Brickbat: Timely Manner

An internal investigation by the Connecticut State Police found that four troopers entered hundreds of fake tickets into agency records systems in 2018 in an effort to make their productivity look better. Investigators found the officers' actions may have been felony crimes, but they did not alert prosecutors to the results of their investigation. Chief State's Attorney Patrick Griffin said he only found out about the scheme in late 2022, years after the investigation, when a local newspaper began asking about it. Griffin opened a criminal investigation at that time, but he said recently that the troopers will not face charges because the statute of limitations has run out. Two of the troopers retired without punishment and are each collecting nearly $70,000 in annual pensions; the other two received brief suspensions—one for 10 days and the other for two days—before being transferred to new units.
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Investigators found the officers' actions may have been felony crimes, but they did not alert prosecutors to the results of their investigation.
For which lapse they are facing charges, right? RIGHT?!
Good thing there isn't a quota on prosecutions of bad police, I guess.
"Two of the troopers retired without punishment and are each collecting nearly $70,000 in annual pensions"
So the whole "crime doesn't pay" thing is misinformation?
Got curious, and according to zip recruiter:
The average salary in Connecticut is $39,140 per year or $18.82 per hour. Entry level positions start at $33,280 per year while most experienced workers make up to $81,670 per year.
Just for some additional context:
Libertarians - UBI! What a great idea! With the best of intentions! What could possible go wrong?!
Crime pays big time. Just remember to bribe important people so if you are arrested they will call and convince the cops to let you go.
Bad behavior. Ultimately harmless, but unbecoming and undermining of people’s confidence in law enforcement. But the SA's right.
"What we learned during the course of the state police investigation, for example, is in 2018 there was no referral to the local state's attorneys office for review. "
"You can't just bring charges and then hope to prove it afterwards."
If there's going to be consequences, they'll have to be federal. Which, good luck under sleepy Joe and the DOJ who seems more interested in DIE these days.
Err...I don't know if I'd refer to that as productivity. Better term might be Loot? Pelf? Plunder?
Should they have known that was wrong?
If there is no Supreme Court ruling that that exact senario was wrong, there is no way for them to have known
So even if charges were bought against them it would be Qualified Immunity FTW