Drunk Police Chief ruins his career over a Jacket?!

Drunk Police Chief ruins his career over a Jacket?!
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A New Jersey Police Chief got sauced and tried to interject himself into a DWI investigation. Now he didn’t help, he messed it all up by scolding the shift supervisor for his worn out jacket. What a horrible representation of leadership, or a great example of Toxic leadership.

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47 Comments

  1. Civilians tend to be impressed with police chiefs and other high ranking members of police departments. They tend to think they must be really great cops or they never would have risen through the ranks. A police chief rose through all of the ranks and must therefore be the best of the best.

    Street cops tend to view the issue differently. They realize that a chief of police probably spent very little time in a patrol car. It takes time to promote through the various ranks. Cops are often required to spend a couple of years in each rank before they can move onto the next rank. They often have to work a variety of administrative positions to get their ticket punched so they can move onto the next position. All of this takes away years that they might otherwise have spent as a working cop. The result is that those in the highest leadership positions often have the least experience in doing actual police work. They tend to make mistakes because they have a poor and unrealistic understanding of police work.

    The highest ranked members of a police department tend to be a small group. They all know each other. They do each other favors. They protect each other from the consequences of their own actions. A code of silence might exist at the lower ranks of a police department but this is cranked up to eleven at the highest ranks.

    High ranking cops also tend to have the greatest opportunities for graft. A high ranking cop might be in charge of picking which brand of police radios to buy. They might decide to choose Ford police cars rather than Chevrolet police cars. The companies that manufacture these products would very much like to see a police department choose their own products over those of a competitor. There have long been rumors that certain companies are willing to make “gifts” to police leaders who are willing to steer the decision process in the right direction.

    High ranking police leaders don’t tend to wear body cameras. They generally don’t drive police vehicles with cameras that monitor the inside and outside of their vehicles. They don’t have cameras or microphones recording their actions inside their offices. Their actions, right or wrong, are not recorded.

    These are all reasons why cops might look at this video and celebrate the fact that a chief of police got what was clearly coming to him. I hope the sergeant wasn't punished for his actions.

  2. Chief was drinking with driver of the vehicle that crashed right before the accident. That’s why he was inserting himself bc he was trying to control what wld happen to his friend.

  3. Yeah….this chief is in desperate need of being removed from office. What a pos.
    And yeah, the officer was 110% in the right. He's definitely a large mammal, both morally and dimensionally

  4. This ehole thing could've been avoided with a quick text of "sarge your jacket is shit. get a new one tomorrow or something. stay safe out there" thats it. all that was needed.

  5. Cheif should have been fired for being drunk on duty. Because he wasn't technically working, but as soon as he tried involving himself into the stop, he made himself on duty.

  6. I’m pretty sure you have to have at least one DUI where you drove your vehicle into a house and then started correcting the sergeant that lived on his dirty backyard after you’ve driven through it to become a sergeant major. True story by the way.

  7. It was a bad collision dui involved, then the drunk chief drives over to start obstructing their job….I would be upset as well. Title be damn, that chief would be arrested and no "comand" he gives would be obeyed because he is drunk and not in the right mindset to be giving instructions.

  8. Local Sheriff, when I was in high school, got caught cheating on his wife by a deputy. While on duty, he drove his department vehicle to a cemetery where he slept with a local realtor. The guy that caught he was promoted to SGT by the next sheriff. I got the story from a detective who helped the Sheriff's Association.

  9. I would have arrested him for drunk in public after this. I know old timers that turned in a Chief or sheriff, and was hard for them to get a new job. But one I met as a great Lt, later, he got promoted to Chief.

  10. Fyi this is like 60 seconds worth of clips with 15 mins of the guy talking about the video we desperately just want to watch and refuses to play.

  11. there is a line between walking with the team to monitor and ensure adherence to standards in the field and micro-management. On one side it takes me back to the USMC and the bullshit nit-picking, but if he's right then he's right regardless of how stupid it is.

  12. I had a captain years ago who always said "a chief's job is the easiest job to get in law enforcement. You're not being hired by cops, you're being hired by politicians. You can't BS a board of cops, but it's EASY to BS a board of politicians". He was so right, I've seen so much in 38 years I'd never be able to even think of half. I remember one chief hired in a small town near here who was 30 years old and had 20 years of LE experience. Apparently politicians can't add, either. They also never even checked to see that he had only a basic peace officer license, when his resume said he had a master peace officer license. In my state that's like saying you're a Master Sergeant but you're actually an E1 private.

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