VetSkinsFan wrote:Another snippet from the story that leans on the side of Moats, but really isn't specific:
But Powell spent several minutes inside his squad car, checking Moats for outstanding warrants.
A total of 13 minutes is said to have passed in dealing with this officer. There were people disobeying an order of the officer.
"My mom is dying," Tamishia Moats replied. She and her great aunt ignored the officer and headed into the hospital, while Ryan Moats and another family member stayed behind, according to the report.
They're lucky they weren't handcuffed for an act like this.
"I waited until no traffic was coming," Moats told Powell, explaining why he had rolled through the red light. "I got seconds before she's gone, man," he said, the newspaper reported.
I would have waited at the red light. I've been in vaguely similar circumstances, and I obeyed traffic lights.
Powell demanded his license, which Moats produced, and proof of insurance, which Moats could not find. "Just give me a ticket or whatever," Moats said, his frustration beginning to show, according to the report.
Disrespect to an officer and will get nothing positive from the officer.
"Shut your mouth," Powell told him, the newspaper reported. "You can cooperate and settle down, or I can just take you to jail for running a red light."
In another exchange reported by the Morning News, Moats again asked the officer to complete the traffic stop quickly.
"If you're going to give me a ticket, give me a ticket," Moats said.
"Your attitude says that you need one," Powell replied.
The piece was cut in a few places... I'd like to see the whole piece. They didn't listen to the officer, and that will hold you up, plain an simple.
Overall, both sides could have handled it better. Having dealt with the law a few times in my younger years, Moats did everything he wasn't supposed to do. Talk back, tell the officer what he should do, ect.
I realize that it was a dire circumstance, but ultimately, it's the officer's judgment call, and if the officer isn't receptive to Moats situation, then really, what is Moats supposed to do? He admittedly ran a red light. The two other people disregarded a direct order from an officer. No respect for the law.
In watching that edited video and reading the slanted article, I believe the officer was completely within his rights and shouldn't be punished. I also don't believe it was racial.