Cato Institute
1000 Massachusetts Ave, NW
Washington, DC 20001-5403

Phone (202) 842 0200
Fax (202) 842 3490
Contact Us
Support Cato

August 26, 1999
Briefing Paper no. 50

Warrior Cops: The Ominous Growth of Paramilitarism in American Police Departments

by Diane Cecilia Weber


PRINT PAGE
CITE THIS
  Sans Serif
  Serif

Share with your friends:

Over the past 20 years Congress has encouraged the U.S. military to supply intelligence, equipment, and training to civilian police. That encouragement has spawned a culture of paramilitarism in American law enforcement.

The 1980s and 1990s have seen marked changes in the number of state and local paramilitary units, in their mission and deployment, and in their tactical armament. According to a recent academic survey, nearly 90 percent of the police departments surveyed in cities with populations over 50,000 had paramilitary units, as did 70 percent of the departments surveyed in communities with populations under 50,000. The Pentagon has been equipping those units with M-16s, armored personnel carriers, and grenade launchers. The police paramilitary units also conduct training exercises with active duty Army Rangers and Navy SEALs.

Diane Cecilia Weber is a Virginia writer on law enforcement and criminal justice.

State and local police departments are increasingly accepting the military as a model for their behavior and outlook. The sharing of training and technology is producing a shared mindset. The problem is that the mindset of the soldier is simply not appropriate for the civilian police officer. Police officers confront not an "enemy" but individuals who are protected by the Bill of Rights. Confusing the police function with the military function can lead to dangerous and unintended consequences--such as unnecessary shootings and killings.

Download the PDF of Briefing Paper no. 50 (73 KB)
View this Briefing Paper in HTML
Get Acrobat Reader Get Adobe Reader


Share with your friends:  

Full text of Briefing Paper no. 50

© 2010 The Cato Institute
Please send comments to webmaster