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Cop Nearly Doors Cyclist, Then Chases And Arrests Her

040611thedes.jpg
Courtesy Christina Thede

On Monday, cyclist message boards lit up with outrage over the story of a woman who was arrested after supposedly running a red light on her bicycle on Amsterdam Avenue. But it turns out the truth is actually more outrageous: Christina Thede, the cyclist in question, tells us she didn't run a red light at all. Her crime? Criticizing a plainclothes cop who nearly doored her.

Thede, a 28-year-old theater technician on the Upper West Side, tells us she was biking home on Sunday around 6 p.m. when the driver's side door of a double parked black car popped open suddenly on Amsterdam between 76th and 77th Streets. "I had to brake so abruptly that a delivery biker behind me ran into me," says Thede. "I had a verbal exchange with the driver in which I told him to watch what he was doing." Then she rode on, but soon realized that the guy had gotten back into his car and was zooming up behind her. She still had no idea this man was an officer of the law, and the situation devolved from there:

He was driving after me and I was scared. He kept slowing down alongside me, so I cut all the way over to the left lane. But he angrily skidded to a stop in front of me, pulling his car perpendicular to traffic in the left lane. Then I got off my bike and tried to walk my bike onto the sidewalk because I wasn't going to run out into traffic. That's when he grabbed the back of my bike and started pulling it.

He didn't say he was a cop and I thought, 'This guy's crazy, he's attacking me!' I screamed for help and he started restraining my arms and holding me so I couldn't move. People on the street stopped and started asking him what he was doing. I did not hear him say he was a police officer or see any indication he was a police officer, so I was terrified. Then an NYPD squad car arrived and my initial thought was that they were going to save me from this guy; I figured the bystanders had called 911.

But instead of handcuffing her assailant, they slapped the cuffs on Thede, and that's when she realized that it was a policeman who had chased her. "I asked one of the police officers who was telling me to calm down if this guy and the passenger in his car were really cops," Thede recalls. "And she confirmed that they were from the Central Park precinct. I overheard a bystander say, 'I think she ran a red light.' But that's not true. He was hotheaded and couldn't take someone telling him what he did was wrong so he needed to come after me and teach me a lesson."

Thede was charged with reckless operation of a bicycle and disorderly conduct, and spent about an hour at the local precinct station house. During that time, the cop who arrested her, one "Sgt. Santiago" according to the summons, tried to justify the arrest. Thede says, "He told me that when I went around the door of his car to continue, that that was reckless because I was going into traffic. He maintained that I wasn't allowed to swerve around. But I came to a complete stop, exchanged words with him, then rode around his still-opened door. He said he arrested me because he was concerned for his safety."

We're waiting to hear back from the NYPD on this, but Thede's lawyer believes the tickets will be dismissed, and she tells us she's considering suing the city. So if you were one of the bystanders and happened to take photos or video, she'd love to hear from you! (nycgreenbike@gmail.com)

Contact the author of this article or email tips@gothamist.com with further questions, comments or tips.

Comments [rss]

  • About 10 years back a review of NYPD officers & staff using vehicles revealed a significant number driving vehicles for which they had no valid driving licence I guess you'll need to look it up , but sounds like their driving standards have not improved.

    I hope the cyclist who crashed into back of her has been in contact

    Double standards seem to abound - spoke to folk who stood in baggage reclaim at US airport watching abandoned bag for 30 min and drew security staff attention to it.  We don't touch it - "procedure sir" was response.  Later said observer happened to get introduced to senior security person and repeated story Cue blanched of face - head in hands - back to training the chimps!

    Some of the tales of the front line grunts working for DHS would be hilarious if they were not true.
  • if all happened as told in the story, what an abuse of power.
    UPDATES WANTED.
    what ever happened to their "case" against her?
  • TheSpinGuru
    This is exactly why full paint cans get tossed off of rooftops with NYPD as the target....
  • When I was 18, a bunch of 2 undercover cops pulled guns on me and 3 friends and did not identify themselves. IT WAS SCARY AS HELL.

    The obvious HOLES in the cops story (scare of a 120lb women on a bike? etc.. cmon) lead me to believe that this is another case of authoritarian abuse (albeit much less severe than other examples.)

    Are cops underpaid? yeah, maybe some of the good ones are underpaid! But the bad ones are overpaid, and their are plenty of bad ones, and little recourse for getting rid of them unless they really mess up (i.e. kill someone innocent).

    And yes, street/public space design is partially to blame too, for the aggressive driving culture.

    how much do we create cops who have common sense, self-esteem, are responsible, and just as compassionate as effective? How do we create a positive, relaxed driving culture in NYC? There are many solutions once we start asking the right questions.

    A better question always leads to a better answer.

    Sure, go ahead, call me an idealist.
  • Stupid C_NT . You don't give cops any shit--you're LUCKY they didn't BEAT YOU TO DEATH and then PLANT A GUN ON YOUR DUMB DEAD ASS.

    BURN THESE IDIOTS BICYCLES!

    BURN THEM ALL!
  • This comment is very sexist.
  • NY's finest PIGS at your service!

    I hope you take these pigs to court and get a huge settlement out of this.
  • nyc cops are all PIGS!!!!
  • ALL NYPD STINKS!!!!!!!!
    Only exception is Anti-crime. The rest are lowlife loser drunkards.
  • EarlySummer
    This is the quality of candidates you get when you're forced to dumb down the entrance exam to enable idiots to pass the test. Santiago seems to have the I.Q. of a squirrel. He should be thrown off the force for brutality and endangerment. He didn't even identify himself as a cop when he manhandled this girl. As a pedestrian, I think having to yield to bikes in the city is annoying and dangerous. When did Manhattan become San Francisco? That said, what this creep did to that girl was criminal.
  • We should carry tasers and deploy them with wild abandon like our law enforcement 'professionals' love to do. Somebody being a jerk? Zap em! Had a bad fight with your wife - Zap somebody!

    And ALL police that interact with the public should have thorough psych evaluations regularly. Like every other week.
  • SUE THE PANTS OFF THE CITY if they do not discipline this guy.
  • Wow, she didn't deserve to be arrested. She should have been shot. I'm fucking tired of cyclists who think they own the roads. When one is in front of me going all awkwardly slow, I sort of try not to hit them as I drive around them. Sort of.
  • troll
  • Hello tough guy
  • CrackerBoyX
    Perhaps the nice lady should wear bright colors rather than all black so others might actually see her when she approaches. The cop sounds like a typical jerk
  • Kommon sense
    I don't know why people hate concealed carry... Sure cuts down on stupidity like this. In AZ someone might have shot that 'cop' and it would have been fine.
  • Ignorant pigs with all the testicular fortitude god gave a gnat, that is all cops ever will be. Also is it a requirement to be an ignorant intolerance spewing republican just to be a cop?, because I have never meet one who wasn't. If you work as a 'public servant' and your is paycheck supplied by tax dollars, it should take only a few complaints before you are s%^tcanned and end up where you belong...flipping burgers with authority over mop water only.
  • Try obeying the law!! And I am sure you will have no problems with law enforcement !! I have lived in New York for over 40 years and have never had a problem with the Officers of law enforcement !!Are you by chance sucking up welfare ??
  • TheSpinGuru
    Another Fucktard posts!
  • You mean like the law requiring drivers to look before they open their damn door?
  • Guest
    Might he have used his gun to enforce a minor infraction in a fit a of bike rage.
  • How do we know that she is not just another lying lonely grandstanding freak ???
  • Because the cop chased her down and yet claimed to be "afraid for his safety."
  • WAR ON CRIME - War on Drugs: War, Good God Ya'll what is it good for? Absolutely NOTHIN - Say it Again. The PROBLEM is the US vs THEM Attitude of C*O*P*S. They believe they are a Separate SPECIES from the Rest of Us (Whom they think of as 'Cattle' or 'Vermin' to be 'CONTROLLED') This makes them the ENEMY of the PEOPLE.
  • So far we have only heard her side of the story!! Dumb dumb stupid Americans believe almost anything with out facts !! Look how you dumb dumbs believe your elected and appointed thieving corrupt politicians !!
  • So nice to know that the NY scumbags are exactly as I remember them. Nothing changes in 35 years. New York New York! *snerk*
  • I have lived and worked in New York for 40 years.Never had a problem with the law enforcement.All one needs to do is obey the law !!! Seems the law breakers are the ones to complain !!!
  • TheSpinGuru
    Really asshole.  Double parking and dooring are both illegal, you shit stain!
  • But of course, officer.
  • One of them "bad apples"? The simple truth is the barrel has been rotting for decades. A Chicago area PIG was annoyed when I rested my hand on the door frame of the squad car to make a complaint involving off road motorcyle (no plate) speeding and doing wheelies on city streets. A disturbing percentage of these pubic servants are pompous dimwits who aren't worth their weight in fresh dung.
  • Sorry, but I want to vent. I do not live in NYC, in fact have never had the urge to even visit, I live in the relative boondocks of southern Oregon and love it. Having said that, over the past two years I have seen first hand how our law enforcement has grown and I don't mean just a little. The ratio of Police+Sheriff : Population has grown exponentially. Picture a small town population 2000 over the past 10 years 0 murder 0 rape 0 robbery however two drive up coffee shops were broken into last year and vandals slashed tires on main street the year before. Until two years ago we had a small city Police force a Chief + 3 patrolmen and the county Sheriff's quantity unknown and then the State Police who are in effect the highway patrol. Now the city has 6 Patrolmen and all the law enforcement has the newest and best equipment available. What bothers me is the number of people pulled over for fake reasons, My wife was pulled over for speeding (I have never been able to get her to do the speed limit, she prefers 50 to 55) and after being made to exit the car and being searched was not even cited for speeding but given a ticket for not having her drivers license up to date (due to a change of address)
    The attitude has changed too, big time, the friendly local cop is no longer, they all seem angry and every car has smoked windows so dark you couldn't tell if a kid was driving the patrol car. It is scary. I am afraid they are positioning themselves for a revolt by the people and the way things are going in this country, it isn't going to be too long in waiting.
  • I hope she wins. last year i got t-boned on by bike by a syracuse police cruiser while crossing a street traveling in a bike lane. I have yet to recieve any compensation for medical bills and my destroyed bike. Slippery police bastards.
  • Admiral_Komack
    I hope she wins her suit against the city, and I hope she wins her suit against this power-drunk fool.
  • resign
    bikers and cops have a lot in common. both think that the law doesn't apply to them.
    i got hit by a cyclist running a light last week. Two cops were standing 10 feet away and did nothing.
  • Cops have lost the public trust, its not a respectable job anymore so they are hiring the degenerates more and more, then of course showering them with undeserving meaningless awards and honors so they can say in court how decorated this officer is, and get away with shit
  • ascpgh
    Been watching this fester all winter, curious if it was just a few zealot badges going to the absurd. It's looking a little less like one or two misguided cops causing a bunch of assuming responses regarding NYPD and bikes.

    This is, without a doubt, an enforcement initiative now. The incidents and the responses to the growing concern of other riders is making this clear. It's good to be a murderer, thief, drug merchant, or criminal vehicle operator in NYC; you aren't the focus of enforcement.

    This bike thing is a violation of city fiduciary responsibility regarding enforcement resources. These assets should be spent on crimes and criminals rather than criminalizing behavior mostly exhibited by the financially marginalized coping with living in the conditions present in NYC.

    Think I'm skipping the Five Boroughs Ride this year. Why bring my money to NYC under the premise of a fun ride through town when the city is officially currently applying gallons enforcement on cycling infractions easily addressed with a little dab?

    Bloomberg is really stretching his brain to come up with ways to run money out of NYC. The remaining may find cycling more and more viable for navigating their ways.
  • MrPractical000001
    I always trusted the police until I spent the night in jail because I had a verbal disagreement with one (charges dropped). That being said, I don't like generalizations where someone says that all police are bad because of a few bad experiences. More practically, do you think that these ranting generalizations will help built a bridge to police officers, or do you think that it will alienate them? You do the math. I guess I am just a solution-oriented person. If you really want a better situation, perhaps phrase things in such a way where the police officers with the kind of approach we might appreciate are not alienated. ---Mr. Practical
  • Patriot_70
    "do you think that these ranting generalizations will help built a bridge to police officers, or do you think that it will alienate them"

    Police officers are a form of power, a power that the citizens of the state allow to enforce laws and to accomplish it's goals. The police are little more than a gun that we have given the state to let it do it's job.

    They are not military (even though they think they are), they are not a security force (they enforce laws), they are not there to protect you (SCOTUS ruling), and they can even ignore a cry for help - as they have no legal obligation to answer that call.

    It is wrong to be afraid of police, or to bow to them. They must understand where their limits lie, and that is within the law. If an officer uses the law to attack, assault, and kidnap (falsely arrest) a person for offending them, then that officer needs to be removed form the force. He has forgotten that he is a representative of the law, and now thinks of himself as an authority over people.

    Don't play into their fantasies, or let yourself be intimidated by a police officer. If you do nothing wrong, then you should stand up for your rights, because of you don't, then you give confirmation to the errant police officer that what he is doing is okay. And when that officer crosses the line again, the person that gets hurt will probably not even be you - it might be your mother, dad, wife, girlfriend, or child.
  • Whenever they come to my front door to do me good, I run out the back. Whenever they are concerned for my safety, I pay with my freedom. Whenever they pretend to be protecting me, it is the big important well-respected thug who has robbed me, murdered my son and raped my wife that they are protecting. This is true in Zimbabwe, the USSR, and the USSA. They call it the police state.
  • CrackerBoyX
    Then don't vote Democratic: they want to control every little aspect of your life in an enduring nanny-state. FREEDOM! INDEPENDENCE!
  • InjunTrouble77
    This is why they are called pigs
  • f the police , shoot a cop , all those saying goes. I wonder why ..every time a cop does stuff like this it makes the public distrust them and makes it dangerous for good and bad cops .
  • It's a damn shame, but I know when I was a kid, a police officer was respected and most were good police officers. I'm really not sure that I can say that anymore. It appears that if they aren't corrupt, they want to abuse their power. I hope I'm wrong. Just an older guy with an observation.
  • This sounds like the cops in Ventura County California! They beat me in the jail there when I was no threat to anyone in the world, they just had to make a point like this guy... I still can't find anyone who can explain to me how people with a high school diploma or junior college level classes with other uneducated cops as professors at best are allowed to carry guns and make choices that forever change our lives. I wish I could escape to another sane reality!
  • EveDeVinney2
    Had an incident with a Los Angeles officer about 58 years ago. Some of these police
    have high stress levels, for sure. Others just want to push people around and have
    anger management problems...my brother for one ! Respect and appreciate most
    officers but guys like this make it bad for the good ones!
  • bamaearl
    "good. stupid bicycles are for CHILDREN. the worst form of transportation ever invented and preferred by pricks of all stripes . . . but mostly white."

    Cycling burns little Arab oil...
  • Wont see me shed a tear for a dead cop. i just might laugh at it. Karma comes to us all. bad things happen for a reason.
  • Compurgator
    You people in New York have it pretty bad - - in every population center where there's more than one Andy Griffith and Don Knotts, it's bad and getting worse where the uncontolled, arrogant, badge-bully cops and agents are concerned - - but in Casablanca West (Miami and its 'burbs and satellites) it's far worse: here, cops with .40 caliber semi-autos and shoulder weapons pack together at the first chirp of "officer needs help" (which could mean: "someone gave me a dirty look while driving by and when I stared back flipped me off") and before everything is over, they've killed, again (six or seven times in the past several months, mostly unarmed people). Here, the cop unions are obscenely well-connected. They have their own state-court judges and, to a lesser extent, (state) prosecutors. They've by now come pretty close to imperviousness (true, when something's just over-the-top outrageous, the worst of the bunch is wrist-slapped while the other disappear off into the foggy Everglades). Take a picture of a rogue at work? Go straight to jail for obstruction. Question a badger's actions on the street (arresting an eighty-something lady for feeding a stray cat)? Ditto. (Stray cats on Miami Beach are currently Public Enemy Number Two.)

    In the last analysis, it's really no different anywhere: Los Angeles, Chicago, New York Miami, New Orleans (ah, yes: New Orleans. Target practice from the bridges!). The seeds a lot of the law-and-order zealots of 20 or 30 years ago planted - - the ones who said, "Everybody but you and I is a dirt-bag (their word, exclusively) and I'm not so sure about you," and "Don't restrain the power of Officer Friendly, because, surely,he wouldn't do anything wrong, and anyone who says so is a lying dirtbag" have long since grown into bushes and trees, the places where today's cops and agents pitch their dirty stuff, hide their throwdowns till needed, and store away the dope they'll plant when necessary.

    As ye sow . . .
  • harrykuheim
    Bike messengers have been doing reckless , rude stuff for 15 years.
  • kweezen
    The NYC Gestapo are certainly demonstrating their finest behavior in this example. Aren't they employed to protect the citizens of NYC and not endanger them? Guess the streets aren't meant for healthy and environmentally conscious citizens. Beware of the badge my friends.
  • you cyclists are fracking NUTS! You'll do anything and say anything to further your agenda. Your ilk should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, you weirdo's.
  • What a loser. Go a fcuk a turtle you conservative cheeseofdick.
  • STFU and get back on your fry station BITCH. LMFAO
  • if you are some skanky 110 pounder, the smart thing to do is not to get into a pssng contest with a male in nyc. he could have had a gun, knife, baseball bat, a baton, or he could just drop kick you to the curb. have some sense beatch. I am a 250 lb male and I would not do it. Well, unless I was packing, and, not even them. Live long and prosper. DONT BE A STUPID BEATCH.
  • EyemNotFree
    The christian government must go down
  • good. stupid bicycles are for CHILDREN. the worst form of transportation ever invented and preferred by pricks of all stripes . . . but mostly white.
  • I didn't mean to click "Like". You are a racist idiot and an internet tough wannabe. Go home.
  • SUVs are the WORST form of transportation..
  • YOU HAVE STRIPED PRICKS?
  • EyemNotFree
    One time a secret service agent attacked me with a baseball bat when my 18 month old child was on the bike with me.
  • SeattleJo
    I still say if you checked for mental illness, 50 PERCENT of all cops need medication, treament, and are alcholics. They are often on power trips and need more time off in training on cooling off their hot heads. Much of it is job stress. Most are not able to deal with it properly.

    Everyone thinks police and military are gold. I served 6 years in the military. There are tons of uneducated scum in the military that claim to patriotism, but the truth is they have no plan for education and they have no job opportunities in their small towns. The military is a way out of red-neck, jobless America.

    I have a friend who was one of the sweetest guys, and after about 3 years in the Detroit force, he sure sounded angry and bitter. Cops need to be rotated to calm positions and spend community service time to reconnect with humans normally.

    They also need to stop doing petty enforcement of silly crimes and only be asked to do real police work.
  • A_Student_at_a_University
    I am tired of bike people running over pedestrians and blaming them. Pedestrians have a right not to be injured by vehicles on a pedestrian path. I am tired of being yelled at for "stepping in front of" a silent bike riding on a sidewalk when I'm trying to get to class just for stepping to the right. You were endangering me by your behaviour. You are not supposed to be on the sidewalk. You should be arrested for it and put in jail for it, just like a drunk driver.
  • you need to get physical with these people in self defense. they try that stuff on me they are in big trouble. white elitist idiots that's who rides bikes (other than children)
  • And lookeeee here. An Internet Tough GUy...
  • gl
    You should NEVER be in door range of a parked car, especially a double parked car. I learned that years ago.
  • I visited NYC in 1975. Haven't been back. What a pit!

    Oh, yes, I do live in flyoverland. But I vacation in Europe so I'm not a total rube.
  • gem22
    Yes, you are and you're the type of American that Europeans loathe.
  • I love how these cyclists come barreling down the wrong way on a ONE WAY bike lane on 8th Ave and almost kill pedestrians. And, they do so with the most despicable sense of self righteousness and entitlement.
  • I don't. Are you saying because some people do that I shouldn't have the full rights of the law when I get hurt by someone breaking the law?
  • gem22
    Absolutely not...two wrongs never make a right.
  • She should sue, he should be fired.
  • Fired? The slop cop should do time.
  • gem22
    The young woman may be entirely accurate in her account, and undoubtedly every cyclist on this board believes her. However, because cyclists so regularly disobey traffic laws....which makes the citing of regulations on this board so ironic....this is a suspicion that things weren't entirely as she states. Riding a bike in NYC is often a dangerous undertaking. I'm not sure that we can ever make things "safe enough". Cars don't look out for cyclists as often as they should and cyclists don't look out for pedestrians as they should. But until cyclists start obeying traffic laws, they are not going to get the support they want from the non-riding population.
  • moocow
    I don't support cars in anyway, but through a healthy amount of my taxes. I dont see cars obeying the laws any better, and often with way worse consequences. How can I register my non support of the minority of city dwellers driving their cars? Just today, on Alt side cleaning day, whole blocks of cars double parked, I would say that is the same level of dangerousness as a bike going through an empty intersection. But the cops have worked out an "understanding" with car owners.
  • gem22
    You are spouting absolute nonsense. And let's keep on topic...this young lady and bikes. I have had a lot more near misses with cyclists than I've ever had with cars. I see bikes go through red lights and I can't remember the last time I saw a car do this in the city. I see cyclists going the wrong way 50% of the time. I never see cars going in the wrong direction. Two wrongs don't make a right...it's no wonder non-cyclists have lost patience with cyclists...no acceptance of responsibility and blinders on to what is going on. How do you think we're going to get deliveries without trucks etc. The cops have no understanding with cars...what a silly conspiracy theory you've just concocted.
  • grrlfriday
    Sorry, I "liked" that comment by accident, I meant to hit "reply" instead. I was just in NY for a couple of weeks and I was absolutely SHOCKED at the lack of respect for bike lanes, bike infrastructure, crosswalks, red lights, etc., by almost every motorist I saw. One guy who was parked in a crosswalk, when I pointed this out to him, he said, "Crosswalk, what's that?" In general, everyone acted exactly the way they did before all this bike & ped infrastructure was put in. If they wanted to ignore it, they just went ahead and ignored it. This made a very dangerous and scary environment for walking and biking around the city. So I flat-out disagree that the cyclists are the only people breaking the law in NYC -- in fact, the very idea is absurd.

    Also, my experiences with the NYPD COMPLETELY back up everything this young woman has said. I have no doubt whatsoever that she was telling the truth. And I agree that anyone who can't get more control over himself than that, does not deserve to be on the force.
  • The real criminal is the gook that hit her from behind..
  • nolastname
    Internal Affairs needs to look into this ass of a cop and she needs a good lawyer. I don't mind my taxes paying for this lawsuit.
    PS that pic looks like Greeenpoint.
  • IAB never finds wrongdoing by one of their own when a civilian is involved.
  • nolastname
    The D.A.'s Office?
  • I was physically assaulted by a slop cop in the 70 pct. for no reason. I called the King's County D.A.'s office and was told that ALL criminal complaints against cops in uniform MUST go through IAB. I was either misinformed or the DA just really doesn't care about prosecuting cops who are bad. Karma will come after this cop just like it did to Dillon Stewart.
  • JSteed
    I think she lying! She looks like a dope and can't accept the responsibility for being stupid.
  • in my neighborhood, they don't call it "getting doored" anymore, they call it, "getting weinshalled".
  • canofpeas
    The good news is a large percentage of cops become alcoholics, steroid junkies, drug addicts, beat their wives, get divorced, alienate their children and eventually self destruct. It's called karma...
  • cmdrogogov
    None of that is good news.

    Being a policeman should be a respected profession in accordance with a social contract with the rest of society.

    The fact that this is not the case hints at problems that run deeper than anything that can be legislated away.
  • BoogieDown
    I don't really care for that wife beating part of the equation.
  • Lt. Dan Albano of NYPD Legal explains the law regarding cyclists riding outside of the bike lane to avoid doors or whatever.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v...
  • HassanCHOPP
    SUE that cop, Thede...for yourself, for everyone.
  • ChiGuyBike
    I had an interesting conversation with a Chicago Police officer who nearly struck me, passing on a narrow 2-way street. He insisted that cyclists should "hug the parked cars." A regular Rhodes Scholar, this one. Wouldn't even shake my hand at the end of our conversation. Enjoy your full- pension retirement -- my treat, douchebag!
  • Drivers will bully/
    As do many officers/
    Such is car culture/
    #haiku
  • I remember when I was in the ER, the guy that had been admitted next to me was "doored" on a bicycle and cracked his spine at the base of his skull. A lot of people don't realize that you CAN kill a cyclist by not looking before you open the door.
  • May this pig rot in hell...
    and
    May Thede be awarded thousands of dollars....
  • MannieP
    Idiot, I oughta proof my stuff. I should have said, I hope she sues the snot out of the City, and the arrogant pig ought to be flogged out of the force.

    Sheesh!
  • MannieP
    I usuallly have no patience with bicyclists driving like they own the road, and endangering themselves and others. But for once, the cyclist seems to have been in the right. I hope she's arrested. The arrogant pig ought to be flogged out of the force.

  • bggb
    If bicyclists rode as if they owned the road, they'd all be dead.

    When you're on a 30lb bike, surrounded by 2,000 lb vehicles, you watch where you're going.
  • FUCK DA PO LEASE!!!!!!
  • If you do you will catch a "Blue" virus.
  • chud_hunter
    hothead cops?--unheard of. This is what happens when GED failures put on uniforms. We need to clone Richard Belzner, even if he isn't a cop in actuality.
  • bike_whisperer
    Given what we know about the cyclist, the bike, and that it is slightly uphill where the incident occurred, most likely she was not "speeding." And do remember, she DID NOT hit the officer nor the door. She DID stop in time. Although words were exchanged, she was obviously content to continue on her way without further incident as she went around the door and was leaving. (Remember, at this point, she did not know this was an officer.) It was at this point that the officer decided to become the aggressor and use a "technicality" to put the cyclist (and who knows how many others) in danger by cutting her off in traffic and using physical force to place her under arrest. Seriously? Physical force to arrest a young woman for going around an illegally opened door from a stopped position. Not to mention this officer even calling for backup. I just wonder, with this ridiculous incident involving 3-4 units, how many more legitimate emergencies were put at risk by perhaps a delayed response?
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