tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-47499281529002393342024-02-08T02:21:54.892-08:00Traffic Cop StoriesUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4749928152900239334.post-43871227721767642842011-09-21T13:07:00.000-07:002011-09-21T13:07:23.948-07:00Headlights On When RainingThis is quote of my friends story..<br />
Many years ago, riding thru NW Alabama on Ala 155 one rainy afternoon, I had stopped at a stop sign, coming into Moulton, Al., when all of a sudden I heard a siren blaring behind me. I pulled up, nudging the tractor over so I could see behind me (we had just started getting 102" trailers & they were hard to see around). There was a Lawrence Co. Al. sheriff's deputy behind me, signalling me to pull over. I pulled thru the stop sign and pulled onto a pull-off on the side of the road and got out of the truck. I walked to the back of the truck where he met me and he proceeded to give me grief about speeding thru a construction zone just north of where we were (I was speeding) and not stopping 5 miles back, where he first started signalling me. I informed him that I never seen or heard him because it was raining (hard to see) and that the truck was loud inside and I had the windows rolled up (hard to hear). As he was brow beating me for speeding and not stopping on his command, I noticed that he did not have the headlights turned on, on his squad car.<br />
I interrupted him as he was talking and said, "excuse me deputy, could it be possible that the reason that I didn't see you was because you didn't have your headlights on? Isn't there a law in Ala. that says "headlights on when raining"?"...<br />
He quickly changed his direction and told me that he was in a hurry, didn't have time to write me a ticket and he was just going to give me a warning this time. He further told me that he was going to be watching out for me. I responded with, "you just keep those headlights on because I'm going to be looking for you, too"... He spun his tires as he was leaving...Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1