I was going to bite my tongue, but I can't. (Sigh)
Some of you know who I work for. Some don't. For those that don't know me, I am a Lieutenant with the Oregon State Police. I am in my 14th year with OSP. Currently, I'm the Portland Area Commander - that means I oversee and manage our three offices in the Portland metro area. I am the top OSP officer in Portland. I'm not telling you to this to toot my own horn. I only mention it to put into perspective the job I have and the level of management I engage in 7 days a week with lots state troopers who work the road here and the lots of challenges that come with it.
Our call load is about 50/50 between 911 calls for service and self-initiated activity. For the self-initiated activities, most of that is traffic related. We're the State Police after all, not a city PD or a county SO. We work traffic. It is what it is.
My troopers (including myself if I ever get out on the road instead of counting beans or handling personnel issues) routinely drive faster than the rate of traffic. We have to. We just have to. It is the only way to proactively patrol a state highway and especially an interstate. If we were to drive the speed limit, we would follow the same couple of cars for miles and miles and miles. If there was nothing wrong with those cars we were following or they were being driven by Mr. and Mrs. Jones from the farm down the road, what good would we be doing? Our mission is to promote traffic safety through enforcement of traffic crimes and hazardous traffic violations. Mr. and Mrs. Jones don't drive that way.
By driving at a rate faster than traffic, i.e. 75 in a 65, it allows us to look at many, many cars and pick out the worst of the worst. One could argue that we could drive slower than the rate of traffic, i.e. 55 in a 65 and let cars pass us, but there are two problems. The **** heads that we want to find would never pass us and the good citizens that think we're actually concerned with someone going 66 in a 65 wouldn't pass, either, causing a monumental back-up. Those back-ups cause crashes, something we're trying to avoid.
So, there have been a couple of good reasons a cop is driving through traffic posted here. I totally agree with the quiet and invisible response to an emergency call. It is sometimes critical to get somewhere w/o the siren or lights so as not alert the bad guy. It is also very routine (at least in Oregon) to drive faster than traffic so you can "work traffic."
I'm not so naive to say that every cop speeding has a reason like one of these two. That's not the case. I've known cops that have done a lot worse than speed - I know some cops that have gone to jail. Like any profession, there are bad seeds. But, in all the years I've been a cop, I have certainly seen cops speed for no reason. It's not right, I agree with you...but don't assume that they're all doing it just because they can. I don't and I know most don't...at least in my Area Command!
Sorry, couldn't keep my mouth shut any longer and admittedly, just my two cents. Hopefully those that know me, but didn't "know" what I really do will still talk to me...sniff, sniff.
If anyone doubts or questions what I have said here, you have a standing invite to come ride with me or one of my troopers. As mentioned, it is tough for me to get out on the road with my Sergeants or the troopers, but I will make the time if anyone wants to come out and see what it's really like. It would be fun and I promise you would have a whole new way of looking at things the po-leece do.
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