Carl
Railroader Emeritus (practiced railroading for 46 years--and in 2010 I finally got it right!)
CAACSCOCOM--I don't want to behave improperly, so I just won't behave at all. (SM)
She who has no signature! cinscocom-tmw
QUOTE: Originally posted by CShaveRR The Mook's latest post about a cop going around the gates left me upset... disregarding signals is one of the easier ways to set me off. Sooo, as therapy, I thought I'd post a story that appeared yesterday on the UTU web site about a cop who seems to be using the brains he had. CTA: Can you spot the cop? CHICAGO -- The Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) recently placed new public-service placards on its buses and trains to reassure customers that mass-transit police -- both uniformed and undercover officers--are watching out for rider safety and security, according to this Chicago Tribune report. The photo on the placards shows a group of people standing on the Chicago Avenue "L" platform. The headline asks, "Can you spot the undercover cop?" Benjamin Wlodyka, 21, of Chicago was stumped while riding a Red Line train with friends about 10 p.m. last Wednesday (Feb. 18), police said. So Wlodyka removed the placard from its holder in the train and started walking down the aisle, pestering fellow passengers about whether they could identify the undercover law-enforcement officer (not his exact words) in the poster. As he got to the middle of the train, Wlodyka even offered a big hint, allegedly pulling out a Sharpie brand marker, which is the type often used by graffiti vandals to deface transit property, and circling a person on the placard. He then approached Eddie Perez. "Hey, I think I know who it is," offered Perez, a sergeant with the Chicago Police Department's mass-transit unit who was off duty, in plain clothes, just riding the train home. "Yeah, who?" responded Wlodyka. "Me," Perez answered as he displayed his police badge. Wlodyka was arrested for damaging the placard. He was charged under CTA President Frank Kruesi's zero-tolerance policy with criminal defacing of public property, vandalism and possession of marking or etching materials with intent to use them for criminal purposes. "It was a classic moment," Perez later said. (The preceding report was published by the Chicago Tribune Monday, Feb. 23, 2004.) February 23, 2004
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