Title: History of Policing
1History of Policing
Wyatt Earp
Ofc. Pete Malloy
2A BRIEF HISTORY OF POLICING
- Pre-Colonial Policing in England
- Colonial Policing in America
- Post-Revolutionary Policing
- The Rise of the Police Department
(1790s-1840s) - The Political Era
- The Service Department (1840s-1920s)
- The Reform Era
- Crime Fighting as Police Business
(1930s-1970s) - The Modern Era
- Community-Problem Solving (1980s - ????)
3Early Policing in England
- Era of voluntary peacekeeping
- 1285 Statute of Winchester - Citizens are
required to pursue criminals under the direction
of the Constable. - 1361 Justices of the Peace appointed by the Crown
- Watchmen introduced by King Charles II
(1649-1685).
4Early Policing in England
- 1748 - Henry Fielding author of Tom Jones
takes over as JP of the Bow Street Court - Inquiry into the Causes of (Crime)
- Leads efforts to educate the public about the
crime problem - Covent Garden Journal - Also publishes the Weekly Pursuit - a 1 page
flyer (precursor of the modern .Ten Most Wanted
List) - Organizes an ex-constable band called the Bow
Street Runners - salaried group of vigilantes
but also the first London force.
5American Colonial Period
- The Early Colonies An Era of Self-policing
- Similar backgrounds, similar religious beliefs,
little to steal, nowhere to hide, towns provided
protection against the wilderness. (similar to
the society found in Tristan de Cuhna) - (Of course, the settlers were hardly the cream
of European society. Many were legal and
religious castoffs.)
6American Colonial Period
- Era of British Rule Two principal police
institutions - The Constable
- Chosen by the townspeople
- Job - Suppress violations of community
religious (moral) edicts, primarily victimless
crimes. Keep drunks in line. Watch for gambling
and prostitution. - The Night Watch
- A patrol of volunteers supervised by a
Constable - Report drunks and single women out after dark.
- Duty was avoided by paying others to take your
shift. (precursor of the paid police force)
7American Colonial Period
- During this period, citizens, regardless of their
economic status, were responsible for the
identification and pursuit of criminal offenders.
- Once a criminal was identified, it was the
citizens responsibility to raise the hue and
cry and to join the posse to track down the
criminal. - In those days, the penalties were severe so
criminals had the incentive to run. - Detection of crime was largely a private affair.
Initiatives were encouraged through rewards paid
to informers.
8American Colonial Period
- While night watch groups were established in the
northern colonies, groups of white men organized
slave patrols in the southern colonies. - Slave patrols were responsible for controlling,
returning, and punishing runaway slaves. - These slave patrols are generally considered to
be the first "modern" police organizations in
this country.
9American Colonial Period
- Policing on the western frontier varied widely.
- Settlers originally from northern colonies
created marshals and police forces similar to
those in northern colonies. - Settlers from southern colonies relied on
sheriffs and posses. - In many western settlements, however, there was
no formal organized law enforcement. In these
areas, groups of vigilantes were formed by
volunteer citizens to combat any threat to the
order of the settlements.
10The First Police Departments
- London (The British Model)
- Formed in 1829 under the command of Robert Peel.
- His officers were first called Peelers and
later Bobbies, a derogatory term at first used
by British citizens suspicious of this new police
presence in their community.
11- Police force of over 1000 officers with a new
approach to crime fighting. - The MPF became a model for all British provincial
police forces. - Policing was a political business even in Merry
Ole England. Peel founded the Metropolitan
Police Force when he was Home Secretary in Lord
Liverpools Cabinet. The success of the
Metropolitan Police of London led to Peels
eventual rise to Prime Minister of England in
1835.
12(No Transcript)
13Peelers PrinciplesThe police are the public
and the public are the police.
- The basic mission for which the police exist is
to prevent crime and disorder. - The ability of the police to perform their duties
is dependent upon the public approval of police
actions. - Police must secure the willing co-operation of
the public in voluntary observation of the law. - Police seek and preserve public favor not by
catering to public opinion, but by constantly
demonstrating absolute impartial service to the
law.
14Peelers Principles
- The degree of co-operation of the public that can
be secured diminishes proportionately to the
necessity of the use of physical force. - Police use physical force to the extent necessary
to secure observance of the law or to restore
order only when persuasion, advice, warning is
found to be insufficient.
15Boston The American Prototype
- When first initiated by the City Council in 1824,
the department, under the supervision of the
city Marshall, was charged with "the care of the
streets, the care of the common sewers, and the
care of the vaults, and whatever else affects the
health, security, and comfort of the city." - In these early days, an officer on duty carried a
six-foot pole, painted blue and white to protect
himself, and a "police rattle" to call for
assistance.
16Boston Police DepartmentA Brief Historical
Chronology
- 1635 First night watch established.
- 1788 The word "police" appeared for the fist
time, designating a specific office, "Inspector
of Police". - 1822 The Town of Boston became the City of
Boston. Increases in the population businesses
created increased demand for police patrol. - 1838 Law passed permitting day patrol. City had
a Day Police and a Night Watch, which operated
completely independently of one another. - 1854 Boston Police Department established,
structured after the model developed by Sir
Robert Peeler. - 1858 Telegraph system completed, linking central
office and police stations.
17- 1861 White cotton gloves worn by the officers
for the first time. Thereafter, "full uniform"
included the wearing of such gloves. - 1872 The Great Boston Fire of November 9 and 10
which destroyed 776 buildings. The fire was
discovered by a patrolman who was chasing boys on
Lincoln Street. - 1873 First mounted patrol established.
- 1903 First motor patrol wagon placed in service
a Stanley Streamer touring car operated by a
chauffeur the police officer sat on higher seat
so that he could look over areas back fences.
18The New York Police Department
- In 1844, the NYPD was formed by combining day and
night forces into a single integrated PD, the
first such arrangement in this country. - NYPD adopted a uniform so citizens could easily
recognize officers (Blue becomes the color of the
force in 1853), and a paramilitary structure like
the British. - No training, meager salaries, limited public
respect. Politics influences too much of their
activities. - Boston and Philadelphia give its officers guns
for the first time in 1854 and NY follows suit in
1857.
19WHERE DID THE TERM "COPS" COME FROM?
- When the first NY police force began patrolling
in the summer of 1845, they only had badges on
their civilian clothing. The badges were 8
pointed stars with the seal of the City at the
center and were made of stamped copper. The
newspapers of the time referred to the new force
as the "Star Police" but people seeing the shiny
copper shields began to call the new force
"Coppers" which was later shortened to "Cops."
20Alternative Theories
- Copper as slang for policeman is first found in
print in 1846, according to the Oxford English
Dictionary. The most likely explanation is that
it comes from the verb "to cop" meaning to seize,
capture, or snatch, dating from just over a
century earlier (1704). - There is also a British police term, Constable On
Patrol, which may account for the term "cops" in
England. - The French call their police gendarmes, which
came from gens d'arme (people with weaponry)
which ranked just below knight in medieval armies
21Early Police Forces in America
22Nashville PD 1870
23Nashville 1890 The winter uniform
24Chattanooga PD 1910
251919 Call Box
261920
27Memphis PD 1921
281922
291923
30SWAT 1920s
311925 Motorcycle Squad
32Armored Chase Car 1935
33Radio Cars 1936
34(No Transcript)
351950
3620th Century Policing
- Technology changes police operations
- The telegraph
- The telephone
- Walkie-talkies
- Cars
- Radio-cars (aka Angels of Death)
- Radar
- Computers
- Computers in cars
- Crime analysts
- New training techniques/Police academies
- New weaponry
37Reform
- Wickersham Commission of 1931
- Presidents Commission on Law Enforcement and the
Administration of Justice 1967 - National Advisory Commission on Criminal Justice
Standards and Goals 1973 - Criminology as a college major.
38The Job Today
- Numbers
- Federal Structure
- Salaries
39Number of Fulltime Law Enforcement Personnel
(2003)
40American Police Agencies by Population Served
(2003)
41Average Salaries for Police Officers, by City
Size (2005)
42Average Salaries for Police Chiefs (2005)
43The Chiefs of Big City America
44The public image of police officers and police
departments today
45How much confidence do you have in the ability of
the police to protect you from violent crime?
- A Quite Not None
- great a lot very at all
- deal much
- 2000 (Aug) 20 42 31 6
- 1999 (Mar) 29 41 25 4
- 1998 (0ct) 19 36 37 8
- 1995 (Sep) 20 30 39 9
- 1993 (0ct) 14 31 45 9
- 1989 14 34 42 8
- 1985 15 37 39 6
- 1981 15 34 42 8
46Q How much respect do you have for the police in
your area?
- A Hardly
- great deal Some any
- 2000 (Aug) 60 30 9
- 1999 (Mar) 64 29 7
- 1991 (Mar) 60 32 7
- 1967 77 17 4
- 1965 70 22 4
47Q How high would you rate the honesty ethical
standards of people in these different fields?
- Very High Ave. Low Very High Low
- Clergy 15 39 33 7 2
- Doctors 10 42 38 6 3
- Policemen 8 34 42 10 4
- Journalists 4 23 54 13 2
- Bankers 4 23 53 14 3
- Lawyers 3 15 43 25 11
- Congressmen I 10 43 32 11
- Car Salesmen I 4 32 41 18
48How would you rate the ____ that serve your
community in accomplishing their criminal justice
mission?
- Excellent Only Fair Not Sure
- or Good or Poor
- Police 64 34 2
- Prosecutors 48 44 9
- Judges 45 48 7
- Prisons 32 54 14
- Parole Boards 22 57 21
49Police operations
50Impact of Timeliness in Reporting Crime
Probability of an Arrest Crime
Reported While In Progress 33 1 Minute
Afterwards 9 10 Minutes Afterwards 5
51Reasons for Not Calling the Police Private
Matter Police Would Fear of Didnt
Want Not Be Effective Reprisal CRIME To
Bother Them ( Not Reported) Robbery 27 45
0 (35) Burglary 30 63 2
(42) Sex Offenses 40 50 5
(49) Family 65 17 7 Crimes
(50) Auto 20 60 20 Theft (11)
Other than Rape