"Philip Stinson combines his extensive credentials as a criminologist with his professional knowledge of police and policing to produce a comprehensive account of how major theories of crime causation can be used to explain and predict criminal violence by police officers. The prose is crisp and clear. The contribution is substantial."—Franklin Zimring, Professor of Law, University of California at Berkeley
"Stinson masterfully intertwines his experiences as a police officer, attorney, and researcher, to produce a concise and important primer on police violence. An eye-opening book that should receive wide readership among criminologists and police practitioners. I anticipate the book will quickly become a must-read in the field."—Shaun Gabbidon, Professor of Criminal Justice, Penn State Harrisburg
"This thoroughly engaging book comprehensively reviews the numerous components of police crime. It is built upon Stinson’s decades-long work building and analyzing a unique database of problem officers and incidents, and relevant scholarship. A necessary read for scholars, students, and police professionals who want to understand why some officers engage in crimes and how many still remain as working law enforcement professionals."—Jeffrey Ian Ross, Professor of Criminal Justice, University of Baltimore
“Come for an easy-to-follow discussion of police crime in the United States. Stay for the shocking and admittedly addicting stories of cops who used their positions of authority to commit crimes and elude culpability for years. Stinson's research provokes serious reflection about the ways we screen and monitor police officers."—Natalie Todak, Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice, University of Alabama at Birmingham
"While Stinson has become one of the foremost public commentators on the issue of criminal misconduct by police officers, his research and honest conclusions are even more powerful and on point in this book. By using history, policy, the law, and sociological patterns, Stinson—himself an ex-police officer—has provided a cogent framework for deep examination and change in policing for the better."—Brian G. Gilmore, Associate Professor of Law, Michigan State University
"Stinson's application of criminological perspectives represents a significant leap forward in our understanding of police violence. His synthesis of that literature and its application is nothing short of masterful, and this work will be beneficial to both scholars and practitioners."—Chris Harris, author of
Pathways of Police Misconduct