I'm a writer at heart, so this is one of the places I write. It's where I store my ideas, observations, interests. This is my personal reflective journal on a range of topics. I'm told journaling is good for the soul. I hope so. And since there's nothing quite as powerful as an idea, maybe a few of those will manifest themselves in my writing. Thank you for reading and always feel free to post a comment.
Thursday, February 18, 2010
Close call with Rock Hill Police Department
Every semester I tell my students not to be out and about late at night in their cars in Rock Hill.
"You will be stopped by a police officer, and you will end up getting some sort of ticket," I say.
That's because the police in Rock Hill are bored, especially late at night. They're scouring the community--its byways and highways--looking for trouble.
I guess that's their job--to find trouble and arrest people or fine people.
The rest of my spiel to the students goes something like this: "I, on the other hand, being an older person with gray hair, can be out late in Rock Hill, and even if I'm stopped by an officer, I probably won't get a ticket. That may not be fair, but that's the way it is. . . You get cut a bit of slack (respect?) when you're older... The police just accept that you're probably NOT doing anything illegal..."
Last night I was almost proven wrong.
I had been at the university till about 10:30 p.m.; then had stopped for a snack at McDonald's.
Time I'm driving home it's a bit after 11.
In the rear view mirror, I see a big car suddenly dart out from a side road.
He's close behind me in a few seconds, blue lights flashing.
I pull over to a grocery store parking lot.
After about a minute (maybe he's checking my license plate??), the RHPD officer gets out of his cruiser and slowly, very slowly walks to my car.
Then the request: "Let me see your driver's license and registration."
I give it to him, but really have a hard time finding my registration. I fumble and scrounge through the glove compartment. I find a crumpled document and hand it to him. The window down and cold air and wind biting, I wait while he returns to his cruiser.
He's a nice cop--toboggan on his head, African-American, soft spoken--doing his job.
While he's in his car, checking on this and that, I wait...
I'm pondering what I've often preached to my students: "If I get stopped late at night, the cops in Rock Hill won't give me a ticket, but they will give YOU a ticket. It's not fair, but that's just the way it is..."
He's still in his car. I walk up to his window and say this: "Officer, how fast was I going?"
"You were doing 51. Speed limit is 35."
"I apologize, officer. I always try to obey the law. I wasn't feeling good. I'm tired and I just wanted to get home. I need to take my medicine." (This is all the truth.)
He asks me where I live and why I've been out so late.
I tell him.
He keeps checking and writing.
"I didn't even think my car (a VW Beetle that you see with this blog post) would go that fast," I say.
He laughs.
A good sign.
He hands me a warning ticket.
"You have a good rest of the evening, sir," he says.
I thank him--profusely. And then I promise him that I'll do something, somehow to boost the police department.
That's partly what this blog post is about.
Saying thanks to a good-hearted Rock Hill police officer who gave an old guy a break.
Close call. I don't plan to be on the road at that unseemly hour again. I will be "beddy-by," curled up under the covers, reading myself to sleep. Where I should be and need to be that late in the evening.
Bottom line: Respect the police. Fear the police. Understand the police. Appreciate the police.
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2 comments:
Being poh-lite to the poh-lice is a good thang. I reckon it comes from being old n'all. Go Larry! But at a slow beetle crawl.
Police get paid 2 write tickets.lets hope he dosent get in trouble
For being kind.
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