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Chapter 4 Police in Society: History and Organization

Chapter 4 Police in Society: History and Organization. Learning Objectives. Describe how law enforcement developed in feudal England Summarize characteristics of the first law enforcement agencies Discuss the development of law enforcement in the United States

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Chapter 4 Police in Society: History and Organization

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  1. Chapter 4 Police in Society: History and Organization

  2. Learning Objectives • Describe how law enforcement developed in feudal England • Summarize characteristics of the first law enforcement agencies • Discuss the development of law enforcement in the United States • Analyze the problems of early police agencies • Discuss how reformers attempted to create professional police agencies

  3. Learning Objectives • Describe the major changes in law enforcement between 1970 and today • Be familiar with the major federal law enforcement agencies • Summarize the differences among state, county, and local law enforcement • Explain the role of technology in police work

  4. The History of Police • Origins of police traced to early English society • Before 1066 BCE: • Pledge System - families banded together for protection • Prior to the thirteenth Century in England: • Shires • Similar to counties • Reeves • Appointed to supervise the territory

  5. The History of Police • In the thirteenth Century England: • Watch system • Employed watchmen to protect against robberies, fires, and disturbances • In 1326: • The office of the Justice of the Peace was created

  6. Private Police and Thief Takers • During early eighteenth century: • Rising crime rates encouraged and new form of private, monied police who profited from legal and illegal conduct as informal police departments • These private police were referred to as “Thief Takers”

  7. Creating Public Police • 1829: Sir Robert Peel, England’s home secretary lobbied an “Act for Improving the Police in and near the Metropolis” Established the first organized police force in London with over 1,000 men • By 1856, all boroughs and counties in England were required to form their own police force

  8. Law Enforcement in Colonial America • Paralleled British model • County Sheriff • Collecting taxes, supervising elections, and performing other matters of business • Instead of patrolling or seeking out crime, the Sheriff reacted to citizens’ complaints and investigated crimes

  9. Early Police Agencies • Boston created first formal U.S. police dept. in 1838 • New York Police – 1844 • Philadelphia Police – 1854 • Conflict between police and the public was born in the difficulty that untrained, unprofessional officers had in patrolling the streets of cities and controlling labor disputes

  10. Early Police Agencies • Police during the nineteenth century: • Involved foot patrols • Were regarded as incompetent and corrupt • Police agencies evolved slowly during the second half of the nineteenth century • Uniforms were introduced in New York (1853) • Communication links between precincts using telegraph (1850s) • Bicycles introduced (1897) • Primary responsibility was maintaining order

  11. Policing in the Twentieth Century • The emergence of professionalism • The 1960s and Beyond • Policing in the 1970s • Policing in the 1980s • Policing in the 1990s

  12. The Emergence of Professionalism • 1893 International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) • Called for a civil service police force • August Vollmer • Most famous police reformer • Instituted university training for young officers • Helped to develop the school of Criminology at the University of California, at Berkeley

  13. The 1960s and Beyond • Turmoil and crisis in the 1960s • Supreme Court decisions impacted police • Civil rights of suspects expanded significantly • Civil unrest between the public and police • Rapidly growing crime rate in the 1960s • Both violent and property crimes increased

  14. The 1970s • 1970s • There were structural changes in police departments, increased federal support for criminal justice • Law Enforcement Assistance Administration provided resources: • Improved police training • Supported innovative police research • More woman and minorities were recruited for police work

  15. The 1980s and 1990s • 1980s • Emergence of community policing, unions fought for increase in salaries, state and local budgets were cut • 1990s • Rodney King case prompted an era of police reform • Police departments embraced forms of policing that stressed cooperation with the community and problem solving

  16. Policing and Law Enforcement Today • Law Enforcement agencies are adapting to the changing nature of crime • (Ex: terrorism and internet fraud) • 700,000 sworn law enforcement officers throughout these jurisdictions: • Federal • State • County • Metropolitan • Private

  17. Federal Law Enforcement Agencies • U.S. Justice Department Agencies: • Federal Bureau of Investigations • Drug Enforcement Administration • Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives • U.S. Marshals • Department of Homeland Security Agencies: • Customs and Border Protection (CBP) • The Secret Service

  18. State Law Enforcement Agencies • First agency was the Texas Rangers, created in 1835 • First truly modern state police agencies: • 1903 – Connecticut • 1905 – Pennsylvania • State police agencies • 60,000 officers and 30,000 civilians • Primarily responsible for highway patrol and traffic law enforcement

  19. County Law Enforcement Agencies • Today sheriffs’ offices contain 330,000 full-time employees including 175,000 sworn personnel • Provide court security • Operate the jail system • Duties vary widely depending on size

  20. Metropolitan Law Enforcement Agencies • Range in size from agencies with 40,000 officers to departments with only 1 part-time officer • Nearly 13,000 departments with over 460,000 sworn personnel • Majority of departments have fewer than 50 officers and serve a population under 25,000 • Most provide a wide variety of services and functions

  21. Private Policing • Private security has become a multimillion-dollar industry • 10,000 firms and 1.5 million employees • People employed in private security outnumber public police by almost three to one • Privatized security costs less than public officers

  22. Technology and Law Enforcement • There is little doubt that the influence of technology on policing will continue to grow: • Crime Mapping • License Plate Recognition Technology • Digitizing Criminal Identification • Automated Fingerprint Identification Systems • Digital Dental Records • DNA Testing

  23. Future Technology • Genetic algorithms • Augmented Reality technology • Automated Biometric Identification System

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