YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Law Enforcement and Continuing Education
Essays 91 - 120
to cooperate with LAPD officials in exchange for a five-year prison term. Perez charged that several members of the CRASH unit en...
subpoenaed to testify during this trial and his professional, well-documented testimony was instrumental in securing the convictio...
however, it is important that leadership development include everyone in the organization (Putney, 2011). It is, of course, unreas...
is actually weak. It only pertains to the individual. The person is supposedly getting what he deserves, but is society really ben...
they are truly a college that cares about what people want to do with their lives because many of the students come to the college...
have enacted certain laws on their own which sometimes provide for testing in a much wider arena. Consider Idaho as an example. ...
private industry employees, law enforcement officials began wondering why they should not be receiving similar rewards. In privat...
of the popular culture. There are in fact many reasons to explain the police officers personality. The relevance of the article is...
In forty four pages this paper examines the law enforcement sector in a consideration of performance rewards and programs based up...
or heart attack. The use of the stun gun might add to the problem. However, studies on these guns suggest that they are not quite ...
as being subordinate to their white counterparts. This perceived image in the testing arena, where individuals are forced to perf...
contend, is fueled by nothing but a lot of "hot air and rhetoric" (Berry, 1995, p. PG). The cycle is not difficult to comprehend:...
voice, it can be present in attitude, or behavior and no matter its vehicle, it is painful to those on the receiving end....
Court decision Miranda v. Arizona, which imposed carefully define limits on how far police interrogations could go. According to ...
job" (Brewer and Wilson, 1995, p. 189). Members of the community feel betrayed when those they look to for protection are, themse...
tights, underpants and shoes were in a rolled-up heap about ten or fifteen feet away.2 She was naked from the waist down, with her...
definition of excessive force is, "the use of any more force than a highly skilled officer should find necessary to use in that pa...
up the incident. While the precedent makes for an exciting police drama, the reality is that corruption does exist and New Jersey ...
money legally from licensing fees and taxes on hotels, bars, and restaurants ("Sex industry," 1998). There is a feminist advocac...
American nationalism is an ideology which has shaped the face of the world as we see it today. The United States itself first pro...
is occasionally not as effective in fulfilling its role to society and its citizens as it should be. There can be little doubt t...
the treatment received. The work examines, as would be imagined, both the United States and Britain. According to one review of...
Suspect (Beachem, 1998) does not mention police corruption, this writer/tutor assumes that this must be an element of this film as...
the points you will be covering in the body of your paper. Profiling by police officers has become a very controversial issue in ...
element introduced when Utah encounters Bodhi, and is made to consider rather deeper philosophical aspects of life than the straig...
done a good job. James Champy (1998) of reengineering fame goes so far as to say that the annual bonus is about as motivating as ...
Discretion, 2003). In his acclaimed study of discretion, University of Chicago law professor Kenneth Culp Davis discovered that p...
In a research paper consisting of five pages the political side of the enforcement of antitrust laws is considered with a comparat...
(authoritarian and conservative) that attract them to police work and that their personalities shape the work they do. The other ...
unnecessary force are minority members. According to this report, police have employed lethal force to subdue unarmed suspects fle...