The Columbus Dispatch

Establishi­ng and maintainin­g a culture of accountabi­lity is crucial

- Jack D’aurora is a partner with The Behal Law Group. jdaurora@ behallaw.com

potential threats until it was too late. My performanc­e was, well, not good.

I watched recruits perform. Besides dealing with potential and obvious threats, there’s the stress element and dealing with distractio­ns. You hope the training takes over instinctiv­ely and the recruits will think clearly and not emotionall­y, but mistakes are made. And when a recruit errs, instructor­s move in to discuss what went wrong and alternativ­es that were overlooked.

Back to the primary question: how do we minimize mistakes? Let’s start with the premise they’re inevitable. As Meader puts it, “We only hire imperfect human beings because that’s all that’s available.” He places emphasis on the culture of a police department and advocates a culture of training, accountabi­lity and discipline.

“We train beyond the standards mandated for us,” Meader says. Minimizing errors is a matter of good initial training, realistic scenarios and continuing education, his instructor­s explained. Meader stated it’s a matter of “trying to develop good habit patterns, similar to muscle memory in sports. And what we do has to comply with the law, and so we regularly train on legal issues that affect our work.”

When there’s a problem, the situation is investigat­ed, and, if warranted, remedial training is mandated. The mistakes made by officers are used as training opportunit­ies for others. It’s how you develop, Meader says, “a culture of accountabi­lity.”

Still, there are complicati­ons. The Plain View project revealed that several Philadelph­ia police officers were posting bigoted and hatefilled posts on social media. Were warning signs overlooked? Can these officers be trusted? Should they be required to undergo evaluation, or should they be dismissed? The point is, there are subsurface issues that affect the integrity of a police force and have to be dealt with.

And there’s the matter of what the public thinks it knows about police work from the usually unrealisti­c world of TV and movies. Our predetermi­ned attitudes set our expectatio­ns when we watch body cam footage.

Adding to the complexity is the judicial system. Sometimes police officers are not indicted or are acquitted in situations that to the public call for a different result. Juries — there’s that human element again — can get things wrong. Or maybe these are situations where we think we know better, even though we didn’t sit through the grand jury proceeding­s or trial and listen to all the testimony and see all the evidence.

At the risk of appearing to be an apologist for law enforcemen­t, where there is human endeavor, there will always be error. The best we can do is conduct routine training and remedial training, when required, and foster a culture of accountabi­lity and discipline so as to minimize mistakes.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States