Saturday, June 25, 2016

Questions


 On August 4th, I will celebrate my third year of retirement. That alone is surreal for me, because in my mind I could still gear up, get in a cruiser and work a shift. The reality, however, is much different.

I retired after having surgery for the second time on my left knee in 2013. Well, the fourth; I had a couple of scrapes/clean-ups in the 90s after stepping in a groundhog hole. At night. While trying to arrest a drug trafficker who was thought to be armed. He’d crashed his car over an embankment way out on Beal Road, on a very dark fall night, after an extended vehicle pursuit. Larry Caudill and I were partnered up in an unmarked minivan while working in METRICH, the ten-county drug task force, and had driven by the guy’s house to see if he was home; a judge had revoked his bond on a drug trafficking charge and we were actively looking for him. In the end, he went to jail and I ended up in the ER.

The knee wasn’t my only issue. I won’t bore you with the details, but suffice it to say that I was a frequent flier with the medical community. Look up the term ‘accident prone’ in the dictionary and you’ll see my picture.

So it’s been three years. A lot changes in three years, especially concerning the law and law enforcement. I do, however, get calls seeking advice on legal issues still to this day on an almost weekly basis. If you are now or have ever been in law enforcement, you know what I’m talking about. People will call, stop by the house or grab you by the elbow if they run into you in a store and ask about all kinds of scenarios, explaining the difficulty or situation they’ve encountered in a particular event. You’re expected to know the answer or solution immediately.

The truth is, sometimes we just don’t know the answer. Other times, you give them what you know or think they should do…and they don’t like it.

I haven’t kept up on changes in the law or legal procedures that have occurred since I took off the badge for the last time, unless it’s something that might affect me directly…such as the ‘if your windshield wipers are on, your headlights are on’ law that went into effect a couple of years ago. Civil or domestic issues? Your guess is as good as mine, but I can steer you to who you need to talk to in order to deal with them.


The question is…will you listen?

Monday, June 20, 2016

Foot patrol.

Walking a beat.

When’s the last time you saw a police officer walking, patrolling a business area?

For me, it’s been awhile. That’s too bad, too, because foot patrol was a very effective technique. An officer assigned to a foot beat became very familiar with the everyday people in his assigned patrol area, the shop owners, the residents and even the crooks and undesirables. He/she knew whether or not someone belonged to the area. He/she knew the trouble spots. He/she knew what belonged and what didn’t.

Business people generally loved when the beat cop walked into their shop or restaurant, because they’d know there wasn’t a chance of trouble happening. Neighborhoods got to know the cop on patrol because he wasn’t gliding on by in an air-conditioned cruiser behind tinted glass. He was real and he was present. He was personable, a cop you could actually hold a conversation with.

Back in the day we had foot patrol, but even then it was a dying assignment. We’d have guys/gals walking assigned beats on ‘all-hands’ days; those days during the shift cycle where no one was on scheduled days off. We’d have plenty of two-officer cars because we didn’t have enough cruisers for all the personnel who were working. Even then, though, the department was beginning to feel the budget bite; that was one reason we didn’t have enough cruisers. I always looked forward to all-hands days, because I knew there was a good chance I’d be assigned to downtown foot patrol, and I enjoyed it immensely.

You were assigned in pairs; back in the 50s and 60s, guys would walk a beat alone, being dispatched to calls via blue-painted call boxes mounted on poles seemingly on every corner. The call boxes generally had a red light on top that would flash if the beat cop needed to contact the station for a call, and the copper carried a key that would unlock the call box door, where the phone awaited use.

Call boxes were long gone before I started my career, replaced by big, boxy, heavy portable radios. Between the radio on one hip and the .38 revolver on the other, well, that leather gun belt rode low on your hip bones, which could become painful.

Anyway, we walked in pairs, making it a point to stroll several times through the bars that were known for trouble, like ‘showing the flag’’; you wanted the mopes to know that you were around and could appear unannounced at any moment.

We didn’t just stroll the streets, either. Oftentimes, we’d get up on top of a building and just watch activity below us. I remember one particular instance where my pal Keith ‘Biscuit’ Coleman and I were on top of the Reed’s Building on the square, just watching. We noticed a car come around the corner, pause in front of the store and then back in to a parking space. It was a Sunday, late afternoon, and Reed’s department store was closed. Why would a driver do that? No one ever backed in those spaces. The guy never got out of his car. We waited about fifteen minutes and then decided to pay him a visit. Keith and I climbed down the rear fire escape and approached from an alley that ran between Reed’s and the Olympic Lounge; the car was parked in a space near the mouth of the ally, so the guy couldn’t see us approach. We walked up to him on the driver’s side and he never saw us. In his lap he had a Frisbee, loaded with loose marijuana, and he was rolling joints. Every so often he’d raise his head and look around, but he never looked behind his car, so we stood, just back of the driver’s door, watching him through his open window. Finally, I spoke.

“What’s up?”

The guy’s head snapped around, seeing two policemen standing right beside his door, a look of surprise and horror on his face. Then his chin hit his chest, realizing he’d been caught red-handed, and he just handed that marijuana-laden Frisbee out the window to us.

“You got me”, he said dejectedly. It was priceless.


I miss the old days.