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The True Mission of Policing:
Make Good People Feel Safe

Brian Boetig

 

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The overwhelming majority of the U.S. population is comprised of law-abiding, good-natured people. During the course of a law officer’s career, it can become more difficult for an officer to believe that most of society’s members are good people because the preponderance of their time is spent dealing with good people at their lowest moments and a small fraction of the population that intentionally seeks to prey on others. Failing to recognize that more people are good than bad is a precursor to the degenerating disease of cynicism, which plagues many criminal justice professionals. When officers focus all their attention on detecting and apprehending the criminal element, they will miss golden opportunities to engage in activities that make honest citizens feel safe. 

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Officers have as much of an obligation to make the good people appreciate them as they do in making the wicked worrisome of their presence. For every minute officers spend arresting a crook, a comparable amount of effort should be spent befriending a business owner, conversing with a homeowner or acting as a community ambassador to a visitor.

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As often as criminals communicate among their unscrupulous brethren about police activities, so do the finer people in society. The topic of neighborhood banter should be the increased number of engaging police officers patrolling the street or the interest an officer took to inquire from a resident about concerns they have about crime or other nuisances in their neighborhood. Not only will the public's confidence in law enforcement be escalated and contribute to an improved sense of security, but officers will also be taking positive steps in countering the corruption of cynical thoughts in their own minds, the worst enemy they will battle throughout their career.

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There is no suggestion that a blind eye be turned to criminals, but rather, ensuring officers focus on the benefits of making the good people of society feel safe. Once plagued with cynicism, the high stature that law enforcement deserves begins to deteriorate.

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The true mission of effective, community-supported policing is simple: make good people feel safe. Detecting criminal activity and arresting offenders is a noble and important function of policing, but it is only a small objective in the much more grandiose and critical mission for 21st century law enforcement professionals.

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