Campus Cops Are All About the Military Swag, Too (Cameras? Not So Much)

MRAPLocal police departments aren’t the only
authorities arming themselves to the teeth with ex-military stuff.
As
Politico notes
, campus cops at universities all over the
country are also receiving re-purposed combat equipment:

Florida International University campus police have
military-grade rifles. Ohio State has a
Mine Resistant Ambush Protection vehicle
. And Florida State has
a brand new Army Humvee. These Pentagon hand-me-downs are just a
few examples of the militarization of local police that has
extended to college campuses — raising fresh questions about
exactly why police departments would need such defense-grade
hardware. …

Most items distributed through the Defense Logistics Agency’s
Law Enforcement Support Office go to state and municipal government
agencies. But a recent Freedom of Information Act request
by MuckRock revealed
that more than 100
college campuses
 with sworn-in police departments also
participate in the 1033
program
 as of last December.

The institutions include community colleges, large research
universities, liberal arts campuses and entire college systems.

It’s not all armored cars and crowd-suppression
gas—some colleges have received furniture and office supplies from
the federal program that distributes the goods. Even so, why does
OSU need an armored car? OSU football fans are a crazy bunch, but
still.

The average college town probably doesn’t have quite as fraught
a relationship between cop and citizen as does Ferguson,
Missouri
. But students also endure unjust police encounters all
the time. The kind of extreme incident for which campus cops claim
they need military equipment—an active shooter, for instance—is
extremely rare. Over-aggressive campus policing, on the other hand,
is not.

If colleges really wanted to protect students lives and their
rights, they would require their police forces to wear cameras. But
as University of Florida Dean of Students Jen Day Shaw told
Politico, that doesn’t seem to be a top priority:

But those questions are more about creating a welcoming
environment for students and how campus cops can use existing
technology in the best way possible — for example, should police
have on-person cameras that record confrontations with
students?

“I’m not hearing a lot of the anti-police buzz,” Shaw said.
“We’re really focusing more on the educational side of things.”

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