Published on March 24, 2005 By drmiler In Politics
Before I repost the AP article let me say this. What kind of world are we living in when a state trooper would say stuff like this? And people say we don't need to worry about protecting ourselves. With this kind of attitude how can you not?


Trooper Suspended for 'Too Bad' 911 Remark

By Associated Press

March 22, 2005, 1:33 PM EST


LISBON, Conn. -- A state trooper was suspended for 15 days without pay after he was recorded on a 911 tape saying "too bad" to a caller seeking help for a man injured in a motorcycle accident.

State police said the dismissive answer by Trooper Robert Peasley did not affect the response time to the accident involving Justin Sawyer, 21, who died of a severe head injury a week after the crash last August. Peasley was suspended on Monday.

Russell Shepard, a friend of Sawyer's, called 911, which was routed to the state police barracks in Montville. When he reported the accident, Peasley said, "Yeah ... too bad," and hung up, according to a tape obtained by WTNH-TV.

Shepard said he was shocked, believing he reached a wrong number.

Another friend made a second call. "Yeah," the officer responded. "Help will get there. Shouldn't be playing games."

A third emergency call was answered by a different dispatcher, who asked about Sawyer's condition and advised those nearby to not touch him.

"I am absolutely outraged every time I hear that `too bad' and then click," said Sawyer's father, Jim Sawyer. "I only know that I would have felt a whole lot more comfortable if I had heard people responding on the end of that 911 call with some heart and caring."

State police said the comments by Peasley, an 18-year-veteran, were unprofessional, and the agency apologized if "our actions added to the family's pain."
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Comments
on Mar 24, 2005
The whole "thin blue line", or i guess brown in this case, sickens me. There is nothing but self-destruction involved in sheltering people who behave this way. People should respect the badge and purge people who degrade it, instead of having some sort of sick "code of honor" to back up anyone in the uniform.

I'd like to know if they actually dispatched an ambulance on the first call or if they really waited three or four calls. I wonder if this is a matter of the cop just being callous, or if he really ignored a 911 call. If he did, I think charges should be in order.