FRESH
YARN PRESENTS: Whatcha
Gonna Do When They Come For You? A completely true, albeit unlikely story about
the day I appeared in an unfilmed, non-televised episode of Cops.
By
George McGrath
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3
So I'm worried that I'm going to be stopped again, and a police
car behind me causes more than the standard posturing concern. I
tell my attorney what happened, and he has the perfect idea. There
is a deputy D.A.. who is gay (!?) and he would be the perfect person
to speak to about this. I guess his enthusiasm was based on the
old expression "It takes a gay to help a gay" and not
the less quoted but equally true "Gays often have a lot of
issues with other gays and can sometimes destroy one another and
then go out dancing."
So I take my lawyer's advice and I write this guy. (I dare not mention his name,
as I am still frightened that he can, and might, send me to prison for life by
pushing a button). In the letter I basically tell him what happened, tell him
my recently deceased father was a NYC policeman all his life, and that I had lived
in L.A. a long time, never had a ticket, donate to the library and other worthwhile
L.A. causes, and that I didn't want to sue anybody, but I wanted his help in finding
out what happened and get some assurance it wouldn't happen again. A
week later, he calls me. He is not a "fun gay." He is more what you
might call a "creepy scary gay." He immediately informs me that there
was no mistake. A warrant was issued by a judge (not the D.A.'s office) because
my car was used in a crime. I asked what crime and he said "Barbara Stone
was driving my car in Compton and they found drug paraphernalia on her, and she
never turned up for her court date." First of all, this didn't seem like
the caliber of crime required for a super duper felony warrant. But I pressed
on without comment. "I've
never been to Compton and I don't know Barbara Stone." "Well, she is
a prostitute and of course you're going to say you don't know her. But you're
going to have a hard time convincing a judge of that in court." "But
I'm gay." "Maybe she is a transvestite prostitute. Of course you're
going to be embarrassed and deny it." He is not getting any friendlier.
"No one has ever borrowed my car." "Maybe you fell asleep
when she was at your house and she took the car and returned it without you knowing
it." "I have an alarm on the garage." "You probably were high
and gave her the code or she saw you punch it in." He was quick with each
of his insane "but what if" comebacks. No matter what he said, I heard
"Another low-life whore-using, car lending scumbag who won't tell us where
the damn court no-show is. God you make me sick." "Believe
me, no one has ever borrowed my car." "Well, this isn't a mistake. It's
right here. A black Lexus." "I have a silver Infiniti." "Well,
they could have the make and model wrong." "Or they could have
it right, and the license plate number wrong." "That's not likely, but
I will check it out." About ten days later, I got a message from
him on my answering machine. "They had transposed two of the numbers on your
license plate. I'm going to have a judge lift the warrant." The
warrant that, according to DMV records, never was. I didn't call him back. He
was too scary to talk to twice. I know this is a completely unsatisfying
ending to this story. I'm with you. I'm unsatisfied, too. I still am
a little more nervous than I used to be when a police car is behind me for too
long. And when I think of that day I think, "Imagine if I was less Caucasian,
or a guy in a tank top and a ponytail, with laundry in my back window. I would
have been put in jail. No question about it. And I might still be there, denying
my wild night in Compton with the drug paraphernalia-carrying, possibly transvestite
prostitute Barbara Stone." Follow up: The tile turned out beautiful.
I went with marble in the back bathroom and it is still one of my favorite remodeling
touches. The Color Tile store has been replaced by a mattress store; I replaced
my Infiniti with a Cadillac Catera and then an Acura TSX (It's all about the navigation
system.) Jerry's Deli has been completely remodeled and Barbara Stone, as far
as I know, remains a drug-addicted fugitive from justice. (Baby, if you're reading
this, you know how to get in the garage. XOXO Little Merv.)
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