Flagg wrote:Well it's clear Simon has absolutely no idea how law enforcement works.
Would you mind expanding on that using an argument grounded in actual facts, logic, or information?
White Haven wrote:And yet soldiers are expected to disobey illegal orders up front, without waiting for things to wind their way through the court system. Or was that not the point of the utter failure of 'I was just following orders' as a defense during war crimes trials after the second world war?
If that is true, why does it not apply to police as well?
Because soldiers are being asked to disobey orders not because they personally believe the orders are illegal, but because
they actually are illegal.
For example, if you are a soldier and your commanding officer tells you to shoot bound, kneeling prisoners in the head, you know that actually
does violate very specific provisions in the Geneva Conventions about treatment of prisoners. You are entitled and indeed expected to refuse.
Now, suppose you are a soldier and your commanding officer tells you to commandeer a civilian vehicle so your unit can escape from danger. You refuse, because the Hague Convention prohibits looting, so stealing someone's truck is a war crime.* Fortunately, the unit doesn't get massacred so the issue goes to trial instead of the graveyard.
This case is more complicated. We could get into an argument about the legal aspects of it. On the one hand, taking someone's stuff is wrong. On the other hand, taking someone's stuff to save your life from immediate danger is generally seen as allowing 'self-defense' as a defense against criminal charges.
But basically, what it comes down to is that you're going to end up on trial for disobeying an order. And your defense is "stealing a truck so that my unit could escape danger in combat is a war crime." But that issue will then be decided by some court,
not by you. And if they conclude that stealing a truck in order to escape danger is
not a war crime, you're going to jail for a long time for needlessly endangering your unit.
Moreover (and this is an issue), if the court does not support you... Then you
have needlessly endangered and hampered your unit. You were then, legally, presenting an
incorrect legalistic quibble as a justification for not doing something that would have removed them from danger. This is the sort of thing that weighs on a person's conscience, at least if they're not the sort of person who hates their fellow soldiers and secretly wishes them dead.
*[For the record, I know looting is prohibited, I
do not know whether commandeering a truck is considered looting in the situation I describe. You may have a strong opinion or expert knowledge on this issue; I don't. I am using it purely as an illustrative example, because you could make arguments either way.]
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So we have clear-cut cases where we know exactly what the laws of war say. Like "don't take civilian hostages" But potentially, we also have cases where it is a matter for learned debate what the laws of war say. And where that decision is made by official courts, not by random people on the ground happening to have different opinions. Like "don't commandeer civilian transport in a war zone."
In police work, there are a lot of cases of the second type. For example, is a "no-knock raid" constitutional or not? The courts in America appear to think so, at least for now. If
you personally think it's unconstitutional... well, you disagree with the courts whose job it is to construct logical, consistent, legal frameworks in which to evaluate these things.
If you refuse an order that is in fact legal, because you
think it's illegal, then the consequences for you are going to be severe, the consequences for your comrades may well be severe, and it is very much debateable whether you're actually doing the right thing.
We live in a society where there are very deep divides about how to interpret certain laws. We have different political opinions. And the thing is... we're all entitled to our own political opinions. But we're not all entitled to our own laws. And if you agree to work for (say) a police department, you are agreeing to follow
legal orders... including legal orders you do not personally agree with and approve of.
So if there is political and management pressure within a police department to carry out no-knock raids, and given that the decision to make no-knock raids constitutional in the US was made by courts that are
not part of the police, individual policemen don't have grounds to refuse to participate in no-knock raids by claiming they are "illegal." Because they're not.
Now, we can reasonably argue that no-knock raids are
bad policy. Or even that a court should ban them. But until such time as a court gets around to banning them, they are in fact legal. Not illegal. In which case there's no question of "you should refuse to follow an illegal order." Orders are not made illegal purely by the fact that
I believe they are illegal. They are made illegal by actually contradicting specific laws on the books, and specific court rulings on the books.
White Haven wrote:To answer your question, KS, my statement was in direct response to statements similar to, but not necessarily only, Simon's as quoted below. I didn't provide quote originally because he wasn't the only one espousing this viewpoint, and I thought the context would be quite apparent.
Simon Jester wrote:As noted, they are obligated to not follow "illegal" orders. Thing is, they aren't the ones who define 'illegal.' And Flagg isn't the one who gets to do that either.
The definition of "illegal" and what is 'illegal' police action is a matter of constitutional law, determined by the courts. If you disagree with the courts' opinion, you are still stuck following it, unless of course you have decided to start writing your own laws.
I don't want the police to get into the habit of writing their own definitions of what is and is not constitutional. Even if today that definition happens to be nicer and less restrictive than the one the courts are using... tomorrow it might not be.
Yes. They ARE the ones who have to define 'illegal orders' at the drop of a hat, because by the time the courts can get involved there may well be
bodies on the floor. As the United States Department of Justice does not yet possess the power of bodily resurrection, that means that 'just wait for the courts to sort out whether that action was legal in hindsight' isn't in any way an acceptable answer, any more than it is when applied to a soldier in a time of war. We expect soldiers to disobey illegal orders (hence, as I said, why 'I was just following orders' failed as a defense at Nuremburg). There are a great many things that it is too late to fix after the fact, and a great many of these things involve the use of force, so anyone authorized to USE force, police included, has to be able to say 'no, I will not' or else the whole system is one big failure state waiting to happen.
Don't want your police officers in that sort of position? Don't put them there. That'd be fucking ideal. But when you put them in that sort of position again and again, you have to not only recognize that they need to be able to say 'no, this is not right,' you need to make sure THEY know that sort of judgement call is demanded of them. Because once lethal or potentially-lethal force is brought into the picture, you don't always have the luxury of fixing things in the courts after the fact.
The question then is, what proportion of police killings happen because of each of the following scenarios:
1) Someone issued a clearly illegal order
2) Someone issued an order that occupies a legal gray area where you'd need two weeks and a team of paralegals to prove it illegal.
3) Someone issued a legal, but stupid order.
4) Someone issued a legal, reasonable order, and unfortunate screwups happened while carrying this order out.*
5) Someone issued a legal, reasonable order, nothing defined under the law as a police screwup occurred, and yet somebody died.
*(As an example of (4)... Policeman is on a raid where use of flashbang grenades is legal and appropriate. Policeman throws flashbang grenade into crib out of carelessness, when he should have thrown it on the floor. Baby gets severe burns as a result of a
legal, reasonable order that was carried out incompetently).
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Now, in case (1) and maybe (2) the appropriate response of a policeman ordered to do whatever is being ordered would be to say "no, this is illegal, I refuse."
In case (3), well, the duty to refuse illegal orders does NOT extend to refusing stupid orders. You might have a right and responsibility to inform your superior of the reasons why their order is ill-advised, but you don't get to decide to ignore the order purely because you think you could have done a better job and made a better judgment call in the same situation. There are good reasons for this to be the case which I could go into, but this post is already crazylong.
In case (4),
no mistaken order was issued. Responsibility falls solely on the individual police officer(s) who screwed up. Sometimes the people in charge do everything right, and something still goes wrong.
In case (5),
no mistaken police action occurred, even if as a result somebody died. Even if there was a misunderstanding.
If someone pulls me over for speeding, and when they come up to the window I shout "FUCK THE POLICE!" and my hand darts into the glove compartment, and I get shot... frankly, my death does not reflect bad judgment on the police's part. Or excessive militarization. Or anything else. My death was, in essence, a suicide attempt. And that doesn't change if it turns out there was no weapon in the glove compartment and that policeman just "killed an unarmed man," namely me.
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Now, my basic argument is that while police are justified in refusing an order to avoid a situation of class (1) and sometimes (2), such cases are relatively rare. What is far more common, looking at the police killings that I've seen and heard of, is cases (3), (4), and (5).
Often, an order is issued which is legal but stupid. It may for instance be
legal for police to use force to restrain an armed suspect that refuses to stand down, even if that suspect is not an imminent threat to anyone at this moment. When the suspect is a 95 year old man barricaded in his own bedroom, such an order is stupid... but still legal.
Often, an order is issued which is legal but some individual screws up. Ordering the no-knock raid is legal, shooting the suspect's brother who happens to be in the house is a
horrible bloody mistake... but the fact that the mistake occurred does not directly reflect on the order that was issued in the first place.
And often, people genuinely do make moves that provoke police and which make them think they are about to be attacked, because some people just cannot resist the impulse to show off how aggressive and ballsy they are when dealing with the wicked cops.