Trust the Police: I WISH I WOULD. is a gut-wrenching, rage-filled, truth-telling volume that dismantles the myth of law enforcement protection in America. This is not a policy book-it's a literary protest, wrapped in legal fact, cultural critique, poetic lament, and generational pain. In Part 2 of the They Didn't Hear Me Until It Cost Them to Listen series, George LeVance Barnes lays bare the hypocrisy of justice systems that let rogue officers roam while permanently branding civilians with false charges.
Through chapters like "Wandering Officers, Still Walking," "Qualified Immunity = Disqualified Humanity," and "Personnel File: Protected. My Life? Public." the book exposes how secrecy, resignation loopholes, sealed files, and systemic protection uphold police misconduct-while civilians are crucified by their own records.
This book isn't just about police. It's about policy. About silence. About survival. About grief.
And it ends with a simple command: Stay dangerous. Because they already think you are.
Related Subjects
Law