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Social Media: What Puts Officers and the Agency at Risk?

Sargeant Nasuti posted pictures with underage women and liquor

In previous posts, we’ve highlighted the role social media can play in assisting agencies’ policing initiatives and building trust with the community, and for good reason: it has become incredibly useful in policing. In fact, a March 2012 study by LexisNexis of over 1,200 federal, state and local law enforcement professionals showed that nearly 7 out of 10 respondents believed that social media helps solve crimes faster than traditional methods alone. But while officers may be using Facebook and Twitter to help close cases on-duty, their online activities off-duty may be putting themselves and their agency at risk.

Undermining Safety and Agency Credibility:

Perhaps not heard as often as headlines such as “Facebook Photos Help Police Catch Party Burglars“, occasionally we hear stories of social media posts getting officers and their agencies into trouble. Unfortunately the very tools officers use to target suspects can be used against them by the very criminals they are investigating. In 2011, Maricopa County Sheriffs arrested a suspect on suspicion of DUI and found a CD containing the names and photographs of over 30 Phoenix PD patrol and undercover officers–all obtained from Facebook.  Social media sharing can not only compromise the safety of officers, it can undermine the credibility and integrity of the agency to the public when ill-advised posts and pictures make a public appearance. Just last week, Detroit’s Chief of Police was busted after pictures emerged on twitter exposing an affair with a department subordinate. For a community already demoralized by financial woes and previous scandals, the photos were a kick in the gut.

Tips for Online Officer Safety: 

While your agency should strongly consider a social media policy that dictates acceptable activities for off-duty officers and staff, here are 3 smart tips for keeping your social media sharing safe and clean.

1. Figure out Your Privacy Settings: On Facebook and other networking platforms, set your  settings so that only your “friends” can see the information you post, the pages you like, etc. Look through all the apps you might have and lock them down as well. Remember that information you share can be shared by others, so be selective in your social networking.

2. Don’t Mix Personal with Professional Content: Keep two accounts, one for the professional and the other for the regular guy or gal that  you are off the job. Refrain from posting information or photos about your personal life (especially of the family) on your professional twitter or Facebook accounts and keep your professional contacts from meshing with your personal ones online.

3. Don’t Post, ‘Like’ or Tweet Anything Your Grandma Wouldn’t Approve Of: Chances are if granny wouldn’t approve, your agency wouldn’t either. Keeping it clean will help maintain your agency’s credibility and trust with the community and will keep you from losing your job like this cop, who mistakenly believed “what happens on Facebook, stays on Facebook”.

 

Is Your Son ‘Scooping’?


Photo by D Sharon Pruitt via Flickr

I came across a very disturbing newscast the other day regarding a trend in middle schools and high schools in California and other parts of the country. It’s about a trend called “scooping.” It basically amounts to sexual assault, although it seems to be treated as if it were just a harmless game.

Scooping is when a boy comes up behind a girl and quickly shoves his hands up the front of her shirt, grabbing her breasts, then runs away (Urban Dictionary). Watch the video below for details of one incident at a California middle school.

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Please Rob Me: A Lesson in Location-Based Social Media

No kidding, that’s the name of a new website that is meant to make a statement about location-based social media: Please Rob Me. At any given moment you can see the amazing amount of people who are publicly advertising that they are not at home. Imagine the possibilities for some enterprising young thieves out there.

When I first visited the site a few days ago, there was actually a location search that allowed you to search by city to see who—in that city—was not currently home. That feature has been inexplicably removed from the site in the intervening days, perhaps out of protest that the site would ACTUALLY BE USED by criminals, instead of just being a snarky way of telling people to stop sharing so much information publicly.

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Child Security: Risk vs. Threat

Children are primarily faced with safety threats: car seats improperly fastened, parents on the phone while driving, and un-gated stairs leading to severe falls are all examples. Some of those threats can be neutralized: ensure the car seat is properly fastened, turn off the phone while driving, and install a gate at the top and bottom of the stairs.

What those threats have in common is that there’s no intent behind them—mom is not intentionally causing a car-wreck by talking on the phone on the way to the grocery, and the car-seat wasn’t sabotaged. While these instances might lead to tragic consequences, they’re much easier for us to deal with because there’s no predatory element involved.

Introduce that predatory element and many people lose perspective. I hear a lot of comments involving “monsters preying on unprotected children,” to which I reply, “They’re not monsters, they’re cowards, and you can protect your kids even if you’re not with your kids: teach them!”

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