Sinopsis
The purpose of the podcast is to promote police integrity by gaining a better understanding of police crime, correlates of police misconduct, and agency responses to officer arrests. New podcast episodes are posted monthly. This project is supported by Award No. 2011-IJ-CX-0024, awarded by the National Institute of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice. The opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this podcast are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect those of the Department of Justice.
Episodios
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Police Sexual Misconduct: Policy Implications
31/10/2013Police work is condusive to sexual misconduct. The job affords unique opportunities for rogue police officers to engage in acts of sexual deviance and crimes against citizens they encounter. In this episode of the Police Integrity Lost podcast Bowling Green State University professors Phil Stinson and John Liederbach discuss the policy implications of their research … Continue reading Police Sexual Misconduct: Policy Implications →
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Police Crime Research Findings
11/08/2013This episode of the Police Integrity Lost podcast is a recording of the presentation of Professor Phil Stinson summarizing his police crime research findings at the 2013 conference of the American Psychological Association in Honolulu, Hawaii.
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Research Performance Progress Report for January thru June 2013
26/07/2013All federally funded research project grantees are required to file semi annual Research Performance Progress Reports with the funding agency. In this episode of the Police Integrity Lost podcast, BGSU professor Phil Stinson discusses the Research Performance Progress Report his NIJ-funded police integrity research project recently filed with the National Institute of Justice for the … Continue reading Research Performance Progress Report for January thru June 2013 →
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Police Sexual Misconduct Arrests
26/06/2013Police sexual misconduct remains an understudied area and little is known about the sexual crimes of police officers. In this episode of the Police Integrity Lost podcast, Bowling Green State University professors Phil Stinson and John Liederbach discuss the findings of their recent study on sex-related police crime. The study analyzes a subset of data … Continue reading Police Sexual Misconduct Arrests →
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Using a Content Management System: Police Crime Research Methods Part 3
18/05/2013Professor Phil Stinson at Bowling Green State University has developed an innovative enhanced relational database to support his federally funded police integrity research. Using the university’s enterprise level content management system, he has structured a relational, digital imaging, and video database to support his quantitative content analysis research on police crime in the United States. … Continue reading Using a Content Management System: Police Crime Research Methods Part 3 →
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Drunk Driving Cops
13/04/2013Little is known about how often police officers drive drunk. It is generally assumed that most police officers are generally exempt from law enforcement. When an off-duty officer is stopped for driving under the influence of alcohol and/or drugs, in many instances the impaired officer is extended a professional courtesy, not arrested, and given a … Continue reading Drunk Driving Cops →
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Using Google News for Data Collection: Police Crime Research Methods Part 2
08/03/2013In this episode of the Police Integrity Lost podcast John Liederbach and Steve Brewer question Stinson on his use of the Google News search engine and Google Alerts as part of his research methodology to collect data for research studies on police crime in the United States.
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Decision Tree Analysis: Police Crime Research Methods Part 1
02/02/2013Research methods used in social science research studies often include multivariate statistics. In this episode of the Police Integrity Lost Podcast, Phil Stinson and Steve Brewer discuss their use of decision tree analysis as part of their predictive analytic statistical operations in police crime research studies. This episode is Part 1 of a multipart discussion … Continue reading Decision Tree Analysis: Police Crime Research Methods Part 1 →
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Late-Stage Police Crime
01/01/2013In this episode of the Police Integrity Lost Podcast, Phil Stinson and John Liederbach discuss late-stage police crime. Stinson and Liederbach are both professors in the Criminal Justice Program at Bowling Green State University. Their study on late-stage police crime, entitled EXIT STRATEGY: AN EXPLORATION OF LATE-STAGE POLICE CRIME, was published in 2010 in the … Continue reading Late-Stage Police Crime →
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Crime by Policewomen: Is it Different than Crime by Policemen?
02/12/2012In this episode of the Police Integrity Lost podcast, Phil Stinson and Natalie Todak discuss their recent research study that explored criminal conduct by policewomen at various nonfederal law enforcement agencies across the United States. The information is increasingly relevant as departments hire more female officers, especially if their crimes are different than crimes by … Continue reading Crime by Policewomen: Is it Different than Crime by Policemen? →
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Police Criminal Misuse of TASERs
03/11/2012Conductive energy devices (CEDs), including the TASER (an acronym for Thomas A. Swift Electric Rifle) have been adopted by thousands of law enforcement agencies because they offer a less-than-lethal method for gaining control of suspects. In this podcast episode, Professors Phil Stinson and John Liederbach of Bowling Green State University discuss their recent research study … Continue reading Police Criminal Misuse of TASERs →
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Off-Duty Police Crime
12/10/2012In this episode, BGSU Professors Phil Stinson and John Liederbach discuss their recent research study on off-duty police crime.
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Officer-involved Domestic Violence
11/09/2012Professors Stinson and Liederbach discuss their recent research study on officer-involved domestic violence (OIDV).
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Police Drug Corruption
15/08/2012Discussion of a recent research study on drug-related police corruption.