JRH6856
Member
Corporations often contract for security guards, or create their own in-house security dept. and then assume that because they are paying the bills, they can make the rules. It is not uncommon for these rules to run counter to what the law requires or allows. Such as not calling the police in certain circumstances, even when such a call is warranted by law.
The SO was threatened and he made a counter threat. Either party could have called the police and as has been mentioned in many threads, who calls first often gets the benefit of the doubt with the responding officers. Handling things "in-house" is not always the best way, even when all parties involved are in house. When an external party is involved, it usually isn't.
The SO was threatened and he made a counter threat. Either party could have called the police and as has been mentioned in many threads, who calls first often gets the benefit of the doubt with the responding officers. Handling things "in-house" is not always the best way, even when all parties involved are in house. When an external party is involved, it usually isn't.