I spent nearly five years reporting heavily on the decade-long epidemic of corruption that paralyzed the Border Patrol after its ill-conceived Bush-era post-9/11 hiring surge.... The Border Patrol’s hiring surge doubled the size of the force in just a few years, from about 9,200 to 18,000, a move roughly equivalent to (but still less than!) what we’re about to see happen with ICE....I think the results could be even worse than Graff imagines.
As CBP’s then-commissioner, Gil Kerlikowske, told me back in 2014, “Law enforcement always regrets hiring quickly.” Anyone familiar with policing can rattle off the police hiring surges that inevitably led to spikes in corruption—including mistakes like the 1980 Miami police hiring surge and the infamous Washington Metropolitan Police class of 1989, when Mayor Marion Barry tried to increase the police force by nearly half in a single year. Both agencies saw widespread corruption problems that took years to fix.
All of this happened with the Border Patrol. CBP and the Border Patrol hired cartel members and even a serial killer—and put them out in the field with inadequate training and supervision....
As I totaled up in 2014, “there were 2,170 misconduct arrests of CBP officers and agents—ranging from corruption to domestic violence from 2005 through 2012—meaning that one CBP officer or agent was arrested every single day for seven years.” Even by 2017, a decade after the hiring surge, CBP was still seeing an agent or officer arrested every 36 hours....
Now we’re about to repeat all of those mistakes with ICE — and with CBP all over again.
Graff is correct when he says that we should expect "a tidal wave of applicants who are specifically attracted by the rough-em-up, masked secret police tactics, no-holds-barred lawlessness that ICE has pursued since January." But the problem isn't just a wave of applications by testosterone-poisoned men -- it's that we can expect the Trump administration to exhibit a bias toward hiring the most toxic applicants.
Remember, the president and his party find police brutality delightful and believe that attempts to hold officers accountable are a liberal plot to undermine law and order.
Since the beginning of his first term, Trump has publicly glorified police brutality, directly encouraging officers to behave more violently than they already do, and making it one of his biggest laugh and applause lines at rallies.On the campaign trail last year, he flatly said that it shouldn't be possible to charge police officers with crimes:
“When you see these thugs being thrown into the back of a paddy wagon, you just seen them thrown in, rough. I said, ‘Please don’t be too nice,’” the then-president told assembled law enforcement, at a speech he delivered on Long Island, New York, in 2017. “When you guys put somebody in the car and you’re protecting their head, you know, the way you put their hand over [their head] ... ‘Don’t hit their head and they’ve just killed somebody, don’t hit their head.’ I said, ‘You can take the hand away, okay?’”
Trump continued: “I have to tell you, you know, the laws are so horrendously stacked against us, because for years and years, they’ve been made to protect the criminal. Totally made to protect the criminal. Not the officers. You do something wrong, you’re in more jeopardy than they are.”
"We're going to give our police their power back," he told rallygoers in Waukesha, "and we are going to give them immunity from prosecution."In other speeches, he described brutality as a solution to crime:
Former President Donald J. Trump mused on Sunday about “one really violent day” as an answer to what he has described as a plague of unchecked property crime in American cities.In May of this year, it was reported that the Trump Justice Department would no longer hold police departments accountable for brutality in several cities:
“One rough hour — and I mean real rough,” Mr. Trump said. “The word will get out and it will end immediately.”
... He has in the past ... called for the summary execution of shoplifters....
The Trump administration has said it will roll back Biden-era police reform efforts in cities where there has been controversy over high-profile police killings and brutality.It isn't just Trump. In 2021, when police misconduct was under scrutiny in New York City, Florida governor Ron DeSantis gleefully offered incentives to NYPD officers who wanted to work in Florida. And, of course, many figures on the right -- Ben Shapiro, Candace Owens, Marjorie Taylor Greene -- have demanded a pardon for Derek Chauvin, the Minneapolis police officer who killed George Floyd in 2020.
The US justice department said on Wednesday it would dismiss oversight agreements reached with the police departments in Louisville, Kentucky and Minneapolis, Minnesota.
It will also be scrapping investigations into police constitutional violations in six other cities, including Phoenix and Memphis.
I suspect that the administration will be predisposed to hire cops who claim they've been persecuted by "the woke mob." I don't think the administration will merely fail to screen them out -- I think it will be eager to have them on the team.
*****
Graff notes that the hiring spree will be primarily for balaclava-wearing goons:
... compared to the rest of the bill, there’s only the most modest of modest increases to the number of immigration judges in the country — a rise from 700 to 800, an increase so out-of-scale to the problem that we could have used those extra 100 to work through the existing backlog from the Biden years. If the Trump administration had any plan to balance civil rights and due process with its giant new hiring and construction spree, it would be also tripling or quadrupling or quintupling the new immigration judges. The fact that it's not makes clear that the Trump administration, DHS, and DOJ have no intention of normal due process.Your right-wing relatives will respond to this by saying, "Due process is for citizens only," even though the Constitution says nothing of the sort. If they really believe that, ask them what they think happens in this scenario: A tourist from France arrives in New York and kills someone in a hotel room in Manhattan. Do the authorities arrest the culprit and send him off to an overseas torture prison without a trial? Of course not. He gets a trial in a U.S. court conducted under U.S. law. He gets due process. Now what if he's a teenager who overstayed a tourist visa and is illegally working at a bar? Same deal -- he gets a trial. No goon squad. No torture prison. At least how we do things now. You shouldn't have to be a citizen to get due process. But more and more immigrants won't get it.