Saturday, February 18, 2012
Nothing Stops Cops In Florida
Something bizarre is showing up in the orange juice down in God's waiting room. Or maybe too much sunshine is baking the brains of the local cops. No one knows for sure what the cause of the problem is, but it is a large problem.
Cop falls asleep while speeding 73-mph in a fifty and kills another motorist.
Henrietta Strong was killed Sept. 6, 2010, during her morning walk on State Road 520 in Cocoa when she was struck by the police car of Brevard County Deputy Vincent Marino-Vitani, who was going 65 mph in a 40-mph zone, according to FHP. Investigators found her partly at fault, saying she failed to yield while trying to cross the road.
Guess pedestrians no longer have the right-of-way, at least when it comes to cops.
Monroe County Deputy Melissa Powers died in this 106-mph crash in 2010. The Sheriff's Office quickly began patrol reforms.
106-mph patrol speed is one hell of a patrol speed.
The Orlando Sentinel found that approximately 7,400 crashes per year are caused by cops. Not from pursuit, but from all forms of lousy driving. Distracted driving is the cause - like texting, cell phone usage and playing on their computers while driving. Oh, and also, driving way to fast for conditions - i.e. careless and reckless driving.
Well, luckily they are almost never ticketed for the lack of respect they show for the traffic laws they supposedly enforce. In fact, they are ticketed only 11% of the time, while the average motorist is ticketed 64% of the time.
No one is above the law you say. Whatever.
Cop falls asleep while speeding 73-mph in a fifty and kills another motorist.
Henrietta Strong was killed Sept. 6, 2010, during her morning walk on State Road 520 in Cocoa when she was struck by the police car of Brevard County Deputy Vincent Marino-Vitani, who was going 65 mph in a 40-mph zone, according to FHP. Investigators found her partly at fault, saying she failed to yield while trying to cross the road.
Guess pedestrians no longer have the right-of-way, at least when it comes to cops.
Monroe County Deputy Melissa Powers died in this 106-mph crash in 2010. The Sheriff's Office quickly began patrol reforms.
106-mph patrol speed is one hell of a patrol speed.
The Orlando Sentinel found that approximately 7,400 crashes per year are caused by cops. Not from pursuit, but from all forms of lousy driving. Distracted driving is the cause - like texting, cell phone usage and playing on their computers while driving. Oh, and also, driving way to fast for conditions - i.e. careless and reckless driving.
Well, luckily they are almost never ticketed for the lack of respect they show for the traffic laws they supposedly enforce. In fact, they are ticketed only 11% of the time, while the average motorist is ticketed 64% of the time.
No one is above the law you say. Whatever.
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