How wide spread was corruption and police brutality in your line of work?
Also: What do you think about prohibition laws?
Also: What do you think about prohibition laws?
The long answer is because I like helping people. I'm usually a very empathetic person I'm also very large so i can be scary when I need to be. I love the community I live in now and want nothing more than to try and make it better.Xvito said:Why did you become a cop?
Not to terribly bad in our department the internal affairs (or OPR as we called it) was very tough. Brutality... well the only time I seen anything like that is after a long chase sometimes your adrenaline and heart are pumping so hard a guy will throw in one more punch than he needed. The biggest problem I saw was people trash talking. When you got the perp/inmate on the ground you don't call him a ************ he's still 'sir'.Jinx_Dragon said:How wide spread was corruption and police brutality in your line of work?
Also: What do you think about prohibition laws?
Yes, but it's a trade secret. You'll have to join a department if you want to know. (hint: it's in the place you'd least suspect)WanderFreak said:Is it true that, there is a place in a man's head that, if you shoot it, it will explode?
[small]I had to.[/small]
That's good to hear, because I happen to know that a lot of cops only become cops only to satisfy their needs for power. (This information actually comes from studies carried out by the police themselves (in my country)).ace_of_something said:The long answer is because I like helping people. I'm usually a very empathetic person I'm also very large so i can be scary when I need to be. I love the community I live in now and want nothing more than to try and make it better.Xvito said:Why did you become a cop?
the short answer is that i read too many comic books as a kid.
That would be the mysterious powers of the badge. It causes people to use more turn signals, drive slower, say 'sir' and 'please' more often, walk without slouching, and hold in your farts. It basically means you have a good upbringing. You were taught to respect authority to a degree and maybe even have a minor amount of fear for it. Trust me though when I say you are in the minority. That's one of the biggest shockers I expected instant respect everywhere you go. That is not even close to the case.AngloDoom said:Why is it that, every time a policeman walks past me, I start to walk extra casual.
I do this sort of happy, freely-swinging arm walk past the officer, intending to give them a look and smile, then then look straight ahead whilst trying to keep my face as 'casual' as possible.
In every one of those situations I've never done anything wrong and I also have family who are in the police. So what kind of mind-altering super-device are you using to make me outstanding citizen of the month when you walk by?
A lot of drunken women will offer things up to sexual favors to get out of? well pretty much anything. There is a vast array of reasons this doesn?t work. I've even had one woman grab my crotch though she than went to jail for assault on an officer and the other cops teased me for a good while about being so bashful or that I should've gotten her number for lazy.quiet_samurai said:Have you ever had an attractive women try and use her lady charms to get out of a ticket or be arrested?
Well, giving Speeding tickets save lives....Motti said:Have you ever saved someone's life (doing it by way of drug bust doesn't count)?
Part of that is that it's not my favorite thing to talk about.iron codpiece said:I see earlier you put you never shot a guy, but didn't you a couple times?
Alcohol not being illegal is hard for me to think of any examples or gather data for outside of experience. If I had to make an informed guess though - I?d say alcohol can DEFINITLY cause crime but not the organized type of crime which I am speaking. More sporadic violence - spousal abuse, vandalism, and most obviously vehicle related crimes are more common. I?d argue that a bad neighborhood causes the alcoholism not the other way around. The other thing is while widespread (adult) drug use is more common in poorer/criminally active neighborhoods alcoholism occurs in all tiers of society. (Of course sturgeon?s law applies)Crystalgate said:I used to work vice and have seen that every illegal drug even weed is a detrament to the community as a whole. Yes, it's your body but... what about your sibling that sees you and doesn't handle the weed as well as you do later in life and doesn't function as an adult? Or the dealer's dealer's dealer you bought from who has a cache of illegal weapons he also buys and sells using your money? what about the mother who decides weed is more important than feeding her children? what about the man who stops fixing his house cuz he doesn't care; which shows thugs that 'no one cares' about this neighborhood and moves in? It's not as obviously detrimental but it still is.
I'm curious, how does the effects of alcohol compare to that? Have you noticed it being significantly more or less detrimental than weed?
It was probably an undercover thing.Graustein said:The cops are allowed to do that? I thought that came under entrapment (although I could be completely wrong).ace_of_something said:I have actually sold drugs myself... but that was to arrest mid level dealers... and i didn't see one dime.
500 Magnum... nuff said...Helnurath said:Can you recommend a good personal defense handgun?
Okay, I've read the whole thread and I have a few questions.ace_of_something said:You can ask me questions like, things you want to know about police behavior, jail, things about the system. My knowledge from experience is strictly American, but I do have a small amount of knowledge academically of other countries (really small).