(Spenoza, 1995). Definitions of ethical behavior vary from generation to generation and from culture to culture. Generally ethical behavior includes the following qualities; honesty, integrity, fairness, loyalty, kindness, courage, generosity, compassion, doing good, doing right, and unselfishness. When people display these qualities, they are behaving ethically. The following definitions are those most commonly used during ethics training for police officers: Ethics is a code of values that guides our choices and actions and determines the purpose and course of our lives. Ethics is not a written code or credo, it is about what we do (Southwestern Law Enforcement Institute, 1995). Ethical behavior is a standard of conduct when dealing with others that reflects a public trust attached to a police officer (Michigan Commission on Law Enforcement
Cited: Close, D., & Meier, N. (Eds.). (1995). Morality in criminal justice, an introduction to ethics. New York: Wadsworth Publishing. Michigan Commission on Law Enforcement Standards. (1998). Ethics in Policing. Lansing, MI: Author. Southwestern Law Enforcement Institute. (1995). Law enforcement ethics train-the-trainer. Richardson, TX: University of Texas. Spinoza, B. (1995). Belief in God motivates people to behave ethically. In D. Bender (Eds.). Ethics (pp.19-22). CA: Greenhaven Press.