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      • no longer obedient, belonging, or accepted and hence not controllable or answerable; renegade: They described him as a rogue cop who had abandoned his training.
  1. It's a legal doctrine that says government workers can't be held liable for what they do on the job, except in rare circumstances. Some legal experts are praising the new law. "Colorado has passed...

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    • State Takeovers of Local Police
    • Replacing One Police Agency with A Better One
    • An Inspector-General of Police in Every State
    • Predictive Policing of Police Crimes

    If Governor Walz were to frame the question of policing solutions more broadly as state takeovers of local control of police, he could build on the apparent success with the State Attorney General. He could even go on to ask whether the Minneapolis Police Department itself could be replaced, or supplemented by, a new institution. Rather than defund...

    The critical issue for any plan to abolish one police force and launch another is how to avoid a de facto police strike, at least during a transition from one local police monopoly to another. A de facto police strike—working to rulebook, doing as little as possible, failing to arrest violent criminals—would not just threaten the success of a plan ...

    Thomson’s philosophy of policing overlaps heavily with policing by consent. But it was not by philosophy alone that the British policing model cultivated those values. Since 1856, a mere 27 years after modern English policing was founded at Scotland Yard, the Government of England and Wales has appointed a Chief Inspector of Constabulary. This posi...

    But what about rogue cops? How can a state answer the question of what can be done to reduce the hiring and retention of police officers who consistently abuse citizens and run very high risks of excessive force or criminal actions?A very new and high-tech answer to that question might be created within a Statewide Inspector-General’s office. Using...

    • Lawrence W. Sherman
    • Lawrence.Sherman@crim.cam.ac.uk
    • 2020
  3. Mar 16, 2022 · This report examines the issue of “wandering cops”—officers who leave one police department after alleged misconduct and are then hired by another agency.

  4. Feb 16, 2023 · The Rogue Police Officer, the Reasons, and Remedies. Officers take an oath to protect citizens, but not all who wear the uniform will uphold this duty, and we must ask why and how to improve the...

    • Dr. Patricia Farrell
  5. Jun 15, 2020 · The "good rogue" cop comes in a range of flavors from disgusting to delightful but remains popular across the spectrum. (They are almost always detectives; uniformed police are bit...

    • Robert Lloyd
  6. Rogue definition: no longer obedient, belonging, or accepted and hence not controllable or answerable; renegade. See examples of ROGUE used in a sentence.

  7. 1 a dishonest or unprincipled person, esp. a man; rascal; scoundrel. 2 Often jocular a mischievous or wayward person, often a child; scamp. 3 a crop plant which is inferior, diseased, or of a different, unwanted variety. 4. a any inferior or defective specimen. b (as modifier) rogue heroin. 5 Archaic a vagrant. 6.

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