Anonymous wrote:I continue to be befuddled by the people who see this as rudeness, or the equivalent of giving the middle finger. He didn't flip her the bird. That is the hand gesture for "I am going to shoot you." Driver was pissed and made a threat to murder her child. It was probably an idle threat, but it would not be overreacting to take it seriously. if someone screamed in my face that he was going to murder my child, I would call the police even if he didn't actually flash a weapon. That's what the driver did. Pointedly, and repeatedly, using a hand signal, with the apparent intent to frighten her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a f#cking loser. I'd probably memorize the license plate and report it to 911 later in the day.
He needs a visit from the cops to straighten him out.
This would not be an appropriate response. The appropriate response would be to ignore. But if you really felt like you MUST call the police, use the non-emergency number. I'd want you arrested if you called 911 for this.
Just an FYI re: 911 vs. non-emergency...I parked my car in my work parking garage one time for a quick weekend trip and while I was gone someone smashed into my bumper and side of car. When I got back days later and spoke to insurance, they said I had to file a police report, so I called the non-emergency number. Non-emergency would not take down any information and required me to call 911 to report the hit and run. From there, the cops had to come out and go through the motions to file the police report. I was pretty embarrassed/sheepish when they arrived since I had to call 911 for a hit-and-run that probably happened days before. I was in no imminent danger, but that was the process that I was told to follow. The cops were also rude and annoyed (understandably annoyed, IMO as I'm sure they had more pressing things to do).
Long story short, if OP felt threatened, she has every right to call 911. There will likely be no recourse, but saying you want her arrested for making the call is absurd. That's not for you to decide, it's for the police. Also, every neighborhood listserv I've ever been on has had messages from local police telling residents to call 911 at the sight of anything suspicious or out of place (even if it's just someone walking down the street that doesn't seem quite right). From there, the police decide what's an emergency or what isn't.
Where was this? I am a 911 Dispatcher and we take turns ans 911 and non emergency lines. This is bizarre.
Where I work we dont even do reports for hit and runs with no suspect info. We tell you that on the phone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a f#cking loser. I'd probably memorize the license plate and report it to 911 later in the day.
He needs a visit from the cops to straighten him out.
This would not be an appropriate response. The appropriate response would be to ignore. But if you really felt like you MUST call the police, use the non-emergency number. I'd want you arrested if you called 911 for this.
You're a lunatic.
This is exactly what 911 is used for in most major localities. In DC, 911 is the general government services number for ANYTHING that may involve the police, fire department, and paramedics. This would include noise complaints, getting an illegal parked car towed, etc. It goes through 911 because that's where the city can track and keep records of all requests.
No, the man did not commit a crime. But he did make a threatening gesture to a mother and a child. Most cops I know would be happy to drop by and give the man a stern lecture on his front porch about appropriate behavior while driving.
Anonymous wrote:I was driving with my two kids in a 25 mph zone and took a turn slowly because I had a big plant in the back of the car and I didn't want it to tip over. It wasn't super slow, but apparently it was slow enough to piss off the guy behind me, because right after the turn we were stopped at a light and he made a gun shape with his hands and fired at me twice. Then, when the light turned green, he pulled around me and pointed his finger gun at my 9-year-old (who was in the passenger seat). That was the end of it, but I'm still thinking about it, and wondering if I should have taken down his license plate and called the cops. Thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:This guy sounds very unstable in my opinion, so I would just completely ignore his crazy a%# since you do not know what he is truly capable of.
The fact that he pointed directly at your child shows that he isn't playing w/a full deck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a f#cking loser. I'd probably memorize the license plate and report it to 911 later in the day.
He needs a visit from the cops to straighten him out.
This would not be an appropriate response. The appropriate response would be to ignore. But if you really felt like you MUST call the police, use the non-emergency number. I'd want you arrested if you called 911 for this.
Anonymous wrote:You should have made "I have a grenade" motions towards him. Hold up your hand, pretend to pull the clip out with your teeth, then LOB it in his general direction.
Always one up.