In which way do you propose they be put into their place?
The list drags on and on.
- Overturn multiple Supreme Court decisions, including but not limited to: having to declare your action of silence, the police not being obligated to protect the public, the entire general standard of hearsay and testimony for the police vs others, and the standard of reasonable suspicion.
- End and reverse militarization, ban the DoD from ever giving them equipment again.
- Ban civil forfeiture, or otherwise reform it so radically that it doesn't exist in its current format.
- Establish greater powers for Internal Affairs, try to find some way to break the esprit de corps.
- Eliminate unnecessary SWAT programs (a city of 100,000 needs SWAT, a town of 5,000 does not).
- Completely scrap and recreate police academy training to emphasize non-escalation, and get rid of these lines that every cop in the USA uses ("detected the sent of marijuana", "I'm a nice guy I don't cite if people just give up their drugs", "I'll call in the dogs if you don't consent to a search").
- Disarm patrolmen in certain circumstances, very peaceful areas don't need gunmen with badges, they can call it in.
- Completely end kickbacks for not just civil forfeiture sales, but also fines and local fundraising. Only allow a direct line from the state or federal government.
- Universal body and patrol cameras that transmit to public archive.
- Stricter warrant standards; magistrates currently give them out on basically nothing. Eliminate no-knock warrants entirely.
- Mandatory timing of
all jailed people, and legal protections for their jobs and responsibilities while being held. No more "oops we forgot to release you" and "oops I fired you when you vanished for a week".
I could go on or expand into prison and greater judicial reform, but all of the above would be an acceptable time to revisit having respect for the police.