Pubdate: Wed, 01 Mar 2000 Source: Sacramento Bee (CA) Copyright: 2000 The Sacramento Bee Contact: P.O.Box 15779, Sacramento CA 95852 Feedback: http://www.sacbee.com/about_us/sacbeemail.html Website: http://www.sacbee.com/ Forum: http://www.sacbee.com/voices/voices_forum.html COPS UNDER SIEGE: SCANDALS IN NEW YORK, L.A. COULD HAPPEN ANYWHERE At a time when the crime rate has plummeted all across the country, you might expect the nation's police to be universally hailed as heroes. In an odd turn, they are under siege as never before. Sadly, in too many communities the men and women who wear badges are resented, regarded by citizens they are sworn to protect as an occupying force. From the Ramparts precinct in Los Angeles to the Bronx in New York, police are feared, distrusted and despised. For the moment, it's the police departments in the country's two biggest cities that face the most serious breakdown in public confidence. In New York, where a young African immigrant was mistakenly gunned down by four white officers, angry citizens blame overly aggressive police tactics and racism. In Los Angeles, where one officer has already admitted shooting innocent suspects and planting false evidence, a spreading scandal threatens to engulf the entire force. Forty convictions have been reversed because of allegations the police lied in court. Twenty-one LAPD officers have been relieved of duty. Another 70 are under investigation. Police departments not caught in the hurricane today can ill afford to ignore the crises in those two big cities, which could happen anywhere. The cops alone are not to blame. We, the law-abiding, good citizens, have allowed it to happen. The public has been far too willing to close its eyes when the rights of fellow citizens are violated -- particularly if those citizens are poor, black, brown, young or addicted. To fight the scourge of drugs and crime and street gangs and violence, we've stood by as police jettisoned important constitutional protections for "those" people. The Fourth Amendment's constitutional protections against unreasonable search and seizure has been a consistent victim. Young black men in New York, Hispanics in California and young people everywhere complain of being stopped and frisked routinely, with or without probable cause. Joseph McNamara, the respected former police chief of San Jose, has been sounding the alarm for some time. He blames the hyperventilated rhetoric about "the war on drugs," which sends the wrong message to police - that they are soldiers and the accused is the enemy. In a war, the enemy is not entitled to the constitutional protections that safeguard us all. Federal drug policy that rewards local police departments that wage drug wars in poor neighborhoods adds immeasurably to the problem. Drug enforcement is necessary, but when it slips into zealotry it leads to the kind of excess that produces police scandals. Whom should we blame? Politicians with their rabid tough-on-crime rhetoric; the public, which has been seduced by it; and, yes, even the media, who've fanned the flames with reporting that's too often long on sensationalism and short on thoughtful analysis. We are all to blame. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D