Occasionally I will repost op-eds of mine to give them fresh life and allow people to comment. The following was published in theWashington Post, August 2, 2004. You can read all my op-eds here. When you board a plane, both you and your carry-on bags are searched. A civilian employee of the Transportation Security Administration may open and search your…
Category: Police
No more “Moving Day”
There are many day-to-day things in the ghetto that start to seem normal, or at least routine, when you’re in too deep. These are things that would shock most outsiders. Take evictions. Every day you’d turn your police car into a street and see the insides of an entire home neatly piled up in the street. This structure often looked…
Man pays for sex
New York Governor Eliot Spitzer slept with a whore. She was an expensive whore, as is befitting a man of his station. I believe once the price is more than $1,000 an hour, the word is “high class.” So there you have it: Man Pays for Sex. There really isn’t much else to say. I don’t care. I don’t think…
The fire-bombing of 324 car
About a year after I left the B.P.D., this happened. 324 car got firebombed. Some locals didn’t like the officer driving it because he could outrun and catch anybody in the district who tried to run from him. Somebody led him on a foot chase while his friends torched the car. It was our best car, too. The only one…
Officer shot
Something strange is going on here. There are important details not reported. No matter, I’m glad the officer is alive. The rah-rah part of these stories bothers me. If the bullet was anything but a graze, odds are this officer will never patrol again. City officer shot by gunman who was hiding in bushes By Ruma Kumar 12:06 PM EST,…
Humanizing the Corner
I just stumbled across “Murder I Wrote” (from a link related to Bradford Pulmer’s blog). In 1997, David Simon, producer of The Wire (the best TV show ever), wrote in The New Republic how corner boys were recruited for a day to be slinging extras for the TV show Homicide(not the best show ever). The boys complained about how unrealistic…
911 is still a joke
In his blog, Bradford Plumer writes a thoughtful analysis of one chapter of Cop in the Hood (scroll down to “Call a Cab Cause a Cab Will Come Quicker,” and the comments in particular). I learned of a 911 operator in Detroit criminally convicted of negligence for failing to take a call from a 5-year-old boy seriously. The boy’s mom…
The Trial in the Killing of Sean Bell
Sean Bell, an unarmed black man, should not have died. But the officers on trial won’t be convicted of anything major. The police certainly make mistakes. We all do. Like it or not, mistakes aren’t usually crimes, especially for police. After any high-profile police shooting, there is the hope that time will reveal the truth and truth will lead to…
The Wire, the War on Drugs, and Jury Nullifcation
There’s a great article in Timeby Ed Burns, Dennis Lehane, George Pelecanos, Richard Price, and David Simon. They’re the writers for the best show ever, The Wire. It’s a powerful piece and you should read the whole thing. Needless to say, they write well. Interestingly, they argue that for jury nullification, a concept I have long loved. “If asked to…
An “adrenaline-accelerating night ride”!
Another good review. From Publishers Weekly, a trade magazine: Cop in the Hood: My Year Policing Baltimore’s Eastern District Peter Moskos. Princeton Univ., $24.95 (304p) ISBN 978-0-691-12655-5 A Harvard-trained sociologist, Moskos set out to do a one-year study of police behavior. Challenged by Baltimore’s acting police commissioner “to become a cop for real,” he accepted. During his six months in…