Schaffer Online Library of Drug Policy Sign the Resolution for a Federal Commission on Drug Policy

 

Contents | Feedback | Search | DRCNet Home Page | Join DRCNet

DRCNet Library | Schaffer Library | Other Publications | Joseph McNamara Collection


Anguish in Blue Needn't Become Deadly

By Joseph D. McNamara

Newsday - April 9, 1996

Police suicides, police corruption and misconduct, high rates of alcoholism, divorce and mental breakdowns among cops all offer grim confirmation that police work is grueling and stressful. Gilbert & Sullivan said it best a long time ago: "A policeman's lot is not a happy one, when the constabulary's duty is to be done."

The constabulary's job is particularly hard in New York City: A study last year reported a rate of 29 suicides per 100,000 for the NYPD, versus 12 per 100,000 for the general population. And in a telling episode, off-duty Officer Christopher Gargan of Merrick pulled out a Glock 9-mm. weapon at a St. Patrick's Day concert and fatally shot himself in the head. He was only 22.

Nevertheless, in New York and elsewhere, departments are helping officers deal with psychological stress. These improvements not only benefit officers and their families, but spare citizens the consequences of unstable cops.

Of course, a lot of the stress in policing is unavoidable. Cops aren't invited to birthday parties and weddings. People dial 911 only when someone's bleeding or dead. Cops get catapulted from tedious duties into moments of terror and danger, and relentless closeups of human degradation. . Along the way, it becomes far too easy for the police culture to label the world as overrun by dirtbags, ingrates - and other cops. Even entry-level police work is stressful because, unlike rookies in most other large organizations, patrol officers have to make instant life or death decision.

If those decisions are wrong, officers can end up in the morgue, the emergency room, the internal affairs unit or even prison, like the cops who assaulted Rodney King.

During my years as a police chief, I discovered a number of strategies that helped dilute the strew, thus protecting the-public from over-the-edge cops. First, pre-hiring psychological screening is essential. Believe it or not, many police agencies still fail to do adequate background investigations of recruits. Bad cops are hard to get rid of once they obtain civil service tenure.

And people carrying badges and guns who don't belong in police work are under tremendous personal anxiety. They are also time bombs who raise apprehension throughout the ranks. People with a history of psychological problems should not be hired as police officers, period.

On the other hand, even stable people can come unglued in police work. The beat police departments are the ones that drop the John Wayne syndrome and train their personnel to be aware of the inevitability of stress and how to cope with it. Instruction. on proper diet, exercise and how to avoid financial, marital and family problems can all help cops cope with job pressures. Training courses on these subjects are as important as those on the law of arrest.

Free confidential psychological consultation is another essential for officers and their families. It turns out to be a bargain for the public in savings on disability pensions and lawsuits resulting from police misconduct

In addition, police management can take steps to broaden a cop's world. Too often, departments allow officers to sink into a police culture that emphasizes the violence and depravity cops see. In my experience, the overwhelming majority of citizens are law-abiding and want to work with the police to make their neighborhoods safer.

But if officers simply respond to scenes of crime and violence, they miss the positive: owners' and renters' meetings, parent-teacher gatherings, student conferences and business community meetings. They miss the opportunity, as well, to discover citizens who support good police work. The public, for it's part, loses the opportunity to discover that most officers are warm human beings eager to explain their jobs and to show people how to prevent crime.

Given a chance, ordinary citizens can come to appreciate what cops do; and this greatly increases public confidence. Relating to normal public values also encourages cops to break the police code of silence and to help in weeding bad cops off the force.

One ironic source of stress is that police officers consistently underrate how much the public respects them. The police would handle personal pressure better if they knew that most people value their work. For example, a recent Gallup poll showed that 52 percent of the public expressed high confidence in the police, surpassed only by confidence in the military and organized religion. The police rating was much higher than that for business, Congress, the presidency or TV and other news organizations. And why not? What's wrong with a line of work that aims to protect human life and to prevent innocent people from being victimized by law-breakers?

Overall, the best way to minimize stress in policing is to run a good police department. That means a department that acts in partnership with community groups. It means a department with the vision and courage to take the steps necessary to minimize public stress about both crime and bad cops.


Contents | Feedback | Search | DRCNet Home Page | Join DRCNet

DRCNet Library | Schaffer Library | Other Publications | Joseph McNamara Collection