Creator of ‘The Wire’ talks to the Reformer about troubled police departments like MPD – Minnesota Reformer
David Simon hates the war on drugs. But he doesnt hate all police. He takes issue with police militarization, but he doesnt have time for slogans. In fact, hell cuss out anything from ACAB on the left to Back the Blue on the right. For him, the solutions to problematic law enforcement, even here in Minneapolis, are more complex than slogan-chanting political action, but not impossible.
A longtime Baltimore Sun crime reporter-turned-author, screenwriter and TV producer, Simon is most known for creating The Wire, a five-season look at how the city dealt with drugs and crime. In 2008, The Atlantic called him The Angriest Man in Television.
With his writing partner and production team, he just pulled off a six-episode HBO series called We Own This City that returns to Baltimore to tell stories of corrupt cops. The work is based on the reporting of Justin Fenton, a former crime reporter at The Sun now with a nonprofit newspaper called The Baltimore Banner. Twin Cities readers will see similarities between Baltimore post-Freddie Gray and Minneapolis post-George Floyd. Among them:
The Reformer talked to Simon about those similarities. Heres his view of what bad law enforcement looks like, what good policing can look like, and what it takes to get there (edited heavily for space):
I cant speak to most demographics of every city or what the crime problems are. Baltimore is a post-industrial, very heavily Rust Belt dynamic, with a very high rate of drug addiction, and its a city that has committed for about 30, 40 years to aggressively pursuing the drug war. So that sort of has colored and affected everything. I dont know if that marries up to the Twin Cities or not, but thats who we are.
I thought it was incredibly overt. The video was a little bit astonishing. How long it went on and how indifferent (Derek Chauvin) was. He seemed to be completely devoid of awareness that he was taking somebodys life or coming close to taking someones life. He doesnt seem to be comprehending. And the inertia of the cops around him was pretty shocking as well. But I mean just how long it went on.
There are moments of police violence that are over very quickly. You might argue from the premise of a cop that an instinctive or impulsive moment resulted in a death or police violence. Six, seven, eight seconds one blow, one battering. When it gets to be minutes thats something Ill always remember the premeditation becomes utterly convincing.
The Freddie Gray thing was very different in that were not quite sure what happened. At a minimum, the Baltimore Police Department had a guy in distress, who had suffered a spinal injury, and they rode him around unattended for 45 minutes in the back of a wagon. So theres definitely a case of negligence there.
The prosecutors looked for video of this van going around west Baltimore to see if they were giving him a rough ride. It doesnt seem so. That was the initial presumption. The more video came in, the more the van seems to be traveling at relatively normal speeds.
Its a little bit more of an enigma than George Floyd. George Floyd theres nothing enigmatic about it at all.
The work slowdown is a pretty remarkable thing. Clearly the arrests nosedived (in Baltimore) and the police stopped getting out of their cars to clear corners or go affect an arrest. They decided fundamentally that they werent going to do that. It was not organized, it was not called for by the union or anything like that, but it clearly happened. And definitively so because the arrests collapsed. And suddenly. I have no way of proving that. I think its incredibly unprofessional on the part of the police to stop doing their jobs and continue to take pay for it.
On the other hand, there is an argument that police were making a point that a lot of people didnt want to contend with, which is this: In Baltimore, its really subtle, but the prosecutor I hate to bring up racial politics, but this is just true the prosecutor, Marilyn Mosby, whose political base is African American and critical for her, politically, she did not want to go into another weekend without delivering some sort of indictment.
They were hoping to in some way mollify the protests. So she charged the death in the back of the wagon. She overcharged it as a second-degree murder there was certainly a negligence case there and possibly manslaughter, I dont know. But she charged it as second-degree depraved heart murder.
And this is sort of the subtle nuance here: The three officers who were involved in the transport were African American. The three who were involved in the arrest the knife arrest, which, whatever else it was, was effectively a legal arrest. Im not saying it was the best police work or that they needed to make that case for a pocketed knife, but they did. They were white. They were white officers who made the arrest.
By charging the Fourth Amendment case criminally which is to say false arrest or they in some way abused his civil liberties and denied his due process by arresting him she got a mixed-race group of defendants. Three and three. Which was important for her politically.
Unfortunately, what that did was, the entire police department watched what she did and said, Wait a second. Its one thing to start debating about what happened to this guy in the back of the van the fact that they werent around for 45 minutes. If youre telling me that even if I make a mistake on a Fourth Amendment case and when I can do a Terry stop (stop and frisk) or when I can detain a suspect
The Supreme Court changes Fourth Amendment stuff every term. They come up with different rules every term. If youre the average cop, you know, the chance of you making an arrest that will be thrown out in court on probable cause is pretty high. Eventually its gonna happen. Some judge is gonna say No, that isnt probable cause. Its not a distinct fine line every time.
And Gray he ran. He looked at the cops and he ran. Now, do I think that should be probable cause that you cant run from a cop without being chased? I dont, but unfortunately the U.S. Supreme Court does. That is reason to pursue and detain. Look up the law, which Mosby, of course, was unwilling to acknowledge.
So these cops, they were gonna beat it in court anyway. It was a legal arrest. But she basically sent a message to the Baltimore Police Department that if you make a mistake, if I decide you made a mistake, even a good faith mistake on probable cause, Im gonna charge you criminally. Im gonna try to put you in jail and take away your pension. And so a lot of cops said, Hey, why am I getting out of my car?
Thats a huge problem and that comes hand-in-glove with having positions empty. They cant fill the post cars, they cant fill the radio cars some nights without having guys work doubles.
So part of it is legitimate in that theyre down so many positions because of the exodus and because its (Baltimore) a poor city and theyre not throwing academy classes through at the rate they used to.
So some of the overtime is legitimate, but a lot of it is overtime fraud In Baltimore, you get paid overtime for a couple of things: Obviously, if you get involved in something and you have to work over, and then also for court pay, meaning youre working (4 p.m. to midnight) and you have to come in at nine in the morning to go to district court on your arrests.
That creates an incentive to do a couple of things, one of which is make a cheap, shitty CDS (controlled dangerous substance) arrest 40 minutes from the end of shift and then make sure you spend two hours processing drugs down at evidence control, processing a prisoner, and youre gonna get paid extra.
Or even better, make a bunch of shitty, meaningless arrests failure to yield, loitering in a drug-free zone, whatever. It doesnt matter whether it goes to court; youre not trying to actually convict anyone of anything. But they all gotta show up in court. And if you fill the days docket, youre gonna get paid for whatever the prosecutor signs your slip for, saying that (the officer) was in court on his cases.
And then if youve arrested so many people on such bullshit, then you get three days, four days, five days (OT). Meanwhile, the guy whos actually working on his post to try to solve whoevers robbing people with a gun, burglarizing churches and he makes one arrest for the month because he actually solved the case, he gets paid for going to court one time.
So theres actually an incentive to do bad police work to get paid more. And thats the overtime demon actually transforming police work into the worst possible thing.
Well, youve got to end the drug war Its not as if police work was devoid of violence or devoid of racism or any of these things. But tellingly, the police department in 1980 and certainly in 1970 was majority-majority white. It was run by white guys, the mayor was white, the power structure was white.
And now the Baltimore department is majority-minority. The command staffs African American and the mayors African American. The power structure is now no longer white, and yet the levels of police violence and corruption and dysfunction are worse. Think about that. I mean, thats probably very different from Minnesota.
Its not that the department of 1970 wasnt capable of considerable police violence against neighborhoods of color and people of color. I know that they were capable of predatory policing.
So we start from a position where of course it was bad. But in 1970, 1977, 1980, all the way through those years, the clearance rate for things like murder, robbery, rape, assault they were at or above the national average. We solved more of our crimes. And thats kind of one thing you want police to do its the one thing that a police department can do for a city is when people hurt people and theres actual crime as opposed to drug warring.
There is a linkage between the clearance rates for felonies and and the rate of crime, and you can point to Boston in 1991, what they did. Its actually been demonstrated that if you lock up the right people for the crimes that matter, you can actually affect the quality of life in your city.
Well, the clearance rate when I was in the homicide unit to write a book in 88 was 71 or 72%, somewhere in there. In the end, and of course, that doesnt mean 72% went to jail. It means like four out of 10 people who committed murder once you shake it out at the courthouse, and rightly so, not everyone should be convicted, there are not guilty verdicts and there are cases that are dropped because of insufficient evidence, but by and large four out of 10 people, if you killed somebody in Baltimore, you saw the inside of a prison cell for some length of time.
Right now, the clearance rate is about 38%. Its probably one in 10 (in jail after committing murder). So the difference is back then you had 230 murders a year in a city of 730,000. Now, we have about about 120,000 less people, and we have 350 murders a year.
Because we trained two generations of cops how not to do the things that solve crime. They cant do retroactive investigation. They cant write a search warrant that doesnt get thrown out. They cant testify on the stand without perjuring themselves. They dont know how to properly interview people. They cant write a f***in report.
What they can do is go up on the street and grab bodies and throw them against the wall and decide whos going to go in the van for the ground stash. Or not even the ground stash for loitering or whatever.
We train them in the policies of mass arrest and drug war, which doesnt fix anything. Not only did it destroy neighborhoods and lives and the people being policed were over-policed brutally it destroyed law enforcement, it raised a generation of cops who cant actually do the f***ing job you need them to do and thats the police department now. Those skill sets dont exist anymore. So the drug war destroyed us.
And I would argue that that is why there was no peace dividend. If you think about the fact that the police department went from being majority white to being majority-minority Black command staff, Black city hall, and yet its worse? It should have gotten better. Instead, racial integration had been achieved in a fundamental way and yet its worse.
And the only thing that can explain that, to my argument, is the mission got worse. Weve committed to a mission that is incredibly destructive and alienating. Everyone has been locked up for something. My own film crew kept getting locked up whenever we finished filming and tried to drive out of the ghetto.
The Fourth Amendment ceased to exist under the last 20, 30 years of the drug war. It just got worse and worse. Until you had this Gun Trace Task Force that created this racially mixed group of officers who had come together to create the perfect predatory machine to just rob the shit out of people under the cover of the drug war.
And until we change that, until we get rid of drug prohibition and return the mission creep that thats created for law enforcement, police reform is doomed.
We have to accept that the drug war has brought us to this point.
How many slogans can I sneer at? All cops are not bastards. I know cops who have done credible and worthy police work that made my city better and werent shit who would go into peoples pockets. I knew guys who were just playing the stat game and didnt care about the people they are policing. Ive known all kinds of cops. All cops are not bastards.
However, the drug war will manufacture more bastards out of young cops than anything Ive ever seen. So theres some truth in what people were feeling. Although the slogan itself is alienating from anybody whos ever known a cop who ever tried to do the job the right way.
I dont believe you can back the blue unequivocally, in any sense if these are the policies that the police are being asked to enforce.
On the other hand, I dont believe in defunding police as an agency. I would certainly love to take away the money they spend on trying to do drug interdiction prosecution and give that to social programming. But Id also like to see the actual investigative, retroactive felony investigation enhanced to get the clearance rates back up to where theres an actual deterrent to violence. Because that, as I said before, that matters.
There was a great experiment done in Boston in 1991 where the police department went around to all their investigative units and they basically asked for police intelligence. Who were the 100 worst badasses in Boston, right? Who are the 100 guys a week that keep showing up in our files, keep showing up in our lineups? But that we cant every time we make a case, the witnesses end up intimidated. Who are the guys basically who keep showing up in case after case of violence and we know their names. Lets make a list and then they went out for those 100 guys, just 100 guys, and they got them on everything from parole violations to weapons violations. They basically targeted the people who were their repeat violent offenders. And they dropped the murder rate by 40%. Did anyone pay attention?
When we did Hamsterdam, we assumed, I mean, obviously, no ones ever tried it. They tried it in Zurich, in Amsterdam and Portugal and theyve had no increase in crime. In areas where you practice this level of tolerance for drug use, it becomes untenable for normal people. You dont want anyone living there. Huge amounts of human degradation. And your overdoses probably do go up, especially during this time of fentanyl.
But youre basically practicing harm reduction. Youre saying, We cant arrest our way out of this. And maybe by putting it all in place, we can direct all of our social services into that quadrant If you had someplace to push it, to practice, not to make some glorious libertarian moment of free love and drug use, but just harm reduction and its never been tried because no politician would dare stand behind them.
When you say progressives, are they white? Do they live in the inner city? Do they live in the area where crimes are occurring? Because let me tell you something, I still know a lot of people who live in east, west Baltimore they do not want to be unpoliced. Thats not what they want.
If you ask them what they want out of their police department, they say they want to not be harassed. They want to get treated with dignity when theyre trying to get from the car to the curb. They want to be respected They want to not be over-policed. They want no predatory police.
And then when you talk to them about whats wrong with their neighborhood and why its unbearable to them, they say Im scared. They want the police to come and lock up the badasses who are shooting people or robbing people or breaking into the houses. Thats what they want. And I am absolutely and firmly convinced progressives arent talking to them.
They want the police to do the job, the only job that police are good at and (criminologist Ernest) Burgess called that taking out the trash. And by that he meant the guys who were hurting other people. Not the guys who are hurting themselves with drugs, not the guys who were selling contraband so somebody could hurt themselves.
But everybody you talk to whos trying to make a life and in the hardest places in Baltimore, they want the police to do the one job they can do. And the police cant do it anymore. They learn to do the wrong f***ing thing.
Change the goddamn mission, and then from there, theres a basis for reform. But thats not satisfying enough to the lefties who want all police vanquished. Invariably, they dont live in these neighborhoods. They just imagine what its like but they dont actually live there. And it doesnt satisfy the people on the right who are convinced every time they read of a drug overdose or drug-related murder that the dysfunction of the drug war has to be applied harder and longer and more brutally. The people in either extreme are f***ing useless. They just are.
- Permissibility of Cross-Border Share Swap: Understanding the Fourth Amendment of the NDI Rules and its Implications - SCC Online - November 23rd, 2024 [November 23rd, 2024]
- Does the Fourth Amendment protect smartphone users? - Lewiston Morning Tribune - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- The Fourth Amendment shouldn't stop once you get up to drone level: Albert Fox Cahn - Fox Business - September 21st, 2024 [September 21st, 2024]
- The Reasonableness of Retaining Personal Property Post-Seizure and the Ascendancy of Text, History, and Tradition in Fourth Amendment Jurisprudence -... - September 21st, 2024 [September 21st, 2024]
- Gujarat's Proposes Fourth Amendment To Net Metering Regulations For Rooftop Solar Systems Up To 100 KW - SolarQuarter - July 26th, 2024 [July 26th, 2024]
- Nearly 96% of Private Property Is Open to Warrantless Searches, New Study Estimates - Reason - March 15th, 2024 [March 15th, 2024]
- Heres what to do (and not do) if you get pulled over in California. What are my rights? - Yahoo Movies Canada - December 12th, 2023 [December 12th, 2023]
- FBI Seized $86 Million From People Not Suspected Crimes. A Federal Court Will Decide if That's Legal. - Reason - December 12th, 2023 [December 12th, 2023]
- Digital justice: Supreme Court increasingly confronts law and the internet - Washington Times - December 12th, 2023 [December 12th, 2023]
- MCHS goes on lockout after weapons found on campus - Mineral County Independent-News - November 19th, 2023 [November 19th, 2023]
- Cops Stormed Into a Seattle Woman's Home. It Was the Wrong ... - Reason - November 19th, 2023 [November 19th, 2023]
- Ron Wyden, U.S. Senator from Oregon The Presidential Prayer ... - The Presidential Prayer Team - November 19th, 2023 [November 19th, 2023]
- Bill Maher Slams Critics of the West Amid Israel Conflict: Marginalized People Live Better Today Because of Western Ideals (Video) - Yahoo... - November 5th, 2023 [November 5th, 2023]
- Surveillance authority change could harm ability to stop attacks, FBI ... - Roll Call - November 5th, 2023 [November 5th, 2023]
- New York's progressive chief judge joins with conservatives to ... - City & State - November 5th, 2023 [November 5th, 2023]
- Should domestic abusers have gun rights? | On Point - WBUR News - November 5th, 2023 [November 5th, 2023]
- The Biden administrations latest executive order calls for a ... - R Street - November 5th, 2023 [November 5th, 2023]
- DPS Presents Purple Hearts, Medal of Valor and Other Prestigious ... - the Texas Department of Public Safety - November 5th, 2023 [November 5th, 2023]
- Senators Katie Britt and John Kennedy Call for Investigation into ... - Calhoun County Journal - October 15th, 2023 [October 15th, 2023]
- Trump and Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment: An Exploration ... - JURIST - October 15th, 2023 [October 15th, 2023]
- Expert Q&A with David Aaron on FISA Section 702 Reauthorization ... - Just Security - October 15th, 2023 [October 15th, 2023]
- A Constitution the Government Evades - Tenth Amendment Center - October 15th, 2023 [October 15th, 2023]
- Imagine If Feds Hunted More Real Terrorists, Not Conservatives - The Federalist - October 15th, 2023 [October 15th, 2023]
- Lake Orion Voters Could Decide Removing TIF Funding for ... - Oakland County Times - August 24th, 2023 [August 24th, 2023]
- A marriage of convenience: Why the pushback against a key spy program could cave in on progressives - Yahoo News - August 24th, 2023 [August 24th, 2023]
- Iowa Public Information Board accepts one complaint against ... - KMAland - August 24th, 2023 [August 24th, 2023]
- Burleigh County weighs OHV ordinance to crack down on reckless ... - Bismarck Tribune - August 8th, 2023 [August 8th, 2023]
- AI targets turnstile jumpers to fight fare evasion, but experts warn of ... - 1330 WFIN - August 8th, 2023 [August 8th, 2023]
- As of July 1, police won't be able to stop people for smell of cannabis - The Baltimore Banner - May 20th, 2023 [May 20th, 2023]
- Baby Ninth Amendments Part V: Real Life, Potpourri, and the Big ... - Reason - May 20th, 2023 [May 20th, 2023]
- COA affirms SVF firearm conviction, finds stop and search by police ... - Indiana Lawyer - May 20th, 2023 [May 20th, 2023]
- BARINGS BDC, INC. : Entry into a Material Definitive Agreement, Creation of a Direct Financial Obligation or an Obligation under an Off-Balance Sheet... - May 20th, 2023 [May 20th, 2023]
- Column: : Justice, tyrants and the mob (5/19/23) - McCook Daily Gazette - May 20th, 2023 [May 20th, 2023]
- Alabama appeals court reverses murder conviction of Ala. officer ... - Police News - May 20th, 2023 [May 20th, 2023]
- Oakland narrows town manager search to five | West Orange Times ... - West Orange Times & SouthWest Orange Observer - May 20th, 2023 [May 20th, 2023]
- The Durham Report Is Right About the Need for More FBI Oversight - Reason - May 20th, 2023 [May 20th, 2023]
- Hashtag Trending May 19- U.S. government use invasive AI to track refugees; OpenAI releases iOS ChatGPT app; Microsoft bets on nuclear fusion - IT... - May 20th, 2023 [May 20th, 2023]
- Collective knowledge doctrine applies to a traffic stop - Police News - May 18th, 2023 [May 18th, 2023]
- Privacy and civil rights groups warn against rapidly growing mass ... - TechSpot - May 18th, 2023 [May 18th, 2023]
- There Is No Defensive Search Exception to the Fourth Amendment ... - Center for Democracy and Technology - May 8th, 2023 [May 8th, 2023]
- Napolitano: Does government believe in the Constitution ... - The Winchester Star - May 8th, 2023 [May 8th, 2023]
- Constitution might as well be abandoned if amendments are not ... - Washington Times - May 8th, 2023 [May 8th, 2023]
- One police officer opens a car door, and another looks inside. Did ... - SCOTUSblog - May 8th, 2023 [May 8th, 2023]
- Biden retains option of invoking 14th Amendment to avoid default - Geo News - May 8th, 2023 [May 8th, 2023]
- North Carolina Legislature Pushing Bill That Would Allow Cops To ... - Techdirt - May 8th, 2023 [May 8th, 2023]
- Letter: Threat to our freedom | Opinion | news-journal.com - Longview News-Journal - May 8th, 2023 [May 8th, 2023]
- Parents file lawsuit alleging civil rights violations after children were ... - The Boston Globe - May 8th, 2023 [May 8th, 2023]
- Nevada moves to strengthen protections around use of sexual ... - This Is Reno - May 8th, 2023 [May 8th, 2023]
- Feds rethink warrantless search stats and oh look, a huge drop in numbers - The Register - May 8th, 2023 [May 8th, 2023]
- Its literally cost me everything. Missouri man gets jail time in Capitol riot case - Yahoo News - May 8th, 2023 [May 8th, 2023]
- Board Member Rallies to Student Who Vandalized LGBTQ Posters - FlaglerLive.com - May 8th, 2023 [May 8th, 2023]
- 4th Circuit upholds $730K award to Black Secret Service agent - Virginia Lawyers Weekly - April 19th, 2023 [April 19th, 2023]
- Suspected drug dealer who used alias to rent condo wins reversal in ... - Indiana Lawyer - April 19th, 2023 [April 19th, 2023]
- Do Priests Have a Right to Privacy? - Commonweal - April 19th, 2023 [April 19th, 2023]
- This Deceptive ICE Tactic Violates the Fourth Amendment - ACLU - April 13th, 2023 [April 13th, 2023]
- LDF Appeals Grant of Qualified Immunity in Case Involving Invasive ... - NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund - April 13th, 2023 [April 13th, 2023]
- Livestreaming police stop constitutionally protected - North Carolina Lawyers Weekly - April 13th, 2023 [April 13th, 2023]
- F.B.I. Feared Lawmaker Was Target of Foreign Intelligence Operation - The New York Times - April 13th, 2023 [April 13th, 2023]
- Houston police officer who opened fire in Family Dollar parking lot also shot Mario Watts in separate 2021 incident, HPD confirms - KTRK-TV - April 13th, 2023 [April 13th, 2023]
- Jayland Walker: What's legal and what's illegal during protests - Akron Beacon Journal - April 13th, 2023 [April 13th, 2023]
- IMPD officers indicted for death of Herman Whitfield III - WISH TV Indianapolis, IN - April 13th, 2023 [April 13th, 2023]
- You can support Second Amendment and want gun reform, too ... - Straight Arrow News - April 13th, 2023 [April 13th, 2023]
- Does the five-second rule apply to extending a traffic stop to permit a ... - Police News - April 13th, 2023 [April 13th, 2023]
- Charlotte moves to dismiss lawsuit from man injured during 2020 ... - Carolina Journal - April 13th, 2023 [April 13th, 2023]
- TRAVEL & LEISURE CO. : Entry into a Material Definitive Agreement, Creation of a Direct Financial Obligation or an Obligation under an Off-Balance... - April 11th, 2023 [April 11th, 2023]
- Socialism and the Equal Sharing of Misery | Business ... - The Weekly Journal - April 11th, 2023 [April 11th, 2023]
- Top 10 Court Cases That Changed the U.S. Justice System - Listverse - April 11th, 2023 [April 11th, 2023]
- A new look at the lives of ultra-Orthodox Jews: Shtetl.org provides ... - New York Daily News - April 11th, 2023 [April 11th, 2023]
- VERISK ANALYTICS, INC. : Entry into a Material Definitive Agreement, Creation of a Direct Financial Obligation or an Obligation under an Off-Balance... - April 11th, 2023 [April 11th, 2023]
- Power Of Arrest In India, USA And UK - BW Legal World - April 11th, 2023 [April 11th, 2023]
- Jalil Muntaqim: The time to end prison slavery is now - The Real News Network - April 11th, 2023 [April 11th, 2023]
- Race and the Fourth Amendment: Defendants Raise Issue in ... - Law.com - April 9th, 2023 [April 9th, 2023]
- Why Founding Fathers passed the Third Amendment to the ... - Tennessean - April 9th, 2023 [April 9th, 2023]
- The journey of the Constitution - Pakistan Observer - April 9th, 2023 [April 9th, 2023]
- Former MPD officer sued - McMinnville - Southern Standard - April 9th, 2023 [April 9th, 2023]
- No, the RESTRICT Act wouldnt give the government access to data from your home devices - WCNC.com - April 9th, 2023 [April 9th, 2023]
- Analysis: How Strict Enforcement of Strict Gun Laws Begets ... - The Reload - April 9th, 2023 [April 9th, 2023]
- New York Court Rules Due Process Must be Considered for 'Red ... - National Shooting Sports Foundation - April 9th, 2023 [April 9th, 2023]
- Opinion: Democracy can't exist without "legal technicalities" - The Connecticut Mirror - April 9th, 2023 [April 9th, 2023]
- Commentary: Police and District Attorneys Dont Want to Give Up ... - The Peoples Vanguard of Davis - April 9th, 2023 [April 9th, 2023]