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Rob Ford will ‘catch hisself,’ says Florida sheriff

Art Mann

sapiosexual
May 10, 2010
2,898
3
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"Be a man, do the right thing and move on with life."

By Colin Perkel
TORONTO — An American sheriff who has just charged a town mayor with drug offences said Wednesday it's a head-scratcher why the continent's most notorious crack smoker, Rob Ford, is still in office.

Gordon Smith, a self-described politically incorrect sheriff from Bradford County in Florida, said he's watched the Ford situation unfold with amazement.

"He's so flamboyant, he's out there, he's kind of smearing it in Torontonians faces, saying, 'What are you going to do?' " Smith told The Canadian Press from Starke, Fla.

"He is the face of Toronto, and that's all you see plastered in the news media and people are going, 'What the heck?' "

In a statement announcing Monday's arrest of Mayor Barry Moore of Hampton, Fla., population 500, Smith said he wouldn't put up with illicit drug activity, regardless of who is involved.

"This isn't Toronto," he said.

"We will not tolerate illegal drug activity in my jurisdiction by anyone, to include our elected officials."

Investigators in Toronto have said they had recovered a video that apparently shows Ford smoking crack cocaine, but said they didn't have enough evidence to warrant an arrest.

Chief Bill Blair has said Ford received no special treatment, and police would charge him if there were reasonable and probable grounds to do so.

Smith said he sympathized with Blair.

"I truly believe if they had enough to put (Ford) in jail, they would already have him in jail," Smith said.

Still, the sheriff said he believed it was only a matter of time before Ford, who has admitted to buying illegal drugs and smoking crack cocaine in a drunken stupor, is charged or ousted.

"A guy like that, he'll catch hisself," he said.

On Monday, Florida police charged Moore with possessing and selling Oxycodone, the first arrest of an elected official under Smith's watch.
Police had video and audio recordings to back the arrest, said Smith, who agreed the Ford "crack video" would by itself not be enough in his state for charges.

Ford has repeatedly apologized for his conduct, which also included using crude sexual language in public, but has strenuously denied being an alcoholic or junkie.

Smith, who has been in law enforcement for 27 years, has his doubts.

"You just don't quit smoking crack cocaine," Smith said. "You don't just get drunk and say, 'I'm going to pick up a crack pipe'."

While council has stripped Ford of most of his powers, it does not have the authority to actually suspend or force him from office, as the governor of Florida could do in the Moore case.

Ford himself has been adamant he won't step down, despite the adverse publicity that has garnered international attention and mockery.
Smith said the mayor should quit.

"In a case like that that's so outrageous, so demeaning, and he represents the populace of Toronto, he's just got to do the right thing," Smith said.

"Be a man, do the right thing and move on with life."

http://o.canada.com/news/florida-mayor-charged-in-drug-trafficking-sheriff-says-this-isnt-toronto/
 

MattRoxx

Call me anti-fascist
Nov 13, 2011
6,745
3
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I get around.
Florida cops will arrest anyone for anything.

Florida man arrested 62 times at workhttp://news.msn.co.nz/worldnews/8760162/florida-man-arrested-62-times-at-work

After being arrested more than 60 times for trespassing in the store where he works, a US man and his employer are preparing a civil rights lawsuit because they believe the arrests were racially motivated.
In the past four years Earl Sampson, a 28-year-old black man from Miami Gardens in Florida, has been stopped and questioned by police 258 times, searched more than 100 times and arrested and jailed 58 times.

But in spite of his long rap sheet, the Miami Herald reports that the most serious offense Mr Sampson has been convicted of was marijuana possession.

Most of Sampson's police citations have occurred at the same place: the 207 Quick Stop convenience store where he works, the same place police say he was trespassing.

"They always stop me, going in my pockets, ask me for my ID, writing my name," Mr Sampson told CBS Miami.

"The same ones stop me two or three times a day. I feel like I can't even be in my own neighbourhood no more," he said.

Mr Sampson's employer Alex Saleh, 36, has wondered how one of his employees could be arrested for trespassing at the same place he works.

"It seemed outrageous the police abusing all the people in the community, how they be treating the people," Mr Saleh told CBS Miami.

For more than a year Mr Saleh watched Mr Sampson, along with other employees and customers, being constantly approached police inside and out of the store, sometimes three times in one day.

To Mr Saleh, the only thing they appeared to have in common is that, like Mr Sampson, they were all “poor and black”.

So fed up with what he was seeing routinely, Mr Saleh recently installed 15 security cameras in and around his store to record the actions of the local police.

He said the cameras were necessary because officers were "stopping people for no reason in front of the business and anywhere, (illegally) searching everybody".

The heavy-handed police work even led Mr Saleh to remove a "zero tolerance" police notification to scare would-be loiterers away from the outside of his business.

Mr Saleh and his lawyer Steve Lopez are preparing to file a civil rights lawsuit in the federal court, alleging the police have been instructed by the city's top officials to engage in racial profiling and illegal stops and searches.

Mayor Oliver Gilbert said he would not comment on pending cases but referred to the city's high murder rate including a recent shooting outside the 207 Quick Stop store as justification for police actions.

"The line is 'zero tolerance', so if you break a law you are going to jail," Gilbert said.

But Mr Saleh said the police's pattern and approach to the local black community was already long entrenched before that shooting took place.

"Yeah, there is violence in Miami Gardens, but that doesn't give the right to violate people's rights," Mr Saleh said.

Chuck Dargo, a police policy consultant and former officer, said the police actions were only making it harder to build a relationship with the local community.

"When they make these kinds of stops for minor offences it only reinforces mistrust," he said. .

That is a sentiment Mr Sampson can understand all too well.

"It says on the (police) car that you're supposed to 'protect and serve' though, but you're not protecting and serving. You're harassing," Mr Sampson said.
 

groggy

Banned
Mar 21, 2011
15,259
0
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Florida cops will arrest anyone for anything.
Are you suggesting that Rob Ford will be arrested 62 times?
Though I do have to admit that the cops have been called to the Ford residence a couple of dozen times already, so maybe its possible.
 
Ashley Madison
Toronto Escorts