Hoosier_Vol
VFL Stuck in B1G Hell
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I could swear I remember a deputy a long time ago tell me it enabled a faster response in a rural environment. If something happens requiring additional LEOs they get their gear, get int the cruiser, and head to the scene.
Hey GW-
Kind of off topic here...
But why are county cops always cooler and easier going than city and state police?
Ive never had a cross word with a deputy. I can get the city boys being jumpy considering what and who they deal with on a daily basis but the state police??
Damn. They need to get laid or something...
I'll address this post and the one below it...
I cannot speak for anyone outside of me, my agency, and my experience, both professional and personal, but I can tell you that the full spectrum exists out there. You probably already know that.
I live / work in a largely rural county. My Sheriff has lived here all his life. His mandate to us is a familiar one, and one that I agree with: Treat everyone you encounter like family, right up to the point where you can't, then do what you must do to keep the peace, and/or protect yourself.
He's also a Christian man (just hear me out), so he gets the "Role of the Centurion" mentality. We are peacekeepers first, defenders second, and enforcers last. This is the mentality he expects from us. On that note...in light of recent events...he expects us to charge into the fight if innocents are in peril, and equips us for that fight. I'm a part-timer, but the Sheriff makes sure I have every tool (minus a take-home ride) I need to serve my county. In short, I have the luxury of working for a great Sheriff, and a great agency.
State. Here, it's GSP, and the post I work with is top-notch. They work with us; we work with them; and if not for the difference in the uniform and badge, you'd never know the difference. Yes, they are a bit tougher on traffic enforcement, but that's a big part of what they do.
Move north to Savannah, and you get a totally different picture. The locals do their thing; GSP does their thing; and never the 'twain shall meet.
So I guess it comes down to each locality, because I have seen both ends of it. Like the West Virginia trooper who had me dead-to-rights at 85+ on I-77, and let me go with a "be safe out there", or the Florida trooper who was in the process of writing me a ticket AND giving me the lecture for 81/70 (just north of Port Orange) when I told him to make sure his name and badge number were legible on my copy, because from that day forward all of the Florida officers I stopped for 80+ were going to start getting hard copy instead of warnings, and I wanted them to know why. So I got a warning...and he remains just another anonymous a**hole trooper I met.
Yes, we do "professional courtesy", but I'll lay a Franklin that I have let far many more civilians go than I have fellow officers, so hold off on the lecture.
Take home cars. Common for state and county officers. And yes, so that we can be out the door and rolling if and when a major event happens. Job perk, yes...but many is the time I've rolled out of bed at 2 or 4 am to respond to a major wreck on I-95, or assist another deputy in a chase in my area. One reason I'm glad I don't have one now; they don't expect me to respond anymore.
Hope this helps.
Greywolf is in Georgia? Cool, howdy neighbor!
* though you sound like youre in South Georgia, and Im northeast.
I'll address this post and the one below it...
I cannot speak for anyone outside of me, my agency, and my experience, both professional and personal, but I can tell you that the full spectrum exists out there. You probably already know that.
I live / work in a largely rural county. My Sheriff has lived here all his life. His mandate to us is a familiar one, and one that I agree with: Treat everyone you encounter like family, right up to the point where you can't, then do what you must do to keep the peace, and/or protect yourself.
He's also a Christian man (just hear me out), so he gets the "Role of the Centurion" mentality. We are peacekeepers first, defenders second, and enforcers last. This is the mentality he expects from us. On that note...in light of recent events...he expects us to charge into the fight if innocents are in peril, and equips us for that fight. I'm a part-timer, but the Sheriff makes sure I have every tool (minus a take-home ride) I need to serve my county. In short, I have the luxury of working for a great Sheriff, and a great agency.
State. Here, it's GSP, and the post I work with is top-notch. They work with us; we work with them; and if not for the difference in the uniform and badge, you'd never know the difference. Yes, they are a bit tougher on traffic enforcement, but that's a big part of what they do.
Move north to Savannah, and you get a totally different picture. The locals do their thing; GSP does their thing; and never the 'twain shall meet.
So I guess it comes down to each locality, because I have seen both ends of it. Like the West Virginia trooper who had me dead-to-rights at 85+ on I-77, and let me go with a "be safe out there", or the Florida trooper who was in the process of writing me a ticket AND giving me the lecture for 81/70 (just north of Port Orange) when I told him to make sure his name and badge number were legible on my copy, because from that day forward all of the Florida officers I stopped for 80+ were going to start getting hard copy instead of warnings, and I wanted them to know why. So I got a warning...and he remains just another anonymous a**hole trooper I met.
Yes, we do "professional courtesy", but I'll lay a Franklin that I have let far many more civilians go than I have fellow officers, so hold off on the lecture.
Take home cars. Common for state and county officers. And yes, so that we can be out the door and rolling if and when a major event happens. Job perk, yes...but many is the time I've rolled out of bed at 2 or 4 am to respond to a major wreck on I-95, or assist another deputy in a chase in my area. One reason I'm glad I don't have one now; they don't expect me to respond anymore.
Hope this helps.
Agree completely, when we go up there, thats the way we go.Yeah, I'm down in the corner. We probably pass near/by you on our way to the Smokies every year. We have abandoned the chaos of I-95/26/40 for the more genteel route using US 441 to come in the back way. Takes about an hour longer, but we avoid the crowds at gas / food / walk the dog stops, and when we get there we're not stressed out, strung out from 57 cups of coffee, and staring straight ahead with a death grip on the wheel. My wife says the number of "Oh my God we're gonna die" moments have all but disappeared since we changed routes. Ha.
Officers with the Lebanon Police Department were at the scene to serve a woman an outstanding warrant around 9:30 a.m. Friday. They then spotted a man, who they recognized as John D. Baldwin Jr., 28, who also had an outstanding warrant for violation of probation for possession of a syringe, a statement from Indiana State Police said.
Again I ask, WTF kind of violation is that? Really?
Lost a fellow Indiana brother in the LOD today
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A Boone County Sheriffs deputy in Indiana was fatally shot Friday morning after attempting to apprehend a fleeing suspect, police said.
Jacob Pickett was critically wounded while assisting in the chase and later died, Indiana State Police confirmed in a statement.
Pickett is the first person killed in the line of duty from the Boone County Sheriff's Office since 1935, police said.
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Lost a fellow Indiana brother in the LOD today
![]()
A Boone County Sheriffs deputy in Indiana was fatally shot Friday morning after attempting to apprehend a fleeing suspect, police said.
Jacob Pickett was critically wounded while assisting in the chase and later died, Indiana State Police confirmed in a statement.
Pickett is the first person killed in the line of duty from the Boone County Sheriff's Office since 1935, police said.
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The mum-of-two claimed the traffic officer touched her inappropriately during a stop and search, then waited near her home to pull her over again when she returned from work.
She was initially stopped on August 16 for not wearing a seatbelt while driving to her evening janitorial job.
Three hours later, she was returning from work in the same truck with her two children, aged eight and three, in the vehicle when she was stopped by the same officer for the second time.
Lloyd claimed Wilson's windows were overly tinted and that she was "all over the road", according to the lawsuit reported by WATE.
Prosecutors in Campbell County, Tennessee, on Monday cleared Lloyd of criminal wrongdoing during both stops.
