A video of a Massachusetts cop emerging from McDonalds and being called out for parking in a handicap space has gone viral, as an example of what happens when citizens police the police.
The cop, carrying a sack of burgers and a tray of junk, walks (able bodied) to his cruiser but is interrupted by a man who asks him if he is aware of the parking infraction.
The officer responds by first claiming that the spot isnt a disabled bay, a clear lie, as the video footage verifies, and then saying that he can do whatever he wants.
So you get to park wherever you want? the man asks.
Thats right replies the officer.
As the man pursues the matter, the cop busts out the age old line Do you know who I am?
The law-breaking cop then resorts to intimidation, asking the man for his name and pulling out a notepad, as if hes about to issue a citation or report a crime.
The man stands his ground and tells the cop that he doesnt have to tell him his name or show ID simply for pointing out police wrongdoing.
The video was posted to the Webster Police Facebook page, prompting several pointed responses.
Coverage of the incident prompted the department to initially respond by defending the officer and claiming that the parking space was a regular spot. However, the Facebook post now seems to have disappeared, along with the entire Webster police Facebook page.
The posts were mirrored on Twitter however:
These kinds of videos are increasingly popping up as more law abiding citizens stand up to law breaking cops. Recently, a video showing a cop being pulled over by a citizen for speeding received a huge amount of attention.
It seems that showing cops that they are not above the law is immensely popular.
It seems that showing cops that they are not above the law is immensely popular.
Showing EVERYONE who thinks they are NOT above the law should also be immensely popular also...
Handicapped-Parking Fraud Is Just About the Jerkiest Crime Imaginable
Why do all the best parking spots go to people who cant walk? Thats a question that haunts Americas biggest jerks every hour of every day. For those who cant abide having to stroll 100 feet through a shopping mall parking lot to get to Ruby Tuesday, theres nothing more alluring than a counterfeit or illicitly acquired handicapped- parking placard. It gives you all the benefits of being disabled, with no real downside except for inconveniencing people who are really and truly handicapped. Like I said, no real downside!
Probably the most famous case of handicapped-parking fraud happened in 1999, when NFL quarterback Cade McNown and 18 other current and former UCLA football players were charged with illegally using handicapped parking placards while they were enrolled at the school. All 19including Skip Hicks, who rushed for eight touchdowns in 1998 as a running back for Washington, D.C.s professional football team, and Brendon Ayanbadejo, who later won fame as one of the NFLs most outspoken st raight advocates for gay rightspleaded guilty or no contest to the charges, and were sentenced to fines and community service.(I always thought this said a lot about why McNown was such a bust in the pros. A quarterback whos too lazy to walk through a parking lot isnt going to stand a chance against the Packers defense.)
The most recent outbreak of handicapped-parking fraud has come in Providence, R.I., a small city where pretty much everything is within walking distance. As Amanda Milkovits tells it in the Providence Journal, local valet parkers noticed an unusual amount of cars with handicapped placards parked near the train station and downtown businesses. So the Providence cops set up a sting operation of sorts in which they approached the drivers of placard-bearing cars and asked whether the placards actually belonged to them.
They received a variety of responses. Some people said the placards belonged to relatives. Some people said nothing. One able-bodied lady allegedly claimed that she was using the placard because she wanted a close parking spot in case of emergency. I particularly enjoyed this exchange:
A Woonsocket woman parked on Exchange Terrace and heading to work told Sgt. Paul Zienowicz that it was hers. Then, it was her husbands, whose name she couldnt quite remember. Then it was her sons.
Then she said, OK, Ill tell you the truth, officer, Zienowicz recalled. I said, That would be refreshing.
The placard was actually listed to a man in Olneyville, who may or may not be a friends husband.
The not-handicapped handicapped parkers all got written up, and theyll face a potential $500 fine, which seems a bit too lenient, if you ask me. Maybe they should instead be sentenced to a week in a wheelchair, so they can see what its like to actually be handicapped. Or maybe, if convicted, they should be named and shamed on handicappedfraud.org, a website where suspicious citizens can post information about drivers whom they suspect are gaming the disabled-parking system. Our organization does not issue tickets, but raises awareness and hopefully shames offenders into paying for their parking meters and leaving designated spaces for the truly handicapped, reads the sites About Us section. A noble goal, but is the site really making a difference? We are Making a Difference! the homepage states. Well, that settles that. Keep it up, handicappedfraud.org!