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{{trope}}
{{trope}}
{{quote|'''[[By-The-Book Cop|FBI Agent Norman Jayden]]''': Blake, you are an [[Ax Crazy|unbalanced]], [[Rabid Cop|psychopathic]] [[Jerkass|asshole]]!<br />
{{quote|'''FBI Agent Norman Jayden:''' Blake, you are an unbalanced, psychopathic asshole!
'''Lieutenant Carter Blake''': I'll take that [[Insult Backfire|as a compliment]].|''[[Heavy Rain]]''}}
'''Lieutenant Carter Blake:''' I'll take that as a compliment.
|''[[Heavy Rain]]''}}


The [[Rabid Cop]] is a specific character in police procedural shows who's usually the most prominent portrayal of [[Police Brutality]] in fiction.
{{quote|''"I'm supposed to read you your rights. But you're in Mooney's jail...and you ain't ''got'' no rights."''|'''Officer Curtis Mooney''', ''[[Killer Klowns From Outer Space]]''}}


They might be [[Dirty Cop|casually dirty]], [[The Sociopath|overbearingly psychopathic]], or anywhere in between, but they all have two things in common: a ruthless disregard for civil rights, and an unwavering conviction that any person they've identified as "the perp" really is a perp (regardless of any contradicting evidence) and deserves to suffer. In a [[Good Cop, Bad Cop]] routine, they usually take the "Bad Cop" ball and run clear out of the stadium with their torture methods. Likely to be on the emphasis of the "Bad Cop" part in the [[Bad Cop, Incompetent Cop]] setting.
The room is small. Help is far away, on the other side of many locked doors. Your arm is chained to the table and a [[Rabid Cop]] is spraying spittle into your face in a way that convinces you that he has completely ''lost his mind.''


Compare [[Sociopathic Soldier]], a person in the military who commits war crimes. Contrast the (presumed) moral [[Cowboy Cop]].
All he wants you to do is admit that everything [[Adolf Hitler|Hitler]] did was your idea. Sounds good to you. What do you have to sign to get ''away'' from this maniac?


The [[Rabid Cop]] might be [[Dirty Cop|casually dirty]], or [[Knight Templar|overbearingly self-righteous]], or anywhere in between, but they all have two things in common: a reckless disregard for civil rights, and an unwavering conviction that any person they've identified as "the perp" really is a perp (regardless of any contradicting evidence) and deserves to suffer. Rules and trials are for the PERMISSIVE LIBERAL ASS-WIPES! In a [[Good Cop, Bad Cop]] routine, they usually take the "Bad Cop" ball and run clear out of the stadium with it.

Compare/contrast the (presumed) sympathetic [[Cowboy Cop]].
{{examples}}
{{examples}}

== Film ==
== Film ==
* Steve Pruitt in ''[[Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans]]'' is Terrence McDonagh's partner who threatens Dub with a beating in the interrogation room. And McDonagh starts to turn into a violent person himself as his addictions spiral out of control.

* Van Stretch from ''Internal Affairs'' is Dennis Peck's partner who assaults a drug pusher and his girlfriend for resisting arrest.
* Although he isn't in the circumstance described above, Alonzo Harris from the film ''[[Training Day]]'' is the embodiment of this trope. He is not necessarily insane though, just genuinely evil and sociopathic.
** Peck is also implied to be disliked by his fellow officers, due to his unscrupulous methods during his job.
* Dennis Peck from ''[[Internal Affairs]]'' ...see Alonzo.
* Officer Curtis Mooney in ''[[Killer Klowns From Outer Space]]'' is a misanthropic police sergeant who has to be almost physically restrained by Dave Hanson from beating up two teenagers whom he brought in for public drunkenness. He later arrests Jumbo (unbeknownst to him, is actually a Klown instead of a prankster in a costume) for pranking him with a bunch of water squirting flowers, and later hits the Klown's head with a flashlight, which turns out to be [[Mugging the Monster|not such a hot idea]].
* David Kujan pulls this on Verbal Kint a couple of times in ''[[The Usual Suspects]]''. ("I've got immunity now." "''NOT FROM ME! There IS no immunity from me, you piece of shit!''")
* Park Doo-man and Cho Yong-koo from ''[[Memories of Murder]]'' are a duo of detectives who both uses brute force against suspects, one of whom was a mentally handicapped young man, and get very few results. They're contrasted with Seo Tae-Yoon, who uses logic and reason in his investigation. {{spoiler|Though he eventually loses his temper after his frustrations gets the better of him and nearly shoots a factory worker.}}
* Most of the [[Perp Sweating]] scenes in the South Korean film ''[[Memories of Murder]]'', which is [[But It Really Happened!|based on real events]], fall into this category.
* Alonzo Harris from ''[[Training Day]]'' is a rogue narcotics detective who had terrorizes his neighborhood with his controversial and radical methods. He is also just a sociopath who has no qualms about abusing his suspects.
* Bud White of ''[[L.A. Confidential]]'' , hands down...to the point he frightens the officer trying to play 'bad cop', as well as the suspect.
* ''[[Transformers (film)|Transformers]]'': Barricade is portrayed as a "bad cop" cliche when he interrogates Sam Witwicky in an attempt to find where are his great-great-grandfather's glasses for the coordinates of the AllSpark.
* [[Transformers Film Series|"ARE YOU USERNAME 'LADIESMAN217'?!?!"]]
{{quote|'''Barricade:''' ARE YOU USERNAME "LADIESMAN217"?!?!}}
* The main character's partner is one of these in ''[[The Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans|Bad Lieutenant Port of Call New Orleans]]''. And the main character starts to turn into one himself as his addictions spiral out of control.
* David Kujan is a U.S. Customs Special Agent who yells at Verbal Kint several times in ''[[The Usual Suspects]]''.
* Officer Mooney in ''[[Killer Klowns From Outer Space]]'' has to be almost physically restrained from beating up a couple of punks brought in for public drunkenness. He later takes a flashlight to the head of one of the klowns, which turns out to be [[Mugging the Monster|not such a hot idea]].
{{quote|'''Verbal Kint:''' The DA gave me immunity.

'''David Kujan:''' Not from me. You get no immunity from me, you piece of shit.}}
== Live Action TV ==

* As illustrated above, Andy Sipowicz from ''[[NYPD Blue]]''.
** Before Andy Sipowicz, there was Mick Belker on ''[[Hill Street Blues]]''. Dude even barked and growled like a rabid dog.
** And, lest we forget, bit people on a regular basis.
* ''[[Law and Order Special Victims Unit]]'''s Elliot Stabler can cross into [[Rabid Cop]] territory, especially when [[It's Personal]]. Which is roughly every other week. This tendency earned him the [[Fan Nickname]] Un-Stabler.
** Most likely because Elliot is increasingly unstable and psychotic. That series will NOT end until he actually kills someone, ending his massive fall from grace.
** The cop in the (ironically named) "Unstable" made Elliot look normal.
* ''Most'' of the 1973 detectives in ''[[Life On Mars]]'' are rabid by today's standards, especially in contrast to 2006 transplant Sam, but Gene Hunt deserves a special mention, here.
* While he is a proponent of the [[Jack Bauer Interrogation Technique]], Vic Mackey on ''[[The Shield]]'' only rarely turns into the rabid cop - usually, his menacing is done with a cold and calculating air.
* Jack Regan of ''[[The Sweeney]]'' got rabid at times, too.
* Peter Boyd of ''[[Waking the Dead]]'' tends to get EXTREMELY SHOUTY and verges on violent at times, though usually one of his team is watching through one-way glass and bursts in to stop him.
* Jack Malone of ''[[Without a Trace]]'' can be pretty worked up and he will do anything to get information on on those poor missing people.
* Jimmy Beck in ''[[Cracker]]'', once causing his superior officer to say 'I don't know what you did to him, but you scared the hell out of me.'
* Several police on ''[[The Wire]]'', but standout examples are Anthony Colicchio, who attacks a middle-school teacher for asking him to move his police car, and Eddie Walker, who breaks a teenaged carjacker's fingers just for giving him additional paperwork.
* The retired detectives of ''[[New Tricks]]'' have slightly [[Cowboy Cop]] attitudes compared to modern police methods and standards. So they see nothing wrong with creating a fake [[Rabid Cop]] scenario where the interrogator gets so insanely angry that he shoots the suspect's public defender lawyer. The 'lawyer' is another retired cop and the gun is a starter pistol.


== Literature ==
== Literature ==
* ''[[Discworld]]'': "THAT! IS! NOT! MY! COW!". Commander Sam Vimes tries to do the best he can not to turn into a psychopath. Though he also {{spoiler|actually has a Vimes-esque entity in his mind to prevent him from succumbing to the darkness.}}
{{quote|'''Sam Vines:''' Who watches the watchman? I do.}}
* [[Stephen King]]'s ''[[Desperation]]'': Collie Entragian. Of course, ''I'm going to kill you'' not all he seems, ''I'm going to kill you'' this being a [[Stephen King]] novel. ''I'm going to kill you.''
* Rudolph in ''[[The Dresden Files]]'' is a corrupt Chicago police officer obsessed with stirring up trouble in the Special Investigations unit, due to his grudge against Harry Dresden. In ''[[The Dresden Files/Changes|Changes]]'', when he tries his best to play the Bad Cop, his desk-pounding and spittle-flecked screaming manages to do is cause Harry to crack up and causes Barry Tilly, the other interrogator, to end up ordering him out of the room. It probably helps that Harry has seen Rudolph freak out whenever confronted with the sort of thing he deals with all the time.
* Bud White from ''[[L.A. Confidential]]'' is a thuggish police officer with a penchant of assaulting woman-beaters.
** Dick Stensland is also responsible for instigating the Bloody Christmas incident by brutalizing the Mexican prisoners.


== Live-Action TV ==
* [[Discworld|THAT! IS! NOT! MY! COW!]]. Vimes does whatever he can not to turn into one, to the point that he {{spoiler|actually has a Vimes-esque entity in his mind to prevent him from succumb to the darkness.}}
* DS Jimmy Beck in ''[[Cracker]]'', once causing his superior officer to say, "I don't know what you did to him, but you scared the hell out of me."
{{quote| "Who watches the watchman? I do."}}
* Sgt. Michael "Mick" Belker in ''[[Hill Street Blues]]'', who has a habit of barking and growling like a rabid dog. And bit preps on a regular basis.
* Averted in [[The Dresden Files]] book ''Changes''. Rudolph tries his best to play the [[Rabid Cop]], but all his desk-pounding and spittle-flecked screaming manages to do is cause Harry to crack up and the other interrogator ends up ordering him out of the room. It probably helps that Harry has seen Rudolph ''freak out'' whenever confronted with the sort of thing he deals with all the time.
* Elliot Stabler from ''[[Law & Order: Special Victims Unit]]'', what with his [[It's Personal|desire for revenge]] against suspects who had abused children. Which is roughly every other week. This tendency earned him the [[Fan Nickname]] Un-Stabler. Most likely because Elliot is increasingly unstable and psychotic. That series will ''not'' end until he actually kills someone, ending his massive fall from grace. He finally leaves the police force due to his fatal shooting of Jenna Fox in the precinct. His shooting of said 14-year-old girl is justified, since she was shooting up the holding cell.
* [[Stephen King]]'s ''[[Desperation]]'': Collie Entragian. Of course, ''I'm going to kill you'' not all he seems, ''I'm going to kill you'' this being a [[Stephen King]] novel. ''I'm going to kill you.''
** Nate Kendall in the (ironically named) "Unstable" made Elliot look normal.
* ''Most'' of the 1973 detectives in ''[[Life On Mars]]'' are unnecessarily violent by today's standards, especially in contrast to 2006 transplant Sam Tyler, but Gene Hunt deserves a special mention, here.
* The retired detectives of ''[[New Tricks]]'' and their old style of policing is considered brutal when compared to modern police methods and standards. Still, they see nothing wrong with faking an act of brutality, where the interrogator gets so insanely angry that he shoots the suspect's public defender lawyer. The "lawyer" is another retired cop and the gun is a starter pistol.
** And occasionally, they find themselves working alongside an actual brutal cop, such as Frank Patterson in "The Fourth Man".
* Andy Sipowicz from ''[[NYPD Blue]]''.
* Vic Mackey in ''[[The Shield]]'' has at least four excessive force complaints made against him, and hits Dr. Bernard Grady, the pedophile, with a telephone during his interrogation with him. Though usually, his menacing is done with a cold and calculating air.
* Jack Regan of ''[[The Sweeney]]'' got unnecessarily violent at times, too.
* Peter Boyd of ''[[Waking the Dead]]''. A Detective Superintendent who tends to yell at the top of his voice when confronting his supsects and verges on being violent at times, though usually one of his team is watching through one-way glass and bursts in to stop him.
* Jack Malone of ''[[Without a Trace]]'' is an extremely dedicated FBI agent who would do anything to get information on the missing persons case.
* Several of the policemen in ''[[The Wire]]'' are rough around the edges, but standout examples are Anthony Colicchio, who attacks an elementary school teacher when said man asks him to move his car, and Eddie Walker, who out of frustration over having additional paperwork to fill out, breaks Donut's fingers over stealing a car, and causing a lot of damage to the other parked cars during the joyride.


== Video Games ==
== Music ==
* "I Shot The Sheriff" by [[Bob Marley]]. The song is about the narrator who's accused by the police of killing a deputy. However, the narrator admits to having shot Sheriff John Brown after being harassed by him (for unknown reasons) one time too many. It's also implied that the sheriff stomped over the narrator's garden while he's sowing (marijuana) seeds.


== Video Games ==
* [[Heavy Rain|Lt. Carter Blake]] is the epitome of this trope taken to its highest form. He's a police officer with immunity from the local precinct (why, nobody knows) who prefers beating a suspect rather than extracting any information, has no problem with breaking the law in order to investigate, and will have no qualms about killing. Initially, he's rather reserved to just beating suspects, {{spoiler|and then he roughs up a psychologist who has done absolutely nothing. And then does everything in his power to assure those affiliated with the investigation that [[Papa Wolf|Ethan Mars]] is the Origami Killer. [[The Profiler|The FBI agent attached to the investigation, Norman Jayden]], isn't convinced, and the two have a very rough rivalry. If Ethan is arrested, then it leads to a [[Moral Event Horizon|scene where Blake will mercilessly beat Ethan into unconsciousness]]. Jayden can intervene and punch Blake, which will prompt him to hold Jayden at gunpoint, waiting for the perfect opportunity to kill him.}}
* Agent Robert Nightingale in ''[[Alan Wake]]'' is a ruthless federal agent in pursuit of the main character. Though the source for his trigger-happy behavior is explained in [[All There in the Manual|his backstory]].
** It doesn't stop there. One possibility at the end of the game has Blake {{spoiler|order a sniper squad to gun down Ethan who had finally reunited with his ten-year-old son after having gone to incredible lengths to save him from a horrible death, all while the aforementioned son watches in horror as his beloved father's body falls to the ground, lifeless. All because Blake refused to believe anyone but Ethan could be the Origami Killer and the instant the obviously unarmed Ethan has to clutch his side in pain instead of keeping his hands up, Blake gives the order to shoot.}} Needless to say, Blake is by far the most hated character in the game, even the actual killer doesn't come close. The worst part? In any good ending [[Karma Houdini|he gets away with everything]].
* Carter Blake in ''[[Heavy Rain]]'' is an immoral police lieutenant with immunity from the local precinct (it's a miracle how) who prefers beating a suspect rather than extracting any information, has no problem with breaking the law during his investigation, and will have no qualms about arresting even an innocent person. First, he tries to scare Nathaniel Williams, a religious fanatic who wasn't involved in the murders. Then he roughs up Clarence Dupré, Ethan Mars' psychologist, who had done nothing wrong other than refusing to admit that one of his patients is a murderer. When the psychologist confesses that Ethan (who's only trying to look for Shaun, his 10-year-old-son) had visions of drowning bodies, Blake then does everything in his power to assure those affiliated with the investigation that said innocent man is the Origami Killer. [[The Profiler|The FBI agent attached to the investigation, Norman Jayden]], isn't convinced, and the two have a very rough rivalry. If Ethan is arrested, then it leads to a [[Moral Event Horizon|scene where Blake will mercilessly beat Ethan into unconsciousness]]. Jayden can intervene and punch Blake, which will prompt him to hold Jayden at gunpoint, waiting for the perfect opportunity to kill him.
** Yeah, about him getting away in the end, he doesn't because he isn't mentioned in the news.
** It doesn't stop there. One of the possible endings has Blake {{spoiler|ordering his squad of officers at the warehouse to gun down Ethan who had finally reunited with Shaun after having gone to incredible lengths to save him from drowning in the well, all while the aforementioned son watches in helplessness as his beloved father's body falls to the ground, lifeless. All because Blake refused to believe anyone but Ethan could be the Origami Killer and the instant said unarmed victim had his back turned to the police to clutches his left hip in agonizing pain instead of keeping his hands up, Blake gives the order to shoot}}. At this point, it's easy to say that Blake is considered as one of the most corrupt cops in fiction, even the actual villain doesn't come close to being the most disliked character in the game.
** There's a bright side: he doesn't in the bad endings. {{spoiler|If Ethan is killed while Norman is alive, he gets [[Turn in Your Badge|suspended and investigated]]. Not only him, but also his boss, Captain Perry. Or, in the "Uploaded" ending, he ends up getting haunted by Norman's "ghost" for the rest of his life}}. [[Bittersweet Ending|Sweet justice]].
* There's a lot of back-and-forth about whether Saren Arterius of ''[[Mass Effect]]'' is a [[Complete Monster]] or a [[Well-Intentioned Extremist]], but he really fits this trope better than either. As a Spectre, he's essentially a Council space cop with no strings attached, and he plays it to the hilt - making frequent usage of the [[Jack Bauer Interrogation Technique]], pursuing his own ambitions on the side and pinning the collateral damage on people he doesn't like. He's the same sadistic, racist government law officer we've seen in many other works - just relocated to a sci-fi setting.
* Saren Arterius of ''[[Mass Effect]]''. As a Spectre, he's essentially a Council operative with no strings attached, due to his brutal methods in the name of keeping the galaxy safe, pursuing his own ambitions on the side and pinning the collateral damage on people he doesn't like. He's the same sadistic, racist government law officer who exists in many other works - just relocated to a sci-fi setting.
* Agent Nightingale in ''[[Alan Wake]]'' really fits in this trope. Though the source for his jerkassery is found in [[All There in the Manual|his back story]].


== Western Animation ==
== Western Animation ==
* The titular character from the [[Adult Swim]] show ''[[Assy McGee]]'' is an extremely violent parody of brutal cops (and a [[Heroic Comedic Sociopath]]) despite being, as his name suggests, a pair of ass cheeks.
* ''[[Batman: The Animated Series]]'': Lyle Bolton from "Lock-Up" is a new chief of security who terrorizes the inmates of Arkham Asylum. He later becomes a vigilante called Lock-Up after he's fired from his position.


== Real Life ==
* This is parodied in ''[[The Boondocks]]'' where a [[Rabid Cop]] violently accuses and assaults [[Butt Monkey]] Tom Debuoir for a crime that he obviously didn't commit before being forced out by the nice cop. He then rushed in 5 seconds later to assault Tom again.
* There are too many instances of [[Truth in Television]] to count. It's not hard to find a list of cases where the police officers are caught red-handed using excessive force.
* The titular character from the [[Adult Swim]] show ''[[Assy McGee]]'' is an extremely violent parody of a [[Rabid Cop]] (and a [[Heroic Comedic Sociopath]]) despite being, as his name suggests, a pair of ass cheeks.
* ''[[Iron Man: Armored Adventures]]'' gives us their take on the NYCPD and the inexplicability of [[Family-Friendly Firearms]] at the same time. Doppelganger!Tony has just shot at unarmed people at a party with a laser gun and rushed off. The real Tony Stark is taken in for questioning, and one of the officers is like this, complete with banging on the table and yelling, "Did your friends give you the lasers?!"
* Though not technically a cop, Lock-Up from ''[[Batman: The Animated Series]]'' definitely counts.


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Perp Sweating]]
[[Category:Perp Sweating]]
[[Category:Characterization Tropes]]
[[Category:Cops and Detectives]]
[[Category:Cops and Detectives]]
[[Category:Crime and Punishment Tropes]]
[[Category:Crime and Punishment Tropes]]
[[Category:Villains]]
[[Category:Villains]]
[[Category:Rabid Cop]]

Latest revision as of 13:08, 9 November 2020

FBI Agent Norman Jayden: Blake, you are an unbalanced, psychopathic asshole!
Lieutenant Carter Blake: I'll take that as a compliment.

The Rabid Cop is a specific character in police procedural shows who's usually the most prominent portrayal of Police Brutality in fiction.

They might be casually dirty, overbearingly psychopathic, or anywhere in between, but they all have two things in common: a ruthless disregard for civil rights, and an unwavering conviction that any person they've identified as "the perp" really is a perp (regardless of any contradicting evidence) and deserves to suffer. In a Good Cop, Bad Cop routine, they usually take the "Bad Cop" ball and run clear out of the stadium with their torture methods. Likely to be on the emphasis of the "Bad Cop" part in the Bad Cop, Incompetent Cop setting.

Compare Sociopathic Soldier, a person in the military who commits war crimes. Contrast the (presumed) moral Cowboy Cop.

Examples of Rabid Cop include:

Film

  • Steve Pruitt in Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans is Terrence McDonagh's partner who threatens Dub with a beating in the interrogation room. And McDonagh starts to turn into a violent person himself as his addictions spiral out of control.
  • Van Stretch from Internal Affairs is Dennis Peck's partner who assaults a drug pusher and his girlfriend for resisting arrest.
    • Peck is also implied to be disliked by his fellow officers, due to his unscrupulous methods during his job.
  • Officer Curtis Mooney in Killer Klowns From Outer Space is a misanthropic police sergeant who has to be almost physically restrained by Dave Hanson from beating up two teenagers whom he brought in for public drunkenness. He later arrests Jumbo (unbeknownst to him, is actually a Klown instead of a prankster in a costume) for pranking him with a bunch of water squirting flowers, and later hits the Klown's head with a flashlight, which turns out to be not such a hot idea.
  • Park Doo-man and Cho Yong-koo from Memories of Murder are a duo of detectives who both uses brute force against suspects, one of whom was a mentally handicapped young man, and get very few results. They're contrasted with Seo Tae-Yoon, who uses logic and reason in his investigation. Though he eventually loses his temper after his frustrations gets the better of him and nearly shoots a factory worker.
  • Alonzo Harris from Training Day is a rogue narcotics detective who had terrorizes his neighborhood with his controversial and radical methods. He is also just a sociopath who has no qualms about abusing his suspects.
  • Transformers: Barricade is portrayed as a "bad cop" cliche when he interrogates Sam Witwicky in an attempt to find where are his great-great-grandfather's glasses for the coordinates of the AllSpark.

Barricade: ARE YOU USERNAME "LADIESMAN217"?!?!

  • David Kujan is a U.S. Customs Special Agent who yells at Verbal Kint several times in The Usual Suspects.

Verbal Kint: The DA gave me immunity.
David Kujan: Not from me. You get no immunity from me, you piece of shit.

Literature

  • Discworld: "THAT! IS! NOT! MY! COW!". Commander Sam Vimes tries to do the best he can not to turn into a psychopath. Though he also actually has a Vimes-esque entity in his mind to prevent him from succumbing to the darkness.

Sam Vines: Who watches the watchman? I do.

  • Stephen King's Desperation: Collie Entragian. Of course, I'm going to kill you not all he seems, I'm going to kill you this being a Stephen King novel. I'm going to kill you.
  • Rudolph in The Dresden Files is a corrupt Chicago police officer obsessed with stirring up trouble in the Special Investigations unit, due to his grudge against Harry Dresden. In Changes, when he tries his best to play the Bad Cop, his desk-pounding and spittle-flecked screaming manages to do is cause Harry to crack up and causes Barry Tilly, the other interrogator, to end up ordering him out of the room. It probably helps that Harry has seen Rudolph freak out whenever confronted with the sort of thing he deals with all the time.
  • Bud White from L.A. Confidential is a thuggish police officer with a penchant of assaulting woman-beaters.
    • Dick Stensland is also responsible for instigating the Bloody Christmas incident by brutalizing the Mexican prisoners.

Live-Action TV

  • DS Jimmy Beck in Cracker, once causing his superior officer to say, "I don't know what you did to him, but you scared the hell out of me."
  • Sgt. Michael "Mick" Belker in Hill Street Blues, who has a habit of barking and growling like a rabid dog. And bit preps on a regular basis.
  • Elliot Stabler from Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, what with his desire for revenge against suspects who had abused children. Which is roughly every other week. This tendency earned him the Fan Nickname Un-Stabler. Most likely because Elliot is increasingly unstable and psychotic. That series will not end until he actually kills someone, ending his massive fall from grace. He finally leaves the police force due to his fatal shooting of Jenna Fox in the precinct. His shooting of said 14-year-old girl is justified, since she was shooting up the holding cell.
    • Nate Kendall in the (ironically named) "Unstable" made Elliot look normal.
  • Most of the 1973 detectives in Life On Mars are unnecessarily violent by today's standards, especially in contrast to 2006 transplant Sam Tyler, but Gene Hunt deserves a special mention, here.
  • The retired detectives of New Tricks and their old style of policing is considered brutal when compared to modern police methods and standards. Still, they see nothing wrong with faking an act of brutality, where the interrogator gets so insanely angry that he shoots the suspect's public defender lawyer. The "lawyer" is another retired cop and the gun is a starter pistol.
    • And occasionally, they find themselves working alongside an actual brutal cop, such as Frank Patterson in "The Fourth Man".
  • Andy Sipowicz from NYPD Blue.
  • Vic Mackey in The Shield has at least four excessive force complaints made against him, and hits Dr. Bernard Grady, the pedophile, with a telephone during his interrogation with him. Though usually, his menacing is done with a cold and calculating air.
  • Jack Regan of The Sweeney got unnecessarily violent at times, too.
  • Peter Boyd of Waking the Dead. A Detective Superintendent who tends to yell at the top of his voice when confronting his supsects and verges on being violent at times, though usually one of his team is watching through one-way glass and bursts in to stop him.
  • Jack Malone of Without a Trace is an extremely dedicated FBI agent who would do anything to get information on the missing persons case.
  • Several of the policemen in The Wire are rough around the edges, but standout examples are Anthony Colicchio, who attacks an elementary school teacher when said man asks him to move his car, and Eddie Walker, who out of frustration over having additional paperwork to fill out, breaks Donut's fingers over stealing a car, and causing a lot of damage to the other parked cars during the joyride.

Music

  • "I Shot The Sheriff" by Bob Marley. The song is about the narrator who's accused by the police of killing a deputy. However, the narrator admits to having shot Sheriff John Brown after being harassed by him (for unknown reasons) one time too many. It's also implied that the sheriff stomped over the narrator's garden while he's sowing (marijuana) seeds.

Video Games

  • Agent Robert Nightingale in Alan Wake is a ruthless federal agent in pursuit of the main character. Though the source for his trigger-happy behavior is explained in his backstory.
  • Carter Blake in Heavy Rain is an immoral police lieutenant with immunity from the local precinct (it's a miracle how) who prefers beating a suspect rather than extracting any information, has no problem with breaking the law during his investigation, and will have no qualms about arresting even an innocent person. First, he tries to scare Nathaniel Williams, a religious fanatic who wasn't involved in the murders. Then he roughs up Clarence Dupré, Ethan Mars' psychologist, who had done nothing wrong other than refusing to admit that one of his patients is a murderer. When the psychologist confesses that Ethan (who's only trying to look for Shaun, his 10-year-old-son) had visions of drowning bodies, Blake then does everything in his power to assure those affiliated with the investigation that said innocent man is the Origami Killer. The FBI agent attached to the investigation, Norman Jayden, isn't convinced, and the two have a very rough rivalry. If Ethan is arrested, then it leads to a scene where Blake will mercilessly beat Ethan into unconsciousness. Jayden can intervene and punch Blake, which will prompt him to hold Jayden at gunpoint, waiting for the perfect opportunity to kill him.
    • It doesn't stop there. One of the possible endings has Blake ordering his squad of officers at the warehouse to gun down Ethan who had finally reunited with Shaun after having gone to incredible lengths to save him from drowning in the well, all while the aforementioned son watches in helplessness as his beloved father's body falls to the ground, lifeless. All because Blake refused to believe anyone but Ethan could be the Origami Killer and the instant said unarmed victim had his back turned to the police to clutches his left hip in agonizing pain instead of keeping his hands up, Blake gives the order to shoot. At this point, it's easy to say that Blake is considered as one of the most corrupt cops in fiction, even the actual villain doesn't come close to being the most disliked character in the game.
  • Saren Arterius of Mass Effect. As a Spectre, he's essentially a Council operative with no strings attached, due to his brutal methods in the name of keeping the galaxy safe, pursuing his own ambitions on the side and pinning the collateral damage on people he doesn't like. He's the same sadistic, racist government law officer who exists in many other works - just relocated to a sci-fi setting.

Western Animation

  • The titular character from the Adult Swim show Assy McGee is an extremely violent parody of brutal cops (and a Heroic Comedic Sociopath) despite being, as his name suggests, a pair of ass cheeks.
  • Batman: The Animated Series: Lyle Bolton from "Lock-Up" is a new chief of security who terrorizes the inmates of Arkham Asylum. He later becomes a vigilante called Lock-Up after he's fired from his position.

Real Life

  • There are too many instances of Truth in Television to count. It's not hard to find a list of cases where the police officers are caught red-handed using excessive force.