Officer - You Are Under Arrested!

That would be my guess to in that situation. There is a big problem with fake cops in the south too. Maybe everywhere :dunno:

At the same time, I am wondering if a possible stolen car justified a pursuit at this speed. Again :dunno: but all worked out well.

oh? fake cops as in... somebody driving unmarked car with fake sirens? or somebody wearing fake cop tshirt and badge?
 
oh? fake cops as in... somebody driving unmarked car with fake sirens? or somebody wearing fake cop tshirt and badge?

That's happened here in my State before on occasion. Females get stopped and then raped.

Yiz
 
That's happened here in my State before on occasion. Females get stopped and then raped.

Yiz
yea I've heard of it several times. it's sad....

I recall one thread in here from the past about some guy who got killed due to excessive police force. He sustained brain injury from falling down the stair when the police went to arrest him for police impersonation. The police allegedly pushed him down.

I think that thread got ugly :dunno:
 
Both. and the unmarked cars have fake light too in many cases. I actually saw one pull a guy over. There is one detail easy to spot. Our cops have exempt plates. The fake cars obviously don't.

ah... I didn't think of that.
 
yea I've heard of it several times. it's sad....

I recall one thread in here from the past about some guy who got killed due to excessive police force. He sustained brain injury from falling down the stair when the police went to arrest him for police impersonation. The police allegedly pushed him down.

I think that thread got ugly :dunno:

I think I recall that thread too.

It wasn't pretty, for sure.

Yiz
 
I knew State Troopers looked down on City Police officers. Technically, State Troopers have authority over City Officers if I'm not mistaken. Especially when there is a crime and there is a joint-task force operation that involves both city and state police officers.

I'm glad the guy got pulled over. I am sure he will be forced to resign and an automatic no-rehire will placed on him with the Miami Police force. He will end up working as a bouncer at some cheap strip club in Miami or as a security guard for a senior citizen's assisted living center. :giggle: No one will take him seriously as someone who can uphold the law.
 
I knew State Troopers looked down on City Police officers. Technically, State Troopers have authority over City Officers if I'm not mistaken. Especially when there is a crime and there is a joint-task force operation that involves both city and state police officers.
State Troopers have authority over city police only if mayor requests it. or Governor, I think.

I'm glad the guy got pulled over. I am sure he will be forced to resign and an automatic no-rehire will placed on him with the Miami Police force.
lol he can't be rehired by same employer if he was forced to resign but knowing how it is within police community - nothing's gonna happen out of it. just some silly lover spat thing.

He will end up working as a bouncer at some cheap strip club in Miami or as a security guard for a senior citizen's assisted living center. :giggle: No one will take him seriously as someone who can uphold the law.
lol oh well.
 
just did some googling to find a latest news on it.... wow shit just got really ugly especially in police forums

Reckless driving charge against officer sparks tension between Miami, FHP - Miami-Dade - MiamiHerald.com
First came the controversial traffic stop, cop vs. cop on Florida’s Turnpike, recorded on dash-cam video that went viral showing a state trooper pursuing, cuffing and detaining a hyper-speeding Miami police officer at gunpoint.

Now comes the aftermath: Some Miami police officers are not only defending their compatriot, they are threatening and insulting the Florida Highway Patrol trooper who had the nerve to write him a ticket for reckless driving.

If professional courtesy is a two-way street, it looks like the encounter between Miami Officer Fausto Lopez and Trooper Donna Jane Watts has dropped a massive ro******* between factions in their two agencies.

The grudge match has been playing out in hundreds of tit-for-tat postings on a law enforcement blog.

In this corner, Miami: “I would have loved for Watts to try and pull me over in my marked unit and draw her gun on me! She would have a very rude awakening,’’ an anonymous writer posted Monday. “I would wait til I got to my district, called all my boys, and then you Miss Watts will be very SORRY!!’

On the other side, FHP: “The dumb ass shouldn’t be doing 122 miles per hour that is RECKLESS,’’ posted another writer. “What if it’s your family that idiot rear-ends and kills, will you still want FHP to be so lenient?’’

The growing tension was heightened Sunday when Sgt. Javier Ortiz, vice president of Miami’s Fraternal Order of Police, which represents the city’s 1,000-plus officers, attacked Watts and defended Lopez in a letter to union members. He accused Watts of just wanting to ticket a Miami cop.

“Officer Lopez was extremely professional,’’ Ortiz wrote. “Many of us would have acted differently if a fellow cop pulled a gun on them. I would have thought she possibly was a Baker Act that stole an FHP car and a uniform,’’ he wrote, using a legal term for mentally unstable people who are considered dangerous.

He went on to tell officers: “Please do not get to her level and begin taking action against Troopers because of the poor decisions of one. … Do not be running her information on DAVID, FCIC/NCIC, etc.,’’ referring to law enforcement databases that contain criminal records, addresses and dates of birth.

Such databases are to be used only for law enforcement purposes, not to gain personal information.

The bickering is about a mid-morning Oct. 11 incident that took place in the south-bound lanes of the Turnpike near the Hollywood exit. In an FHP offense report, Watts saids Lopez passed her, weaving in and out of traffic, at speeds over 120 mph.

The dash cam video from her patrol car shows Watts following Lopez for five minutes, with his patrol car generally too far ahead to be seen on camera. As she finally nears him, she turns on her siren and lights for two minutes before he pulls over.

Watts wrote that after she hit her siren, “the driver ignored my lights and siren and again accelerated, changing lanes to the outside lane, back into the center lane, back across to the outside lane and then back to the inside lane. He slowed to 78 mph, but then accelerated again, continuing to change lanes in and out of traffic.”

On the 45-minute video, Lopez is seen eventually pulling over against the concrete highway median and stopping.

Lopez’s attorney, Bill Matthewman, said his client wasn’t aware he was being ordered to pull over, and was simply trying to get out of the trooper’s way until he realized she was tailing him.

The video then shows Watts exiting her car and drawing her weapon as she approaches the Miami patrol car. “Put your hands out the window right now,” she barked. Lopez, who is extremely polite throughout the incident, was then handcuffed and placed in the back of Watts’ vehicle.

“Oh my God, I can not believe this,” Lopez is heard saying to himself. After Lopez tells Watts he never noticed her marked car, he added, “Honestly, the handcuffs are not necessary, ma’am. I’m a police officer. I would never handcuff you, ever.”

A short while later Watts told Lopez she thought he might be driving a stolen patrol car.

Almost 20 minutes into the video, Watts can be heard saying to a supervisor on the phone, “He was detained. He was not under arrest. Okay, I’ll do it.” She then went into the back of her vehicle and apparently removed the handcuffs.

A short while later Lopez was escorted to another FHP car that had pulled up. He spent a few minutes inside that vehicle, then walked back to his patrol car and drove away. Lopez was never arrested but was charged with reckless driving, a second-degree misdemeanor.

He is back patrolling the city’s central district. Watts, too, is on the job, according to the FHP, despite blog postings stating she had been suspended for not obeying her supervisor’s purported orders to stop the pursuit.

“He’ll be pleading not guilty,” Matthewman said. “Maybe he was going too fast. To me this has been blown out of proportion.”

Yet to be answered: Did Watts check to see if the car had been reported stolen while she was following it? Did a supervisor order her to stop her pursuit? Did Watts violate FHP regulations or training in any way, particularly when she pulled her weapon and approached the car instead of waiting for back-up from a same distance?

FHP Sgt. Mark Wysocki, an agency spokesman, told The Miami Herald he believed Watts was in the process of checking if the car was stolen when Lopez pulled over. He said he did not know if a supervisor told her to stop her pursuit. He declined to comment on FHP protocols, saying, “The video speaks for itself.’’

“The actions she took were based on the driving pattern of the officer,’’ Wysocki said. “He was detained to determine why he was driving in that fashion.”

The blogosphere, meanwhile, is captivated by the controversy. Hundreds of anonymous comments have been posted on LEOAFFAIRS.com, which calls itself The Voice of Law Enforcement Online.

Though numerous threats and personal attacks have been directed at Watts, and purported members of both agencies are threatening to retaliate or not to back each other up in emergencies, there is no easy way to tell if the writers are actually law officers.

“She is an unfortunate-looking woman, her behavior probably has something to do with it,’’ a pro-Miami writer said about Watts.

“Miami cops should be used to riding handcuffed in the back seat,’’ wrote an FHP supporter. “So many get arrested for rape, murder, corruption, etc.’’

Interim Miami Police Chief Manuel Orosa declined to comment on the blog postings or the incident, which is under investigation by Internal Affairs. The FHP’s Wysocki likewise declined to address the blog postings.
 
What the officer and the city police department should not threaten or ridiculous to the trooper as she was doing the job on duty. This city cop is playing around with this thinking that he can make any thing he want against the woman cop. He got the whole city police department and the court against her. If the city cop is not being serious what he is doing. He is not doing a very good job at all.

Anyway, the comments that they made is very discriminating to me. I can not believe that any cop would treat any cop whether it is woman or man, usually women very badly with abusive remarks like that. They should all be fire from their jobs just because they think they are doing the right thing. Uh. Uh. No way, Jose. If the cops are serious about the law enforcement and helping to protect the citizen of Miami, Florida, by golly, they better treat the citizens and female cops with respect. I hate that the police department think that they are Gods, but they are not as they are much as human as we are. So get real, Miami Police Department. :roll:
 
Well there's an unwritten code between LEOs that no LEO arrests or even writes a ticket to another LEO or their family members. Doing so guarantees retaliation down the road somewhere. This means if Officer Watts has family members living in the Miami area, the Miami police will find out and they will write her family members tickets for any and every violation they can come up with, even on improper lane change or something minor like that. They will also catch Watts off duty in plain clothes and they will just make her life miserable for a little while.
 
Well there's an unwritten code between LEOs that no LEO arrests or even writes a ticket to another LEO or their family members. Doing so guarantees retaliation down the road somewhere. This means if Officer Watts has family members living in the Miami area, the Miami police will find out and they will write her family members tickets for any and every violation they can come up with, even on improper lane change or something minor like that. They will also catch Watts off duty in plain clothes and they will just make her life miserable for a little while.

that's how it is in NYC-NY-White Plains. NY State Police salivated whenever they pull over NYPD off-duty officers and vice versa. It's so ridiculous. and even within NYPD, its Highway Patrol division disliked regular NYPD and they too salivated over ticketing NYPD... just like my friend.
 
That's why I hate city cops, 2 bit rent-a-cop thinks he's above the law and the State Trooper just gave his ass a lesson.

Yiz
 
As far as I can see if you do the crime...you should do the time, whether that means a fine, jail time, loss of job, etc. Just because your a cop, I don't care State or City, doesn't mean your exempt from normal responsibilities, and the female cop understood this. Kudos to her, but we all have heard of that thin blue line. She will be ostrasized for this and that is much harder to bear when your life can depend on those fellow officers backing her up. I don't think any jerk on either side resorting to back-biting is going to help any dang thing. I also wouldn't want to be on either side if something bad goes down right now because I honestly some cop is not going to have backup from the other side and an officer of the law is going to get killed before this settles down. I hope to hell I'm wrong, but when you've got human nature involved in this, something is going to happen.
 
if I were to go out here, do 120mph down the interstate and a cop seen me. I would be stopped, arrested and beat down right on the road. Why cop's think they can do WTF they want is because there is nobody there to enforce them. Good for her, he should be treated/fined/punished just like the average citizen.
 
LOL, FAR OUT!!!! Isn't it the first time for me to see a cop in a police car being arrested by another cop for speeding? Again, FAR OUT *sending this link to my SO*
 
I read somewhere that the Miami officer didn't lose his job but he was disciplined.

However - I think he should have been suspended pending the outcome of this. It's going to come down to a Judge's ruling in court I am afraid.
 
Firing him for speeding like this is unnecessary and a colossal waste of tax money. It costs a good deal of money to recruit and train one. Just dock his pay, suspend him, discipline him... and he'll be a good boy. It'll be in his record and so what?
 
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