Im a 19/m and I got pulle over by a cop once, lights lookd a little weird but the cop came to the door and arrested me put me in his front seat, by then i realized it wasnt a real cop, fake cop lights phony suit but he said i had to suck his cock to get out of the ticket, long story short, long dick in my mouth, cum on my face.....no ticket!
Call the real police. Impersonating a cop is bad, and anything you do under it is much more servere. So they let you go after he forced you to suck his cock?
MIAMI· If there ever was a Teflon cop, Miami Police Officer Jesus "Jesse" Agüero was it. He has been criminally indicted twice, and twice he has been acquitted. His personnel records show dozens of citizen complaints, yet he managed to work his way to elite units in the department. He was even fired once for allegedly sexually assaulting a prostitute, but the city's Civil Service Board reinstated him. On Tuesday, Agüero was fired for the second time. This time, prosecutors and the top brass at the department hope it is for good. Agüero, a 16-year veteran, was accused of planting a gun on a homeless man in Coconut Grove in 1997 after one of his colleagues shot the man in the leg. The man was unarmed. Agüero was accused of stealing the gun from a suspect his unit arrested during a drug raid months earlier. "This is not a message for the good officers in the department who are the vast majority, but for those few bad officers, whoever they are, that this [behavior] will not be tolerated," said Miami Police Chief Raul Martinez. Agüero, 38, could not be reached for comment, but his lawyer, Harry Solomon, pointed out that a Miami-Dade County jury acquitted his client this year on charges that he planted the gun. Two other officers involved won on a mistrial, but Agüero is expected back in court in October on charges that he stole the gun. In addition to that court date, a federal grand jury is investigating the Coconut Grove case, dubbed the "Grove Throw Down," along with at least five other shootings in which officers are suspected of planting guns or manipulating evidence to justify shootings. Agüero is at the center of another of those shootings, which happened on the Interstate 395 extension connecting Interstate 95 with Miami Beach in 1995. In that case, Agüero and other officers shot two robbery suspects in the back. He told investigators one of the suspects was facing him and pointing a gun at him. Agüero fired 22 times. But the Miami-Dade medical examiner ruled the suspect was shot in the back, and at least one of the guns found on the suspects wouldn't fire. "I've talked with a lot of guys in different ranks, and they feel it is time to let him go," said Capt. Miguel Exposito, who investigated Agüero in the prostitute case. With that case in 1988, Agüero's troubles began gaining notoriety in the department. He allegedly picked up the prostitute on Biscayne Boulevard and forced her perform sexual acts on him. The prostitute identified Agüero and Internal Affairs investigators found napkins containing seminal fluid that later matched Agüero's DNA. Because of that case, then-Police Chief Calvin Ross fired Agüero in 1992. But the following year the city's Civil Service Board gave Agüero his job back, and he was assigned to the elite Crime Suppression Team. As that case was winding through the system, in late 1988 several Miami police officers beat to death suspected drug dealer Leonardo Mercado in the Wynwood neighborhood. Agüero allegedly became involved in the cover-up to justify the death. At one point, Agüero wrote the name of a homicide investigator in the Mercado case on a cardboard piece and used it as a target in the firing range, records show. A federal grand jury eventually indicted several officers, including Agüero, who was charged with obstruction of justice, intimidating witnesses and giving false statements. In 1994, a federal jury acquitted him. But that did not end his troubles. The case that got him fired Tuesday took place two years later as a team of officers was coming back from a drug sting in Coconut Grove. Officers Oscar Ronda and Rolando Jacobo were driving along Grand Avenue when they saw a homeless man standing over another man and pointing something at him. Ronda jumped out of the car and pulled his gun, screaming at Daniel Hoban, the homeless man, to drop it. Ronda suddenly fired, hitting Hoban on the leg, court records show. When Hoban's supposed victim realized what happened, he screamed: "You shot my friend." Hoban had a Walkman, not a gun, in his hands. The next few frantic moments have become fodder for the media as panicking officers asked for "the sock," police slang for a throw-down gun. The officer who allegedly came through was Agüero, who drove the gun to the scene from the department. Other officers formed a human shield around him so investigators a few yards away would not see as Agüero placed the gun on the ground, and Jacobo kicked it under a car, Jacobo said. Another officer was charged with getting rid of the Walkman. But Hoban and the victim claimed he did not have a gun. Fire-rescue personnel also said they did not see a gun, only headphones hanging around his neck. Other witnesses also claimed they never saw a gun, and the case began unraveling. Jacobo was eventually convicted on perjury charges and sentenced to one year. While in jail, he decided to testify against Agüero. Despite that, Agüero was acquitted this year in state court. Martinez said the standard of guilt is higher in criminal court than in an administrative process. He said there was more than enough evidence to fire Agüero, and a panel of officers who reviewed the case agreed. Trudy Novicki, chief assistant state attorney for special prosecutions, said while Martinez's decision does not help her in the upcoming trial against Agüero, she is very pleased with the decision. "It's great news," she said. "He was a real blemish on the department." But Solomon, Agüero's lawyer, thinks the firing is almost tantamount to double jeopardy. "The man was acquitted by a jury of his peers," Solomon said. "I don't know why we have a judicial system if we don't abide by its findings."