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Why do police officers turn against the people they are hired to protect? This question seems all the more urgent in the wake of recent global protests against police brutality. Historical criminologist Paul Bleakley addresses this by examining a series of intersecting cases of police corruption in Queensland, Australia. The protection and extortion of illegal gambling operators and sex workers were only the most visible features of a decades-long, pervasive culture of corruption in the states law enforcement agency. Even more dangerousand far harder to prosecutewas the corrupt bargain between the police and the states conservative government, which gave law enforcement free rein to profit from criminalized vice in return for supporting the governments repression and persecution of its political enemies, from punk music fans to gay men to left-wing protestors. While intimidating members of the political opposition, the police also protected friends and allies from criminal prosecution, even for offenses as serious as child sex abuse. When journalists and investigators revealed this corrupt bargain in 1987, the premier was forced from office and the police commissioner went to prison. But untangling politics from policing provedand continues to provefar more difficult in societies around the world. This true crime story goes beyond the everyday violations of law and ethics to underscore how central honest, equitable policing is to a truly democratic society.
- Format: Pocket/Paperback
- ISBN: 9781611864007
- Språk: Engelska
- Antal sidor: 272
- Utgivningsdatum: 2021-11-30
- Förlag: Michigan State University Press