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View Full Version : Portland city commissioner who wants to defund the police called 911 on Lyft driver



Teh One Who Knocks
11-11-2020, 12:38 PM
By Paul Best | Fox News


https://i.imgur.com/uSqw2ZXl.jpg

Portland City Commissioner Jo Ann Hardesty, who has pushed for police budget cuts, called 911 after a Lyft driver canceled her ride and asked her to get out of his car.

Lyft driver Richmond Frost told two Portland Police Department officers, who responded to the scene on Nov. 1, that Hardesty "became irate when he refused to roll the windows up," according to a dispatch report,

Frost pulled into a Chevron gas station, canceled the ride and apparently asked her to leave the vehicle. Hardesty allegedly said she refused to exit the vehicle because "it was cold and she was a woman and alone."

She called 911, telling the operator: “Well, I’ve got a Lyft driver that decided he would just drop me off at a filling station. Well, I’m not getting out of the car, in the dark, at a filling station, not happening. All because I asked him to put the window up. I’m not leaving."

"I am not going to allow him to leave me on the side of the road. I paid for a ride and he says he canceled it, so I’m just going to sit here until he sends me another ride."

The dispatcher explained that it's Frost's property, no crimes were committed, and only she can order another Lyft. Officers were sent to the scene.

Lyft currently recommends that drivers keep windows down while a passenger is in the car to ensure air circulation and mitigate the spread of coronavirus.

After Hardesty called 911, Frost made his own 911 call.

"I've got a customer that I canceled the ride. I'm a rideshare driver and I canceled the ride, and I've taken her off the freeway to this filling station so that she can order another ride," Frost told the 911 operator

"I canceled the ride so she's no longer involved or engaged with me. She's refusing to get out of my car."

Hardesty, who oversees the Bureau of Emergency Management which includes the city's 911 system, did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

She told the Portland Tribune that she called 911 because she felt unsafe.

"I don't call 911 lightly, but I certainly am not going to do anything that would put my personal safety at risk," Hardesty told the newspaper.

"It's a lot harder when you are Black or brown in America to make that decision ... But I ultimately had very limited options."
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Hardesty has been pushing for a budget amendment that would "reallocate $18 million from the Portland Police Bureau to reinvest in community, COVID-19 relief, and police alternatives."

After the Portland City Council failed to pass the budget amendment last week, Hardesty called on elected leaders to "move past the fear and stretch ourselves to take the action that is demanded."

"In June we started this journey by reallocating $15 million from the Police Bureau and redirecting those funds towards community investments," she said in a statement Nov. 5.

"We came into this budget with the same goal of investing in our communities and reducing police by providing mutual aid because if Portlanders can’t depend on Portland to keep them safe and supported, who can they count on?"

FBD
11-11-2020, 12:56 PM
he should have driven and actually dumped her by the side of the road once she tried saying that

Muddy
11-11-2020, 03:02 PM
Portland... What a shithole.

Teh One Who Knocks
11-16-2020, 12:43 PM
By Hank Berrien - The Daily Wire


https://i.imgur.com/FIVNe1nl.jpg

On Thursday, Portland City Commissioner Jo Ann Hardesty, who has called for defunding the police and derided those who called 911 unnecessarily but was then found to have called 911 when a Lyft driver ended her ride, defended her 911 call, saying it was “another example of being black in America” and blaming “white supremacists” for her fear and subsequent 911 call.

Speaking at a virtual city council meeting on Thursday that was discussing the adoption of the 2020 fall budget monitoring process, Hardesty stated, “I want to end with this: recently you’ve read articles about me and a Lyft driver. Another example of being black in America and being put in a position where I have to be the one to look out for my personal safety; didn’t expect the Lyft driver to do it, certainly didn’t expect the police to do it. It was my responsibility to make sure I got home safe, and I did everything I could to get home safe.”

“When you’re living in a city where white supremacists are proudly riding around in their big trucks with their flags and you’re a black person and somebody wants to put you on the side of the road at night,” she continued. “Not gonna happen.”

According to Fox News, Hardesty allegedly demanded that Lyft driver Richmond Frost roll the windows up because she said she was cold. Lyft’s instructions for its drivers on how to deal with the coronavirus state clearly: “Roll down the windows during trips and / or use the car’s vents to bring in fresh outside air. Avoid using the recirculated air option for the car’s ventilation.”

“Hardesty, who heads up Portland’s 911 system, had been picked up from Ilani Casino in Washington when the series of disagreements began,” the Daily Mail reported.

The Portland Tribune noted that “Hardesty has pushed to cut the police budget noting that many 911 calls are unnecessary, and police response often not needed.”

Hardesty told the Portland Tribune, “I don’t call 911 lightly, but I certainly am not going to do anything that would put my personal safety at risk. I knew that having him call the police would put me in danger. And that’s why I proactively called 911. It’s a lot harder when you are black or brown in America to make that decision … But I ultimately had very limited options.”

Frost said, “I spent 40 years in the service business. There’s always a few people, you cannot please them no matter what you do,” adding that the 911 call from Hardesty “was so unnecessary … To argue and belittle and to treat me the way I felt she treated me was completely unnecessary.”

Hardesty claimed that the Chevron station was about to close, stating, “I didn’t know how long I would have to wait. There was no way I was going to get out on the side of the road, in the dark, because some driver has an attitude, and decided I should just get out and just whatever happens happens.”

Hardesty stated in her complaint to Lyft, according to the Daily Mail: “I requested a ride, the driver came to the wrong pick up location, He then blamed me. I asked him to roll the window up on my side and he started to yell, ‘I can’t because the regulations require each window to be cracked.’ He then pulls over in the dark on the side of a gas station and told me he was cancelling the ride. I had no interest in being left on the side of the road by an angry driver. He threatened to call the police. I called the police & another car. Both arrived at the same time. It is totally inappropriate to expect a woman to get out of a vehicle in the dead of night because any angry person demands it. This is a safety issue for your customer. Your driver was in no danger.”

Lyft replied: “The feedback alleged that you refused to exit the driver’s vehicle after they requested you do so. As a reminder, drivers are free to end a ride for any reason as long as the drop off is in a safe location. Safety is our top priority. We take these matters very seriously. We encourage everyone using Lyft to be respectful of others. This helps maintain a safe and inclusive community. Please know that future reports of this nature may lead to additional action being taken on your account.”

At the Thursday meeting, Hardesty also stated:


I want to appreciate the tens of thousands of people who have taken to the streets of Portland night after night after night demanding justice and police accountability. …. I also want to say that this budget does not reflect the moment in history that we’re in. We have an obligation to rise up and be bigger and bolder than we ever imagined we could be. When we are suffering as a community and we continue to get lip service to either black lives mattering or to transforming how policing operates in this community, it is disheartening. …

When the assumption is somehow I should sing Kum-Bah-Yah along with people who have not had my lived experience, who’ve never been black in America, who’ve never been targeted by the police, who’ve never cried with family members who’ve lost loved ones at the hands of police? I reject that totally and without reservations. … For the most part, I’m told to be polite, play along with my white, middle-class colleagues, and just pretend that black lives matter in a building that has never prioritized black lives. … I’m told that we should all figure out how to be collegial with each other; let me tell you, white people will never be comfortable talking about racial inequality.

DemonGeminiX
11-16-2020, 12:46 PM
:roll:

Griffin
11-16-2020, 01:01 PM
If a white woman said she was afraid of being attacked by black men, she would be condemned as a racist.

Teh One Who Knocks
11-16-2020, 01:04 PM
If a white woman said she was afraid of being attacked by black men, she would be condemned as a racist.

Because ONLY white people are racist :nono:

PorkChopSandwiches
11-16-2020, 04:13 PM
:haha: