CHICAGO – A suburban Chicago police officer used a $132 speeding ticket he issued to track down a woman and ask her for a date, saying the least he could do for costing her so much money was to buy her dinner, a lawsuit filed by the woman alleges.
Evangelina Paredes accuses Stickney cop Chris Collins of violating her privacy by searching motor-vehicle records for her address, then leaving a handwritten note on her car windshield outside her apartment two days after she was ticketed.
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7 comments:
There's that pesky 1% once again.
I would think that would be cause for termination.
I don't think a lawsuit is necessary. File a complaint and get on with your life.
trust me when I say this, nothing will happen...
What happened to the cop whom had sex with a women while on duty and after he used her indecent report to go back to her house? ( she called it rap; courts didn't) but yet because he was on duty that should have been filed under the law "conduct uncomming of an officer"
yet nothing happened to him...
Then there was a guy whom pretended to be a cop, basically impersonating a cop which is against the law, but because he was or was an ex firefighter he got off with nothing...
Think about it people, when you get a ticket or warning, is the address not on it already. So why did the cop have to search the address, he already had it, on his copy. So with the little facts we have, already half is false.
1% lmao! more reason for citizen review boards and a national database tracking these dirtbags so when they are fired they can't just show up elsewhere get hired and harass working people!
Typical cop, He was probably married.
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