|
to the cop's question, but not to the OP's question.
My worst was. I had just moved to Northern Iowa from Southern Wisconsin. Had already gotten insurance (since Wisconsin wasn't a mandatory insurance state and Iowa is) and an Iowa DL, but still had Wi plates.
I had just worked ten hours on the night shift at my temp job. That was a job where I swear that I was hitting "the wall" if you know what that means from long distance running. It is the point where your body has used up its reserves of energy.
So I am just about out of town on a four lane, and a truck is passing me and a cop going the other way in a 45 mph zone. The cop makes a u-turn and the pick-up suddenly decides to make a left turn.
So the cop quickly turns on his lights and races up to me as I am slowing down to pull over. I quickly get the OJ off my lap, because that is probably some kind of safety violation, and get my papers out. The cop tells me that I was not wearing my seatbelt which is why he pulled me over.
So the ticket is taking forever, and I start gathering up my groceries in my car so I can get quickly unloaded and do about half a dozen things before I goto bed and have another ten hour shift the next night. (Keep in mind that I sat quietly for about five minutes before I got bored and impatient and decided to do that because time was a-wastin')
The cop comes back, and instead of giving me a ticket and letting me go on my way, he tells me to get out of the car. Then he is kinda in my face barking out question "Do you have any weapons in the car?"
Of course, I have no idea what he wants, and I hate to say "no" and have him search the car and find something he thinks is a weapon and suddenly he is saying things like "okay, you lied to me, now we are going downtown." I have no idea that I can prevent him from searching the car. So I remember that sometimes I carry a machete underneath my driver's seat. Why? Because I like to have a weapon/tool when I am walking through my woods and my woods are full of poison ivy, particularly my driveway. So why keep it in the trunk when it is much handier under the seat.
However, I do not know if it is there or not. Since I am standing right next to my car and the driver's window is rolled all the way down, the easiest way to find out if it is there is to check. (And I actually said to him "there might be a machete under the seat, let me check." Stupid, stupid, stupid, but I am not thinking paranoid. I just moved from Wisconsin, a small town where all the cops knew me as a businessman, and treated me like they worked for me, instead of like the long-haired punk I looked like.) Of course, reaching into the car to do this, makes this cop understandably very nervous so he moves to restrain me. I freeze when he grabs me. Then it is over to the trunk, where I am spread-eagled and patted down. While walking over there, I notice that there are about four cop cars around me. It seems like the whole police force was called out to deal with the "mad non-seatbelt user".
Then I get cuffed and two cops search my car. They find the machete in the trunk and tell me it is illegal to keep it under the seat. News to me. They say nothing about the broken pool cues in my back seat, which I keep there as weapons. While I was standing there cuffed, I asked if I could sit down before I fell down, so I was sitting on the hood of a police car while they did their searching.
Later, after I got home and walked my dog, I called them up. I asked them what their probable cause was for getting in my face about weapons and why the whole police force showed up. He said they do not need a probable cause and when they call for back-up, they do not know how many will show up (apparently there were no other seat-belt violators for them to deal with that morning). I said that I wanted an apology or I was going to start raising hell.
I had one on my answering machine when I woke up that evening. I spent many hours getting ready for the trial about the seat-belt violation at which time I expected to challenge his behaviour during that stop, but he did not show up to the trial, so the charges were thrown out.
Probably just as well. Three years later I took another seat-belt ticket to court and the assistant DA thrashed me in court. It is hard to win a game when you do not know the rules, and it is hard to win an argument when their rebuttal is "you can't say that". It sure does make it easy for them to avoid proving me wrong, simply do not allow me to make my point.
|