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- Mar 8, 2006
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Just for kicks, if anyone can think of a plausible explanation as to why an experienced sheriff's deputy who transports prisoners for a living would put this total stranger in his car without checking for weapons, I would have to at least give you an "A" for effort.
My H, and every one of his fellow officers, carry their weapons off-duty. When you carry a gun for a living and you are used to having to find an inconspicuous way to carry it, you are hyper-aware of anyone with a suspicious buldge in a place it does not belong. You don't ever want to risk being caught off-guard and un-armed by someone who you arrested last month, and they way our system works, those people are out on the streets before you have time to work your next shift. Most cops would probably have to try hard to supress the urge to search a strange man before putting him in their passenger seat(bet he made him ride in the back
) and bringing him into his home, even just to do yard-work. "This is for my safety and yours", don't you know! Wouldn't surprise me a bit if the dude had flex-cuff marks around his wrists when he died.
Susan
My H, and every one of his fellow officers, carry their weapons off-duty. When you carry a gun for a living and you are used to having to find an inconspicuous way to carry it, you are hyper-aware of anyone with a suspicious buldge in a place it does not belong. You don't ever want to risk being caught off-guard and un-armed by someone who you arrested last month, and they way our system works, those people are out on the streets before you have time to work your next shift. Most cops would probably have to try hard to supress the urge to search a strange man before putting him in their passenger seat(bet he made him ride in the back

Susan