Orlando Sentinel

‘Law and order’ pose undermines law, order

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So President Donald Trump was just joking when he suggested police officers should play basketball with the heads of suspects against the roofs of police cars? That’s what White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said she believed Monday. The tragedy is that she’s right.

One of the many things that we have learned about the nation’s self-described “law and order president” is his mammoth appetite for laughter and applause. As a result, he has become the first president in recent memory to have not just one but two speeches repudiated by his host organizati­ons in the same week.

First the Boy Scouts distanced themselves from the starkly political and noticeably bawdy monologue he delivered to thousands of young men and boys at their national jamboree.

Three days later, police officials were doing the same to his advice on policing.

When arresting “these thugs,” Trump said Friday to law enforcemen­t officers on Long Island, “please don’t be too nice.”

Hesitant laughter at that remark turned to applause as Trump continued: “Like when you guys put somebody in the car and you’re protecting their head, you know, the way you put their hand over, like, don’t hit their head and they’ve just killed somebody, don’t hit their head. I said, ‘You can take the hand away, OK?’ ”

Oh? Is the president of the United States giving a green light to police officers who want to bang suspects around before they’ve been formally charged?

“I believe he was making a joke at the time,” said Sanders as if she was delivering an autopsy report.

The Suffolk County Police Department was not amused. In an official statement, the department pointed out that it “will not tolerate roughing up of prisoners” and that violations are taken “extremely seriously.”

That was comforting to hear, since that department has been under federal oversight by the U.S. Department of Justice since 2013 amid allegation­s of discrimina­tion against Latinos and immigrants.

The Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police issued a statement on the use of force by police, saying officers are trained to treat everyone with “dignity and respect.”

In an email exchange, Paul Butler, a former District of Columbia prosecutor and author of the new best-seller “Chokehold: Policing Black Men,” called Trump’s remarks an “encouragem­ent to wanton police violence” and “one of the most irresponsi­ble comments from a president in the last 50 years.”

Still, some police unions and other groups like Blue Lives Matter dismissed Trump’s remarks with the equivalent of: Hey, lighten up; it was a joke.

For example, Detective Steve Loomis, president of the Cleveland Police Patrolmen’s Associatio­n, excused Trump’s comments in a statement to CNN as “completely taken out of context by the racially exclusive and divisive profiteers” seeking to question Trump’s “support of all law-abiding citizens and the law enforcemen­t (officers) that live and work among them.”

As a law-abiding citizen who seeks effective law enforcemen­t, I beg to differ. I oppose Trump’s idea of a joke because it gives a simple-minded nod and a wink to the sort of roughhouse policing that alienates police from the communitie­s they’re assigned to serve.

Former Dallas Police Chief David O. Brown learned that lesson on the job. In his new memoir, “Called to Rise,” he describes how he focused on “locking away villains” until he was assigned to a community policing program in the 1990s.

By having police officers “connect with the people they served” through community activities, Dallas’ crime rate took a historic decline between 2010 and 2015, until budget cuts led to staffing shortages.

Alas, I’m not holding my breath waiting for Trump to discover the value of community policing. At present, he seems to prefer cracking heads — or encouragin­g others to do it.

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