Arguments Against Police Brutality

2144 Words5 Pages

Numerous studies have been conducted on various facets of police brutality, since it has been one of the controversial issues in our society. Even though it is true that police brutality exists in United States, police officers have been expressing their image by the media as wrongly depicted. Therefore, there are two distinct perspectives on this issue. Sanders (2015) states in her article that the police are actually an occupying force present to control the minority community through fear, intimidation and incarceration (p.740). On the other hand, Jasper (2015) found that blacks are in fact killed by police at a lower rate than their threat to officers would predict. In 2013, blacks made up 42 percent of all cop killers, even though blacks …show more content…

579). Sanders (2015) also suggests the data that in 2001, the U.S. Department of Justice found that around 422,000 adults were estimated to have contact with the police in which the police used physical force or threatened the use of physical force (p.742). Nonetheless, Rodriguez (2012) suggests that even though police brutality does exist, police brutality was wrongly described, so that even lawful restraints on illegal movements conducted by the police officers were often considered ‘police brutality’ (p.305). To avoid further confusion and disagreements, the Supreme Court has applied these four …show more content…

Minorities comprise a majority or near-majority of police officers in a number of cities, and black chiefs of the police run the departments of an even larger number of cities, including LA, Houston, and New Orleans (p.32). Also, Jasper (2015) found that Blacks are in fact killed by police at a lower rate than their threat to officers would predict. In 2013, blacks made up 42 percent of all police killers, even though blacks are only 13 percent of the nation’s population (p.10). Another author of an article “Issues and Controversies On File”, Katz (1996) claims that in large cities such as NYC, the number of deaths attributed to officers has declined over the past two decades, despite the increase in illegal handguns and high-power weaponry that officers now need to defend themselves against (p.33). He also mentioned that on the research that was conducted by Geller and Scott, the Police Executive Research Forum, reported that a police officer in NYC would need to work for 694 years before the officer would be statistically expected to kill a criminal or other civilian; in Milwaukee, it would be 1,299 years and in Chicago, 594 years

More about Arguments Against Police Brutality

Open Document