Crime & Safety
Kid Rock's a Cop. Who Knew? Hint: Not the Citizens of Oakley
Michigan hamlet with a reserve police officer-to-citizen ratio of more than 1-to-3 is reluctantly giving up names under FOIA requests.
Robert James Ritchie, who performs as Kid Rock, is a reserve police officer in the Village of Oakley under scrutiny as an alleged pay-for-play scheme. (Photo via Flickr)
Recently released court records show Kid Rock is a reserve police officer in a Michigan hamlet under scrutiny for an alleged pay-for-play scheme that gives celebrities and others special law enforcement status in exchange for cash and equipment donations.
Find out what's happening in Huntington Woods-Berkleyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Earlier this month, the Detroit rocker β Robert James Ritchie in private life β became the 149th member of the previously secret group of civilians deputized as reserve officers for the Village of Oakley, The Saginaw News/MLive.com reports.
Oakley Police Chief Robert Reznick kept the names secret until his department was compelled to reveal them in Freedom of Information Act requests filed by Hemlock attorney Philip Ellison, who wants to determine who is a reservist in Oakley and whether they paid for the privilege.
Find out what's happening in Huntington Woods-Berkleyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The reservists are allowed to carry firearms into areas where the public is banned from doing so, such as in bars and at ballparks, regardless of whether theyβre on duty.
Is Kid Rock Inspecting Halloween Candy?
The ratio of auxiliary officers to citizens in Oakley is greater than one-to-three, an excessive number according to critics like Ellison.
The document containing Kid Rockβs name remains sealed until a hearing, but Ellison told The Saginaw News heβs allowed to talk about whatβs at stake in making it public.
In a court motion, Ellison argues the βreal questions of public interestβ are raised about how the police chief in a sleepy village came to know an internationally famous rock star β βand why this international rock star would have any legitimate interest in volunteer activities such as cooking hot dogs at community events or inspecting Halloween candy.β
In media interviews, Reznick said reserve officers serve primarily at community events.
Whoβs Policing Americaβs Streets?
In an odd twist of timing, the investigation in Michigan has some striking similarities to allegations that have surfaced recently in Tulsa, OK. After having allegedly mistaken his handgun for a stun gun, a 73-year-old volunteer deputy shot and killed an unarmed suspect on April 2.
An attorney representing the family of the victim in that case told CNN that the volunteer deputy, Robert Bates, didnβt have the training to join a drug sting operation, but paid for privilege with cars and video equipment donations to Tulsa County Sheriffβs Office.
CNN legal analyst Sunny Hostin said the Oklahoma case raises troubling questions about who is policing Americaβs streets
Also on Patch:
- Judge to Decide Skirmish with βRogueβ Police Force with 1 Officer for 3 Residents
- Kid Rock Kills Lion and Ted Nugent Cackles with Joy
βDo we want really what are ordinary citizens, with enough money to play to be police officers, policing our streets? This is a very, very dangerous precedent,β Hostin said. βAnd I think itβs now time for either the Justice Department, perhaps, or every single police department to review this, the deputy status, because weβre going to see more and more of this kind of thing, if it isnβt happening more than we even know.β
Phil Stinson, an associate professor of criminal justice at Bowling Green State University, cited John du Pont, the real-life killer depicted in the film βFoxcatcherβ who regularly made donations to police, as an example of βvery concerningβ consequences of pay-for-play schemes.
βSo weβve actually seen this before, and if you think about the troubles police departments have had with budgets in recent years, itβs rather tempting if youβre the head of that type of agency to take someone up on this, and give them the action experiences that theyβre looking for,β Stinson told CNNβs Andersen Cooper. βItβs really pay for play.β
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