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Thursday, February 7, 2008

Don’t blame Duluth police for actions of one

A comment on my recent blog said: “Hey man, screw the Braves, what about these rogue Duluth police officers? I’ve been following the Jay Dailey story quite closely, and it only gets more bizarre. Can we get a blog about corrupt cops in this town?”

Here’s your blog. But it’s probably not what you were expecting.

To recap: A Duluth police officer, Jay Dailey, 42, was jailed Saturday after being treated for a gunshot wound. He is said to have been shot during a confrontation with Fulton County police officer Paul Phillips, who also was injured. Dailey faces four counts of felony aggravated assault.

Gwinnett Police have not said much about what happened, but witness statements to the media paint this picture: Phillips was flagged down to help a distressed woman on Level Creek Road in Sugar Hill. He was off duty but in uniform and driving a marked patrol car. After Phillips stopped to help, Dailey began shooting, hitting Phillips once. Phillips returned fire.

There are a lot of details yet to come as this story develops. Here’s what I think: ¥ Officer Dailey is innocent until proven guilty. He has only been charged, not tried and convicted. ¥ In no way should Mr. Dailey’s alleged actions be attributed to the City of Duluth Police Department.

It’s obvious to me that there’s a lot more going on than what meets the eye. And, like many of you, I will talk about this among my friends and neighbors. It’s human nature.

That said, Officer Dailey seems to have acted on his own, in no official capacity. Yes, he apparently had a gun, a badge, a bulletproof vest. However, according to reports, he was not wearing a uniform, he was not driving an official vehicle, and he was not acting on orders from a superior officer. That makes him a private citizen.

I’m sure that many within the Duluth Police Department are as stunned by these events as we are. They are human beings, too.

That’s my point. A teacher is a teacher while at school. A doctor is a doctor while at the office. A police officer is a police officer while on duty. When they are not at work, then they resume their identities as human beings.

If a teacher gets caught downloading child pornography on his home computer, for example, we don’t blame the school. If a doctor gets caught selling steroids that he stole out of the medicine closet, we don’t blame the hospital. How, then, can we hold the Duluth Police Department accountable for the actions of an officer who was off duty? We can’t, and we shouldn’t.

True story: Several years ago, a friend and I, and our dates, were at a haunted house display in Norcross. Long story short, my friend got into a disagreement with another patron. A friend of the patron jumped into the discussion and started to beat up my friend.

Police came to break up the scuffle, at which point the guy who jumped my friend said, “Hold on. I’m with the Douglasville Police Department. Here’s my badge.” The police arrested the errant officer and charged him with assault. They said that just because he had a badge did not give him license to act as he pleased.

The police asked my friend if he wanted to pursue the charges. They wanted to assure my friend that they wanted justice and felt what the officer did reflected badly on them.

My friend declined.

“You can’t indict a whole group of people based on the actions of an individual,” he said. “Hell, some people thought that Charles Manson was a nice guy at one point. We don’t think all flower children are like Manson, do we?”

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