State Troopers being biased

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Nate Dogg

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In a rarity among modern American jurisprudence, a state highway trooper has lost his job over a traffic ticket he didn't write — and now his fight has sparked a wider dispute over who gets preferential treatment for enforcing the law on the road. Does anyone need to guess that this happened in Florida?

The tale starts last November, when Florida Highway Patrol trooper Charles Swindle stopped state Rep. Charles McBurney, R-Jacksonville, for doing 87 mph in a 70 mph zone. McBurney was driving a Toyota with a license plate identifying him as a state lawmaker; after checking with his sergeant, Swindle told McBurney "I'm cutting you a break" and cited him only for lacking proof of insurance — a $10 ticket rather than a $280 one that McBurney could have faced.

According to Florida state investigators, Swindle did the same for another driver he pulled over at the same time, telling his dispatcher “I’m going to write (McBurney) a warning and be nice; I’m going to stroke him ’cause I didn’t see his insurance card."

But the episode bothered McBurney (who denied going 87 mph) so much that he wrote to Swindle's superiors on legislature letterhead, complaining that Swindle was favoring state officials. "If those who enforce our laws fail to meet the highest ethical standards, there is erosion of that confidence," McBurney wrote. "I am concerned that as Trooper Swindle acted in such fashion to me, that he would do so to any law-abiding citizen of our state."
The trooper should have written him a ticket, doing the right thing by the law. I wonder if this same situation happens in other states and isn't noticed.

story here: http://autos.yahoo.com/blogs/motora...lawmaker-break-speeding-ticket-182456916.html
 
The trooper should have written him a ticket, doing the right thing by the law. I wonder if this same situation happens in other states and isn't noticed.

story here: http://autos.yahoo.com/blogs/motora...lawmaker-break-speeding-ticket-182456916.html

There was actually a lady who was stopped in Tennessee recently because she had an Ohio St. decal on her back window, and the cops pulled her over and searched her whole car because they believed it was a decal that signified involvement in drug trade somehow...

http://www.dispatch.com/content/sto...eye-leaf-mistaken-by-police-out-of-state.html
 
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I wonder if this same situation happens in other states and isn't noticed.

You wonder? Southern California newspapers often mention that police flash badges to escape speeding tickets. The driver is annoyed that he has to do even that much. The policeman who was going to write the ticket walks away, pissed at the arrogance. It's no secret there, the default par for the course, standard operating procedure, and included uncritically in articles.
 
Drive through the south and then ask the same question. I thought that with the title of "State Troopers being biased," there'd at least be a funny video or something. State troopers being biased is an every day part of life. Try driving through Mississippi, from Louisiana to Tennessee, as a minority. You'll get $200+ in fees just for going with the flow of traffic.

There was actually a lady who was stopped in Tennessee recently because she had an Ohio St. decal on her back window, and the cops pulled her over and searched her whole car because they believed it was a decal that signified involvement in drug trade somehow...

http://www.dispatch.com/content/sto...eye-leaf-mistaken-by-police-out-of-state.html

This example of bias is kind of weird too.. He got fired for not giving a state representative a speeding ticket. Yeah, it's not right, but that's like the lightest side of police bias.
 
The Republican lawyer is a big shot in the Legislature, and fires anyone who shows him up. He's not used to taking orders, and knows how to manipulate the office politics system of reward and punishment. To remain at the top of his inner world psychological pyramid, he got the cop into trouble.
 
1%ers own all law enforcement in the nation.

Did you think they were created to protect YOU? :biglaugh:
 
That kind of sucks. He decided to cut the guy a break and gets fired.

maybe it was favor . . . State troopers write tickets all day, wouldn't be the most enjoyable job, IMO.
 

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