Title: Week 5: Police in Society History and Organization
1Week 5 Police in Society History and
Organization
- Identify what the idea of police involves
- Distinguish between police and law
enforcement (as useful terms) - Trace the evolution of the modern police
organization (in the U.S.)
21) What does police refer to?
- Police derives from from the Latin politia which
means roughly civil administration or
maintenance of civil order - It refers to internal actions directed to the
maintenance of civil order and law within a
community - Distinguish police from the military which deals
with external actions toward outside communities.
3What does police refer to? (cont.)
- Generally police refers to the legitimate use of
force or authority to maintain order on behalf of
the entire community - Use of military forces to carry out policing
implies an outside power forcefully controlling
an occupied population martial law - Use of privately funded and controlled force to
maintain order mercenary policing - Use of unauthorized force by citizens to maintain
order vigilante policing
42) What is the difference between police and
law enforcement?
- Policing maintenance of order in the
community or society very general function - Includes both proactive (preventive) and reactive
(corrective) efforts - Includes both facilitation and coercion
- Law enforcement refers to coercive efforts to
respond to apprehend and punish offenders - It is essentially reactive and corrective
- It is one part (coercive and reactive) of
policing - Compare with medicine?
53) The History of Policing (in U.S.)
- Police in the U.S. is mostly adapted from English
police systems and practices - Occasional borrowing from European practices
e.g., French Spanish systems - It follows certain universal patterns in the
evolution of modern policing (found in lots of
other countries) - But also shows distinctly English American
patterns reflecting the unique political history
of Great Britain and the American colonies
6The History of Policing (cont.)
- The universal pattern 3 stages or forms of
policing - Self-policing informal policing by citizens
- Transitional policing semi-organized by
semi-specialists or mercenaries - Modern policing centralized control of
specialized, professionalized police officers
acting under authority of community or the
state
7Self-Policing
- informal policing by members of the community
behaving as citizens - Operation of policing in groups Informal,
voluntary, occasional, reactive, general - May be organized by families or clans -gt
German/Saxon wergild system - May be organized by communities -gt English Mutual
pledge system - tithings (tithingman) ? hundreds (constable)
- Group must respond to hue and cry
- Operates through group action by community
- Early versions of community watch system
8Transitional Policing
- Semi-organized arrangements of citizens and
private groups ? move beyond simple voluntary
enforcement - Somewhat more formalized, organized, and
specialized - Frankpledge system royal appropriation of
control over the pledge system - Hundreds further organized into Shires (counties)
- Hundreds financially accountable for
apprehending offenders - Shire led by appointed Shire-reeve (Sheriff
selected by King) - Watch-and-Ward systems in middle English cities
- Mercenary systems police paid for special
purposes - Praetorian guard retained to protect the
Emperor - Gendarmes paid by fees to catch wrong-doers
- Thief Takers paid by reward for recovering
stolen goods - Bow Street Runners private security/detective
agency - The regulators and early Texas Rangers in U.S.
old West - Paid replacements for pledge and watch members
9Modern Policing
- Formally organized, paid policing by full-time
specialists in officially authorized agencies - Require stronger centralized governments
- Authority to make and enforcement laws
- Legitimate monopoly on exercise of force
- Specialized agencies carry out specific functions
- Formed in the large cities in response to
disorder, riots, and lawlessness - Also formed in support of inequality to maintain
and defend such systems
10First Modern Police Force the London
Metropolitan Police
- Organized by Sir Robert Peel authorized by
Metropolitan Police Act of 1829 - Adoption was controversial and contested, but
became model for later police forces - Organized on a new model
- Paramilitary organization disciplined,
professional - Proactive focus on policing i.e., prevention
of crime through order maintenance service - Deemphasis on force and coercion i.e., unarmed
achieve compliance through respect - Quality and discipline within police were enforced
11What was distinctive about English Policing?
- It evolved reluctantly in response to disorder,
riots, violent conflict, and lawlessness - Opposition to strong centralized police authority
- Reflecting the long history of conflict and power
struggle between local communities and the crown - Resistance to investing strong coercive power in
the central government - Note the basic and ongoing tension between
- Desire to control disorder and protect public
safety (which needs central organization
authority) - Desire to protect and maintain local freedoms
(which opposes central organization coercive
authority)
12Policing in the American colonies
- Generally adopted the English Pledge system but
with some modifications - Even greater emphasis on local autonomy
- Reduce accountability to central authority
- Make police officials locally accountable e.g.,
Sheriff appointed by colony governor, not King - Rural areas use Sheriff citizens (common law
principal of posse comitatus) - Cities use very basic night-watch systems
- Unique American development Slave Patrols in
the southern colonies (late 1700s) - Full-time, organized, professional police forces
13Policing in the American colonies
- Overall the American colonies were not policed
very effectively because - Resistance to strong central control ? highly
localized and dependent on local politics - Resistance to professional policing ? reliance on
volunteers - Highly fragmented and weak
- One Unique American development Slave Patrols
in southern colonies (1700s) - Organized, semi-professional police forces
- Enforce slave laws and quell slave riots
14Policing in the U.S. (post-colonial)
- Extremely decentralized and localized
- U.S. confederation of states
- Police force authorized at county and city levels
- No state police or federal police
- County Sheriff weak pledge system
- Sheriff with very broad duties
- Sheriff locally elected
- Very reactive and reliant posse comitatus
- Cities Constable with day night watches
- Slave Patrols continue in southern states
15Policing in the U.S. Historical Eras
- Colonial Era (pre-1780)
- Post-Colonial (Infancy) Era (1780-1840)
- Expansion (Spoils) Era (1840-1900)
- Progressive Era (1900-1930)
- Modern Era (1930-1960)
- Reform Era (1960-1980)
- Contemporary Era (1980-present)
16Policing in U.S. Colonial Era (pre-1780)
- Localized, fragmented, variable, and minimal
forms of police systems - Great emphasis on local autonomy and
accountability - Opposition to strong central governments
- Forms of Policing
- Weak Sheriff-Pledge system (rural areas)
- Weak Constable-Watch system (cities)
- Slave Patrol (southern states)
17Police in U.S. Post-Colonial Era (1780-1840)
- Infancy of new nation (establishing basic
structures) some growing pains - Maintain localized control over police
- No state or national police (ex. U.S. Marshals)
- Resist adopting stronger police organization
- Continue (with modifications) early
English-American policing forms - Weak Sheriff-Pledge system (rural areas)
- Weak Constable-Watch system (cities)
- Slave Patrol (southern states)
18Policing in the U.S. Expansion Era (1840-1900)
- Growth of U.S. as national power ? large
economic, geographic, and social changes - Emergence of powerful political machines to
control local and state politics - Creation of modern city police departments
- Policing seen s locally controlled, corrupt,
brutal, unprofessional, and ineffective - Expansion of federal government police
- Large private police agencies Pinkerton, Brinks,
Wells-Fargo, Railroad, etc.
19Police in the U.S. Progressive Era (1900-1930)
- Development of ideology of Progressivism
- Police professionalism movement
- Removal of politics patronage
- Use of science and technology to improve
efficiency cars, fingerprints, labs, statistics - Emphasis on education, training, selection
- Unionism
- IACP ? national crime statistics (UCR)
- August Vollmer (Berkeley Wickersham Comm)
- Stronger federal government police
- Creation of first State Police agencies
20Policing in the U.S. Modern Era (1930-1960)
- After the Depression ended, relative social
stability and economic growth - Police Professionalism extended and
institutionalized (maintaining the status quo) - View of Police as professional, apolitical,
crime-fighting protectors of public order and
safety - O.W. Wilson textbook on police administration
- Expansion of federal police (FBI) due to threat
of communism and organized crime
21Policing in the U.S. Reform Era (1960-1980)
- Period of dramatic social conflicts, crises, and
changes (civil rights Viet Nam, rise in crime) - National changes in legal landscape
- View of police as nonpartisan, professional
defenders of law and freedom challenged - Initiation of critical research to test the
received wisdom about policing - National Commission on Law Enforcement
- Commissions on corruption and misconduct
- Experimentation and variation in policing
22Policing in the U.S. Current Era (1980-present)
- New technologies
- Change tasks of daily police work
- Expose errors and misbehavior
- New organizational theories
- Community-Oriented Policing
- Impact of globalization and terrorism
- Homeland Security
- Increased federal influence through funding and
training ? standardization control - Privatization greater use of rent-a-cops
23Policing in the U.S. Current Era (1980-present)
- Local Municipal and township police departments
- County Sheriffs offices and sheriffs police
department( county constable offices in Texas) - States 49 primary State law enforcement
agencies - Special jurisdiction agencies schools,
airports, etc. - Federal 65 agencies with police powers
- Private about 2 million persons serving as
private police security officers
24Local Police
- 12,433 local police agencies in the U.S.
- 10,788 municipal (city) departments
- 1,612 township or town departments
- 33 regional (combined) departments
- Most are very small
- Over half have fewer than 10 full-time officers
- One-third have less than 5 full-time officers
- One-eight (1,720) have 1 or less full-time
officer - Few are very large
- Under 5 (83 depts) have 100 or more full-time
officers (the size you see on TV programs)
25County Police Agencies
- 3,111 County Police Agencies (in 2000)
- 3010 County Sheriffs Offices
- 52 County Sheriffs Police departments
- 49 Consolidated (unigov) City-County Agencies
- Note the continued importance of the Sheriff in
the 21st century - Major county-level police agency in most states
- Elective office in all but two states
- Constitutional office in most states
- Has broad, diverse responsibilities and powers
26State Police Agencies
- Found in all but one state (Hawaii has a State
Sheriffs office) - Found in two formats
- State Police Full and broad police powers to
investigate crimes to enforce law anywhere (in
23 states) - Highway Patrol focus only on highway traffic
safety, traffic law enforcement, accident
investigation - Usually special focus state agencies to handle
other enforcement or investigation activities
27Special Jurisdiction Agencies
- 1,376 police agencies with special limited
jurisdictions - About 65 of these involve educational
institutions (e.g., college campuses, public high
schools) - Also transportation facilities (e.g., airports,
transit systems, railroad, shipping ports) - Also public parks, natural resources,
conservation departments, fish game
28Federal Police Agencies
- Federal law enforcement ? mostly a 20th century
development (exc. U.S. Marshals) - Located in various agencies where special
enforcement or investigation need occurs - Some consolidation of agencies in
- Treasury Dept.
- FBI under J. Edgar Hoover
- Homeland Security (in 2001)
- Dept. of Homeland Security biggest change
29Federal Police (cont.)
- Dept. of Homeland Security (42,870)
- Dept. of Justice (37,460)
- U.S. Courts (Judicial Branch) (4,126)
- Office of Inspector General (2,867)
- U.S. Postal Service(2,978)
- Internal Revenue Service (2,777)
- VHA (2,423) Dept. of Interior (Park Service BIA
Forest Service) (2278) - Capitol Police (1,535)
- Dept. of Treasury (722)
30Federal Police (cont.)
- Dept. of Justice
- FBI (15,214)
- DEA (4,400)
- US Marshals Service (3,233)
- ATFE (formerly in Treasury) (2373)
- Dept. of Homeland Security
- US Customs and Border Protection (27,705)
- US Immigration and Customs (10,399)
- Secret Service (4,769)
31Private Police Security
- Est. 2 million private security officers in US
- 3-4 times as many as in public police agencies
- A growing sector of policing
- What do these involve?
- What are their Powers and Authority?
- The Advantages and Disadvantages?
- Standards, qualifications, and Licensing
32Private Police Security
- What do these involve?
- Proprietary security employed by company itself
- Contract Security employed by security firm
which contract with employer company - Brinks Burns Wackenhut Pinkerton Wells-Fargo
- Private Police (with limited authority petitioned
from government) - Private colleges schools
- Private companies with national security interest
- Closed communities
33Private Police/Security (cont)
- What are their Powers and Authority?
- Generically same as any citizen
- Some may be derived from employer
- May be enhanced in some states (with licensing)
- Enhanced when public police officers are hired as
2nd job (bring police powers with them)
34Private Police/Security (cont)
- Advantages of private police?
- Declining revenues for public policing
- Private nature of crimes in workplace
- Better control and attention to specific problems
- Few constitutional limitations
- Concerns about private policing?
- Qualifications, standards, and training
- Legal ambiguities
- Questions about public cops in private uses
- Diminished public responsibility and oversight