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Joe Domanick is an award-winning investigative journalist and author and an associate director of John Jay College's Center on Media, Crime, and Justice, City University of New York. His previous books include Faking It in America; To Protect and to Serve, which won the 1995 Edgar Award for Best toon meer Fact Crime Book; and Cruel Justice, which was selected as one of the Best Books of 2004 by the San Francisco Chronicle. He lives in Los Angeles. toon minder

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Important necessary book about the culture of American policing seen specifically through the development of the LAPD from Rodney King to 2015, from thuggish paramilitary untouchables to a modern, accountable unit of city government. Expertly researched, vividly rendered. This is not the writers fault but I wish this book had come out in 2018, in light of Michael Brown and Eric Gardner and Sandra Bland and Black Lives Matter. Still 100% worth it.
 
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Smokler | 1 andere bespreking | Jan 3, 2021 |
Fierce, beautifully researched takedown of the LAPD, ending at Rodney King beating. Has a point of view (anti) but comes to it honestly. Has a sequel called "Blue" that I will read next.
 
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Smokler | 1 andere bespreking | Jan 3, 2021 |
A special thank you to Simon & Schuster and NetGalley for an ARC in exchange for an honest review. 4.5 Stars

Award-winning investigative reporter, Joe Domanick describes the transformation in BLUE, The LAPD and the Battle to Redeem American Policing --a riveting page-turning account of the LA police Department from the LA riots, the OJ Simpson trial, to the events of 2014, which began in Missouri and New York City; with effects reverberated throughout our country.

Domanick tells of a much larger bigger picture of American policing over the past quarter-century, and the challenges we still face today.The story is told through the lives of people who actually LIVED it—police officers, police chiefs, mayors, city politicians, gang members, and ex-gang members, community leaders, and citizens.

Thought-provoking questions: What constitutes good and bad policing? How best to prevent crime, control police abuse, ease tensions between the police and the powerless, and partner with communities of color to enhance public safety.

Joe mentions how he wanted to understand the source of the department’s extraordinary power, when he wrote his first LAPD book, a character-based historic narrative of the department called to protect and to serve, as a way to find that understanding.

Then there were changes in the 1950’s up to 1991 when the tension once again began mounting when four white LAPD officers were caught on videotape beating a black motorist- Rodney King. A year later the officers were acquitted, sparking the bloody LA riots. Thereafter little changed.

Why was the reform taking so long to implement? This is when he decided to revisit the LAPDs history starting with the 1992 riots and the writing of Blue.

Told through lives of the people who lived through the crack-filled violence-laden nineties, and then through the reforms that finally began taking hold in the first decade of the twenty-first century.

Joe highlights two cops: One a police reformer and stranger to LA, the other a chief-in-training with LAPD roots stretching back half a century. The others were LA gangsters who embodied the fraught relations between the LAPD and the communities.

I enjoyed the way the Key Players are highlighted at the front of the book with a description of each, as well as sections devoted to the topics and time.

• Charlie Beck
• Tom Bradley
• William Bratton
• Andre Christian
• Daryl Gates
• Alfred Lomas
• William H Parker
• Bernard Parks
• Rafael “Ray” Perez
• Connie Rice
• Willie Williams

Meticulously researched, well-written, with impressive historical notes, references, interviews, and news reporting, as well as-- laid out in a very organized format.

Much of Blue is about cops and the police leadership, officers past and present. From crime, politics, and cops—policies and reform. Filled with political intrigue, cultural and racial conflict, income and opportunity. The politics and the business of crime and guns, our reckless sentencing laws, and the disastrous state of our public schools. All of this disparate forces together send generations of young Americans into the world’s largest prison system with no end in sight.

As the author notes, in 2014 both the American people and the American press began asking hard questions about the current state of American policing. We live in a violent, racist, gun-loving society. American society is in a deep crisis centered around our corrupt politics and institutions.

We have to start somewhere, and have to work for change within and within and outside American policing. Depending on your age or your geographical location, some stories may ring all too familiar, if you lived through those eras.

Highly recommend. Informative, Compelling, Timely.
… (meer)
½
 
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JudithDCollins | 1 andere bespreking | Dec 26, 2015 |
An overview of the history of the LAPD, ultimately focusing on the King Riots. From the turn of the century, when the LAPD was openly corrupt; and how the efforts to clean up the department led to a strong-man rule and a departmental pattern of accepting violence against 'scum' as being necessary and tolerated. And how those policies led to two major riots in the City of Dreams.
½
 
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BruceCoulson | 1 andere bespreking | Mar 11, 2011 |

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Werken
4
Leden
92
Populariteit
#202,476
Waardering
3.9
Besprekingen
4
ISBNs
9

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