U.S. police say black killings, protests
raised tensions: survey
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[January 11, 2017]
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Three quarters
of American police officers said their interactions with black people
have become more tense following police killings of unarmed black men
and waves of protests that followed, according to a survey published on
Wednesday.
The Pew Research Center survey found a widespread feeling among police
that the general public misunderstood them and the public outcry over
the deaths in recent years was motivated by anti-police bias rather than
a will to hold police accountable.
Police killings of several unarmed black men in 2014 led to nationwide
protests and the rise of the grassroots movement known as Black Lives
Matter.
Supporters of the movement, including some Democrats, have said it
shines a light on a previously overlooked problem of excessive use of
force against blacks by police. Critics, including President-elect
Donald Trump and other Republicans, have criticized Black Lives Matter
as unfairly maligning police doing a dangerous job.
"Within America's police and sheriff's departments, the survey finds
that the ramifications of these deadly encounters have been less visible
than the public protests, but no less profound," the researchers wrote
in a report accompanying the survey results.
Seventy five percent of officers told Pew their interactions with black
people had become more tense in the wake of high-profile police killings
of blacks and the protests they generated. Two thirds of officers said
the protests were motivated "a great deal" by a general bias towards
police.
Two thirds of officers saw the killings of unarmed black men as isolated
incidents rather than a sign of a broader problem. This was in marked
contrast to the sentiment of the general public, 60 percent of whom said
in a separate Pew survey the killings pointed to a broader systemic
problem.
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Members of the New York Police Department's Counterterrorism Bureau
patrol Times Square in the lead up to New Year's celebrations in
Manhattan, New York City, U.S. December 29, 2016. REUTERS/Andrew
Kelly
More than ninety percent of American police officers said they
worried more about their safety because of the protests. About three
quarters said they or their colleagues were less willing to stop and
question people who seemed suspicious or to use force even when
appropriate.
Majorities of police officers and the general public supported the
wider use of body cameras worn by officers to record interactions,
at 66 percent and 93 percent respectively.
Pew based its findings on online surveys with 7,917 officers from 54
police and sheriff's departments between May 19 and August 14 last
year. There is no single margin of error for the results because of
the complex, multi-stage way Pew arrived at its sample of police
officers, Pew said.
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen; Editing by Andrew Hay)
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