― M. White (Miguelito), Friday, 12 January 2007 18:16 (nineteen years ago)
― You've Got Scourage On Your Breath (Haberdager), Friday, 12 January 2007 18:20 (nineteen years ago)
― Beth Parker (Beth Parker), Friday, 12 January 2007 18:20 (nineteen years ago)
― jel -- (jel), Friday, 12 January 2007 18:20 (nineteen years ago)
― Beth Parker (Beth Parker), Friday, 12 January 2007 18:21 (nineteen years ago)
(Besides which, note that his story doesn't make any sense: he was approached by one man, and then, without discussion, was suddenly wrestled to the ground by five? Which suggests that he got PLENTY of time to talk things over -- long enough for four more men to come by.)
― nabisco (nabisco), Friday, 12 January 2007 18:28 (nineteen years ago)
― Beth Parker (Beth Parker), Friday, 12 January 2007 18:31 (nineteen years ago)
Umm, because having pedestrians cross the street at unexpected spots makes it a thousand times more likely that they'll get hit by cars, cause cars to swerve into accidents and pileups, or otherwise contribute to death, injury, and property damage? Whereas if pedestrians cross the street at designated traffic stops, everyone's on the same page and no one gets surprised? I mean, sure, it's not a law you want to overenforce on pleasant little roads -- but c'mon, it's not like the principle doesn't make perfect sense.
― nabisco (nabisco), Friday, 12 January 2007 18:34 (nineteen years ago)
― M. White (Miguelito), Friday, 12 January 2007 18:36 (nineteen years ago)
― jel -- (jel), Friday, 12 January 2007 18:40 (nineteen years ago)
― jel -- (jel), Friday, 12 January 2007 18:41 (nineteen years ago)
― lk (lawrence kansas), Friday, 12 January 2007 18:43 (nineteen years ago)
― M. White (Miguelito), Friday, 12 January 2007 18:55 (nineteen years ago)
― gabbneb (gabbneb), Friday, 12 January 2007 18:57 (nineteen years ago)
― everything (everything), Friday, 12 January 2007 18:58 (nineteen years ago)
― jel -- (jel), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:00 (nineteen years ago)
― gabbneb (gabbneb), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:01 (nineteen years ago)
― do i have to draw you a diaphragm (Rock Hardy), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:01 (nineteen years ago)
― Bnad (Bnad), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:08 (nineteen years ago)
― molly mummenschanz (mollyd), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:09 (nineteen years ago)
― TOMB07 (TOMBOT), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:16 (nineteen years ago)
― TOMB07 (TOMBOT), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:17 (nineteen years ago)
― Ned Raggett (Ned), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:19 (nineteen years ago)
lol
― The Android Cat (Dan Perry), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:19 (nineteen years ago)
― TOMB07 (TOMBOT), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:20 (nineteen years ago)
filthy, foetid paddy wagon
"It was a fantastic experience going into that detention centre and spending time with those miserable wretches of the earth."
― fuck you slacks (Mr.Que), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:22 (nineteen years ago)
― gabbneb (gabbneb), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:23 (nineteen years ago)
― Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:25 (nineteen years ago)
Actually, wouldn't it be flout?
― Fleischhutliebe! like a warm, furry meatloaf (Fluffy Bear Hearts Rainbows), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:25 (nineteen years ago)
― The Android Cat (Dan Perry), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:27 (nineteen years ago)
My roommate (in Atlanta obv.) got a jaywalking ticket. No cars around. The nearest crosswalk was two blocks away. The fine was ONE HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-FIVE fucking dollars.
(It was Halloween; we suspect that the police needed to fill their quotas or some shit)
― Curt1s St3ph3ns, Friday, 12 January 2007 19:28 (nineteen years ago)
― gabbneb (gabbneb), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:28 (nineteen years ago)
― Fleischhutliebe! like a warm, furry meatloaf (Fluffy Bear Hearts Rainbows), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:30 (nineteen years ago)
― jaymc (jaymc), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:33 (nineteen years ago)
I know you're kidding, but jesus christ dude, you must have it backwards when you distinguish between Atlanta vs. the rest of Georgia
― Curt1s St3ph3ns, Friday, 12 January 2007 19:33 (nineteen years ago)
Gleefully Illiterate BOT OTM that we live in world where "attitude does not attract sympathy" means the same thing as "should be beat the fuck up"
― nabisco (nabisco), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:34 (nineteen years ago)
― Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:34 (nineteen years ago)
― Sweet Tater (kelstarry), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:35 (nineteen years ago)
― gabbneb (gabbneb), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:36 (nineteen years ago)
― TOMB07 (TOMBOT), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:36 (nineteen years ago)
― Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:37 (nineteen years ago)
― Curt1s St3ph3ns, Friday, 12 January 2007 19:38 (nineteen years ago)
― The Android Cat (Dan Perry), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:38 (nineteen years ago)
― Ned Raggett (Ned), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:38 (nineteen years ago)
― AllyzayEisenschefterBDawkinsFlyingSquirrelRomoCrying.jpg (allyzay), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:38 (nineteen years ago)
― gabbneb (gabbneb), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:39 (nineteen years ago)
― AllyzayEisenschefterBDawkinsFlyingSquirrelRomoCrying.jpg (allyzay), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:39 (nineteen years ago)
― cheesesteak and shake (dubplatestyle), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:40 (nineteen years ago)
― lauren (laurenp), Friday, 12 January 2007 19:40 (nineteen years ago)
― The Android Cat (Dan Perry), Friday, 12 January 2007 22:55 (nineteen years ago)
The first part of this has NOTHING to do with how he acts or may act in a situation with the police, by the way.
― fuck you slacks (Mr.Que), Friday, 12 January 2007 22:56 (nineteen years ago)
Now, I don't know what really happened here. But I think that there are lots of ways to deal with noncooperative people other than roughing them up.
Tangenially-related anecdote that proves nothing but functions in leiu of real proof:
I watched a video of an arrest in Africa (can't remember what country) a while ago, on some "COPS"-type TV show. A crazy man was running amok through a village with a machete. Not hurting anyone, but threatening to, and refusing to drop the weapon when confronted by police.
The cops, without body armor but armed with pistols, chased this guy for hours, dodging machete swings. They never fired a shot. They tried to throw nets over him, threw water at him, attempted to disarm him over and over. Eventually they got him down and took the machete away. Then trucked him off, still struggling, without ever hitting him once or using a choke hold.
Interviewed afterwards, the cops basically said, "Sure, we could have shot him, but we knew that he was crazy and that his actions weren't really his fault. We took personal risks rather than killing him because that's the nature of the job."
And I thought, this would NEVER happen in my country. No way, no how. No matter where you are, you fail to drop a machete when a cop says so, they're probably gonna kill you. You swing at a cop with a machete, they're almost certainly gonna kill you, and if not, you're gonna have at least a few broken ribs to show for your troubles.
― Adam Beales (Pye Poudre), Friday, 12 January 2007 22:59 (nineteen years ago)
Bad policy is bad policy. I know you don't like the slippery slope but once you start excusing the cops for acting like thugs, they'll keep pushing it, and beating up people who ask to see your badge before they submit IS thuggish and paternalistic. Have you ever been in a town where the cips are afraid, politically, of the people? They're sure as hell a lot more circumspect in their dealings with the citizenry. My real point there was about how insular America believes that everyone should be perfectly savvy about how shit works in America even though half of us couldn't find a given country on the map. Are you really saying that the cop couldn't have recognized that the prof was a foregner and cut him a second of slack? That he couldn't have been trained to defuse the situation? Quit arguing for lowered standards and fight for higher ones, sheesh. DHS is already keeping professors and students out of the country, which will make us more parochial and more insular. We're already looking and behaving less like an admirable country as it is and I am perfectly willing to exercise my rights as a patriotic American and say 'fuck that.'
I'm sorry if I come from a city where I'm more scared of the cops beating me up for my fajitas than arresting me for jaywalking or smoking weed in the street.
― M. White (Miguelito), Friday, 12 January 2007 23:04 (nineteen years ago)
Friend of mine, albeit in the 80's.
― M. White (Miguelito), Friday, 12 January 2007 23:06 (nineteen years ago)
My only complaint is with the verb 'trust'. If you wish to have faith, that's fine, but you also need sunshine laws, some amount of community police oversight, a commitmment to an independent judiciary (which F-A lauds btw), a civilized incarceration system, and a sensibility that avoids the paternalistic tendency to criminalize every petty little thing.
― M. White (Miguelito), Friday, 12 January 2007 23:10 (nineteen years ago)
This is exactly how I feel, re: police violence. The circumstances under which any violent response by a police officer is acceptable should be VERY, VERY stringently defined and enforced.
Since they're allowed to carry guns and control the behavior of ordinary citizens, and since their word carries more weight in court than that of ordinary citizens, they should be held to the highest standard possible.
― Adam Beales (Pye Poudre), Friday, 12 January 2007 23:11 (nineteen years ago)
it does?
― gabbneb (gabbneb), Friday, 12 January 2007 23:24 (nineteen years ago)
Adam, you're conflating totally different things. I can acknowledge the police's authority to arrest people and still have grave concerns about the circumstances in which they'll fire their weapons. Those are two totally different acts, with very different consequences, and there needn't be any slope connecting them.
And M, you're totally begging the question here, and you've completely evaded my query about what procedure you'd recomment. How are the police "acting like thugs" here -- by arresting a person who fails to present ID in order to be ticketed? What "higher standard" would you write into procedure? And what constitutes the "violence" here -- the fact that, when a man tried to avoid arrest, they brought him to the ground without significant injury? What "higher standard" would you write into that one?
Would you criticize this sequence of events if it had happened to a drunk driver? Policeman stops drunk driver, asks for identification. Drunk driver refuses to provide it. Policeman says "I'm going to have to arrest you, then." Drunk driver tries to argue and avoid arrest. Policeman safely brings drunk driver to ground and takes him to station.
That's a precise procedural equivalent to what happened to this guy; it sounds entirely by-the-book to me, and every one of the procedures in that book seems like a sensible high standard to me already.
― nabisco (nabisco), Friday, 12 January 2007 23:25 (nineteen years ago)
"Other officers helped him handcuff the historian. According to Leonpacher's report, the professor said: "Well now I believe that you are the police."
Let's be very clear, I will never advocate resisting arrest or even being personally vindictive to law enforcement, but a free society, and better, a civilized society should keep an eye on these things. F-A's biggest mistake, imo, was to say 'everyone else was doing' as opposed to asking. There are crosswalks in Britain and he should know better to jaywalk anywhere unless he's sure of himself. In the account I made upthread about getting busted for jaywalking in L.A., the cop said something very interesting to me. I said, "I looked up the hill and there was no-one coming (it was a one way street) so I didn't impede the flow of traffic and I looked to my left and there was no-one in the right turn lane (one can, as Woody Allen pointed out, make right turns on red light in CA) so I don't see what I did?
He replied, "Ah, but you didn't see me so you WEREN'T really totally aware of your surroundings." He had been about 100 feet back in the righ turn lane. "I can't let these people see you getting away with this."
I'd already told him that one could jaywalk with impunity in San Francisco and that I didn't realize it was so harshly penalized so I merely said, "Well, now I know, officer. I hate to rush you but they're calling for me on the production I'm working on around the corner." My radio was indeed crackling with a call for 'locations'. He wrote it out and wished me a good day. It was about $55.00, 'cause he only gave cited me for crossing against the 'don't walk' sign.
― M. White (Miguelito), Friday, 12 January 2007 23:31 (nineteen years ago)
― The Android Cat (Dan Perry), Friday, 12 January 2007 23:35 (nineteen years ago)
― nabisco (nabisco), Friday, 12 January 2007 23:35 (nineteen years ago)
― The Android Cat (Dan Perry), Friday, 12 January 2007 23:36 (nineteen years ago)
Since we're both reading the same material, maybe the difference lies in the experience we've had with cops, or what we imagine cops are like? I dunno.
Anyway, I do think that it's reasonable to talk about police violence in an aggregate sense. Non-lethal and lethal violence may just be different faces of the same coin.
Still, I admit I overreacted in my initial responses. Based on what I know (vs. what I imagine), there's no reason to call for the firing/prosecution of the cops involved. I was outta line in that.
― Adam Beales (Pye Poudre), Friday, 12 January 2007 23:37 (nineteen years ago)
My prejudice is entirely against intellectuals with no realworld skills, a type I had to deal with fairly often when I worked for the U. of Miss. They were a trial, a chore and a pain. If they'd look up from their research just a little bit and figure out how the world works off-campus, they'd be able to avoid situations like F-A found himself in. On the other hand, maybe distaste for the "real world" is what pushed them into academe to begin with. I know my issues may be unfair to them, and it's more my problem than theirs, but this case really rubbed against that prejudice.
― do i have to draw you a diaphragm (Rock Hardy), Friday, 12 January 2007 23:47 (nineteen years ago)
Though they weren't really supposed to help with lock-ups (i.e. stopping pedestrian and vehicular traffic for a shot) the cops on one shoot, when begged ''cause the light was going down and since they would be with us even after nightfall 'til the bitter end, acquiesced. One young and stern officer was at an intersection 90 degrees from mine. I was covering his side walk and watching for any looie-loos who might come out from the storefronts for what would be a 30 second take at most. A car came up and the driver was rubbernecking at the set and the crew and the lights and didn't see the cop until the last moment. The cop was at the crosswalk itself and he started screaming at the guy less in a 'don't hit people in the crosswalk, asshole' way than in a 'obey the command of an officer in uniform way' freaking the driver out. However, his voice had been loud enough that they had to shoot the scene over. One of the 2nd AD's complained to me and I told him to go fuck himslef, we weren't supposed to be using cops for that anyway; it's illegal. The Sergeant, well experienced in augmenting his salary with movie detail overtime, heard this and he came over to talk to the cop, making the following points:
1) The production co. doesn't have the right to stop anyone. They can only ask for your co-operation.2.) You get more flies with honey than vinegar. Most people will be glad to help if you ask them respectfully and smile.3.) The reason the car got so close was 'cause you were rubbernecking too. You should have been stopping them 20 feet up the hill.4.) We all want to get home as soon as possible, right? Don't forget to smile.
So his advice was to be respectful and be polite and it was partly professional (Don't stare. You're at work) and partly tactical (stand up the hill and not right at the intersection).
That same Sergeant once told me that what was mind-boggling to him as a cop, in uniform, with a gun on his hip, was that people would mouth off to him, a man who could use the very wide power of disobeying a police officer, without compunction, but the second he pulled out his citation pad and pen, when money came into play, they became remarkably more co-operative.
Nabisco, upon reflection, I don't know how relevant that is, but policing seems to me as much an art as a science and Leonpacher just seems like a mediocre cop to me. If a civilain says, show me your badge or your ID, show him your badge, if only to make sure that if anything goes down, HE's the asshole.
― M. White (Miguelito), Friday, 12 January 2007 23:51 (nineteen years ago)
I submit that we need both people with real world skills and intellectuals. I'd rather work with the former and dine with the later, as a rule, though. The thing is that the police have to police EVERYBODY; shy people, crazy people, outgoing people, happy people, sociopaths, manipulative people, mythomaniacs, moralistic browbeaters, racists, people fucked-up on drugs, college professors, homeless people, clerks, beauticians, etc...
You do see that the way you handled the situation was totally, completely different from the way the professor did, right?
Notice my preface - F-A's biggest mistake, imo
― M. White (Miguelito), Friday, 12 January 2007 23:57 (nineteen years ago)
― Adam Beales (Pye Poudre), Friday, 12 January 2007 23:59 (nineteen years ago)
― nabisco (nabisco), Saturday, 13 January 2007 00:00 (nineteen years ago)
No argument here. I struggle with my predispositions. I also have a friend who is an Oxford don AND has real world skills, so my sympathy for the dude in Atlanta is lessened.
― do i have to draw you a diaphragm (Rock Hardy), Saturday, 13 January 2007 00:04 (nineteen years ago)
― You've Got Scourage On Your Breath (Haberdager), Saturday, 13 January 2007 00:07 (nineteen years ago)
Even if some action was warranted, was injurious force warranted? The professor wasn't seriously injured, of course, but he was roughed up (according to his own version of the events, anyway).
I don't think all rules of behavior can be quantified and set in stone. Rather, we should expect police officers to display a modicum of judgement, tact and sensitivity. When it comes to the application of force, poor judgement should not be accepted, even if the actions in question are technically within bounds.
― Adam Beales (Pye Poudre), Saturday, 13 January 2007 00:12 (nineteen years ago)
― Adam Beales (Pye Poudre), Saturday, 13 January 2007 00:14 (nineteen years ago)
― do i have to draw you a diaphragm (Rock Hardy), Saturday, 13 January 2007 00:19 (nineteen years ago)
We do have crosswalks in Britain but you're under no obligation to obey them. We don't have jaywalking laws, you can cross wherever and whenever you want.
That said, I was aware of the jaywalking laws when I went to the US, and really a professor who has presumably travelled abroad before should be aware of them as well.
― Colonel Poo (Colonel Poo), Saturday, 13 January 2007 00:21 (nineteen years ago)
in the UK if they really don't want you to walk across somewhere, they'll put up railings to discourage it -- and plenty of people (ie me) will walk round the railings and walk through the traffic
(i think it is actually really illegal on motorways)
― mark s (mark s), Saturday, 13 January 2007 00:50 (nineteen years ago)
― Colonel Poo (Colonel Poo), Saturday, 13 January 2007 00:53 (nineteen years ago)
― mark s (mark s), Saturday, 13 January 2007 00:58 (nineteen years ago)
― Colonel Poo (Colonel Poo), Saturday, 13 January 2007 01:01 (nineteen years ago)
― timmy tannin (pompous), Saturday, 13 January 2007 01:02 (nineteen years ago)
Haha, I'm starting to think maybe you guys are the ones who trust cops more than me: I prefer for as many of their tactics and procedures as possible to be set in stone! There's a long history of bad things happening when people with guns and authority just get told to use their own judgment.
As for whether force was necessary, eh, we could go round and round on this, but if you say "you are under arrest" and someone keeps saying "no I'm not" -- what's the other option here? I mean, I think we all agree that it'd have been nice if they'd spent a couple minutes saying "hey, don't worry, here's my badge, I'm just gonna write you a ticket" before arrest even came into the picture. But I'm not gonna criticize them too much for, like, properly arresting someone. (And c'mon, if pressing someone to the ground is "injurious force," then every uncooperative arrestee in history has been exposed to injurious force.)
― nabisco (nabisco), Saturday, 13 January 2007 02:07 (nineteen years ago)
That being said, it's very troubling that the police officer refused to provide ID, and it's that detail (if true) that prevents me from writing off the prof as a total jackoff.
― max (maxreax), Saturday, 13 January 2007 02:11 (nineteen years ago)
― Trayce (trayce), Saturday, 13 January 2007 07:32 (nineteen years ago)
Aus cops are, I think, more like US ones - they'll shoot you if you do something stupid to be honest (like wave a sword about, or be aboriginal. Um.)
― Trayce (trayce), Saturday, 13 January 2007 07:34 (nineteen years ago)
http://ase.tufts.edu/faculty-guide/images/photos/fFernandez-Armesto.jpg
― bobby bedelia (van dover), Saturday, 13 January 2007 07:35 (nineteen years ago)
― Trayce (trayce), Saturday, 13 January 2007 07:40 (nineteen years ago)
awesome!
― Curt1s St3ph3ns, Saturday, 13 January 2007 09:02 (nineteen years ago)
― ledge (ledge), Saturday, 13 January 2007 10:08 (nineteen years ago)
― Trayce (trayce), Saturday, 13 January 2007 10:14 (nineteen years ago)
― ledge (ledge), Saturday, 13 January 2007 10:31 (nineteen years ago)
The only part about the cop I think might have been iffy was that he said he never pulled out his badge because F-A kept asking him for his driver's license...cop was wearing other police-identified gear and there were other policemen in the visible area so he had no idea why F-A was being so difficult. There were hundreds of people in the immediate vicinity of the incident and everyone was following the rent-a-cops to keep order at the crosswalks. F-A pretended like he didn't have to follow the rules and when a cop called him out on it, he played the dumb foreigner card as a defense.
― don weiner (don weiner), Saturday, 13 January 2007 11:47 (nineteen years ago)
― ledge (ledge), Saturday, 13 January 2007 11:52 (nineteen years ago)
― Euai Kapaui (tracerhand), Saturday, 13 January 2007 12:38 (nineteen years ago)
Well, I tried that, and got hit by ten tons of Nabisco-logic. It's a shame when he disagrees with you on something, because you've gotta be world debating champion or whatever to win your side of the argument.
Dude has now himself written a lengthy spiel about the American system in the Independent (well, where else?) today. I had a brief read, but I think it'd be better served up here. As soon as it turns up on the site, I'll link it, and the Yanks can redouble their mirth.
― You've Got Scourage On Your Breath (Haberdager), Saturday, 13 January 2007 14:15 (nineteen years ago)
In America they have jaywalking conventions?
― Alba (Alba), Saturday, 13 January 2007 14:28 (nineteen years ago)
― mark s (mark s), Saturday, 13 January 2007 14:29 (nineteen years ago)
― You've Got Scourage On Your Breath (Haberdager), Saturday, 13 January 2007 17:15 (nineteen years ago)
-- ledge (tomdotledge...) (webmail), Yesterday 9:08 PM. (ledge) (link)
There was a big problem with pedestrians getting hit in Atlanta for many years
― Curt1s St3ph3ns, Saturday, 13 January 2007 18:14 (nineteen years ago)
― Curt1s St3ph3ns, Saturday, 13 January 2007 18:16 (nineteen years ago)