Posted on 07/28/2012 4:58:45 AM PDT by marktwain
The Force Science Institutes latest email blast features Rick Rosenthal. Ricks a veteran TV news anchor (left WGN TV in 93) turned law enforcement consultant. In other words, he tells the cops how to spin the news. And when it comes to an officer involved shooting (OIS), the po-po see the largely sympathetic mainstream media as the enemy. The emails titleFeeding the Animals: 10 tips for winning with the media after an OISsets the tone. Heres an abridged version of the abridged version of Rosenthals advice on post-OIS PR delivered to an ILEETA (International Law Enforcement and Education Training Association) conference. His bullet points in bold. My comments after.
1. Build rapport with reporters before you need it. Rosenthal reckons its all about trust and credibility. Part of the medias job is to witness what law enforcement does, but that doesnt necessarily make them the enemy, the newsreader writes. Working with them and helping them now on other stories will give you a better chance of exercising some control over them when a crisis hits. So trust, credibility and control.
2. Provide 24/7 accessibility. Rosenthal reckons police departments need a trained officer ready to go when the cops lead hits the fan. Apparently, its a thankless task with career-killing capability; whomever is recruited should have some rank and street experience and want to do the jobnot someone being punished with the assignment.
3. Protect your officer and the scene. The media are not entitled to any greater right to penetrate the incident scenedont call it a crime scenethan any other private citizen. In case you didnt get the need to maintain command and control, Reporters can be arrested for interfering with law enforcement if they intrude on the scene against orders, but by the same token for the police to try to control the medias movement outside the perimeter is a dreadful mistake. That opens you up immediately to charges of suppression and cover-up.
4. Feed the animals early and often. Rosenthal recommends an initial press briefing no later than two hours after an OIS, followed by three formal updates per day: midmorning for noon newscasts; mid afternoon for the evening shows; and early evening for nighttime news. The veteran newscaster seems to have missed that whole 24-hour internet thing.
5. Skip the spin cycle. I entitled this article a how-to for spinning an officer involved shooting. To his credit (and my shame?) Rosenthal advises cops that the best spin is no spin.To win with the media, you have to give it to them straight. The minute you get imaginative and try to spin the facts or speculate about elements that are unknown, you have chosen to be stupid, because that kind of creativity will ultimately trip you up. Make of that what you will.
6. Consider an outside investigation. Starting to like this guy? Its nice when PR and morality line-up. To wit: Even if you dont have to do this, its smart public relations.
7. Promptly douse flaming arrows. If those pesky victims families start dominating the coverage, Rosenthal counsels his clients to go on the offensive. If you feel youre getting the short end of biased coverage by news outlets themselves, it may help to remind media brass that reporters are expected to adhere to a detailed Code of Ethics issued by the Society of Professional Journalists. This provides specific guidelines for seeking truth and reporting it, which specify, among other things, that distortion of the truth is never permissible. . . . Law enforcement often feels it has no recourse against mistreatment by the media, but there is accountability. If youre treated unfairly, you need to rear up on your hind legs and fight back.
8. Dont swat every mosquito. Mosquitos R Us. [Bloggers] can annoy you, like a mosquito in a camping tent but they cant really do you much harm if the facts are on your side and you argue them forcefully with the mainstream media. You need to know what bloggers are saying, but you cant swat every mosquito. If youre open, the conventional media will report what youre doing and this will be enough to significantly tip the scales in your favor. Yes but what of the down-and-out hacks from trash TV, like Nancy Grace and Geraldo Rivera? What they do is spectacle, and that is not a game you should play. Odds are that cooperating with these sensationalists will be a losing proposition. Youre within your rights to [just] say no.
9. Fess up to UgSits. That would be ugly situations. And Rosenthal believes in doing so by confronting realityand throwing the officer involved under the bus. Youll take hits, but dont try to defend the seemingly indefensible, justify the unjustifiable, or excuse the inexcusable. In the case of an unjustified shooting, stress that it was the behavior of an individual officer, not of the agency. Empathize with the situation and the complainants. Focus on discipline and, where appropriate, on changes in policy, procedures, and/or training.
10. Have the patience of a saint. Reporters arent stupid, Rosenthal insists. but they are generalists and in some cases they may be ignorant about specialty areas. They may argue with you, repeat questions youve already answered, criticize you and the department, bait you, and frustrate you. . . You must not respond in kind. Ever. You must always be deliberate, calm, cool, and courteous. If you lose your head, you will become the focus of the story instead of the OIS, and your outburst will inevitably end up forever on YouTube, a personal and professional nightmare.
Not quite as bad as the nightmare experienced by the person or persons (or the friends and family of the person or persons) shot by a police officer, but similar. And that thin blue line needs protection, no matter what. Know what I mean? Share
I would love to read this document...
...If it is indeed real...
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This [Code of Ethics-above] provides specific guidelines for seeking truth and reporting it, which specify, among other things, that distortion of the truth is never permissible. . . .
OOK-K-k-a-a-a-a--y-y-y--yy....
...moving right along...
************
Reporters arent stupid...
Summer help..... summer not...
************
And that thin blue line needs protection, no matter what. Know what I mean?
Yeah... we know what you mean...
Especially when there is a gross violation of someone's constitutional rights....
...to privacy and self-defense in their own home,
...freedom from unreasonable /unlawful search and seizure...
.... or violent death by SWAT serving no-knock warrants at the wrong address...
The truth will set you free...
...Smoke and mirrors, baffling BS, lies and distortion will pull the plug on public trust in a Nanny-Mike New York minute...
Young LEO's should take notes...
So what he's saying is that police officers are supposed to act like animals?
One would think it should be called a CRIME scene, especially if there is a dead body involved, because it is probable that either the officer fired his gun in response to a serious and life-threatening crime being or about to be committed, or there was no threatening crime and the officer fired his gun without provocation, which is a crime.
Using the phrase "incident scene" suggests "there's nothing to see here, folks, so just move along."
There is quite a gap between their professed ethics and their actual work product.
TWB
9. Fess up to UgSits. That would be ugly situations. And Rosenthal believes in doing so by confronting realityand throwing the officer involved under the bus. Youll take hits, but dont try to defend the seemingly indefensible, justify the unjustifiable, or excuse the inexcusable. In the case of an unjustified shooting, stress that it was the behavior of an individual officer, not of the agency. Empathize with the situation and the complainants. Focus on discipline and, where appropriate, on changes in policy, procedures, and/or training.
Has it dawned on them that this is all we are really after, justice? That and maybe enough restraint to be sure your are actually under threat.
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