My guess is that they wanted to go to "County" because attorneys that are members of the Oklahoma County Bar Association can bail on their "own recognizance." Something like that.
Then again, these cats arent worried about the money aspect.
For all those ready to throw a punch, be careful. I know Mr. Moon and don't like him much but we all need to be reasonable here. We know very little about the facts of the case.
Reasonable???? These idiots could have killed someone!we all need to be reasonable here. We know very little about the facts of the case.
What else do we need to know? That someone spiked their drinks? They were on prescription drugs? What? They were drunk as could be! And driving! Please.
Did you see the video?
I'm sorry, but if someone is driving the Wrong way through a drive though at 1:00am, something obviously is out of whack.
"Two attorneys were arrested in Warr Acres on Friday morning after witnesses reported the men driving the wrong way through a restaurant drive through lane.
Attorney Lewis B. Moon, 42, and Oklahoma County public defender David James Bedford, 32, were arrested about 1:40 a.m. at Whataburger, 7820 N MacArthur, after an employee called police and said a driver of a Cadillac Escalade was causing a disturbance and appeared intoxicated, Warr Acres Police Sgt. Alan Davidofsky said.
Witnesses told police the men nearly hit another car in the drive-through lane.
When a police officer arrived, Moon, the driver, was uncooperative and was “taken down,” Davidofsky said.
He said Moon also spit in an officer’s face.
Davidofsky said Moon pulled out a badge from the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s office and claimed to be a deputy.
Sheriff’s spokesman Mark Myers said the badge actually is known as a sheriff’s “eagle badge.” The badges are given to people who support the sheriff’s department but they are not official law officer badges. Myers said the badges are not given to people who promise political support or financial contributions but are more of a “keepsake.”
Myers said Sheriff John Whetsel “is extremely disappointed,” to hear about Moon’s arrest.
Moon was said to be belligerent at the Warr Acres Police Department, as well.
“While they were here, Moon was dropping names of judges and threatening to sue everyone. Then, comments were made about tracking down the clerks who called him in,” Davidofsky said.
Moon was taken to the Oklahoma County jail and booked on complaints of having actual physical control of a motor vehicle while intoxicated, impersonating a law officer, resisting arrest and placing bodily fluids on a law officer, Davidofsky said.
He said Moon refused to take a breath test to determine whether he was intoxicated.
" You've Been Thunder Struck ! "
So based upon that, although I only deal with mother who is mentally disturbed and wants to dismember her child as a sacrifice or I arrest a 16 year old for selling the Crystal Meth his uncle made I can apply my opinion of them to society as a whole to include you, your family and your coworkers?
What I have been eluding to in this thread is the double standard and some points mentioned by others, not just you Midtowner. A lawyer can have a private life but a cop cannot? I think the biggest misconception is cops have to be "on-duty" 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. If that were reality I would have quit within my first year. It is a job, not a lifestyle. While I will agree there are those within the profession who are a disgrace, that can be said for any and every profession on this planet. To apply that to all the others within that profession who do so with a passion to do right is ludacris. When I am at work I devote 110% of my effort to finding those who prey upon the innocent. Most who I work with are the same.
Just as you would like an officer who doesn't know you to give you the benefit of the doubt (that you are a good citizen) it is only fair it goes the same way towards us.
Now, back to the initial discussion. It was mentioned awhile back about the staff members from the Oklahoman and the news channels who go out and look for stuff. The poster was 100% correct. Growing up my father was a Public Information Officer (PIO) for a police department and every morning without fail he would receive a visit from 4, 5, 9 and 25 in addition to the Oklahoman and the local paper. Every day. They would review the prior day and night's acitivites and request further information on what they deemed newsworthy. Per the Open Records Act, they would get the information, reports, video, etc. they asked for.
Oh, so now it is political people and movie stars. In your earlier post, you included government workers, judges and lawyers. You are bitter and spewing hate.
What? I don't even know how that has anything to do with anything. We all do tough things.
Did I say that? Nope.What I have been eluding to in this thread is the double standard and some points mentioned by others, not just you Midtowner. A lawyer can have a private life but a cop cannot?
It's equally unreasonable to take someone's word as gospel-truth simply because they are a police officer. The door swings both ways. I suppose that if you have the benefit of knowing the individual, you probably know their propensity to be truthful or their propensity to make up probable cause after they have already conducted a search, or to file reports containing false charges to force a suspect/defendant to not have much of a choice as to sue the department/the police officer for Constitutional deprivations in exchange for a covenant not to sue.While I will agree there are those within the profession who are a disgrace, that can be said for any and every profession on this planet. To apply that to all the others within that profession who do so with a passion to do right is ludacris. When I am at work I devote 110% of my effort to finding those who prey upon the innocent. Most who I work with are the same.
I will say that the men in the department whom I know personally are fine individuals who really and truly do serve with honor. I also can't ignore the fact that there are men in blue who continually violate the public's trust, while hiding behind a blue wall of silence as to their misdeeds.
Do police give the benefit of the doubt as to the innocence of a criminal suspect? Again, you are affording them more credibility simply due to the job they do.Just as you would like an officer who doesn't know you to give you the benefit of the doubt (that you are a good citizen) it is only fair it goes the same way towards us.
Ah, so the PIO told the attorney, "I have something juicy for you!" I suppose we would have had to be privy to the conversation which took place between the newsok crime reporter and the Midwest City PIO, but I think it all hinges on who thought the story was newsworthy.Now, back to the initial discussion. It was mentioned awhile back about the staff members from the Oklahoman and the news channels who go out and look for stuff. The poster was 100% correct. Growing up my father was a Public Information Officer (PIO) for a police department and every morning without fail he would receive a visit from 4, 5, 9 and 25 in addition to the Oklahoman and the local paper. Every day. They would review the prior day and night's acitivites and request further information on what they deemed newsworthy. Per the Open Records Act, they would get the information, reports, video, etc. they asked for.
Frankly, I think crime as news is one of the things which has really heart the news. We all know crime happens, and the bad stuff gets really underreported. Unfortunately, if it bleeds, it leads. That sort of mentality killed journalism.
Karried,
From what I've been told, things didn't go down quite like they were reported in the Oklahoman. They didn't almost hit another car and they didn't pull the wrong way into the drive through. Now, we all know that Moon was belligerent, but that's not against the law.
Being beligerent the way he was isn't going to help him in a DUI defense. He looks and acts sh*t faced. If (and this is a big if) he was the one behind the wheel, he could have been creeping along like a little old grandmother on Sunday afternoon and they are still going to convict him of DUI.
Yeah, well, that's a fact.
No, but drunk driving is against the law. I really don't care if he almost hit another car, based on the video evidence, it's apparent they were drunk as skunks.. and I don't care who you are, or who you know or what your profession is, you can't be on the road driving a vehicle while intoxicated.They didn't almost hit another car and they didn't pull the wrong way into the drive through. Now, we all know that Moon was belligerent, but that's not against the law
And if you doubt he was drunk then a question? Why did he refuse to take a breathalyzer, surely an Attorney can understand the ramifications of not taking one, especially, if he wasn't drunk. Why not?
Last edited by Karried; 09-18-2008 at 10:14 PM.
" You've Been Thunder Struck ! "
Hoya - They weren't charged with almost hitting another car or driving the wrong way through a drive-through because those things aren't against the law. You keep claiming inside knowledge without divulging sources, and presenting impirical knowledge from someone who had to be there, so if it isn't a Whataburger employee or customer, it must be from Moon or his passenger, both of whom have axes to grind. So who's telling you this stuff (including the police brutality allegation), and why are you passing it along here without attribution?
Why are the police able to pass their charges along without attribution and not have those same claims be questioned by you?
I detect a double standard.
I really don't get all the hoopla. Sure, it was tabloid journalism at its best and the police video makes for good YouTubing, but why all the fuss?
Yeah, yeah - "Drunk driving bad!"
The reality is I bet many of the same people on this thread have driven legally drunk.
They didn't hit anyone and didn't cause any damage and have been arrested and will most likely be charged because of the publicity. So, what with all the gripes.
Wanna see drunk drivers? Watch them come and go from the Glitter Dome on Agnew.
I seriously doubt the bar association is going to care. Moon will check himself into rehab and make nice with the bar. The PD will most likely get fired, but c'mon, that's the last place a real lawyer wants to spend his career anyway.
Who was the lawyer awhile back that the local news featured? He had like 6 DUIs and yet had never done any jail time. His latest DUI was in Norman and he called in a political favor and the new DA Mashburn dropped the charges.
These guys throw around judges names because in many circumstances it does work. Not so much with the cops - it tends to really piss them off. But, the smart lawyers stay calm and quiet, get arrested, keep it out of the media and then work a deal with a judge or the DA to have a no-file.
Perfect example is the lawyer with all the DUI's and the other downtown lawyer - something Harris - that was arrested this year for being a public homo in one of our gay parks. I remember he masturbated in front of an undercover officer and then made a sexual advance. He called in a favor to our local DA and was never charged with the crime. Now, those examples are the real story - not that Moon is an alcoholic.
Because I'm outraged. Outraged, I tell you!
How dare a drunk person act like a complete idiot when put into an extremely stressful situation? No one would ever do that except for Mr. Moon, and we now have the video evidence!
-- actually, the above post sums this thread up nicely.
I'm 'around the courthouse' alot and "This" isn't the 'big joke' - but Moon and the P.D. are. The sad thing is that nobody that knows Moon was surprised. He's known to be an alcoholic.This is basically a big joke around the courthouse, though.
And, i agree, this isn't resolved yet because they are both still trying to do damage control. If I was Moon and the P.D. I'd voluntarily give back my Pal of the Police badge, enroll in AA and get a quick deferred sentence and be done with it.
I'm just not convinced that there are different laws for judges, lawyers, etc.
As a lawyer, if I get caught speeding, I get a speeding ticket. I may get it reduced to something less expensive, but the general public also has that option. Some people are too lazy or too scared to show up on that court date and just pay the fine by mail ahead of time.
The same with a DUI. If I decide that, after a long day in court, I want to go out and have some cocktails, and I get caught driving under the influence, I will, as an attorney, get a DUI. Nothing will be different than any other citizen. I may or may not end up with a DUI on my record -- but the same option I am given is also given to the rest of the public.
Do people really think only attorneys and judges get "special favors"? It's called a negotiated plea. It's called stepping up to the plate, standing in front of a judge and accepting that what you did is wrong and asking for something less than the maximum sentence the law calls for. We members of the bar are not the only people for whom this happens.
It's actually called DENIAL.
This doesn't only happen with lawyers, but it is common practice with the better connected ones. Same goes for elected officials. Let me try to carry a licensed concealed weapon into the capitol not once but twice and see what happens. Let me get arrested with 3-4 other perverts at Will Rogers park masturbating (calm down ladies) and you're telling me when the other three were prosecuted and the 4th - a lawyer and financial contributor to the DA's campaign wasn't - that was just 'chance.'
Maybe you're just not that good of a lawyer? Or, maybe you're actually better than the rest - just depends on perspective.
Lastly, I don't blame the defendant or his/her lawyer for pulling these tricks. I blame the prosecutors who do not refrain from the temptation.
BailJumper- I don't think it's quite as ubiquitous as you imply, but I agree with you in principle that it happens plenty.
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