Police Issues

Thought-provoking essays on crime, justice and policing
 

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Must Impulse Rule?
(2/19/26 #478)


Hasty policing
yields tragic outcomes



What's Up in L.A.?
(1/30/26 #477)


Crime is reportedly down.
But police shootings
are (way) up.



Place Still Matters.
A Lot.

(12/11/25 #476)


A dispute between gangsters
devolves into the massacre
of children



L.A.P.D. Blues
(11/12/25 #475)


Is ideology driving
an ex-cop's prosecution?


Take Over? Take Care!
(Part II)

(10/23/25 #474)


San Francisco lands - for
a time - on the Prez's "hit list"


Take Over? Take Care!
(10/4/25 #473)


Invasions can't fix
what's really broken


Does "Why" Matter?
(8/21/25)


The causes of criminal
violence remain in dispute


A Money Pit
(7/28/25)


Feeding cops and lawyers
is very expensive


Post-Pandemic Blues
(7/7/25)


Thievery, some of it violent, besets our nation's recovery


More Poverty,
Less Trust

(6/23/25)


Citizens who most need the
cops trust them the least


Violence Isn't Down
for the Cops

(5/30/25)


More officers are being murdered. Mostly, with guns.


All in the Family
(5/12/25)


A foot pursuit of hit-and-run
suspects turns into a firefight
with an armed resident


Putting Things Off
(5/30/25)


Pursuits Kill Innocents.
What are the Options?


Gun Control?
What's That?

(4/1/25)


Ideological quarrels beset
gun laws, gun law-making,
and gun law-enforcing


Forewarned is Forearmed
(3/19/25)


Killings of police officers
seem inevitable.
What might help?


Who's Under the Gun?
The ATF

(3/6/25)


Going after gun controllers,
for the usual reasons


Point of View
(1/30/25)


Do scholars really "get"
The Craft of Policing?


All In the Family (II)
(1/6/25)


A decade after Part I,
domestic killings remain commonplace

 



 











 

 


2/25/26  A traffic stop led to the shooting death of a Missouri deputy two days ago. Early the next morning his killer, Richard Dean Bird, 45, opened fire on deputies who had tracked him down. A second deputy was killed and two were wounded. Bird was also killed. It's not the first time that Bird had shot at police. Bird served prison time in Kansas for a 2014 incident in which he fired a rifle at a deputy who was investigating him for a theft. After his 2023 release he moved to Missouri, and was soon charged with a burglary. But he was let go after paying a small fine. Related post

Colin Gray, the father of Colt Gray, the Apalachee High School killer, is on trial for giving his son access to guns despite knowing he was a danger. Marcee, Colin's estranged wife, testified that Colt stayed with her for a time, and that he became very destructive and upredictable. Marcee said that she warned her husband to keep guns away from their son. But she admitted that she never told him about Colin's interest in school shootings, and specifically, his obsession with Nikolas Cruz. Marcie suffered from chronic mental health problems, and Colin eventually moved back in with his dad. Related post

Moved by "the arrests and detention of United States citizens, including children, at times in the dead of night; masked agents unleashing chemical irritants on bystanders and non-violent protestors; the killings of United States citizens by federal officers; and incidents involving racial profiling," New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill issued an executive order barring the Feds from entering State property to enforce civil immigration laws, or using State properties, including parking lots and garages, as a staging ground for that purpose. State employees are also prohibited from allowing such access. Only exception is with a judicial order. Related post

2/24/26  Jalisco New Generation Cartel leader "El Mencho" got his start in San Francisco, where he collected three arrests for drug sales between 1986 and 1992. After a prison term Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes was deported, and in time became the infamous leader of Mexico's premier drug cartel. And so he remained until his death at the hands of Mexican military troops a couple days ago. But his underlings have viciously fought back and killed dozens of Mexican soldiers. And so the cycle continues. Related post

Between 2018-2025 citizens filed "at least 43" complaints of misconduct against Chicago cop Richard Rodriquez Jr. But he remained on a tactical team until yesterday. That's when a city lawyer suddenly pulled him away from a courtroom where he was being deposed on one of the many lawsuits spawned by his team's alleged abuses during stops, searches and arrests. Rodriquez and three colleagues, who were also stripped of their badges, are now on desk duty. Meanwhile the plaintiffs' lawyer is demanding to know why Rodriquez was hauled off, and insists that he be promptly brought back so that his deposition can continue. Related post

Homicides are down across the U.S.; homicide clearances are up. Indeed, those two factors likely go together. According to LAPD Deputy Chief Alan Hamilton, his agency's ability to clear 78 prior-year homicides in 2025 was a product of 2025's low murder count. That, in turn, was likely helped along by various factors, including a higher rate of gun seizures, more arrests for violent crimes, and benefits flowing from community anti-violence programs. The (very) visible presence of immigration agents might have also tamped things down. Related post

2/23/26  About 1:30 a.m. on Sunday, Feb, 22, a small-town North Carolina family called the sheriff about the disappearance of 21-year old Austin Tucker Martin, who lived with his parents and older brother in a ranch home northwest of Raleigh. That was about the same time that two Secret Service agents and a local cop intercepted Martin as he drove into President Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach. Martin had a (very long) shotgun, and when he defied orders to surrender and picked it up, he was shot dead. Martin, who had no known encounters with the law, passed the time doing artwork, which he displayed online. So the question is: Why? Related post

Karl Jacobson was a cop in New Haven, CT for 15 years when he was appointed its chief in 2022. But he suddenly retired in January. That was quickly followed by his arrest on charges of stealing public funds. According to prosecutors, Jacobson, an inveterate gambler whose bets exceeded $4 million in a recent year, reportedly helped finance his hobby with tens of thousands of dollars he snuck out from the agency's drug enforcement and youth activity funds. He apparently started coming clean after underlings discovered the shortages, and told Mayor Justin Elicker that the problem was caused by a "gambling addiction" for which he was seeking help. He's out on $150,000 bond. Related post

Aurora, CO paramedic Peter Cichuniec has been serving a five-year prison sentence for a 2019 episode in which the negligent administration of ketamine caused the death of Elijah McClain. But a judge just ruled that Cichuniec has proven himself a model inmate and released him on probation. Cichuniec, though, didn't actually administer the drug. He had ordered the drug be used and measured it out. But another paramedic actually injected the dose. He, though, was acquitted at trial. So Cichuniec is appealing. Related post

"Not Guilty." Had she been found guilty of manslaughter, former small-town South Carolina cop Cassandra Dollard faced up to thirty years. But a jury just absolved her of criminal blame for the death of Robert Langley, who "had something in his hands" when he stepped out of his car after a protracted high-speed chase. (That "something" was $100 cash.) So she shot him dead. Dollard had worked as a cop at six different agencies during her 30-year career, and was fired twice. Related posts 1   2

Thirty-three-point-five million. Just south of Chicago lies Dolton, IL. An incorporated village of about 20,000, Dalton has its own cops. A decade ago they chased a car that "skidded through a stop sign." Their quarry soon crashed. One occupant, John Kyles, was killed. His companion, Dwayne Dunlap, sustained "severe, catastrophic and permanent injuries." A lawsuit led to that judgment against the city. A judge just declared it must be paid, with interest. That brings the debt to $40.6 million. And yes, it may bankrupt the community. Related post

2/20/26  "Rapid Enforcement, Support, Evaluation, and Triage Center." San Francisco's new approach to combatting the scourge of street drug use is reportedly coming into effect. Instead of jail, as of April 1 deputies can begin taking persons whom they arrest for drugs to a new center, where staff will watch over them while they sober up. Clients are then referred to selected providers for follow-up treatment. At its start, there will only be room for two-dozen clients. But there's hope for expansion. Related post

2/19/26  One had been a Navy Captain. Another, an Army Ranger. Two U.S. Senators and four U.S. Representatives (each happens to be "Blue") released a ninety-second video that urges members of the military to resist following orders they deem illegal. In their view, "the threats to the Constitution aren't just coming from abroad, but from right here at home." Their message was blasted by President Trump, and the Justice Department moved to prosecute the lawmakers for seditious conspiracy. But a D.C. Grand Jury just turned the Government down. Related post

2/18/26  In 2024 an Immigration judge ordered the deportation of Guatemalan man Oscar Vasquez Lopez. And when red lights flashed in his rear-view mirror on a Savannah, GA street two days ago, he pulled over. But when Lopez realized the agents' intentions, he sped away. And ICE chased. Lopez soon rammed a vehicle at an intersection. Its driver, a teacher going to work, was killed. And the community's very upset. Chatham County police can't chase except for violent felonies. Had ICE asked for help, cops say they would have cut the man off without risking a pursuit. But ICE didn't. Meanwhile, Maryland Governor Wes Moore (a "Blue") just barred the state's cops from 287(g) partnerships with ICE. Its officers will no longer help enforce immigration laws. Ditto, New Mexico, whose Governor (also a "Blue") signed a similar measure two weeks ago. Related posts 1   2

2/17/26  Bursts of gunfire upended a hockey game between high-school teams at a Pawtucket, R.I. arena. Officials say that the father of a high-school senior burst into the venue and shot five family members, killing the youth's mother, fatally wounding the youth's sister, and leaving three other family members in critical condition. He then committed suicide. A December, 2025 shooting at nearby Brown University took two lives and wounded nine. Related posts 1   2

2/16/26  A deadlocked jury ended the trial of former Whittier, CA detective Salvador Murillo. In 2020 the driver of a vehicle connected with a robbery backed his car - it now seems, accidentally - into a vehicle occupied by Murillo and his partner, Det. Cynthia Lopez. Both ultimately fired on the driver. As it turns out, the man, Nicholas Carrillo, was unarmed and unconnected with the robbery. But Murillo's shots struck Carrillo in the back and permanently crippled him. Assault charges were filed against both officers. Those against Ms. Lopez were dismissed last year. Whether Murillo will be retried hasn't been decided. Related post

Despite criticism from the (very Blue-ish) L.A. Times, L.A.'s new D.A., Nathan Hochmann, has made good on his pledge to ease up on the cops. Unlike his predecessor, George Gascon, he rarely charges them with using excessive force. According to Hochmann (and Court records bear him out) those cases rarely succeed. Perhaps the most notorious was the prosecution of seven CHP officers for manslaughter in the death of Edward Bronstein, who was "piled on" after a DUI stop. Gascon ultimately dismissed all the charges but one, against the supervisor, and that was disposed of as a misdemeanor. But that officer is no longer a cop. Related posts 1   2

Launched in January, DHS "Operation PARRIS" intends to review the qualifications of all refugees admitted to the U.S. during the four years of the Biden administration. To begin addressing that weighty number - it totals nearly 200,000 - the Feds are targeting the 5,600 who settled in Minnesota. DHS has also moved to rescind a long-standing policy that prohibits detaining refugees simply because they fail to earn lawful permanent status (a "green card") within a year of arrival. Related post

Two ICE officers were placed on leave after a video and witnesses contradicted their justification for shooting an alleged assailant. According to the officers, Alfredo Aljorna and Julio Sosa-Celis went after one of them with a broom handle and a snow shovel during a confrontation in Minneapolis. They then ran off, and during the chase an officer fired, wounding Sosa-Celis. But testimony at their initial hearing suggests that there was no assault, and the judge dismissed the case. FBI agents are now investigating...ICE. Related post

2/13/26  Self-admitted Latin Kings gang member Jaime Rios had served 17 years for murder when he was paroled in 2007. His current lawsuit against Chicago is the latest in a torrent of litigation spawned by the reported misdeeds of retired CPD detective Reynaldo Guevara and his colleagues. Chicago has already paid out tens of millions to recompense those who were wrongfully convicted thanks to lies and false confessions allegedly obtained through force and coercion. Guevara, who is testifying by video from his home, has invoked the Fifth dozens of times. As this is a civil case, the judge has told jurors that his refusal to answer can indeed count. Related post

"Mean Arms" of Georgia has gone out of business. But on the way, it's agreed to pay $1.75 million to settle lawsuits filed by families and survivors of the 2022 massacre at the Tops market in Buffalo, N.Y. "Mean Arms" had made and marketed a small device that allowed persons slinging assault-style rifles to disable the locking mechanisms, required by New York state law, which prevents swapping out the weapons' magazines for high-capacity versions. Thus enabling gunslingers like Payton Gendron to cause even more unspeakable harm. Related post

2/12/26  According to the BBC, the 18-year old who stormed into a remote Canadian schoolhouse had transitioned from male to female and was the subject of repeated mental health calls to police. Jesse Van Rootselaar opened fire at home, killing her mother and a step-brother, then stormed a secondary school and used a handgun and a "long gun" to murder a teacher and five students, ages 12 and 13. She then committed suicide. While Canada's gun death rate is far below that of the U.S., it's nonetheless suffered from a string of school and college shootings. Related post

Forty- eight years ago small-town Missouri woman Donna Hughes-Brown legally emigrated from Ireland with her parents. A green-card holding permanent resident, she's also married and, at 59, a grandma. Problem is, she collected two misdemeanors a decade ago for passing two bad checks totaling $75. So when she returned from an overseas jaunt last July, ICE snatched her at the airport. Mrs. Hughes-Brown spent almost five months locked up before a judge canceled her removal. ICE, though, has said that her behavior "[does]not make for an upstanding lawful permanent resident." They intend to keep using "crimes of moral turpitude" to negate green cards. So there! Related post

2/11/26  Young men striving to reform are recruited by crime-beset communities to counsel their peers and help "interrupt" violence before it occurs. But sometimes they get sucked back into the mix. As in D.C., where two "violence interrupters" are facing charges for a murder. And it's not the first time that a D.C. "interrupter" has gotten crosswise with the law. In September 2024 D.C. cops shot and killed an "interrupter" working for the A.G.'s "Cure the Streets" program. He crashed his car, and when officers showed up he had a gun in his lap. Then reportedly grabbed for a cop's. Related post

Police pursuits are dangerous for the cops. Even after they seemingly end. In Indiana, a wild pursuit - the fleeing vehicle reached 130 mph - was brought to a seemingly successful end by a Trooper who used an "immobilization" technique to stop the suspect's car. But as the officer walked over to confront the driver he was struck by a Sheriff's patrol car that slid out of control as its driver jammed on the brakes at the end of the chase. The trooper was seriously hurt. Related post

2/10/26  "Despite our belief that this is useful technology we recognize that public trust is far more valuable." With these words, a Milwaukee P.D. representative announced that her agency will no longer use facial recognition technology, period. Criticisms of its intrusiveness and propensity for error, and particularly with persons of color, had reached a fever pitch in the city. A prospective deal to supply over two-million jail and booking photos to a data company in exchange for its software was apparently the last straw. Related post

Four Massachusetts State Police officers were indicted over the 2024 death of a trainee from brain injuries suffered during an "unauthorized, unapproved and unsafe" boxing match. Charges include involuntary manslaughter and, in the case of a supervisor, perjury. Lasy year, in "Dying to Serve," the AP attributed "dozens" of police recruit deaths to unsafe police training practices in use across the U.S. Related post

2/9/26  Guilty of 2nd. degree manslaughter. Rendered on February 6th. by a New York judge, the verdict - reportedly the first such conviction in a decade - led to the immediate firing of NYPD Sgt. Erik Duran. Two years ago Sgt. Duran threw a cooler chest at a fleeing drug seller, causing the man to lose control of his motorbike and crash to his death. Although Sgt. Duran testified that he was only trying to keep fellow officers from being run over, the judge apparently concluded that his actions were really intended to prevent the flight of Eric Duprey, who had just sold a small amount of cocaine to an undercover officer. Duran faces a term of five to fifteen years. Related post

Expert testimony about false confessions isn't a given. Ruling in South Dakota v. Timothy Huante, a panel of the South Dakota Supreme Court altogether excluded the proposed testimony of an expert about the issue of false confessions. In this case, the evidence against the accused is substantial, and there is no indication that his confession was coerced. Absent that, there is no "reliable methodology" that jurors can apply to determine whether a confession is false. Reliable data about how often people falsely confess is also lacking, so testimony about its supposed prevalence cannot be admitted. Related post

"A public safety crisis." According to Calif. A.G. Rob Bonta, that's what "ghost guns" have brought on in the no-longer-so-Golden State. Using 3-D printers, readily available gun parts and computer code, virtually anyone can skirt whatever regulations and prohibitions exist and assemble working, unserialized guns at home. So California's suing. It accuses the Gatalog Foundation Inc., CTRLPew LLC and several individuals with knowingly helping customers skirt State and Federal laws by providing them online access to all the code needed to assemble 3-D printed guns in a day's time. Complaint   Related post

Fifty-caliber ammo. manufactured in an Army plant has long been smuggled to the Mexican cartels. Private firms produce the bullets at the Lake City Armory, and their contract permits selling their lethal product to the civilian market. Loads wind up in the hands of smugglers, who then make big bucks hauling the rounds across the border. Where they get used in inter-Cartel squabbles, and against the military and police. Related post

2/6/26  "The system sucks. This job sucks." That's only a snippet of what Homeland Security lawyer Julie Le told the frustrated Minneapolis Federal judge who must deal with the mass of habeas petitions and other motions filed by immigration detainees on which the Government is yet to act. Complaining that she, too was swamped, Ms. Le asked to be held in contempt "so that I could get 24 hours of sleep." And, yes, Ms. Le's detail to help out in Minnesota was cut short. Related post

Newly-installed Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger (she's a "Blue") worries that immersing state and local cops in immigration enforcement damages community trust in the police. So she's ordered an end to all 287(g) agreements between state officers and ICE. Her predecessor, Glenn Youngkin (a "Red") championed State cooperation in immigration matters, and "Red" members of the State legislature bemoan its passing. But the new Guv, a former Federal agent, views the present immigration enforcement drive as "fear-based policing [or] enforcement theater." Related post

2/5/26  "We got away from it a little bit." Newly-installed immigration czar Tom Homan's words reflect the Administration's supposedly renewed emphasis on going after illegal immigrants who pose a threat to public safety. That, asserts Mr. Homan, will be the focus of the two-thousand agents who remain in the Minneapolis area after 700 are pulled back. That re-do was made possible, he says, by the "unprecedented number of counties" that have been turning over unauthorized residents upon their release from jail on local charges. On the other hand, the Washington Post reports that recent lethal missteps by ICE are leading a number of States to strip local agencies of Federal 287(g) authority, which had enabled cops to arrest persons for immigration violations. Related post

2/4/26  California law requires that gun dealers make real-time audio and video recordings of all gun transactions. Enacted in 2024, P.C. Sec. 26806 was unsuccessfully challenged in Federal Court as a breach of the Second Amendment. But the plaintiffs, a coalition of firearms businesses and gun advocates, appealed to the Ninth Circuit. And that's where their challenge presently sits. Related post

Minneapolis ICE agents have shifted from staging major sweeps to targeting specific residences and neighborhoods. That led activists to start following Government cars. And that, in turn, just led agents to arrest, at gunpoint, the occupants of a car that was trailing them. Meanwhile, New York Attorney General Letitia James is preparing to deploy observers clad in "purple safety vests" to watch ICE agents and gather information that could be useful in a "legal action". Related post

Before her 2022 election to Congress, Florida U.S. Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick helped run her family's healthcare company. And, according to a Federal indictment, seized on the opportunity presented by the COVID-19 pandemic to submit a copious amount of false, vaccine-related claims for reimbursement. She allegedly used the proceeds to reimburse donors to her Congressional campaign. And for other things, including a $100,000-plus diamond ring. Related post

2/3/26  Police credit license-plate reader cameras with helping to locate wanted persons and solve crimes. Their use, though, has come under fire from civil liberties advocates, and particularly so as immigration enforcement ramps up. While agencies around the U.S. have shared license plate data with ICE, Detroit, a major user of the cameras, insists it doesn't. But other Michigan cities that wish to deploy the cameras are finding that they must now contend with the "hard questions" that their citizens will inevitably pose. Related post

Brian O'Hara took over as chief two years after the murder of George Floyd forever upended Minneapolis policing. He just told a new set of hires about the challenges they will face gaining - and keeping - citizen trust. That chore has become far more burdensome since ICE invaded his city. So far, though, his agency has successfully "threaded a narrow needle," keeping its distance while only stepping in when it must. And so far, so good. Related post

Federal tax credits have proven a powerful tool for lifting children from poverty. According to a new report from the National Academies, the 2021 American Rescue Plan helped free "more than 2 million children" from the clutches of poverty. It accomplished this by temporarily expanding the Earned Income (EITC) credit and the Child Tax Credit (CTC), thus helping to ease the burden that the devastating pandemic imposed on American families. Related post

 

 



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