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  1. Gratuities are often seen as the first step on the slippery slope toward major corruption (Coleman, 2004), and it is for this reason that accepting gratuities is always frowned upon by law enforcement agencies.

  2. 1 sty 2004 · The slippery-slope metaphor recognizes the importance of police peers in encouraging corruption and the role played by the secretive elements of police culture.

  3. Gratuities are often seen as the first step on the slippery slope toward major corruption (Coleman, 2004), and it is for this reason that accepting gratuities is always frowned upon by law enforcement agencies.

  4. 1 sty 2004 · There was a significant speed-bump on the slippery slope in these agencies. I consider the official attitude toward gratuities unrealistic, somewhat hypocritical, and insulting to a police officer's intelligence.

  5. These include the "slippery slope" to serious corruption, the tendency of officers to favor those who provide gratuities, and the public perception that police receive favors that other citizens do not receive.

  6. 15 maj 2012 · The “slippery slope” of corruption theory is not something that many police officers accept as beginning with the acceptance of gratuities, but is more of

  7. The Slippery Slope Theory E. Delattre suggested that of-ficers who accept gratuities start down a road that leads to corrup-tion—the primary reason that law enforcement administrators must take a stand against such acts.5 Why must we only be concerned with gratu-ities if they lead to corruption? Throughout my research, I found many authors ...

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