Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Main / CopsNeedTheVigilante

Go To

1%%%
2%%
3%% This page has been alphabetized. Please add new examples in the correct order. Thanks!
4%%
5%%%
6->'''Ingrid Block:''' I always hoped the law would catch up with him.\
7'''Elliot Stabler:''' The law doesn't always guarantee justice.\
8'''Ingrid Block:''' But this time, ''I did.''
9-->-- ''Series/LawAndOrderSpecialVictimsUnit''
10
11In first world countries, cops have rules. They're not allowed to beat a confession out of you or ransack your home on a whim or throw you in prison for months and wait for a confession. There's also a great deal of paperwork. A ByTheBookCop follows these rules scrupulously, a CowboyCop just breaks them. A lot of cops get annoyed by them.
12
13Private citizens, though of course bound by the law, aren't bound by the rules cops have to follow. A lot of cop shows/movies like to throw a cop and a civilian together so that the civilian can work around the annoying rules and the cop can nab the bad guy ''officially''. Unless he [[WhyDontYouJustShootHim just shoots him]], possibly when he [[HostageSituation takes the civilian hostage]]. The cop might also help the civilian out of any legal trouble he gets into.
14
15In truth, it doesn't matter if you're getting a paycheck; if you're working on behalf of the state, you're a state agent. That is to say, a cop can't ask you to do what he's not allowed to do.[[note]]However, sometimes cops make use of private citizens to get around administrative rules. In particular, if they don't have enough evidence to start an investigation, sometimes they'll hire a private eye to get that first bit of evidence. This is sometimes legal.[[/note]]
16
17There are two different ways this can go. If a cop asks someone to do something he can't, the law has been broken, the evidence is inadmissible, and everyone walks away with egg on their faces; fiction typically ignores this except to ratchet up the tension. If the cop didn't ask but gets an unexpected windfall, then the law was still broken, but many jurisdictions will still allow the evidence (providing it can be authenticated).
18
19Related is SteppingOutForAQuickCupOfCoffee when the cop "accidentally" helps the other party.
20
21Compare RecruitingTheCriminal, BoxedCrook and VigilanteInjustice. See also BadGuysDoTheDirtyWork and VigilanteMan.
22
23----
24!!Examples:
25
26[[foldercontrol]]
27
28[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
29* In ''Manga/CodenameSailorV'' (of which ''Manga/SailorMoon'' is a spin-off), much of Tokyo's police treat Sailor V as their saviour due a combination of being the only one who can deal with the mysterious attacks on civilians and being well on the way to arrest ''every single criminal in Minato Ward'' (and at one point she ''does'', getting even the panty thieves), and treat [[OnlySaneMan Wakagi]] as a weirdo for his insistence they should instead do their jobs ''and'' arrest Sailor V for vigilantism. As for Superintendent-General (the chief of Tokyo's police) Natsuna Sakurada, she has ordered to bring Sailor V in for questioning... Because she's actually a fan and wants to ''recruit her''.
30* ''Manga/IsItMyFaultThatIGotBullied'': When Aizawa's actions are being discussed on public television the legal expert of the panel admits that while Aizawa did break several laws, his actions are not completely wrong as school bullying is too much of an insidious problem to be handled by current methods and a deterrent is definitely needed. He even supports Aizawa's suggestion of installing surveilance cameras to monitor and prevent the bullying problem. [[spoiler: The final chapter reveals that some schools took Aizawa's suggestions to heart]].
31[[/folder]]
32
33[[folder:Comic Books]]
34* Comic books play this every which way. Franchise/{{Batman}} is perhaps the worst offender. He is, and always has been, more or less a ''de facto'' agent of the Gotham PD. That they have the Bat-Signal up on the roof confirms that. Therefore pretty much everything he does is entirely illegal, as it contravenes all the rules of evidence gathering, chain of custody, interrogation, etc. Some recent series have gotten more sophisticated, going so far as to actually get this right (Batman is an agent of the police and therefore this is inadmissible, or Batman is entirely unconfirmed and you can't prove there's any contact, making this very murky but admissible, for example), though some have gotten it wrong while trying to be clever (no, bringing in a bureaucrat whose only job is to turn on the Bat-Signal doesn't make it okay because the bureaucrat is acting as an agent of the police, which makes Franchise/{{Batman}} an agent of the police). [[http://lawandthemultiverse.com/ Learn more here.]]
35** This was deconstructed in one storyline: ''ComicBook/BatmanNoMansLand''. After a massive earthquake devastates Gotham and the US Government declares it to be "No Man's Land", various gangs end up claiming territories for themselves. The Gotham PD themselves become such a gang, the ''Blue Boys'', with Jim Gordan at the head, egged on by Petit to be more ruthless, and causing him to resent Batman for seemingly abandoning them in their time of need. Another officer questions ''why'' Gordon is really that mad at Batman, and Gordon's wife Sarah explains that he initially tried to ''leave'' Gotham and join another Police Department, but was laughed out of all of them since he's considered incompetent for relying on a costumed vigilante, resenting Batman for making him look like a fool, and his forces now never mentioning him by name, instead of calling him "The B". When Batman returns and claims Scarface's territory as his own, Gordon just sees him as another enemy, with even Batman's attempt at revealing his identity to regain trust failing [[SecretIdentityApathy since Gordon refuses to look at his face.]] Gordon doesn't manage to get much done on his own, however, relying on an alliance with ComicBook/TwoFace that quickly turns sour, Petit breaking off and forming his own gang after Gordon doesn't go far ''enough'', nearly gets killed by David Cain only being saved thanks to [[ComicBook/{{Batgirl}} Cassandra]], and capped off with [[spoiler:ComicBook/TheJoker killing Sarah right before NML was lifted.]]
36* ''ComicBook/{{Blacksad}}'': Commissioner Smirnov gives Blacksad free reign to avenge Natalia's death after he tried to investigate her murder through the official channels but was [[ScrewTheRulesIHaveConnections quickly shut down when it got too high up]]. After Blacksad kills the wealthy businessman responsible for the murder in a VigilanteExecution, Smirnov even covers for him by lying right in front of the two employees who saw Blacksad carry out the act.
37* ''ComicBook/DisneyDucksComicUniverse'':
38** In the ComicBook/DisneyDucksComicUniverse, including ''ComicBook/PaperinikNewAdventures'', Duckburg's police department knows they can't deal with the far too numerous criminals without Paperinik's help, though [[DependingOnTheWriter the exact relationship may vary with the story]]: while Paperinik is ''never'' an official member or associate of the police, the cops in the streets tend to look the other way, while the brass either condones such actions or try and get him arrested. And the one time cops on the ground openly asked for Paperinik's help against orders of a chief of the police (actually a criminal in disguise who wanted to get rid of Paperinik) to ''not'' work with him at all, [[SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome the judge had to let all thieves arrested by Paperinik that night go]].
39** Occasionally, especially in the earlier years where Paperinik tended to live up to his title of [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast Devilish Avenger]], even the cops on the ground would try and arrest him on sight... Invariably leading to failure, humiliation, and sometimes pain for whoever was stupid enough to try and arrest Paperinik, leading to the unspoken reason the cops on the street usually let Paperinik do his thing: they know they can't beat him, so they let Paperinik free to beat up criminals and leave them for the police to arrest so they have at least ''something'' to show.
40* ''ComicBook/ThePunisher'': It's heavily implied pretty often that rank-and-file NYPD cops have no problem with Frank's war on crime and put zero effort into apprehending him.
41[[/folder]]
42
43[[folder:Fan Works]]
44* Discussed in ''[[https://archiveofourown.org/works/40940559/chapters/102598665 Dimensional Meddling]]'', which deconstructs some aspects of this trope. In a brief segment from Jim Gordon's perspective, he notes that he's technically just as corrupt as the officers on the mob's payroll because he works with a vigilante. It's also noted that Batman stopped going after mob members because most of them were able to get charges dropped or evidence thrown out on the grounds of vigilante involvement. Batman sticks to handling his rogues gallery because they commit crimes publicly and gift-wrapping them for the police doesn't interfere with evidence gathering or chain of custody. By contrast, Superman is noted to not have this problem due to refraining from intervening in police work unless someone is in immediate danger (which is covered by Good Samaritan laws) or he's specifically asked to help.
45[[/folder]]
46
47[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
48* ''Film/FortyEightHrs'' and ''Film/Another48Hours'' are at least honest in that the guy breaking the rules is an actual criminal. Still, the case would get thrown right the hell out.
49* Discussed in ''Film/TheAmazingSpiderMan''. When Peter has dinner with Gwen's family, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ph5Vk6sC6SQ discussion turns to Captain Stacy's pursuit of Spider-Man]]. Peter tries to point out that he thinks Spider-Man is trying to help, but Captain Stacy is firmly convinced Spider-Man is a danger and points out that he's targeting criminals who all look the same, "like he's got some personal vendetta," not to mention his actions have interfered with long-term police stings.
50-->'''George Stacy:''' He's an amateur who's assaulting civilians in the dead of night. He's clumsy, he leaves clues, but...he's still dangerous.\
51'''Peter Parker:''' He's--he's assaulting people? I'm not sure. I mean, I saw that video with him and the car thief, and...I-I think most people would say that he was providing a public service.\
52'''George Stacy:''' Most people would be wrong. If I wanted the car thief off the street, he'd already be off the street.\
53'''Peter Parker:''' So why wasn't he then?\
54'''George Stacy:''' Let me illuminate you. See, the car thief was leading us to the people who run the entire operation. It's been a six-month-long sting. It's called "strategy", I'm sure you're aware of the term "strategy"? You've probably heard about that in school?\
55'''Peter Parker:''' Okay. Well obviously, he didn't have a plan.\
56'''George Stacy:''' Deep d-you seem to know an awful lot about this case. You know something we don't know? I mean, whose side are you on here?\
57'''Peter Parker:''' I'm not on anyone's side. I saw a video on the Internet-\
58'''George Stacy:''' [[SarcasmMode Oh. You saw the video on the Internet. Well, then the case is closed]].\
59'''Peter Parker:''' Well, no, I'm just saying if you watch the video, maybe I send you the link, it looks like he's trying to help-\
60'''George Stacy:''' Yeah sure on the Internet, he's been made to look like some kind of masked hero or something.\
61'''Peter Parker:''' No-no-no, I'm not saying he's a hero, I don't think he's a hero at all.\
62'''George Stacy:''' What are you trying to say?\
63'''Peter Parker:''' I'm saying he's trying to help, but he looks like he's trying to do something that maybe the police can't.\
64'''George Stacy:''' Something the police ''can't''?\
65'''Peter Parker:''' I dunno-\
66'''George Stacy:''' [[DonutMessWithACop What do you think we do all day? You think we just sit around eating donuts with our thumbs planted firmly up our asses]]?
67** Both undergo CharacterDevelopment, with Captain Stacy realizing that, with things like The Lizard running around, there ''are'' things Spider-Man can do that the police can't, and Peter realizing that Spider-Man needs to be more than just a way to avenge his uncle's murder.
68* ''Film/BeverlyHillsCop'' (I'm sensing a trend here, [[Creator/EddieMurphy Mr. Murphy]]) does this, too, in a funny way. Detective Axel Foley isn't a cop ''in Beverly Hills''. His antics are amusing but illegal.
69* ''Film/DeathWish3'': The Captain of the local police precinct gives Paul Kersey carte blanche to do whatever it takes to eliminate the criminal gang that is terrorizing the town (because [[CrapsackWorld crime rates overall are high enough that the police's hands are tied]], and this has given the gang the idea that they have free reign to perform said terrorizing).
70* ''Film/TheDukesOfHazzard'' movie actually did this mostly right. The Duke cousins all broke the law, but they did so not only without permission but in the face of police antagonism.
71* ''Film/TheDarkKnight'': While officially maintaining the fiction that Batman is a wanted vigilante, the Gotham P.D is openly working with him, even bringing in Batman to conduct a violent interrogation of the Joker while the detectives look on. However, this changes by the end of the movie when Batman takes the blame for the death of Harvey Dent, and Commissioner Gordon is shown smashing up the Bat Signal with an axe.
72* ''Film/ManOnFire'': Although they never directly interact, Detective Manzano is fully aware that Creasy is carving a bloody path through the Mexican underworld and accomplishing more in a week than he could in a lifetime. After keeping tabs on Creasy's progress throughout the movie, [[spoiler: Manzano personally takes care of the main villain after Creasy sacrifices himself to save Pita]].
73* ''Film/MissMeadows'': Implied by Mike's actions throughout the film [[spoiler:and especially the ending]], as Miss Meadows is able to eliminate criminals whom there's no evidence against.
74* ''Film/NothingButTrouble'': A PlayedForHorror reveal: [[spoiler:the state police knows perfectly well that J.P. Valkenheiser is a murderous HangingJudge and not only do nothing about it but send him criminals to get rid of covertly. Chris and Diane discover this while surrounded by the army of cops that came to "arrest" the Judge after they first escaped and the Judge himself all acting chummy, and the massive collapse of Valkenvania happens just in time to interrupt what seemed to be [[KilledToUpholdTheMasquerade our heroes being murdered to silence them]].]]
75[[/folder]]
76
77[[folder:Literature]]
78* ''Literature/TheExecutioner'': The police and other law enforcement agencies often looking the other way, when Mack Bolan kills criminals. But it goes even further, the U.S. federal government actually hires him on occasion for various missions, especially if they're assassinations. The feds even had Mack create various semi-official vigilante groups for them such as Literature/AbleTeam.
79[[/folder]]
80
81[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
82* This trope is deconstructed and ultimately denied in the ''Series/Adam12'' episode "Million-Dollar Buff". Throughout the episode, Malloy and Reed have had to deal with an overenthusiastic "buff" named Jennings Thornton who has decided to fill his retirement years by acting as an unlicensed police officer. He pulls this trope in almost as many words on Malloy and Reed, but they're not having any of it. In fact, Thornton is seen to be much more of a liability with his "help" than he is any sort of asset. In one incident, he very nearly runs Reed over with his car in his eagerness to "help" the LAPD corral a liquor-store robber wearing a bullet-proof vest. He's finally arrested when he claims to be a police officer and "arrests" at gunpoint two teens who were doing nothing more illegal than transferring legitimately-bought wheels from one car of theirs to another (Thornton assumed they must have been stealing the wheels, one of the teens had the original sales receipt to prove they were theirs). Nobody at Malloy and Reed's station has any regard, respect, or like for Thornton, seeing his as an irritant at best, a danger to the community at worst.
83* ''Series/{{Angel}}'': The series mostly skirted this issue, as Angel Investigations tended to stick with demonic activity (though the fact is the law probably wouldn't particularly care that the murderer was an immortal demonic entity). They tended to operate without police sanction, but they were called in by Detective Lockley a few times.
84* The Series/{{Arrowverse}} plays both sides of this:
85** In ''Series/TheFlash2014'', the cops really are out of their depth dealing with metahumans, which is demonstrated in Season 1 (when the Reverse-Flash casually takes down a roomful of heavily-armed cops) and in Season 2 (when Zoom slaughters a dozen cops in a split-second and sends an army of Earth-2's metahumans to wreak havoc on Earth-1's Central City). While the Flash is technically a vigilante, he's such a beloved hero that this is simply ignored. The Flash often delivers metahumans to the cops without mention of any legal issues, and the Flash's team has helped the cops without their knowledge by providing them power-containment technology through their civilian identities.
86** In ''Series/{{Arrow}}'', it's brought up several times that vigilantes taking care of criminals is making the cops look bad and has a negative effect on morale. Legally, the city varies between trying to ignore the vigilantes to actively hunting them. This usually depends on whether or not a villain is framing them at the moment. In Season 7, Team Arrow is even legally incorporated into the Star City Police Department (though making this work in practice is shown to be rather difficult).
87** In ''Series/Supergirl2015'', regular cops really can't do much about aliens and metahumans. The DEO, on the other hand, is more equipped to handle ''some'' of the threats. Still, without Supergirl, National City (and probably all of Earth-38) would have fallen long ago. Of course, the DEO is an official government organization and Supergirl an on-the-books agent, making this more a case of cops needing federal help.
88** ''Series/LegendsOfTomorrow'' zig-zags this in Season 3 with the introduction of the Time Bureau. While they do an excellent job sorting through the mess created by the Legends at the end of Season 2, their arrogance does, occasionally, result in them screwing up, forcing the Legends to step in and resolve the issue (hopefully, without making the problem worse). The Legends are semi-official agents; at the very least, the Bureau has agreed to stop actively trying to arrest them.
89* ''Series/BarneyMiller'':
90** In "[[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin The Vigilante]]", a vigilante pops up when the 12th Precinct is too overworked to reach all their calls. It turns out to be an elderly immigrant who's otherwise a good citizen, just one taking exception to people getting mugged in his neighborhood. The squad gives him a warning, but when they hear that someone of his description is at it again they modify all the descriptors ''just'' enough before putting out an [=APB=].
91** Played more darkly with Bruno Binder, who puts up posters offering money to people who kill criminals in the act. When recurring character Cotterman and another store owner ''do'' take a shot at a criminal (though not for the reward), both are horrorstruck to learn that one of them is guilty of taking a life.
92* ''Series/{{Bones}}'': The show is particularly terrible about this. Agent Booth will tell Dr. Brennan to step in ''in the middle of an interrogation'' if a suspect lawyers up. She dives in and steals evidence right in front of him. The entire team colludes to hide that one of their own tampered with evidence in an investigation he should have recused himself from. They have to have the worst record of any team ever for case closure.
93* ''Series/BurnNotice'': The show is at least honest that their main characters are all criminals. Good guys, but criminals nevertheless. As the police never ask for their help (the CIA is another matter), this should actually pass muster.
94* ''Series/{{Castle|2009}}'': The series both acknowledges that Rick Castle is an agent of the police and that his actions routinely screw the pooch. Good job, ABC!
95* ''Series/{{Dexter}}'': Zigzagged. [[Characters/DexterDexterMorgan Dexter Morgan]] is a legitimate agent of the police (albeit a lab technician, so he does not have the authority to arrest anyone) whose nighttime activities as a SerialKillerKiller are beneath notice by the rest of the department. When Dexter himself becomes a target of the FBI after a mass grave of his victims' corpses are discovered, most of his colleagues are quick to denounce the "Bay Harbor Butcher" and his one-man war on crime. Later, when Dexter was going after the Barrel Girl Gang, a group of criminals who raped and murdered numerous young women, Debra walked in on him in the middle of his kill ritual after he and Lumen, [[RapeAndRevenge one of the gang's would-be victims]], captured their leader. Dexter and Lumen were concealed behind a sheet of plastic, but Debra just said that she was going to let them get away with it because their victims were just that horrible.
96* ''Series/{{Dollhouse}}'': The Dollhouse is once hired to assist a DEA operation. As the Dollhouse is already an illegal entity, everyone involved is upfront about the iffy nature of this operation.
97* ''Series/{{Elementary}}'': Sherlock and Joan regularly break into suspect's homes and other property in order to gain or simply secure evidence for the NYPD. Sherlock even states that little things like the 4th amendment don't apply to them, since they're "only consultants". Except they are on the NYPD payroll, thus bound by all the constitutional requirements that entails.
98* ''Series/{{Fringe}}'': The pilot brings us Peter Bishop walking into an interrogation room after Agent Dunham walks out so that he can torture information out of a suspect.
99* ''Series/KamenRiderDrive'': This is part of the dynamic between Shinnosuke (Drive) and Gou (Mach). Shinnosuke is a cop and (especially once his SecretIdentity is exposed) has to do his superheroing by the book, while Gou is a civilian who even points out how useful he can be.
100* ''Series/KnightRider'': This is explicitly the premise, with the [[FunWithAcronyms Foundation for Law and Government]] targeting [[CorruptCop dirty law enforcement]] and [[EvilInc unethical corporations]]. Subverted in that Michael Knight is a former law enforcement officer who knows where to draw the line, and Knight and FLAG do call in the state police or FBI when they have enough evidence to bring charges.
101* ''Franchise/LawAndOrder'': This franchise, with its passion for legal truthiness, was typically careful about this. Cops weren't allowed to break the rules and neither was anyone else. When someone did break a rule, it usually meant the DA's office had to tap dance on quicksand to keep the perp from getting away with it. This was occasionally taken to the opposite extreme: there were several episodes where civilians obtained evidence illegally through no fault of the police, and it was [[LawfulStupid suppressed anyway]].
102** For example, in ''Series/LawAndOrderSpecialVictimsUnit'', one investigation into a fraternity hazing a couple of pledges to death led one of Stabler's teenage daughters to steal the fraternity's ledger, which includes details of the crime that incriminate the fraternity. While Elliot's daughter did this without his knowledge, the ledger is suppressed as "fruit from the poisoned tree". However, one suspect cites the ledger during the defense's questioning, so the ADA motions that the ledger is back in-play if the defense intends to use it as evidence. The judge agrees since its introduction has nothing to do with its previous theft, and the perpetrating members of the fraternity are found guilty.
103* Generally averted in ''Series/{{Lucifer}}'', especially in the early episodes, where Lucifer was more concerned about punishing the guilty (i.e. his day job). He typically does that by briefly revealing his true face to the killer, oftentimes resulting in them being committed to a mental hospital. In one episode, though, a cop killer ends up getting a Not Guilty verdict, so [[spoiler: one of the detectives contacts TheMafiya and tells them that the killer beheaded one of their own, who was about to testify against him. It's not pretty what the Mafiya ends up doing to the killer]].
104* {{Franchise/Marvel|CinematicUniverse}}'s Netflix shows show the NYPD adapting to the appearance of superheroes in New York City, some of whom they're allied with and some with whom they're enemies.
105** ''Series/Daredevil2015'': In seasons 1 and 2, Matt Murdock, while operating as Daredevil, develops an uneasy secret alliance with Sgt. Brett Mahoney, [[FriendOnTheForce Foggy Nelson's childhood best friend]] and contact in the 15th Precinct. Ultimately, in season 1, Matt's role as Daredevil was necessary given how many of Hell's Kitchen's cops were in Wilson Fisk's pocket. By season 2, Brett is not too fond of the alliance, even nearly arresting Matt on a couple of occasions. Early on, Brett mentions to Foggy and Karen that the NYPD rank and file are split on their views of vigilantes like Daredevil, Jessica Jones, and the Punisher. Some cops see the vigilantes as making their jobs much easier, but others think they're just making the issue worse. Brett is in the latter category, explicitly saying in "Penny and Dime" that just because Matt gave them Fisk and flushed out the police corruption doesn't put him and the NYPD on the same side. Later in the episode, when Brett rolls up on Matt and Frank Castle in the cemetery, Matt persuades him to take sole credit for the Punisher's arrest and not make any mention of Daredevil's presence at the scene because it will restore public trust in the police.
106--->'''Matt Murdock:''' Take the collar. Take the credit. Get a promotion, if you can. You've earned it.\
107'''Brett Mahoney:''' Bullshit.\
108'''Matt Murdock:''' No, people have to know the system works. Not his justice and not mine. Vigilante days are done in this town. The police are in charge.\
109'''Brett Mahoney:''' That's not how it happened.\
110'''Matt Murdock:''' Then make it how it happened.
111** In season 3, Daredevil's necessity is made clear as the FBI agents that are supposedly guarding Wilson Fisk are actually secretly working for him. Once Ray Nadeem realizes that Dex is the fake Daredevil that Fisk hired to attack the ''Bulletin'', he and Matt team up to break into Dex's apartment to investigate. Later on, after Nadeem finds out that his boss and the rest of his colleagues are also in Fisk's pocket, he continues corresponding with Matt. Matt ultimately trusts Nadeem enough that when Nadeem goes rogue, and Matt rescues him and his family from assassins Fisk sends to their house to kill them, he unmasks himself as a show of gratitude. In turn, Nadeem chooses to hire Matt and Foggy as his lawyers to help negotiate a plea bargain for him to testify against Fisk.
112** ''Series/LukeCage2016'': Misty Knight is a detective in the 29th Precinct, and after Luke hits Cottonmouth's stash houses as retaliation for Pop's murder, she and her partner Rafael Scarfe briefly discuss whether or not "gifted" people like Luke Cage are a boon for the NYPD or a thorn in their side. Scarfe is a DirtyCop on Cottonmouth's payroll, but he celebrates a VigilanteMan helping cops out when years of investigation have no payoff, especially when crime bosses like Fisk and Cottonmouth routinely pay off cops and government officials to kill investigations into their criminal activities, and "gifted" people exist everywhere. Misty, though, believes vigilantes (especially superpowered ones) are dangerous and should not be left untouched, and has a very adversarial relationship with Luke. The show goes to great lengths to show that [[BothSidesHaveAPoint both sides make good cases]]: the NYPD are sometimes in way over their heads and gifted vigilantes can really be a boon for them. However, since Luke Cage has a code against killing, at some point he's going to need the system again or else the criminals he beats up will just come back. This is best highlighted in the final episode: Diamondback is taken off the streets, but Misty's only witness against Mariah Dillard gets killed by Shades because no one trusts the system enough to make sure she is protected.
113*** In season 2, the events of ''Series/TheDefenders2017'' have left Misty more trusting of Luke, to the point of her becoming his sidekick at several points as they investigate leads on Bushmaster since she doesn't trust her police colleagues (especially considering that her boss Captain Thomas Ridenhour is stonewalling her investigations into Mariah, ostensibly to protect her as he was her high school sweetheart and confidant).
114* In ''Series/NewTricks'', the retired cops sometimes take advantage of the fact that they are no longer official police to do things they could not do if they were still on the force. While they can still expect official censure, it will generally be light if their actions resulted in an arrest.
115* ''Series/NYPDBlue'' has one episode [[SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome that applies reality to such a scenario]]. A civilian comes to the cops with evidence that another man is an active pedophile. They met while in an "ageplay" online group and the civilian pretended to be a little girl interested in sex. To get the other guy hot, our civilian sent him some child porn. The cops tell the civilian that not only was that planting evidence, he just confessed to the cops that he had child porn to send to someone else.
116* ''Series/{{Psych}}'': Shawn usually commits about two dozen serious infractions solving every one of his cases. He usually gets called on it by the people he works with. Only once did it actually screw up a case.
117* ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'': Non-cop example, but Sisko frequently involves Garak for this purpose.
118** "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS04E01E02TheWayOfTheWarrior The Way of the Warrior]]": When Sisko is under orders not to disclose a piece of information to the Cardassian government, he calls Garak into the wardroom to "measure him for a new suit" and then openly discusses the situation with the other senior staff, tacitly signalling Garak to report it to his government.
119** "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS06E19InThePaleMoonlight In the Pale Moonlight]]": Basically the entire episode. Sisko gets Garak to help him with the war effort through a little extortion, forgery, and murder.
120* ''Series/WhiteCollar'': The series plays with this, as the FBI ''know'' the crook-of-the-week is operating out of a warehouse, but they do not have a warrant. So convicted felon Neil Caffrey, who works as a consultant, simply runs to the warehouse and he is taken inside by the guards- where the FBI then tracks him using his monitoring bracelet, the FBI can use probable cause to go inside. This follows under the heading of "an agent of the police can't do what the cops can't do". That said, Neil's handler tells him if he tries this stunt again, he will be back in jail.
121* ''Series/WonderWoman2011Pilot'': Wonder Woman is basically an illegal police liason, being allowed to interrogate suspects, pursue her own investigation, and when Detective Indelicato points out that he and his fellow officers cannot actually bust the villainess' drug lab because they do not yet have enough evidence for a warrant, Wonder Woman immediately breaks in so they will have an excuse to do so.
122[[/folder]]
123
124[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
125* When a ''TabletopGame/{{Shadowrun}}'' team is hired for some kind of illegal work, there's always a chance that the Johnson hiring them is working for the police - not as a sting operation against the runners, but in order to gather information or evidence that they can't legally go after themselves. There's also "avenging angel" contracts, where Lone Star hires a shadowrunner team to do in a crook who got OffOnATechnicality or who they otherwise can't touch.
126* ''TabletopGame/{{Traveller}}'' adventure ''The Argon Gambit''. Part of Grant's plan is to have the {{PC}}s arrested by the local police after they've broken into Kashkanun's villa and stolen some documents. The police don't have enough evidence to get a search warrant for the villa, but if the documents are seized in the course of an arrest they will become valid evidence.
127[[/folder]]
128
129[[folder:Video Games]]
130* ''VideoGame/{{Borderlands 3}}'': In a ''Borderlands 2'' ECHO log, it's mentioned that Amara took it upon herself to clean up crime on her homeworld. It's unclear whether the cops ''needed'' her to handle criminals for them, but since she's an uber-powerful Siren, they decided to stay the hell out of her way. They also seem to appreciate her presence -- one lets slip a "you go, girl!" before panicking and pleading his interviewer to cut that bit out (they didn't).
131* ''VideoGame/DeusExHumanRevolution'': A side mission sees ex-cop Adam Jensen recruited by one of his former colleagues to help with a case. Though there is some lip service paid to the fact that they're "bending the rules" and "have to be careful how we handle this," Jensen is perfectly able to collect evidence and even "arrest" suspects (by knocking them out for the police to retrieve later) without a warrant with no consequences to the investigation. The only concession is that remaining unseen while in gang territory will net a bonus reward for the player, as their being detected will "complicate" the investigation.
132* In ''VideoGame/FalloutNewVegas'', the quest "Silus Treatment" has Lt. Boyd recruit the Courier to help her interrogate Silus, a captured Centurion because NCR law prevents the torture of prisoners. One option you have is to just [[JackBauerInterrogationTechnique beat Silas into revealing information]].
133* This sums up the Kaneshiro arc in ''VideoGame/Persona5''. A Tokyo Yakuza boss has been lording over the city, extorting and blackmailing high-schoolers into smuggling drugs or even prostitution, and the police haven't been making progress. While the cops don't directly contact the protagonists, the one who puts them up to the job is the sister of a Public Prosecutor on the case, figuring that the Phantom Thieves' [[HeelFaceBrainwashing methods]] may be the only way to take Kaneshiro down. Part of the reason the Phantom Thieves are on-board is to prove to the public they only target criminals and aren't entirely opposed to law enforcement. Since everyone they targeted before was a VillainWithGoodPublicity, the public was still sceptical of their intentions.
134* ''VideoGame/Sly2BandOfThieves'': [[FriendOnTheForce Neyla]] gives Sly several leads, with the justification that she can't follow them up herself, as she lacks sufficient evidence for a warrant, whereas "a thief like you can go wherever he pleases". Cleverly, [[spoiler:it turns out that Neyla's willingness to bend the law really [[DirtyCop should have been]] [[DoubleReverseQuadrupleAgent a red flag]]]].
135* ''VideoGame/SpiderManPS4'': Spider-Man actively works with the cops at various points, and [[FriendOnTheForce Captain Yuri Watanabe]] doesn't discourage him from raising a ruckus at the Kingpin's various bases because they give her a reasonable justification to arrest them. After solving certain crimes involving Mr. Negative's Demons, a cop remarks that he would have originally arrested Spidey for vigilantism, but they need all the help they can get.
136[[/folder]]
137
138[[folder:Visual Novels]]
139* In ''VisualNovel/ShinHayarigami'', Sekimoto beats the living daylights out of a suspect arrested by S Prefectural Police for killing Kazamori during a manhunt since he was getting confused due to illegal dietary prescription medicine. The beating, however, was able to make the suspect snap out of his confusion and he wasn't in trouble since he was a BoxedCrook brought in as an occult consultant. [[FromBadToWorse But the suspect later decides to commit suicide by biting the tongue as a final "FUCK YOU" to the police as he bleeds to death]].
140[[/folder]]
141
142[[folder:Websites]]
143* ''Website/SCPFoundation'': [[https://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-4494 SCP-4494]] is the AnthropomorphicPersonification of fighting crime, who resembles and acts like a superhero. If he's prevented from helping law enforcement, the concept of crimefighting starts to break down around him, leaving everyone in an ever-increasing radius unable to understand that crime is bad and should be stopped. One example of this reduced a city to complete anarchy within an hour and twenty minutes. Thankfully, everything goes back to normal if he's let back on the case.
144[[/folder]]
145
146[[folder:Western Animation]]
147* Subverted in the first two seasons of ''WesternAnimation/TheBatman''. Gotham's complete reliance on Batman to stop crime is regarded as a black eye by the police, and has led to Gotham being rated "America's scariest city". As such Batman has to deal with occasional police interference, and one cop is suspended for being too sympathetic to the Bat. This is worked out by the end of Season 2, and the trope is played straight after that.
148** ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheAnimatedSeries'' plays this straight. Batman and Robin are usually shown working with the police to bring in Gotham's crazed super-criminals, crime bosses, [[BreadEggsBreadedEggs and crazed crime boss super-criminals]]. Justified in that only Batman has the skills and abilities to take down some of these threats, and his capturing of known criminals could very well be labeled as citizen's arrests.
149* ''WesternAnimation/TheSpectacularSpiderMan'': Partway through the first season it's shown that, while the police are fairly competent at busting run-of-the-mill crimes, super criminals like Sandman, the Rhino, and Doctor Octopus are beyond the police's abilities to stop. Thus, when the police know there's a threat they can't handle, their tactic basically becomes "get the civilians out and let Spider-Man handle it". This is shown to be especially true in "Shear Strength", when Master Planner plans a cyber attack on NYC and blackmails Captain Stacy into complying by kidnapping [[DamselInDistress Gwen Stacy]]. The rest of the police are kept busy with scrambled dispatches and an attack by the Vulture. Hence, Spider-Man is the only one able to stop the attack and save Gwen Stacy (though he was clearly more ticked about [[ItsPersonal the latter]]).
150* ''WesternAnimation/SwatKats: The Radical Squadron'':
151** Subverted by Commander Ulysses Feral of Megakat City's Police force, The Enforcers. Feral believes the SWAT Kats are lawless vigilantes and should be brought to justice, although he doesn't know the SWAT Kats T-Bone and Razor are Ex-Enforcers themselves. Also borders on downplayed, however, when Commander Feral has reluctantly accepted the SWAT Kats' help on a few occasions.
152** Played straight by some of the other Enforcers, especially Lieutenant Felina Feral (an elite Enforcer and Commander Feral's niece), who is more than happy to assist the SWAT Kats almost every time they meet.
153[[/folder]]

Top