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90mph chase for graffitti suspect

by Hawes Spencer
published 10:41am Thursday Mar 4, 2010
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An Augusta County sheriff’s deputy launched a chase that blew through eight red lights as it traveled through residential and shopping areas and hit speeds reaching 90mph, according to a story in the News Virginian. Sheriff Randall Fisher was not immediately available to take a phone call from the Hook to ask if he would consider such a chase an acceptable risk. The chase resulted in the arrest, according to the News Virginian, of 18-year-old Sahvannah Nargi. Last year, an 85mph chase on residential Rugby Road nearly killed three people and caused over $100,000 in property damage, but Charlottesville Police Chief Timothy Longo declared it “reasonable based on the totality of the circumstance.” (In a related story by WHSV television, Staunton business owners breathe a sign of relief that two alleged vandals have been nabbed.)

29 comments

  • al March 4th, 2010 | 12:04 pm

    Let’s report the racial disparity in the Cville department with black and white officers…

  • Tim Brown March 4th, 2010 | 12:25 pm

    Paging Gasbag… Paging Gasbag…

  • Pete Deer March 4th, 2010 | 12:29 pm

    What a blow for justice the Augusta County Sherriff has landed on these miscreants. That’s how it always starts, you know. First, they start spray painting graffitti, and before you know it, they’re jacking banks and terrorizing the populace. Lethal injection would be too good for their kind…

    Pete Deer

  • Gasbag Self Ordained Expert March 4th, 2010 | 12:43 pm

    Ohh, I am here, Tim! :)

    This is exactly why cop shoppe pursuits need to be banned. You can’t trust these rookies out to figure out when a pursuit is justified and when it isn’t.

    Not one charged placed against the driver was worth the loss of human life. Combined with the fact they knew who the driver was already.

    Once the pursuit exceeded the speed limt by 20 to 30 mph at any point, they should have backed off.

  • yepper March 4th, 2010 | 12:46 pm

    seems odd that the hook has not a single item on the county BOS meeting last night…..

  • Gasbag Self Ordained Expert March 4th, 2010 | 12:58 pm

    quote: “Let’s report the racial disparity in the Cville department with black and white officers…”

    Al, the last I heard, Charlottesville was 12% black. This figure is most likely not accurate any longer, so let’s jump it to 15%.

    Do you feel the cop shoppe should therefore have 15% black officers? Or do you propose a 50/50 split?

    Just curious.

  • Wikidemographics March 4th, 2010 | 1:08 pm

    As of 2000, CVille was 69.56% White, 22.22% Black or African American, 4.93% Asian, and down sharply from there. If anything, I’d guess that the Hispanic/Latino population has creeped up a bit.

  • fred March 4th, 2010 | 1:20 pm

    Only a loser would take a cop job anyway.

  • Gasbag Self Ordained Expert March 4th, 2010 | 1:21 pm

    Thanks. I didn’t know the actual statistics had changed that much.

    The question remains the same though. Should the cop shoppe be 22.22% black, or a 50/50 split?

  • Gasbag Self Ordained Expert March 4th, 2010 | 1:25 pm

    quote: “Only a loser would take a cop job anyway.”

    Why? With salary, benefits and overtime a local cop can easily make $60,000 to $70,000 a year.

    I base this figure on a $36,000 starting salary, $14,000 in benefits and $10,000 to $20,000 overtime per year. (The $14,000 in benefits is probably a low estimate)

  • gman March 4th, 2010 | 1:42 pm

    deleted by moderator

  • Climategate March 4th, 2010 | 2:02 pm

    deleted by moderator

  • Gasbag to the 10th. power March 4th, 2010 | 2:02 pm

    Cops never think this through when it starts….They just turn the lights on and go and next thing you know it’s like the chase scene in “The French Connection”. There’s really no more thought involved than a dog chasing a cat and by this I mean the whole thing relies on instinctive behavior. GB #1 is right….When not chasing someone on whose apprehension public safety depends, the chase should be broken off immediately once it gets crazy..
    Most such chases end in a crash because the fleeing person’s instinctive need to escape over-rides all other considerations and the cop’s need to catch trumps sound cost-benefit analytic judgment.

  • Pete Deer March 4th, 2010 | 2:04 pm

    Gman;
    What a cogent and coherent denunciation of all that is unholy. From your sophisticated reasoning, I am guessing you must be the Grand Wizard of the local Klavern.

    Pete Deer

  • Marijuana Man March 4th, 2010 | 2:07 pm

    but there’s more! Free gas/vehicle in most cases, discounts to live in certain neighborhoods, free food at some establishments, and let’s not forget the opportunity for side job security work.

  • Name March 4th, 2010 | 2:19 pm

    Most people are probably not anti law enforcement, but anti police running over pedestrians in wheel chairs, anti shooting someone 60+ times, anti 90 mph chases and anti sending flying cars into occupied homes. All of this wonderful service and protection comes with no accountability because it is quite clear that law enforcement is above the law.

  • Voted wrong in 2008 March 4th, 2010 | 2:29 pm

    Stop them at any cost. Preventing graffiti is certainly worth a few lives and some property damage. Hats off to the Augusta Sheriff’s office they are ready to move to LA. I’ll help buy them the tickets.

  • Gasbag Self Ordained Expert March 4th, 2010 | 4:07 pm

    The bigger problem lies within the police chiefs and sheriffs themselves. Most will be more than glad to tell the public that they run their offices and make policy, not the public.

    I think Longo did this most recently…. he said a Citizen Review Board was fine with him, but the bottom line was the fact that HE still ran his department.

  • Gasbag Self Ordained Expert March 4th, 2010 | 4:23 pm

    quote: “Most people are probably not anti law enforcement, but anti police running over pedestrians in wheel chairs, anti shooting someone 60+ times, anti 90 mph chases and anti sending flying cars into occupied homes.”

    You forgot the part about the cop shoppe almost running over 2 pedestrians…. then locking them up for drunk in public after they shouted for the rookie to “slow the F*** down”! :)

  • The Mertilator March 4th, 2010 | 4:42 pm

    Ok since none of you have ever been on the roads at 2:30am it is dead in a busy area, much less any part of Staunton. Also yeah I’m sure it would be a much better result the criminals telling all their friends that cops aren’t allowed to chase them so pretty much go do what you will and if you see the lights then it’s easy to outrun them. Boneheads.

  • hooker March 4th, 2010 | 4:49 pm

    wow the hook didnt like what i said about them , must have hit a truth. i say catch and tthrow em in the poky, letting scum get away sends a bad message. besides most of these artists are gang bangers. if you want them to be allowed to get awy then i want them to put pretty paintings on your homes

  • Gasbag Self Ordained Expert March 4th, 2010 | 5:04 pm

    Mertilator, you may or may not have a valid point about the streets in Stauton being dead at 2:30 a.m. The last time I was on Staunton streets at 2:30 a.m. was back in 1996. But it’s certainly not normal in Charlottesville where the 85 mph pursuit took place a few months ago. The community is very lucky there wasn’t UVA students returning home on foot from all the nightclubs and parties. And thank God there wasn’t a motor vehicle coming through any of the intersections involved in te Charlottesville cop shoppe pursuit.

    Central Virginia is riding on borrowed time. We haven’t had a cop killed or a civilian killed in a high speed pursuit for a very long time. It’s coming though, just a matter of time as these rookies turn the streets into a Nascar track after dark.

  • The Mertilator March 4th, 2010 | 7:21 pm

    Maybe so but one time is hardly an epidemic and I mean it is Staunton. You don’t harp on a guy who does something because under totally different circumstances it’s dangerous.

  • High speed chase ends in arrest | Alcoholic Christians March 5th, 2010 | 2:59 am

    [...] 90mph chase for graffitti suspect | The Hook News Blog [...]

  • bookguy March 5th, 2010 | 9:32 am

    One of the problems that I have with a number of posts here is the really negative attitude towards police officers. These guys do a hard job dealing with, at times, dangerous, unstable people - sure they screw up once in a while, but what would it be like without them ? In this specific instance, do they just ignore the violation (how many complaints would that draw about do-nothing police) ? At what point do they pursue ? If we had traffic cameras (something I think that many of the readers would oppose) perhaps they wouldn’t need to pursue at excessive speeds.

  • The Mertilator March 5th, 2010 | 9:55 am

    I don’t see anything wrong with holding police officers accountable for their actions in general, the catch all excuse of “without them we wouldn’t have protection so let’s overlook their mistakes blah blah” is really weak and doesn’t hold up. They should be exemplary individuals because of their position of power, do we not hold doctors accountable when they screw up because “without them we wouldn’t have heart transplants blah blah..”? Of course not.

    That said, it’s also really dumb to hold them to the same standards of say a heart surgeon, since their years of training hone their instincts to make snap decisions alone under pressure instead of learning how to precisely operate with hours of preparation and a full team with them at all times. They never have the same completeness of information and have to go with the most reasonable course of action based off of a few facts in second or two, and often are at a point where they are risking their own lives to save life and limb, which is not a state where the human mind can always make a perfectly calculated and informed decision.

    Bookguy, how in the world do you come to the conclusion that traffic cameras, an already unreliable device, will help at all? Really, “clever” solutions typically add the most complication for the least payoff and the most horrid consequences down the line. Ask the Brits.

  • Gasbag Self Ordained Expert March 5th, 2010 | 12:03 pm

    quote: “If we had traffic cameras, perhaps they wouldn’t need to pursue at excessive speeds.”

    Huh? If the cop shoppe spots somebody driving a stolen car, how is a traffic camera going to help?

    The key to allowing cop shoppe pursuits is to train the rookies as to when the pursuits are acceptable and when they aren’t. I think somebody is dropping the ball in the training category. Not one crime was committed in Staunton that justified a 90 mph pursuit through city streets. Especially since they knew the suspect’s name BEFORE the pursuit even began.

  • Jimi Hendrix March 5th, 2010 | 4:27 pm

    Well, as soon as the bad guys know that all they have to do is drive really fast and aim at a pedestrian to stop police intervention then all will be well….

  • Gasbag Self Ordained Expert March 5th, 2010 | 5:02 pm

    Jimi, you take a very complex issue and try to make it sound so simple. What if the lunatic the cop shoppe is chasing is only WANTED for stealing a quart of beer at a local store just a few minutes prior to the pursuit beginning? Do you chase this lunatic at 90 mph when you already know who it is in the first place? :)

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