Freakonomics Radio - 476. What Are the Police for, Anyway?
Episode Date: September 23, 2021The U.S. is an outlier when it comes to policing, as evidenced by more than 1,000 fatal shootings by police each year. But we’re an outlier in other ways too: a heavily-armed populace, a fragile men...tal-health system, and the fact that we spend so much time in our cars. Add in a history of racism and it’s no surprise that barely half of all Americans have a lot of confidence in the police. So what if we start to think about policing as … philanthropy?
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Edwin Raymond is a police lieutenant in New York City.
One day, about 10 years ago, he was just finishing up his shift.
I was walking back to the station house when someone in a bodega ran out and flagged me down
and said, officer, officer, we're being robbed.
I said, what do you mean, man?
I thought he was joking. I'm like, what, really? At the end of my shift, I said, does the guy
have a gun? He said, yeah. So I put over the distress cord for backup. I said, what is
he, you know, white, Latino, black? He said, he's black. So I pull out my gun and I'm waiting
for the backup.
Raymond is also black. He grew up in Brooklyn. His parents were poor immigrants from Haiti.
That's when I see a Black guy walk out, hoodie over his head.
He had a plastic bag.
And I say, get on the ground.
And he's arguing with me.
And it's weird because he's like, bro, I have a gun pointed at you.
Can you please follow my directions?
When Raymond was a teenager, he was always getting hassled by the police in his neighborhood.
He had been confused by this.
Why can't they see the difference between me, you know, who's in college, who doesn't commit crimes,
and some other people up the block who are involved in certain lifestyles?
Why do they think I'm them? Just because we live near each other? Just because we look alike?
But one day at a Haitian street festival,
he ran into a family friend who was a police officer.
I saw him there and it was just like this sense of pride.
Like, wow, like I know him.
I could touch him.
Look, I could get right next to his gun.
And I also saw like the quality of life he was able to live,
not knowing that cops get paid pretty well.
And that's when I said, you know what?
I think I need to join this thing, man.
Which is how, years later, Edwin Raymond finds himself outside a bodega trying to get a robbery suspect on the ground.
So he starts getting on the ground, but he's protesting.
I finally have him get on his stomach and extend
his legs and his arms. And as I get closer to search his waistband, I can hear the siren
of the backup coming. He takes his hands that were extended and puts it near his chest to push
himself up. I almost depressed the trigger because Because in my mind,
you have a gun.
You know,
by then the backup had come.
We had him at gunpoint.
I go, I search the waistband and he has a imitation pistol.
It was an orange water gun,
spray painted black.
Raymond and the other officers
arrested the suspect
and brought him back
to the station house.
I'll tell you, some of the old timers said, why the hell didn't you shoot him?
It would have been a good shoot.
Like, Raymond, you know, you played with your life, right?
You waited to find out if he had a real gun?
Who does that?
And when he was in the cells, a few cops said, you're lucky it was Raymond.
Because if it was anybody else, you'd have been dead.
But I just, at that moment, I didn't feel the complete need to pull the trigger.
If Edwin Raymond had felt the complete need to pull the trigger,
this robbery suspect might have become a statistic in a category that no one is happy about.
Here's the statistic.
Last year, just over 1,000 people were shot and killed by police
in the U.S. That's 34 fatalities for every 10 million residents. In a ranking of other wealthy
democracies, that puts the U.S. at number one. Canada is second with 10 police killings per 10 million people. Australia is next at nine.
Why does the U.S. have triple the rate of fatal police shootings of the nearest country?
That is not a simple question to answer. But today we are going to try. More broadly,
we're going to try to figure out what makes American policing so American. We have put out a series of episodes
lately looking at the many ways in which the U.S. is fundamentally different from other countries.
We've looked at our culture of individualism. We've looked at transportation, child poverty.
You could probably come up with a hundred explanations for why U.S. policing is so
different from other countries. In this episode, we will
focus on four. The first one has to do with where people are most likely to encounter a police
officer. A lot of American life is happening in cars. Another is about how police forces are
organized. There's a real lack of standardization. Then there's the demand side of the equation, the person on the other end of the 911 call.
A very large fraction of the 911 calls in the United States, there's either a substance use issue or a mental health issue.
And maybe the biggest driver of U.S. policing style.
Because of the amount of guns out there, you have to equip your police officers with the right tools.
Today on Freakonomics Radio, how podcast that explores the hidden side of everything.
Here's your host, Stephen Dubner.
The U.S. leads the world in prisoners, more than 2 million people incarcerated. China is second at
1.7 million, but they have more than four times our population, so their incarceration rate is
much lower. We are also number one in the incarceration rate category, 629 prisoners
per 100,000 residents. In second and third place are El Salvador and Turkmenistan.
An incarceration rate like ours requires a lot of policing. And we have that too,
nearly 700,000 full-time law enforcement officers. That's not the all-time high in the U.S., but
it's pretty close, which may be a bit surprising since crime has fallen sharply over the past few decades.
The rate of reported violent crime in the U.S. today is about half what it was in 1990.
One argument says that crime has fallen because of all those police, and there's evidence that that is at least partially true. Another argument says the police have been arresting way too many people,
especially people who sell or buy drugs.
My name is Sarah Sayo, and I'm a professor of law at Columbia Law School.
Sarah Sayo was interested in the second argument.
I wanted to study the history of the war on drugs. I wanted to know what drug laws did to American society and culture.
I like to say that I became an accidental historian of cars
because that's not what I had thought I would be studying.
An accidental historian of cars?
This needs explaining.
In studying the war on drugs, I wanted to look into law enforcement and the
constitutional provision that is most relevant to law enforcement is the Fourth Amendment.
The Fourth Amendment is the one that prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures.
The main concern originally was protecting the privacy of a person's home.
So I started by reading all Fourth Amendment cases, and I was surprised to
find very few Fourth Amendment cases in the beginning. In the beginning, meaning in the
18th and 19th centuries. And it all changed in the first few decades of the 20th century.
And a lot of those cases were about cars. Whenever there's an explosion of a legal issue, it usually means there's a social change
that requires the law to address how people should govern themselves in a new situation.
And when I looked into it, I realized American society had completely changed because of the car.
Cars suddenly appeared on streets that were meant for wagons, pedestrians, a few carriages.
And so they created chaos.
There were a lot of accidents.
Cars were really dangerous.
They killed people.
This led to new laws, traffic regulations.
Somebody had to enforce those regulations and the statutes would say the police would do it.
Keep in mind, this is happening during Prohibition.
A lot of American life is happening in cars.
Criminals are using cars as getaways.
Bootleggers are using cars to transport alcohol.
And we see from the very early years of the automobile, the merger of crime fighting and traffic law enforcement.
This is where the Fourth Amendment comes in, because the police faced a key question.
Do officers need a warrant to stop and search a car?
The law seemed to say yes, but.
But there's a practical difficulty of not being able to go get a warrant
to stop a moving car before it drives off to another jurisdiction.
This issue made it to the U.S. Supreme Court. And what the court did was to create an exception for automobiles.
This was a huge decision for two reasons. One, it didn't require a warrant if an officer has
probable cause that there's evidence of crime inside the car. And the second big consequence of this
decision is that no longer does a neutral judge determine whether there's probable cause and will
therefore issue a warrant. It's the officer on the street deciding for himself whether he has
probable cause to stop a car. And that transferred a lot of discretionary authority
to the police to decide which cars to pull over. So that was a huge case in terms of
constitutionally legitimizing the exercise of discretionary policing.
Not only did discretionary policing become the norm, but as Sayo argues, it became a foundation from which the mission of policing
expanded. Throughout the 20th century, the police have been delegated to enforce more and more laws.
You see the expansion of policing into other domains like schools. The other thing is that because American society was a car society, a lot of questions about what the limits
to police discretion might be happened in the context of a car. And so there's a lot of Fourth
Amendment cases that seemingly have nothing to do with cars. But if you read the cases,
they come up in the context of a traffic stop.
Americans, as you likely know, spend an inordinate amount of time in their cars.
And the traffic stop is a key touchpoint in American policing.
The traffic stop is the most common encounter between individuals and the police.
And it's also the site of a lot of police violence and police shootings that we see in the news today.
Daunte Wright, a 20-year-old Minnesota man, was shot and killed by a police officer during a traffic stop in April.
We want to warn you, this body camera footage is hard to watch.
The officer reportedly meant to use her taser, but fired her gun instead.
The officer heard Zane, she just shot him.
Sandra Bland, a 28-year-old woman, survived her traffic stop in Texas.
Step out of the car.
But was arrested for assaulting a police officer.
Wow.
Get out of the car.
I really feel you're the signal. You're doing all of this for yourself.
Get over there.
And a few days later, hanged herself in jail.
Sandra Bland, like Daunte Wright, was Black.
Black Americans are five times more likely to be arrested than white Americans.
On a per capita basis, Blacks are also much more likely to be fatally shot by the police.
There has, of course, been a racial reckoning
around policing lately, highlighted by the police murder of George Floyd.
According to a recent Gallup poll, just 51 percent of U.S. adults have either a great deal or quite a lot of confidence in the police.
And that 51% figure contains a huge racial divide.
In fact, it's the largest racial divide among the 16 major institutions that Gallup surveys.
About 56% of white adults profess confidence in the police.
Among blacks, the number is just 27%.
This despite the fact that police departments across the U.S. have increasingly hired
more Black officers. But this doesn't surprise Edwin Raymond, the Black police lieutenant we
met earlier. By the way, here's what Raymond is best known for.
Definitely being a police whistleblower and someone with the courage
to stand up to the system. Raymond is the lead plaintiff in a federal lawsuit alleging that the
NYPD used an illegal quota system to arrest people and that the system disproportionately
targeted minorities. The NYPD denies it uses quotas and many of the lawsuit's claims have
been dismissed.
Although a couple years ago, the department agreed to a $75 million settlement related to another
lawsuit claiming the NYPD has issued nearly a million summonses that had no legal basis.
So the racism is there, but it's just a small pool of the leadership that keeps the systemic racism going as a policy. And at the
bottom of the pyramid are the rank and file who simply enforce it. The racial history of policing
is a deep and brutal history, extending, of course, back to slavery. Sarah Sayo found plenty
of evidence in the early automobile era. As soon as Black people
are also driving, they're immediately encountering abusive policing by traffic police. That was when
I saw the first letter to the NAACP complaining about traffic police. And racialized policing
becomes institutionalized as a practice during the war on drugs, which goes full circle
to why I studied this in the first place. Sayo came to wonder whether it makes sense for the
police to handle traffic enforcement in the first place. Traffic, I see as more regulatory
than criminal. And so I think those functions could be split up where the police could focus on real criminal investigation of murders, violence, and have traffic enforcement be more like paying taxes, where if you're caught speeding, you pay a ticket.
Like we have to pay taxes to really ease the fraught situation we have.
For what it's worth, Sayo's argument has essentially been echoed by New York's attorney general.
Sayo says that technology could also help.
Why have humans pull cars over when that same information can go to an official sitting in an office and mail out notices saying your license and registration is expired.
And so to automate as much as we can to reduce human interactions on the road, but at the same time enforce traffic laws.
A lot of would-be police reform focuses on technology and modernization.
Six years ago, the Obama administration had the presidential task force on 21st century policing.
Lieutenant Raymond again.
Their findings were sent to police departments across the nation,
but the changes were just highly recommended.
There was no power to enforce it because of states' rights, because of the way policing works. Our policing problem, in my view, reflects the larger looseness of the culture in the sense that we need more accountability and more standardization. And that is Michelle Gelfand.
She is a cross-cultural psychologist who has analyzed the differences between countries
based on how tight or loose their cultures are.
Tight cultures tend to be marked by compliance and rule following. Looser cultures tend to offer
more freedoms. The U.S. is overall fairly loose, but there's a lot of variance from place to place.
After all, we have 50 states that can each set their own laws. This means there's a lot of variance in how a given police department will operate.
Accountability, being subject to rules, being evaluated based on your abidance by the rules
and punished if you're not acting accordingly, is something that's really important for groups
like the police.
And having standardization so that we know what are people accountable for is really
important. And this is where the U.S., compared what are people accountable for is really important.
And this is where the U.S., compared to many other countries, is really an anomaly when it
comes to policing. There's a real lack of standardization in terms of practices.
Just how decentralized is U.S. policing? Here's a big number, 18,000. That's how many federal,
state, county, and local law enforcement agencies we have in the
U.S. Some are huge like New York City's, but most are much smaller and many are tiny with fewer than
10 officers. And to Michelle Gelfand's point about a lack of standardization, each agency has not only
its own jurisdiction, but its own internal regulations.
You can imagine how hard it is to police 18,000 policing agencies.
And how many law enforcement agencies are there in a place like the UK?
So roughly we have 43.
There's no police force really that has less than a thousand staff.
That is Alex Murray.
I'm a commander in the Met, and I am the violence lead for London.
The Met, as in the Metropolitan Police, London's equivalent of the NYPD.
Murray is also chair of the Society of Evidence-Based Policing.
Yeah, that's right.
And these are cops just wanting to understand the evidence of what is effective.
I asked Murray to talk about the difference between the decentralized setup of American policing versus the UK. minimum training requirements, standard operating practices that can be governed and well-trained.
And with training comes a profoundly different outcome. You can see that again and again.
How long does the median UK police officer train before becoming a police officer?
So we have two years probation. They're called probationers when they start. And now everybody gets a degree as well. So you either
come with a degree as a constable, or if you join the police now, you get a degree through that
service where you have to demonstrate a certain amount of competencies, both practically and
theoretically. The UK has a National Police Academy for training. The US does not. On average,
a US police officer gets about 35 days of basic training, including 73 hours of firearms training.
Joe Biden did propose that during his first 100 days as president,
he would establish a National Police Oversight Commission. That hasn't happened. Federal standards would likely help clarify the question
of just how discretionary our discretionary policing should be,
especially when it comes to the use of force.
I think your listeners might find it interesting
to look at what we go through before we go to a house with guns
and then compare it to what happens in the U.S.
So say we need to execute a warrant or arrest someone from an address,
but they know that that person might have links to firearms. So the first thing they'll do is
they'll speak to a tactical advisor who will bring in a tactical firearms commander. That
tactical firearms commander will then go through what we call the national decision-making model
and they will draw together a plan that first highlights what's the information, but then the
risks and threats. And they will say, what's the risk, medium, low, or high? And what's our strategy
against that risk? And they'll say, well, we want to maximize the safety of the police officer,
minimize the risk to the child. And by the way, we want to recover evidence.
And this is happening over what kind of time frame, Alex?
Well, so this might happen in three or four hours, if I'm being quick.
This is not to say that U.S. police officers don't have protocols for handling this kind
of situation, but the decision to use force that a U.S. officer might make on their daily shift
is rarely run up the chain of command,
especially if the situation calls for urgency. And you can imagine how a review process that
takes at best a few hours could put officers and civilians in danger. This brings us to another
aspect of modern U.S. policing that's related to a constitutional amendment, the Second Amendment.
That's the one that has to do with the right to bear arms. To understand why the U.S. has so many fatal police shootings, we must first understand why U.S. police are so heavily armed. And that
has to do with how heavily armed Americans are. It's estimated there are 120 guns for every 100
U.S. residents. How about the U.K.? About five guns per 100 people. Accordingly, many fewer
police in the U.K. are armed. In England and Wales, only about 4%. Not surprisingly, many fewer people there are fatally shot by police.
Last year, just three in a population of about 60 million.
Again, the U.S. number of fatal police shootings last year was more than 1,000.
I feel for police officers in the States,
who I imagine whenever they are stopping someone proactively,
they have to assume
that they are gun carrying. We can safely assume that people are not gun carrying in the UK. I mean,
you can't carry guns are virtually not a thing lawfully. So a logical person could easily reach
a conclusion that US police are so heavily or frequently armed because the population that they're policing
is so heavily or frequently armed, yes?
Yeah, that is an argument,
but there are other countries who are also heavily armed
that don't have the same death rate.
Firearms are very common in Canada as well.
And I think that Switzerland is.
Switzerland.
I think you're required to have one, right?
Yeah, and I don't think they shoot many people there.
Now, we should say a police officer in the US is about 30 times more likely to be killed
than a police officer in, say, Germany.
So how do you consider the risk to police in that equation?
Yeah.
What's the prevalence of firearms like in Germany?
Is it equivalent?
Is it equivalent?
Is it considerably less? And, you know, clearly culture plays a big impact.
In this nation, because of the Second Amendment and the amount of guns out there,
you have to equip your police officers with the right tools.
Edwin Raymond again of the NYPD. Believe me, I've wrestled with that, you know, whether or not we can disarm the police force. And unfortunately,
there are just certain things about the culture of this nation and laws in this nation that
it doesn't fit here. Like, okay, New York City has the toughest gun laws in the country,
but the guns that end up killing people here, they start off very legal in states where the
law is a lot more lax.
And that's because of the Second Amendment.
So how do you successfully police
a country full of guns,
a country built around the automobile,
a country with 18,000
separate law enforcement agencies?
That's coming up right after this break.
The state of modern policing in the U.S.
isn't very surprising once you consider some of the factors that set us apart from other countries.
The prevalence of guns and cars, the decentralization of our police forces.
But it is somewhat surprising when you consider the origins of modern policing.
This happened in the UK at the direction of a man named Robert Peel.
Robert Peel founded the Metropolitan Police as it was,
with the very principle of it not being military and policing by the consent for the people. That, again,
is Alex Murray, a commander with the Metropolitan Police in London. And that any use of force should
be absolutely minimized. This was during the 1820s and 30s. Robert Peel, who would go on to become prime minister, he was devoted to
professionalizing London's police force. He put officers in uniforms, he stressed safety and
efficiency, and he preached the twin virtues of public safety and police propriety. Those have
sort of been inculcated across the culture of UK policing for a long time. And of course, we make mistakes and get it wrong all the time as well.
But that police service very much doesn't feel like a police force.
And please don't misinterpret that as being soft on crime.
Quite the contrary, because crime affects victims and we want to stop it.
And we will be harsh on people who perpetuate violence against individuals.
Robert Peel is remembered for a set of nine Peelian principles,
although it's not clear he actually wrote them.
For instance, the basic mission for which the police exist is to prevent crime and disorder.
And the test of police efficiency is the absence of crime and disorder,
not the visible evidence of police action in dealing with it.
Peel's principles spread to early police forces in the U.S., which modeled themselves after the Met.
I'm looking at these Peelian principles. Number three, police must secure the willing cooperation
of the public in voluntary observance of the law to be able to secure and maintain the respect of the public.
That sounds lovely and often impossible. Are you really saying that the foundation of modern
UK policing still is built atop those Peelian principles?
Yeah, it has to be, Stephen. The only alternative is a police officer on every street corner
enforcing through surveillance.
And that is an impossible situation.
You could never fund it.
And you'd be a police state if you did.
The people have to see the police as someone who's on their side to protect them and for the benefit of everybody.
Now, in the U.S., I'm sure there are some people who do see the police exactly as you described,
but then there are some populations who don't.
I'm guessing that's the same in the UK, yeah?
Absolutely.
Yeah, I think the context is different here, but certainly we're really keen to improve
relationships with Black communities in London.
And certain parts of the Black community in London won't trust the police,
and we're really keen to address that.
Here again is Edwin Raymond of the New York Police Department.
I was actually shocked to read the Peleon Principles for the first time.
Because it seemed so gentle and sensible?
Exactly. Compared to what I know I experienced and what was being asked of me,
it was 180 from the Peleon Principles, where basically one of them is the
metric in which to measure efficacy of police work is not by the amount of criminals you catch,
it's the prevention, it's the lack of the crime happening.
Can you talk for a second just about that? Some famous management guru said it years ago,
you can't fix what you can't measure. So measurement obviously has a lot
of good purpose. But when the primary metric or when a primary metric of policing is arrests,
how does that affect the work that you do? The commanders whose promotions are determined by
those arrest numbers, they become drunk on it. But here's where it gets funny. If the numbers
are not what the leadership wants and crime still plummets, you'll still be in trouble. And that always shocked me
because it's like, wait, if the objective was to lower crime and as a commander, I'm able to do it
without over-policing, then what's the issue? So I don't understand why that would be. I mean,
I understand how arrests are a metric that is easy to count,
but why wouldn't the crime numbers themselves be the primary metric?
Well, to me, it's two things. One, think about it. Most people, if their job is to
lower crime and crime drops, whether or not they had something to do with it,
they're going to take credit for it because it's their job. So by making a connection to arrest, it keeps you relevant. If we're able to
successfully drop crime and the police is not connected to that, then the argument inevitably
will be, do we need the police? And if so, how many? Edwin Raymond's argument is that the NYPD
uses arrest quotas in part to keep itself relevant and to generate revenue.
You can predict how much revenue you expect to earn if you simply set a number of how many
summonses the police department should issue. But many of these summonses are for low-level
offenses, which you could argue are more costly to the suspect than they are helpful to society.
This style of policing was made famous in New York in the 1990s under Police Commissioner
Bill Bratton.
It was known as broken windows policing.
The idea was that aggressively enforcing even minor crimes, like breaking a window or jumping
a subway turnstile, was an effective way to prevent bigger crimes.
Edwin Raymond is not a fan.
Broken windows changed the way that nonsense arrests are perceived
with the notion that that's what stops the bigger things from happening.
Other police departments throughout the nation and then throughout the world
unfortunately embrace this.
And the data just doesn't prove to be something that works.
I'm quite persuaded by some aspects of broken windows.
Alex Murray again of London's Metropolitan Police.
If the environment is really shoddy and everyone's breaking the rules in that environment,
then it equates to you can break rules here.
But he agrees there is a downside to going after every low-level offence.
I think the evidence is emerging and quite strong.
If you criminalize someone for a low-level offense, it will create, in the end,
more victims of crime and probably have that individual incarcerated. So if someone makes
a little mistake, coming down on them like a ton of bricks is not an effective crime prevention tool.
I'm really curious about the cognitive biases that exist, obviously, in all of us,
but especially within policing.
One bias that seems pretty strong in most people
is sometimes called the do-something bias,
which is don't just stand there, do something,
whatever it is.
And I'm really curious how you think
that applies in policing,
because it strikes me that one difficulty of policing
is that if you do your job well,
often nothing happens and no one hears about it.
It's very easy to measure arrests, incarcerations, amount of guns seized, amount of knives seized.
But people are obsessed on outcomes, and they have been for a long time.
And I'm beginning to question outcome obsession, because so many things, particularly in the world of crime, lead to an outcome.
Crime goes up,
crime goes down. But I'm much more interested in outputs. And all the time I've heard in my service,
don't give me outputs, give me outcomes. But if we know what works, then all I want to measure is,
are my police officers doing what works? Are they in the area where crime is highest at the right
time? I would like to have the management information being outcomes
and the performance targets being the outputs.
The quotas incentivize arresting and ticketing people
to the point where you create these very overzealous cops.
Edwin Raymond again.
I know cops who work in different precincts
who are in competition with each other
over who can get the most arrests for the month.
And because these arrests feed the policy from the leadership, they're unable to see how
problematic that culture is. They don't understand how their pressure creates bad policing. It's
disingenuous to try to weed out people that might become problems when you're creating the problem based on what you incentivize.
It's bad soil, you know.
It's not the apple, it's the soil.
It's deeper.
Talk to me about the difference between what you learn in the New York Police Academy about your job and about dealing with the public and then how similar the actual
job is to what you've been trained to do? So in the Police Academy, everything on paper
is pretty good. But what actually goes on, that's where things are different. For instance,
it's like boot camp in the Police Academy. And their justification for treating you that way
is they're instilling discipline.
So if you encounter someone in the street
that tells you to F off or speaks to you
in a violent, disrespectful manner,
you're not going to go crazy and do something.
That's what it says in the book
and that's what the culture of the academy is.
But once you get out, it's like,
don't you ever let anyone talk negatively
to a cop. You know why? Because with you, it'll be F you. With that cop, it'll be a push. And
eventually they'll feel comfortable enough to kill a cop. So you nip it right in the bud.
So it's like, wow, that's completely opposite of like, I sat there for six months and let you guys
yell at my face because it's supposed to be teaching me discipline. And when you talk about that message,
once you're actually on the job,
how is that message delivered?
Is it from literally a commanding officer?
Is it just the way the culture works?
It's the culture.
You emulate it subconsciously sometimes.
And sometimes you're just taught it, you know, directly.
Like what I just shared with you was verbatim.
It's like, don't you ever let anybody talk to any cop like that.
People need to learn to respect the police.
Once we lose the respect, we lose everything.
Let me ask you this.
I've always been amazed at how fire departments work around the world.
You know, there are many, many, many, many fewer fires now than there were 100 years ago.
But there aren't anywhere near as many fewer firefighters.
And what they seem to have done a really good job is rebranding themselves. In other words, firefighters do a lot
of things now beyond fighting fires, and that's accepted as a mandate to continue getting the
funding. Policing, I've always wondered why the same didn't happen, or at least to a greater
degree, because as much as crime fell in New York City over the last few decades, which was a massive drop, if you want to preserve the budget,
I understand that, but why not change the nature of what police actually do?
Because there's a resistance to it in the culture. The job is romanticized long before many people
even get onto it. Shows like Law & Order, and we all know the plethora of shows.
The job has its risk, of course. You know, you're running towards a gunfight, not away from it.
But for the most part, everyday work of a police officer, it can be pretty smooth. It's more work
to actually have those other responsibilities, which is why sometimes they're not too good at it.
You know, the Swiss Army knife of social ills. Can you talk about that a little bit? I mean, you're too young to remember when
deinstitutionalization happened, but I'm sure you know about it. The government used to take care of
especially mentally ill people very differently than they do now. So as a police officer,
I'm really curious to know what that is like for you to respond to situations
where often you'd probably be much better off with a mental health expert along with you and
what you do in those cases. Well, for me specifically, prior to becoming a police
officer, I actually worked with the developmentally disabled. I come in with a different understanding.
And oftentimes when I'm dealing with what we call EDPs, emotionally disturbed persons, it's the training from my previous job that kicks in,
not the training from the police department. I can't tell you the amount of times that I've
been called to respond to a situation that I wasn't even trained for, that I had no business
being at. Eventually the perfect storm will align and someone could end up getting hurt or getting
killed because officers are doing too much. So we can divest and reallocate those funds
to either support existing agencies or to create agencies and responses for certain
things that we don't absolutely need law enforcement present for.
Deinstitutionalization has been a real success in the realm of intellectual and developmental
disabilities. That's Harold Pollack, a scholar of public health and social work at the University
of Chicago. He's also done a lot of work on policing. I think the term deinstitutionalization gets a bum rap
and has become identified with a homeless man in the subway screaming at people
whose needs are not being met and who is posing a challenge to the community.
Can you tell me anything about how the median citizen assesses the value
and the practice of the modern, let's say, big city police department now?
Well, I think we're all ambivalent because people want to be protected by the police,
but they also want the police to genuinely align themselves with the community and protect it and
respect it. When you look at particular things like defund the police, those pull very poorly.
People want the police to be there, but they also want services like mental health services
to be properly funded.
If I were to ask you, Harold, to characterize the mission of policing in the U.S., what would you say?
Well, what the mission should be is to keep everyone safe.
And keeping people safe includes keeping the people safe who might themselves be experiencing behavioral challenges. Where do you think, again, the median Chicago citizen stands on changing not just the mission of the police, but the responsibilities of the police?
I think most Chicagoans, and I think actually a lot of police officers, would love to see non-police responses to mental health challenges.
By the way, a lot of the things that we talk about under the banner of defund the police, what we really should be talking about is Medicaid. How do we provide better mental health services through the things that are actually supposed to pay for mental health services? Medicaid is way, way, way bigger than the law enforcement budget in the United States. There's no particular reason that that money has to come from law enforcement budgets. It just has to come from somewhere. And I think we have to fund mental health services more generously. If we completely defunded the police, it actually would not provide enough money. If you look at what it really costs to deal with homelessness issues,
mental health issues, we really have to make a profound national investment in these. And
Medicaid and other vehicles are really where the money is.
And how would you say the policing style that you would like to see jibes with the reality of modern policing?
I think that it's better than it was 20 years ago.
It's a lot better, but boy, there's a long way to go.
Here's a piece of evidence supporting Pollock's claim that we have a long way to go.
Of all the people shot and killed in a given year by American police officers,
at least 25% of them had a serious mental illness.
So, is that a policing failure?
Or our shared societal failure?
Studies have found that 6- 10 percent of all police interactions
with the public involves someone with a serious mental illness. People with mental illness are
significantly overrepresented in our jails and prisons. Some states and many cities are confronting
this problem directly. They've started crisis response teams to deal with people in mental or emotional
distress as an alternative to calling 911. To me, this issue is perhaps the best illustration
of how complicated modern policing can be and how so much of the discussion we hear about it
is little more than sloganeering from one angle or another.
So let me ask you the biggest question last.
What do you think police should be for?
It's hard to not be cliched, isn't it?
But I think we are an organization that fights injustice.
Alex Murray, again, from the Met Police and the Society of Evidence-Based Policing.
And by injustice, it means that someone takes the things off me that they have no right to, or that they are reckless and as a result have killed someone, you know,
in a car accident. So our job is to minimize injustice. I'm reading something that you,
Alex Murray, wrote in 2015. It was called Policing as Philanthropy. You wrote, We have never ever heard of the policing mission coined in terms of love, perhaps because of the
connotations and skepticism that brings, but Martin Luther King places it at the heart of both justice
and power. This is absolutely relevant to policing when what makes us different to
other professions is the ability to exercise power on citizens.
That's, you know, beautiful and high-minded. Is it practical, though?
Yeah, I see policing as philanthropic. I definitely do. Our purpose is to serve citizens.
One of the really important things for police officers to realise is, and I think most do,
is that there's a background story to everybody. And with that comes empathy. And yes, there are
bad people, but we need to understand the background of individuals to have the greatest
impact. And there's some sort of simple general rules that you can follow, you know, the principles
of procedural justice. It's not rocket science, but if you treat people with dignity and respect one two you demonstrate your motivation
is good now that's really important and three you listen if i can use a little example from
queensland in australia a great criminologist called lorraine mazzarolle did an experiment on
drink drive testing where at different checkpoints they
used different tactics so at one checkpoint they just gave the breath test as usual and in another
checkpoint they said look thanks very much for stopping the the hardest part of my job is visiting
someone and telling them their partner has just died in a car accident and I'm here to stop that
happening to you so can you just blow in this
test and by the way is there anything else I can help you with? When she checked up with those
drivers afterwards there was a profound difference in what they thought of the police and also what
they thought about the offence of drink driving. If you were to say, in two words, the mission of policing, I would say less victims.
That's it for today's episode.
Thanks to Alex Murray and Edwin Raymond for the police perspectives.
Sarah Sayo, Harold Pollack, and Michelle Gelfand for the academic insights.
And thanks most of all to you for listening
and for continuing to spread the word
about Freakonomics Radio.
We really appreciate that.
We'll be back next week.
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