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despondent
24 Feb 2006, 03:07 PM
link (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060224/ap_on_fe_st/honking_at_police;_ylt=Ai27zu8nUjxB_fBR0E3j43PtiBI F;_ylu=X3oDMTA5aHJvMDdwBHNlYwN5bmNhdA--)
By The Associated Press1 hour, 56 minutes ago
A college student has been given a lesson from a judge after his day in court — don't correct the police.

Clay Palmer, a student at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, honked his car horn when he saw police stop their patrol car, turn on blue flashers to go through a red light and then turn the flashers off. He got a ticket for violating the city noise ordinance.

The charge was reduced to a warning Wednesday when he went before a judge who told him he acted wrongly.

"The horn blowing is not the real problem here, it's that you were trying to correct the police and they didn't need correcting," Judge Russell Bean said.

Palmer left traffic court saying he still believed officers were abusing their authority.

"I see this cop with his blue lights come screeching up beside me and I didn't know what was going on," Palmer said. "Before they got to the next light, I could see they turned their blue lights off."

Palmer said officer Matthew Puglise forced him onto the hood of his car and issued him a ticket for honking the horn when there was no reason.

Puglise said he was helping another officer track down a speeder when Palmer saw him pass through the red light.

Bean said Puglise was right and Palmer was wrong.

"I expect officers to follow the rules like everyone else," Bean said.

aqualou
24 Feb 2006, 03:16 PM
"I expect officers to follow the rules like everyone else," Bean said.
what planet is this judge living on?

despondent
24 Feb 2006, 03:19 PM
"I expect officers to follow the rules like everyone else with power or money ," Bean said.
fixed that

shivui
24 Feb 2006, 03:21 PM
if he was helping another officer track down a speeder, how come he had plenty of time to issue a ticket to this guy?

glorified tax collector.

markalot
24 Feb 2006, 03:55 PM
Nothing to see here, they should have given him the ticket.

Sure, some cops abuse power, but he may have been tracking something and needed to get through but yet not make a big fuss, which sounds exactly like what he WAS doing.

teribl sob stry
24 Feb 2006, 04:13 PM
i wish they ticketed the asshats honking outside of my house all hours of the day and night for no reason. :(

Dirk
24 Feb 2006, 04:48 PM
Nothing to see here, they should have given him the ticket.

Sure, some cops abuse power, but he may have been tracking something and needed to get through but yet not make a big fuss, which sounds exactly like what he WAS doing.
Shivui I think nailed it. If he was doing official important business (so important he couldn't wait for the light), how exactly was it he could stop that business tp issue this guy a ticket. Either it was important business that had to be done and he couldn't wait long enough for even the light, or it was nothing important and he could stop and wait for the light (and to give the guy the ticket). It doesn't work both ways.

yoshomon
24 Feb 2006, 04:58 PM
Ticket for honking his horn? Fuck the police.

DaHood
25 Feb 2006, 12:19 AM
Bean said Puglise was right and Palmer was wrong.

"I expect officers to follow the rules like everyone else," Bean said.
I expect officers to follow the rules even more so than everyone else. What the hell is someone who is charged with the duty of upholding the law doing breaking the law? I realize that not all cops are bad but this does seem to be a common problem.

DaHood
25 Feb 2006, 12:20 AM
Ticket for honking his horn? Fuck the police.
Exactly.
321

DaHood
25 Feb 2006, 12:21 AM
i wish they ticketed the asshats honking outside of my house all hours of the day and night for no reason. :(
I wish they'd do more ticketing of the boom boom cars that I can hear for miles before they arrive.

Honking a horn is not a noise violation in my book.