MechAg94 wrote:Purplehood wrote:Marines can be a member of the Shore Patrol, but on their own installations they are Military Police.
If the plates did indeed come back as belonging to a stolen vehicle (whether the caller gave an accurate recitation of the plates or not), I would tend to support the stop.
I might support the initial stop also, but once they saw it was a grandmother and two small kids, they should immediately start double checking infomration. They don't fit the profile.
I also find it hard to believe that small kids running around looking at license plates were mistaken for car burglars. That is odd.
[sarcasm]Profiling is bad. Ba-a-a-a-a-a-a-d. You should never profile anybody.[/sarcasm]
“We sincerely regret the fact that their enjoyable day at the museum ended with this high-risk traffic stop,” their statement read, according to the Dayton News. “Had the vehicle not originally come back as stolen, this situation would have been resolved with a quick courtesy stop of the vehicle to clarify the initial report.”
It
wasn't a high risk stop. If he spoke
honestly, he would say "We sincerely regret the fact that their enjoyable day at the museum ended up with this
erroneous high-risk traffic stop".
“All we can do at this point is offer our apology to the Hills,” Barlow added. “And we’ve invited them to come out to the base and meet the security forces.”
But despite the apology, Wendy says the damage may already have been done to her son.
“My son doesn’t trust police officers now,” Wendy Hill said. “He views them as the bad guy.”
Sadly, the damage has been done, and one more child has been taught (by the police) that the police are the enemy.......and it didn't have to be this way. This kind of response is right up there with TSA doing body cavity searches on wheelchair-bound grandmas from Smalltown USA.
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
#TINVOWOOT