She would later tell a judge she was splayed outside the patrol car for a
pat-down, made to lift her shirt to prove she wasn't hiding anything,
then to pull down her pants when the officer still wasn't convinced.
He
shined his flashlight between her legs, she said, then ordered her to
sit in the squad car and face him as he towered above. His gun in sight,
she said she pleaded "No, sir" as he unzipped his fly and exposed
himself with a hurried directive.
"Come on," the woman, identified in police reports as J.L., said she was
told before she began giving him oral sex. "I don't have all night."
The accusations are undoubtedly jolting, and yet they reflect a betrayal
of the badge that has been repeated time and again across the country.
In a yearlong investigation of sexual misconduct by U.S. law
enforcement, The Associated Press uncovered about 1,000 officers who
lost their badges in a six-year period for rape, sodomy and other sexual
assault; sex crimes that included possession of child pornography; or
sexual misconduct such as propositioning citizens or having consensual
but prohibited on-duty intercourse.
The number is unquestionably an undercount because it represents only
those officers whose licenses to work in law enforcement were revoked,
and not all states take such action. California and New York — with
several of the nation's largest law enforcement agencies — offered no
records because they have no statewide system to decertify officers for
misconduct. And even among states that provided records, some reported
no officers removed for sexual misdeeds even though cases were
identified via news stories or court records.
"It's happening probably in every law enforcement agency across the
country," said Chief Bernadette DiPino of the Sarasota Police Department
in Florida, who helped study the problem for the International
Association of Chiefs of Police. "It's so underreported and people are
scared that if they call and complain about a police officer, they think
every other police officer is going to be then out to get them."
Even as cases around the country have sparked a national conversation
about excessive force by police, sexual misconduct by officers has
largely escaped widespread notice due to a patchwork of laws, piecemeal
reporting and victims frequently reluctant to come forward because of
their vulnerabilities — they often are young, poor, struggling with
addiction or plagued by their own checkered pasts.
In interviews, lawyers and even police chiefs told the AP that some
departments also stay quiet about improprieties to limit liability,
allowing bad officers to quietly resign, keep their certification and
sometimes jump to other jobs.
The officers involved in such wrongdoing represent a tiny fraction of
the hundreds of thousands whose jobs are to serve and protect. But their
actions have an outsized impact — miring departments in litigation that
leads to costly settlements, crippling relationships with an already
wary public and scarring victims with a special brand of fear.
"My God," J.L. said she thought as she eyed the officer's holstered gun, "he's going to kill me."
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