Obstructed Justice

This comprehensive exposé delves into the origins, evolution, and ongoing controversies surrounding the Peace Officer Bill of Rights (POBR), a series of legislative frameworks that have shaped American law enforcement since their inception in the 1970s. Drawing upon authoritative sources such as The New World of Police Accountability (Walker, 2019), “Police Union Contracts” (Duke Law Journal, Rushin, 2017), and the ACLU’s Gaining Compliance: A Survey of Proposed Police Reforms (2020), this work meticulously unpacks how POBR statutes have influenced internal investigations, limited public access to crucial evidence, and, in some jurisdictions, contributed to a virtual elimination of open trials in misconduct cases.

With clarity and precision, this book examines the legal, political, and social dimensions of POBR provisions, tracing how these statutes have altered evidentiary discovery processes, affected prosecutorial decision-making, and shaped public perceptions of accountability. It also explores the reform movements, legislative amendments, and civil society efforts that are challenging the status quo, raising urgent questions about the tension between officer rights and the imperatives of transparency and justice.

In an era of intensified scrutiny of policing practices, this exposé illuminates a little-understood yet profoundly consequential element of the American legal landscape. Readers seeking a deeply researched, evidence-based assessment of how POBR laws shape law enforcement oversight will find this text an indispensable resource.


A complete study of the impact of the Peace Officer Bill of Rights [POBR] including a state-by-state analysis, relative precedents, and associated articles is available online at peaceofficerbillofrights.com.