Police Psychology: The Accused
by Gary S. Aumiller, Ph.D. ABPP
This column has been known to cause some stir for the politics being read into it, but mostly the column is apolitical. However, I am very nervous and followed the senate confirmation hearings for Brett Kavanaugh closely. It started for me after the allegations of sexual misconduct when he was a teenager were well in motion. It wasn’t the sexual misconduct that caught my attention, it was the people with law degrees saying the onus of proof lies on Kavanaugh. In other words, the accuser should be considered telling the absolute truth and the accused should be mounting a defense, if he was even in the vicinity or can remember where he was on that specific date 35 years ago. Scary stuff!! Especially for someone who works with the public. And to make it even scarier, the senator from Hawaii Mazie Hirono said “he is very much against women’s reproductive choice,” therefore he must have committed the act he is accused of. That sent a chill down my spine. He has an opinion against her opinion, so he must be guilty of attempted rape. Imagine if they believed everything against cops that is thrown out there. Oh wait, they already do!!
If we have learned anything from Ferguson, or Freddie Gray, or any of the big cases is we must wait for an investigation, or at least the second half of the videotape. Essentially, a case must be investigated before it is set out in public. The “rush to judgement” is something cops deal with all the time, and there is not really any training for it at this point that I am aware of. How do you handle being under such amazing scrutiny and now find yourself going crazy? It is interesting that the accusers will say you have got some guilt when you falter under scrutiny, but isn’t that normal. The accusers will say you must have done it when you get angry or over emotional, but again that is a normal emotion to being falsely accused as well. Then there are those that pile on with other accusation or even made up lies which will cause more emotion and more of the appearance you are just starting to lose it. We don’t really know the truth in the first place, but the destruction an accusation can do can make an entire life unfold.
Okay, so I have said nothing new. Now let’s talk about what to do if you are accused. F. B. Meyer who was a famous Baptist minister in England once said: “We make a mistake in trying always to clear ourselves. We should be wiser to go straight on, humbly doing the next thing, and leaving God to vindicate us.” The cops I know have a different standard: you can tell a man is guilty by the effort they put in to prove they are innocent. I am not sure either is right, but both should be considered. (more…)