F.B.I. Chief Links Scrutiny of
Police With Rise in Violent Crime (Justice Department "fumes")
New York Times ^ | October 23, 2015 | MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT and MATT APUZZO 10/24/15
New York Times ^ | October 23, 2015 | MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT and MATT APUZZO 10/24/15
CHICAGO — The F.B.I. director, James
B. Comey, said on Friday that the additional scrutiny
and criticism of police officers in the wake of highly publicized episodes of
police brutality may have led to an increase in violent crime in some cities as
officers have become less aggressive.
With his remarks, Mr.
Comey lent the prestige of the F.B.I., the nation’s most prominent law
enforcement agency, to a theory that is far from settled: that the increased
attention on the police has made officers less aggressive and emboldened
criminals. But he acknowledged that there is so far no data to back up his
assertion and that it may be just one of many factors that are contributing to
the rise in crime, like cheaper drugs and an increase in criminals who are
being released from prison.
Baltimore residents last
month at a vigil for Kirk Butler, one of 13 people shot, and four killed, in a
single September weekend.
“I don’t know whether
that explains it entirely, but I do have a strong sense that some part of the
explanation is a chill wind that has blown through American law enforcement
over the last year,” Mr. Comey said in a speech at the University of Chicago
Law School.
Mr. Comey’s remarks
caught officials by surprise at the Justice Department, where his views are not
shared at the top levels. Holding the police accountable for civil rights
violations has been a top priority at the department in recent years, and some
senior officials do not believe that scrutiny of police officers has led to an
increase in crime. While the department had no immediate comment on Friday,
several officials privately fumed at Mr. Comey’s suggestion.
Among
the nation’s law enforcement officials, there is sharp disagreement over
whether there is any credence to the so-called Ferguson effect, which refers to
the protests that erupted in the summer of 2014 in Ferguson, Mo., over a police
shooting.
In Oakland,
Calif., for example, homicides are on the rise after two years of decline. But
shootings are down, and the overall crime rate is about the same, said
Oakland’s police chief, Sean Whent. “Our officers are very, very sensitive to
the climate right now, but I haven’t seen any evidence to say our officers
aren’t doing their jobs,” Chief Whent said.
In
Washington, homicides are also up, but violent crime and crime over all are
down, said Lt. Sean Conboy, a police spokesman. “Trying to correlate it to a
Ferguson effect, I don’t believe is appropriate,” Lieutenant Conboy said.
After civil
rights leaders and the Justice Department accused the Seattle Police Department
of discriminatory policing and excessive force, the number of
officer-instigated stops declined and crime ticked upward, said Kathleen
O’Toole, the police chief.
Chief
O’Toole said it was up to police leaders to insist on reversing that trend. The
critiques made the department better, she said. Crime is down this year, and
her city has hosted police officials from places such as Baltimore wanting to
understand why. “There’s
never been as much scrutiny on police officers as there is now,” Chief O’Toole
said. “We should embrace it.”
But Mr.
Comey said that he had been told by many police leaders that officers who would
normally stop to question suspicious people are opting to stay in their patrol
cars for fear of having their encounters become worldwide video sensations.
That hesitancy has led to missed opportunities to apprehend suspects, he said,
and has decreased the police presence on the streets of the country’s most
violent cities.
“I’ve been
told by a senior police leader who urged his force to remember that their
political leadership has no tolerance for a viral video,” Mr. Comey said,
adding that many leaders and officers whom he had spoken to said they were
afraid to address the issue publicly.
“Lives are saved when those potential killers
are confronted by a police officer, a strong police presence and actual,
honest-to-goodness, up-close ‘What are you guys doing on this corner at 1
o’clock in the morning’ policing,” Mr. Comey said. “We need to be careful it
doesn’t drift away from us in the age of viral videos, or there will be
profound consequences.”
But
investigations by the Justice Department have given weight to the loudest
criticisms of police behavior in Ferguson and elsewhere. Those inquiries have
found that many officers unfairly singled out African-Americans for stops and
arrests, and too often used force that was unjustified. Videos of deadly
encounters with the police in cities such as Cleveland, New York and North
Charleston, S.C., have fueled that criticism.
More than
his predecessors, Mr. Comey has used his position as one of the nation’s top
law enforcement officials to bring attention to issues that state and local
police departments are confronting. It is not clear what impact he will be able
to have on the issue. He said that the remedies to the problem were not clear,
and that law enforcement authorities needed to have better data about crime and
shootings involving police officers.
Mr. Comey,
who was in Chicago for the annual conference of the International Association
of Chiefs of Police, plans to address the issue with law enforcement leaders. In
February, Mr. Comey delivered an unusually candid speech at Georgetown
University about the difficult relationship between the police and
African-Americans. Some officers, he said, scrutinize minorities more closely
using a mental shortcut that “becomes almost irresistible and maybe even
rational by some lights” because black men are arrested at much higher rates
than white men.
Mr. Comey
said that without more reliable data, the task of identifying trends and
remedies to fix them is far more challenging. He said state and local law
enforcement officials were increasingly open to providing the F.B.I. with
better data so it can more accurately chart trends.“ ‘Data’
is a dry word, but we need better data,” Mr. Comey said. “And people tend to
tune out when you start to talk about it, but it’s important, because it gives
us the full picture of what’s happening.”
Michael S. Schmidt reported from
Chicago, and Matt Apuzzo from Washington.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/24/us/politics/fbi-chief-links-scrutiny-of-police-with-rise-in-violent-crime.html?_r=0
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