Anonymous wrote:The best revenge possible will be the rich and connected guys who want to keep a major destroying the cop’s career
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just can’t believe the “soft” treatment this golfer is receiving for his actions. Now if Scottie were a black golfer we all know what the outcome would have been.
Nothing. Just like Tiger Woods. The guy was arrested what else do you think should happen to him?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rich WHITE pro athlete: benefit of the doubt, just a silly misunderstanding, cops are low IQ trash, prosecutor needs to immediately drop all the charges
Rich BLACK pro athlete: thug, was probably drunk or on drugs, who does he think he is, put him in jail, kick him out of the league, should have complied, blue lives matter
This country is so freaking racist it’s insane.
As a former defense attorney/prosecutor I cannot agree more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a former prosecutor and this thread makes me laugh, but more in derision than humor.
It reminds me of all the experiences I had working in the legal system where middle and upper middle class white people argued endlessly to me - sometimes until I had to hang up the phone on them or close the door in their faces - about why the law shouldn’t apply to them or their precious snowflake child.
These same people would bray and bark if I didn’t enforce the law with all due haste and harshness on those poor white trash and brown people who were mucking up the neighborhood.
It’s the same old story, as old as our legal system.
How many of the people posting here in defense of this rich white golfer who injured a law enforcement officer have argued strenuously that all those black motorists the cops ended up shooting should have just done what they were told?
Sickening racism/classism going on in these comments.
By the way, I’m not a cop lover - especially not after having worked with them for years. Some are good, many not so much. Most of them would be the first to call me or come to my office looking for a pass for their kid’s drunken driving or whatever. My comment is not about cops, it’s about the rule of law - which so many Americans feel shouldn’t apply to them.
Can you tell us where the golfer resisted arrest? This cop clearly needs more training about how to manage traffic, maybe he should go back to desk duty for awhile.
I’m sorry, but you are either a moron or pretending to be one.
I am a fat middle aged white woman, highly educated and a former prosecutor AND former defense attorney.
If I drove through a traffic barricade and continued on my way despite a cop practically adhered to my vehicle, knocking on the vehicle and yelling at me to stop, my fat ass would be in jail - especially if that cop was knocked down and injured by my colossal stupidity/arrogance.
Do you have any idea how many cops get killed on traffic details in this country every year?
The only idiot in this scenario was the arrogant rich white golfer. I hope the prosecutor is not bullied into dropping the charges, because this manchild should pay the same price my fat ass would have to pay if I acted an idiot like he did.
Did you miss the part about how the golfer was in a marked PGA vehicle? Other players have stated that they were told they could proceed to the venue and in fact, did exactly what Scheffler did to get around traffic? Also where was the cop adhered to the vehicle? How did that happen? Why aren't those facts in the police report?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a former prosecutor and this thread makes me laugh, but more in derision than humor.
It reminds me of all the experiences I had working in the legal system where middle and upper middle class white people argued endlessly to me - sometimes until I had to hang up the phone on them or close the door in their faces - about why the law shouldn’t apply to them or their precious snowflake child.
These same people would bray and bark if I didn’t enforce the law with all due haste and harshness on those poor white trash and brown people who were mucking up the neighborhood.
It’s the same old story, as old as our legal system.
How many of the people posting here in defense of this rich white golfer who injured a law enforcement officer have argued strenuously that all those black motorists the cops ended up shooting should have just done what they were told?
Sickening racism/classism going on in these comments.
By the way, I’m not a cop lover - especially not after having worked with them for years. Some are good, many not so much. Most of them would be the first to call me or come to my office looking for a pass for their kid’s drunken driving or whatever. My comment is not about cops, it’s about the rule of law - which so many Americans feel shouldn’t apply to them.
Can you tell us where the golfer resisted arrest? This cop clearly needs more training about how to manage traffic, maybe he should go back to desk duty for awhile.
I’m sorry, but you are either a moron or pretending to be one.
I am a fat middle aged white woman, highly educated and a former prosecutor AND former defense attorney.
If I drove through a traffic barricade and continued on my way despite a cop practically adhered to my vehicle, knocking on the vehicle and yelling at me to stop, my fat ass would be in jail - especially if that cop was knocked down and injured by my colossal stupidity/arrogance.
Do you have any idea how many cops get killed on traffic details in this country every year?
The only idiot in this scenario was the arrogant rich white golfer. I hope the prosecutor is not bullied into dropping the charges, because this manchild should pay the same price my fat ass would have to pay if I acted an idiot like he did.
Anonymous wrote:Rich WHITE pro athlete: benefit of the doubt, just a silly misunderstanding, cops are low IQ trash, prosecutor needs to immediately drop all the charges
Rich BLACK pro athlete: thug, was probably drunk or on drugs, who does he think he is, put him in jail, kick him out of the league, should have complied, blue lives matter
This country is so freaking racist it’s insane.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a former prosecutor and this thread makes me laugh, but more in derision than humor.
It reminds me of all the experiences I had working in the legal system where middle and upper middle class white people argued endlessly to me - sometimes until I had to hang up the phone on them or close the door in their faces - about why the law shouldn’t apply to them or their precious snowflake child.
These same people would bray and bark if I didn’t enforce the law with all due haste and harshness on those poor white trash and brown people who were mucking up the neighborhood.
It’s the same old story, as old as our legal system.
How many of the people posting here in defense of this rich white golfer who injured a law enforcement officer have argued strenuously that all those black motorists the cops ended up shooting should have just done what they were told?
Sickening racism/classism going on in these comments.
By the way, I’m not a cop lover - especially not after having worked with them for years. Some are good, many not so much. Most of them would be the first to call me or come to my office looking for a pass for their kid’s drunken driving or whatever. My comment is not about cops, it’s about the rule of law - which so many Americans feel shouldn’t apply to them.
Can you tell us where the golfer resisted arrest? This cop clearly needs more training about how to manage traffic, maybe he should go back to desk duty for awhile.
Anonymous wrote:I just can’t believe the “soft” treatment this golfer is receiving for his actions. Now if Scottie were a black golfer we all know what the outcome would have been.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are wondering about why he didn't "see" something - it was raining and dark.
I have no doubt he thought police were there to direct traffic for the golf tournament.
He didn't know about the accident.
Think about it, people. Why would he intentionally ignore directions of police officers at the scene of a fatal accident? He wouldn't.
The excuses never end for the privileged white guy. Hilarious.
Anonymous wrote:I am a former prosecutor and this thread makes me laugh, but more in derision than humor.
It reminds me of all the experiences I had working in the legal system where middle and upper middle class white people argued endlessly to me - sometimes until I had to hang up the phone on them or close the door in their faces - about why the law shouldn’t apply to them or their precious snowflake child.
These same people would bray and bark if I didn’t enforce the law with all due haste and harshness on those poor white trash and brown people who were mucking up the neighborhood.
It’s the same old story, as old as our legal system.
How many of the people posting here in defense of this rich white golfer who injured a law enforcement officer have argued strenuously that all those black motorists the cops ended up shooting should have just done what they were told?
Sickening racism/classism going on in these comments.
By the way, I’m not a cop lover - especially not after having worked with them for years. Some are good, many not so much. Most of them would be the first to call me or come to my office looking for a pass for their kid’s drunken driving or whatever. My comment is not about cops, it’s about the rule of law - which so many Americans feel shouldn’t apply to them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I first assumed overzealous cop, but when you read the details, Scottie sounds like an entitled scumbag who thought the rules didn't apply to him.
And Scottie is in fact a born super rich country club kid turned really rich pro golfer who was been pampered his entire life.
It was a closed street for a pedestrian FATALITY investigation. You don't get to drive through a fatal CRIME SCENE because you're a pro golfer.
Sigh. Read what actually happened. He didn't drive through the crime scene. He didn't hit the cop (he held on to the door). His car was marked as one for a player, not a normal spectator. The cop made a bad call and yes, Scottie should have stopped once the cop didn't let go of the door but you're making this into something it wasn't. And by the way, I'm not even a golf fan and knew nothing other than Scottie's name before this, but reading this thread is a perfect example of hysteria and fiction becoming the real story. It's sad.
Are you his publicist or just a pathetic middle aged groupie? You were not there. You are trafficking spin put into the media by his reps, PGA and network toadies. The only FACT is he was booked and charged with several crimes. And multiple cops and brass on scene and at the dept validated those charges, so there is merit.
Why, were you a witness to the "validation" of charges by multiple cops on the scene? If so, how did the officer get dragged, and on what side of the vehicle was he dragged?
I work in law enforcement.
An A-list celeb or athlete might be cuffed and might even be taken to the station on “bs” from a single idiot power drunk cop — but brass all the way up the chain of command approved those charges once he was processed and had a mug shot.
That all carries far more weight than the high-dollar crisis PR spin and jock-sniffing nonsense you’re spamming.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I first assumed overzealous cop, but when you read the details, Scottie sounds like an entitled scumbag who thought the rules didn't apply to him.
And Scottie is in fact a born super rich country club kid turned really rich pro golfer who was been pampered his entire life.
It was a closed street for a pedestrian FATALITY investigation. You don't get to drive through a fatal CRIME SCENE because you're a pro golfer.
Sigh. Read what actually happened. He didn't drive through the crime scene. He didn't hit the cop (he held on to the door). His car was marked as one for a player, not a normal spectator. The cop made a bad call and yes, Scottie should have stopped once the cop didn't let go of the door but you're making this into something it wasn't. And by the way, I'm not even a golf fan and knew nothing other than Scottie's name before this, but reading this thread is a perfect example of hysteria and fiction becoming the real story. It's sad.
Are you his publicist or just a pathetic middle aged groupie? You were not there. You are trafficking spin put into the media by his reps, PGA and network toadies. The only FACT is he was booked and charged with several crimes. And multiple cops and brass on scene and at the dept validated those charges, so there is merit.
Why, were you a witness to the "validation" of charges by multiple cops on the scene? If so, how did the officer get dragged, and on what side of the vehicle was he dragged?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the most likely thing is that it was an accident but if you’re driving the car, I don’t think there’s a lot of ways to knock down a pedestrian and have it not be your fault. If you’re driving at a slow speed and someone grabs your door, you should know and stop pretty darn quickly. I think they’ll review the video and adjust it down to some sort of driving violation if it’s clear he didn’t know the guy was holding the car.
That said, while I’m sure the cops down there are terrible, I don’t think there is anywhere in the country you can knock down a traffic cop, no matter how unintentionally, and not end up arrested. If other cops see that your car was involved in a cop falling down, they’re going to arrest you.
To me this is kind of in the category of it’s always your fault if you hit someone from behind, even if they’re an idiot. It’s his job as the driver to not let this happen.
What was the cop planning to do? Hold a moving car (sounds stupid) or open the door and throw him to the ground?