Wednesday, June 03, 2026

How Ethical Drift Becomes Operational Risk

Across every security domain—public, private, and hybrid—organizations face a silent but significant risk: ethical drift. When leaders and teams lose clarity around values, expectations, and accountability, trust erodes, morale declines, and operational effectiveness suffers. These are not abstract concerns. They directly influence decision-making, team cohesion, and the ability to prevent or respond to incidents.

This risk is universal. From corporate security teams and campus protection units to municipal public safety organizations, similar patterns appear wherever authority is exercised under stress. Law enforcement environments often reveal these dynamics most rapidly, but the same challenges quietly manifest in private and hybrid security operations, creating vulnerabilities that many organizations do not recognize until consequences arise.

Operational Manifestations of Ethical Drift

Ethical drift rarely appears as a single, dramatic event. More often, it unfolds gradually, revealing itself through operational signs that can undermine effectiveness and safety. In security organizations, those signs can include inconsistent decision-making, erosion of team cohesion, blurred lines of accountability, and disengagement among personnel. Left unchecked, these factors reduce operational readiness and create vulnerabilities that can escalate into serious incidents.

From my experience influencing executive teams in private security and public safety, I have observed these patterns in multiple contexts. For instance, when frontline personnel perceive a gap between stated organizational values and actual leadership behavior, trust diminishes quickly. Teams may hesitate in critical situations, fail to communicate clearly, or prioritize personal judgment over established procedures—all of which increase operational risk.

An organization might publicly emphasize integrity and accountability, yet supervisors inconsistently enforce reporting protocols for workplace incidents. When personnel observe that certain issues are minimized or selectively addressed, they begin to question whether the organization’s stated values truly guide decision-making. Over time, this uncertainty can lead to hesitation in reporting concerns, inconsistent escalation of risks, and breakdowns in communication—ultimately increasing the likelihood that preventable issues could develop into operational incidents.

Ethical drift also manifests in organizational culture. Staff may adopt shortcuts, avoid accountability, or disengage from proactive problem-solving if they sense that leadership tolerates inconsistent standards. Across both public and private security environments, this slow erosion of professional standards can weaken operational outcomes, reduce stakeholder confidence, and create exposure that is often invisible until a critical failure occurs. Recognizing these early warning signs allows leaders to intervene before operational risk escalates.

Preventing Ethical Drift: Practical Solutions for Security Leaders

At the center of effective prevention is a leadership approach recognizing that those entrusted with protection inevitably carry cumulative stress and moral weight. How leaders process that burden directly shapes their judgment, empathy, and consistency.

Leaders must model integrity and accountability consistently, ensuring that their actions align with the organization’s stated values. This clarity builds trust, strengthens morale, and provides personnel with a framework for decision-making under stress. Equally important, effective leaders are generous with their time and are sincerely interested in the professional development of others—traits that consistently strengthen trust.

In practice, this means:

Leadership modeling. Leaders at every level should demonstrate ethical judgment, transparency, humility, and generosity with their time. Personnel quickly recognize when leaders are present not merely to supervise but to serve, guide, and develop those entrusted to them.

Cultural reinforcement. It is critical to establish and maintain an organizational culture that prizes professionalism, accountability, and ethical clarity. Policies alone are insufficient. Culture must be lived daily through recognition of ethical behavior, consistent enforcement of standards, and open communication. In private security organizations, embedding ethics into routine briefings and team meetings—for example, leaders may incorporate brief scenario-based discussions into daily or weekly briefings such as how to handle a conflict of interest, an access control exception, or pressure from a senior executive to bypass standard protocols—creates a shared expectation of excellence that prevents drift.

Wellness and resilience programs. Operational stress can amplify ethical ambiguity if personnel lack emotional and mental resilience. Programs that support wellness, stress management, and peer support reduce the likelihood of poor judgment and disengagement. Effective leaders also recognize their own experiences of professional, emotional, or physical pain. When acknowledged, these experiences become sources of empathy, compassion, and strength rather than liabilities.

Stakeholder engagement and transparency. Building trust with clients, partners, or the public requires clear communication and visible adherence to ethical standards. Teams that understand the purpose behind decisions and feel supported by leadership are more likely to act decisively and consistently in line with organizational values.

By integrating these measures, security leaders can transform potential risks into operational strengths.

Building Resilient, Trustworthy Security Organizations

Ethical drift is not just a moral concern—it is an operational risk that directly impacts leadership effectiveness, team morale, and organizational outcomes. Leaders who acknowledge their own burdens typically lead with greater clarity, compassion, and moral authority, thereby strengthening organizational resilience and trust.

Across both private security and public safety environments, clear ethical guidance, consistent leadership modeling, and reinforced organizational culture serve as critical safeguards. When personnel see ethical principles applied consistently, morale improves, trust strengthens, and operational performance rises.

Proactive measuresincluding leadership visibility, cultural reinforcement, wellness and resilience programs, and transparent communication—equip organizations to reduce vulnerabilities before they escalate into crises. By embedding these practices, security leaders transform potential risk into operational strength, ensuring teams remain aligned, engaged, and capable under pressure.

For security professionals today, the call to action is clear: Prioritize ethical clarity, reinforce organizational culture, and invest in personnel resilience. These actions are not optional: They are essential for sustaining trust, effectiveness, and safety across every security domain. When leaders commit to these principles, they create organizations that are operationally resilient, trusted, and respected.

First printed in the May 2026 edition of Security Management.

Vincent J. Bove, CPP, is a national speaker, author, and executive leader in private security, law enforcement leadership, and organizational resilience. He serves as the NYPD Honorary Law Enforcement Motivational Speaker, delivering department authorized guidance on ethical leadership, morale, and resilience across precincts, promotion classes at the police academy, roll calls, and major events. Bove has delivered executive and leadership programs to public safety and security professionals nationwide for more than 25 years and is the author of over 350 published works on leadership, violence prevention, ethics, morale, and public safety. He is recognized for strengthening organizational trust, leadership effectiveness, and operational readiness through his Wounded Protector ethical leadership framework. Contact him at vincent@vincentbove.com.

© 2026, Vincent J. Bove

Images selected for The Sentinel, not as published originally in Security Management:

Image 1: How Ethical Drift Becomes Operational Risk (Vincent J. Bove for Reawakening America LLC)

Image 2: Vincent J. Bove speaking on ethical leadership and resiliency to the NYPD Transit District 4, Manhattan, May 4, 2025. (NYPD for RALLC)

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From NYPD SRG to Harlem’s 32nd Precinct: A Day Across the Front Lines of New York

Reflections on service, vigilance, sacrifice, tactical readiness, and community from two iconic NYPD commands during a single day across the front lines of New York on May 26, 2026.


Statement of Record

On May 26, 2026, I was honored to return for presentations before members of the NYPD Strategic Response Group (SRG) during the morning hours and later that afternoon to participate in roll call presentations within Harlem’s historic 32nd Precinct.

Both visits carried special meaning because they represented return invitations following earlier presentations and continuing relationships developed through my ongoing American Policing series and law enforcement outreach initiatives.

During both visits, I spoke briefly with officers concerning themes of service, sacrifice, resilience, democratic guardianship, and the moral responsibilities carried daily by those entrusted with protecting the people of New York City. Particular attention was given to Memorial Day reflections, the symbolism of the Sentinel at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, the concept of the “Wounded Protector,” and the enduring connection between contemporary policing and the generations of Americans who defended the values of freedom, democracy, and liberty throughout our nation’s history.

At both commands, I distributed newly designed Liberation Monument cards individually to officers while personally thanking them for their service to their communities. The encounters remained intentionally personal and grounded in direct human interaction, including shaking hands individually with officers at both locations and having the privilege of numerous meaningful one-on-one conversations with officers both before and after the presentations.

These visits formed part of my continuing American Policing series examining service, legitimacy, sacrifice, resilience, institutional memory, and the humanity of those entrusted with protecting democratic communities throughout the United States.

Across the Front Lines of New York

On the day following Memorial Day 2026, I experienced one of the most powerful and symbolically meaningful days of my continuing American Policing series — beginning that morning with a return presentation to the NYPD Strategic Response Group (SRG) in Manhattan and concluding later that afternoon inside Harlem’s historic 32nd Precinct.

Separated by geography, mission, atmosphere, and the rich tapestry of New York’s diverse neighborhoods and communities, both commands nevertheless revealed something profoundly connected about the moral and institutional realities confronting 21st century policing in New York City. One represented tactical vigilance and readiness amid the evolving security demands facing one of the world’s greatest cities. The other embodied historical memory, sacrifice, community continuity, and the living human legacy carried within one of America’s most storied police precincts.

Moving from SRG headquarters on West 57th Street to Harlem’s 32nd Precinct in a single day felt, in many ways, like moving across different dimensions of New York itself — from operational preparedness for future threats to solemn reflections upon generations of officers who have already sacrificed in defense of their communities.

Yet both visits ultimately converged around the same enduring truths: service, dignity, vigilance, sacrifice, memory, and the deeply human responsibilities carried by those entrusted with protecting democratic society.

Understanding the NYPD Strategic Response Group

The NYPD Strategic Response Group represents one of the most operationally demanding and visible assignments within 21st century American policing. Established to address evolving post-9/11 security realities, civil disorder contingencies, counterterrorism support, active threat response, and large-scale public safety deployments, SRG personnel routinely operate at the intersection of tactical preparedness and public order protection.

During my return visit, I had the opportunity to speak with Sergeant Robert Livingston concerning the responsibilities and unique demands carried by SRG officers serving throughout New York City. Sergeant Livingston spoke insightfully about the tremendous pride members of SRG take in their mission, particularly the opportunity to protect the city during major world-class events requiring extensive coordination, preparedness, and tactical readiness.

At the time of my visit, members of SRG were already participating in exercises and operational preparations connected to upcoming international events, including security planning surrounding the FIFA World Cup activities anticipated throughout the metropolitan region. Such preparations illustrate the extraordinary complexity and vigilance required to protect one of the world’s most visible and dynamic cities.

Yet despite the tactical nature of the assignment, what stood out most during the visit was not equipment, posture, or operational readiness alone. It was the attentiveness, professionalism, and humanity visible throughout the room.

Standing among these officers only one day after Memorial Day carried unusual symbolic weight. I reflected upon the Sentinel at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier — the silent guardian who stands watch not for recognition, but for duty itself. In many respects, modern police officers similarly inherit a vocation rooted in vigilance, sacrifice, discipline, and continuity of service.

I shared with the officers my profound admiration for the nobility and honor of policing, reminding them that they remain mystically connected to all those throughout American history who defended the principles of democracy, freedom, and liberty. As Memorial Day reminded the nation of those who died serving our country, I emphasized that contemporary officers continue carrying forward those same responsibilities of protection within their own communities every day.

The experience inside SRG reflected not simply tactical readiness, but democratic guardianship.

Harlem’s Historic 32nd Precinct

Later that afternoon, the atmosphere shifted dramatically as I traveled north into Harlem for returnpresentations during roll call at the NYPD 32nd Precinct.

Emerging from the subway at 135th Street after departing Midtown Manhattan, I was struck once again by the changing human tapestry of New York City itself — the distinct neighborhoods, histories, cultures, and communities that together form one of the world’s great urban landscapes. As I reached street level and looked toward nearby Harlem Hospital, I paused quietly for a moment of prayer and reflection for all those who work there, all those suffering within its walls, and the countless acts of healing, compassion, and service carried out there each day on behalf of the surrounding community.

Walking toward the precinct also stirred deeply personal memories. During my remarks later, I shared with officers that in the 1980s I had once lived only a few blocks away near St. Thomas the Apostle Church on West 118th Street and St. Nicholas Avenue, where I helped operate a youth center serving young people from the Harlem community. Those years remain among the most meaningful and privileged experiences of my life, and the memories helped deepen my appreciation not only for the neighborhood itself, but also for the officers who continue serving and protecting the people of Harlem each day.

The 32nd Precinct occupies a uniquely important place within both New York City policing history and my own personal reflections concerning 21st century American policing, institutional memory, sacrifice, and community legitimacy.

For decades, Harlem’s 32nd Precinct has stood at the crossroads of some of the city’s most difficult challenges, profound tragedies, historic transitions, and enduring demonstrations of courage. Yet what struck me most during my return visit was not tension or division, but rather the deep mutual respect repeatedly described between officers and the Harlem community itself.

Deputy Inspector Cary Rose, Commanding Officer of the 32nd Precinct, spoke passionately about the reasons he values serving within Harlem. Reflecting upon his experiences throughout numerous assignments across New York City, Deputy Inspector Rose described the unusual level of respect and appreciation members of the Harlem community demonstrate toward the police officers serving there.

He spoke movingly about neighborhood residents, local organizations, small business owners, and community members who consistently seek collaborative programs and partnerships with the precinct because they recognize and value the role officers play in protecting their neighborhoods.

Particularly striking were his reflections upon arriving to work each morning and witnessing small business owners already outside cleaning sidewalks and preparing their businesses before the city fully awakens for the day. His observations reflected a profound appreciation not only for policing, but for the dignity, resilience, pride, and communal spirit carried by the Harlem community itself.

Also deeply moving during the visit was spending time once again with Police Officer Ellen Usher, whose remarkable 33 consecutive years of service within Harlem’s 32nd Precinct represent an extraordinary example of institutional continuity, community devotion, and enduring humanity within American policing.

Officer Usher and I first met during an earlier NYPD Don Bosco Retreat where I was privileged to encourage officers to see their profession as a spirituality of service, resilience, compassion, and human dignity. Over the years, her professionalism, compassion, and unwavering commitment to Harlem policing helped make possible many of the relationships and initiatives connected to my continuing visits within the precinct.

The 32nd Precinct has remained Officer Usher’s professional home since her earliest days as a young NYPD officer. In many ways, her decades of continuous service within the same community reflect one of the most important yet often overlooked dimensions of democratic policing itself: continuity.

Long after headlines fade and public attention shifts elsewhere, officers like Ellen Usher remain present within their communities year after year, quietly sustaining relationships, institutional memory, neighborhood trust, and the enduring humanity at the heart of public service.

The Tribute Wall: “Never Forget”

Among the most emotionally powerful moments of my return visit to Harlem’s 32nd Precinct was standing once again before the precinct’s tribute wall honoring officers who gave their lives in the line of duty.

Positioned beneath the solemn words “32 PCT — NEVER FORGET,” the wall carries not merely photographs, but generations of sacrifice, memory, and institutional identity.

The faces displayed there are not distant historical abstractions. They remain profoundly and mystically present within the life of the precinct itself, shaping its culture, traditions, consciousness, and daily understanding of service.

For me personally, the experience carried especially deep meaning.

As a high school senior in 1971, I vividly remember the headline news that swept across New York City following the horrific ambush killings of Patrolman Joseph Piagentini and Patrolman Waverly Jones — two officers assigned to the 32nd Precinct whose murders shocked the city and became permanently woven into the history of Harlem policing. The tragedy dominated newspapers and television news throughout New York and became one of the inspirations that later led me to study at John Jay College of Criminal Justice following high school.

Patrolman Piagentini, an Italian American officer, and Patrolman Jones, a Black officer, together came to symbolize both the sacrifices and brotherhood carried by generations of NYPD officers serving across racial, ethnic, and neighborhood lines in defense of the city they swore to protect.

Only days before my visit, members of the 32nd Precinct community had commemorated the anniversary of those tragic killings. The memorial floral arrangements surrounding the tribute wall during my visit reflected that continuing remembrance and reinforced the living nature of institutional memory within the command.

Standing decades later inside the precinct beneath the “Never Forget” wall — surrounded by current officers, memorial flowers, and the ongoing continuity of service — felt less like observing history and more like standing within an ongoing moral inheritance carried forward across generations.

Notably present on the wall are the photographs and memorial tributes to Detectives Jason Rivera and Wilbert Mora, whose murders in Harlem in January 2022 profoundly impacted the NYPD, Harlem, and the nation itself.

Their sacrifice previously inspired my earlier Law Officer article, “Honoring Centuries of Sacrifice in American Policing,” within the continuing American Policing series. In those writings, I reflected upon the moral responsibilities society carries toward those entrusted with protecting democratic communities amid rising violence, uncertainty, and social fragmentation.

As I wrote at that time:

“A nation that forgets the humanity of its protectors risks weakening the very foundations of democratic society.”

Standing before the tribute wall in May 2026 transformed those earlier reflections into something far more personal and immediate.

The experience no longer felt connected merely to headlines or public mourning, but to the living institutional memory carried daily by the officers who continue serving within the command itself.

Together, the tribute wall — spanning generations from Patrolmen Joseph Piagentini and Waverly Jones in 1971 to Detectives Jason Rivera and Wilbert Mora in 2022 — revealed a solemn continuity of sacrifice woven into the identity of the 32nd Precinct itself.

Reawakening the Nation

The deaths of Detectives Jason Rivera and Wilbert Mora produced one of the largest public outpourings of grief witnessed in New York City policing in recent years. During their funeral processions in early 2022, thousands of officers lined the streets of Manhattan in solemn formation as the city publicly mourned two young officers whose lives and service came to symbolize both the dangers and democratic responsibilities carried within 21st century policing.

Years later, standing quietly before their photographs inside Harlem’s 32nd Precinct beneath the words “Never Forget,” the public spectacle of mourning gave way to something more intimate and enduring: the daily institutional memory carried forward by the officers who continue serving within the command itself.

This continuity between public mourning and ongoing service may represent one of the most important lessons emerging from both visits on May 26, 2026.

Eventually, the public ceremonies fade from the streets. The headlines disappear. National attention moves elsewhere.

But inside the precincts of New York City, the memory remains alive every day.

Officers continue reporting for roll call beneath the names and photographs of those who came before them. Communities continue depending upon those willing to serve. And the difficult responsibilities of democratic guardianship continue passing from one generation to the next.

The meaningful response from officers and leadership following both visits reinforced the continuing importance of encouragement, human encounter, and institutional support within 21st century policing. I was deeply grateful and humbled to later receive thoughtful messages and invitations to return for future conversations and presentations.

In many ways, those responses reflected something deeply important: that beyond policies, headlines, and public debates, policing ultimately remains rooted in human relationships, institutional continuity, shared sacrifice, and the enduring responsibilities carried by those who continue standing watch over their communities each day.

What ultimately united both the Strategic Response Group and Harlem’s 32nd Precinct throughout this extraordinary day was something far deeper than policing alone.

It was continuity.

Continuity of vigilance. Continuity of sacrifice. Continuity of service. Continuity of memory. And continuity of humanity.


Final Reflections: Grateful Acknowledgement

Special appreciation is extended to Deputy Inspector Cary Rose, Commanding Officer of the NYPD 32nd Precinct, for his gracious hospitality, inspirational reflections concerning Harlem, community legitimacy, and neighborhood partnership, and for his continuing leadership within one of New York City’s most historic police commands.

Deep gratitude is also extended to Police Officer Ellen Usher for her extraordinary compassion, professionalism, and remarkable 33 consecutive years of continuous service to Harlem’s 32nd Precinct and the surrounding community.

Special thanks are also extended to Sergeant Robert Livingston and Sergeant Richie Jones of the NYPD Strategic Response Group for their professionalism, operational insights, hospitality, and unwavering commitment to protecting New York City through one of the NYPD’s most demanding assignments.

Appreciation is further extended to retired Detective Charina D’Aiuto for first helping facilitate my original introduction to the NYPD Strategic Response Group and for her continuing support of these outreach initiatives.

Finally, special appreciation is also extended to Police Officer Emir Aliaj of the NYPD Strategic Response Group and Sergeant Lee Stanton of the NYPD 32nd Precinct for their outstanding photographic documentation of these visits for Reawakening America LLC, helping preserve moments of service, encounter, remembrance, and institutional memory reflected throughout this article.

Vincent J. Bove — Law Officer Selected Articles

Sacred Honor: Armed Forces and Police —Serving Abroad and at Home

A deeply reflective article exploring the sacred covenant shared by members of the armed forces and law enforcement officers who place the safety and freedoms of others above self. Centered upon the life and sacrifice of First Lieutenant Mark H. Dooley, the article examines courage, vigilance, sacrifice, institutional memory, and the enduring moral connection between military and police service.

American Military Sacrifice: A Sacred Place in the Heart of Policing

A powerful meditation on the cost of freedom and the enduring legacy of those who defended democratic values through military service. The article connects remembrance, patriotism, sacrifice, and civic responsibility within the broader framework of the continuing American series.

Honoring Centuries of Sacrifice in American Policing

Includes reflections inspired by the funerals of NYPD Officers Jason Rivera and Wilbert Mora, this article examines the humanity of America’s protectors, institutional sacrifice, constitutional legitimacy, and the moral foundations necessary for democratic policing in modern society. The piece became one of the defining entries in the continuing American Policing series, connecting memory, democratic guardianship, public mourning, and the enduring responsibilities carried by those entrusted with protecting American communities.

As originally published by Law Officer, June 2, 2026. 

About the Author

Vincent J. Bove is a nationally recognized authority on ethical leadership, violence prevention, and law enforcement resiliency.

A sought-after speaker and prolific author, his work has influenced agencies and institutions across the United States for more than 25 years.

Bove has authored more than 350 published articles and four books addressing critical issues in public safety, leadership, and moral courage. 

His book Reawakening America© was named a finalist for ASIS International’s Book of the Year. Listen to Their Cries© was selected and sponsored for distribution to all attendees—students representing institutions from across the United States—at the National Conference on Ethics in America by the Simon Center for the Professional Military Ethic at the United States Military Academy, at the request of a coalition of West Point graduates involved in the conference.

He was appointed the first-ever Honorary Law Enforcement Motivational Speaker by the New York City Police Department, conducting leadership and resiliency initiatives across all five boroughs of New York City.

Bove is also the author of more than fifty leadership articles published in Law Officer, a national publication serving law enforcement professionals across the United States. His work emphasizes ethical leadership, preventive strategies, officer resilience, and the preservation of public trust in modern policing—drawing on American history and enduring leadership traditions to reinforce the importance of character, accountability, and moral courage.

He is a trusted voice at Federal Bureau of Investigation venues, United States Military Academy, and numerous U.S. military facilities. A longtime author for the National Association of Chiefs of Police, he has written 18 cover stories and contributed to shaping national law enforcement dialogue through feature articles and reports.

“Vincent J. Bove is considered one of the foremost national experts on school and workplace violence prevention, specializing in facility protection, evacuations, terrorism prevention, and leadership training.” — U.S. Senate

PHOTO: Vincent J. Bove conducting an ethical leadership, morale, and resiliency initiative at the NYPD 46th Precinct, Bronx, March 15, 2026. (Photo by NYPD Officer Theodore Cecchini for RALLC)

Image 1. NYPD Strategic Response Group Roll Call Presentation

Vincent J. Bove addressing members of the NYPD Strategic Response Group (SRG) during roll call presentations in Manhattan on May 26, 2026. The SRG represents one of the NYPD’s most operationally demanding assignments, responsible for tactical readiness, major event security, counterterrorism support, and rapid response operations throughout New York City. (Credit: Police Officer Emir Aliaj / NYPD Strategic Response Group for Reawakening America LLC)

Image 2. 32nd Precinct “Never Forget” Tribute Wall

The historic “Never Forget” tribute wall inside Harlem’s NYPD 32nd Precinct honoring officers who gave their lives in the line of duty. The wall reflects generations of sacrifice, institutional memory, and continuity carried within one of New York City’s most historic police commands. (Credit: Sergeant Lee Stanton / NYPD 32nd Precinct for Reawakening America LLC)

Image 3. Funeral Procession for Detective Jason Rivera — January 28, 2022

Thousands of NYPD officers and officers from departments nationwide line the streets of Manhattan during the funeral procession honoring Detective Jason Rivera following the murders of Detectives Jason Rivera and Wilbert Mora, a tragedy that profoundly impacted the NYPD, Harlem, and the nation. (Credit: NYPD)

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