I agree with Steve.srothstein wrote:I just wanted to point out one misconception. The cops may or may not have chosen the location. When you are setting up a drug sting of this type, both the crook and the cops need to agree on a location. The cops do not always get to choose it, and it is hard to tell the crook McD's is too crowded because we are going to arrest you and there may be innocents in danger. Smart crooks want to make deals like this in crowded public places because they think it is safer, both from the cops and the other bad guys.
From the way the article was written, I am guessing the cops were not too happy with the location and tried to deal with it as best as they could. The real mistake was in jumping the gun to make the arrest in the parking lot. I think I would have waited until he got in his car and then pulled it over, just to avoid the crowd.
But yes, I do have a bias in favor of law enforcement.
I'm pretty sure the supervisor on the scene had one of those "Oh, Sugar!" moments when Murphy intervened and the bad guy turned to go back inside. I'll bet money he saw a hostage situation and a total nightmare that would make national news unfolding from his drug sting, and made a quick decision to prevent that from happening. He had to do something, and his solution was the best he could come up with at the moment. Been there, done that, was in the commissioner's office to explain the decision process and contribute to the after action review the next morning. I'll bet the on scene supervisor from this incident had a similar experience when the dust settled.
Not pretty, not fun, comes with the territory. You can plan and try to game out all the possibilities, and still a completely unforeseen detail can turn all that preplanning into so much wreckage in an instant. No matter what happens, the supervisor in charge still owns the results.
With the incident in the post, I'm just really happy it turned out as well as it did. There were several disasters waiting to happen there, and none of them did.
BTW, I share Steve's bias.
