More than two years after a drunken Tony Logan crashed his car into a city-owned police car — in his own driveway — Logan is still the police chief in Tuscumbia, Ala.
Logan was finally sentenced Tuesday on his DUI conviction. It was in December of 2009 when he ran over his mailbox and smashed into a police car. It was March of 2010 when a jury first convicted him of DUI. And he finally found out his punishment this week — which amounts to almost nothing.
The judge sentenced Logan to a year in jail, but then reduced it to the two days he’s already spent locked up. (Why bother to impose a sentence if you don’t really mean it anyway?) In addition, he’ll lose his driver’s license for 90 days and be subject to random drug screening for two years. There’s also a $761 fine.
In sentencing Logan Tuesday, the judge made it clear that he wasn’t going to treat him harshly because the guy is a police chief.
“Chief Logan, I have never sentenced a police chief for DUI,” the judge said. “You can be assured I’m not going to treat you any differently or any harsher because of your position.”
Why not? Shouldn’t we hold the people put in positions of enforcing laws to a higher standard? And if we’re not going to hold him to a higher standard, shouldn’t we at least make sure he’s no longer in the position to enforce laws over other people?
Missing childhood connections leave us longing for missing love
Hospital’s five-year fight to move shows health care isn’t free market
Authenticity the only path that connects us to people we need
Being loved is one of life’s gifts, but joy of loving is even greater
NOTEBOOK: Simplistic storytelling on TV news pushing nation to war
U.S. debt per capita worse than basket cases such as Greece
If you want life outside of hatred, get away from political cesspool
Finding your own authentic voice is riskier than copying everybody else
With NASA getting out of the way, free market heads to outer space