Law enforcement officers confront ethical challenges daily. These decisions shape careers. Some uphold integrity, while others compromise their morals. Ethics in policing isn’t abstract—it defines reputations and trust.
A career can end with just one wrong decision. Yet, the question remains: Are we normalizing poor ethics and unacceptable behavior within law enforcement?
The Slippery Slope: Small Compromises Lead to Bigger Failures
The erosion of ethics is not instantaneous. It begins with small compromises—decisions that seem harmless but gradually shift an officer’s moral compass. Over time, these choices create a culture where misconduct is tolerated.
Consider alcohol and drug use, for instance. Many officers drink casually. Some drink regularly. A few develop substance dependencies.
During my career, I became both an alcoholic and addicted to pain pills. It started as a way to cope with stress and injuries. Then, I normalized my usage. A man I considered a friend would give me pain pills occasionally. I told myself it was harmless — just a friend helping me out.
This marked the beginning of a hazardous trajectory. One day, this same man came to me with a threat. He said he’d tell my department’s Internal Affairs division about the pills if I didn’t help him. He wanted me to use my status as a law enforcement officer in a motorcycle club to move illegal items through my area.
He argued that no one would suspect me. “You’re a cop,” he said. “No one will ever stop you.”
At that moment, I faced a choice. Continue compromising my ethics or put an end to it. I refused. I told him to turn me in if he wanted. A few weeks later, police arrested him in another county for drug possession. I never heard from him again.
That experience taught me something critical: When you begin making small ethical compromises, people will exploit them.
The normalization of unethical behavior doesn’t just affect individuals—it creates opportunities for corruption and blackmail.
Ignored Ethical Dilemmas and Broken Oaths
Some ethical breaches seem minor but have lasting consequences.
One Sunday, I received a call from an officer on duty.
“Do you know this guy?” he asked.
I said yes.
“He’s drunk. Can I drop him off at your house?”
Without hesitation, I agreed.
At that moment, I didn’t consider the ethical cost. The officer and I enabled someone who should have been arrested for DUI.
This was more than a poor decision; it was a breach of our sacred oath. Law enforcement officers commit to serving and protecting the public, enforcing the law fairly and without bias. By bending the rules for someone we knew, we betrayed that responsibility.
When officers choose loyalty over law, public trust erodes. If we make exceptions for friends, what does that say about our commitment to justice?
This is how corruption starts—not with major crimes, but with small favors that undermine the principles we swore to uphold.
The Higher Standard: Accountability or Selective Punishment?
Law enforcement officers are held to a higher standard. At one point, I thought that was unfair. Now, I see that it’s necessary.
That realization came when my career ended in a drunk-driving accident.
I stood in court before a judge I had known for years. He had prosecuted many cases I built. But on that day, I wasn’t an officer presenting evidence—I was a defendant facing the consequences of my actions.
He looked at my attorney and said:
“Odom was a police officer. He is held to a higher standard.”
He made it clear that if I contested my DUI charge, he would ensure I received the maximum sentence allowed by law.
That moment forced me to confront a hard truth. For years, I had accepted poor ethics as normal. I had believed officers should be held to a different standard—but one that protected them rather than the public.
This mindset is dangerous. When officers believe they are above the law, they stop fearing consequences. When that belief spreads, accountability disappears.
The Hypocrisy of Selective Judgment
This raises another critical question: Do we judge officers selectively?
Consider two examples.
One officer has an affair that results in a child. Another officer is arrested for DUI.
The officer who committed adultery often faces no formal consequences. His peers joke about it. The officer with the DUI, however, is ostracized, treated as if his mistake defines him.
This double standard is common. Some officers are punished severely, while others escape accountability altogether.
Throughout my career, I saw officers engage in behavior that clearly violated ethical and moral standards. Yet, their actions were ignored—or even accepted—because of their status, connections, or the biases of those in power. At the same time, those same individuals were often quick to condemn others for mistakes they themselves had made.
This is why selective ethics in law enforcement is dangerous. When bad behavior is tolerated for some but punished for others, it creates a culture where loyalty outweighs integrity.
The Long-Term Cost of Normalizing Bad Behavior
Unethical behavior in law enforcement does not exist in isolation. Every time an officer bends the rules, it weakens the foundation of public trust.
When officers cover for each other, it sends a message: Some people are above the law.
When officers enforce the law unevenly, it creates doubt: Is justice truly blind?
When officers protect their own at the expense of integrity, they damage the credibility of the entire profession.
Communities do not lose faith in law enforcement overnight. It happens slowly, after years of seeing officers escape consequences for actions that would ruin the lives of civilians.
Once the public stops believing in the fairness of the system, cooperation declines.
- Witnesses refuse to come forward.
- Victims hesitate to report crimes.
- The effectiveness of law enforcement itself is compromised.
There’s no room for compromise when it comes to police ethics. The moment officers accept minor violations as normal, the floodgates open for greater misconduct.
A Lesson from Experience
I do not write this article as a man who always upheld his ethics. I failed in many ways. I compromised my values. I allowed my personal struggles to cloud my judgment. I made decisions that violated the oath I swore to uphold.
But I also learned. I paid the price for my mistakes, and I will carry them with me for the rest of my life. That is why I write this—not to condemn, but to warn. The path of ethical compromise is easy to step onto but difficult to escape.
Officers will face challenges—some personal, some professional, many unavoidable. No one wears the badge without eventually feeling the weight of it. The truth is, we all need help sometimes.
Agencies, supervisors, and peers must recognize and support one another in this context. When officers struggle, they must be given the tools to course-correct before they lose themselves. Peer support programs, mental health resources, and leadership that prioritizes wellness over discipline can make the difference between an officer who recovers and one who falls deeper into compromise.
To any officer reading this who feels lost, who feels like they are slipping, who fears they have already compromised too much—ask for help. It is never too late to turn back. The badge does not have to become a burden.
Law enforcement is a profession of service, but that service must also extend to one another. Because the moment we normalize ethical failure, we lose not just our integrity—but the very foundation of public trust.