No. Criminality is not the fault of the police for any reason, and certainly not a result of police not being "honest and compassionate human beings." Criminality is not due to a "lack of trust in police." People are criminals because they choose to be criminals. No amount of deflection or excuses for the criminal makes their behavior the fault of the police.
We can debate whether the "cause" of criminality is nature, nurture, or a combination of both, but it's definitely not the fault of the police that criminality exists. Nor is it the responsibility of police officers to "fix" all of the many personal, social, and psychological problems that allow criminality to blossom and flourish.
P. Huffs didn't become a violent drug addict at the age of 28, run a car into the side of a liquor store at 10:30 in the morning, and attack and bash in the heads of 3 police officers, because the police weren't "honest or compassionate enough." HIs lengthy rap sheet is not the fault of the police.
Wouldn't it be nice if there were no criminals? If everyone was law abiding, responsible, and respectful to others? If every citizen took responsibility for their own lives, tried hard in school, held down a job to provide for their needs, practiced responsible child bearing, and attentive child rearing? Then we wouldn't need very much policing at all, right? And in fact, in communities where most of the people do the above things, the communities ARE safe, and don't need many police officers patrolling everywhere. In places where there are a lot of criminals, and a lot of criminal behavior, we have to send a lot of police officers to keep the peace, and arrest the criminals.
I'll say it again: P. Huffs didn't become a violent drug addict at the age of 28, run a car into the side of a liquor store at 10:30 in the morning, and attack and bash in the heads of 3 police officers because the police weren't "honest or compassionate enough." Or because P. Huffs didn't "trust" the police enough.