Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just yesterday someone blatantly blew through a red light right in front of a cop, almost hitting a pedestrian. Cop did nothing. It’s infuriating.
They're legally not allowed to pursue. Take it up with the DC Council.
Uh … no. They can try to pull someone over. They just can’t chase them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just yesterday someone blatantly blew through a red light right in front of a cop, almost hitting a pedestrian. Cop did nothing. It’s infuriating.
They're legally not allowed to pursue. Take it up with the DC Council.
Uh … no. They can try to pull someone over. They just can’t chase them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just yesterday someone blatantly blew through a red light right in front of a cop, almost hitting a pedestrian. Cop did nothing. It’s infuriating.
They're legally not allowed to pursue. Take it up with the DC Council.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just yesterday someone blatantly blew through a red light right in front of a cop, almost hitting a pedestrian. Cop did nothing. It’s infuriating.
They're legally not allowed to pursue. Take it up with the DC Council.
Anonymous wrote:Just yesterday someone blatantly blew through a red light right in front of a cop, almost hitting a pedestrian. Cop did nothing. It’s infuriating.
Anonymous wrote:I was the victim of a violent crime. The police were all over it. My councilperson and ANC representative ignored my emails.
Anonymous wrote:We’ve taken traffic enforcement away from the police and given it to the cameras, and remind me again how cameras stop drunk/stoned drivers (who are responsible for a quarter of all traffic deaths in DC)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have the largest police force on a per capita basis and our elected leaders don’t want them to do anything. You see the results. Cops sitting in their cars surfing the internet
This. They can only do what elected leaders want them to do. Policing isn’t very popular right now, so you aren’t going to see a lot of patrolling or proactive policing.
I lived here before George Floyd was killed and never saw an MPD officer walk a beat, interact with anyone outside of tourists asking for directions, or get off their phone when not sitting in their cars, so I'm not sure this Murdoch talking point is as true as people want it to be. There has not been a political sea change forcing them to *stop* all the crimefighting they were doing before their hands were tied.
The proof is in the numbers and the upswing in lawlessness the past few years.
That actually disproves the theory, because lawlessness is up everywhere - places that reacted to the string of murder cops by trying to institute reform of the police and places that reacted by buying them more tanks and making it legal to drive over protestors.
Police know that if a criminal with Covid ODs on Fentanyl they may be liable for murder. Retreat the donut shop and let people sort things out for themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have the largest police force on a per capita basis and our elected leaders don’t want them to do anything. You see the results. Cops sitting in their cars surfing the internet
This. They can only do what elected leaders want them to do. Policing isn’t very popular right now, so you aren’t going to see a lot of patrolling or proactive policing.
I lived here before George Floyd was killed and never saw an MPD officer walk a beat, interact with anyone outside of tourists asking for directions, or get off their phone when not sitting in their cars, so I'm not sure this Murdoch talking point is as true as people want it to be. There has not been a political sea change forcing them to *stop* all the crimefighting they were doing before their hands were tied.
The proof is in the numbers and the upswing in lawlessness the past few years.
That actually disproves the theory, because lawlessness is up everywhere - places that reacted to the string of murder cops by trying to institute reform of the police and places that reacted by buying them more tanks and making it legal to drive over protestors.
Anonymous wrote:well, for one thing, they saved democracy on January 6, 2021.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have the largest police force on a per capita basis and our elected leaders don’t want them to do anything. You see the results. Cops sitting in their cars surfing the internet
This. They can only do what elected leaders want them to do. Policing isn’t very popular right now, so you aren’t going to see a lot of patrolling or proactive policing.
I lived here before George Floyd was killed and never saw an MPD officer walk a beat, interact with anyone outside of tourists asking for directions, or get off their phone when not sitting in their cars, so I'm not sure this Murdoch talking point is as true as people want it to be. There has not been a political sea change forcing them to *stop* all the crimefighting they were doing before their hands were tied.
The proof is in the numbers and the upswing in lawlessness the past few years.
Anonymous wrote:When there was a situation in our neighborhood, MPD was incredibly helpful. Our Councilperson did nothing.