Question for #journalists -- do you avoid naming cops even when their names are available?

#journalism #police

I know police departments rarely release names of police, even when they get fired for misconduct. But then sometimes I wonder whether the names were available and just left out of news stories?

Like this is an article about a court finding that RCMP violated people's rights. No RCMP are named, but several protestors and the judge are fully identified.

The baseline level of secrecy around police makes it confusing as a reader, for me at least. Does this mean the court didn't know any names either, or that the finding was about "the RCMP" as a group, or just that the journalist left out the names?

https://thetyee.ca/News/2025/02/19/RCMP-Violated-Charter-Rights-CGL-Arrests/

RCMP Violated Charter Rights During CGL Arrests, Court Finds | The Tyee

Indigenous land defenders found guilty of criminal contempt may receive shorter sentences due to ‘extremely serious,’ ‘racist’ conduct.

The Tyee

One time at a club, a friend apologized for showing up late.

Late friend: "Sorry, I dropped a full coffee pot and had to clean up"

Journalist friend: "Oh my god! What was it full of?"

So I assume journalists are usually asking for all the details, but I wonder if police are a special case 🤷

@beandreams
Even if the journalist isn't trying to, they may subconsciously not want to speak on RCMP or police officers. Unless the journalist is stopping to think about the power imbalance and correcting for that, it's bound to be the case that they will just opt to not stir tensions that could come back on them.

Even if the journalist doesn't register that they are uncomfortable challenging the institutionalized power, they're often acting in a way that doesn't step on powerful toes.

@beandreams
I wish more journalists had spines. The cartoons lied as much as copaganda does.