There are not enough cops. Hardly anyone wants to pay for more. And nobody is quite sure how to add more men and women to the "Thin Blue Line." (READ the
January
chapter here)
The demographics of who serves in law enforcement are changing in terms of race, ethnicity, gender, and even age. (READ the
February
chapter here)
Training methods are rooted more in tradition and convention than in the realities of what you face on the street. Updating these methods elicits howls from some trainers. (
March
)
The public doesn't really hate you. Some of it doesn't love you that much either. (
April
)
You will likely gravitate toward a specialty such as K-9, SWAT, or investigations at some point in your career. This trend will be even more prevalent as we move deeper into this century. (
May
)
Women will play a greater role in law enforcement in this century. They won't find it easy to balance career and family. Neither will their male counterparts. (
June
)
Patrol is still one of the most critical operation in law enforcement. It is both the "protect" and the "serve" part of the job. (
July
)
SWAT's focus on physical strength and endurance is being challenged by politicians more interested in diversity than tactical performance. (
August
)
Since 9/11, you've actually done a damn fine job improving your ability to prevent and respond to terrorist attacks. On behalf of all American civilians, thank you for your vigilance and your service. Unfortunately, you still can't relax your guard. (
September
)
Policymakers make rules of engagement for the least common denominator of officers. This is true, even though the experience level and education level of the vast majority of American law enforcement officers far exceeds that common denominator. (
October
)
Regardless of where you work, no matter how affluent or remote, violent criminal gangs are going to be a big problem for you in the coming years. Gang investigators we have talked to say you can thank Hollywood and the music industry for making gang culture so attractive to kids. (
November
)
Using less-lethal force can be controversial. Not using less-lethal force can be even more controversial. Weapons technology will likely outpace policy and the political will of your local government. (
This month, page 34
)
We hope that you learned something from this feature series. We certainly did.
And one of the things we discovered very quickly was that we could have written hundreds of features on this topic and still barely scratched the surface.
The truth is that the state of American law enforcement is a very fluid thing. Because of the nature of our project, we pretty much had to commit to certain topics well in advance. This gave us time to round up authoritative sources and do our research.
But that advance time often worked against us. So while we were working on features on policy and gang enforcement, the world economy went down a rabbit hole and we are all now living in Recessionland. We would have liked to respond to that issue in this series, but we didn't have time. The economic meltdown snuck up on us like it did everyone else.