Florida State Trooper Watts watched a car speed past her, so she pursued. The five-minute chase reached speeds of up to 122 miles an hour, which I suspect is a touch beyond the speed limit in Florida.
Watts eventually pulls the car over and detains the driver. Charges him with reckless driving.
All is good, right? Someone doing 120 is a textbook example of reckless driving, right?
Nope, Watts received a formal warning from her chief.
Why? Because the man she pulled over was an off-duty cop. Violating professional courtesy between cops is a disciplinary offence, apparently.
Apparently there's a heap of law enforcement blogs out there going bananas. Some are saying Watts shouldn't have drawn her weapon, shouldn't have cuffed the cop. Some are saying the cop shouldn't have been speeding. But there's talk of the troopers and Miami cops not backing each other up when called together - and that's a seriously fucked up can of worms that common sense would have avoided.
Watts eventually pulls the car over and detains the driver. Charges him with reckless driving.
All is good, right? Someone doing 120 is a textbook example of reckless driving, right?
Nope, Watts received a formal warning from her chief.
Why? Because the man she pulled over was an off-duty cop. Violating professional courtesy between cops is a disciplinary offence, apparently.
Apparently there's a heap of law enforcement blogs out there going bananas. Some are saying Watts shouldn't have drawn her weapon, shouldn't have cuffed the cop. Some are saying the cop shouldn't have been speeding. But there's talk of the troopers and Miami cops not backing each other up when called together - and that's a seriously fucked up can of worms that common sense would have avoided.
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