Friday, March 27, 2009

Never a Good-bye

NFL player Ryan Moats didn’t have the chance to say good-bye to his mother-in-law as she died in a Texas hospital on Thursday. Moats has Officer Powell to thank for that lost opportunity.

When Ryan Moats and his family got word his mother-in-law was dying, they rushed to the hospital to see her. On their way, Moats stopped at a red light, felt it was safe to enter the intersection, and proceeded toward the hospital. Officer Powell witnessed this event and immediately turned on his siren and lights. Moats didn’t stop until he reached the hospital a minute later.

Powell pulled his gun on Moats and his family when they emerged from their SUV. The officer demanded Moats produce a driver’s license and proof of insurance. When Moats replied he didn’t know where the insurance information was and that the officer was welcome to look through the vehicle to locate it himself, Powell refused. Moats explained his mother-in-law was dying and he needed to see her. Powell seemed unaffected by this statement. In fact, when Moats pleaded with Powell for permission to leave, Powell went on a power rant. “I can screw you over. Your attitude will dictate everything that happens,” the officer said. Powell also told Moats he could arrest him for fleeing the scene, have his car towed for lack of proof of insurance, issue a ticket for illegally parking, and haul him to jail for running a red light.

A nurse working at the hospital informed the officer that Moats’ mother-in-law was dying and he needed to see her immediately. Powell still didn’t excuse Moats. Instead he said: “All right. I’m almost done.”

Talk about unreasonable. Even Dallas Police Chief David Kunkle felt Powell’s behavior was embarrassing. Powell is on administrative leave pending an internal investigation.

I wouldn’t say Powell should be fired, but his attitude needs some adjustment. Maybe he’s an otherwise good cop, who got caught up in the power of his title. What do you think?

9 comments:

  1. That was the saddest thing! I hope that young cop feels very bad. It would be nice if this could shape his life for the better.

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  2. Saw that on the news this morning. That was so wrong.

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  3. How devastating. I understand how difficult it must be to be a police officer but . . .

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  4. Heartbreaking, truly.

    Certainly an unnecessary power trip. I've seen such cases personally, but never with such hurtful consequences.

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  5. Very sad for Moats. I hope the police officer was caught up in the whole thing, following him to the hospital, not being sure if he was telling him the truth, then not being sure how to extricate himself from the hole he'd dug. I don't know. Sad all the way around.

    Helen
    http://straightfromhel.blogspot.com

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  6. Overzealous and very young cop, it sounds like to me. So sad and silly really. Jenni

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  7. Sounds like a jerk. I hope that he learned something from this and changes. We need our policemen to be the good guys, not on power trips. It just sounds like his ego was offended and he probably didn't believe everyone. So sad.

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  8. I think he should get fired. I hate to think what things he did when there weren't other witnesses around. He is a bad cop.

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  9. I realize that people probably say the wildest things to get out of tickets, but Geez, the guy went straight to the hospital & a nurse vouched for him! Write the ticket if you must, but let the guy go on in.

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