Allen Iverson to police: 'Do you know who I am?'

Originally Posted by Im Not You

Where do you guys live...that the police won't pull you over for lane changing w/o signaling?
QFT spend some time out here in SoCal and try getting away with that in front of the LAPD. It will not end well for you.
 
Originally Posted by Im Not You

Where do you guys live...that the police won't pull you over for lane changing w/o signaling?
QFT spend some time out here in SoCal and try getting away with that in front of the LAPD. It will not end well for you.
 
Originally Posted by PharelFor3

You know he aint say vehicle. He probably said "take this motherEffing car", I got 10 more.

laugh.gif

  
 
[h1]Iverson's friend: Atlanta cops made up their Lamborghini report
[/h1]

http://www.ajc.com/news/atlanta/iversons-friend-atlanta-cops-904074.html

By Ty Tagami

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

The friend who was driving former NBA all-star Allen Iverson's Lamborghini when it got impounded last month is saying Atlanta police falsified information in their report about the incident.

http://www.ajc.com/news/atlanta/ive...mic/00894/lamorg_894380c.jpg&superSizeImage=y 
Andrea Dzeda, Andrea Dzeda This photos was supplied by Andrea Dzeda, who says it is a picture of Allen Iverson's Lamborghini in Buckhead on March 20, 10 days before the car was impounded for expired registration. The tag shows a dealer tag with expiration date of April 3. Iverson's car was pulled over on March 30. The AJC was unable to verify the authenticity of the photo's date.

 

http://www.ajc.com/news/atlanta/ive...ic/00885/iverson_885703c.jpg&superSizeImage=y 
Associated Press Former NBA star Allen Iverson was driving a silver Lamborghini with expired dealer tags.

Antwuan Clisby told the AJC Friday that, contrary to the official police report, Iverson didn't swear at a cop or ask her a boastful question about his fame.

"It's not right how they're trying to portray this whole thing," Clisby said.

Clisby is one of several people who've come forward to dispute the details of the police report.

Clisby, 35, was cited for failure to signal and for driving a car with expired tags after an officer pulled him over in Iverson's gray 2007 Lamborghini Murcielago. Clisby, a friend of Iverson's from Virginia,  was handcuffed after he grew "angry" during the March 30 encounter, according to a police officer's report of the incident.

Officer S. J. Durham called for backup and, according to Clisby, five squad cars and eight more cops came to the scene, in the parking lot of the Ruth's Chris Steak House and Embassy Suites Hotel on Peachtree Road in Buckhead.

The car had a dealer tag, and after running the vehicle identification number through a computer, Durham realized the tag had been expired for two years, she wrote in her report.

When a tow truck was called, Iverson became upset.

"Take the vehicle, I have 10 more," he told Durham, according to her report. "Police don't have anything else [expletive] to do except [expletive] with me. ... Do you know who I am?"

For the next 20 minutes, according to the officer's report, Iverson "went on and on" about who he was.

But Clisby told the AJC that neither he nor Iverson behaved as the officer reported.

"I'm not going to be rude when I get pulled over, because I'm not trying to get a ticket," Clisby explained. He said Iverson did not swear and did not boast about his fame.

"‘Do you know who I am?' Who would say that? Only an [expletive] would say that," Clisby said.

Clisby said he did ask the officer early in the encounter if Iverson, the passenger, could get out of the car and go to Ruth's Chris, where he had a take-out order waiting. Clisby said he made the request to shield his friend from the publicity. A crowd was gathering around the Lamborghini and people were taking pictures, he said.

The request was denied. Instead, Iverson and Clisby were ordered from the car and searched. Clisby said an officer asked where they were keeping the drugs and guns.

Ernest West, a courtesy van driver for the Embassy Suites, was parked next to the Lamborghini and witnessed the incident. He said Iverson has been a regular at the hotel and restaurant, so he recognized him immediately.

"He didn't curse at all," West told the AJC. "I mean, he was upset by the situation. But he didn't curse."

When asked about this, an Atlanta Police Department spokeswoman said Clisby called Thursday, claiming Durham fabricated her report.

"We told him that he will have his day in court, and if there is something in that report that he feels is not true, he could testify and she would testify," Officer Kim Maggart told the AJC Friday.

Maggart said Clisby didn't appear to appreciate the response, and started cursing at her and the other two police employees -- one a sworn officer -- who were participating on speakerphone. She wouldn't repeat what he said, but said he used words like those attributed to Iverson by Officer Durham in her report: "Everything she stated he said in the police report is pretty much everything he [Clisby] said to us last night."

Clisby also denies that the tags were expired. He said Iverson bought the car in Georgia two years ago and left it undriven at his home in Philadelphia, and recently had it shipped back to his home in Atlanta after asking the same dealer to give him new drive-out tags while he got permanent tags. The drive-out tags expired in early April, he said, days after the car was impounded.

Another witness offers some corroboration of that claim. Andrea Dzeda wasn't there the night of the traffic stop, but 10 days earlier she and her husband, both visiting from their home in Austin, met Iverson and his friends at the bar of the Embassy Suites. They hung out together, and Iverson and his friends were polite, even calling her ma'am, she told the AJC.

On their way out of the hotel, Dzeda snapped photos of Iverson's gray Lamborghini with her cellphone. She provided a copy of one of the photos. It shows a car with dealer drive-out tag that was dated April 3, 2011 -- four days after Clisby was given the expired tag citation.

The AJC had no way of verifying the authenticity of the photo.

The public likely will not see a resolution about the accuracy of the police report or the underlying traffic violation though. Clisby said he won't be fighting any of this in court. It'll be less expensive to just pay the fine, he said.
 
[h1]Iverson's friend: Atlanta cops made up their Lamborghini report
[/h1]

http://www.ajc.com/news/atlanta/iversons-friend-atlanta-cops-904074.html

By Ty Tagami

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

The friend who was driving former NBA all-star Allen Iverson's Lamborghini when it got impounded last month is saying Atlanta police falsified information in their report about the incident.

http://www.ajc.com/news/atlanta/ive...mic/00894/lamorg_894380c.jpg&superSizeImage=y 
Andrea Dzeda, Andrea Dzeda This photos was supplied by Andrea Dzeda, who says it is a picture of Allen Iverson's Lamborghini in Buckhead on March 20, 10 days before the car was impounded for expired registration. The tag shows a dealer tag with expiration date of April 3. Iverson's car was pulled over on March 30. The AJC was unable to verify the authenticity of the photo's date.

 

http://www.ajc.com/news/atlanta/ive...ic/00885/iverson_885703c.jpg&superSizeImage=y 
Associated Press Former NBA star Allen Iverson was driving a silver Lamborghini with expired dealer tags.

Antwuan Clisby told the AJC Friday that, contrary to the official police report, Iverson didn't swear at a cop or ask her a boastful question about his fame.

"It's not right how they're trying to portray this whole thing," Clisby said.

Clisby is one of several people who've come forward to dispute the details of the police report.

Clisby, 35, was cited for failure to signal and for driving a car with expired tags after an officer pulled him over in Iverson's gray 2007 Lamborghini Murcielago. Clisby, a friend of Iverson's from Virginia,  was handcuffed after he grew "angry" during the March 30 encounter, according to a police officer's report of the incident.

Officer S. J. Durham called for backup and, according to Clisby, five squad cars and eight more cops came to the scene, in the parking lot of the Ruth's Chris Steak House and Embassy Suites Hotel on Peachtree Road in Buckhead.

The car had a dealer tag, and after running the vehicle identification number through a computer, Durham realized the tag had been expired for two years, she wrote in her report.

When a tow truck was called, Iverson became upset.

"Take the vehicle, I have 10 more," he told Durham, according to her report. "Police don't have anything else [expletive] to do except [expletive] with me. ... Do you know who I am?"

For the next 20 minutes, according to the officer's report, Iverson "went on and on" about who he was.

But Clisby told the AJC that neither he nor Iverson behaved as the officer reported.

"I'm not going to be rude when I get pulled over, because I'm not trying to get a ticket," Clisby explained. He said Iverson did not swear and did not boast about his fame.

"‘Do you know who I am?' Who would say that? Only an [expletive] would say that," Clisby said.

Clisby said he did ask the officer early in the encounter if Iverson, the passenger, could get out of the car and go to Ruth's Chris, where he had a take-out order waiting. Clisby said he made the request to shield his friend from the publicity. A crowd was gathering around the Lamborghini and people were taking pictures, he said.

The request was denied. Instead, Iverson and Clisby were ordered from the car and searched. Clisby said an officer asked where they were keeping the drugs and guns.

Ernest West, a courtesy van driver for the Embassy Suites, was parked next to the Lamborghini and witnessed the incident. He said Iverson has been a regular at the hotel and restaurant, so he recognized him immediately.

"He didn't curse at all," West told the AJC. "I mean, he was upset by the situation. But he didn't curse."

When asked about this, an Atlanta Police Department spokeswoman said Clisby called Thursday, claiming Durham fabricated her report.

"We told him that he will have his day in court, and if there is something in that report that he feels is not true, he could testify and she would testify," Officer Kim Maggart told the AJC Friday.

Maggart said Clisby didn't appear to appreciate the response, and started cursing at her and the other two police employees -- one a sworn officer -- who were participating on speakerphone. She wouldn't repeat what he said, but said he used words like those attributed to Iverson by Officer Durham in her report: "Everything she stated he said in the police report is pretty much everything he [Clisby] said to us last night."

Clisby also denies that the tags were expired. He said Iverson bought the car in Georgia two years ago and left it undriven at his home in Philadelphia, and recently had it shipped back to his home in Atlanta after asking the same dealer to give him new drive-out tags while he got permanent tags. The drive-out tags expired in early April, he said, days after the car was impounded.

Another witness offers some corroboration of that claim. Andrea Dzeda wasn't there the night of the traffic stop, but 10 days earlier she and her husband, both visiting from their home in Austin, met Iverson and his friends at the bar of the Embassy Suites. They hung out together, and Iverson and his friends were polite, even calling her ma'am, she told the AJC.

On their way out of the hotel, Dzeda snapped photos of Iverson's gray Lamborghini with her cellphone. She provided a copy of one of the photos. It shows a car with dealer drive-out tag that was dated April 3, 2011 -- four days after Clisby was given the expired tag citation.

The AJC had no way of verifying the authenticity of the photo.

The public likely will not see a resolution about the accuracy of the police report or the underlying traffic violation though. Clisby said he won't be fighting any of this in court. It'll be less expensive to just pay the fine, he said.
 
Originally Posted by Im Not You

Where do you guys live...that the police won't pull you over for lane changing w/o signaling?
This.....
Everyone signals unless they are ignorant.
not paying for tag's? 10g's for the tags? someone was embelishing to say the least. Dudes that handle stuff like that, plan his schedule, or whose job it is to alert Allen to that type situation ( aka prob this driver) are dumb.
I wouldnt be suprised if Allen had no clue as to the situation ( not that that excuses him from paying the tags)
But think about it if your Allen Iverson, you left Europe 3 months ago. You prob have not driven or been driven in the car for more than 6000 miles total and prob not often in the past. And you have as many "handlers" as Iverson has are you thinking about tag's to a car? If I lead the lifestyle Iverson leads now I wouldnt. That was Iverson feeling like a vic, reacting like a vic, then realizing he was not a vic.
 His driver prob did some the worst harm. Iverson stated facts.
Iverson:Do you know who I am?
Officer: It doesnt matter what your name is.
Iverson:Can I leave for Dinner?
Officer: No not until were finished.
Iverson realizing that he prob lost a chance to make some money for the first time in a year =
Tirade
Officer who's really pulling over the driver for not signaling, and to write the ticket is now stuck in a situation where the driver messed up and you have an arrogant legitimately rich black male who's history with the law has left him with little respect for the police who's pissed and cussing you out decides to take more time than is necessary to collect himself and figure out how he will handle the rest of the situation.
Situation gets worse, and gets reported.
Pure and utter stupidity.
 
Originally Posted by Im Not You

Where do you guys live...that the police won't pull you over for lane changing w/o signaling?
This.....
Everyone signals unless they are ignorant.
not paying for tag's? 10g's for the tags? someone was embelishing to say the least. Dudes that handle stuff like that, plan his schedule, or whose job it is to alert Allen to that type situation ( aka prob this driver) are dumb.
I wouldnt be suprised if Allen had no clue as to the situation ( not that that excuses him from paying the tags)
But think about it if your Allen Iverson, you left Europe 3 months ago. You prob have not driven or been driven in the car for more than 6000 miles total and prob not often in the past. And you have as many "handlers" as Iverson has are you thinking about tag's to a car? If I lead the lifestyle Iverson leads now I wouldnt. That was Iverson feeling like a vic, reacting like a vic, then realizing he was not a vic.
 His driver prob did some the worst harm. Iverson stated facts.
Iverson:Do you know who I am?
Officer: It doesnt matter what your name is.
Iverson:Can I leave for Dinner?
Officer: No not until were finished.
Iverson realizing that he prob lost a chance to make some money for the first time in a year =
Tirade
Officer who's really pulling over the driver for not signaling, and to write the ticket is now stuck in a situation where the driver messed up and you have an arrogant legitimately rich black male who's history with the law has left him with little respect for the police who's pissed and cussing you out decides to take more time than is necessary to collect himself and figure out how he will handle the rest of the situation.
Situation gets worse, and gets reported.
Pure and utter stupidity.
 
Originally Posted by Turbo Mopar


[h1]Clisby said he did ask the officer early in the encounter if Iverson, the passenger, could get out of the car and go to Ruth's Chris, where he had a take-out order waiting. Clisby said he made the request to shield his friend from the publicity. A crowd was gathering around the Lamborghini and people were taking pictures, he said.[/h1]

The request was denied. Instead, Iverson and Clisby were ordered from the car and searched. Clisby said an officer asked where they were keeping the drugs and guns.

Wouldn't doubt this for one second. I've been in this situation. They think we all have guns and drugs when they pull us over.
 
Originally Posted by Turbo Mopar


[h1]Clisby said he did ask the officer early in the encounter if Iverson, the passenger, could get out of the car and go to Ruth's Chris, where he had a take-out order waiting. Clisby said he made the request to shield his friend from the publicity. A crowd was gathering around the Lamborghini and people were taking pictures, he said.[/h1]

The request was denied. Instead, Iverson and Clisby were ordered from the car and searched. Clisby said an officer asked where they were keeping the drugs and guns.

Wouldn't doubt this for one second. I've been in this situation. They think we all have guns and drugs when they pull us over.
 
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