The column is accessible if you give them your email address or log on with facebook (now I'll probably get email alerts from the Strib till the end of time).
The column is long on warm and fuzzy, short on specifics. As someone who worked on the breaking news side, I consider the greatest vulnerability of the newsroom that it considers the police a privileged source -- that is, their report generally goes unquestioned, especially when events are just unfolding. The cops write the reports, and news media generally consider them as gospel. About the only thing that weakens that grip is when some witness on the scene records a video that contradicts the official version. That's rare indeed.
Usually, when a reporter and/or photog goes out to a scene, it's taped off and the people available to talk have little better idea what went down than the journalists who just parachuted in. After the mess is mopped up and the news team returns to base, there isn't much otheer than the cops and the courts to go by.
I can recall a few incidents where police actions were seriously questioned at our paper. One was where police shot a young man, saying he had a gun. Some witnesses, who turned out to be kinda sketchy, came forward and said the guy was unarmed. We reported their account and pressed the cops pretty persistently -- the ME had a real hard-on for this story. Ultimately, the witnesses proved to be drunks and the guy, who ended up paralyzed from the waist down, did admit having a gun (which was recovered) in his hand when he was shot.
In another incident, police ran down a fleeing suspect and put him in the back of a squad. A camera in the car videotaped him as he sat. He was having trouble breathing -- it turned out he had sickle-cell anemia. Cops through he was faking. Eventually he passed out and died in the back of the car.
Police released the video after the paper learned of its existence and requested it. It was posted online for public viewing, with a warning of its content. Did that change police policies or alter the paper's image? Maybe a little. But it took video to bring the issue to light.
Police began wearing body cameras in 2016, several years after the aforementioned case. They generally have been forthcoming in releasing footage when a fatal encounter occurs. I think that has improved their image, but people are on such a hair-trigger these days, an unconfirmed rumor can set a neighborhood off.
A former co-worker has set up an urban community reporting bureau with support from a local university. It mostly writes blow jobs on local folks, which the sources and their immediate family probably read and enjoy. I occasionally see a similar-type video doc on an individual, but public TV is the only medium I know of that does a decent job of that. Commercial TV seems limited to 2-minute hits or "reality" plots where some characters are racing against a manufactured deadline.