LAPD Asking You to Report Terrorism Tips Via iWatch

By The Cato Institute , Individual Liberty, Free Markets, Peace - October 20, 2009

Icoemail3
Comments(1) | (0)

by Jim Harper

Right on the heels of my post the other day discussing the error in inviting terrorism reporting, here’s another video (and suspicious-activity-reporting Web site) produced by the Los Angeles Police Department.

The production values in this video are hipper, and L.A. appears to have its share of actors willing to look concerned about terrorism. But really, the attacks of September 11, 2001 were all the Public Service Announcement we needed to encourage reporting of genuine suspicions.

Asking amateurs for tips about terrorism will have many wasteful and harmful results, like racial and ethnic discrimination, angry neighbors turning each other in, and—given the rarity of terrorism—lots and lots of folks just plain getting it wrong. People with expertise—even in very limited domains—can discover suspicious circumstances in their worlds almost automatically when they find things “hinky.”

My impressions of the LAPD were formed up in the late 80’s and early 90’s when I lived in southern California. To encourage reporting, what that department needs most is to make the community confident of its own fairness and competence. Reporting of meritorious suspicions will naturally follow that. There’s no need for it to artificially gin up crime or terrorism reporting.

This content is inappropriate
Loading

Please select the category that most closely reflects your concern about this content, so that we can review it and determine whether it violates Civility 101 or isn't appropriate for some other reason.
Abusing this feature is also a violation of Civility 101.

Explanation:


Regarding Article
VIDEO:LAPD Asking You to Report Terrorism Tips Via iWatch

Thank You for your Comment

We review all comments before they're posted. For more on our comment policy, please see our FAQ.

  • quantummechanik
    This begs a couple of questions

    First...iWatch? Get on it, Apple.

    Second, this is encouraging us to turn in any suspicious behavior, and implies that such behavior will be investigated. My question is...we have this kind of time and money now?

    - quantummechanikUS October 21, 2009 9:37AM

    Reply to this Recommend (0) Icon flag

    Thank You for your Comment

    We review all comments before they're posted. For more on our comment policy, please see our FAQ.

See Related...