And right now you guys are losing. How you right that ship is up to you guys. All I know is I think getting rid of the dummies who are cops just to break skulls is a good first move.
For sure. I’m just not a baby with the bath water guy, and the really egregious misconduct cases are dwarfed by false and vexatious allegations. Somewhere in the middle lies the relatively modest number of genuine misconduct matters that are of a fairly serious nature. And of course use of force cases are only a portion of this. Caution needs to be exercised in stripping pay or employment status.
No matter how good we get, we’ll never be faster than the witness who captures video (often selectively) of part of an interaction that is ugly to watch. Usually they’re the product of lawful and appropriate actions in bad circumstances, but it takes not long at all for a simply uninformed or downright bad/malicious take to go viral. That’s a reality we deal with. Picking the wheat from the chaff can be difficult and requires good investigation.
Just because you didn't ultimately commit a criminal act doesn't mean you shouldn't still lose your job.
Again, maybe you are just bad at your job? There should be consequences for being bad at your job. Especially when your poor performance leads to negative outcomes for others.
Well, in the case of police use of force, the criminal code is exactly where the threshold is and should be found, since that’s what enables police to use force at all. A police use of force that isn’t reasonable is inherently criminal, as it would fail the test under s.25 of the Criminal Code that can take what would otherwise be an assault, and make it legal in the course of execution of police duties.
Now, outside of the use of force context, I agree that there can be situations where a criminal offence is not committed (or a matter proceeds other than criminally, say an impaired driver handled administratively) but where there may be a misconduct justifying termination. Sexual misconduct, serious harassment, etc. I still believe a proper investigation needs to be conducted with a proper fact finding and a fair adjudication in such cases. Suspension without pay before a finding of guilt (or administrative equivalent) should be very rare and reserved only for really egregious cases.
We likely don’t and won’t agree on that, and that’s fine.