Thursday, April 8, 2010

Unethical and Illegal

Law enforcement personnel who are stealing drugs is a very common form of corruption. A law enforcement employee usually steals drugs for one of two reasons: 1) for personal use or 2) to sell them. Drugs play a large role in the American society and police are always confiscating drugs from people they come in contact with, therefore the drugs are definitely available.
A recent case that was highly publicized is that of the San Fransisco crime l
ab technician, Deborah Madden, who was caught stealing small amounts of Cocaine that was intended to be evidence. The scandal was a huge embarrassment on behalf of all law enforcement officials in San Francisco and now the community has lost trust in them. The scandal has jeopardized other areas of the crime lab as well, including the DNA and firearms sections. The District Attorney's office felt as if they could not trust the evidence that was being evaluated at that crime lab due to the tampering, resulting in 550 cases that have either been dropped or not charged and another 1,400 that are being reviewed still. (Collins & Donald)
The crime lab technician was using the stolen Cocaine for her own personal use. The employee
obviously had an addiction to the Cocaine since she continuously stole it. How come none of her coworkers noticed something was off? It is understandable that Madden was good at hiding the scandal she was committing, but what about the way she acting due to using the Cocaine? The evidence was not being taken care of as well as it should have been. If the evidence was monitored more closely and more rules were in place then this would not have gone undetected as long as it did. The evidence needs to be seen and measured and analyzed by more than one technician. The evidence tape that seals the bag needs to be taken more seriously. There needs to be documentation of who has what evidence and what they did with it and the data they collected for it.
When there are so many problems with the process in which evidence is handled then it is understandable that the public would lose trust in the system. Why should they believe that everything is being done correctly when the corruption in the crime lab is exposed. Of course, not all employees are going to try and run a scandal, but one person ruins it for the rest and may make their jobs a little bit harder and more tedious. The only way to get rid of corruption problems is to have more of a checks and balances within each department, so it is not so easy to get away corrupt activities.

References


Collins, Terry and Donald, Brooke.
Sf crime lab scandal strains justice system. Sacramento Bee. April 2, 2010.

Carter, David. Drug-related corruption of police officers: A contemporary typology. Journal of Criminal Justice. Volume 18. Issue 2. July 16, 2006.

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