By PM Beers
At the beginning of the millennium I used to listen to conspiracy theory radio in the middle of the night. I loved fiction presented as fact. The stories the guests told were rich and fascinating. Of course, I didn’t believe a word of it as I was kept entertained while I made digital art.
![]() |
| Michael A. Woods |
Sometimes our culture is so corrupt that our perception becomes altered so much that we don’t know what we are doing is terribly harmful. Michael A. Woods is a retired Baltimore police officer who recently began tweeting about the embedded culture of oppression and corruption in police departments. While he speaks directly only to his own personal experiences, the same shady behavior exists in police department across the country — and none of this comes as a surprise to poor people and persons of color. He talks about how he can’t remember specific examples because the unethical things he and the other cops did happened on a daily basis. The culture of policing was so corrupt that Woods was unable to see unscrupulous behaviors as unethical at the time that they occurred.
In a recent radio interview, Woods spoke about how he came to realize that what many cops were doing was wrong. “I was seeing them as the ‘thems’ so I didn’t see anything wrong. As soon as I stopped seeing them as ‘thems,’ I knew how wrong I was and I started to fight back. I was about five years in when this became apparent. What was striking to me is that I wasn’t a bit racist. I grew up with government assistance but I bought into the culture of law enforcement.” He spoke about how the same behavior was fine for white kids while in black teenagers it was criminalized. Empathy was what made all the difference.
Woods recommends the following changes be made:
– Stop the war on drugs.
– Create civilian oversight boards.
– Cops should police with empathy.
– Police should consult with community leaders.
– Police need to be reminded that their oath was not to follow orders, but to uphold the constitution.
– Investigations of police misconduct must be public.
Here are the Tweets that brought Michael Woods to our attention:
@MichaelAWoodJr timeline is worth a read. Former Baltimore cop who is giving a look behind the cloak. It’s not pretty. #ThankYouForHonesty
— Sam Dei Lune (@SamDeiLune) June 24, 2015
Years ago @MichaelAWoodJr promised me after he retired he’d spill the beans. @Lixen123 @baynardwoods @EdwardEricsonJr @davidcsmalley — Gen. MacArthur (@BaltoSpectator) June 24, 2015
So here we go. I’m going to start Tweeting the
things I’ve seen & participated in, in policing that is corrupt,
intentional or not.
— Michael A. Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 24, 2015
A detective slapping a completely innocent female in the face for
bumping into him, coming out of a corner chicken store. — Michael A.
Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 24, 2015
Punting a handcuffed, face down, suspect in the face, after a foot chase. My handcuffs, not my boot or suspect
— Michael A. Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 24, 2015
CCTV cameras turning as soon as a suspect is close to caught. — Michael A. Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 24, 2015
Pissing and shitting inside suspects homes during raids, on their beds and clothes.
— Michael A. Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 24, 2015
Swearing in court and PC docs that suspect dropped CDS during unbroken
visual pursuit when neither was true. — Michael A. Wood Jr.
(@MichaelAWoodJr) June 24, 2015
Jacking up and illegally searching thousands of people with no legal justification
— Michael A. Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 24, 2015
Having other people write PC statements, who were never there because
they could twist it into legality. — Michael A. Wood Jr.
(@MichaelAWoodJr) June 24, 2015
Summonsing officers who weren’t there so they could collect the overtime.
— Michael A. Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 24, 2015
Targeting 16-24 year old black males essentially because we arrest them
more, perpetrating the circle of arresting them more. — Michael A. Wood
Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 24, 2015
Most of this isn’t new. A google search will show, I’ve been speaking for awhile http://t.co/lT00Rvd91K @BaltoSpectator
— Michael A. Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 24, 2015
If you listen to my interview http://t.co/rOjnxpKnzY and review my timeline, go way back, you’ll get a lot more details. — Michael A. Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 24, 2015
Please follow @MichaelAWoodJr :: Worked 11 years for @BaltimorePolice & was a sergeant in the Marines. Sharing truth on his experiences.
— Shaun King (@ShaunKing) June 24, 2015
If internal investigations were transparent, you would be able to see it
all. The records are there. — Michael A. Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 24, 2015
What’s really hard to convey is that some things are so common place, they didn’t register until I was on the other side.
— Michael A. Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 24, 2015
I don’t remember details of any particular person getting illegally
searched, it was every day. — Michael A. Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 24, 2015
I’m one person relying on a flawed memory system.
This is an indictment on the culture of the profession, not a
witch-hunt. Sorry.
— Michael A. Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 24, 2015
These things happen(ed), now how do we fix it? We need police. Let’s
figure out how to do it right. The starting line is marked “Empathy” —
Michael A. Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 24, 2015
I’ve virtually begged local media to give me a voice, only @BaltoSpectator @baynardwoods @EdwardEricsonJr and @davidcsmalley cared at all
— Michael A. Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 24, 2015
It doesn’t matter whether anyone believes me or not Don’t rely on
arguments from authority. What matters? That future training prevents
this — Michael A. Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 24, 2015
@MichaelAWoodJr @OpFerguson I have seen police corruption thru family members and firsthand. Don’t know Blk person that hasn’t. No surprise.
— Walter abraham (@waltdog602) June 24, 2015
@waltdog602 @OccupyWallStNYC @OpFerguson @MichaelAWoodJr Because system is set up to prevent active duty cops from speaking out. — StormyBlue (@StormyBluePup) June 24, 2015
Remember this Baltimore police news release? It took the FBI less than a day to debunk https://t.co/fYmHdhtx0q pic.twitter.com/Jgz0cPHH7y
— Luke Broadwater (@lukebroadwater) June 24, 2015
Every person in low income, especially minorities, knows all of this
already. I’m not revealing anything at all, just confirming. — Michael
A. Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 24, 2015
@MichaelAWoodJr real law is the what we all agree on:rape/theft/murder/etc-things w/victims.Not:”u have the wrong color sticker on your car”
— Ike (@Ike__Mouser) June 25, 2015
Going 2b quite busy today, will post asap. Hit & run, snitching to
dealers, plea deals, & CI buys, will be topics today — Michael A.
Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 25, 2015
Audit: 30 percent of police dashboard cams in Prince George’s are broken http://t.co/uZNsQM6YRY
— deray mckesson (@deray) June 25, 2015
A detective staging a hit & run to cover up crashing a departmental vehicle. — Michael A. Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 25, 2015
Drug shops “magically” knowing where our narcotics team was. We suspected Dan Redd.
— Michael A. Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 25, 2015
Placing people in a situation where they can choose either a 6month
guilty plea or face 20+years in prison. — Michael A. Wood Jr.
(@MichaelAWoodJr) June 25, 2015
CI buys which swear that the whole exchange was
watched, when I NEVER saw it be watched the entire time. Thus why I
never worked with CIs.
— Michael A. Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 25, 2015
Writing OT slips for overtime on CI buys for people who were never there, ala @joecrystalxxx testimony. — Michael A. Wood Jr. (@MichaelAWoodJr) June 25, 2015



No comments:
Post a Comment