Driving Us Crazy
I was muttering in my car again the other day.
There's always something. On this occasion, a Vancouver Police Car turned onto the street I was travelling on. The driver gave no signal whatsoever. That's usual for Vancouver drivers. So usual that it became one of my standard silly gags on the radio. "Vancouver cars are not sold with turn signals, " I'd declare, and god knows how many believers went along for the ride.
But a cop?
"If we can't expect you to play by the rules, " I fumed pointlessly, "how can we expect anyone else to?"
Now, comes the story of a Prince George RCMP officer, who is a member of the drug squad. The fellow takes out a patrol car to go to a private party. INFRACTION #1. He drinks we don't know how many beers and gets back behind the wheel of his police car. INFRACTION #2. He smashes into a parked car. INFRACTION #3. He leaves the scene of the accident. INFRACTION #4.
About an hour later, he asks a fellow officer for advice. HE NEEDS ADVICE???
He said he "was unsure what to do."
He is both a police man and a drunk driver who has left the scene of an accident and he needs advice? If he doesn't know the rules, who does?
Net result?
This petty criminal, this dangerous, out-of-control, alcoholic fool is docked 9 days pay. He is not fired. He is not charged with anything.
He is still a member in good standing of the RCMP's drug squad.
The most dangerous drug in the world, the drug that causes the most harm viewed from any point of departure, is alcohol.
But a drunk drug cop who smashes into some else's car and leaves the scene of the "accident" is still trusted with the task of enforcing Canadian drug laws.
And we wonder why so many citizens despair of the possibility of finding justice in Canada.
1 comment:
Sadly, I guess that even cops have figured out that the most effective way to do whatever you want is to play the victim. It works for perps, it works for media personalities, and now I guess it works for police officers.
Sad, sad, sad.
Robert
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