MUST READ!!! KCPD CHIEF BLASTS MEDIA FOR COVERAGE OF POLICE SHOOTINGS!!!



As KCTV5 prepares a controversial report and One Struggle KC continues their advocacy, THE KANSAS CITY CHIEF OF POLICE WARNS ABOUT RESPONSIBILITY THAT COMES WITH FREEDOM OF SPEECH . . . In a lengthy blog missive that we're posting in its entirety in the interest of fair play.

You decide . . .

KCPD Chief Blog: Media coverage of police influences public perception

Soon you will see newspaper and television stories about officer-involved shootings in Kansas City. They likely will feature emotional statements from loved ones saying they wish the shootings never had to happen. Those of us in law enforcement wish the same thing. The very last thing any officer wants to do is take the life of another person. Everyone misses a loved one when they are gone. Because of this, I understand that the family and friends of those left behind are grieving and questioning the necessity of it all.

But when a life-threatening situation presents itself, officers cannot act on what they would like to happen. They don’t have that luxury. They must act on the facts as they know them at the time and take what actions are necessary and legal to protect themselves and others. And unlike the extensive analysis of the incident that so-called “experts” on 24-hour news stations can conduct in the aftermath, officers usually do not have the luxury of time as an incident unfolds. They have fractions of a second to determine whether someone is presenting a threat to their life or the life of another.

We have seen what irresponsible reporting by the media can do. While protests over the death of a man in police custody raged in Baltimore in May, a national news network reported that Baltimore police had shot and killed a protester, nearly inciting another riot. That was not at all true. Police instead arrested a man with a gun. The network retracted the report. But not before it already increased unrest and police distrust in the city. Once the relationship between the community and police is damaged, it may take years to repair it.

Most news organizations – local or national – are not so reckless as to report complete falsehoods. But presenting emotion-heavy stories, out-of-context videos and putting “experts” on television or in print who don’t know all of the facts of an incident is a disservice to everyone. Police investigations of officer-involved shootings are based on facts. Trained detectives with years of experience in criminal investigations determine the facts of the case. Those facts and findings are then presented to a prosecutor for a determination of whether police acted within the law. Emotions cannot be a factor in conducting a fair and unbiased investigation, and the public should expect no less. And as the Department does with any other criminal investigation, once an officer-involved shooting investigation is closed, the case file is made public, in accordance with the Missouri Sunshine Law.

Fostering distrust between police and the community is a reckless thing to do. Everyone’s safety is put at risk when communities lack the trust to work together to fight violence. We have seen violence spike in recent years in communities where residents don’t have a good relationship with law enforcement. I blogged about that earlier this year. I have worked my entire career here at KCPD to build trust between the department and residents, and it has been one of my top priorities as Chief of Police. And from the feedback I’ve gotten, we’re making real strides.

I’m not saying that we are perfect. If one of the 2,000 members of this department violates policy or the law, we want to know about it, and we will work to correct it as quickly as possible. We have proved as much by taking such allegations seriously. For example, the Office of Community Complaints – an independent civilian oversight organization – was one of the first civilian oversight offices for law enforcement to be established in this country. When a KCPD member has violated the law or department policy, he or she will be held accountable.

But we invest heavily in training to avoid such violations of the law or department policy in the first place. From one call to the next, our officers must be social workers, paramedics or conflict mediators, and we try to prepare them for every situation they may face. Our officers are well-versed in everything from responding to an active shooter to city ordinances.

A city where law enforcement and other community members work together and trust each other is a safer community. It’s a place where people feel free to come to police with their fears or to provide information to capture someone who has committed violence in their neighborhood. Propagating stories to get ratings or readers that rely solely on emotion, or out-of-context snippets undermines that relationship, and ultimately undermines the safety of the city.
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Comments

  1. Thank you for posting both sides of this issue today TKC.

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  2. If the Chief was really doing his job, this wouldn't have been a story in the first place. The whole city can't be responsible for covering his mistakes.

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  3. If the media is finally going to have to exhibit some responsibility and actually report facts, the neighborhood "activists" are suddenly going to have a whole lot less to do.
    Ferguson? Based entirely on a series of lies.
    MU? Lots of anecdotes without a shred of evidence.
    Black Lives Matter? A Twitter phenomenon with nothing in particular in mind except for disrupting meetings, marching around, and making pointless demands.
    Local KCMO activities? An embarrassing joke.
    Isn't there anyone with just a little creativity?
    When people behave irresponsibly, treat others around themselves like crap, break the law, threaten other people, and attack and ignore the police, they're putting themselves in self-destructive situations.
    Most everyone else has had way more than enough of this show.

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  4. The Chief is just now discovering that journalists are scumbags. Could have told him that a long time ago.

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  5. Say no to censorship11/23/15, 7:55 PM

    So now we want the police programming the news? I think not.

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  6. IF this police chief continues his blind defense of officers, and basically puts lipstick on thug cops, he's fixing for a fall. For if he's being honest, the KCPD is head and shoulders better than any department in the country.

    The minority community first needs to speak out. I see this essay as a preentive strike...not unlike what happened in Ferguson, NYC, Oakland, and so many places.

    Let the chips fall chief. Don't preemptively accuse the media of unfair or sensational reporting. Let's wait and see. Video on sites like "COP BLOCK", "Cato Institute", Free Thought Project and others makes it clear that police have a serious problem in America. Included among their issues are insufficent vetting, the blue code of silence and officers look the other way at abuse, an "us versus them" mentality, triggerhappy, tazer happy policing, too-violent arrests, insufficient training and supervision, police behaving badly while knowing prosecutors won't prosecute them, and insufficiently clear RULES of ENGAGEMENT.

    Local media, depending on positive police relations, tends not to report police abuse until the video hits national television. Then it hits the fan when the network reporters come in on their Learjets to do what local journalists SHOULD have been doing all along.

    The real tale is how the community feels about policing, about how many arrestees end up black and blue, how many innocents get hit in police chases over small offenses, and more.

    A preemptive police chief essay automatically smells bad, even though KCTV has had a reputation for hatchet jobs in past decades. Lets see what they've got. See how the public reacts on social media. If KCPD has been practicing community policing and abusive takedowns are very rare, that will become very apparent.

    Fact is, POLICE have the guns, and so if anybody should be preemptively admonished by the chief for overreaction, it should be lawmen, not newsmen.

    I expect when push comes to shove, lots of people in the community know which KCPD divisions have overzealous officers on which shifts, or which suburban departments have reputations for stopping people while poor, and which cops are too quick to scream, 'get on the ground, get on the ground NOW."

    In light of a national policing problem we see on too many videos...let's see how things shake out locally. And just what ARE KCPD's RULES of ENGAGEMENT ARE, when should officers shoot or be patient and call in negotiators to handle mentally ill citizens with some finesse... rules we see violated ON VIDEO, in OTHER cities on a regular basis.

    This writer hopes police in the KC AREA are 110percent different and better than the reputations and practices of departments across the state in St. Louis.

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  7. Although, I agree that the media is collectively one big self serving ass hole, I can not agree with everything the chief communicated as his team is just as guilty of parading around slinging horseshit propaganda and one sided slanted inferences as the media. I could list a ton of examples, but everybody in town has witnessed the PR machine at work.

    I don't know if the chiefs people ALL feel the same way as he about human life. I can tell you that I have witnessed bad officers beating the shit out of people just because the wrong thing was said or someone was not fast enough for officers. There is just no place for that kind of street justice in America. I grasp that a shit head can get on that last nerve, but officers are selected for the job with self control being one of many required qualifying factors.

    I also don't buy into all the bad crap I read about how evil cops are in general. Frankly, few people get out of bed in the morning intending to be an ass hole and I can guarantee you if Darren Wilson (Ferguson) could have the hindsight all the media has I'm sure he would have called in sick the morning he off'd Michael Brown.

    At some point the trend has to change. There have to be bridges built, trust rebuilt, integrity rebuilt and new perceptions need to exist. I am not betting it will happen anytime soon because changes have to happen on both sides. One thing is for sure. No one is winning any ground in the current state of affairs and it is costing society dearly.

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  8. I say it is sweeps month. All about ratings for local news.

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  9. Its called managed perception like when the st Louis cops said mike brown stolen cigarillos at the time they released the name of killer cop Darren Wilson. Though it is clear the man punching the shop owner over cigarillos is clearly a man much older than mike brown. So when the police shoot someone like Ryan stokes In Kansas city then handcuffs him while he lays dying makes it hard to believe someone with a gun wouldn't just shoot a cop in the face.

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  10. I'm a STRONG supporter of law enforcement, but Chief Forte needs to get the hell off of social media.

    Let your public relations liaison officer handle all the media contacts, newsletters, updates, etc.

    Forte wants to give the impression of personally being on top of every police encounter, but he degrades the position of Chief by getting involved in this type of silly back and forth.

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  11. 9:45 comment said:
    "like when the st Louis cops said mike brown stolen cigarillos at the time they released the name of killer cop Darren Wilson. Though it is clear the man punching the shop owner over cigarillos is clearly a man much older than mike brown."

    You are DELUSIONAL!! I watched that video more than once, and it's CLEARLY the same Mike Brown.

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  12. This kind of stuff is not going to end well for the nation's police. A severe spanking is in the offing after dinner. Yes, just wait til your father gets home!

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  13. While I admit that media does play a role in spinning facts to favor one side or another, the truth is that interactions between citizens and KCPD is deplorable. Chief still has not answered any serious, fact-based questions about his role in the East Patrol development scandal. That, and that alone, forms the basis if my opinion about the Kansas City, Missouri Police Department. The media was all too willing to help the police department play cover-up.

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  14. 9:54 Your bullshit is a perfect example of a lack of basic integrity.

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  15. I smell some bacon in this thread. Buried, but it's the biggest story of the week....or the month. Or the year, even tho unlike NYC, KC gets just a bit part in the story of the nation's police state getting caught on video. This is only the beginning. WHo's going to buy the popcorn and the donuts?

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  16. If you don't resist or flee, your odds of getting shot go WAY down.

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  17. 11:18 but your odds of dying do not. Sad fact. See Brandon Ellingson.

    As for Forte's claim that "trained professional detectives" investigate officer shootings. Ya, the wolf watching the henhouse.

    Anyone who followed the Brandon Ellingson case (even officers within the department) know that cops lie for other cops. The fact the officer that arrested Brandon Ellingson is not in prison proves beyond a shadow of a doubt that officers CANNOT be trusted to investigate other officers.

    An officer turned whistle-blower in the Ellignson case, and what happened? The cop was demoted and forced out of the department.

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  18. " ... the responsibility that comes with free speech..."

    There isn't any. That's the point: its a way of avoiding responsibility & accountability, the refuge of the morally lazy. 'I can't decide what to delete, so I won't delete anything. We'll call it a 'free speech' zone. Yeah, that's the ticket ..'

    ' and we'll show offense pictures of scantily clad women, & if any one complains, we'll just scream 'free speech', yeah, & we'll post stories about local women & include pictures of them, as well. Then, if any one complains about the cum guy, we can cry, 'We're not perverts, this is a 'free speech' zone.' 'Its not hate speech, this is a 'free speech' zone.

    Yeah, that's the ticket ... we'll get a gazillion hits & be the envy of every hipster on the friggen' planet. Yeah, that's the ticket ... we'll call it

    KANSAS CITY'S LAST FREE SPEECH ZONE.

    Home of racists, misogynists, homophobes, Christians, wingnuts, the tin foil hat brigade ,& other assorted, & unaffiliated, terrorists.

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  19. Actually, bullets are the only free speech left. Police are now randomly shooting into crowds of activist during prayer circle. The praying is over people. Been there done there and got shot at. Justice for Ryan Stokes. Time to fight back the police

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  20. Accept Chief Forte discipline in the form of austerity by the banking cartels and willfully work yourself to death or be sent to the Gulag and die under in the Jackson County Court System.

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  21. The police dept. should not make their own rules. The PUBLIC should make the rules the police must live by. In essence, the police dept. has been making the rules over life and death, which should not be their choice.

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  22. The Office of Community Complaints should be, must be, renamed to The Office of NIGGER Crying.

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  23. The chief has some good points. The media have become trolls looking for ratings. The investigative journalism that brought out the facts on Watergate and priests misbehaving are now just memories we can visit in "All the Presidents Men" and "Spotlight."

    Byron: So very very sorry you don't like free speech. Perhaps you can find another blog that will offer you the safe place you seek free of microaggressions and anything that would challenge your little mind.

    Speaking of your little mind, did you note that George W. Bush is presumed to have an IQ of 130, which both puts him several points ahead of you and among the presidents with the lowest IQs.

    Maybe you're not the remarkable supergenius you think you are?

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  24. The media, and especially the KC STAR want to create false naratives.
    All of the cases are cut and dry. "Facts are the enemy of truth "
    I have managed to survive nearly 60 years , but I dint attack Officers in squad cars , waive guns or swords around in public places and I dont attack store clerks over cigars.
    Life is pretty simple to survive, enjoy it.
    There is no such thing as DWB, SWB or anything else "while black".
    You control your behavior, you control the narative and you control your own destiny.

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  25. So Byron must be in the wingnut crowd.

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