To Protect and to Serve II

Something that came to my attention this weekend is the mass use of steroids by the 20something cops in my SILs department. No way the bosses don’t know this and if it’s so prevalent in that medium/small department it has to be happening all over the country.
 
Something that came to my attention this weekend is the mass use of steroids by the 20something cops in my SILs department. No way the bosses don’t know this and if it’s so prevalent in that medium/small department it has to be happening all over the country.

@NurseGoodVol spoke about this last year. It didn't get the proper attention that it deserved back then.

The elephant in the police room.
 
I never gave it much thought until this weekend and it's IMO a major problem.
It is indeed. It’s a departments dirty little secret. Nobody thinks anything about it until some hopped up rhoided out cop beats the crap out of someone.
The use of steroids should be banned by people who are expected to be level headed and carry a gun. Yet police departments ignore the problem, until it bites them.
 
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DumbAzz still did not understand the law after he was educated on it more than once.


These cops can't continue to be this dumb. There are far to many instances of cops doing this wrong by now for them to not know what the law is in their jurisdiction. Kudos to the senior officer for coming in to clean that up., however.
 
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That piece of trash should be fired ASAP.
I agree, there was no reason to do it at all.

She clearly was trying to slow down and indicate with the flashers her possible intent, BUT even if the officer "assumed" she was evading, you don't pit someone like that for a damn traffic charge. Trooper being trooper on this one
 
I think police officers should have to carry insurance similar to doctor's malpractice insurance. They should have to share in the financial burden of their actions from law suits. Enough incidents, enough claims, enough lawsuits = no insurance, no job.
 
I think police officers should have to carry insurance similar to doctor's malpractice insurance. They should have to share in the financial burden of their actions from law suits. Enough incidents, enough claims, enough lawsuits = no insurance, no job.

and no police at all...you don't understand the importance of having protection from the onslaught of frivolous lawsuits that would be brought by lawyers trying to make money when officers didn't do anything wrong. You literally would have officers being sued for 5-10 incidents a day
 
and no police at all...you don't understand the importance of having protection from the onslaught of frivolous lawsuits that would be brought by lawyers trying to make money when officers didn't do anything wrong. You literally would have officers being sued for 5-10 incidents a day
Just because they have insurance? What's stopping people now for filing frivolous law suits? When a cop does stupid things, whether intentional or not, over and over, he should have some financial ramifications as well.

I'm as pro cop as you'll find. I've got several friends that are cops. But when you see incidents like the one in the video above, where after all that went down, he still doesn't get that he can't force someone to provide ID, maybe just maybe he should have something else to reinforce the correct law. Maybe if he felt a little pain in his wallet he would think a little before doing stupid ****. Same with the AR state trooper that felt like he needed to pit that pregnant woman.
 
I think police officers should have to carry insurance similar to doctor's malpractice insurance. They should have to share in the financial burden of their actions from law suits. Enough incidents, enough claims, enough lawsuits = no insurance, no job.

Going to have to raise their pay significantly.
 
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