Hidden Brain - When Doing Right Feels Wrong
Episode Date: April 19, 2022Have you ever been in a position where you had to choose between someone you care about and a value that you hold dear? Maybe you had to decide whether to report a friend who was cheating on an exam, ...or a co-worker who was stealing from the tip jar. This week, we tell the story of a Detroit police officer who found himself in this sort of dilemma, forced to choose between people he loved and the oath he swore to serve his community. What happens in our minds when we have to decide what is right and what is wrong?If you like this show, please check out our new podcast, My Unsung Hero! And if you'd like to support our work, you can do so at support.hiddenbrain.org.
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Have you ever had one of those conversations
where half the people in the room have a very strongly held opinion
and the other half feel just as strongly in the opposite direction?
This happened to me a few years ago.
I was having dinner with friends in Washington, DC.
Everyone was talking about some shocking news that had just come out. Tens of thousands of top secret documents from the National Security Agency or NSA
had been leaked to journalists.
Since at least 2008, the National Security Agency has been using secret technology to hack into
secret and far-reaching and it's been going on for years.
The government can compel a phone company to provide this metadata as it's called for
millions of customers.
The man who released all these documents was Edward Snowden, a computer security consultant
at the NSA.
The document's detailed extensive secret U.S. surveillance of people and governments
across the globe.
Edward Snowden believed that what the NSA was doing was wrong, and that the public had a
right to know.
I don't want to live in a world where everything that I say, everything I do, everyone I talk
to, every expression of creativity or love or friendship is recorded.
Fearing correctly that he was in the crosshairs of U.S. security agencies, Edward Snowden
fled the United States and found refuge in Russia.
Back at the dinner table with my friends that night, someone asked a simple question,
Edward Snowden, hero or traitor.
One side of the dinner party was certain.
This man was a hero.
He had acted in the public interest and learning Americans to heavy-handed surveillance
by their government.
The rest of the group, they were equally certain.
Edward Snowden was a trader who shares national security secrets that embarrass your country,
and dangers the lives of US intelligence agents and your country, and dangerous the lives
of US intelligence agents and service members, and then finds refuge in Russia, Vladimir Putin's
Russia.
What fascinated me about this debate was how quickly people came to their conclusions, how certain
they were that they were right.
What explained it?
Today, we explore what happens when two core moral values are pitted against each other.
Loyalty vs. honesty. on hidden brain.
Darwin Rocher grew up in Detroit, Michigan in the 1970s and 80s.
His father was a millwright. He dismantled, repaired, and reassembled
huge pieces of machinery in a steel factory.
Darwin's mom stayed at home to raise him and a sister.
She'd help them with their homework,
give them life advice.
She'd also whip up big family dinners every Sunday evening.
My childhood was pretty good.
I can't recall any really adverse childhood experiences that I went through as a
as a kid and as well as a young adult in a teenager. So I had a pretty good pretty good lifestyle. I really enjoy being a kid.
Darwin's parents were loving, kind, church-going folks. They tried to impress the right values on young Darwin.
They try to impress the right values on young Darwin. Doing the right thing for the right reasons, being a person of honesty and integrity, doing
the best you can, and doing the right the first time in everything that you do.
When Darwin was around 12 years old, he violated his parents' moral code.
One day he snuck into a neighbor's yard and picked some of her flowers.
As he was walking home with his freshly assembled bouquet, the neighbor called his mom and told her what he'd done.
My mom really got after me about doing that and she was telling me how important it is to respect other people's property.
So the punishment or I guess the reward would be that I had to do yard service for her for the remaining summer at the cutter grass and everything like that. Darwin said this lesson taught him what kind of person he wanted to be. At home he became the model son. At school he got good grades.
But when he was 16 he received a different kind of lesson. A lesson that taught him what kind of person he didn't want to be.
He was driving to pick up his sister from school.
Two friends were in the car with him, all of the boys were black.
Suddenly, in his rearview mirror, Darwin saw the flashing lights of a police car.
And so I didn't think anything of it because I've never had any negative encounters with
law enforcement at all. There were four officers in the squad car. All of them got out.
One approached Darwin. So the officer approached the driver's side door and he asked me for my driver's
license.
Darwin knew his license was in the car, probably in the side pocket of the door.
Something told him not to reach for it.
So I said my driver's license is here, but I just don't know where it's located.
And so at that point, he ordered all three of us out the car, and then he told us to
put our hands on the trunk of the car,
of my car, while they searched the interior of the vehicle.
And then the officer walked back to me and said,
hey, I found your driver's license,
and he held it in his left hand, and he showed it to me.
And I smiled because I was happy
because I didn't know where it was at.
And then he slapped me in the face very hard,
and told me to wipe that smile off my face.
He took his hand and did like a clamp around my throat, squeezing my Adam's apple.
At one point, Darwin looked at the other three officers.
And the other officers kind of, they were black males and they kind of just kind of shrugged
away and I was kind of looking at them like, you know, are you gonna allow this to happen?
Are you gonna allow someone to assault me?
And I'm 16 years old, and I haven't done anything wrong.
And so at that point, they kind of just kind of
went along to get along and didn't do anything
to intervene.
And then they counted last year for about five minutes, but that five minutes I thought that
they were actually going to kill me because he told me when he choked me, the only reason
I won't kill you out here is because it's daylight.
After the incident, Darwin thought about what had happened.
He thought about the officer who had choked him, but he also thought about the other three
officers who had watched and done nothing.
Why did they hesitate to speak up?
Did they not want to break ranks with their fellow officer?
I was hoping to think maybe one of those officers would have the courage to stand forth and
say, okay, this officer is out here assaulting teenagers and brought daylight for no crime whatsoever.
The encounter left Darwin with a concussion, but the injustice of what had happened
stayed with him long after the physical pain had eased.
stayed with him long after the physical pain had eased. He sometimes asked himself what he would have done
if he had been one of the three officers who had witnessed the assault.
If a situation arose where he had to choose between loyalty and honesty,
would he hesitate to speak up?
He was soon to find out the answer.
After a stint in the Air Force, Darwin eventually became a police officer and Detroit himself.
He rose in the ranks and gained the respect of his fellow officers.
Soon work in life began to blow together.
Colleagues became friends.
Darwin felt especially close to one of his scout partners.
They'd go out and patrol together almost every day.
I consider him a friend.
He was at my house.
I was at his house.
And he really taught me how to be a street officer.
He taught me how to detect crime, drug narcotics, trafficking, those sort of things.
He was a street cop and he was very good at his craft.
On weekends, they'd watch sports together.
They celebrated milestones with their families.
He was just a good guy.
When he would come on my house, I had a young child at that time.
He would kind of ask me about the kid and ask me, did I need anything?
Because I knew I was a new or officer.
And he just kind of took on a big brother role
for me in certain aspects.
Darwin had another scout partner he was close to.
For reasons that will become clear later in the story,
we are not naming Darwin's fellow cops.
Darwin felt he had a real bond with this second partner.
He was more quiet, soft-spoken, a good partner.
We were more adventurous when we worked together.
We would go and investigate things on a deep level because we were anxious to get out
there on the streets and we wanted just to patrol and have fun.
There was a third colleague, Darwin, respected enormously.
When they worked together, Darwin always felt he came away with a better understanding of
what it meant to be a Detroit police officer.
Me being a new officer, they kind of tell you, write a lot of tickets, get a lot of citations,
get some stats, and he kind of explained to me that these tickets that you write these
people have a you know a monetary
impact adverse impact on them. He said you know it's okay to give out a warning.
You know at certain times so is those intangibles that you didn't learn any
academy on how to be a patrol officer for the city of Detroit. The brotherhood
he formed with his officers gave Darwin a sense of security. The cops knew
each other's families. When
they were out on dangerous calls, Darwin felt like he could trust these men to watch his
back to keep him safe. And of course, he knew he would do the same for them.
One night in 1998, the four men got together for a beer at a dive bar on the east side
of Detroit.
We had drinks, we talked about sports, we talked about police work, we talked about women,
and things that people do at that age group.
And then the conversation went in a new direction.
One of his scout partners asked Darwin a question,
do you want to make some money?
And I said, well, of course, I mean, what do you want to do?
And he said, well, I got an idea.
of course. I mean, what do you want to do?" And he said, well, I got an idea.
The office had told Darwin about a bookie who had just been released from prison for tax evasion and illegal gambling. The bookie had stashed a million dollars in a safe at his house.
And we're going to go in there, we're going to get it. And I know that you're a young officer and they don't pay well, you have a young child, and you can put some coins in your pocket. And it's just
the one-time shot we go in, we go out, it's a one-day thing, and then we can be set for
a very long time to come.
It was like a plot of a movie.
Darwin sat there, stupified.
At first I thought it was a joke.
I thought it was a high-very, very funny.
But as the conversation continued, he started to draw a diagram of the target house and
how we would approach this house. And I remember, Shaka, I remember, you know, drinking the alcohol, but not getting the desired
effect. It was just I was so shocked and so numb.
The plan his friends laid out went like this. The four cops would dress up as FBI agents and
conduct a fake raid on the home. It wasn't like the book he was going to call the police.
He'd have to explain how a million dollars came to be sitting in a safe.
Unspoken was the idea that even though breaking into the book he's house was obviously illegal,
it could also be the right thing to do.
The money they'd be stealing was from a crook. In a way, they'd be writing a wrong.
Darwin's friends told him the first step was to stake out the house.
Then, on the day of the raid, they'd call 911
and report there was an officer in trouble far away from the house.
And that would distract all the local units
to that location.
Free and clear of any interruptions,
the cops would break in, tie up the bookie, spray him
with mace, and force him to reveal the code to the safe.
And if he refused or in any way didn't allow us to get
the money out, then we would take any means necessary up and
to including death.
Wow, so they actually talked about killing the guy if he didn't cooperate.
Yes, absolutely.
Darwin felt a battle start to rage inside his brain.
The scheme felt wrong, but he also felt a deep loyalty to these men.
These are the people that I work with every day.
I put my life in their hands and hopefully they put their lives in my hands.
These were people that I looked up to for, you know, aspiration and what kind of cop I wanted to be with the Detroit Police Department.
After they laid out the plan, Darwin's friends looked at him and asked him a question
that would shape the rest of his life.
Are you in or are you out?
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
At Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management, psychologist Adam Wates has
long been fascinated by the kind of dilemma Darwin Roshe experienced at that bar in Detroit.
What happens in the mind when someone has to make a choice
between two competing ethical priorities?
My first interest in the topic of whistle blowing
came from hearing about a news story in Chicago's,
terrible story, something about someone getting shot.
And as they were dying, the police actually
approached the person who got shot and as they were dying, the police actually approached the person who got shot
and said, can you help us?
Do you know who did this?
And the person essentially said something along the lines of, I know who did this, but
I'll never tell you.
I know who did this, but I'll never tell you.
Adam was struck by the story.
Here was a man who was dying and he was
trying to protect the person who'd shot him. Out of kind of a code of silence, a
code of don't snitch. And I remember talking to someone who was leading an
anti-gun violence organization and this person had worked with communities as well as the police and this
person who I relayed the story to said, well, you know, this is very interesting because
there's a similar code of silence within police departments as well.
As a psychologist, Adam asked himself what the connection could be.
Why would the victims of crimes and the people trying to catch the perpetrators of crimes
follow the same code?
There seemed to be something about a code of loyalty, and so I started talking about that
with Leon Young and James Dungan, and we said, well, you know, this could be something
interesting to study from a psychological perspective.
Adam and his colleagues decided a good place to start their analysis was in the field of what's called moral foundations theory.
There are these five or six kind of basic moral intuitions or moral foundations or moral modules that people use intuitively to determine whether something was right and
wrong.
When we ask ourselves what's right and wrong, we usually don't realize that beneath
the surface of our reasoning, we're actually drawing on a deeper set of moral feelings.
These feelings form the foundations of our moral reasoning.
Moral Foundation's theory was first put forward by the psychologist
Jonathan Height and Jesse Graham, who hypothesized that people don't realize they are unconsciously
drawing on different moral foundations. This in turn is a central reason why people are bewildered
when others reach different moral conclusions. The people who thought Edward Snowden was a trader
may have felt that those who called Edward Snowden a hero needed to have their heads examined and vice versa.
What was so interesting to us was that two of those foundations can very easily come into
conflict with each other.
Cultures around the world understand that one way to be a good person is to stand by those
who stand with you.
We defend our families, communities and nations, and we expect our families, communities
and nations to defend us even when the going gets tough.
Flicking out doesn't just make you a coward, it makes you unreliable, this loyal, a bad person.
Simultaneously, however, many of us also intuitively feel that being a good person means standing up for fairness and justice.
Stealing from someone is unjust.
Hearding someone is unfair.
One place, these two moral foundations come into conflict.
It just so happens that these kind of core intuitions, that is the desire for loyalty,
and simultaneously the desire for justice, really come into conflict with each other when people
are put in situations where they have to decide whether to blow the whistle or not.
When we think about Darwin Rocher, it's easy to think his choice was either to be loyal to his colleagues or to do the right thing.
But this is a mistake. The moral foundation of justice is not superior to the moral foundation of loyalty.
It's just that different situations can make
different people lean in one direction or the other.
We all face balancing acts between honesty and loyalty. Let's say you see a colleague stealing
toilet paper from the office supply closet. Do you report it? What if they were embezzling
money from the company? Or let's say you have a very kind neighbor who brings you soup when you're sick, but this person also posts fake news
on social media. Do you call him out? What if you see him abusing a dog? How does the
gravity of the act change the equation? It's not clear what the right thing is, and this
is where we landed in our hypothesizing that many people
and many cultures feel like the most right thing you can do is be a loyal citizen to your community,
whatever that is, whether that's a police department, whether that's a neighborhood, whether that's
a place where you work, that is the ultimate immorality is being loyal.
That is the ultimate immorality is being loyal.
On the other hand, you have this competing moral intuition where you want to do what's just and what's fair
and what prevents the greatest amount of harm to others more broadly.
And so if you look at it one way whistle blowing is the most moral thing you
can do, but if you look at it another way, it feels like the ultimate betrayal.
Adam and his colleagues have shown that our inner moral calculations can be tipped in one direction
or another. In one study, they recruited two groups of volunteers.
The first was asked to write an essay on the importance of fairness and honesty.
The other was asked to write about the value of loyalty.
All the volunteers were then told to evaluate the work of previous participants in the study.
In reality, however, there were no previous participants
and the research team was asking
the volunteers to evaluate poorly done work that they themselves had fabricated.
The researchers asked the volunteers to blow the whistle about poorly done work.
Here's research at James Dungan from the University of Chicago.
And the question for the participants in our task was, would they report this
shoddy work or not? The researchers told the volunteers that if they reported
shoddy work, the previous participant would be banned from working on any future
studies. What we see is that whistle blowing behavior was affected by the
essay prompt that they wrote. So people writing about the importance of fairness,
who are made to remind themselves
of how important it is to be fair,
were more likely to report the participants'
shoddy work, people who were focused on loyalty,
were less likely to report the participant.
What this shows is that our internal moral compass
is not static.
It's also not just about what happens inside our own minds.
Social factors in the context can alter how we feel about profoundly important moral decisions.
So when some of us think Edward Snowden is a hero and some of us think he's a villain,
it may be useful to ask how different social
norms and social ties are shaping those conclusions.
At a larger level, the cultures in which we find ourselves can also play a powerful role
in nudging us to prioritize honesty or loyalty. Researchers have found that different cultures prioritize different moral foundations, perhaps
because of their unique historical circumstances.
Here's Adam on that topic.
Worked by Michelle Gelfand and others had suggested that when countries experience crises, whether
due to war or famine or natural disaster, they tighten up.
And to the extent that tightening up or promoting sort of tighter social norms is going to weaken
whistle blowing, I think in the aftermath of crises, people are going to be less likely
to break with their fellow country people.
I'm wondering if you or anyone else has done research looking at organizations that believe
they are doing the right thing.
So police departments or the army or medical workers.
You have a sense that partly what motivates you to join this profession is a sense of mission,
a sense of duty, a sense of responsibility to hire things.
And I'm wondering if there's been any research looking at the likelihood of whistle blowing
in those contexts, partly because I'm wondering if the conflict in some ways becomes more
acute.
So in other words, if I'm working for, let's say, doctors without borders.
And I think that I'm working for a humanitarian organization that's doing really wonderful things.
Now if I blow the whistle, I'm not just potentially hurting the organization or hurting the people
within the organization.
I'm hurting all the people that the organization could have helped.
And now that makes the moral dilemma, at least the way I'm seeing it, even more acute.
Well, you know, you gave me just the perfect testable hypothesis.
I want to run out and do this research tomorrow.
And I think you're really onto something
where to the extent to which you believe
that your organization has a bigger social mission,
and this can be true of police departments,
the military, again, other examples of user,
Boy Scouts of America, or the Catholic Church,
and indeed these are mission-driven organizations,
the conflict might be lessened for you
because you might say, well, the reason why
I'm not gonna report wrongdoing is that
that would weaken our organization.
And so really, what the greater good is for me
is that our organization thrives, so we can
do the good work that we do.
And so, you know, that might explain why within those organizations, you know, you're saying
that your purpose is partially socially driven.
And that then gives you license to engage in potentially less ethical behavior.
It's a phenomenon called moral licensing,
the idea developed by a psychologist Benoit Mounin
and Dale Miller, where if you think of yourself
as having a certain level of morality,
then it licenses you to be less moral
on other dimensions.
And so that might also occur in the whistle blowing context.
I mean, in some ways, the idea is that if you're basically already
putting money in your moral piggy bank by doing a good thing,
by being part of a mission driven organization
or a humanitarian organization, it now
becomes a little easier to take money out of that piggy bank
when you're called upon to do so because you say,
well, my piggy bank is already pretty full with all of these moral coins.
Absolutely. You're still morally wealthy, even if you take more coins out.
Adam can think of a moment in his own life when he was torn between the moral impulse of loyalty
and the moral impulse of honesty.
He was a senior in high school,
and his brother David was a sophomore,
and they had gone to a classic high school party.
Think cheap plastic cups filled with bad beer.
At some point in the night,
one of the party goes to a picture of the scene,
and the next week, the photograph started making
its way around the school.
And in our public school system, you know, there's nothing you can do to a student who was drinking alcohol off campus, but there was some rule in place that if you're an athlete, a high school
athlete, you could be suspended if you're found, consume the alcohol even if it was outside of school grounds.
Adam was on the basketball team. David did cross-country. They were going to be called in for questioning.
Adam had a choice. Lie and protect his brother and his teammates, or tell the truth, and get everyone in
trouble.
Of course, Adam was not the only one confronting this choice.
Everyone who knew they were going to get called in for questioning had this decision to make. Do we all, you know, basically lie and say, I wasn't drinking at the party or what you see in
my cup is apple juice and not
beer.
You know, do we maintain that code of silence or do we tell the truth?
Before Adam or David got called into the office, they run the food and came up with the
plan.
Let's just say we were drinking apple juice if anyone asks.
Slowly each of his teammates was brought in.
Eventually, it was Adam's turn.
And I was asked, was I drinking at the party?
And I said I was not.
Adam chose the moral foundation of loyalty
over the moral foundation of justice, of honesty.
But then, in an almost comical demonstration of what happens
when moral foundations come into conflict with each other,
he immediately felt torn about his decision.
I walked out of that office, and I just felt bad.
It did not feel good to tell a lie.
After walking about 50 feet, I turned around
and I recanted my statement.
This is the thing about our moral foundations.
We don't notice them most of the time
because they're hidden beneath the surface.
Yet, when we ignore them, we experience what Adam calls moral stress.
Which is the stress brought on by having to stretch the truth or do something that feels immoral.
And that's what I felt.
It was, you know, momentarily debilitating.
It was very stressful to know that I had lied.
And not only that, but yeah, I could get away with it,
but I think plenty of people in the school
knew the actual story, and that was gonna be embarrassing.
When we come back, moral stress in a situation with the highest of stakes.
We return to that bar in Detroit and Darwin-Rose is dilemma.
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
The events that change our lives
don't always look monumental from the outside.
To a stranger who might have seen Darwin
and his colleagues in that dive bar,
they probably look like four friends drinking beer, talking about life.
But as his fellow police officers asked him to help them carry out a crime, break into
a house and steal a million dollars, Darwin felt his head spin.
It was just one of those things that, regardless, if I say yes or no, now, you know, I still
have to have a relationship
with these officers. I got to get in the scout car with them two days from now.
As he made his way home, Darwin thought about the decision he had to make. No answer he
landed on felt good. If you went along with the plan, he'd be helping perpetrate an injustice.
The kind of injustice he had sworn an oath to prevent. But if he
turned on his buddies, turned them in, Darwin knew he would feel like he had betrayed them.
If he got them convicted, he would feel responsible for taking their lives away, for creating
that empty chair at the dinner table that their wives, girlfriends, and kids would have
to look at each night.
When he got home, Darwin was distraught. He called someone he trusted and asked her to come over. And so I told her what happened and she said, well, you know, what are you going to do? You know,
she kind of advised me, well, just don't say anything. I said, well, no, I can't do that.
Because I have to put myself in the situation of that
person in that house and allowing something bad to happen to him for something that I
had prior knowledge of.
It just couldn't resonate with me.
I just could not wrap my head around doing that.
As they talked, it became clear to Darwin which moral choice felt better to him and which
one felt worse.
As much as loyalty to his friends mattered, as much as it broke his heart to turn away
from them, he knew he could not take part in the crime.
And he could not say idly by as the book he was robbed and maybe killed.
I reached out to the chief of police.
The only person I know that, you know, that I felt that I could have trusted with this
information, told them what had happened, told them what I knew, and he said, okay, well,
stand by the phone, someone will be calling you.
A short while later, Darwin got a call from the FBI.
They arranged to meet at a park the next day.
They brought me in and they kind of said, okay, well walk us through
what happened. With a not anistamok, Darwin told them everything. When he was done, they
gave him a choice. They pretty much directly said, hey, do you want to participate in helping
catching these guys? Or do you just want wanna give us the information and go about your life?
Darwin felt that if he had made the choice
to come down on the side of justice,
he had to take the plunge.
If he didn't, and his fellow officer's God of Scott free,
showing up at work as usual, he would have to quit.
If I don't participate in this,
if I don't see it through,
if I don't get this this, if I don't see it through, if I don't get
this to a conviction, they may walk. They may be found not guilty. So all my dreams and
aspirations are gone. Everything I went to college for, everything I believed in, serving
the community, serving the citizens of Detroit, that is done. If they don't go to jail. And
at this point, I had to go where the odds are more favorable for me and my career,
my name, my family, my belief systems. And I said, well, I'm here to help.
So the thing that I just want to spend a moment talking about is that I feel like for many people,
this would have been a difficult decision. You know, because again, you're not just reporting on something that you
saw happen, you're reporting on people who you work with, people who are your
friends, people who know your kid, you know, people who looked out for you, people
who have, you know, you look up to. I would think for most people, they would be
at least a moment of emotional conflict where you're deciding what the right thing is to do.
Emotional conflict is an understatement.
This was gut-wrenching.
It was very painful to make that decision.
And you know, I love these guys.
I mean, we really shared a lot of time together.
It was very emotionally draining and very traumatic for me to go through that.
Those days after that initial contact with them and subsequent contact with the FBI and life.
Darwin kept going to work each day except now he was consumed with anxiety. I had to, you know, actually work with the authorities and continue my day-to-day
activities as nothing's changed because if anything if I change anything a day
off or left work early or anything like that, it could
have possibly alerted them that something is a foot.
So on the outside, I appeared normal, but on the inside, I was really like shattered in
pieces and conflicted.
Instead of blurring out that he'd betrayed them, that the FBI was following their every move,
Darwin met up with his colleagues.
He told them he was in.
Fully in.
They would do drive-bys of the house, trying to figure out the best way to get in.
They started gathering supplies and weapons.
Throughout all of this, Darwin either wore a wire or wrote extensive notes that he'd pass
along to the FBI.
Now, besides the conflict he felt as a whistleblower, Darwin realized how terrifying it was to be an informant.
I was in an altered state. I was in one of those where I had to really step outside myself who I was and kind of get into almost a role play where I had to,
you know, pretend that I was an active participant. I had to pretend that I was, you know, enthusiastic
about conducting this criminal activity, you know, while at the same time, I always paranoid,
always emotionally on edge. He became hyper-vigilant and suffered frequent panic attacks.
And then, one cold afternoon, Darwin had just come off a lunch break when a coworker showed him the Detroit Free Press.
Plastered across the front page with this headline,
cops planned heist.
Three Detroit police officers charged with blood.
And so that's how I found out that they actually made their rest earlier that morning. Heist, three Detroit police officers charged with blood.
And so that's how I found out that they actually made their rest earlier that morning.
It's typical for the FBI to withhold information from informants about the progress of an
investigation.
They don't want informants to get cold feet and warn the group they've been investigating.
Darwin knew this and he tried to prepare himself
for the moment it all came out.
It was still a shock,
but nothing compared to what came
in the weeks and months that followed.
That's because the tension between loyalty and honesty
was not just a question to be resolved in Darwin's heart.
His community was weighing the very same questions. Was Darwin
Rocher a hero or a traitor?
I would get calls. We're going to kill you. You're not going to make it the trial.
And the calls were frequent throughout the day or night. I actually had a security detail assigned to my home,
just based upon those threats.
After a while, the death threats,
they became so prevalent, it was just like, just do it.
I stopped calling, just do it.
And one thing I always said,
I would not want to be shot in a face or the head,
so I could have an open casket funeral.
And that was my only thing and so it was very, it was very trying, very traumatic.
The pressure slowly mounted on everyone in Darwin's life. At one point, the house where his ex-girlfriend and 12-year-old daughter lived was firebombed.
Thankfully, Darwin's ex and daughter came away from the incident physically unharmed.
But knowing that his decision to blow the whistle had put his child in jeopardy,
pushed Darwin over the edge.
I had reached my emotional bottom.
I was isolated.
I don't have the ability to go to the store without worrying
if someone's going to come up on me and take my life away.
Or answer the phone without fear in that someone's
going to put me in that emotional state of fear
and discomfort.
Or the ability just to have friends over and just to say hi because
if someone's trying to kill you or someone has threatened to kill you, it's not a lot of people
that want to be around. Darwin was transferred to desk duty. While many of his colleagues supported him
and held him up as a model of good policing, others were angry about his decision.
This is a common experience for many whistleblowers.
The people for whom the moral foundation of honesty and justice is paramount will view
your actions in one way.
The people for whom loyalty is a core moral foundation will see the same actions very differently. As a trial grew nearer, Darwin felt like he was in a race. A race for his life.
We always talk about, you know, crossing the finish line, but very suddenly we talk about the work
that goes after you crossed the finish line. And in this situation, you know, the hard work was
just to survive, emotionally survive this and hopefully stand alive to
participate in trial and testify against the actions that they did.
And so I just got up every day and treated each day as it was my last.
And that was the mindset I had to have in order just to kind of, you know, stay sane
for lack of a better word.
Darwin made it to the trial of life.
He testified against his former friends in court and told the truth about what he'd heard
and witnessed.
The three men were found guilty, although the conviction of one officer was overturned
on appeal.
All served some prison time.
Given that the events in this story happened decades ago,
and the other cops either served their time, or in one case had his conviction over
turn, we have chosen not to name them in this story.
After the trial, Darwin's life moved on.
The threats subsided.
He was taken off desk duty and went back to patrolling the streets of Detroit.
He retired in early 2022 as a lieutenant.
There are people who still disagree with the choice he made.
He still occasionally hears people refer to him as a snitch.
But Darwin says he'd make the same decision again if he had to, even with all the pain
it caused. I mean, if you don't stand out for what is right and what is just and your own moral beliefs,
then how do we change society?
We have a society right now that is so willing to kind of duck into the shadows and hope
that someone else will handle it.
And that problem causes a lot of issues in our lives.
When we're forced to choose between loyalty and honesty, it can feel agonizing.
Yet, psychologist Adam Wates says there is a way to reduce the agony, at least in an organizational context.
The way to do that is by reframing the underlying tension
between loyalty and honesty.
When we talk about how to overcome the tension between
while doing the just thing versus being loyal to my group,
the answer we don't try to put forth is, well, you should
just forget about loyalty.
I mean, first of all, it's impossible.
Loyalty is sort of baked in all of us.
It's part of human nature to want to be loyal.
But loyalty is something that I think can be reframed as loyalty to your fellow human
beings, or loyalty to the greater good, or loyalty
to society.
And so there's a way to, I think, blow the whistle, which might be calling out someone in
your circle, or your organization for wrongdoing, while still feeling a sense of loyalty.
For some people, the most loyal thing you can do
for your organizations is call out bad behavior
when you see it.
And I wish more organizations and CEOs
put forth that message, which would be something
along the lines of part of what it means
to be a good citizen is we call each other out.
You don't take it personally, but we call each other out. You know, you don't take it personally,
but we call out bad behavior.
And, you know, I think that's a way to communicate
a loyalistic message without curbing people's desire
to do the right thing and blow the whistle. Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media.
Our audio production team includes Bridget McCarthy, Annie Murphy-Paul, Kristen Wong, Laura
Quarelle, Ryan Katz, Autumn Barnes and Andrew Chadwick.
Tara Boyle is our executive producer.
I'm Hidden Brain's executive editor.
This week, we turn over our unsung hero segment
to a listener with an episode
from our sister podcast, My Unsung Hero.
Today's story comes from Veej Barry.
Veej has mild cerebral palsy.
Because of the disease, she occasionally trips and falls.
One day, in 2017, she was in Washington, DC for an important meeting.
That morning in June, it was bright and beautiful.
I felt very confident in what I was wearing.
I was walking along El Street toward my meeting. And without warning,
I fell. I fell badly. I fell on my face. My glasses cut into my eyelid. My cheeks were torn up.
I was bleeding. All I wanted to do was jump up and grab my glasses and avoid any further embarrassment.
I heard a voice from the man I had noticed earlier standing in a garage.
I thought he was a garage attendant.
He ran over to me and picked me off the sidewalk, and he walked me, rushed me actually into
a building, and down an office hallway, and I heard him yelling,
Mary, Mary, come, it's emergency.
Veejlada found out the man's name was Kevin.
And he rushed me into a bathroom, and Mary appeared,
and Mary was the building concierge.
Mary took over, and Kevin ran for her first
date kit and Mary just automatically even though I had left a trail of blood, she took over
washing me, washing my face, washing my hair, trying to get the blood off my clothes, soothing me, I was babbling, I was so embarrassed. But more
than that, I was deeply demoralized that this had happened to me yet again, and at what
an awful moment I needed to be somewhere very important. And yet here I was a mess. What would have happened had they not picked me off the sidewalk?
And here she was trying to bandage me, to make me look somewhat
presentable and encourage me that it was going to be all right.
Between the two of them, Kevin and Mary, they put me together.
And I was mildly presentable.
They didn't think about cleaning up the hallway first.
They thought about me.
In the end, Vige made it to her meeting.
Afterwards, she wrote a letter about Kevin and Mary's actions and sent it to Mary's
boss, a woman named Linda. She told me I made her day, but it was uplifting to me,
just to write that letter as it is to make this recording right now,
and remember the kindness and the real care and the love
that was expressed by those two people.
Linda told me that she put my letter in the top concierge annual employee awards file
for Mary.
And I certainly hope Mary got that award that year 2017.
Episodes like the one we brought you today take months of research, writing and fact checking.
If you enjoyed today's episode, please consider making a contribution to support our work.
You can do so at support.hiddenbrain.org.
Again, that's support.hiddenbrain.org.
I'm Shankar Vedantam.
See you soon.