Ron knew it was time to retire after Scotty Pearson was elected as the District Attorney for Warren County. Retiring at sixty would cut his pension some, but he'd still be all right once he sold his house and moved to the cabin he'd bought on Kentucky Lake. He'd bought the cabin when real estate prices were down, and it was paid for, so the only expenses he'd have were insurance, taxes, and something to eat.
If he stayed on, Ron knew he wouldn't be all right. If Scotty did what he'd promised during his campaign, every job in the Bowling Green Police Department was going to change in ways he'd never be able to tolerate. Scottie would take office in a month, and Ron wanted to be gone before that happened.
Scotty was what the asshole called himself, not Scott like a man would have. Scotty was a name people call you when you're five, just like Ron's mother and father and all his other relatives called him Ronny up until his voice changed. After that, it was Ron, or if he was in big trouble, his full name of Ronald Eugene Mathews.
Ron had met Scotty Pearson in court a few times. Scotty had started his career as a public defender. As a patrol officer, Ron had worked his fair share of cases involving drugs and prostitution, and a lot of those defendants had been represented by Scotty.
After the first case went to trial with Scotty as the defense lawyer, Ron knew he didn't like the man. Ron was used to a defense lawyer trying to catch him making two statements that didn't agree in order to discredit his testimony. That was just part of the job. What wasn't part of the job was the way Scotty attacked each witness for the prosecution personally.
The first case where he'd come up against Scotty was the trial of a drug user Ron had arrested when he was a patrol officer. He'd found the guy passed out in the doorway of a beauty salon with the needle still in his arm. The EMT's Ron had called both testified the guy would have died if they hadn't gotten there soon enough and treated the guy with Naloxone.
Scotty didn't attempt to prove the guy hadn't been using or offer any mitigating circumstances. Instead, he attacked Ron's motive for arresting the guy.
"Officer Mathews, what were you doing when you found my client?"
"I was checking out a 911 call about a man passed out a the doorway on Sixth Street. When I got there -"
Scotty had cut him off.
"I didn't ask you what you found. I just asked you what you were doing. Now, who made this 911 call?"
"I don't know because they didn't identify themselves."
"So, based on an anonymous 911 call, you started walking down Sixth Street looking for someone allegedly passed out in a doorway."
"Well, dispatch requested an officer in the area to check it out, so yes, I did."
"Officer Mathews, according to police records, you've arrested forty-two people for drug use over the last year, almost one every week. Is that correct?"
"Yes, if that's what the record says."
"That's the most people you've arrested for any offense this year isn't it?"
Ron had shrugged.
"I suppose it is, but that area's --"
Scotty had cut him off again.
"Officer Mathews, once again, I asked you a simple question that only required a yes or no answer. I didn't ask you for any other information but you seem to want to defend your actions. Could that be because you took it upon yourself to find someone, anyone, to arrest so you'd look like you were doing your job?"
Ron had started to get aggravated then.
"Sir, with all due respect, I was doing my job."
Scotty had smiled.
"I see. Isn't it true that you had a high school friend who died from an overdose of heroin about five years ago?"
"Yes, that's true."
"Isn't it also true that at the funeral, you stated you were going to make a career of getting drug users off the streets?"
"Yes, but --"
"Just a yes or no answer will suffice, Officer Mathews. Now, could it be that you couldn't find anybody else on that street except for my client and decided to arrest him because he happened to appear to be using drugs?"
Ron was mad by then.
"He didn't appear to be using drugs. He had the needle still in his arm and he was passed out cold. His pulse was barely strong enough to feel."
Scotty had looked at the jury, and then back at Ron.
"Was my client endangering anyone else? Remember, all that's required from you is a yes or no answer."
By then, Ron was seething.
"No, Sir, he wasn't."
"Then why did you arrest him?"
"Because using heroin is against the law."
Scotty had smiled a patronizing smile.
"So are running through a red light and speeding. Do you arrest every person you see doing those things? It would seem those things pose a more significant danger to the public than some individual using drugs."
"No, Sir. I work in drug enforcement, not traffic."
"So, Officer Mathews, you admit that you arrested my client only because you suspected he was using drugs even though he wasn't a danger to anyone else, and you arrested him only because of what happened to your friend. Isn't that right?"
The prosecutor had made an objection then.
"Your Honor, Mr. Pearson is putting words in the witness' mouth. Move to strike that last question."
The judge had allowed the objection, and the drug user was convicted in the end, but Scotty had left Ron with the impression he wasn't interested in his clients. Most public defenders would have looked at the evidence and told the guy he should let them get the charges reduced and then plead guilty to shorten the sentence. Scotty was more interested in making the police look like they were out to arrest anybody for any reason they could find, even if that meant his client went to prison for a long time.
Ron wasn't surprised when Scotty revealed his platform. It was no different from what he'd argued as a public defender.
"For too long, we've used our prisons as holding facilities for people who pose no danger to society. Doing so costs the city, county, and state millions every year for trials and more millions to incarcerate people. If this continues, taxes will have to go up, and for what -- there are no studies that show incarceration changes anything. If I'm elected, I'll end the practice of putting people in prison for drug use, prostitution, and other so-called crimes that don't endanger our citizens."
Ron didn't really care if no more junkies and prostitutes went to prison because they weren't the real problem. What Scotty was promising was going aggravate the real problems -- the people who made a living selling drugs and women, and while it might reduce the cost of trials and keeping an offender in jail, the net result would be an increase in crime.
The best source of information about who was dealing drugs came from the drug users the officers arrested and hauled into the station for questioning. They'd usually give up the name of their dealer in exchange for a reduced sentence. That would give the police reasonable cause to arrest the dealer and search his premises for drugs, and if they found anything, the dealer would sometimes be willing to identify his supplier in exchange for a reduction in charges.
Ron had been part of several of these investigations and they had put several major dealers in prison by following the chain. Other dealers had immediately taken over, but at least the situation wasn't getting worse.
Prostitution, per se, wasn't really a criminal problem. It was just a woman exchanging her body for cash and not really much different than Ron exchanging his time for a paycheck. The problem with prostitution was that at least some of those women had been forced into selling their bodies either because their pimps had addicted them to drugs or because they'd been caught up in the sex trade operations of the cartels. Even the women who'd entered the trade willingly found it very difficult to leave, so all prostitutes were basically slaves owned by their pimps.
Those women were too afraid to ever say anything to anybody on their own. If they were arrested and threatened with jail time or deportation, they might decide to give the interrogating detective enough information to fill in some of the blanks in an investigation. Ron knew of two cartel members who were currently in prison because the prostitute he'd arrested for soliciting had been more afraid of being sent back to Columbia than she was of the pimp who bought her from the cartel. Her pimp had been more than happy to give the DA the name of the cartel member in order to get the charges reduced from sex trafficking to pandering.