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Post Reports

The hidden cost of police misconduct

Post Reports

The Washington Post

Daily News, Politics, News

4.45.1K Ratings

🗓️ 9 March 2022

⏱️ 24 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Today on Post Reports, we explore the hidden cost of police misconduct. Cities around the country spent more than $1.5 billion between 2010 and 2020 to settle claims involving thousands of officers repeatedly accused of misconduct – and often left taxpayers in the dark.


Read more:


A warning to listeners: Today’s episode of Post Reports includes a story about police violence that may be disturbing to some people, especially animal lovers.


When we hear about lawsuits against police departments, it’s often in cases involving fatal police shootings, like Breonna Taylor’s or George Floyd’s, that result in multimillion-dollar settlements.


“Those cases, they make the headlines, they make the news,” says Washington Post reporter Keith Alexander. “But there are other cases where officers are the subject of numerous lawsuits — 10, 12, 13 — for much smaller offenses, but they're happening repeatedly.”


In a new investigation from The Post, Keith and fellow reporters tallied nearly 40,000 payments made by 25 major cities and counties around the country to settle repeat allegations of misconduct involving thousands of officers. What they found was the hidden cost of police misconduct: the staggering amount that’s been paid over the past decade and the way that taxpayers are often kept in the dark.


Steven Rich and Hannah Thacker contributed to this report. If you want to learn more about how The Post reported on the hidden billion-dollar cost of repeated police misconduct, check out this video.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey, it's Martine.

0:03.4

Before we start the show, I wanted to warn you that today's episode contains a story

0:07.6

about police violence that may be disturbing to some listeners, especially animal lovers.

0:13.3

So please take care and thanks.

0:17.0

On an ordinary evening back in 2014, Tony Murray was getting ready for bed.

0:22.5

Murray worked at a potato chip factory in Detroit, and he had a 6am shift the next day.

0:28.5

He was turning off all the lights in his house, and he had two dogs at the time, and getting

0:35.4

the dogs ready to get a bed as well.

0:37.4

Keith Alexander covers crime and courts for the post.

0:40.0

And then he looked out of his window and he saw these police officers.

0:42.7

And the next thing I knew, I heard something, boom, boom, boom.

0:47.8

I'm thinking somebody knocking on my door.

0:50.8

So when I opened up the door, all I saw was guns in my face.

0:57.6

And they pushed their way in.

1:00.0

They had a weapons drawn.

1:01.9

They pushed Murray to the floor.

1:05.2

Murray immediately ordered his dogs to run downstairs into the basement.

1:09.4

He pleaded with the police officers.

1:11.5

Do not shoot my dog.

1:12.8

My dogs are fine.

1:13.8

They will not bother you.

1:15.5

One was a black lab at work.

...

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