Police Unions Wield Massive Power in American Politics -- For Now
When he was fired, arrested, and charged with the murder of George Floyd, Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin belonged to a union. Officer Brett Hankison still enjoys union membership, despite being terminated by the Louisville Metropolitan Police Department over the killing of 26-year-old Breonna Taylor. Unlike other public sector unions tasked with establishing collective bargaining rights for its members, police unions have sought to protect employees who have killed people on the job.
Though Chauvins termination wont be contested by the Minneapolis Police Federation, his criminal legal defense will be covered by another labor outfit, the Minnesota Police and Peace Officers Association. Hankison appealed his termination to the LMPDs Merit Board through lawyers employed by his union, the River City Fraternal Order of Police. The RCFOP didnt return a request for comment by Rolling Stone, and the MPFs website and social media pages have been taken offline. The FBI and the Kentucky State Attorney Generals office are investigating Taylors death.
Neither officer is an anomaly. Chauvin had a professional history littered with at least 17 misconduct complaints, while Hankison, who had sat on the LMPD Merit Board, later faced allegations of using his position to sexually proposition and assault at least two women. Both men have become a focal point of the national ire currently focused on Americas cops. They are just a symptom of the systemic rot that plagues American policing.
That dysfunction has in large part been enabled by police unions. I cant recall the last police department where I went in and someone said, The union isnt an obstacle in making meaningful reform. Its always an obstacle, says Phillip Atiba Goff, the CEO of the Center for Policing Equity, a police reform research organization.
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