Crime and Recruitment
Steven Overly
Issue date: 11/30/07 Section: News
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Most police statements cast the school's reputation for crime as overblown and undeserved, but a look at one University Police recruitment video reveals a divide between how the campus is portrayed to the larger public and to potential recruits.
Among the most startling revelations? Police apparently think those downtown riots - if regrettable, dangerous and costly, of course - are at least a little exciting, too.
"If we were doing this as a public relations video to the general university population, it would have been produced in a different way," said Maj. James Hamrick, who oversees the department's recruitment and training. "But what you have to keep in mind is the purpose of the video, why it was produced and who we were targeting."
Featuring footage of officers suiting up in full-body gear to combat rowdy crowds at the 2005 riot after the men's basketball team beat Duke, a chunk of the video portrays sporting events as often becoming civil disturbances and explains how officers are trained to handle them.
"When the front line becomes the city street and crowd control becomes riot control, you can put together all the tools and all the training," says the video's narrator. "One officer. One team. One mission: taking back the street."
University Police have bemoaned rankings that place the university as one of the nation's most dangerous and said crime is no more pervasive here than other urban campuses.
While that message is reflected in a small portion of the video, images of high-speed car chases and officers firing weapons dominate the film.
After tranquil images of officers riding bikes in front of McKeldin Mall and chatting with students at California Tortilla in downtown College Park, officers recount their work on the force.
"It takes a special individual to do the things that a police officer is called upon to do," Richard Mugerwa, a university police officer, said in the video.
Then the film cuts to an officer firing multiple shots from a rifle.
The video, which is readily available on the department's website, was also disseminated on YouTube. It can also be found on MySpace Video.
Monique Mitchell Turner, an associate professor in the communication department, explained the video is most likely effective for targeting the audience police are looking for, though she hasn't seen the video firsthand. But she also cautioned it could send mixed messages to students.



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Viewing Comments 1 - 8 of 8
phil
posted 11/30/07 @ 10:18 AM EST
the ridiculous advertisement blocks off the whole first page and cannot be closed. good job guys.
dani
posted 11/30/07 @ 11:28 AM EST
I can single handedly fight crime myself better than the entire college park police department put together. they are USELESS. why gloat about crowd control during riots when people are getting robbed left and right?? maybe they should focus less on those with a beer glass in hand and focus more on those with the guns. (Continued…)
Boh
posted 11/30/07 @ 11:47 AM EST
Good job of working the uppercases Dani! I wasn't sure how useless they were until I saw how you capitalized the WHOLE word. I'll tell you what - find another police department in PG County that can show the drop in violent crime that these guys did and you can capitalize "Boh Lost" in marker on my chest. (Continued…)
chris
posted 11/30/07 @ 3:19 PM EST
how on earth is this news, let alone front page news? the cideo came out in 2005? my god, diamondback. and who the hell cares about capitalization? your sarcasm just shows people that your argument is weak. (Continued…)
Chel
posted 11/30/07 @ 9:36 PM EST
Though she hasn't seen the video... let's have her comment on it based only on what we say it portrays! That is smart and responsible journalism. I am so proud to attend university with these spoon fed idiots. (Continued…)
Mike
posted 12/01/07 @ 10:03 AM EST
It doesn't take a whole lot of guts to load your weapons and break up a gathering of unarmed students celebrating a game. It takes guts to put yourself in harms way to prevent armed criminals from assaulting, raping, murdering, etc which PG and campus police do not do nearly as well. (Continued…)
Terp Alum '05
posted 12/01/07 @ 9:04 PM EST
There was a "riot" after the ACC Championship game that year. Which brings me to this laugher:
"When the front line becomes the city street and crowd control becomes riot control, you can put together all the tools and all the training," says the video's narrator. (Continued…)
wondering
posted 12/02/07 @ 3:20 PM EST
so where can we find the video to watch? what would the key word on youtube be?
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