Dr. Clarissa Cole on After Hours AM April 17, 2019
(Start at 78:31)
Dr. Cole: He had an epiphany; he was going to become a cop!
Eric Olsen: Ha ha ha what??? Uh, so, wait a minute, he was told by a former employer, if you ever, you better never get a job where you have influence over others, an authority position, or Ill do whatever it takes to stop you. So wouldnt becoming a cop kinda give him the ultimate authority over people?
Dr. Cole: Well, you know, lucky for all these other people, he kept moving from county to county so they werent really, uh, yeah, it is the ultimate authority he was just moving around so people wouldnt know what he was doing, and I think getting out of the teaching profession they didnt know what he was going to do.
He eventually applied to the Broward County Police Unit; he was rejected, though, because he failed the psychological test.
Eric Olsen: Oh thats it hes out of the career. No career for him Hes obviously unstable
Dr. Cole: One, you know what? One would think so, and I actually used to perform these psych tests, and oh, do I have stories! You would think that it would even, its supposed to, let me tell you how its supposed to work, its supposed to prevent you from getting a job as a police officer or a prison guard.
Eric Olsen: Sure.
Dr. Cole: Does that always occur?
Eric Olsen: I would hope that it does.
Dr. Cole: No, no, no, I would say 50% of the time.
Eric Olsen: What?
Dr. Cole: Its supposed to be a be a requirement, a REQUIREMENT, if you dont pass, if you are not psychologically fit, you are not supposed to become a police officer or a prison guard. Does that actually preclude you from becoming a police officer even as long ago as what, 2005? No, I was doing them in 2005. Half of the people I rejected still became a cop.
Eric Olsen: How does that happen? How do they get around this?
Dr. Cole: Oh God there so many ways
Eric Olsen: Is it a buddy, a dad?
Dr. Cole: My son, hes the son of my buddy, his dad a cop, he has to be a cop, hes going to work in this county and were really understaffed, we need people, we know he failed, but its OK. The amount of excuses I heard to employ people.
And thats the thing, just so the general public is aware, its difficult to fail, its difficult to fail one of these psychological
Eric Olsen: What would cause one
Dr. Cole: Its not like the bar is so darned high that no one could pass, its nothing LIKE that, this test is just to find out is this person basically psychologically stable, are they non-sadistic, do they not have criminal or punishing tendencies or narcissistic tendencies themselves. Basically youre trying to weed out anybody that has a like God complex; Im judge, jury, and executioner. You want to get those people out of there. Youre trying to get people out of there that are just psychiatrically so unstable that they cant control their emotions so, maybe some sort of bipolar thing going on or somebody that absolutely clearly has a personality disorder, like narcissistic personality disorder, antisocial personality disorder, borderline personality disorder. They are not
Eric Olsen: Checks and balances. Checks and balances to protect the general public from somebody that would not do well in that position.
Dr. Cole: And I was very, yeah, I was extremely, forgiving on these psychological tests even when somebody would sort of hit sort of some of those marks on the tests we would give, I would ask in interviews I would ask a ton of questions just to be very, very sure that this person was indeed failing the psychological exam, and I did not fail that many people, but the people I failed, please believe me that it was for extremely good reasons, extremely good reasons, and half of them became cops anyway.
Eric Olsen: So when theyd leave would they go to a different state and do it?
Dr. Cole: Hah no, they would get hired by different a county, like a couple minutes over usually. Somebody knew them and Now lets pick them up. No, no, no, he has really strong sadistic tendencies and fantasies of rape and murder, you really shouldnt hire him and they would. And thats exactly, I hope its different that was like I said, this was in 2005, it scared the heck out of me and I said I would never have a career doing that I dont want to know that those people are becoming officers.
Eric Olsen: Tell me its in the minority, though, that this happens.
Dr. Cole: Its in the minority that people fail, the majority of people passed. But those that do fail, like I said its for very good reason, but half of them. Half of them got picked up. So no, its not a minority a full 50% got hired.
Eric Olsen: That is truly a scary number out there that 50% of...
Dr. Cole: Its a small sample, a small sample that was in a place that was economically depressed and needed officers
(End at 83:29)
Kid I grew up with was very happy and proud that he became a Baltimore police officer. I asked him why, “Because I get to slam N****rs against walls!”. He enjoyed this until he received a full retirement. One of Baltimore’s finest that didn’t help the whole situation we are in right now one bit...