Portland City Commissioner Joe Ann Hardesty, who has pushed for a police budget cut, called 911 after a lift driver canceled his ride and told him to get out of his car.
Lift driver Richmond Frost told two Portland Police Department officers who were arrested Nov. 1. Responding to the scene on, Hardesti said, “When he refused to roll the windows, he screamed.”
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Frost was dragged to the Chevron gas station, canceled the ride and apparently asked to leave the vehicle. Strictly said he refused to get out of the vehicle because “it was cold and she was a woman and alone.”
She called 911 and told the operator: “Well, I have a lift driver who decided he would drop me off at the filling station. Well, I’m not getting out of the car, in the dark, at a filling station. All because I told him to put the window. I’m not leaving. “
“I’m not going to let him leave me on the side of the road. I paid for the ride and he says he canceled it, so I’m going to sit here until he sends me another ride.”
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The dispatch explained that it was Frost’s property, no offense had been committed and only he could order another lift. Officers were dispatched to the scene.
Lift currently recommends that drivers keep the window down while the passenger is in the car to ensure air circulation and reduce the spread of coronavirus.
After Sakhtai called 911, Frost called his 911.
“I got a customer that I canceled this ride. I’m a rideshare driver and I canceled this ride, and I took her from the freeway to this filling station so she could order another ride.” 911 operator
“I have canceled this ride so she is no longer engaged to me or attached to me. She is refusing to get out of my car.”
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Hardetty, who oversees the city’s 911 system-involved Bureau of Emergency Management, did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
She told the Portland Tribune that she called 911 because she felt unsafe.
“I don’t call 911 lightly, but I certainly won’t do anything that endangers my personal safety.”
“It’s very difficult to make a decision when you’re black or brown in America … but in the end I had a lot of limited options.”
Toughness is pushing for a budget reform that would “rehabilitate પો 18 million through the Portland Police Bureau to reinvest in community, Covid-19 relief and police options.”
After the Portland City Council failed to pass a budget amendment last week, Strictly called on elected leaders to “move beyond fear and take action to demand action”.
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“We began this journey in June by recalculating 15 15 million from the Police Bureau and directing that funding to community investments,” he said in a statement on June 5.
“We have come to this budget with the same goal of investing in our communities and reducing the police by providing mutual assistance because who can they trust if Portlanders can’t rely on Portland to keep them safe and support?”