After Central sent the call, I keyed my mike.
"Central, eight zero four niner. Seventeen at Elm and Claire, ETA three minutes."
"What was that all about", asked Valerie, the woman sitting in the seat beside me in the patrol car.
"Central got a silent alarm from the pawnshop on Elm. Somebody is probably trying to break in. Happened there last month, so I know the place. They're probably after the guns and gold jewelry like last time. I just told Central I was on the way and I'd be there in about three minutes."
"What will we do when we get there?"
I shut off the siren as I turned off Elm and onto Justin. Half-way down the block, I turned into the alley. I saw a blue Chrysler minivan parked behind "Everyday Pawn". I turned to Valerie.
"We... aren't going to do anything. I'm going to check out the pawn shop. You're going to stay in the car and not touch anything. You'll be able to hear anything I say back to Central on the radio because I'll leave the engine running."
After pulling the key from the ignition, I opened the door, took my flashlight from the charging station and made certain it was charged, then locked and closed the door. The engine was still running because car manufacturers modify patrol cars so the officer can take the key out of the ignition without shutting off the engine. That's so the electronics and lights can continue to work without running down the battery and the officer still has a key to unlock the doors. We always lock our doors if we're going to be more than a few steps from our patrol car. It's uncommon, but not unheard of, for a person to take a patrol car if it's not locked.
It was pitch black dark in that alley at one AM, but the take-down and alley lights on my light bar lit up most of the alley. The beam of my flashlight showed me the back door to the pawn shop was standing open. When I was about ten feet away, I pulled the Glock.40 from my holster and got ready to yell for anybody inside to come out. Before I could do that, a guy dressed in black jeans and a black T-shirt came out the door carrying a gym bag that looked heavy.
He looked dazzled when the beam of light from my flashlight hit him in the eyes, and that's what was supposed to happen. It was supposed to blind him and make him give up. I yelled, "Police officer. Drop the bag, turn around, put your hands on your head, and don't move."
It looked like he was going to do what I asked. He gently sat down the gym bag and started to lift his hands. A split-second later though, he took off down the alley. I holstered the Glock and keyed my mike as I started after him.
"Eight zero four niner in foot pursuit down the alley toward Elizabeth. Suspect is white male, black shirt and pants."
In my ear bud, I heard Central reply.
"Eight zero four niner, be advised eight zero six one is at your location on Elizabeth."
I really hate chasing bad guys on foot. I'm in pretty good shape, but I'm no sprinter and my vest and service belt add about thirty pounds to my two-ten. Most guys into theft are in pretty sorry shape, so I'd have eventually caught him, but that was probably going to wear me out for the rest of the night.
The guy would have made it to the street if Will hadn't turned his patrol car into the alley. As it was, Will's flashing blue lights made the guy stop and look for some other way to get out of the alley and that let me catch up to him. He did try a couple of doors, but they were locked. That's when I tackled him and forced him to the ground.
When Will ran up, I had the guy on the ground on his belly with my knee in his back. I was trying to get my cuffs on his right hand, but the guy wasn't cooperating. He was fighting like hell and screaming "you're breakin' my fuckin' back. Let me up." I pulled on his arm again.
"Just relax and let me cuff you and I'll get off you. If you keep fighting, it's just gonna hurt worse."
He wasn't a big guy, but he was surprisingly strong. He tried to raise up and throw me off his back. Even the two of us were having trouble holding the asshole down and getting his hands behind his back. Will said, "fuck this", pulled the charge cartridge from his Taser, pushed it against the guy's thigh, and yelled, "Lay still or you'll be tased".
Either the guy wasn't listening or he was just plain fucking dumb, because he screamed "get the fuck off me" and pushed up again. His second scream wasn't rage. It was the intense pain of a couple thousand volts of electricity from the probes of the Taser. I know how much that hurts because when we were issued Taser's I had to submit to being tased so I'd understand the effect. Believe me, the effect will take your mind off anything and you won't be able to move either.
He stopped fighting me long enough I got my cuffs on his right hand, and when Will yelled, "Give him your left hand or I'll tase you again", he gave up and let me cuff that one too.
We stood him up then and walked him back to my patrol car. I noticed that Valerie was standing there watching instead of being inside my car like I'd told her. There wasn't time to say anything about that now, but I would later.
We stood the guy up against the side of my patrol car and while Will held him there, I asked him for his name. He wasn't very cooperative.
"I don't have to tell you nuthin' 'cause I wasn't doin' nuthin' but walkin' down this alley."
"Yeah, I know. You've been to the all night gym and that gym bag you dropped at the pawn shop was just your gym clothes, right?"
"I ain't never seen that fuckin' bag before. It ain't mine."
I smiled.
"You know, of course, that my dash and body cams are gonna show you walking out of the pawn shop with that bag and then dropping it before you ran?"
He still wouldn't own up.
"I don't give a good fuck what you say. I wasn't in there and I didn't do nuthin'. Why'd you tackle me, man? I scraped my fuckin' face on the ground and it still hurts."