Kamikaze Sith, once again you point out (correctly) that police officers are human beings who do not want to give tickets to friends and family. This is obvious.
Does it mean that the friends and family of police officers should get what are in effect
special rights, a limited... not immunity, call it resistance... to being ticketed for a traffic stop? For possessing very small quantities of drugs, which you've already given as another example of officer's discretion? Granted, these are not huge rights or protections. It's not a huge deal. But that doesn't mean it's perfectly fine and good for the system to work this way.
And let's say, for the sake of argument, that the friends and family of officers should get this special protection, for the sake of good internal relations within the department. What about people who contribute money to police charities? What about people who buy FOP bumper stickers?
There has to be a limit somewhere; where is it? Where, just as a hypothetical, does it stop being proper use of discretionary power and start becoming a situation where you're paying protection money to encourage the police to use discretionary power in your favor?
SVPD wrote:Discretion is exactly that, discretion.
Police officers will always have discretion over minor offenses. There is simply no way to efficiently utilize law enforcement resources without it. The sorts of offenses which it aplies to are minor offenses, generally so minor that practially everyone commits them just by virtue of making normal, human mistakes.
Yes. So far, so good. Police discretion is good.
When police discretion is used inconsistently, to reward certain groups (people who are related to police officers, people who donate money to the Policeman's Ball, people who are a certain color), then that is a problem. Not a big problem. But still something that goes against the principle of equal protection under the law for everyone.
Inevitably, some tickets are simply unwarranted at the time the officer discovers them. For example, I once stopped a man for speeding who informed me that he was acting as principle for 2 elementary schools, and a student at the one he was heading to was becoming seriously violent. Yes, he was speeding, but although he didn't have a technical legal right to do so, he did have a perfectly good reason for doing so, so I didn't give him a ticket.
Fair enough. This is a good reason, because it's specific and because it doesn't depend on what
type of person the speeder is. You didn't let the speeder off because he was black, or white, or a military veteran, or because he'd donated money to an organization, or because he was your buddy's second cousin. You let him off because he had a perfectly good reason to be speeding, independent of who he was or who he was related to or what charities he donated to. And you didn't want to screw him over on account of that.
I'm totally fine with that.
2) Relatives and friends of cops automatically get tickets because you don't like them getting breaks, or worse, we start prosecuting people for mentioning that they know or are related to a cop as "corruption" in which case we start having fewer and fewer cops as the law distorts itself into a caricature of justice to appease a few people who are pissed about courtesy cards.
I look at it like this. If, for identical incidents (speeding X mph above the limit), people with the courtesy cards are getting ticketed
much less often than people without them... well, I have a problem with that. Because unless I'm mistaken, people with courtesy cards don't have life-and-limb situations where they need to hurry from A to B more often than people without. I'd say the solution is to just stop passing out the courtesy cards, myself.
Now, if it's only a little less often, I can shrug it off. Not knowing what the numbers look like, I can't say whether it's that big a problem or not.
SancheztheWhaler wrote:Is it corruption when a cop lets an attractive woman off with a warning, while giving a guy in the same situation a ticket?
Since there is presumably no exchange of goods or services, no. But if it happens consistently, I'd say you could definitely call it sex-based discrimination, just as you could call it racial discrimination if the cop lets white people off with a warning and tickets black people consistently.
This is only a problem if it happens
often. Often enough that in effect there are two different enforcement regimes, one for "normal" people (who get ticketed, say, 50% of the time) and one for the "special" kind of people (who get ticketed, say, 25% of the time).
Now, if you can
buy something that gets you fairly reliable protection from traffic tickets (as opposed to something that almost never works, or only works a tiny bit more often than not having it would)... that is arguably petty corruption, because there is an exchange of goods or services.
SVPD wrote:Are you going to respond to my points, or just try to recast my assessment of your personal issues as my actual argument?
Since you've used it over and over, aimed at multiple posters, it's hard to tell whether it's just a matter of armchair psychology or whether you're using it as a standard debating tactic to discredit people you disagree with.
Most people do not have problem with this. Where are the lawsuits and court cases over it?
Since suing someone is a colossal pain in the ass, I wouldn't
expect individuals to sue over issues like this, which mostly revolve around traffic stops. Why would you?