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Coffee Cop

Last post 07-21-2008, 12:12 PM by WSB. 5 replies.
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  •  07-18-2008, 8:39 AM 84266

    Coffee Cop

     

    Police: Officer fired for demanding free coffee

    Fla. cop allegedly threatened workers with slower responses if they refused

    updated 5:02 a.m. CT, Fri., July. 18, 2008 function UpdateTimeStamp(pdt) { var n = document.getElementById("udtD"); if(pdt != '' && n && window.DateTime) { var dt = new DateTime(); pdt = dt.T2D(pdt); if(dt.GetTZ(pdt)) {n.innerHTML = dt.D2S(pdt,((''.toLowerCase()=='false')?false:true));} } } UpdateTimeStamp('633519721581300000');

    DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. - An internal affairs report says a Daytona Beach police officer demanded free coffee and tea from a Starbucks and threatened employees with slower emergency response times if they refused.

    Lt. Major Garvin, a 15-year veteran, was fired July 8. According to the Daytona Beach News-Journal, Chief Mike Chitwood says Garvin recently failed a polygraph test that he insisted on taking.

    The coffeehouse's employees claim that since June 2007, Garvin had visited the store as many as six times a night while on duty. Besides demanding free drinks, workers complained that Garvin also cut in front of paying customers.

    A telephone listing for Garvin could not be found.

    Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.
  •  07-18-2008, 9:06 AM 84275 in reply to 84266

    Re: Coffee Cop

    They must be paying those guys too much.  How did this cop get a Starbuck jones?  The cops I know have trouble affording Dunkin Doughnuts coffee.
    DET
  •  07-19-2008, 6:19 PM 84460 in reply to 84275

    Re: Coffee Cop

    Just another example of the mindset of many LEO's now.  Notice that this was a 15 year vet. , It's not just a dumb rookie thing.  If you are a good LEO or have friends that are, incurage them to try make a difference.  A LEO should be respected for his upstanding character and devotion to the law, when the character is gone the law follows. 
    If you do not know what your rights are, you do not have them.
  •  07-19-2008, 7:24 PM 84468 in reply to 84460

    Re: Coffee Cop

    Cops aren't that poorly paid.

    Big to do here in Houston, Texas. Happened a few years ago. Seemed a senior cop was making well over 150 grand a year. That is the regular pay plus extra jobs.

    Eye brows shot up. The question: how does an hourly wage worker - cop or not- make 150 big ones and still have time to do things like...oh, EAT? Sleep? You know, things like that?

    My brother-in-law was a cop. He retired a couple years ago.But even he wondered about this.

    No, we're all well able to make bad judgement. All of us.
     

    Thanks,
    AlleyOop
  •  07-19-2008, 7:33 PM 84471 in reply to 84468

    Re: Coffee Cop

    It is not unusual for restauraunts in high crime areas to encourage cops to come in and drink free coffee, sometimes to even give dough nuts and on special occasions a slice of pie.  The coffee is a small price to pay for otherwise having to shut down when the sun goes down, looks safer with one or two patrol cars out in the parking lot.  Furr's Cafeteria used to do that in North Houston and managed to stay open in a war zone.
  •  07-21-2008, 12:12 PM 84651 in reply to 84471

    Re: Coffee Cop

    Jake3501:
    It is not unusual for restauraunts in high crime areas to encourage cops to come in and drink free coffee, sometimes to even give dough nuts and on special occasions a slice of pie.  The coffee is a small price to pay for otherwise having to shut down when the sun goes down, looks safer with one or two patrol cars out in the parking lot.  Furr's Cafeteria used to do that in North Houston and managed to stay open in a war zone.

    When I ran my C-store officers always got free coffee and pop. I liked it because I think it was the main reason you would find city, county and state police meeting in my parking lot at 3:00  in the morning. It always made my night shifters feel safer. However, I think the issue here is abuse. Demanding it and coming back that often might tick me off also. All the officers in my area were very polite and appreciative. I would always let the officers step behind the counter and get the pop themselves. After I left that store I was talking to one of the officers I knew. He was telling me he went in there one night and they told him he couldn't go behind the counter - new managers rules. He was assigned the liquor inspection reports that month and decided to do that store at that moment. He asked to inspect the liquor storage room (which he knew would be locked and the clerk did not have the key).  He expained as a LEO he could go ANYWHERE in that facility because it sold liquor. He informed the clerk he would be back the next night to inspect that room. In the long run I believe the manger ended up coming in on a night shift for the inspection AND they he still managed to find a violation or two (you know tax seals that the glue let loose - open liquor - VIOLATION) You can get boneheads on both sides. The new manager was so bent on "rules" she forgot to work with LEO. I had to laugh, because the LEO in that town was great to work with. If I had clerks they thought were selling after hours or to minors, they would let me know first so I could set up the sting and fire them BEFORE they had to. They were very much about solving the problem not asserting their authority.


    "The most foolish mistake we could possibly make would be to allow the subject races to possess arms. History shows that all conquerors who have allowed their subject races to carry arms have prepared their own downfall by so doing..." Adolf Hitler
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