Police, in the Real World

Guest Post by Fred Reed

For years I worked as police reporter for the Washington Times, spending long hours in squad cars in various cities getting to know cops well. Now I listen to nice white people in the suburbs, and self-assured voices from NPR, talking about the police. They know nothing of the world where the police work. They do not know the bad sections at three a.m., the yawning dark alleys and lightless facades of buildings, the boredom, and the radio, the soul of a squad car, the laconic chat of the net. Slow night.

Not all are slow. I rode one night with the Arlington force, the Virginia countyjust outside of Washington. The call came, “Man down, gunshots reported.” Dark residential street, tree-lined, too late for the suburban houses to have lights. The guy, maybe Hispanic or Asian, was on his back, breathing but not moving. The bullet had cut a furrow in the top of his head, brains swelling out like pink vaginal lips. We listened to the stertorous breathing. There was nothing to do. The ambulance cane and the parameds worked on the guy. There was no point in it, but it is what they are paid to do.

You see things you don’t want to see. On a foot beat , in the Shaw district of DC, late, streets empty, we found a blonde woman, maybe thirty, crawling on the sidewalk, drunk, bottle of whisky clutched in one hand. Late stage alcoholism. Seeing a cop, she crawled toward an alley, hugging her bottle. She had wet her pants.

We walked on. The cop wasn’t heartless, but it was Saturday night, the jails and shelters would be full, and there is nowhere that wants a terminal alky. What was her story? Bad marriage? Lost her job? Everybody has a story.

From the Virginia side of Key Bridge across the Potomac, a bike path runs through grass past the Pentagon to the Washington Sailing Marina. Someone had reported a foul smell. I and three cops went to investigate. Following the smell, we found a dead guy in a clump of bushes. Judging by the pistol next to him, he had offed himself. A dead guy after several days in the August sun is not attractive, skull white where not covered by black gunch, remnants of face sliding off.

Cops see this stuff. You can’t let it get to you so you do the macho thing. So do female cops. This time someone said, “Maybe mouth-to-mouth would save him.” There was grossed-out laughter. It wasn’t contempt. Nobody thought the dead guy was funny. But you can’t let it get to you. It turned out later that he had a hard breakup with his girl friend.

You probably don’t know what “immersion cuffs” are. If you hold a little girl’s hands in boiling water, the submerged part puffs up pink, like cuffs. That there is a name for this suggests that it is not isolated. Cops know about these things. They see them. It is why they grind their teeth atnight and have a high divorce rate. One cop told me that he had turned down a job on the child-abuse unit because he would kill somebody. Abuse by police can have its appeal.

A Maryland cop once invited me to his home and was showing me photos of things he had seen on the job. One was of a human face that had been completely skinned with an Xacto knife. See? It’s not a job. It’s an adventure.

In the sprawling crazy nights in the big cities, a camaraderie unites the three street trades, police, fire, and ambulance. If the crews do not know each other personally, which they often do, there is a unity that comes of sharing a world that nobody else knows. You likely have never tried to intubate a man copiously spewing blood from his mouth after going through a windshield, crushing his chest. You might think something wrong with people who can stand around such a scene talking about are you going to Jack’s barbecue Saturday. You can’t let it get to you.

Things can be amusing in a screwy way. Ages ago, when Reagan emptied the asylums onto the streets, one of these mandated escapees was a woman who entered office buildings and turned off lights, announcing herself as being with the Trash Police, who don’t exist. Finally, the police told me, she decided to help the telephone company by putting on a pair of pole-climbers in one of their trucks and began trying to climb a pole. This allowed the cops to invoke “danger to herself or others” and take her off the street.

The racial element is always there with police because almost all the crime is perpetrated by blacks. At NPR, saying this would elicit cries of racism. NPR does not live in the real world. Cops do. For them, the racial makeup of crime is a matter of daily observation. Blacks dislike cops and cops come not to like blacks. The black world deep in the big cities is another country, another civilization, and imiscible with the outlying white culture. Black cops know this as well as white cops know it.

Sometimes you can just about lose all belief in human decency. The small black girl found in a dumpster, wrapped in garbage bags, something like thirty pounds underweight for her age. She had rope burns on her wrists, some fresh and open wounds, other just scars. It turned out that she had been kept always in a closet and barely fed. She died, it was concluded, because to muffle her cries her parents had put her in a hooded jacket backwards and she had suffocated.

Think what you will of cops. They are not perfect. But they are out there, day and night, amid the blood and snot and cum, the screaming freshly raped girls and the desperate old women dying amid their vodka bottles and the insane and miserable. Try it, and then judge.

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34 Comments
bidenTouchesKids
bidenTouchesKids
April 19, 2024 8:11 am

Propaganda puff piece. Cops are not our friends, are only interested in protecting TPTB and there’s no law they won’t gleefully kill you over.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  bidenTouchesKids
April 19, 2024 9:59 am

Not all – and I’ve been locked up a bit, decades ago. The police force is a piece of garbage, as all .gov is, but individuals cops and sheriffs can be heroically decent men.

Anonymouse
Anonymouse
  bidenTouchesKids
April 19, 2024 10:03 am

I see you have a firm grasp of reality…what’s your pronoun Touches..

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  bidenTouchesKids
April 19, 2024 10:34 am

To Serve the politicians and
To Protect the pension.

Luke
Luke
  TN Patriot
April 20, 2024 12:11 am

It’s no longer an Andy of Mayberry world. It’s more like a paramilitary profession that sometimes comes down to “kill or be killed”. More often than not the few LE we know usually have troubled marriages. Yes, the system seems to stink and badly at times, yet there are a few good ones, even today. It is not a profession I’d want any young person with potential to try.

Obbledy
Obbledy
April 19, 2024 9:12 am

Handful of sand…the tighter you grip,the faster it runs out between your fingers.A decent and moral citizenry has no need for cops,but that seems to be the heart of the issue…..self-control!

Mr. Hyde
Mr. Hyde
  Obbledy
April 19, 2024 9:33 am

You are right that self-control is the key to civilization. However, there are inherently bad people who either have no self-control, or their version of self-control compels them to do terrible things. Where there are more than two humans there will eventually be a need for police.

Luke
Luke
  Mr. Hyde
April 20, 2024 12:13 am

Question: is there such a thing as Amish police?

Andy Goober
Andy Goober
  Luke
April 20, 2024 2:54 am

No. They have Shunning.

Mr. Hyde
Mr. Hyde
April 19, 2024 9:30 am

Amen.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
April 19, 2024 10:33 am

A week ago, the cops in Memphrica got into a gun fight with an 18 y-o & 17 y-o. Two cops shot, one dead and the 18 y-o dead. As it turns out, the cop was shot by another officer. Of course, the police will not release the body cam or dash cam video of the incident. How does one cop shoot another? Are they not trained to aim before shooting or is it just spray and pray time when the guns start going off?

anon a moos
anon a moos
  TN Patriot
April 19, 2024 11:17 am

When they open up its ALL in until the chamber is empty. I’m astonished there isn’t more incidental hits from them throwing copious amounts of lead from all directions.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  anon a moos
April 19, 2024 1:00 pm

I remember a few years ago an incident where multiple cops unloaded on a suspect at close range at mid-afternoon on a Manhattan sidewalk. Dozens of rounds fired, they hit no one … including the guy they were “aiming” at.

fujigm
fujigm
  Anonymous
April 20, 2024 1:10 am

83 rounds fired…

Justin O Smith
Justin O Smith
  anon a moos
April 19, 2024 6:58 pm

I never will forget the day in 1984, when a Goodlettsville, TN Police Officer mistook an FBI agent for the bad guy and shot him as he was in pursuit of an actual violent bank robber. It was the definition of a “clusterfuck”, with all the local and state agencies descending on the town.

ARIZONA FUGITIVE DIES IN SHOOTOUT – The New York Times (nytimes.com)

Luke
Luke
  anon a moos
April 20, 2024 12:17 am

A young female we know owned a small retail shop. It was burglarized late one night when closed. When she asked the cop if she should get a bigger dog he laughed and told her to get a gun and if confronted by a robber keep shooting until it was empty. He failed to mention anything about getting trained in how to use it.

The Orangutan
The Orangutan
April 19, 2024 10:50 am

The Most Interesting Man I Know is a very unique guy, but he is not quite like the Dos Equis character in the TV ads. He’s actually much more interesting, and moreover, he is real. A lifelong bachelor who collects weapons of all kinds, he has many firearms, swords and such, and is only 1 of 2 citizens in a city of 1 million with a legally registered Uzi. His 71 corvette was purchased new at age 16 with proceeds from his, uh, side hustle, but he owns many others (Trans Ams, police interceptor, and several motorcycles). He is, among other things, an ordained minister in the church of Dudism, a dedicated audiophile building custom equipment, and a Mensa member and former local vice president.
 
So what does a guy like that do for living? Well, he is a firefighter, of course. More accurately, he was a firefighter, but don’t call him retired. He did not retire. Many years of on-the-job experiences just like the ones described in the article above can and do take their toll, on even the most gifted, resourceful and engaged individuals. Although he came to a point – for his own sanity, I imagine – to walk away from that career, he left with his mental and physical health intact. This is not always the case for first responders. I will not share any of his many stories here, suffice to say he absolutely did operate in “a world that nobody else knows.”
 
Thanks Fred Reed for that insightful article.

Rifles are the Cure
Rifles are the Cure
April 19, 2024 12:12 pm

Cops are the janitors of society.
They see everyone at their worst moments.
Everyone hates a cop, until they need a cop.
A detective buddy of mine had to interview a Mexican drug dealer on scene with a fresh bullet wound between the eyes. The wound was not bleeding profusely. Gray matter protruding like an outie belly button. He was still able to answer questions, until the gray matter began to spurt out of his third eye and he then expired in the back of the cop car.
Life sucks, then you die.

TonyBaloney
TonyBaloney
  Rifles are the Cure
April 19, 2024 2:00 pm

Best strategy is to not need a cop. Just like not needing a doctor or hospital. Cannot guarantee that it will happen, but the more interactions with either, the worse your likelihood for negative outcomes.

fujigm
fujigm
  Rifles are the Cure
April 20, 2024 1:16 am

“Everyone hates a cop, until they need a cop.”

The fallacy presented is that everyone may need a cop.
Some of us never need a cop.
They are literally the people we would never call.
Be a pro and clean up your own mess…

daddysteve
daddysteve
April 19, 2024 12:23 pm

Mag dump shouldn’t be the go-to strategy for a hero.

The Dim Blue Line
The Dim Blue Line
April 19, 2024 1:42 pm

It’s ALWAYS a good shoot.

Diogenes' Dung
Diogenes' Dung
April 19, 2024 2:04 pm

Police, ambulance and fire crews have seen horrors that ’normies’ never encounter. Soon, that cadre’s nightmares will haunt everyone.

“You can’t let it get to you.” will be a common catchphrase during the unraveling of our country, in violent convulsions of hatred and vengeance that leave no horror to the imagination.

There’ll be no police, ambulance or fire engines coming to save you.

Luke
Luke
  Diogenes' Dung
April 20, 2024 12:22 am

A war zone is a war zone; doesn’t matter if it is a declared war or not.

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 19, 2024 5:47 pm

“B**ch You Dead, B**ch You Dead!” – Woman Caught on Tape Brutally Killing Terrified Young Mother Execution-Style in Downtown Seattle Alley (VIDEO)

The ghettopotamus actually was given a $5M bail in lunatic-blue Seattle. Maybe the tide is turning?

fujigm
fujigm
  Anonymous
April 20, 2024 1:20 am

Niggers…
Get away from them.

Walter
Walter
  Anonymous
April 20, 2024 7:45 pm

Never, ever, ever allow yourself to remain in the vicinity of significant numbers of black people if you are not also a black person. Although there are black, mixed race actually, people who are not dangerously unpredictable they are not readily identifiable and are a small minority of the whole. You may wish to be thought of as ‘not racist’ but really, what is your life worth?

Jdog
Jdog
April 19, 2024 7:16 pm

This article is basically bullshit. Cops are mostly psychopaths. They are usually ex military that did not get their fill of high they get from violence against other humans. They have no compassion, they have no morals. They love the high they get from hurting or humiliating another person. On occasion they get the ultimate thrill from unloading their firearm into one.
No sane person seeks power over other people. The people who have the desire for power over others are psychopaths whether they are politicians or police..
The are all our enemies….

Luke
Luke
  Jdog
April 20, 2024 12:24 am

Not much different than the NFL-quite a few troublemakers mixed in with some eccentrics and a few good guys.

J Far
J Far
  Jdog
April 20, 2024 10:02 am

How is it bullshit if he’s just relating some things he observed as a journalist?

Doug
Doug
April 19, 2024 7:47 pm

Cities are bad. Crowded with misfits and do nuthins.Avoid at all cost.

Jackie Puppet
Jackie Puppet
April 19, 2024 11:57 pm

Maybe he can write another article on cops who enforce bullshit, such as arresting homeowners who kick out squatters out of their homes, or other law-abiding citizens that get arrested for doing the right thing, and why cops protect criminals.

Waves
Waves
  Jackie Puppet
April 20, 2024 1:19 pm

Yes, it’s stupid to put all police activity in one ‘defund’ pot. Of course somebody will always have to deal with the relentless lost souls, abusers, murderers, etc etc.

But I resent to the point of boiling over numerous things that create the loss of respect….the use of the police to enforce victimless petty laws with an arrogant hammer of righteousness, ridiculous speed limits and traffic cops sitting in wait and selecting minor offenders, any other ‘no harm done’ laws creating problems where none were for lifelong issue free people… including the beyond wild and unfair variation in sentencing for the same thing, but more than anything, that everyone knows the hypocrisy of the normalized repeat of the practice of the law enforcement system regularly ignoring every possible low and high crime committed by those at the top… including themselves… all the way to murder.

ramAustralia
ramAustralia
April 20, 2024 7:15 pm

Yeah, that description sounds about right. Firefighters see similar things. Often work together with police and ambulance. I’m a firefighter, my close cousin is a semi-retired detective. Different cities on opposite sides of the world but pretty much the same things.