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  2. Blue wall of silence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_wall_of_silence

    The code is one example of police corruption and misconduct. Officers who engaged in discriminatory arrests, physical or verbal harassment, and selective enforcement of the law are considered to be corrupt, while officers who follow the code may participate in some of these acts during their careers for personal matters or in order to protect or support fellow officers. [5]

  3. Gangs in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gangs_in_the_United_States

    The youth of this culture became known as the cholo subculture, and several gangs formed from among them. [20] By the 1920s, cholo subculture and palomilla had merged to form the basis of the Los Angeles gangs. [20] The gangs proliferated in the 1930s and 1940s as adolescents came together in conflict against the police and other authorities. [20]

  4. Police corruption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Police_corruption

    Corrupted behavior can be caused by the behavioral change of the officer within the police "subculture". A subculture is a group of individuals within a culture that share the same attitudes and beliefs. Police officers within the department share the same norms and that new behavioral development can be attributed through psychological ...

  5. 5 facts about police brutality in the United States that will ...

    www.aol.com/news/2015-10-22-5-facts-about-police...

    As of 2011, there are 5.1 million American Indians and Alaska Natives living in the United States. Although that number is significantly less than the 45 million black Americans in the country ...

  6. How race, police and mental health collided in America's ...

    www.aol.com/race-police-mental-health-collided...

    The issue with police involved shootings is that a Black community in particular says that police officers, law enforcement, are way too quick to resort to violence when dealing with the Black ...

  7. Police brutality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Police_brutality

    Nine police officers subduing a member of the public in Egypt. The first modern police force is widely regarded to be the Metropolitan Police Service in London, established in 1829. [4] However, some scholars argue that early forms of policing began in the Americas as early as the 1500s on plantation colonies in the Caribbean. [5]

  8. Subcultural theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subcultural_theory

    In criminology, subcultural theory emerged from the work of the Chicago School on gangs and developed through the symbolic interactionism school into a set of theories arguing that certain groups or subcultures in society have values and attitudes that are conducive to crime and violence.

  9. How police officers preyed on teens in the Boy Scouts’ police ...

    www.aol.com/news/police-youth-program-plagued...

    Stoughton police ran the Explorer program for about 15 years. The department could locate only a single one-year agreement with Learning for Life, the Scouting affiliate that oversees the national ...