Posted on 03/31/2009 11:28:48 AM PDT by buccaneer81
its not like he handed the tickets to him out the car window
Actually, I’m thinking the trooper must have reported the lottery tickets. How else would anyone know?
I agree.
I always wondered how corruption of the lottery system would seep into the game. This is one way.
Sounds like the trooper let him go and was mailed the tickets later. Unless the lottery guy was let go because of the promise of tickets to the trooper, it doesn’t sound like the trooper did anything wrong.
No, but the appearance of impropriety is definitely there. He most definitely used his position to convey his "importance" to the trooper.
I agree
If the trooper turned the unused tickets in, I agree with you that he did nothing wrong. Poor journalism in not getting that part of the story.
I don’t see any impropriety in this story. It wasn’t a bribe. It didn’t influence the outcome and that doesn’t appear to have been the intent.
Yeah, the article is a bit lacking.
That’s what it looks like to me.
From the report:
The letter indicated that the trooper should share these tickets with his fellow Troopers. The letter and promotional lottery tickets were forwarded by the troopers supervisor to the Ohio State Highway Patrol Headquarters in Columbus. On February 2, 2009, the OIG was made aware of this incident and an investigation was initiated.
So, you posted the article and made comments without reading the OIG report...
The trooper did the right thing - when he received the letter and the tickets he forwarded them to his supervisor, who sent the information up the Chain of Command. It is the trooper and his supervisor who are responsible for the investigation.
From page 8 of the OIG report on the investigation:
"We found no fault in the trooper's or his supervisor's actions. They correctly reported the incident to their superiors."
Care to reconsider your opinion of the Trooper in this matter?
The lottery guy should be canned, I agree, but the LEO did the right thing.
He should be commended, not suspended.
The letter indicated that the trooper should share these tickets with his fellow Troopers. The letter and promotional lottery tickets were forwarded by the troopers supervisor to the Ohio State Highway Patrol Headquarters in Columbus. On February 2, 2009, the OIG was made aware of this incident and an investigation was initiated.
Absolutely. I relied on the stupid journalist before I read the report. See my posts # 13 and # 15.
A valuable lesson for anyone. (wink)
LOL! I must be slipping!
One of them asked me, "Would YOU go to a casino that was in Chapter 11???"
But get a load of this: Dolan told investigators that the lottery routinely issues promotional tickets to law enforcement agents and others.
What the...? The lottery official admits to routine handouts to LE? They'd better look at the whole stinking operation then, not just this one instance with the one traffic stop. Free lottery tickets to law enforcement is a not a legit "promotion."
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