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Why don't cops get tickets?

 From now on when I’m stopped for speeding I’m going to tell the officer that there will be no need for a ticket as My company will discipline me.
 
 
 Frank Kopczynski, Host
 www.criminaljusticeforum.com


Reported by: Brendan McLaughlin
Email:

TAMPA, FL -- The accident happened so fast. Michael Kelley never saw it coming. "All I saw was a blur of white and I’m getting spun around."

When his head cleared, Kelley, 54, realized he and another motorist had just been hit by a Tampa Police officer who had run a red light. Angry witnesses at the intersection of Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd and Nebraska Avenue in Tampa told him that the patrol car was running no lights or siren. TPD's own report on the accident of September 1st, 2008 noted that the officer "failed to realize the danger of entering the intersection on a solid red light."
 
Kelley wasn't hurt, but the other motorist was taken to the hospital. Property damage on the report was listed at $14,000 dollars.
 
The biggest surprise for Michael Kelley came later when he discovered that the Tampa Police officer would not be cited in a crash he clearly caused.  Kelley called it hypocritical and a double standard.  "I'm certain if I had done that, I would have been cited."

Michael Kelley's accident was one of more than 400 in the Bay Area last year in which a law enforcement officer was at fault.  ABC Action News examined the records of six local agencies including St. Petersburg Police, Tampa Police, and Polk, Pasco and Pinellas Counties.  We found a dozen officers that had two or more accidents, although many of them were minor.

We also discovered that few agencies ticket their own officers or deputies. The Tampa Police Department recorded 84 crashes in 2008 that their officers either caused or failed to avoid, yet TPD reports they didn't write a single ticket. 

Not writing tickets to police and deputies in crashes in which they're at fault is standard procedure at most agencies.  Agency officials say that while they don't ticket officers and deputies, they are punished internally. 

In our review, we did find cases where the officer lost their take-home vehicle privileges. A few were suspended without pay for up to 15 days.

Tampa Police spokesperson Andrea Davis says the internal punishments are more than adequate.  “Their punishment, including responsibility for damages and the possibility of losing their jobs eventually is a pretty strict punishment”, said Davis.
 
Others argue that law enforcement officers deserve a break. They often drive over a hundred miles a day while using a radio, cell phone and onboard computer.  Police have to check addresses and license plates while driving under all kinds of weather conditions.

Retired Hillsborough sheriff's captain Rod Reder believes ticketing officers would only punish the public.  "I think if you overreact and start citing officers for minor traffic violations and crashes, what you're going to have is officers parking their cars and not going on patrol as much. They're not going to aggressively respond to calls", claims Reder.

There is a notable exception to this policy. Polk County Sheriff, Grady Judd believes a policy that shields officers from traffic citations just doesn't sell with the public.  Eight times last year, Polk County deputies who got into wrecks were both disciplined internally and given a ticket, like any other driver. 

Judd went on to say, "If we're involved in a crash and it's our fault and it's over $1500 dollars in damages, the deputy's going to get a traffic citation as well.  We just think it's fair."

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