Police Brutality Essay

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    Police brutality is the use of excessive and unnecessary force by police when dealing with civilians (The Law Dictionary). With now knowing what the meaning of police brutality is, would you want to be a victim? Would you want someone close to you to be a victim? Would you want to be someone who’s guilty of taking another’s life without reason? Police are attacking us as an entire human race, but are attacking the black African-American community. Why? Who knows, but it is wrong. Brutality to me

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    intense scrutiny for police encounters that have resulted in the use of force and police involved shootings. Every time a person of color is killed by a police officer, the media broadcasts the shooting nationwide, inciting hate, anger and racism. Nothing productive is achieved when the media focuses on officers killing people of color. Instead, trust, faith and respect is lost from the public, and law enforcement officers are feared. People fear that when they encounter the police, they will be shot

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    We often don’t feel safe because of the several examples of police brutality throughout the years. “Police brutality is a daily occurrence across the USA, most of it inflicted in the form of a few extra blows, punches, or kicks during arrests” (Angola, 2013). Police brutality consist of police officers that simply abuse their authority. The American law enforcement has undergone a dramatic transformation over the past few decades. Police officers have more powers than the average citizen; they have

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    The problem I wish to tackle is Police Brutality. I would like to resolve this issues because this is a hot topic in our generation today that has gotten way too far out of hand in the year of 2016. Officers should not be looked at as murders and people we should fear when their job is to protect us, but at the same time they should not have the right to gun down an innocent man (no matter what ethnicity), or abuse their power of discretion. 2. Article: Police Violence: American Epidemic, American

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    There have been many incidents of police brutality in the past few years. It appears that these confrontations usually take place between unarmed black men who are killed by the police, just as with the Jim Crow-era lynchings, the images of black death at the hands of the police since a terrifying message to all communities most especially black community. The difference today are captured and distributed immediately by the media. There have been many events in the past years that have led to a lot

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    brushed off topic of police brutality and how it’s got to be stopped before it gets even way more out of hand. It’s just scary to think that the people who are supposed to protect you have a never ending list of just names and ages which they were responsible for killing. The ages of the deaths go to as young as 14 to all the way to 70 the lives of kids and elderly people are even being taken away and yet society and people of the United States are supposed to believe that the police are there to protect

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    The Effect of Police Brutality on Public Relations Introduction Police brutality has always existed within the United States, however, due to new technologic advancements, more news coverage of the brutal incidents are rising. As stated by Cameron Sehat, Esq., police attacks have “always and without exception been perpetrated against poor people and the socially marginalized.” Certain ethnic groups were more highly targeted in history such as African Americans, but now as our economy has developed

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    Police brutality has been on a steady incline since the 1980’s; but numbers have sky rocketed since the early 2000’s. An article from “USA Today” stated that their research department found that, “cases in which police without justice, destructing the lives of families, and becoming daily dictators in our society today. There are so many Americans suffering everyday due to loss of a loved one who was killed during an as of police brutality; not only are they dealing with grief ,but inly few got what

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    In America, as it has been for a long time, police brutality has become too common an occurrence. And with black people being racially profiled, shot, and in even more extreme cases, murdered, it seems as if its a crime just being black in this country we call home. But even still, there are many people willing to defend police brutality acts, prosing that there are options that the victims could have chosen instead as to prevent their harm. Enter Charles Kinsey, 47, a behavior therapist in the

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    CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION/STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM Excessive force and police brutality have become common terms for anyone keeping up with today’s current events. In 2014, the media covered numerous cases of excessive force that resulted in the deaths of several people of color (Nelson & Staff, 2014). The most widely covered cases by the media in 2014 were of Michael Brown, an 18-year-old black male shot and killed by police officer Darren Wilson in Ferguson, Missouri; and Eric Garner, a 43-year-old

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