Dave Gray
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Posts: 30730
It's doo-doo, baby!
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« on: February 04, 2009, 01:39:34 pm » |
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This question is specifically for Defense, although everyone can chime in.
The Shield (for those who haven't seen it) is a really interesting show. I just started watching it and I like it because the concepts of good and bad are very blurred.
In the first season, the story focuses on a police precinct in Detroit (I think). It's an ensemble cast, but the main players involve Vic -- a cop in a special task force that is very crooked. He takes a little on the side, works deals with crooks, etc. But his intentions seem to be for the greater good. He wants to keep murderers and rapists off the street, so if that means he steals some coke from one drug dealer to give it to another, so that he can get info on a bigger fish, he'll take it. He searches without warrants, roughs people up, and even kills people who cross him. But again, it's all for good -- in his eyes at least.
On the other end of the spectrum is the chief of the department, who wants everything done by the book. However, his motives are unclear. It's as if he wants to catch Vic (the crooked cop), not because it's the right thing to do, but because it will vault him into a career of politics.
And there are many characters in the middle of that struggle.
The good guys are bad and good. The bad guys are good and bad.
Anyway, the question is -- does this stuff really happen in practice? Do cops ever frame criminals they KNOW are criminals to get the evidence they need? Do they pay off people to say they saw something suspicious in order to get a warrant that they really shouldn't? Do they skim off the top, etc? I'm sure this happens somewhere, but is it something you've ever seen or known about firsthand?
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