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yermom
9/13/2007, 09:20 AM
http://www.thenewspaper.com/news/19/1961.asp


Missouri: Police Threaten, Detain Motorist for Parking After Hours
A St. George, Missouri police officer is caught on tape threatening to invent charges to arrest a motorist for parking after hours.

nice.

SoonerBorn68
9/13/2007, 09:45 AM
MEOW!

crawfish
9/13/2007, 09:52 AM
Another...

http://www.officer.com/web/online/Top-News-Stories/Chicago-Man-Sues-after-Prostitution-Arrest/1$37624


Chicago Man Sues after Prostitution Arrest

It was Rocio Palacios who first noticed the woman who appeared to need help.

It was 8 a.m. when she and her husband, Erasmo, dropped their 6-year-old daughter off at school and had picked up their 22-year-old daughter to go out for breakfast when they saw the woman waving her arms at 53rd Street and Kedzie Avenue last November.

The Palacioses, of Chicago, claim the woman approached their car, parked outside Manolo’s restaurant, leaned in to the passenger side where Rocio was sitting and asked Erasmo if he wanted oral sex for $20 or sex for $25.

The couple laughed, realizing this wasn’t a woman in distress after all.

But within seconds, Chicago police swarmed the family car, hauling Erasmo Palacios out in handcuffs. He was charged with solicitation of a prostitute

His daughter, who had just run in to exchange her coffee for a hot chocolate, screamed, while his wife cried in fear.

Eight hours later, Palacios, who has no criminal record, was released from custody. And weeks later, charges against him were dropped.

Now, Erasmo Palacios is suing the city and the officers involved in his arrest, saying they violated his civil rights during an incident he described as both frightening and ridiculous.

“I’m so lucky I was with my wife -- imagine if I had to try to tell her and she wasn’t with me,” he said, before laughing at the image. “She’d never believe me. Never.”

A Chicago police report offers few details, saying only that it was Erasmo Palacios who asked for sex, never mentioning his wife in the car or his daughter nearby.

Attorneys Lonny Ben Ogus and Joe Cavanaugh also want to know what happened to the family’s 1983 Mercedes. It was impounded that November day and, Palacios said, his wife and daughter were even threatened with arrest as they tried to stop police from taking it, as they were left stranded that morning.

The city wants more than $4,700 in towing and storage fees if he wants the car back.

City officials declined to comment on the status of the family’s car and the Palacios case, while the undercover female officer involved in the arrest couldn’t be reached.

Copyright 2007, Sun-Times News Group

mdklatt
9/13/2007, 10:02 AM
That *** wrinkle missed his calling. He should be a Norman cop. :rolleyes:

yermom
9/13/2007, 10:02 AM
impounds are such a scam

and that's pretty awesome, i wonder if he had a wide stance ;)

Chuck Bao
9/13/2007, 10:05 AM
Thanks for posting that article, Crawfish.

I'm hoping for a big settlement for that Chicago family. I'm hoping that police departments everywhere take notice that entrapment is wrong and exposes their city to potential huge restitution cases and settlement.

TUSooner
9/13/2007, 10:17 AM
In 10 years of working for courts and reviewing criminal cases, I've NEVER seen a judge find that a cop was not believable. NEVER. That scares me, and it ought to scare you.

The old adage about how "power corrupts and absolute power corrupts asbolutely" definitely applies to cops, as to any human. That's all I'm sayin...