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Car Chases (Thomas Sowell)
Townhall.com ^ | September 11, 2007 | Thomas Sowell

Posted on 09/10/2007 9:04:17 PM PDT by jazusamo

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

High-speed car chases by police on highways, or even on residential streets, have become a staple of television news. An estimated 500 people died as a result of high-speed car chases last year.

Nearly half the people killed were innocent third parties.

The police have some tough choices to make when deciding when to chase and when to let the driver continue on his high-speed way. Innocent people can get killed either way.

Too many people in the media do not want to face up to any tough choices. Whenever some innocent driver or pedestrian is killed as a result of a high-speed chase, editorials are sure to appear, saying that this would not have happened if the police had just let the high-speed driver go on his way without pursuing.

We have no way of knowing whether reckless speeders will slow down if the cops don't follow them when they try to get away. The people they can kill when there is no police car following them will be just as dead as some innocent person killed as a result of a car chase.

Moreover, once there is a known policy of letting speeders escape, there will almost certainly be more speeding to get away from being arrested for either a traffic violation or a more serious crime.

Life's choices are seldom as easy as they may seem to people writing in the safety and comfort of an editorial office.

Nothing is easier than taking cheap shots at the police, and there are journalists and politicians who do it regularly, as well as community activists who make a career out of it. But the police are the last line of defense for the law-abiding population.

Universal sainthood is not the norm in law enforcement, any more than in any other walk of life. But police abuses require punishment for those who commit those abuses, not blanket condemnation for policemen in general or rules that tie their hands when dealing with criminals.

Recently a man in Ohio was shot and killed by a policeman he tried to run over with the car he had stolen. That driver had led the police on a high-speed chase and, when he was finally cornered, rammed one of the police cars and tried to ram a policeman.

A passenger in the car with the speeding driver said that the shooting was not justified. "For a car, it's not worth a life."

The man who said this had a long criminal record, as did the driver who was killed, but no doubt there are those who will take him seriously.

The issue is not whether the crime for which the driver is being pursued deserves the death penalty. It is the driver's choice whether to put his life -- and other people's lives -- at risk.

No doubt there is much to be said for bringing high-speed chases to an end quicker, and especially before the speeder can get off the highway and go speeding through city streets, endangering both other motorists and pedestrians. But the only way of ending high-speed chases sooner that many critics seem to favor is by letting the reckless drivers get away.

Some of these high-speed chases on a highway might be brought to a quicker end before reaching a populated area, if the police were freer to use force, instead of being hemmed in on all sides by restrictive regulations.

We are not talking about using force against someone who just happens to exceed the speed limit. We are talking about people who refuse to pull over and speed up to try to outrun the police, in utter disregard of the dangers they are creating for others.

When there is a police helicopter overhead, a shot straight down would have little chance of hitting some innocent bystander. Maybe the speeder is just someone out joy-riding but that does not make a reckless driver any less dangerous.

Moreover, this would not have to happen more than a few times before leading the police on a high-speed chase would lose a lot of its attractions -- and some of those hundreds of innocent lives lost every year as a result of high-speed chases could be saved.

Maybe if the courts would put some heavy jail time on people who go speeding away from the police, that might stop some of them. But they have to be stopped, one way or the other.

Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institute and author of Basic Economics: A Citizen's Guide to the Economy.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: carchases; crime; donutwatch; leo; sowell; thomassowell
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To: conservatism_IS_compassion

Outstanding words by Teddy Roosevelt and he’s exactly right. Thanks for posting this, there are some here that could benefit by reading those thoughtful words.


21 posted on 09/11/2007 7:44:42 AM PDT by jazusamo (DefendOurMarines.com)
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To: conservatism_IS_compassion

The biggest concern isn’t hacking, in that it could easily have a 1024-bit code known only to your service that could only be misused if they lost security over it. As someone else pointed out, the biggest problem would be if government tried to mandate it. Which they probably would. Damn them.

Its biggest vulnerability to this would be that it would have to be part of the manufacturer’s electronics, like their damn black boxes, and they would also want to include GPS tracking at the same time, making every car a surveillance tool to spy on its owner.

It is truly sad that government thinks this way. A combination of laziness and paranoia, using the catch-all of tyrants everywhere: “safety”, to justify endless intrusion and voyeurism.


22 posted on 09/11/2007 8:50:56 AM PDT by Popocatapetl
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To: papasmurf
Seriously, we are looking at trillions of dollars in highway and road infrastructure improvements and expansion. Wouldn’t we be far better off spending that money on a forward thinking system. One that isn’t mostly consumable, and in constant need of repair/replacement, and that addresses a myriad of issues in one fell swoop?

In a personal and connected hybrid system of transiting, we could do this, and keep our cars, too.

Even better: Tax breaks for companies who promote working from home. You would need less roads, less cars and less fuel and terrorism becomes much more difficult with less people out in public. Your earnings go farther if you don't have all of the added costs of working in an office (clothes, etc), not to mention all the the time you would get back by not commuting.

23 posted on 09/11/2007 1:52:35 PM PDT by BlueMondaySkipper (The quickest way of ending a war is to lose it. - George Orwell)
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To: BlueMondaySkipper

Agreed. As long as it’s not permanent and there are no loopholes in it.

Point is, let’s take our heads out of the sand, and get creative. Take the thoughts of profit out of the design and decision making process, and move our Country forward. There’ll be plenty of time and opportunity to make money from whatever we decide. But we have to move past the stone age.


24 posted on 09/11/2007 2:05:30 PM PDT by papasmurf (I'm for Free, Fair, and Open trade. America needs to stand by it's true Friend. Israel.)
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To: jazusamo
The only statement by Dr. Sowell I take exception to in this article - But the police are the last line of defense for the law-abiding population.

Excuse my Polish, but that's bullski chitski.

The last line of defence for the law abiding citizen is themselves.

25 posted on 09/11/2007 2:11:02 PM PDT by Just another Joe (Warning: FReeping can be addictive and helpful to your mental health)
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To: shankbear

One .50 caliber into the engine from that helicopter would slow things up a bit without the unpredictable crash that occurs when you shoot the driver.


26 posted on 09/15/2007 2:06:59 PM PDT by arthurus (Better to fight them over THERE than over HERE)
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