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Justice wasn’t served in Tidwell gun-theft case
Pasadena Star News ^ | December 01, 2004

Posted on 12/02/2004 11:48:41 PM PST by TERMINATTOR

FORMER San Bernardino County Sheriff Floyd Tidwell's plea bargain on charges of stealing more than 500 guns during his tenure has led to a reduced sentence that saves the public nothing, even as it saves Tidwell from going to prison.

Justice, indeed, has been cheated. And so have law-abiding citizens, who expect that San Bernardino County's one-time top law enforcement officer be held liable for his transgressions.

Instead, Judge J. Michael Welch on Tuesday reduced Tidwell's felony charges to misdemeanors, sentenced him to three years' probation and fined him $10,000.

Welch seemed to wink and look the other way at Tidwell's contemptible practice of lifting guns from the Sheriff's Department's property room and rewarding them willy-nilly to sworn deputies, reserve deputies, volunteers and even his two sons, Danial and Steven, both deputies at the time.

In letting Tidwell off the hook, Welch dismissed the whole affair as a bygone custom something out of the era of cowboy sheriffs that has since been discontinued. We would think that this kind of good old boy favoritism doesn't happen in Los Angeles County under Sheriff Lee Baca and District Attorney Steve Cooley. Right?

Still, Tidwell's hypocrisy is something far less innocent than that when a sheriff thinks nothing of pilfering firearms, disposing of them however he pleases, and then suffering no accountability for it.

Nor has Tidwell admitted any wrongdoing. He pleaded guilty in May to four felony counts of concealing stolen property.

Part of the plea agreement is that Tidwell return the weapons. Though prosecutors believe he may have absconded with more than 1,000 guns while sheriff (he served from 1983 to 1991), Tidwell thus far has returned only about 160 of them.

For that, Tidwell walks away, chewing his tobacco, a free man. He still will draw his pension, though whether he will be allowed to remain a volunteer is still up in the air.

Will he have to pay even some small price for his misdeeds? That he has not been given the punishment he deserves is a disgrace to the legal system and an object lesson of what not to do for all law enforcement everywhere. It's also a betrayal of honest folks who put their faith in the law.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Editorial; Government; US: California; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: 1000guns; abortedjustice; absconded; banglist; bendoverforthecops; bimbosonpayroll; bohica; cocaine; corruptprosecutor; crime; crimepays; donutwatch; elite; govwatch; guns4contras; nancybohl; noaccountability; noprison; ollienorthspunk; pleaagreement; probationandfine; propertyroom; punked; redrattler; reducedsentence; reducedtomisdemeanor; sheriffleebaca; sherifftidwell; stealingguns

1 posted on 12/02/2004 11:48:42 PM PST by TERMINATTOR
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To: TERMINATTOR
If any gun shop had handled transactions as sloppily as he did, the owners would be living in jail for most of the rest of their lives, with virtually every penny taken away.

At minimum, his pension should have been axed and fined at least five hundred dollars per weapon he stole that was unrecovered. But instead, he gets a slap. I'm sure that there's some lawyer who is living well right at the moment off of his legal fees, and in a way, that's a fine. But I don't care for most lawyers and would rather have such fines go to the city.
2 posted on 12/03/2004 12:00:38 AM PST by kingu (Which would you bet on? Iraq and Afghanistan? Or Haiti and Kosovo?)
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To: TERMINATTOR
Justice, indeed, has been cheated. And so have law-abiding citizens, who expect that San Bernardino County's one-time top law enforcement officer be held liable for his transgressions.

Instead, Judge J. Michael Welch on Tuesday reduced Tidwell's felony charges to misdemeanors, sentenced him to three years' probation and fined him $10,000.

This is why no true American should buy into the Leftist claptrap that we should give up our guns and trust cops to protect us.

3 posted on 12/03/2004 12:04:39 AM PST by Prime Choice (I like Democrats, too. Let's exchange recipes.)
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To: TERMINATTOR

this might actually be a good thing in disguise.The next time anyone in this city is charged with a gun theft they need to point back to this case and pretty much force the proscuter to give them the same sweetheart deal under the guise of equal protection under the law or else tell the prosucuter hes going to trial and try for jury nullification.After a few of the gun thieves get away with it then the prosucuter will have his feet held to the fire to make make damn sure he treats goverment agents like felons the next time one of them commits a felony and not treat them like a long lost lover.


4 posted on 12/03/2004 1:46:29 AM PST by freepatriot32 (http://chonlalonde.blogspot.com)
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To: freepatriot32
Your suggestion might work in a normal enviorment, but this is San Bernardino, they reelect crooks even after indictment and conviction.
5 posted on 12/03/2004 10:23:45 AM PST by investigateworld (( Another Cali refugee in Oregon . ))
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