Peoria Police Put Out Recruiting Poster Telling Recruits To Come Play ‘Call Of Duty’ In Real Life

from the pew-pew-pew dept

Whatever your thoughts on policing in general in America, I would hope it would be largely uncontroversial to state that a huge percentage of Americans believe that police are generally over-militarized and at least slightly a little too trigger happy, especially when it comes to engaging minority communities. If you somehow think that there isn’t at least a perception problem among the public here, then you probably don’t need to keep reading the rest of this post, because it’s not going to make sense to you.

But if you do understand that there is some level of a problem here, your skin will almost certainly crawl when you see the recruiting poster the Peoria, IL police put out on social media to try to get young recruits.

A Peoria, Illinois police department tried to recruit new officers with a Call of Duty-inspired campaign on social media, and it was as tone-deaf as you’d imagine. The post, originally shared on the Peoria Police Department’s social media page, showed three white men posing with guns while wearing tactical gear. “Stop playing games and answer the Call of Duty,” the post reads, with the “Call of Duty” portion of the poster written in the same text as Activision’s wildly popular (and more than occasionally problematic) first-person shooter franchise.

Imagine just how tone-deaf you have to be in the current climate of policing in America to put this poster out. First, recruiting people with images of police in tactical gear pointing guns is precisely the wrong message you want to put out to a community in Peoria that is concerned about policing. Doubly so when the image is of three white cops in a community with a sizable black population.

And now add to all of that the simple fact that Call of Duty is a game in which you primarly spend a great deal of time shooting individuals. Like, with bullets and stuff. You know, to kill them. And, sure, it’s a video game and in that context I don’t have an issue with the game itself. But in a society where many believe that police far too often see themselves as gun-toting enforcers through violence, recruiting against a video game like CoD is absurd.

Police Chief Eric Echevarria eventually took the post down and apologized in a way that I will say does ring through as genuine.

It was never my intention to offend any of our community members with the recruitment flyer that was posted on our Facebook page yesterday. It was simply a recruitment image I thought would appeal and connect to a younger generation. I take ownership of this, and I sincerely apologize. Our goal is to recruit the best and most qualified officers for this police department in the most caring and respectful way.

It’s probably a good move, because we haven’t even gotten into the issue of intellectual property. The poster does name the game and use the same or similar font for the game’s branding when doing so. While I’m not sure there’s an actual trademark infringement case to be made here, I am also quite sure that Activision probably wouldn’t appreciate the use of its product name and branding in this way.

And so the poster is down, but the damage is done. In a community where fear of police violence is very real, that community got a reminder of how some police officers see their jobs.

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Comments on “Peoria Police Put Out Recruiting Poster Telling Recruits To Come Play ‘Call Of Duty’ In Real Life”

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40 Comments
Uriel-238 (profile) says:

Re: COD was a bad choice.

COD is a subset of First Person Shooter called a man-killer, in which the common targets are other people, often in a war setting. (A lot of FPS, though I don’t know the majority, involve shooting bugs or robots. Zombies and Imperial Stormtroopers present a grey zone.) WWII shooters justified that the men were Nazis, but the modern warfare games worry less about the ethical ramifications of killing the enemy because Uncle Sam commands you.

And yes, our new recruits to the police force will infer not only that they get to secure houses in SWAT raids, but that frequently they’ll get to shoot the bad guys as well. If they get killology training, that’ll only reinforce their path to acorn shooters.

A long time ago, I played SWAT IV which was more of a tactical sim based on municipal SWAT teams that specialize on hostage-barricade situations.

In SWAT IV it was super important to not kill civilians. Doing so results in instant mission failure. Even killing the perps cost points and could cost the mission. Eventually I stopped taking lethal weapons at all, counting on my team to do lethal takedowns in that tiny window where baddies were leveling their gun but hadn’t quite shot me yet. (My reflexes just weren’t that good.) I died a lot.

Most of the game was about blocking access paths, stacking up on doors and gathering intel to see if we needed to go loud or pick the lock and go in quietly.

All this is to say, a SWAT sim that was trying hard to sell its SWATness was far, far removed from any of the COD games, even early COD titles which were about shooting Nazis in WWII Europe.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Our goal is to recruit the best and most qualified officers for this police department in the most caring and respectful way.

‘… Which I did by referencing a game series where you shoot your problems until they are no longer problems, only realizing after the fact that might not have been the best choice.’

I really hope he’s just as stupid as he wants people to think he is because if he did that deliberately that paints an absolutely horrifying picture of the sort of people he wants in his department.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

‘… Which I did by referencing a game series where you shoot your problems until they are no longer problems, only realizing after the fact that might not have been the best choice.’

And the difference between Call of Duty and the police department is that you can reload your game in CoD to bring the people you shouldn’t have killed back to life*.

*Except during online play, of course.

Nimrod (profile) says:

This is just another incarnation of the “guns keep people safe” fantasy, which is, of course, DEEPLY rooted in racist fear. You don’t really think that that “home intruder” they say we all need to protect ourselves against is WHITE, do you? This is primal ethnic fear that stems from guilt over past genocide and stolen land.
I myself need no weapons to keep me safe. My people were in Germany when all that shit was going down. One day these fools may learn that nothing can protect you from your own cowardice.

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Lou says:

Recrutment Poster

I wonder how the police dept would react if someone decided to “prove” themselves to the dept by acting that game towards the police dept in that city. It would have to be against the member of the police force because, first, they are doing the recruiting, second, it wouldn’t be fair to go against the general population as they are not armed nor protected by military gear, and third, you’d want to go against the ‘best’.

LostInLoDOS (profile) says:

Huh?

largely uncontroversial to state that a huge percentage of Americans believe that police are generally over-militarized

No. Quite the opposite. For all their training and methods they fail the basic methods of a military force. No discipline. No common sense.
And no, it’s a small minority that think cops should have lesser weapons.

community in Peoria that is concerned about policing.

Generally, there’s no concern there. Sorey, you maybe got your towns mixed up?

am also quite sure that Activision probably

So, are you sure… or not. Why not just reach out for an actually comment from them. Or the people you think are so worried about the police.

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