'Simply
Submit'
by
Vin Suprynowicz
by Vin Suprynowicz
I just
finished reading the article on Excessive Force on page 2B,
wrote in Ron the Former Police Officer, on March the 5th. Another
person was apparently injured in a police confrontation, followed
by the usual lawsuit. As a former police detective, I have a solution
on how to avoid 99 percent of all injuries, lawsuits, and deaths
sustained as a result of a police confrontation, offers Officer
Ron:
When
stopped by an officer, do as he asks. Never run from the police,
never fight with the police, never get into a shouting match, dont
try to escape from custody. Simply submit, but try to obtain all
the info you can, i.e. why am I being stopped, etc. If you feel
the officer is in error, there will be ample opportunity to contest
the allegations later.
That comprises
the entirety of Officer Rons letter, and advice: Just
submit.
On March 27,
2006 People magazine published
an article that reported what happened to a number of Americans
who just submitted:
Heather
Southerland had just gotten in her car after an evening visit with
a girlfriend in Leesville, La., wrote reporter Bill Hewitt
in the article, headlined Phony Cops, Real Victims.
As she
drove away, a green Ford Bronco pulled close behind her, flashing
its lights. Southerland, 24, turned onto a deserted side street.
The man got out of his Bronco and said, Leesville Police
Department, undercover narcotics, step out of the car,
she recalls. He ordered her to walk backwards toward him and put
her hands on the trunk of her vehicle. She asked to see his badge
and he refused. He said I didnt need to see his badge,
she says. I knew right then something extremely bad was about
to happen.
It did. Seconds
later, as she tried to flee, the man grabbed her and raped her at
knifepoint. Because she just submitted.
Such
incidents happen more often than many people imagine, the
magazine reports. And in this age of the Internet, where badges
and uniforms are readily available, it has never been easier to
pull off. While no national statistics are kept, earlier this year
the Chicago Sun-Times ran a series on fake cops that documented
how in the past three years there had been more than 1,000 cases
in the Chicago area alone of people posing as police to commit a
variety of crimes.
On Long
Island, Reginald Gousse is now on trial for the 2005 murder of assistant
bank branch manager James Gottlieb, 49, who was shot after Gousse,
who has pleaded not guilty, allegedly pretended to be a police officer
and pulled him over. The mortally wounded Gottlieb told a witness,
I stopped because I thought it was a cop.
So he just
submitted.
In Blacksburg,
S.C., Charles Connor is accused of going into a convenience store
last September in a police-style khaki shirt with a two-way radio
and a gun on his hip and telling owner Nick Patel that he was a
North Carolina cop.
For 90 minutes he hung out in the store,
chatting with Patel until they were alone. Then he demanded all
his money. Patel, married with two children, turned over $5,168.
Then, police say, Connor, a former corrections officer who has pleaded
not guilty, shot Patel in the head. Connor knew enough to
convincingly pretend to be a police officer, says Cherokee
County Sheriff Bill Blanton.
Sometimes
a moments compliance is all the fake cop is looking for,
the People article continues. According to authorities, last
September Luz Heredia, 53, of Melrose Park, Ill., was in a car on
her way to her factory job with two coworkers when a man approached
and flashed a badge. Moments later he allegedly grabbed Heredia,
who had six grandkids, and pulled her from the vehicle, saying,
Youre coming with me. He forced her into his SUV.
Less than two hours later she was found sexually assaulted and beaten;
she died five days later. (Jorge Dominguez, 28, has been charged
in the crime and has pleaded not guilty.) My mother had her
gut instinct, says Heredias daughter Lina Hernandez.
But she didnt want to go against the law.
So she just
submitted.
Ladies: Ever
been advised to drive to a well-lighted area where there are plenty
of witnesses before pulling over, when you see those flashing lights
in your rear window? Read Women
handcuffed for driving to a well-lit area while being stopped by
police.
And what about
when it turns out to be a REAL police officer? Did Las Vegan Ronald
Perrin, 32, armed only with a basketball when badge-heavy
Metro Officer Bruce Gentner emptied his 14-round Glock at him, really
refuse to comply with some legitimate order after Gentner
waited till they were alone on a night-time street to initiate their
confrontation back in 1999? We may never know, since the unarmed
Mr. Perrin did not survive to testify.
Even though
the coroners jury voted 61 to let Officer Gentner walk,
jury foreman Mark LePage said Gentner went too far that April night
at Tropicana Avenue and Rainbow Boulevard. We all came to
the conclusion that we couldnt convict him, but we all had
reservations about what had happened. As long as inquest juries
are instructed that a homicide is justifiable providing the officer
who kills merely perceived a threat even if the victim turns
out to have been unarmed then an officers use of deadly
force will never be found criminally negligent, Mr. LePage continued.
Several jurors voiced their difficulty with the fact that
most of the shots came from the rear, Mr. LePage said. Everyone
had a problem with that. He (Perrin) had his back to the officer.
The way the system is now, the cop always walks.
How about Orlando
Barlow, 28, shot and killed with a .223 rifle by Metro Officer Brian
Hartman as Barlow kneeled unarmed in a suburban front yard in 2003?
Plenty of witnesses saw Mr. Barlow doing his best to submit
and comply with every order cops shouted at him. How
much good did the decision to submit do Orlando Barlow,
Officer Ron?
Dave Kallas,
president of the Las Vegas Police Protective Association, later
called a press conference to insist the BDRT T-shirts
donned by members of Metros Southwest 11 District to celebrate
the Barlow hit (emblazoned with AR-15s like the weapon used that
night) stood for Big Dogs Run Together, not the rumored
Babys Daddy Removal Team.
You want more,
right here in Vegas? Look up Charles Bush, Daniel Mendoza, and Henry
Rowe, for starters.
(I loved the
1996 coroners inquest for hapless hobo Henry Rowe. Cops initially
said chemical tests on Rowes clothing as well as the officers
would prove or disprove Officer George Peases assertion that
Rowe grabbed Peases gun after the officer rousted him in his
isolated cardboard shack late at night, whereupon Officer Pease
had to slit Rowes throat and shoot him in the head Officer
Peases third on-duty kill, all conveniently lacking any witnesses.
By the time of the inquest, though, Metro had decided not to run
the chemical tests, explaining theyd be costly and most likely
inconclusive. And if you believe that, Ive got
some furtive movements toward the waistband that I can
sell you at a reasonable price.)
Submit, submit,
submit. Die, die, die. And they wont even let you in the door
to the half-empty hearing room if you try to attend one of their
supposedly
public coroners Inquests.
Europes
Jews and other minorities submitted to lawful orders
from 1934 to 1944. Where did it get them? Dead, and the Swiss insurance
companies wouldnt even pay off their remaining survivors,
since the Nazis had somehow neglected to issue proper death certificates!
This used to
be a free country. For the first 50 years of the life of this Republic
when things were pretty peaceful, from all reports
we didnt even HAVE any police forces as we know them today.
When was the Constitution amended, Former Officer Ron? When did
they take the old part that says were to remain secure
in our persons, houses papers, and effects, free from search
and seizure unless a warrant is issued upon probable cause
supported by oath or affirmation
and add to it your
new section that reads Oh yeah, unless someone calling himself
a policeman decides to stop you and issue whatever arbitrary orders
and commands he can dream up, at which point you have to submit
or else he can shoot you down like a dog?
Ive got
my copy of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights in front of me,
Officer Ron you know, the one every public servant
swears an oath to protect and defend, even at the cost
of his or her own, precious officer safety? And I cant
find that part.
March
23, 2009
Vin
Suprynowicz [send
him mail] is assistant editorial page editor of the daily Las
Vegas Review-Journal and author of The
Black Arrow. Visit his
blog.
Copyright
© 2009 Vin Suprynowicz
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