"Corporate America is using police forces as their mercenaries."--Ray Lewis, Retired Philadelphia Police Captain
It's one thing to know and exercise your rights
when a police officer pulls you over, but what rights do you have when a
private cop--entrusted with all of the powers of a government cop but
not held to the same legal standards--pulls you over and subjects you to
a stop-and-frisk or, worse, causes you to "disappear" into a
Gitmo-esque detention center not unlike the one employed by Chicago
police at Homan Square?
For that matter, how do you even begin to know
who you're dealing with, given that these private cops often wear police
uniforms, carry police-grade weapons, and perform many of the same
duties as public cops, including carrying out SWAT team raids, issuing tickets and firing their weapons.
This is the growing dilemma we now face as
private police officers outnumber public officers (more than two to
one), and the corporate elite transforms the face of policing in America
into a privatized affair that operates beyond the reach of the Fourth
Amendment.
Owing to the general complacency of the courts
and legislatures, the Fourth Amendment has already been so watered down,
battered and bruised as to provide little practical protection against
police abuses. Indeed, as I make clear in my book A Government of
Wolves: The Emerging American Police State, we're already operating in a
police state in which police have carte blanche authority to probe,
poke, pinch, taser, search, seize, strip and generally manhandle anyone
they see fit in almost any circumstance. Expanding on these police
powers, the U.S. Supreme Court recently gave law enforcement officials
tacit approval to collect DNA from any person, at any time.
However, whatever scant protection the weakened
Fourth Amendment provides us dissipates in the face of privatized
police, who are paid by corporations working in partnership with the
government. Indeed, if militarized police have become the government's
standing army, privatized police are its private army--guns for hire, if
you will. This phenomenon can be seen from California to New York, and
in almost every state in between.
Technically, a private police force is one that is owned or controlled by a non-governmental body such as a corporation.
Read the fine print, however, and you'll find
that these private police aka guns-for-hire a.k.a. private armies a.k.a.
company police officers a.k.a. secret police a.k.a. conservators of the
police a.k.a. rent-a-cops don't exactly remove the government from the
equation. Instead, they merely allow them to work behind the scenes,
conveniently insulated from any accusations of wrongdoing or demands for
transparency. Indeed, most private police officers are either working
for private security firms that are contracted by the government or are
government workers moonlighting on their time off.
Today these private police can be found wherever
extra security is "needed": at hospitals, universities, banks, shopping
malls, gated communities, you name it. Yet while these private police
firms enjoy the trappings of government agencies--the weaponry, the
arrest and shoot authority, even the ability to ticket
and frisk-- they're often poorly trained, inadequately screened, poorly
regulated and heavily armed. Now if that sounds a lot like public
police officers, you wouldn't be far wrong.
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