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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
4/23/2007
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Senate Approves Pippy Bill Cracking
Down on Fake Police Officers, Veterans
Tougher penalties for fake officers who often target women.
Harrisburg – The state Senate has approved legislation sponsored by Sen.
John Pippy (R-37) that would impose tougher penalties on those convicted
of impersonating a police officer or military veteran.
Current
law makes impersonating a police officer a second-degree misdemeanor
punishable by up to two years in prison. Senate Bill 183, approved by
Senate on Wednesday, makes it a third-degree felony with a penalty of up
to seven years in prison and a $15,000 fine.
"Considering the motivation behind impersonating a law enforcement
officer, such as making fake traffic stops to exploit the driver –
especially women – as well as other kinds of attacks, I believe it is
important to have a tougher penalty for this crime," said Pippy. "Police
impersonators are not only a threat to public safety; they undermine the
confidence the public rightfully has in legitimate officers. It's a
serious crime and deserves serious consequences."
Pippy
said the measure also makes it a third-degree misdemeanor for a person
to impersonate an active member of the armed forces or a military
veteran.
An
incident Wednesday in York, Pa., where police said a man impersonated an
officer and tried to arrest a woman, is the most recent of reported
incidents involving police impersonators across Pennsylvania.
In a case
outside of Philadelphia in 2005, police arrested a man driving a vehicle
that looked like an uncover police car. They found numerous fake police
badges in his possession, from several states.
Senate
Bill 183 was sent to the House of Representatives for consideration.
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