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And the police wonder why we don't trust them

Dominus

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Not talking about police brutality. Or misconduct.

About 5 months ago, I found out one of my employees had been stealing from me. I did my own detective work. Got documents. Witness statements. List of things stolen. Even security camera footages. Filed police report. Also filed a no trespassing order against the guy for all my properties, which a cop was suppose to personally deliver to the guy.

Been months. Just spoke to the detective assigned to the case. He admitted he hasn't even read the report yet. Still sitting on his desk. They haven't even delivered the no trespassing order yet.

The funny thing is when I filed the sergeant that was there told me I gave them way more than what they usually start with.

What's the point of filing a police report if it takes them months to even look at it?
 
Yes, but you're talking about no trespassing orders, and that's civil.

If you were more interested in your stolen property, you would have filed a stolen property report for the police to investigate, or even pressed charges against the guy rather than getting the police to serve him with 'no trespassing' orders.
 
@ no trespassing

Has this person been on any of your properties since you fired him?
 
Yes, but you're talking about no trespassing orders, and that's civil.

If you were more interested in your stolen property, you would have filed a stolen property report for the police to investigate, or even pressed charges against the guy rather than getting the police to serve him with 'no trespassing' orders.
[Text: Removed] What part of my OP gave you the idea that I did not press charges and filed for stolen property report? That's what ticks me off about this. They haven't even read the files.
 
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Why would they care about small time property crimes?

They will assume that you are being compensated through insurance or that the thefts were so minor as to not waste court time.

There was no violence against you or your tenants.

So I suspect that it was just ignored.

As a former cop, you must have seen this many times.
 
[Text: Removed] What part of my OP gave you the idea that I did not press charges and filed for stolen property report? That's what ticks me off about this. They haven't even read the files.

In this post, you very specifically separate press charges and filed report.

In your opening post you did not say anything about 'press charges' in regards to the stolen property.

I wonder if you made a mess of the report you say you filed, [Text: Removed] :)
 
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Why would they care about small time property crimes?

They will assume that you are being compensated through insurance or that the thefts were so minor as to not waste court time.

There was no violence against you or your tenants.

So I suspect that it was just ignored.

As a former cop, you must have seen this many times.
I was a street cop. Never dealt with this kind of case. And I was only on for about 2 years. I've never claimed to be some kind or super cop. If anything, I was terrible at it. Hence I quit.
 
Not talking about police brutality. Or misconduct.

About 5 months ago, I found out one of my employees had been stealing from me. I did my own detective work. Got documents. Witness statements. List of things stolen. Even security camera footages. Filed police report. Also filed a no trespassing order against the guy for all my properties, which a cop was suppose to personally deliver to the guy.

Been months. Just spoke to the detective assigned to the case. He admitted he hasn't even read the report yet. Still sitting on his desk. They haven't even delivered the no trespassing order yet.

The funny thing is when I filed the sergeant that was there told me I gave them way more than what they usually start with.

What's the point of filing a police report if it takes them months to even look at it?
Whoa -- here, when there are papers to be delivered from the court to someone the sheriff's department is required to deliver those within 24 hours and if they can't they'd better have a bloody good reason! When I've had to file some kind of order against someone I usually manage to do that before noon and the papers have been delivered by 5:00.
 
They will assume . . .
I watched a cop get thoroughly reamed by a judge in polite but utterly humiliating language in court one day for "assuming" something about a similar situation -- it was wondrous to listen to someone skilled in thoroughly dressing someone down while sounding calm and cultured. In fact when I went to get a restraining order against someone last year there was theft involved, and when the judge asked if the officer involved was pursuing the person in question and he said he assumed that was being covered in the restitution order the judge stared at him in silence for a good twenty seconds before explaining in no uncertain terms that if a crime had been committed it wasn't the officer's job to assume anything, and that even if the value of that property were included in the restitution order it was the officer's job to go after the criminal.
 
I wonder if you made a mess of the report you say you filed
Here that wouldn't be possible: to file such a report one has to speak with an officer and if anything is at all unclear it's the officer's job to get it clarified before the paperwork is turned in. I know when I went for that restraining order I mentioned above the officer almost seemed to be playing "Twenty Questions" as he worked to pin down every last detail in a way anyone on the force could be able to understand, and then in my court appearance to get the order enacted the judge had another dozen questions to make sure everything was clear enough not just for the police but for the person subject to the proposed order -- and she seemed to be operating on the presumption that said person had an IQ of maybe 90 (not true; his IQ is in the 115-120 range; he's just ignorant as if he never got past sixth grade). The way the process goes, what I had written down was just the beginning of the process, and that process is intended to make sure that matters are clear to all parties involved.
 
One of my peeves about trusting cops is that they get points for making arrests, so they'll arrest people for whatever they can dream up probable cause for -- like the one who dumped out the bag of trash I'd been picking up as I hiked along the beach and then cited me for littering, or the one who cited me for unauthorized diversion of state waters for building a dam in a creek on the beach.....
 
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