BLACK AND
WHITE TAXI COMPANY
By Harry Penny © 2002
FPK
circa 1966
The department policy was two-man patrol units on
the PM and EM shifts. Day shift was
normally a one-man unit. However, after
the Watts Riots in August of 1965 certain FPK units would be two-man units on
day shift, especially in the Willowbrook area, which border Watts on three
sides. On this particular day my
partner and I were a two-man car: 16-Days.
We had spent a goodly amount of time taking reports,
which was usually the case. In those
days, if someone called into the station reporting any type of misdemeanor, and
the complaint deputy could not handle it over the phone, a patrol unit would be
dispatched. This included John Q.
Citizen reporting his son’s bicycle being stolen, or reporting a found bicycle,
Malicious Mischief, Vandalism or just about anything else. You get the idea, I’m sure.
We had just finished having some coffee at one of
the many Fire Stations in our area. We
had a good rapport with the firemen as policy was whenever a Fire engine was
responding to a call, a Sheriff’s unit would automatically be dispatched. We would provide traffic/crowd control; take
reports if the damage was over a certain monetary amount; and, in some cases,
help them haul hoses if necessary. Many
times there would only be three firemen on the fire truck and they would need
help until others arrived.
This particular station was near the intersection of
Redondo Beach Blvd. and Figueroa St.
This particular intersection was a borderline of our area and that of
LAPD’s 77th Division area.
We had just gone 10-8 and were headed back out to
the streets when a call came out over the radio. “Firestone 16…Man down at the intersection of….” The dispatcher
continued, giving us the location, which was about six blocks from our present
location. It was not a code three call
but still one of those calls where you were to respond as fast as prudently
possible.
Enroute to the scene I observed an LAPD black and
white leaving our area and heading West back into their area. This was not uncommon since our areas were
adjacent. We arrived at the scene and
observed a male individual lying underneath some bushes, and a whiskey bottle
in his hand. Closer inspection—using
the keen powers that all deputies at FPK possessed—plus a very strong alcoholic
odor emanating from the vicinity of his person, and a loud, audible snore,
enabled me to determine that the individual was intoxicated. No distress noted. Nosireee! This guy was drunk! Great. Just what we needed: Get tied up with an arrest, booking, and
then another report. We were three
reports behind and we were only two hours from end of watch.
I had heard stories, when I was in training, about LAPD
bringing drunks into our area rather than arresting them and booking them. Some of the deputies who had received the
call had just taken them back and put them in LAPD’s area. There was supposedly
one occasion, I would later learn to be true, where they actually put the drunk
in the back of a parked LAPD unit.
Well, now…this seemed like the perfect opportunity. That LAPD unit had been in our area. Oh,
yes…this opportunity was actually beckoning us to take advantage of the
situation.
After quite some doing, we managed to get the
subject somewhat conscious and awake and put him in the back of our radio
car. A couple of blocks away were a
restaurant where LAPD units would go Code-7.
We headed in that direction. At
this point I was silently wishing that our car could go faster than the speed
of smell: This individual not only
reeked of booze, but his sanitary habits had long been neglected.
As we passed by the restaurant I noticed an LAPD
unit parked in the back. Another
pass-by revealed two LAPD officers seated at a table and enjoying a meal. Yep, this was the time. We went around the block and came into the
parking lot from the rear driveway, which was out of view from the
aforementioned LAPD officers. LAPD and our department both had Plymouth
vehicles and, in some cases, the keys could be manipulated to open the doors of
the same type of vehicle. I was hoping
that this would be the case. As luck
would have it, I didn’t have to hope.
They had apparently forgotten to lock one of the rear doors. Wasn’t that thoughtful?
We put the subject into the back seat of the LAPD
unit. I told him that we had ordered
“Black And White Taxi Company” and for him to go ahead and lie down and get
some rest. Then, when the “Taxi” driver
came back to the car, to just tell him where he wanted to go. He thanked us and assumed his horizontal
position in the back seat. We got back
in our car and left the same way we entered the parking lot. No sense in advertising that we were out of
our area.
We drove across the street and parked away from
corner, but where we could see the restaurant and the parking lot. My partner continued writing his reports
while I Code-5’d the situation. About
20 minutes later the LAPD officers came out of the restaurant. One was lighting
a cigarette and the other one was picking his teeth with a toothpick. They appeared to be in conversation as they
approached their car. Neither of them
even as much as glanced at the rear seat as they got into the car.
The car pulled out and was just approaching the
intersection when the funniest sight appeared:
The drunk arose from the back seat, reached forward and tapped the
driver on the shoulder. The officers
both turned their heads around so fast that it was a wonder they didn’t each
get whiplash. The car came to an abrupt
stop in the middle of the intersection.
The red lights came on, both the driver’s door and the passenger’s door
opened simultaneously, and two officers came out with their guns drawn and
pointed at the drunk in the back seat.
As this was happening, cars were approaching the
intersection and hitting their brakes to avoid the police car sitting askew in
the middle of the intersection. My
partner and I were laughing almost uncontrollably.
The older of the two officers took control of the
situation. While his partner was
handcuffing the suspect, the more senior officer started looking over in our
direction. I turned on the red lights
and tapped my horn. He apparently got
my message and they put the drunk in the back seat of the car. About 15 minutes later I heard one of our
North end units, possibly 12 or 12-A get a “Man down…possible 647f” . As the story goes, later I would learn that
they had taken their drunk and conveniently put him in LAPD’s area. It was quite possible that the suspect would
sober up by the time LASD and LAPD finished playing ping-pong with him.