Police rethinking rabbit costume traffic stings after criticism



Glendale police continued a pedestrian safety sting on Thursday, but they dropped the use of a rabbit costume that had generated some criticism.

A sting on Wednesday used a police officer dressed as a rabbit — a move one councilman described as “breathtakingly dangerous.”

On Thursday, Glendale Police Officer Tom Broadway dressed in
a pair of shorts and T-shirt, a far cry from the furry Easter costume
that he sported a day earlier. He walked back and forth at
two crosswalks, one lighted and marked, the other not. All the while
officers cited drivers who failed to yield, while giving them a rundown
of pedestrian safety rules.



“I
am happy to hear that they modified the sting and agreed that the idea
of a giant rabbit — a total anomaly out in the roadway — is not exactly
training our drivers to learn really anything,” Councilman John Drayman said.

The
city was reevaluating the use of costumes as decoys, although they have
not been uncommon at previous pedestrian enforcement campaigns, city
spokesman Ritch Wells said.

Read the full story here.

— Veronica Rocha

Photo: A car does not stop for a Glendale police officer dressed in a rabbit
costume crossing the street at Central and Garfield in Glendale on
Wednesday. The driver was pulled over for not yielding
to a pedestrian. (Raul Roa / News-Press)