Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on California Highway Patrolman Craig Peyer: How His Murder Case Affected The General Public's Trust Of Police Officers. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. In 1987, a California Highway Patrol officer was arrested for the strangulation murder of college student Cara Knott while on duty; he was convicted in 1988 after two trials. This case, which made legal history on several issues, served to add to the growing distrust the general public already held toward police officers, giving the populace reason to believe their safety was not necessarily protected under the badge. According to testimony from several women, Patrolman Peyer had a history of pulling over female drivers on a particularly dark and desolate portion of San Diego highway, at which point he engaged the women in long, rambling conversations that left many uncomfortable and scared. How are citizens – women, in particular – supposed to abide by the law when being pulled over when they fear for their very lives if they do? Is the general public justified in feeling scared and vulnerable with regard to the handful of officers whose conduct detrimentally impacts the entire force? Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCpeyer.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
college student Cara Knott while on duty; he was convicted in 1988 after two trials. This case, which made legal history on several issues, served to add to the
growing distrust the general public already held toward police officers, giving the populace reason to believe their safety was not necessarily protected under the badge. According to testimony from
several women, Patrolman Peyer had a history of pulling over female drivers on a particularly dark and desolate portion of San Diego highway, at which point he engaged the women
in "long, rambling conversations that left many uncomfortable and scared" (Anonymous, 2001, p. PG). How are citizens - women, in particular - supposed to abide by the law when
being pulled over when they fear for their very lives if they do? Is the general public justified in feeling scared and vulnerable with regard to the handful of
officers whose conduct detrimentally impacts the entire force? Californias law enforcement image has been severely tainted during the past several years with issues of racial intolerance and unsubstantiated brutality; add
to the mix a thirteen-year veteran Highway Patrolman whose motive operandi is to lure unsuspecting female drives to dark and desolate areas in order to pull them over and harass
them, and the general public is left with little about which to feel safe. This rising contempt toward the police force as a whole for the actions of a
few has created a virtual breakdown in trust to the point where people are wondering to what extent they are bound to abide when they believe their safety is at
risk. In spite of the fact that Peyers record indicated he performed his job satisfactorily, it can readily be argued that the primary focal point of his revisited evaluation
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