From: Lew Rockwell.com
The intrepid
Captain
Phillip Tingirides of the Los Angeles Police Department has
come down with a sudden case of "Blue Flu." This is an
oddly selective malady, one that only afflicts police officers.
"Sick-outs" are a common police union tactic in contract
disputes with municipal governments. In this case, the epidemic
appears to be contained in the Tigirides household, where the bold
and valiant captain is cowering in fear of his former comrade, Christopher
Dorner.
"This
month, it will be 33 years on the Los Angeles Police Department,"
Tingirides told the Orange County Register. "I have
had a number of threats and very rarely do I take them seriously.
In this case… I’m taking it very seriously…. I recognize I am susceptible
to his violence."
Little in Tingirides’s
official bio would suggest that danger has been his constant companion.
Early in his career he patrolled such grim and forbidding territories
as Wilshire and Hollywood before being promoted to such assignments
as Prostitution Enforcement Detail, Community Relations, and the
Vice Unit.
His career
has been devoid of measurable peril, even by the standards of law
enforcement – which is one of the least risk-laden occupations in
contemporary life. This helps explain why Tingirides has been hiding
out in his home, surrounded by a phalanx of timid and trigger-happy
police bodyguards who are entirely willing to open fire on innocent
people if they come within eyeshot.
"I haven’t
been able for the last few days to go outside my house," whined
Tingirides to the Register. "Am I afraid? Well, I hesitate
to use that word – but I saw what he did to his attorney."
The attorney to whom he referred was Randy Quan, who represented
Dorner during the 2008 disciplinary hearings that resulted in Dorner’s
dismissal from the LAPD for supposedly lying about abusive conduct
by another officer. Lying about a Mundane is part of a police officer’s
job description; lying about a fellow officer is simply impermissible.
Dorner is believed
to be the assailant who shot Quan’s 28-year-old daughter, Monica.
That young woman was apparently killed for the same reason the Obama
Regime murdered 16-year-old Abdel al-Awalki: Someone habituated
to criminal violence decided that the child was guilty of having
an irresponsible parent.
Tingirides
was chairman of the three-officer "board of rights" that
upheld the decision to terminate Dorner’s employment, and the stalwart
captain was mentioned by name in the vengeful ex-cop’s online "manifesto."
Back
in August 2011, Captain Tingirides was interviewed on the beach
near Torrance to promote a youth "Surf Camp" program.
Despite the fact that he had grown up within easy distance of the
shore, that interview represented the first time he had ever attempted
to surf.
The time devoted
by Captain Tingirides to producing that PR spot for the LAPD constituted
the most danger-intensive
hour of his career. Surfing is a far riskier activity than working
as a law enforcement officer. The risks are particularly acute for
surfers who have the misfortune of encountering police, as David
Perdue can testify.
Last Thursday,
as the LAPD’s institutional panic escalated, Perdue visited a beach
near the site of Tingirides’s 2011 press stunt to enjoy some early
morning surfing. He happened to be driving a pickup truck that resembled
the vehicle being driven by Dorner. Two officers flagged Perdue
down, determined that he wasn’t the suspect, and then let him go.
Scant seconds later, two
other officers rammed their vehicle into Perdue’s truck and opened
fire.
It was Perdue’s
immense good fortune that the assailants were police officers –
which means that their marksmanship was poor enough to make the
typical Imperial Stormtrooper from Star Wars look like William Tell.
Although he wasn’t shot, Perdue suffered a concussion and a shoulder
injury.
Robert Sheahen,
Perdue’s attorney, described the episode as one of "unbridled
police lawlessness." The Department offered Perdue the same
perfunctory apology it had issued to two women who were shot at
by another security detail guarding the home of another LAPD luminary.
The LAPD has thus established itself as a greater threat to public
safety than the "rogue" cop they are pursuing: While Dorner’s
alleged crime spree targeted a narrow cohort – police officials
and their families – the police have engaged in indiscriminate violence
against innocent citizens.
The manhunt
for Dorner has involved the deployment of thousands of police personnel
and the use of unmanned aerial drones. It will cost tax victims
in Los Angeles and elsewhere millions of dollars in overtime. This
means that the police involved in the pursuit – who are already
trained to be risk-aversive – will have a financial incentive to
prolong the exercise as long as possible. So it shouldn’t surprise
us that the police, who are preoccupied with the sacred imperative
of "officer safety," have turned to the public for help
in solving the crime.
LA Mayor Antonio
Villaraigosa has offered a $1 million reward – provided by private
interests; all the available public money will probably be devoured
by police overtime – for information leading to the arrest and capture
of Dorner.
"We will
not tolerate anyone undermining the security of this community,"
mewled Villaraigosa. "We will not tolerate this reign of terror."
LAPD Chief Charlie Beck also characterized Dorner’s shooting rampage,
as "domestic terrorism."
Who, exactly,
is being "terrorized"? The productive public at large
has been going about its business without facing any discernible
risks from Dorner, whose only identified would-be victims are either
police officers or their families (who have done nothing to injure
anybody, of course).
The only way
that private citizens could collect the reward for Dorner’s capture
would be for them to take risks that police aren’t willing to run.
For example: A citizen or privately employed security guard wouldn’t
be able to ram an unidentified truck and open fire on its driver,
or spray gunfire in a residential neighborhood, without facing criminal
charges.
|
In the official
reaction to Dorner’s rampage, we see an unusually candid manifestation
of the "Officer
Safety Uber Alles" mentality that defines police
work. From their perspective, the population exists to protect and
serve the police, rather than the reverse. This brings to mind the
concept of Rickover’s Paradox, which I encountered in a science
fiction novel decades ago. According to author Vonda
McIntyre, was used to test the moral attitudes of officer candidates
at the U.S. Naval Academy.
The most famous
version of this conundrum is the following:
Two individuals, the only survivors of a tragic shipwreck, are adrift in a small, damaged lifeboat. The water is pitilessly cold and infested with ravenous sharks. The boat itself is irreparably damaged in such a way that it will only be able to carry one of its occupants. If nothing is done, both occupants will perish. But whichever is cast into the sea will die very quickly.One of those aboard the stricken lifeboat is a highly trained officer with valuable – perhaps irreplaceable – technical skills. A huge sum has been spent on his training, which makes him all but irreplaceable.The other refugee is an innocent and law-abiding person of no particular achievements or aptitudes. Few if any would notice that person's absence, and the community at large would be impoverished in no discernible way if he were thrown overboard.Since only one can be saved, which of the two should it be? MORE
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