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posted by janrinok on Saturday August 01 2015, @04:20AM   Printer-friendly
from the stepping-on-toes? dept.

Who would have felt comfortable in these circumstances?

A Massachusetts man was driving in the town of Medford last Saturday night. He admits he took a wrong turn and ended up going the wrong way down a traffic circle. The angry man steps out of a truck and approaches him. Michael, seemingly -- and perhaps understandably -- frightened, reverses. The angry man follows him and Michael stops.

The angry man appears to show his badge and identifies himself as a police officer. Some, though, might be troubled by the officer's greeting: "I'll put a hole in your head." Michael is apologetic and explains to the officer -- now identified as Det. Stephen LeBert -- that he is being recorded. LeBert suggests that he will seize the camera.

"I'm a f***ing Medford detective and you went through that f***ing rotary," says LeBert. As Michael insists he didn't see a sign, LeBert demands his license. "You're lucky I'm a cop, otherwise I'd be beating the f***ing piss out of you right now," LeBert adds, shortly after calling the driver an a**hole. LeBert ultimately calls for on-duty cops who at least do a little to calm the situation. However, the fact that Michael posted his video to YouTube has led to an investigation.

Medford Police Chief Leo Sacco told MyFoxBoston: "It's not the proper behavior, but we only know about it when people tell us. And unfortunately, we had to get up this morning and see it on a YouTube video."

In the days before cameras proliferated, you had to rely on witnesses and hearsay. The police were more likely to be believed by those in authority. Cameras have begun to change that -- on both sides.

Sacco told the Medford Transcript: "The video is troubling enough, and it requires investigation just based on what we see here. The driver does not have to file his own complaint. He may, but he does not have to."

[...] Sacco told the Medford Transcript that LeBert was a good policeman. He added, perhaps unfortunately: "If you work hard you do step on people's toes, which generates complaints."


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  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by Whoever on Saturday August 01 2015, @04:58AM

    by Whoever (4524) on Saturday August 01 2015, @04:58AM (#216652) Journal

    "If you work hard you do step on people's toes, which generates complaints."

    I'm struggling to see the work that this cop was doing while threating someone.

    If he had written up a citation for driving the wrong way round a traffic circle, that would be work. Threatening someone's life, not so much.

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  • (Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday August 01 2015, @05:28AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday August 01 2015, @05:28AM (#216661)

    They've probably got some sort of 'hole in a head' (or functional equivalent) quota they have to maintain, otherwise they get poor performance reviews, etc.

    The hard work part could be finding appropriate contributing clients where any stink is sufficiently contained that the department doesn't have to go through that extra process of saying "We are investigating" before declaring everything's hunky dory.

  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday August 01 2015, @05:40AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday August 01 2015, @05:40AM (#216666)

    Strangely I couldn't find that quote in the wickedlocal link.
    It did, however, have:

    “He’s a hard charger,” Sacco said. “He’s an active and aggressive police officer. And when you act that way, you’re going to step on some people’s toes. And when you do that, complaints will be filed against you. He’s very effective at what he does. [Sunday’s incident] is not characteristic of the way he is.”

    So where did the purported quote in the summary come from?

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 02 2015, @07:58PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 02 2015, @07:58PM (#217091)

      I just can't square in my mind the following two things from the article

      He’s an active and aggressive police officer

      [Sunday’s incident] is not characteristic of the way he is.

      Sure thing man