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I had one pull me over for what he said was running a red light. Then when he asked if he could search my car I said no you have no reason to search my car, he proceeded to tell me I need to shut the f@@@ up. I told him that was nice and u hope his camera and mic picked that up. He proceeded to let me go
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Originally Posted by
BulldogDX55
When and where did this happen? I swear I heard this exact story from a fraternity brother about ten years ago in a complex between 182 and the cotton district. Either you were at the exact same party, or this is something SPD does regularly.
Park Circle beside Green Tree townhouses. It is a bunch of duplexes. This was around 2000. We lived at the end of the loop so there was only a couple of houses around us.
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Originally Posted by
PassInterference
The NFL has employed players with questionable ties to murder, hard drugs, physical abuse, etc. They do not care about one DUI.
e.g., Odell Beckham. Not that he did any of the things you mentioned, but he had a "history". And Jameius Winston ... needs no explanation.
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Originally Posted by
Political Hack
This may be Germans. If so, I'm still not apologizing... It's your fault for reading it! Ha. I'm not filtering through the other long thread. Read at your own risk.
Dak has a new ride. Everyone knows this. He wanted to go out in it. Boneheaded? Yes. But he has a shiny new toy and wanted to play with it. Which could imply that this is not normal behavior.
A lot of players were with him in the car and in cars around/following him when it happened. They tried to help him get out of it, but probably just added to the confusion. And there was some confusion during the process... Once they got Dak back to the station, the DUI breathalyzer test did not function correctly. Given, there's a very legit chance that Dak was below the legal limit and the charges could be dropped ultimately because of that. If not, I'd expect a decent attorney to get him off. Still a stain on his image and a boneheaded move to put himself anywhere near anything that could result in bad PR for himself, much less potentially ruin his life. However, I'm expecting this to eventually be thrown out due to the confusion at the site and the failure to register at the station.
Like I said before ... If Dak wasn't shitfaced and being a prick , SPD should have made every opportunity to handle this better and take care of it without a DUI ...
this is starting to sound like a "personal" beat my chest look at who I gave a DUI too...
And I also know for a fact that one particular SPD officer has lied under oath in a DUI case .. his testimony was he " didn't recall" doing that...
Would be interesting to know if this was the same officer or not..
Last edited by mic; 03-14-2016 at 07:06 PM.
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Originally Posted by
Tbonewannabe
I don't think I need to remind anyone that Starkville PD caused Smoot to drop into the 2nd round with some bullshit charge that was later thrown out. I think Mullen has A LOT better relationship with the SPD than Jackie did.
Smoot missed the bowl game due to not attending class. You decide what cost him.
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Originally Posted by
PassInterference
The NFL has employed players with questionable ties to murder, hard drugs, physical abuse, etc. They do not care about one DUI.
This is in no way true. Dak's best qualities all deal with his leadership, decision-making, doing the right things, etc. This is a hit against those qualities. Regardless of whether it's ultimately thrown out or how people think it went down, this is not negligible for his draft stock. It will hurt.
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Originally Posted by
BoomBoom
but in most professions the system is set up so that the dickheads eventually get found out and booted out, along with anyone who covered for them.
Not really. Certainly with some, but definitely not most. Even in my profession as an RN, you'd be shocked at what people get away with in healthcare, especially if you're a nice looking blonde chick.
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Originally Posted by
BeardoMSU
Was this SPD? The gun being drawn is really over the top.
No wasn't in Mississippi at the time. Check your PM
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Originally Posted by
BossDawg
Not really. Certainly with some, but definitely not most. Even in my profession as an RN, you'd be shocked at what people get away with in healthcare, especially if you're a nice looking blonde chick.
i kinda already viewed healthcare that way. at least as far as attitude. but i think that's the exception, not the rule. and i HOPE it doesn't work that way for purposeful "errors" that cause serious injury and major lawsuits. (we were talking about "dickheads", but the problem isn't attitude.)
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Originally Posted by
BossDawg
Not really. Certainly with some, but definitely not most. Even in my profession as an RN, you'd be shocked at what people get away with in healthcare, especially if you're a nice looking blonde chick.
If you worked in government like me you would see how much fat, stupid people can get away with. It usually involves doing nothing.
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Originally Posted by
Tbonewannabe
I had a couple of cops roll into a party we were having and tell us there was a disturbance called on us. My roommate said who and the cop says your neighbor across the street. When my neighbor informed him that the neighbor was in the back by the keg the cop got pissed and threatened to take everyone to jail. They tried to force everyone to drive home with a cop at the end of the road. Luckily we were smart enough to get everyone with a DD.
I met a few good cops but most were dickheads.
Sounds pretty similar to an experience I had when back at State. Was at a small get together (not even a party by any means) at at the residence of a couple friends of mine in Academy Village. Cop knocks on the door and reports that the next door neighbor had called in a complaint for the music being too loud. We knew it was BS right away because not only was the next door neighbor good friends of ours, she was also out of town as it was the Christmas holidays. In fact, 95% of the entire complex was out of town. Anyway, we were content to turn the music down and go about our business, but the cop decided to be a complete asshole anyways. He walks in and opens the fridge and sees beer in there, and then starts checking everyone's ID. Everyone was 21 or older except one of the three guys who lived there (he was 20 and turning 21 in literally like 10 days, and didn't have any alcohol on him). Well, cop finds out one guy there is underage and threatens the other 2 guys living there with contributing to the delinquency of a minor for having beer in their own refrigerator. Thats the Starkville cops in a nutshell. There are a few good ones, but most will go out of their way to be complete assholes.
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From my past experience in dealing with law enforcement, whether it was my own shenanigans or someone else's, I've learned that you don't know who you're going to be dealing with behind the badge. The world is a ****ed up place, therefore there are a lot of ****ed up police officers with a lot of pent up rage and stress. I've seen good textbook cops, I've seen cops take advantage of people, steal from people, and I've seen cops that belonged behind bars themselves..or at least some stage of psychiatric treatment. My two cents on cops.
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Originally Posted by
Bothrops
From my past experience in dealing with law enforcement, whether it was my own shenanigans or someone else's, I've learned that you don't know who you're going to be dealing with behind the badge. The world is a ****ed up place, therefore there are a lot of ****ed up police officers with a lot of pent up rage and stress. I've seen good textbook cops, I've seen cops take advantage of people, steal from people, and I've seen cops that belonged behind bars themselves..or at least some stage of psychiatric treatment. My two cents on cops.
Yeah, all good points.
Like I've said before, there are plenty of good cops out there. Repeat: there are plenty of good cops out there. I know a lot of 'em, am friends with a few, and even have a couple in my family. Unfortunately, I think most of the shitty ones are two types of people: 1) they were bullied in high school, so now they are "getting back at everyone", and 2) people who were bullies themselves, and exerting their rage/dick-headed-ness is the only how they stay "on top" and continue their douchebag lifestyle.
Also, I imagine the majority of good guy cops are the ones promoted to office/detective positions, and as a result, every time that happens, the pool of beat cops on the street dealing with the public is now less one good guy, but his empty slot is now ready to be filled by 1 of the 2 guys mentioned above.
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Junior Member

Originally Posted by
HSVDawg
Sounds pretty similar to an experience I had when back at State. Was at a small get together (not even a party by any means) at at the residence of a couple friends of mine in Academy Village. Cop knocks on the door and reports that the next door neighbor had called in a complaint for the music being too loud. We knew it was BS right away because not only was the next door neighbor good friends of ours, she was also out of town as it was the Christmas holidays. In fact, 95% of the entire complex was out of town. Anyway, we were content to turn the music down and go about our business, but the cop decided to be a complete asshole anyways. He walks in and opens the fridge and sees beer in there, and then starts checking everyone's ID. Everyone was 21 or older except one of the three guys who lived there (he was 20 and turning 21 in literally like 10 days, and didn't have any alcohol on him). Well, cop finds out one guy there is underage and threatens the other 2 guys living there with contributing to the delinquency of a minor for having beer in their own refrigerator. Thats the Starkville cops in a nutshell. There are a few good ones, but most will go out of their way to be complete assholes.
Was this around 2008 at Academy Village #55? If so, I was there. If not, this has happened more than once in Academy Village. I lived there all throughout college and experienced a very similar incident.
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Originally Posted by
Dawg61
I had a cop pull me over and approach my window with his gun drawn screaming at me cause I had my parking lights on instead of my headlights at 7pm at night. The SUV I was driving made it easy to not turn your lights fully on if you weren't paying attention which I wasn't. It wasn't dark enough outside for me to tell I hadn't turned them on fully. I was stone cold sober. It was not a fun experience.
This happened to me too, about 100 feet from campus on 82, around 2005 or 2006. He literally asked if I had any firearms, grenades, or rocket launchers. I don't know if he was ****ing with me ("alright, meow"), or it was because I was with someone who wasn't American, or if he was being serious. I'm pretty sure I laughed. and I'm pretty sure he was being serious because he didn't even notice the dime sack in my pocket when he patted me down for said explosives.
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Originally Posted by
BoomBoom
i kinda already viewed healthcare that way. at least as far as attitude. but i think that's the exception, not the rule. and i HOPE it doesn't work that way for purposeful "errors" that cause serious injury and major lawsuits. (we were talking about "dickheads", but the problem isn't attitude.)
What a suprise. I suspect that is referring to blond patients.
Last edited by Liverpooldawg; 03-15-2016 at 08:21 AM.
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Originally Posted by
Taog Redloh
That's not the point. Point is it didn't matter if he is guilty or innocent.
You think GMs are investing millions in these draft picks and don't care whether they were doing something slightly stupid versus doing something indicating a real problem? That's the Goat type position we have come to know and love.
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Originally Posted by
Dawg61
I had a cop pull me over and approach my window with his gun drawn screaming at me cause I had my parking lights on instead of my headlights at 7pm at night. The SUV I was driving made it easy to not turn your lights fully on if you weren't paying attention which I wasn't. It wasn't dark enough outside for me to tell I hadn't turned them on fully. I was stone cold sober. It was not a fun experience.
Had something similar happen to me once. My wifes SUV had been at dealership in Tuscaloosa for something and we hadn't had time during business hours to pick it up. I called the dealership, payed the bill with CC and told them to lock the keys in it and park it where I could access it after hours and I would bring the spare keys with me. My BIL drove me over late one afternoon and we arrived just after dark. I never drove her vehicle and it usually had the lights on auto but they had been turned off, I turned the switch until I had lights, through her in drive and took off headed back to MS. As I pulled out of the dealership, I met a cop, he promptly did a U-turn and fell in behind me. He followed me a few blocks and another cop joined the chase from behind and we had a 30 mph convoy. A short distance later, we are meeting another cop who swerves across the turn lane and blocks me in the front, the second car pulls beside me and the third is behind me totally blocking me in. I am in full panic trying to get the window down by pushing everything on the door, not realizing that the window switches are on the console. Now is when I make my second mistake, I open the door. Two cops draw their guns and the third grabs me by my collar and throws me over the hood of the patrol car and proceeds to cuff me. They start interrogating me about what I was doing and of course I have no idea where the registration and insurance info is in her car. They finally run the tag # and find it registered to the Drivers License they have laying on the hood of the patrol car. Turns out , this vehicle had 5-6 locations on the light switch and I had only turned the parking lights on, they thought I had stolen the car. All this time my brother in law had watched this unfold in his rearview mirror and had turned around and pulled into a nearby parking lot close enough to hear the ordeal. He was laughing so hard that I could hear him once the panic had subsided a little bit.
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Originally Posted by
smootness
This is in no way true. Dak's best qualities all deal with his leadership, decision-making, doing the right things, etc. This is a hit against those qualities. Regardless of whether it's ultimately thrown out or how people think it went down, this is not negligible for his draft stock. It will hurt.
Thank you for thinking and comprehending, unlike these other clowns.
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Originally Posted by
BoomBoom
i kinda already viewed healthcare that way. at least as far as attitude. but i think that's the exception, not the rule. and i HOPE it doesn't work that way for purposeful "errors" that cause serious injury and major lawsuits. (we were talking about "dickheads", but the problem isn't attitude.)
I used to have a neighbor who was a nurse at Kaiser. We had an issue with our 2nd daughter's childbirth, believing the midwife who did the delivery screwed up (thankfully our daughter turned out fine), but the birthing was traumatic and you could tell the midwife was extremely nervous.
When we mentioned this to our neighbor, she told us to come to her first, if we were going to do anything, because she knew, first-hand, that Kaiser had covered big-time for another doctor whose mistake actually screwed up a patient. She said it should have been a slam-dunk case of medical malpractice, but the hospital lied to keep it from escalating. She said, if we were going to do anything, we should tell her first, so she could secure the facts before the hospital found out and tried to cover it up.
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