DEPARTMENTAL CULTURE: Maintaining Integrity

DEPARTMENTAL CULTURE: Maintaining Integrity
By: Monica Eaton

As a young police recruit, I remember being terrified of the background investigation process. Wracking my brain to make sure every piece of information was in the packet, the location and municipality of my first speeding ticket as a 16-year-old driver, every single address I ever lived at, and any type of office supply I had ever mistakenly taken home and not returned. I was terrified that anything could disqualify me from the job of my dreams. 

Recruits go from being terrified to make a mistake or get their academy “smoked” with conditioning to figuring out how to be lazy and cut corners. One will sit in a parking lot watching Netflix, while another stays “tactically 10-6” all shift but magically appears on every in-progress call. Many will be inconvenienced by regular in-service training and fail to do more than the minimum to get by.

Granted, this does not dismiss the officers who keep their integrity and hard work and continue to do the right thing. But in light of the recent events that call officer integrity into question, how do we go from one extreme to the next? I’d like to propose a theory: the work environment. Another thing we take note of as recruits are the stories of officers from the  past: The one who had sex on duty and never got punished. The one who continuously talks himself out of taking reports and is rarely heard on the radio. The one you get told to leave alone because he doesn’t like to be bothered. The one who got away with some questionable tactics but was seen as the badass who caught the bad guy anyway.

Recruits come in the new starry-eyed little brothers to the many new big brothers they look up to and want to be like. They get enmeshed in the culture of the department, who show them how to do things, and what things you probably shouldn’t do, but might get away with anyway. The administration often reaffirms some of the norms by sweeping some punishable things under the rug for the well-liked “good old boy.”

It’s all fun and games until someone gets hurt. Due to a lack of training or often a slippage of department integrity, an officer, civilian or suspect gets hurt or killed. The media storm swirls yet again into questions of the people behind the badge and who we really are. How do we stop the cycle? We speak up.

We speak up for the good and well-intentioned officers who do this thankless job daily and always to the best of their ability. We speak up to continue to serve and protect the people we took an oath for. We speak up to encourage and maintain positive work environments that encourage continued training and punish the misconduct equally and fairly. We speak up to help weed out those who lack integrity and who should never be there in the first place. At the end of the day, we can only control what we do. Will you be the next to speak up, or will you sit back and watch the storm continue?

Monica Eaton is the owner/CEO of Five-0 Fierce and Fit which creates online nutrition and fitness programs designed to help female first responders lose fat, gain strength and take back their confidence in 90 days because “your family depends on you to be fit for duty.” Using her six-year Oklahoma law enforcement experience along with her 15-year background in fitness and nutrition she helps female first responders reach their full potential in life and career. Look her up on Instagram @five0.fierce.and.fit.