"lonestranger" (lonestranger)
04/10/2014 at 17:55 • Filed to: car crime | 2 | 10 |
Hilarious, real stories of real morons as told by a Canadian cop. From Victoria, B.C.'s !!!error: Indecipherable SUB-paragraph formatting!!! :
!!! UNKNOWN CONTENT TYPE !!!
File this craziness under stupid human tricks.
Victoria Police Const. Graeme Leblanc shares 10 things you shouldn't do at road checks. All incidents that actually happened.
Leblanc was most recently one of the acting sergeants in the Capital Regional District's Integrated Road Safety Unit.
Drive up with a crack pipe in one hand and a lighter in the other, while you have crack and heroin in your pocket.
U-turn prior to a roadblock and flee from police, get caught and end up providing breath samples of 0.26 and 0.27 — that's over three times the legal limit.
Pretend you can't see the officer or the roadblock and drive through without stopping. Keep fleeing from police, get caught and end up providing breath samples of .08 and .07.
Have a beer in your hand as you drive up to the roadblock. When confronted by the officer, put the beer in the centre console and deny any knowledge.
As you are driving up to a roadblock, forget to stop, smash into the vehicle in front of you at 50 km/h, pushing that car into a third vehicle. This all happens because you are so hammered you have trouble walking. Police have to physically remove you from the vehicle and place you into the police car. Pretend you can't speak English. Refuse to provide a breath sample, blah, blah, blah.
As you approach the roadblock, use your truck to do a Dukes of Hazzard manoeuvre to get over the centre median. Dump your vehicle and flee from police. Do all of this because you are impaired and breaching your bail conditions.
Arrive at a roadblock when you are prohibited from driving as a result of a previous impaired driving charge. Unfortunately, the same officer that dealt with you on that earlier impaired incident is at the roadblock and recognizes you. Watch as your wife (with a valid licence) and your two kids leave on foot to walk the rest of the way home. Make a sad face to the police officer as your Audi A4 gets impounded for 60 days.
Drive up to a police roadblock while the woman in the back seat — not your wife — tries desperately to put her pants back on. The car reeks of fresh marijuana. When the officer opens the driver's door, your baggie of coke can be seen in the door's map pocket. In addition to the cocaine, you also have one and a half pounds of marijuana and half a pound of hash in the car.
Drive up and stop 50 metres short short of a police roadblock. Trade places with the driver because he is drunk and doesn't have a licence because of his previous impaired charges. Get arrested for impaired driving yourself. Change your mind and provide a written statement to the police so that you can get your (now) ex-boyfriend charged as well. You blow 0.10, then 0.09 and your ex blows 0.12 and 0.11. Two impaired drivers from one vehicle.
As you're speaking to the officer, she notes a smell of fresh marijuana coming from the vehicle. You're arrested and when the vehicle is searched, police find a small amount of marijuana and just under $24,000 in cash in a backpack. The money is the profits from selling drugs. All the money is forfeited to Revenue Canada for unpaid back taxes.
Carla Wilson / Times Colonist
© Copyright Times Colonist
505Turbeaux
> lonestranger
04/10/2014 at 17:57 | 0 |
wise words
BaconSandwich is tasty.
> lonestranger
04/10/2014 at 18:00 | 2 |
I think this could be summed up in one of two ways:
1. Don't drink and drive.
2. Don't do drugs.
lonestranger
> BaconSandwich is tasty.
04/10/2014 at 18:03 | 2 |
ttyymmnn
> lonestranger
04/10/2014 at 18:09 | 0 |
As you're speaking to the officer, she notes a smell of fresh marijuana coming from the vehicle. You're arrested and when the vehicle is searched, police find a small amount of marijuana and just under $24,000 in cash in a backpack. The money is the profits from selling drugs. All the money is forfeited to Revenue Canada for unpaid back taxes.
I always wondered about this sort of thing. Sure, most people don't go around with $24k in cash in a backpack. But how can the cops prove it's drug money?
With-a-G is back to not having anything written after his username
> ttyymmnn
04/10/2014 at 18:14 | 0 |
The story is from Canada, but in the US there are property forfeiture laws that allow this. It's total BS from a due process perspective, but SO FAR the courts have been ok ruling that you may be innocent until proven guilty, but your possessions are not. Again, total BS.
ttyymmnn
> With-a-G is back to not having anything written after his username
04/10/2014 at 18:18 | 0 |
I remember an episode of COPS with that dorky Sheriff John Bunnell. They raided some guy's house, found some drugs and confiscated the two collector cars he had in his garage. Then they left a cocky message on his answering machine telling him that if he wanted his cars back he had to come down to the station to claim them. That reeks of theft to me.
Moves-Like-Senna
> lonestranger
04/10/2014 at 18:19 | 1 |
11. Forget about stolen property such as a road sign in the back seat.
Not talking from experience... totally not....
lonestranger
> ttyymmnn
04/10/2014 at 18:23 | 0 |
I'm not positive, but in Canada, I think that if you're carrying more than "X" amount of cash, you must be able to show where it came from. In other words, the onus is on you to prove it's not the proceeds of crime. I could be completely wrong, though.
I do know that if you're coming in to Canada with over $10,000 CDN in cash, you must report it .
lonestranger
> Moves-Like-Senna
04/10/2014 at 18:26 | 1 |
LOL, I totally don't know that this type of sign post is very easily bent. Nope, never done that. Not me.
Moves-Like-Senna
> lonestranger
04/10/2014 at 18:39 | 0 |
Hahaha. Sometimes a little mischief is just what you need ;)