Proserpina
Senior Member
Thanks for sharing.
Thanks for the lovely rant. Did you have a question, or are you simply looking for a debate here?What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? Illinois
I have a hard time understanding how a person can pinch somebody for dui when they let off a fellow public servant or do it themselves so often. Much proof to this, it doesn't take an Einstein to understand. Of all dui charges in Illinois against cops, it's ~ 44 percent when out of state, for the non-cop it's about 2 percent. Off duty cops kill more then the non-cop percentage wise due to dui. Yet, it's EXTREMELY RARE for an off-duty cop to be arrested due to dui unless they are:
driving out of state, or have killed or seriously injured somebody.
I have a good friend who was a states attorney and he said he got out of about 9 speeding tickets because he showed his id. I've had cop friends tell me the practice of 'professional courtesy' is way worse then I think, and they become the enemy if they give a fellow officer a dui. If you don't want to believe it, you have the right to be ignorant, but just ask a cop what a 'professional courtesy' is.
Statistics I gave above are enough to tell you how rampant the hypocrisy is.
MADD is big buisiness and makes lawyers and politicians happy. I'm against drunk driving like everybody else, but I would love for others to call out this unbelievable hypocrisy which is something MADD and others who profit from the dui buisiness are too afraid ever do. That's also why you don't hear lawyers in this forum call them out either, as the cops and dui's make them money. Think for yourselves, most lawyers are incompetent and you are best off educating yourself and staying away from high price lawyers.
Interesting.What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? Illinois
I have a hard time understanding how a person can pinch somebody for dui when they let off a fellow public servant or do it themselves so often. Much proof to this, it doesn't take an Einstein to understand. Of all dui charges in Illinois against cops, it's ~ 44 percent when out of state, for the non-cop it's about 2 percent. Off duty cops kill more then the non-cop percentage wise due to dui. Yet, it's EXTREMELY RARE for an off-duty cop to be arrested due to dui unless they are:
driving out of state, or have killed or seriously injured somebody.
I have a good friend who was a states attorney and he said he got out of about 9 speeding tickets because he showed his id. I've had cop friends tell me the practice of 'professional courtesy' is way worse then I think, and they become the enemy if they give a fellow officer a dui. If you don't want to believe it, you have the right to be ignorant, but just ask a cop what a 'professional courtesy' is.
Statistics I gave above are enough to tell you how rampant the hypocrisy is.
MADD is big buisiness and makes lawyers and politicians happy. I'm against drunk driving like everybody else, but I would love for others to call out this unbelievable hypocrisy which is something MADD and others who profit from the dui buisiness are too afraid ever do. That's also why you don't hear lawyers in this forum call them out either, as the cops and dui's make them money. Think for yourselves, most lawyers are incompetent and you are best off educating yourself and staying away from high price lawyers.
Steve...do you really feel telling drunks to just go straight home is fair to the rest of the public who might be killed by those drunks? Now...I do sometimes wonder if the newer levels of determining who is drunk or not are unreasonable? yes, I do. However, whatever the law is, it should apply to everyone. Not only should there be no "professional courtesy", but law enforcement personnel should be held to at least the same standards as the general public, if not to stricter standards.Before the Mothers got Mad, the police used to tell the drunks to go straight home. Then came Debbie Irwin, who sued the town and won because they didn't arrest the drunk driver who killed her husband when they had the chance. Now it's a liability for the police if they DON'T arrest a drunk.
It seems to me that the police treat other police like they would like to treat the rest of the public, but can't.
Thank you for providing the article links, witzeroni.http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2012-02-22/news/ct-met-officer-dui-death-sentencing-0222-20120222_1_trenton-booker-officer-richard-bolling-chicago-cop
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/06/04/john-ardelean-charges-dro_n_601064.html
http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2009-05-30/news/0905290254_1_chicago-cop-off-duty-breathalyzer
http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2009-04-16/news/0904150882_1_police-supt-chicago-police-officers-names
Last one gives some statistics: 6 / 13 of Chicago cops arrested were out of state dui's.
5 / 13 were accident involved
"Weis earlier this week pointed out the small number of officers who have been accused of driving drunk compared to the department's 13,000 officers. Statistically speaking, about one in 1,000 Chicago officers were arrested for DUI last year. That pales by comparison to a national average of one drunk-driving arrest for every 155 drivers, according to U.S. Department of Health and Human Services statistics."
Couldn't be because of 'professional courtesy' could it??
I will try to find more stats.
Maybe more IL officers know not to let their hair down too much. There is no way to objectively answer this question, so you are left to assume what you will.Even in this case, fellow officers tried to protect their fellow officer, this is a good example how far they go to protect their own:
http://abcnews.go.com/US/chicago-police-found-guilty-covering-bartender-beating/story?id=17716840#.Uc731PmsiS
If professional courtesy is so rare please explain why percentage of dui's out of state for off duty officers so much higher than the hoi polloi, in Illinois at least.
It could be that officers drink and drive at a rate less than the general public. Again, there is no objective answer - you can't prove a negative.Also,
do a search on how many off-duty officers killed others through their dui's in Illinois, compare that to how many times an off-duty cop was killed by a non-cop. Statistically, these numbers should be the same if cops and non-cops drink and drive at the same rate.
There's no way to argue with anecdotal data. I can provide contrary anecdotal data and from firsthand experiences ... but, that doesn't account for regional actions, the actions of some departments that may be more insular, or that will penetrate any anti-police bias that might exist.I have seen too much personally and have heard stories from those I know wouldn't lie (a friend cop with many stories, and a brother who is a good friend of a firefighter who was with him when he was driving to the White Sox game). The firefighter was about to get pinched when he showed cop his id. The cops attitute totally changed and he just made somebody else drive. My wife is very good friends with a state trooper in a NE state. She openly admits about the professional courtesy, with the excuse that they suffer tougher sentences when busted.
No.Have you ever given a fellow officer or fellow public servant a free pass when it comes to dui?
Yes. Of course, that also depends on what you mean by a "free pass." I know officers who weren't arrested, and some not prosecuted for DUI, but have lost their jobs all the same.Do you know of fellow officers who have been given a free pass?
Not very. But, I cannot provide objective data to back that up.How rampant is this practice?
Nope. But, I don't drink and I have not had a drink for 22 years, 350 days.We're you ever given a pass by a fellow officer?
I always answer honestly. Though, you have no way to know that so why ask such a question?Please answer honestly or do not answer.
Oh really? Most?Most private vehicles owned by law enforcement have some form of identification on them so when they get stopped it’s readily apparent to the offer that makes the stop.
No one denies that the police (and people in most any profession) give preferencial treatment when they can to their peers, family or friends. It's not simply the police.There’s little doubt among the general public that Professional Courtesy exists.
And there are many instances of officers being disciplined and fired for actions that never make the news. Why? Because most internal complaints and discipline are initiated as a result of agency (peer or supervisor) action, not a complaint from the public. So, keep that in mind as well.If you do read of an instance in the news there’s probably 10 that don’t get reported.
Not sure where "round here" might be, but I suppose the same might be true here as well. But, most officers will cut a break to friends as well. As a note, I have issued cites to friends, to kids of friends, and even towed the car and arrested a reckless driver who happened to be the son of a fire captain and jail supervisor. So, this is not a universal occurrence that occurs in all instances.Around here speeding tickets are almost universally forgiven extending even to family members, sometimes firemen too.
Maybe where you are. Out here, the CHP tend to get those license plates that indicate the CHP radio frequency, but other than that few officers put obvious signs of their employment on their cars or their family's cars. Why? because it tends to make them targets by certain people. In one agency I worked for we were told NOT to put DSA stickers on the car or make any indication of our employment on personal vehicles ... the reason was painfully obvious after some officers had their cars vandalized, and one had his house shot up when some turds followed him home.Most private vehicles owned by law enforcement have some form of identification on them so when they get stopped it’s readily apparent to the offer that makes the stop.
You're right, we don't. But, since most interactions the public has with the police involve NEGATIVE interactions, it would be - on its face - unfair to have the public rate officers.I do wish however that there were a better way for law enforcement departments and individual officers to be rated by the public. Most honest officers don’t want bad officers in their ranks any more then the public does.