The following story may or not be based on actual incidents
that may or may not have occurred to people that may or may or may not
exist. It could also be a figment of my
imagination, a story someone related to me a long time ago or something I
dreamed after chasing two dozen oysters with as many bottles of beer that
would fit in the silver bucket full of ice the waitress slammed on the table at
Big Daddy’s a couple of nights ago.
Just know this: Fiction is sometimes stranger than the
truth.
Now that I’ve gotten that out of the way, let’s talk
law and order. On second thought, law
and disorder is probably a better way
of putting it.
First, a brief history lesson about Johnny Law and I is
needed. I’ve been issued seven speeding
tickets in my life: The first was in 1973.
I drove off campus (I was a senior in high school at the time) for lunch
and on my way back I was pulled over for driving 10 miles over the speed limit
(35 MPH in a 25 MPH residential area).
My fine was $25, quite a bit to pay for a Huskee Junior and a vanilla
shake at the time. My last speeding
ticket was in 1985. I was on my way to
get a haircut when Power Station’s Some
Like it Hot, my favorite song at the time came on the radio. I drove around the block just so I could
listen to the entire song. Big mistake:
Once the sounds of the bass came blaring through the speakers my right foot
uncontrollably got heavier and heavier, resulting in flashing blue lights and a
$75 fine for speeding. In between there
were five others, but the sum total of all of my fines is still less than the
$750 ‘super speeder’ ticket a buddy of mine received for doing 30 miles over
the speed limit on the I-285 perimeter around Atlanta. (If you’ve never driven on I-285, you should
know that driving 30 miles over the speed limit barely keeps up with the regular
flow of traffic. Except during rush
hour, when you’re lucky to be able to drive as fast as 30 miles per hour under the speed limit.)
My other encounters with the Men in Blue:
I was involved in an accident—totally my fault as I
ran a red light and smashed into another vehicle—and was issued a citation for
‘Failure to Yield.’ A more suitable
citation would have been for ‘Flying too Low’ or possibly ‘DWNBDS’ (Driving
With No Business Doing So; I trust you can do the math): Believe me: It coulda/woulda/probably shoulda have
been a WHOLE lot worse than simply ‘failure to yield.’
I was also issued a citation for ‘Failure to Move
Over.’ I won’t go into detail—it’s been
well documented in another book and I don’t need to go into any more detail
about the incompetency of the judicial system of the sh*thole of a town where it
occurred (but if you’re interested pick up a copy of Distance Memories). Let me
just say I doubt I’ll ever be sworn in as Mayor of Tyrone, Georgia anytime
soon.
Then there was that nasty incident in Albany, Georgia
several years ago (also documented in Distance
Memories—tell the truth: NOW you want a copy, don’t you?) where I was the
recipient of a failed citizen’s arrest.
Long story short: Fast marathon + hot day + running shorts drenched in
perspiration + not-quite-quick-enough change into dry clothes +public parking
lot + local redneck looking for trouble = allegations of indecent exposure.
Now back to the original story.
Sum total: I’ve been issued nine citations in my
lifetime up until now. All were
unintentional in the vein that I wasn’t trying
to get a ticket although I will admit to speeding on all seven occasions and (wink
wink) failing to yield; I will NOT admit to failing to move over (sorry, but you’ll
have to read about it in Distance
Memories).
This made me wonder if I had it in me to intentionally get a citation. If I were to knowingly break a law,
regulation or rule. After all, aren’t
rules made to be broken? What’s the
worst that could happen? A fine? Incarceration? A criminal record? Didn’t I have anything better to do with my
time? So many questions; it was time to
look for some answers.
Before you get all nervous and excited there are two
things you need to know:
(1) I am the most law-abiding person you might ever
meet. I use my turn signal to turn into
my driveway; I live on a cul de sac. If
I’m driving I won’t take a sip of your incredibly delicious and delightful
I-can-almost-taste-it-in-my-mouth home brewed wheat beer if I’m driving—even if
your house is a couple of football fields away from mine and we just so happen
to live in the same subdivision. So
yeah: I follow the rules.
(2) You need to know which ‘laws’ I wanted to test. There happen to be two obscure laws in
Georgia (actually, there are a whole lot more than that. Many more, actually. but I narrowed it down
to these two) that I would bet my last dollar a policeman wouldn’t recognize if
it walked up to him, dropped its pants and pooped on his shoes:
· No one may
carry an ice cream cone in their back pocket if it is Sunday.
· It is illegal
to say ‘Oh Boy’ in Jonesboro.
You can probably imagine in which town I decided to
throw all caution to the wind, right?
Besides, out of curiosity I wanted to find out if the police were even
aware of these two laws. If I was a
betting man…
So I headed off to Jonesboro one Saturday morning
wearing the loosest pair of pants I could find, knowing I would be putting an
ice cream cone in the back pocket at some point. I found a place that sold ice cream cones and
sat in the parking lot before realizing the chances of finding a policeman were
pretty slim since I hadn’t seen one in over 30 minutes and there wasn’t a
doughnut shop anywhere in sight. I drove
to another shopping mall and hit pay dirt: Ice cream cones for sale and a
24-hour doughnut shop right around the corner…with two police cruisers parked
right outside. I bought myself an ice
cream cone, took a few bites and waited patiently until I saw the two policemen
get up from their table inside the doughnut shop and head to the cash
register. I carefully slid the cone and its
remaining vanilla ice cream inside into my back pocket and headed towards the
vicinity of their vehicles in nervous anticipation of getting their attention.
It worked. They
both gave me a double take as I walked in front of them. The one with the doughnut powder on his chin
elbowed the other (holding a bag of doughnut holes under his arm) and said to
me: ‘Hey, do you know you have an ice cream cone in your back pocket?’
To which I replied (wait for it…): ‘What are you going
to do; arrest me?’
(It doesn’t
get much better than this, people!)
Then this from doughnut hole holder: ‘Are you being a
smart ass, boy?’
He had no idea how close I was to having just cause
for a citizen’s arrest of my own.
But I didn’t want to push my luck. After all, they were letting me slide on that
ice cream cone caper I was pulling off—whether they knew it or not.
Believe it…or not.