A cop gets sued after asking a woman out for a date. The problem is that this is after he gave her a speeding ticket.
Mahbe he’s an honest cop and had to give her the ticket and that’s besides the point…? A great side job for a stalker.
A cop gets sued after asking a woman out for a date. The problem is that this is after he gave her a speeding ticket.
Mahbe he’s an honest cop and had to give her the ticket and that’s besides the point…? A great side job for a stalker.
It was wrong for him to contact her, but were there not alternatives to filing a suit against him? Like she could have filed a complaint with the police department or informally mentioned it to someone there. Although perhaps she was concerned about retaliation.
She did.
She supposedly left voice mails to the chief of police and the mayor but no one responded… so she’s suing them too.
Let’s go to the quarry and throw stuff down here!
Aye, that’s creepy and arguably stalking.
I think you misread that. The reporter left meassages for the police cheif and mayor.
I don’t think this is a rare occurrence. I’ve had the same type of thing happen twice. Once after an accident and once when my car was broken into. Different cops, different cities.
I dunno, I thought that note was kind of charming.
Just goes to show that stalking is only endearing and adorable in John Cusack movies.
Or when the guy is hot.
I don’t see this is very different from corporation policy. My last job I had, it was clearly stated, we were not to date, vendors, clients or customers of the company.
It just makes good business sense.
I swear I read somewhere that she did… (NOT).
I stand corrected that the articles doesn’t say “she” did, but unclear as to who left the message to the chief.
To Protect, Serve and Stalk if you’re a hot chick.
“Ms. Paredes, is it true that, on the day in question, you were wearing Windsong?”
I’m so sick of this “OMG - A MALE TALKED TO A FEMALE!!! STALKER!!!” meme.
That is all.
The quarry is going to get full if we keep going there and throwing things down.
We will end up going to the mountain and throwing stuff up.
Sounds like something a stalker would say.
Why, well… okay then.
The letter is so innocuous and sweet that I might actually have called the poor guy. What does that make me?
I guess he knows now no girl that attractive is ever going to go for a guy like him. :rolleyes:
Right. Except that
From her perspective, he’s a complete stranger that she had no reason to think she’d ever encounter again. Finding a note from him, at her house, is not “cute”, it’s creepy. For all she knew, he’s watching her from across the street as she reads the damn thing. If she never responds, will he come back?
Had he ran into her at the store, or asked her at the time of ticketing, this would be a non-story. But this pings my creepy-meter, for sure, and I would definitely have filed a complaint with the police department. At the least, it’s inappropriate. At the worst, she had reason to be fearful.
It was definitely wrong of him to look up the address, and when she tried to file a complaint, someone should have listened to her. Did she try to file a complaint? if not, the whole suing thing definitely sounds like a money grab. If she did and no one listened this is an acceptable way to make them listen.
I have don’t know enough of the details about how she handled it and what the police department’s response was from that point on to comment on whether or not suing is a good idea. It may be a money grab, or she might just be suing for $132
There definitely needs to be some sort of consequence to the cop for having looked up her address and sought her out… that’s unacceptable in pretty much any business and should be disciplined.
I don’t really think the guy is necessarily an actual stalker - more likely an absolutely clueless moron - but the steps he did take were creepy enough that I can understand the woman’s reaction to want to protect herself from him. I know we’ve had a ton of debates on these boards about “OMG STALKER!” and “rape culture” and whatnot…I don’t really want to start another one, but at the end of the day, the consequences to the woman could be so devastating that protecting herself must be what she does. Freaking out because an unattractive person approaches you in a coffee shop or on the bus is too much. I just don’t think that, in this specific case, there’s an overreaction to the guy’s actions (at least as far as making a complaint and expecting some sort of discipline…as I said, I don’t know if suing is an overreaction or not).
This bugs you…and you let “besides the point” slide? What the hell’s wrong with you?
I thought so too. Unless he was a total jerk, I would have gone out with him if he left me that note.
If Tom Hanks did this in a movie, it would be a blockbuster love story. Total overreaction.