Re: Ooops!!! "Rifle left unattended"
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Alderleet</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: CSAR</div><div class="ubbcode-body">It gets better. Original officer left the rifle on the trunk while the car was in a police lot. Another officer decided to take that car to go get coffee.......never noticing the rifle on the trunk. The car was driven to the coffee shop with the rifle on the trunk as reported by the local news reports I've seen. </div></div>
I call bullshit on that one. Theres no fucking way that would have stayed on the trunk. There are so many dips, patchy chunks of road, and steep grades for that rifle to stay on the car. Unless they gorilla glued that bitch to the trunk, driving around with it didnt happen.</div></div>
Think what you will. Here's the Seattle Times article.
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Updated Wednesday, June 29, 2011 at 06:26 PM
Seattle police 'embarrassed' by rifle left unattended on cruiser
By Christine Clarridge
Seattle Times staff reporter
Everybody's done it.
You place an item on top of a car only to remember later — after you or someone else has driven off.
But when the forgetful individual is a Seattle police officer and the item is a semi-automatic rifle, it's more than a little embarrassing. It's also the focus of an internal investigation.
Seattle police spokesman Sgt. Sean Whitcomb conceded Tuesday it was "very embarrassing" that a semi-automatic rifle was left on the trunk lid of a police cruiser in downtown Seattle on Monday.
"The fact of the matter is that a police rifle was left on a car in public, and that is unacceptable," Whitcomb said. "It's very embarrassing, and it shouldn't have happened."
According to two sources with knowledge of the incident, it began when one officer was inside the secure parking garage at the West Precinct and unloaded his equipment from a police cruiser. The officer placed the rifle on the trunk of a nearby patrol car.
That officer, identified by sources as acting Sgt. Bill Collins, forgot about the rifle and walked off.
Another officer, identified as Lt. Deanna Nollette, then went into the garage and drove away in the patrol vehicle without realizing the rifle was on the trunk lid, the sources said.
The patrol car was parked a few blocks away from the West Precinct in front of the Roosevelt Hotel on Seventh Avenue around 9 p.m. Monday when at least two people spotted the rifle on the unattended vehicle.
A man who identified himself as Nick Gonzales confirmed he snapped a photo of the unsecured weapon.
Police said he then flagged down a couple of nearby bicycle officers.
A second witness noticed the rifle around the same time, and tracked down and alerted the officer, Whitcomb said.
He would "not confirm or deny" the sources' account, but said an investigation has been launched into the "circumstances that would allow for this patrol rifle to be left on this car."
He also couldn't say whether the rifle, reportedly an AR-15, was loaded.
Whitcomb would not speculate as to whether either officer would face discipline, but the Police Department's policy manual requires officers to inspect patrol vehicles before use.
He said it is a violation of the department policies to leave a weapon unattended, but not a criminal violation.
Whitcomb said such rifles are assigned only to officers who have additional training.
The high-powered weapons usually are kept in the trunk or between the driver and passenger seats.
Christine Clarridge: 206-464-8983
or
[email protected]