Social Media: A Tool for Law Enforcement to Connect with the Community

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Social Media: A Tool for Law Enforcement to Connect with the Community

By – Dr. Michael Beshears

The challenge for leaders in law enforcement is to find ways to utilize online social media to enable residents of the community to feel an authentic connection with the department and the police officers serving the community (Copitch & Fox, 2010). John Miller, the former head of the FBI public affairs branch, once stated that law enforcement needs to exist in the areas where people are present. Thus, if people are using online social media sites, the police need to be active there as well (FBI on Social Media, 2009).

Impact of Technology on Community Policing

Community policing is about building interpersonal relationships of trust and cooperation between the police department and the community they serve via direct interaction (Chappell, 2009). Unfortunately, as technology has evolved, citizen interaction with police has become more limited.

Police and TechnologyOn one hand, technology has enhanced police response to citizen needs. The creation of the 9-1-1 emergency call system made it possible for a citizen to instantly request police assistance. When a call is dispatched, an officer responds.

However, such rapid response also means that officers often have less time to spend on crime prevention or casual interaction with the community (Community Policing Consortium, 1994). As a result, the officer spends a lot of time in the patrol vehicle (somewhat like a mobile office), with no viable means of easily interacting with the community (Dye, 2009). Spending more time in a patrol car is counterintuitive to the philosophy of community policing. While this is certainly not the fault of individual officers, it is something that officers need to be aware of and do their best to engage citizens face-to-face to reinvigorate the community policing model.

The Community Policing Consortium (1994) agreed that police technology, as well as departmental policies introduced due to technological advancements, have contributed to the social distancing between police officers and the community. If the problem is technology-driven, perhaps the solution to the problem should be technology driven as well.

Social Media Sites as a Way to Engage the Public

The ideology behind community policing as a philosophy is to engage and involve local community residents with law enforcement to fight crime in one’s own neighborhood (Chappell, 2009). Online social media sites used by police departments to engage the community and solve crime create an interesting dichotomy of technological issues. Since the introduction of the concept of community policing, police departments have struggled with ways to increase their involvement with the local community residents and law enforcement (Dye, 2009). Social media websites like Facebook may be the answer.

Facebook served more than 1 million active users in 2004. Today, it is used by more than 802 million daily active users. Many law enforcement agencies have found that such social media platforms are helping to build and renew community trust and enhance community participation.

How does your agency use social media? Do you think the community is more or less engaged with your department than they were before social media became so popular? Can social media ever replace face-to-face interactions with law enforcement?


social media
Dr. Michael Beshears

About the AuthorAfter 22 years of honorable military service, Michael Beshears retired from the United States Army at the rank of Master Sergeant. He is the 1982 Fort Campbell, Kentucky, Primary Leadership Development Course, distinguished honor graduate. Plus, the 1983 Non-commissioned Officer of the Year, for the Florence Blanchfield Army Community Hospital at Fort Campbell, Ky. As well as, the 1984 Non-commissioned Officer of the Year, for the Eagle Support Brigade located at Fort Campbell, Ky. He has served several years as a County Commissioner for the Baxter County, Arkansas, Clarkridge community. Of which, nine of those years, were served as the President of the Board of Commissioners. His undergraduate majors include criminal justice and psychology at Drury University. His graduate majors include health services management at Webster University. In addition, to criminology with a concentration in corrections at Indiana State University. He received a PhD in business with a specialization in criminal justice from Northcentral University. He is an adviser for the Kappa-Kappa Chapter of the Alpha Phi Sigma, Criminal Justice National Honor Society. Dr. Beshears is currently an assistant professor of criminal justice at American Military University and full-time faculty in the School of Security and Global Studies for the American Public University System. First Published – In Public Safety with American Military University

References

Chappell, A. T., (2009).The philosophical versus actual adoption of Community Policing: A case study, Criminal Justice Review 2009 34: 5. Originally published online 2 December 2008, Sage Publications. doi: 10.1177/0734016808324244

Community Policing Consortium (1994), Understanding community policing: A Framework for Action, Monograph, NCJ 148457, Bureau of Justice Assistance, Washington, DC.

Copitch, G., & Fox, C. (2010). Using social media as a means of improving public confidence. Safer Communities, 9(2), 42. Retrieved from Career and Technical Education.

Dye, S., (2009) Policing in local law enforcement: A commitment to getting out-of-the-car. The Police Chief, vol. LXXVI, no. 10, October 2009. Copyright held by the International Association of Chiefs of Police, 515 North Washington Street, Alexandria, VA 22314 USA. Retrieved from http://www.policechiefmagazine.org/magazine/index.cfm?fuseaction=display&article_id=1908&issue_id=102009

FBI on Social Media, (2009). Stories; Retrieved from http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2009/may/socialmedia_051509

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