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Portland Police Association

New PPB Union Chief Says Another Dumbass Thing

by: torridjoe

Wed Dec 10, 2008 at 13:45:00 PM PST

Fresh on the heels of blaming Portlanders for why police now tase people just for getting uppity, new Portland Police Association leader Scott Westerman is at it again, making sure we understand his view that it's always someone else's fault when cops do something wrong.

I've linked to the Oregonian story on this, but the online version has a section cut from it that contains the line in the printed version that made me shake my head about this new guy again. If you didn't follow the link yet, Portlander Eric Bryant used a little-cited law allowing citizens to ticket other citizens this summer, nailing policeman Chadd Stensgaard (does he get paid by the letter?)* for parking illegally in a non-emergency situation. Clearly public safety vehicles should have the ability and right to park just about anywhere they need to in an emergency. "Lunch" does not qualify.  "Depositing a check" doesn't, either, nor does "more coffee and donuts." 

In the printed version, Westerman's response after listening to Bryant's press conference on the new tickets reads this way: "He's the one trying to cause financial hardship to my officers." Sweet fancy Jesus, talk about an oppression complex! "Financial hardship" for a $35 ticket?  For people who have good paying jobs? What a load of fucking nonsense, really. What does that make the $250 fine when a HOMELESS person sits on the sidewalk for more than an hour? Financial nuclear devastation?

This is just absurd passing of the buck, and reflects a poor eye for both public relations and the sense in Portland that cops are mostly arrogant pricks who think they can do whatever they want because they're cops. I'm not saying that's true; I'm saying that Westerman is doing himself no favors by repeatedly saying things that reinforce such a construct.

Matt Davis at the Portland Mercury is carving out quite a niche as police watchdog; both the tasing story and this one are originally his, and here's the story that PM broke a day before The O's version. If you can believe it, Westerman says something ELSE that's brash and stupid:

"Mr. Bryant has got a bone to pick and he's got the right to do that," Westerman continues. "But he's on a crusade, he was camped out at the parking garage next to the police bureau. All he's going to do is force the city into creating formal legal exceptions for Police Officers, which he's not going to like." [emph me]

What he's clearly implying is that stuff like parking in a "no government spot" to eat lunch will become legal in the City, but that's surely not what the transportation bureau is saying in The O's piece, again only available in the printed version:

"What we want to do is continue to allow emergency vehicles access to parking they need to do their business to protect people and property," said Cheryl Kuck, of the city transportation bureau. "At the same time, we want them to be more responsible and have some rules."

Catch that? DOT is suggesting that the police "need to be more responsible." That doesn't sound like the change Westerman is alleging will occur, that the City will simply do their bidding so they can continue to blow off the law. And now that this has happened again, the "but we have an informal agreement!" excuse REALLY is not going to fly any more. Suck it up and find a parking spot like the rest of us. We know it's tough; we actually have to do it if we want to leave our car. 

 

Discuss :: (0 Comments)

New PDX Police Union Chief: We Tase, Coz You're a Punk

by: torridjoe

Fri Nov 28, 2008 at 16:04:14 PM PST

Update, midnight--via Bogdanski the jury's ruling today on excessive force via taser, apparently used for compliance by a detective in Seattle...

Update, Saturday 530pm--turns out tasing can also be an occupational hazard...

This week's Portland Mercury has a very interesting piece by Matt Davis on the use of Tasers, particularly of late in the Rose City. What The Merc initially found was a drop in the use of tasers over the last three to four years--which sounds like good news, except for informed supposition that the usage pattern seems to have shifted: originally touted for "less-than-lethal" situations, now compliance instead of submission in order to directly protect public safety, is more often the goal.

While the evidence for Portland is generally anecdotal (itself an issue, given the bureau's apparent refusal to publicly track situation and outcome data associated with tasering), the Merc relies on global taser data published in Australia that indicates a sense of "mission creep" among police across multiple jurisdictions:

"Tasers were initially introduced to provide police with an alternative to using lethal force in extremely high-risk incidents," says a 114-page report on global Taser use issued this month by the ombudsman's office for the state of New South Wales, Australia. "However, in many jurisdictions, Tasers are increasingly being used by police in situations where high levels of risk are not present, and police could likely manage the situation effectively without resorting to force...For example," the report continues, "On some occasions Tasers are being used in the first instance on people who are being uncooperative or non-compliant, but who are not acting in an aggressive or threatening manner."

Now, ordinarily I might not jump so quickly to allow Australia's empirical study to characterize the situation in Portland, especially without more precise data from our bureau on usage patterns. But the new head of the police union, Scott Westerman, does a bang-up job of reflecting exactly the kind of sentiment that would lead to a broader, more aggressive style of use:

"As more and more people mistakenly believe it's socially acceptable to publicly challenge the police, it creates an environment where people think that it is okay to ignore a uniformed police officer giving them commands," Westerman continues. "The environment in Portland allows this more frequently than in other cities."

I had to read that a couple of times to make sure he was saying what I thought he was saying, but he is: Westerman is telling us that Portland tases people because they're disrespectful punks who are insufficiently restrained by the city's social culture.

I frankly don't know what he's referring to when he talks about "social acceptability," other than the idea that Portland residents may actually better understand their LEGAL rights to challenge police activity, and asserting that knowledge is more acceptable here than elsewhere. It is entirely legal to challenge police on their behavior regarding your rights, certainly until one is told they are under detention for some reason (not arrest, but detention--as in, when you ask "am I free to go," they say no.") Cops of course don't like to have their authority challenged, and Westerman is pretty clear that in his view, it's this permissiveness about boldly attempting to assert one's rights that's the problem--not, say, the fact that Portlanders tend to pose a more consistent threat to public safety, which would explain the tasings on a more rattional-legal basis.

By giving this response to the question of changing usage patterns at PPB, Westerman not only implicitly admits that the focus HAS shifted from less-than-lethal to compliance circumstances--but pins that shift on cultural issues in the COMMUNITY, rather than those of the police bureau. In other words, if people would just shut up and do exactly as they're told without being rude or asking questions, they wouldn't be asking for the short sharp shock. 

I don't think I need to explain how disturbing an attitude this is for the head of the policeman's union to express, do I? Tasers aren't being used because they're a safe way to protect people from harming themselves or others; they're being used because people often give cops a hard time about being stopped and/or detained. To me, that's a flatly unacceptable use of force by the police--a mouthy hooker or junkie is NOT a safety situation. 

So Portlanders beware--if you think demanding your rights is an opportunity that law enforcement should be granting you, you might be in for a shock.

Discuss :: (4 Comments)

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