Getting Paid For Spying On One Another

Discussion in 'Freedom and Liberty' started by Yard Dart, Mar 13, 2015.


  1. Yard Dart

    Yard Dart Vigilant Monkey Moderator

    [​IMG]

    NYC residents could get paid for spying

    Let's all spy on our neighbors for cash.... this is the world the left wants to create.... that foul taste in your mouth is tyranny....
    Spit it out!!!!
     
    Gator 45/70, 3M-TA3, tulianr and 6 others like this.
  2. Tully Mars

    Tully Mars Metal weldin' monkey

    [applaud][applaud]
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Mar 14, 2015
  3. Dunerunner

    Dunerunner Brewery Monkey Moderator

    Unt sie will vee rewarded fur beingk an informant, ya!!
     
    RightHand likes this.
  4. oldawg

    oldawg Monkey+++

    I'm thinking nosey SOBs are why backhoes were invented.
     
  5. kellory

    kellory An unemployed Jester, is nobody's fool. Banned

    S,S&S.
     
    Mountainman likes this.
  6. DarkLight

    DarkLight Live Long and Prosper - On Hiatus

    Nope. Large bore post holes (vertical). Smaller cross-section for ground penetrating radar plus the added benefit of more per square acre.
     
  7. kellory

    kellory An unemployed Jester, is nobody's fool. Banned

    Nope. An Axe, a posthole digger, and a dozen randomly selected counties.....

    (Just like what I told my daughter's first boyfriend, when I caught his hands places they should not be on a 15 year old girl.)
     
    Last edited: Mar 14, 2015
  8. VHestin

    VHestin Farm Chick

    I blame television for this....as in the stupid gits on it for the boot-licking crap they spew...
     
    Tully Mars and Motomom34 like this.
  9. HK_User

    HK_User A Productive Monkey is a Happy Monkey

    Tons of that type information were found in the streets of the EAST GERMANY after the wall went down.

    Check out what EAST GERMAN police force was like and then note the similarity of what Obama wants in the way of "Central Policing".

    HK


    POLICING IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE: Comparing Firsthand Knowledge with Experience from the West,
    © 1996 College of Police and Security Studies, Slovenia


    THE FALL OF THE WALL AND THE EAST GERMAN POLICE
    Belinda Cooper
    INTRODUCTION

    The revolutionary events of October and November 1989 ushered in a period of dizzying change in Germany, particularly in East Germany and the reunited city of Berlin. As familiar social and political institutions fell along with the Berlin Wall, crime patterns changed almost overnight and the policing system in East Germany experienced fundamental transformations. While East Germany would seem to have been in an ideal position among post-communist societies, in that new, more democratic structures did not have to be reinvented, but mererly taken over from the West, in reality--like so much else in the unification process--this transition was extremely painful on a psychological and social level. This article will investigate that transition in the crucial period immediately following the events of autumn 1989. In addition to the intrinsically interesting nature of this period, understanding its dynamics helps shed light upon more general issues of East Germany's transition from communism and on more recent incidents and events in Germany.

    This paper was first written in the years 1990-91, before any body of scholarly work existed on the issues it addresses. Thus it relies largely on primary sources such as interviews and documents, as well as newspaper and journal articles published while the changes were taking place, along with some later materials. It begins with a brief overview of the political events leading up to these changes, followed by brief descriptions of the theoretical and practical aspects of crime-fighting structures in East Germay. Changes in crime patterns in Eastern Germany after the fall of the Wall are then discussed, with particular attention to the problems East German police faced in dealing with increased crime. Finally, the psychological tensions in eastern Germany brought about by reunification are highlighted through the use of two brief case studies involving the police (squatting and neo-Nazi incidents).

    OVERVIEW OF KEY POLITICAL EVENTS

    The year 1989 would prove to be a turning point in German history (Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung 1991). The year saw major changes in the Hungarian and Polish political systems and--in part as a result of this--rumblings of discontent among East Germans. Local East German elections on May 7, 1989 were attended by observers from opposition movements, who testified that the results were rigged. The small demonstrations that followed were dispersed with some brutality by police and the secret service (called the Staatssicherheitsdienst or, more commonly, Stasi), but dissatisfaction did not abate.

    In August of 1989, East Germans began storming West German embassies in Prague and Budapest in hopes of receiving asylum in West Germany. As this news began to dominate West German television (watched by almost all East Germans), the atmosphere within East Germany became increasingly tense. Relatively large demonstrations took place in Leipzig during an international trade fair in September 1989, and again were broken up forcibly by the police and Stasi. Finally, also in September, the Hungarian government opened its borders and East Germans began to pour out of the country by the tens of thousands. It was against this backdrop that the East German government prepared to celebrate the country's fortieth anniversary on October 7.

    October 7 and 8 would become key dates in what is sometimes termed East Germany's "revolution." On these two days, the hollow phrases and hymns of praise to an East German state whose citizens were departing in droves, as well as the presence of Soviet Premier Mikhail Gorbachev, a symbol of hope to many East Germans, became the catalyst for large-scale protests throughout the country. On the 7th, a spontaneous demonstration by several thousands erupted in the center of Berlin--the first of its size in East Berlin since the 1950's. The police had been primed for weeks to expect "counter-revolutionary" actions by "enemies of the state," and many believed this indoctrination ("Versuch," Die Polizei 1990: 260-62). For these officers, unaccustomed to dealing with any sort of mass protest and suddenly confronted with the hostility of thousands of very angry fellow citizens, the situation was unexpected and frightening. Both police and Stasi were involved in the operation against the demonstrators. Eye witnesses later described their behavior: more than 1,000 people were beaten and arrested, then taken to various police stations and prisons, where during the night and the next day they were humiliated, mistreated, denied food or use of toilets, and in some cases forced to stand for hours without moving or to run a gauntlet of police armed with clubs ("Ich zeige an," 1989). In the following weeks, a major demand by the opposition would be prosecution of those responsible for this behavior.

    October 9 then became the crucial turning point. In Leipzig, a traditional Monday prayer service for peace turned into a demonstration by 70,000 (Spiegel, October 16, 1989). The East German army and all security forces had been mobilized, but last-minute intervention by a number of prominent persons prevented violence. For the first time, the protest was not broken up by security forces. This marked the beginning of change in East Germany. One month later, on November 9, 1989, the Berlin Wall fell.

    SOCIALIST POLICING

    In every country, the police play an important role in executing the political will of the state (Die Polizei 1990: 257). Their role becomes more complex in totalitarian countries, where the state consists of a single party claiming possession of absolute truth. Following Marxist- Leninist theory, East Germany's ruling "Social Unity Party" (Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands, or SED) claimed, through its laws, to represent the will of the ruling working class, which was implemented by organs like the police. In theory, conflicts between the interests of the people and those of the state could not exist; hence they were ignored as far as possible, or suppressed ("Versuch," Die Polizei 1990: 257). The police were expressly instructed to implement "socialist legality," that is, to take an instrumental role in promoting the "socialist order" (Wolfe 1992). Policing emphasized protection of the state and society over the rights of the individual, in the belief that achievement of a socialist society was, in the end, the best protection of those rights. This often meant combatting those who expressed dissident political viewpoints considered by the Party to pose a threat to its own existence ("Klassenauftrag," Deutsche Polizei, April 1990: 5). The "enemy" was imperialism, often in the form of West German capitalist influence.

    However, the police's main function in East Germany, as in any country, was day-to-day crimefighting. Official ideology held that crime and socialism were incompatible, and that any remaining crime was merely a relic of the previous social order. The task of the entire criminal justice system, including the police, was at least in part an educational one, since criminals were considered "socially retarded" people who "had not yet internalized socialist values." (Wolfe 1992: 10). Community cooperation in crimefighting was not only encouraged, but even required (Wolfe 1992: 9).

    THE CONTROL ORGANS

    The East German system was propped up by a variety of control organs, of which the Volkspolizei, or People's Police, was only one (Harnischmacher 1990: 275-79). Though the organs were subordinated to various government ministries, all were actually 2 under the control of the East German ruling party, the SED. The most important of these control organs, the Staatssicherheitsdienst or Stasi (state security service), dealt with political crimes. The Stasi possessed domestic police powers, including the right to arrest and to investigate. Thus many crimes did not come to the attention of the police or were taken out of police hands altogether. The Stasi also supervised the police at many levels, essentially exercising final control over its actions ("Versuch," Die Polizei 1990: 259).

    In addition, the criminal police had its own net of spies and informants that worked together with or took orders from the Stasi (Gast 1990).

    POLICE CHARACTERISTICS

    The East German police, unlike its Western counterpart, was centrally administered and directly subordinate to the Ministry of the Interior. Its military structure left the individual police officer very little discretionary or other freedom ("Versuch," Die Polizei 1990: 258-59).3 Training included military drill, and ranks also followed those of the army. Some units, the so- called Bereitschaftspolizei (mobile police) were kept at the ready in barracks. Police had4 individual work contracts, rather than the civil-service status and benefits West German police enjoyed, though they were well-paid by East German standards. As in many professions considered to involve state security, police could not have relatives or other contacts in the West; theoretically, they could not even watch Western television or listen to Western radio. A history of political loyalty was a must ("Lenin," Deutsche Polizei 1990: 5).

    Requirements for joining the regular force were a tenth-grade education, army service, and a completed course of vocational training in another profession; actual police training included only 5 months of police school, consisting largely of political indoctrination and legal theory, followed by a six-month practical internship (Harnischmacher 1990: 282-83). Criminal investigators (members of the criminal investigation department or Kripo) received more extensive training (Howorka 1990: 601). Further academic and practical training was possible for all members of the force in the criminology department of East Berlin's Humboldt University, which was also known for training secret police officers.5

    While women always served in various capacities, especially as criminal investigators, they began in 1989 to be used for patrol duty as well, apparently because of personnel shortages caused by the increasing importance placed in recent years upon political correctness. 6

    The reasons offered by individual police officers for joining the force differ little from those of their Western, including American, counterparts: A desire to work with people, idealism, family tradition, belief in the system and the wish to serve one's country. 7

    CRIME IN EAST GERMANY BEFORE AND AFTER THE FALL OF THE BERLIN WALL

    Crime in Pre-1989 East Germany

    According to East German propaganda, the Wall was built to protect East Germans from negative influences from the West (Honecker 1981: 197-207). This claim turned out, paradoxically, to contain an element of truth. It is somewhat difficult to achieve an accurate picture of the crime situation in East Germany prior to November 1989 because of the many different organs that dealt with illegal activities, their secrecy, and the state's conscious effort to downplay the extent of crime in this "socialist paradise" (Baier & Borning 1991); nevertheless8, it is certainly true that East German society, walled off against outside influences and thoroughly organized internally, enjoyed a very low rate of crime in the Western sense. 9 Political crimes were another matter. As in any totalitarian country, many types of apparently non-political behavior constituted crimes against the state. Attempting to leave the country without official permission (which was difficult to obtain and subject to a host of restrictions) was illegal. Contact with Westerners could be interpreted as passing information to the enemy, or espionage. Publication of "underground" periodicals and unauthorized demonstrations were punishable. Many apparently harmless activities could be defined as conspiracy against the state (Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung 1991). 10

    Yet violence, on a psychological as well as physical level, tended to be a government monopoly. Violence by individual citizens remained relatively rare; when it occured, it primarily took the form of bar brawls and domestic violence. In attempting to describe the atmosphere before the fall of the Wall, one policeman I spoke to stated only half-jokingly that the most common crime was "theft of baby carriages." For the average11 police officer, this absence of violent crime meant that he or she rarely confronted the situations faced by policemen in any large Western city. The fall of the Wall would change this literally overnight.

    AFTER THE FALL 12

    Immediate Changes

    The fall of the Wall created a chaotic situation; while familiar structures were discredited almost immediately, no new ones emerged to take their place, leaving a sort of anarchic vacuum. The police and other security forces were no exception. The fear they had nourished for decades disappeared; a liberated but confused citizenry took "freedom" to mean "anything goes." When the public was not openly hostile to the police, it simply ignored them. At the 13 same time, the psychological difficulty of dealing with the sudden, complete breakdown of a familiar social order increased the overall level of tension in the East German population, leading in turn to an increased level of violence.

    A host of problems and crimes connected with the new, uncontrolled borders appeared almost immediately, among them increases in highway accidents, weapons and currency smuggling, and robberies. Starting in14 early 1990, a rash of bomb threats hit East Germany ("Ansteigen," Die Polizei, October 1990: 287). Further, latent hostilities toward East Germany's African and Asian guest workers quickly exploded into racist violence.

    An additional problem was created following the monetary union and introduction of West German currency in July 1990, in conjunction with the dismantling of the East German army and changes in the status of the Soviet military in East Germany. Soviet soldiers, still paid in non-convertible, low-value Soviet rubles, could no longer afford to shop in a country that now required payment in Western currency. Thus it became common for soldiers openly to sell Soviet weapons of all types in exchange for West German Marks.

    Weapons were also taken from the stores of the East German army, the NVA, during the chaotic months of late 1989 and early 1990 ("Ansteigen," Die Polizei, October 1990: 287). Thus automatic weapons became widely available for the first time. Combined with the change in weapons laws in Berlin (see below), this created a major increase in lethal arms on the territory of what used to be East Germany that, in conjunction with the tensions described above, could only worsen the crime situation.

    Monetary union increased East Germany's problems. The sudden influx of Western currency and products resulted in increased shoplifting. Residential burglary and auto theft also rose (the East German Trabant and Wartburg cars had not been as attractive to thieves as the Western cars now owned by growing numbers of East Germans). Bank robberies increased following monetary union by as much as 87 percent (Skoda 1991: 44), as banks now dealt in Western currency and Western cars made safe, rapid getaways possible. There had been little incentive in the past to steal relatively worthless Eastern marks, especially in a communist state with rigidly-controlled prices and limited opportunities to spend extra money. Thus banks had none of the protective devices taken for granted in the West; they resembled mere shops with counters.

    Purse snatchings increased rapidly until they almost matched the rate in the West. In addition, with the introduction of the West German mark in the East a new drug market opened up, though drug use did not rise as steeply as had been feared (Die Polizei, April 1990: 94).

    LONG-TERM CHANGES

    Traffic Accidents and Deaths

    According to the Federal Statistics Office, the number of deaths from traffic accidents climbed from 1,784 in 1989 to 3,330 in 1990. The report shows an 85% increase in traffic deaths on East German territory in 1991. Many were attributable to the fact that many East Germans, accustomed to their slower Trabant cars, immediately bought faster, more powerful, and thus more dangerous, western cars following monetary union. However, West Germans were also responsible for many accidents in the former East Germany; accustomed to smooth Autobahns without speed limits, they ignored such limits on East Germany's bad roads, or drove under the influence of alcohol, ignoring the complete ban on drinking and driving in the eastern part of Germany ("Ansteigen," Die Polizei 1990 claimed almost every third accident in East Germany was caused by Western motorists). Larger, heavier, faster Western cars were capable of causing especially great havoc among the slower-moving, more fragile Eastern automobiles.

    Weapons

    With reunification on October 3, 1990, the Allies gave up their status as occupying forces in Berlin. Laws created by Allied directives lost their validity as lawmaking powers were relinquished once and for all to the German political authorities. One of the most radical differences between the laws governing Berlin and those governing the rest of West Germany concerned possession of weapons. According to occupational directives, only members of the occupying forces could possess weapons; only collectors and hobbyists were excepted, but they were required to comply with strict registration laws. Additionally, due to Berlin's "island" status, cars and travellers entering West Berlin always underwent searches by East German border guards or West German police. The opening of the borders, the merger of the two Germanies and the adoption of West Germany's less-strict laws on weapons possession led to an increase in buying, selling and trading of weapons in a once gun-free society (Heilig 1990).

    RESTRUCTURING EAST GERMANY'S POLICE

    The West Berlin police found it difficult to adjust to crime increases following the historical events of 1989; but for the East German police, coping was next to impossible. Not only did they lack the training and equipment to deal with violent situations, as well as the experience of acting on their own discretion; perhaps most difficult of all was the psychological effect of the East German "revolution." Its major consequence for the police was a fundamental disorientation and insecurity that continued long after unification. The government they had served had forfeited its legitimacy; in the eyes of the population the police, as representatives of that government, no longer possessed any authority. Police behavior over forty years, and particularly in the recent past, was everywhere condemned; officers very much felt their unpopularity and literally feared to enforce the law. 15

    In many cases they could no longer even be sure which laws continued to apply and how those that did were to be enforced. A large number of old structures and rules had clearly lost their validity since the "revolution," but no new ones took their place in the governmental and administrative uncertainty that reigned. In addition, no new police law was passed to define the police's changed responsibilities and duties. In the long16 period beginning in November 1989 and continuing even past the March 1990 East German elections, a "legal vacuum" existed in East Germany that would not end (at least formally) until unification on October 3, 1990 ("Rechtsvakuum," tageszeitung, April 19, 1990).

    CHANGES PRIOR TO UNIFICATION

    Personnel

    Despite this chaotic situation, some changes did occur. East Berlin's chief of police was replaced early in 1990 ("Das Ende," Bhrgerrecht & Polizei 1991: 8), and the "Round Table" that acted as a de facto East German legislature until the March 1990 elections began investigations into the behavior of the police on October 7 and 8, 1989.

    Yet change in personnel occurred quite slowly. Contrary to the general impression outside of Germany that the fall of the Wall meant instant freedom and democracy, few overnight alterations occured anywhere in East German society. Many of the old top police officials, like their political counterparts, remained in power, including those responsible for the police misbehavior on October 7 and 8; few investigations actually resulted in prosecution (Baum 1991). One reason 17for this was that the investigations remained in the hands of the same government prosecuters who had served under the old regime; another was stalling tactics by the police bureaucracy itself ("Das Ende," Bürgerrecht & Polizei 1991: 7-8). The East German police's inability to deal honestly with its own past was illustrated in radical fashion when, shortly before unification, it had to be prevented from destroying files that included evidence pertaining to the events of October 1989 (Malzahn 1990).

    Security partnerships

    Most important from a psychological point of view, the grass-roots organizations that had initiated the revolution made great efforts to work with, rather than against, the police. So-called "security partnerships" became common, in which these groups collaborated with the police to prevent violence and ensure order at demonstrations and other public events ("Versuch," Die Polizei 1990: 262). Although West German demonstrations also had to be registered with the police in advance, confrontational behavior on the part of both demonstrators and police tended to be more common in the West; the East German security partnerships strove to avoid such confrontation. The insecurity of the East German police and their desire to reduce popular hostility aimed at them undoubtedly contributed to the success of these partnerships ("Das Ende," Bürgerrecht & Polizei 1991: 8).

    Cooperation with the West

    Cooperation between the East and West German police began soon after the fall of the Wall. In Berlin, the chiefs of police of the two cities were connected by a direct telephone line (tageszeitung, December 21, 1989). East German police sought the advice of their Western counterparts in dealing with the various crime areas with which they had little experience. West German police held seminars in West Germany for their East German colleagues (Kampmann & Wildt 1990; tageszeitung, May 22, 1990). The police also cooperated concretely, if informally, in solving cross-border crimes (Fuchs, Kriminalistik 1990: 119-21).

    As early as January 1990, police unions began forming in the East and making contact with unions in the West. The rank-and-file demanded better working conditions, better pay, and the right to civil servant status. In May 199018, they succeeded in changing the police ranking system from the previous military hierarchy to one that mirrored the West German system (Die Volkspolizei/Bereitschaft Extra 1990: 7).

    In January 1990, a department for drug crimes was formed in the East Berlin police department; in March, the police began to create an "anti-terror" squad, employing in part former Stasi members (Asendorpf, tageszeitung, March 31, 1990). In summer of 1990, the East and West German police finally created a formal "law enforcement union" to promote cooperation in catching and prosecuting criminals who until then could escape punishment by crossing, respectively, to either the East or the West (Schloesser, tageszeitung, June 18, 1990; tageszeitung, August 18, 1990.)

    Unification and Beyond

    The interim period following the fall of the Wall was short-lived, ending with unification on October 3, 1990. Unlike other East-Central European countries, East Germany was generally not in a position to restructure its society, including its police force, to suit its own needs. Instead, for better or worse, West German structures and laws were essentially superimposed onto the East. This was most obvious in Berlin, where the East Berlin police were completely absorbed by the West Berlin force. However, the situation changed throughout East Germany, as control of the police was decentralized and passed over to the states.

    Following unification, East German police were required to fill out long, probing questionnaires concerning their political and professional history before being accepted conditionally onto the "new" police force. Those accepted 19 only slowly received the status of civil servants; their pay remained low compared with the past and with their Western colleagues. Further, their training in the East was generally not recognized, meaning that those who had held higher rank were forced to move farther down the career ladder. In any case, the force would not take on all of the East German police who wished to keep their jobs. Older 20 officers had little chance of retaining their positions, and none at all of reaching the rank many held in the East (von Bebenburg, Frankfurter Rundschau, October 30, 1990.)

    This situation created a significant morale problem, and many East Germans simply quit (Bühmer, die tageszeitung, May 13, 1991); those that remained 21 feared for their jobs in the situation of mass unemployment facing the East. There were complaints that fear of making a mistake that might cost them their jobs led police from the East to hesitate before enforcing the law. The situation slowly improved as former East German police underwent the necessary background checks and were accepted onto the new force.

    For those former East German members of the force who remained, the introduction of the West German system required massive retraining. Suddenly, the entire corpus of West German law had to be learned from scratch. In Berlin, retraining was offered by the police department itself, but particularly in smaller cities and towns officers essentially had to teach themselves, occasionally with the help of a West German advisor (Frankenstein, Berliner Zeitung 1991; Wildt, tageszeitung 1990). On the other hand, however, West German police forces quickly created partnerships arrangements with East German cities and regions, offering training and helping build up local forces (Diederichs).

    A significant issue among those concerned with crimefighting, particularly in the East, was how to "teach" the principles of democratic policing to officers trained in an undemocratic system. East German criminologists themselves admitted that the process would be difficult-- certainly more difficult than many in the West at first comprehended (Zinycz and Hahn, Kriminalistik 1991).

    The Situation in Berlin

    The effect of Germany's unique East-West split and its psychological consequences on the police were most obvious in Berlin, where the two systems enjoyed the closest proximity.

    On October 3, 1990, East Germany ceased to exist. The former West Berlin police officially took over responsibility for enforcing the law in all of Berlin. The East Berlin police had lobbied for the creation of three new "directorates," or precincts, in East Berlin, but the West Berlin hierarchy refused to do anything that would give the former East German police independent control of police activity in eastern Berlin. Instead, West Berlin directorates divided the former East Berlin precincts among themselves. Thus former East German police officers were kept out of the new police leadership for all of Berlin ("Die 'Erstreckung,'" Bürgerrecht & Polizei, 1990). This decision was just one of many that reflected the West Berlin police's strategy to take over the entire new Berlin police structure, justified with the argument that the new laws would be those of the Federal Republic and the assumption that many high East German police officials had been involved with the secret police and its crimes (Ibid.).

    Thus following unification, the entire police leadership in Berlin became West German. With limited knowledge of the psychological, political and social situation within East Germany, West German police were sent into what was essentially a foreign country, bringing with them attitudes developed over many years in a very different West German setting (East 22 Berlin police also did duty on the western side of the city, but there they were clearly in the subordinate position of trainees in a foreign environment).

    The Situation Outside Berlin

    Whereas in Berlin, the post-unification police force simply took on the structure and leadership of West Berlin's police, a more complicated situation existed in the rest of the country. Soon after the 1989 change in regime, the political map of East Germany was redrawn to conform to pre-1945 state borders abolished by the Communist government; five Lender, or states, were recreated as political units, which required the creation of entirely new administrative structures. Once unification occurred, the centralized East German police administration therefore also gave way to the decentralized, state-level West German system, and had to begin building up brand-new policing structures on the Lender level--clearly a difficult task, given the simultaneously-rising crime rate, high attrition from the police force, and the general chaos of a society in transition. Technical difficulties also created daunting practical problems: the lack of modern equipment to carry out investigations that in the past had been taken care of by the central criminal investigation offices in Berlin, as well as an extremely poor communications infrastructure in the underdeveloped eastern states (Ackermann 113- 14). 23

    To gain control of the situation, the five new eastern German states created the so-called "joint state criminal office," (Gemeinsames Landeskriminalamt or GKLA), a central criminal investigating authority, to coordinate crimefighting until the states could create their own criminal investigation departments (Ackermann 113-19). Yet here, too, the police could not escape its past; the GKLA, an entirely eastern German institution, was accused of employing numerous former Stasi officers ("Spüren in der Mülltüte," Der Spiegel 1990: 108-13). As the states built up their own criminal investigation departments with the help of western partner states, and often with Western criminal justice officials at their heads, the GKLA was slowly eliminated (Diederichs, Bürgerrecht & Polizei 1991: 31-33).

    Case Studies

    Two case studies may help illustrate some of the problems arising from police restructuring in Berlin and the rest of eastern Germany. In Berlin, events surrounding a number of occupied houses in East Berlin provide an example of the psychological and practical problems that arose when a western-oriented police force attempted to deal with a problem in the eastern part of the city. Outside of Berlin, the growth of right-wing, often racist violence illustrated the helplessness experienced by the restructured police in the face of a major new problem in eastern society.

    Focus: Squatters

    In the early 1980's, West Germany, particularly West Berlin, began to experience the phenomenon of "squatting," in which young people would illegally occupy and live in buildings being held empty by speculators. After several years of confrontation with the government and violent combat with police, many of these squatters obtained leases to the buildings and city support for renovation work. Nevertheless, a hard core of violent squatters continues to provoke occasional clashes with West German police.

    Organized squatting began to occur in East Germany as well following the revolution. In many East German cities, squatting had always been one unspoken way of finding housing; now, however, young people began to occupy buildings openly and demand the right to remain. In many cases, they also reached agreement with the government and obtained leases. Particularly in East Berlin, however, the issue was complicated by the presence of West Berlin militants, with their extremely confrontational behavior, in addition to the bona fide East German squatters who tended to adhere to a more non-violent philosophy.

    Until unification, the East Berlin police generally left the squatters alone, occassionally even protecting them when they came under attack by violent right-wing soccer fans and neo- Nazis. But in November 1990, following unification, the West Berlin government decided to use its extended police power over the eastern part of the city to force the squatters out; in the end, several thousand police from West Germany were called in to clear a few hundred squatters. Militant squatters resisted with molotov cocktails and rocks, and the violent confrontation captured headlines throughout the country (Dokumentation zur Mainzer Strasse, 12-14 November 1990; CILIP 37, 3/1990).

    While it remains unclear who was most responsible for these events (police and squatters each accused the other of provoking the violence), it was clear that the situation largely involved Western problems fought out on Eastern territory. West Berlin militants had moved into East Berlin, bringing with them their violent and confrontational approach to the state; West German police responded in kind, as they were accustomed to do in West Berlin (few East German police participated in the operation) (Kampmann, tageszeitung, June 25, 1990; Hartung, tageszeitung, November 14, 1990). The most common response of local East German residents was a feeling of being "occupied" by both squatters and police.

    Focus: Right-Wing Extremism

    Right-wing violence by neo-Nazis did not begin with the attacks in Rostock in autumn 1992 that shocked the world. It began as soon as the Wall came down, and quickly became a major issue for the police in the new states. East Germany 24 had a right-wing "skinhead" subculture even before the fall of the Wall; after it fell, West German neo-Nazi groups began to organize in the East, finding fertile ground among disoriented, often unemployed East German youngsters whose entire world had collapsed around them with the changes in the country. While Berlin has also experienced an increase in such neo-Nazi activity, the problem initially was most serious in southern cities such as Leipzig and Dresden; blacks and foreigners feared to venture out on the streets at night, and cafJs and other projects considered "left-wing" were constant targets. In autumn 1991, repeated attacks on housing complexes where foreigners lived, peaking in the Saxon city of Hoyerswerda, made headlines; later violence 25 began to concentrate in the northern states of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and Brandenburg.

    Police and some local government officials openly admitted from the start that they could not cope with right-wing violence (Krall, tageszeitung, December 3, 1990; Schwart, tageszeitung, October 26, 1990; "Leipziger Neonazis," tageszeitung, July 3, 1991; Kaufmann, tageszeitung, May 6, 1991). They complained that too many police were leaving the force or being let go, creating even greater insecurity and hesitancy to act; that their equipment and materials were too primitive to deal with the new types of crime they faced (some police in Rostock apparently bought protective clothing in a local sporting-goods store during the autumn 1992 riots there); and that they were simply not equipped to deal with the problems that had hit the country, particularly those that result from social tensions--unemployment, racism, and the like (Neunzig, Rheinischer Merkur, January 4, 1991). There were also reports of police sympathy with right-wing attacks, particularly upon foreigners (Der Spiegel, May 27, 1991: 85; Siegler, die tageszeitung, June 28, 1991: 5), though this is more commonly mentioned in connection with the western German police.

    As can be seen from the two case studies above, the difficulties eastern Germany experienced following unification, in crime fighting as in many other areas, had significant psychological, as well as practical and political, components.

    CONCLUSION

    The the opening of the Berlin Wall brought problems in its wake that caught much of Germany unprepared. Euphoria gave way to social tensions in both parts of the country. East Germans, in addition to facing a whole range of new social problems, had to cope with the psychological effects accompanying the collapse of a familiar social order and its replacement by a completely different social structure.

    Nevertheless, to other Eastern and Central European countries, Germany's experience may seem in some ways ideal. Rather than having to reinvent the wheel, as it were, East Germany simply took over ready-made, westernized structures, concepts and institutions. But this view

    is simplistic, as has become clear in the six years since unification. Forty years of divergent experience and behavior cannot simply be molded to suit political purposes--a fact western Germans realized rather late in the process. It is not a judgment of the ultimate effectiveness of the institutional westernization of East Germany to point out that this often involuntary process of westernization--viewed by so many eastern Germans as a sort of colonization--created tensions as significant as any experienced by other post-communist societies undergoing more organic processes of institutional development. The popularity of the PDS, successor to the East German ruling party, in eastern Germany attests to this fact. I have presented the experience of the East German police as a case study of one institution that, I hope, helps illuminate these tensions and the process of change.

    NOTES

    1. ??
    2. The East German Minister of the Interior was also officially the chief of the East German police. See Harnischmacher, ibid., p. 274-275.

    3. The former director of the criminology department of the Humboldt University in East Berlin admits that the military organization of the East German police created an inability to "think for themselves." Interview with Dr. Ehrenfried Stelzer, June 20, 1991.

    4. This was not unique to the East; West German states also have such "Bereitschaftspolizei" units, with paramilitary training. See, e.g., Otto Diederichs, "Westpaten für die Ostpolizei," tageszeitung, July 29, 1991, p. 14.

    5. Additional information on structure and training of East German police from interview with Rüdiger Baumann, former Hauptkommissar (Chief Inspector) with the East German criminal investigation department, September, 1990; interviews with police in Prenzlauer Berg district, East Berlin, March 23 and 28, 1990.

    6. Interview with Christine Schmidt, policewoman in Prenzlauer Berg district of East Berlin, March 28, 1990.

    7. Discussions with police at police precinct 43 in Prenzlauer Berg district of East Berlin, March 23 and 28, 1990.

    8. According to East German criminologists Uwe Baier and Andreas Borning, one way in which the statistical level of crime was "reduced" was the practice of attaching new crimes that involved suspects already under investigation to the original crime, at least in less-serious criminal cases (Baier & Borning 1991: 275). Additionally, minor crimes such as shoplifting beneath a certain value were not even counted as crimes. Id., p. 276.

    9. Some types of crime (such as narcotics offenses) were all but nonexistent. On the other hand, East Germany did experience economic crimes, bordering on organized crime, though in a very different form than in the West. In East Germany, raw materials and tools were often in short supply and difficult to obtain. Directors of factories, desperate to fulfill the economic plans and quotas placed upon them, but unable to obtain the necessary materials, became experts at illegally "organizing" what they needed, and workers often did the same. The various security organs spent a great deal of time investigating such crimes. Interview with Dr. Ehrenfried Stelzer, former head of criminology department of the Humboldt University, June 20, 1991 (Stelzer was at the same time an officer with the Stasi); see also Baier & Borning 1991: 264-75.

    10. See, e.g., paras. 99, 100, 106, 107, 213 of the Strafgesetzbuch der DDR (East German Penal Code), Berlin, 1981, for examples of laws used against political criminals.

    11. Discussion with police officers, March 23, 1990 at Precinct 43 in Prenzlauer Berg district of East Berlin.

    12. The author would like to thank Dr. Alexis Aronowitz for much of the statistical information in this section.

    13. This attitude continued for some time after the fall of the Wall. See, e.g., "Bayern hilft Thhringen," Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, February 28, 1991.

    14. Comparisons of old and new crime rates in the new states reveals a significant rise in violent crime, fraud, and organized crime. For example, in 1990 threats of violence rose by 701.2% compared to the previous year, robbery and extortion by 218%, theft by 51.2%, to name only some of the more extreme figures. On the other hand, several crimes, such as rape and child abuse, showed a decrease. (These statistics cover the territory of what was East Germany; no complete statistics exist for East Berlin). Bulletin of the Presse und Informationsamt der Bundesregierung (Press and Information Office of the Federal Government), no. 47/p. 349, May 7, 1991, pp. 359-360, 362. Comparison of the level of crime in the so-called "new federal states" (the former EastGermany) with the old Federal Republic is difficult because of different methods of statistical measurement. The increase in crime involved not only East German citizens, but in large part also more experienced West German criminals who saw opportunities in the East. Thus, for example, West German organized crime rings became involved in robbery from art museums in the East.

    15. Interestingly, despite this insecurity, one survey among East Germans in February 1990 found a high level of trust in the police. If accurate, it creates a paradox difficult to reconcile, which may involve a discrepancy between perceptions and behavior. Die Polizei, September, 1990, p. 231.

    16. Such a law would not be passed until shortly before unification on October 3, 1990 - "Das Gesetz über die Aufgaben und Befgünisse der Polizei" (Law on Police Responsibilities and Powers), passed September 13, 1990. See Rolf Ackermann, "Das Gemeinsame Landeskriminalamt der Beitrittsländer," Kriminalistik, February, 1991, p. 116.

    17. The commission set up to investigate police behavior in October, 1989 was dissolved with unification in October, 1990. Attempts to continue the investigations met with little success.

    18. "Gründung der Gewerkschaft der Volkspolizei Vollzogen," Deutsche Polizei, March, 1990, p. 4 (Berlin section); "Aschersleben: der Anfang ist gemacht," Deutsche Polizei, May, 1990, p. 7; Dirk Asendorpf, "Kriminalisten wollen Beamte werden," tageszeitung, March 26, 1990.

    19. In the year after unification, several hundred officers in the states of Brandenburg and Saxony were relieved of duty following investigation of their past involvement with the Stasi. See "154 Offiziere müßen den Dienst quittieren," Berliner Zeitung, May 15, 1991; "Kripo - Streik in der Sachsenmetropole," tageszeitung, June 14, 1991; "Pätzold ruft Angestellte der Stadt im Osten zu bürgerfreundlichen Verhalten auf," Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, Oct. 10, 1990. At the beginning of August, 1991, a police spokesman was quoted as saying that some 1,100 former Volkspolizei officers would be relieved of duty by the end of the month, either because of Stasi collaboration or insufficient training. "1,100 Vopos wird gekündigt," tageszeitung, August 3, 1991, p. 30.

    20. Berlin, in particular, had a police force far out of proportion to its population, particularly following the addition of the East Berlin force. See, e.g., Otto Diederichs, op. cit.

    21. Many older police quit the force before the date of unification in order to enjoy so-called "preretirement" at partial pay, something no longer available after reunification. These officers feared they would not be accepted into the "new," post-unification police force. "Unter Druck gekhndigt," Deutsche Polizei, November, 1990, p. 14

    22. In an interview not long after unification, a former East German police commissioner who was then working within the West Berlin system voiced surprise at how little the West Berlin police seemed to know about East Berlin structures when they took over in October 1990. Interview with Rüdiger Baumann, former Chief Inspector, East Berlin criminal investigation department, December 1990. Similar sentiments were voiced by Piotr Krohn, an eastern German policeman sharing patrols with western Germans in eastern Berlin's Weissensee district, November 29, 1990.

    23. The technical situation was no better in Berlin, and was slow to change. When I interviewed police at an East Berlin precinct in 1993, they were still using East German telephones and typewriters and driving East German police cars and trucks, long after criminals had graduated to more modern cars and communications.

    24. Birgitt Griep and Gerhard Menzel, "Extremismus-Bekämpfung - Gegenwart und Ausblick," Kriminalistik, January, 1991, pp. 42-43 provides a brief overview of reasons for the growth of extremism in the eastern states, and necessary steps from a police point of view. See also Ulrich Kaufmann, "Das neue ist die Gewalt am Mann," tageszeitung, May 6, 1991.

    25. See "Die schlagen schneller zu," Der Spiegel, May 27, 1991, pp. 78-85 for a general description of the growth of right-wing extremism in the new states, and Bernd Siegler, "Dresden - Haupstadt der rechten Bewegung," tageszeitung, May 14, 1991, pp. 12-13 for a thorough discussion of the situation in Dresden.
    AUTHOR NOTES

    Belinda Copper Senior Fellow, World Policy Institute of the New School for Social Research, New York; J.D., Yale Law School, 1987. The author lived in Berlin from 1987- 1994. An earlier version of this paper, which included sections on changes in western German crime and policing, was originally written together with Dr. Alexis Aronowitz, who provided invaluable expertise on the West German policing system. It was presented at the conference of the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences in March 1991.



    Table of Contents | Continuity and Change in Hungarian Policing in the Mirror of Public Security Detention The HTML conversion of this chapter was supported by the
    National Institute of Justice/
    National Criminal Justice Reference Service
    Washington, D.C.
     
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  10. Motomom34

    Motomom34 Monkey+++

    I know puffing is illegal in the front range CO but I have never heard of anyone getting in trouble for it. This NY thing takes it to an extreme. You really cannot live free if you have to worry about folks recording you. Where does privacy start and stop?
     
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  11. Yard Dart

    Yard Dart Vigilant Monkey Moderator

    And that is just the point.... they do not like your privacy!! They really dislike your liberty... and they have great disdain for your freedom..... the wolves are at the door. And they have the constitution torn to tatters.... when are we going to say enough?!

    As many have said.... our founding fathers would have been shooting by now!! Have we as a society been so pacified... and so deceived, that freedom is but just a memory....probably yes.
     
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  12. ghrit

    ghrit Bad company Administrator Founding Member

    So where is our Henry Bowman?
     
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  13. Mountainman

    Mountainman Großes Mitglied Site Supporter+++

    Looks like the Craigslist douche bag flaggers in NYC will have a new job.
     
  14. Motomom34

    Motomom34 Monkey+++

    It is a slow programing. @HK_User's post is correct it is a "psychological and social level" in which things are changing. Most don't realize it, most couldn't fathom why.
     
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  15. VHestin

    VHestin Farm Chick

    I 'spy' on my neighbors already in the sense that I know their usual routine so I know if something's wrong. But I do it for OPSEC. I want my household to be safe. I don't blab about my neighbors to everyone who will listen. I do not buy into the notion that I need to give up privacy to be safe. Yeah, if I had a webcam going 24/7 in my house, I'm sure I would have the safest house in the country.
     
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  16. Tully Mars

    Tully Mars Metal weldin' monkey

    Back when my SiL was still my Daughter's boy friend but the relationship was serious he did something stupid. He made my little girl cry. I never said anything or acted like I even knew what happened. One sat morning I asked if he could come over and give me a hand. We jumped into the truck on the pretense of running to the store to pick up "stuff". Once out in the middle of Weld county I drove him to the site of a "dry hole". I explained to him that it was a well that failed to produce any product and as a result was to be filled with cement and written off. As he stood over the casing I asked him WTF he was pulling with my oldest. Long story short I told him to follow me back to the truck and showed him the bag of lime and a camp ax in the bed. I explained to him what the ax and the lime was for, and seeing that the hole was 6,000' deep and due to be capped with cement I probably didn't need the lime.. I then asked him if I needed to explain further. "No SIR" That was several years back and I'm now the proud Grandfather of their two children...
     
  17. TI.Proof

    TI.Proof Monkey

    The secret government ("Black Op's) is alive and well. Spying on - NO ! They are called Terrorist Liasion Officers "TLO' and "Role Playing Surveillance Operatives" They are run by DOD contracting companies like EKS Group LLC, out of Tampa Florida.
    Search Jobs - Realize Your Potential: eksgroup
    These pieces of shit are directly related to gang stalking, electronic harassment and its against American citizens. I should know I am targeted and they are killing my wife and I slowly.
    REAL American slow killing Americans -
    Liberty and Justice for All
    Proof
     
  18. Yard Dart

    Yard Dart Vigilant Monkey Moderator

    Jason Bourne.. that you?!
     
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  19. Ganado

    Ganado Monkey+++

    You are a mean metal welding monkey! and a great Dad! Sometimes the men have to take the boys out behind the barn and have a discussion.
     
  20. chimo

    chimo the few, the proud, the jarhead monkey crowd

    "New York City lawmakers have proposed a bill that would pay residents to video vehicles left idling on the street for more than three minutes and turn the footage over to the city’s Department of Environmental Protection (DEP)."

    Gonna be lots of cop cars in them videos. :lol:
     
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  6. Mortimer Adler Moose
    Thread

    Oligarchy!

    [ATTACH]
    Thread by: Mortimer Adler Moose, Aug 25, 2016, 18 replies, in forum: Freedom and Liberty
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