Saturday, February 02, 2008

Here lies W. C. Fields. I would rather be living in Philadelphia.

Philadelphia Story
When the police are indistinguishable from the bad guys, then society has a serious problem.

- Philadelphia District Attorney Lynne Abraham



1974
I'm in Philadelphia for sales training.  At night a bunch of us, maybe 7-8, and from all over the eastern seaboard, do a walking tour of  taverns.   Anon, we wind up here, where the barkeep greets me like an old friend.  Bear in mind, I'm by now oiled enough to play along.

Barkeep Hey, Ritchie, howdafu*k are ya?  Long time.
Me:
Uh, yeah man, good to see you too.
Barkeep: Yeah, thought maybe you quit the department... your brother still walkin' the beat?
Me: Yeah, still there.

We place drink orders; the guy next to me asks, "Do you know this guy?"   Nope, never been here before in my life. We're throwing down some shots and I notice that the  hookers, who had been flitting around us, are now huddled together at a back table.  We drink up and are ready to continue the tour.  I motion to the barkeep; he comes right over.

Me: Check.
Barkeep
Check?  Whattsa matter witcha?  Come on, it's onna house Ritchie.
Me
Hey thanks Louie.
Barkeep
Here's something for ya. *hands me paper lunch bag*

Once outside I look, and there's $300 in $20 bills.  WTF?  Then it hits us all at the same time.  The guy mistook me for a Philadelphia cop looking for shakedown money. Holy crap, we got the hell out of that neighborhood likkety-split. I bought the drinks from then on.

1998

Philadelphia's police are grappling with the latest of the corruption and brutality scandals that have earned them one of the worst reputations of big city police departments in the United States. The persistence and regularity of the cycles indicate that between the front-page news stories the city and its police force are failing to act to hold police accountable. The result is an undisturbed culture of impunity that surfaces and is renewed with each successive scandal, as each new generation of police officers is taught through example that their leadership accepts corruption and excessive force. As a result, police officers who should not have remained on the force have unlawfully injured and killed citizens, the city has paid enormous sums in settlements and awards to victims of police misconduct, and many minority communities are distrustful of police officers who too often act like criminals.
Shielded from Justice:, June 1998

2:10 AM - NOW

The phone rings and I fumble around to answer it, knocking a glass off the table that crashes to the floor and breaks. It's my son. His voice is shaking. He's in Philadelphia with a friend, a Moe concert at the Electric Factory. 

"I was just mugged, dad.  They took everything. "

Are you okay, I ask?

Five guys came up to me as I walked out of the venue, and said, "walk with us, and give us everything or we'll kill you."

He gave them his wallet, camera, iPod,  and car keys. But wait!  Of a sudden two Philadelphia cops pull up in a squad car and the thugs run, but one is grabbed immediately.  He throws Huck's car keys and camera back.  Things are going fast here folks, but the cop let's the perp go.  When Huck protests that they took his wallet, they tell him, "Fu*k you, you were buying drugs!"   Huck is astonished.   I was just at the Moe concert, he tells them, and had just walked out the door.  "Where's your ticket stub," demands the cop?  "They took my freaking wallet!"  Cop sneers and tells him to turn around and walk back into the venue, and STFU!  Huck calls his wife who immediately (she is so organized) calls and has all  credit cards canceled. Then he called me.

By this time his friend, who had been separated on the egress caught up, and the two set off to find the car.  Shaken up, they get disoriented and it takes until  3:28 before he calls to say they 'd finally found the right parking lot, and were on the way home.   

I'm too old for this.  Philadelphia lives up to its reputation as a town run by the mob, union thugs, and crooked cops. In case you're thinking about visiting, keep moving.  Nothing to see here.

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

OMG Rodger! I'm so glad he wasn't hurt! That's a hell of a way to wake up though.

Those cops were probably in on the whole thing. Bastards.

TFV

Rodger the Real King of France said...

I HATE getting calls in the wee hours. They are never, ever good. We are very thankful that he wasn't harmed.

Anonymous said...

No they aren't ever good but even when they are just a wrong number it takes forever to slow your heart down and get back to sleep!

Our phone number is evidently close to the number of a 24 hour gas station and periodically we will get middle of the night calls- they seem to happen in spells. frustrating!

TFV

Anonymous said...

Sorry to hear this Rodg, hope no lasting damage.

My father also hated the late evening calls, usually meant one of us three boys were in some kerfuffle. Worse are the early morning calls, which usually means someone has passed.

Rodger the Real King of France said...

I don't think you ever completely recover from this sort of violation. Hopefully he'll try and avoid situations where they're more likely to occur.

Juice said...

Jeeze,Rodger! So sorry to hear about your son. He's the father of darling grand daughter? I must live in a cocoon not to realize dirty cops are still out there. Our son was mugged at an ATM machine by a gang, phone call at about the 2am time, but no cops were in sight. Lucky for us, the middle of the night calls were mostly drunk dials from our son while in college. "Hey, Mom,....yada yada ." Nothing you/he can do about it? No cop badge numbers?

Anonymous said...

How's it go? Good judgment comes from bad judgment? He just paid an installment on the admission price to life experience, and got in cheap too. I hope he's feeling lucky today. Sometimes all you get away with is your skin. When you're a young man, it takes a while to come to the conclusion, that you got a good deal.

There wasn't a racial component to this, was there?

Casca

Anonymous said...

Well dang! Sorry to hear happened . I wish he had been properly armed and alert. Of course it sounds like he would a been in a heepof trouble in Philly for defending himself.
Very glad he wasn't hurt.
Live in a Free Place, that's my motto.

Anonymous said...

Rodger, like everybody else here, glad Huck was able to walk away.So many other scenario's? Ozaob

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