The collapse of the NOPD

One of the bigger stories to be addressed after Katrina victims are out of harm’s way is: what caused the meltdown of the New Orleans Police Department? The New York Times had this story[*1] :

NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 3 – Reeling from the chaos of this overwhelmed city, at least 200 New Orleans police officers have walked away from their jobs and two have committed suicide, police officials said on Saturday.

Some officers told their superiors they were leaving, police officials said. Others worked for a while and then stopped showing up. Still others, for reasons not always clear, never made it in after the storm.
. . .
Some patrol officers said morale had been low on the force even before the hurricane. One patrolman said the complaints included understaffing and a lack of equipment.

“We have to use our own shotguns,” said the patrolman, who did not want to be identified by name. “This isn’t theirs; this is my personal gun.”

Another patrol officer said that many of the officers who had quit were younger, inexperienced officers who were overwhelmed by the task.

Some officers have expressed anger at colleagues who have stopped working. “For all you cowards that are supposed to wear the badge,” one officer said on Fox News, “are you truly – can you truly wear the badge, like our motto said?”

Those NOPD officers who stayed at their posts are among the greatest heroes of this entire dreadful tragedy. But, somewhere on the list of things to dig into as we review the runup to this disaster, has to be “why did the NOPD collapse?”