Bike-along with cops By Hope Brumbach "Hey, there's one right there," Sergeant Clint Gibson called out, pointing to a vehicle slowing to a stop at the traffic light at Liberty Lake Road and Country Vista Drive. The driver didn't have his seatbelt fastened. The second officer, Mark Van Hyning, rolled down the knoll on his mountain bike, zipped alongside the vehicle and yelled, "Hey, police." On his bike, Van Hyning herded the car around the corner onto Liberty Lake Road and parked his bike behind the vehicle, which had pulled over to the curb. It proved a productive stop. When the driver rolled down his window, Van Hyning smelled marijuana. With the driver's permission, the officer searched the vehicle and found a glass drug pipe wedged between the passenger and driver's seats, a misdemeanor offense. While the officer talked to him about the pipe, the 18-year-old driver slumped on a curb behind his car; a male passenger hovered nearby. "If I have a green card, it's OK, right?" the driver asked, referring to the pipe. "Why don't you stop talking, homie?" chided his passenger. "You can't possess marijuana. Period," Gibson told him. The officers cited him for not wearing his seatbelt and gave him paperwork for a court date for the drug offense. "I shouldn't have come out here," said the driver, a Spokane resident. "Tell your friends this isn't the place to do dope," Van Hyning said. "We are beyond committed to our community." That was the first stop of the day last week, when Van Hyning and Gibson, two of the four certified bike officers in Liberty Lake, took to the roads on their mountain bikes for an afternoon of two-wheeled patrol duty. During the Thursday afternoon shift, The Splash rode along. Bike officer programs have spiked in popularity around the country with the increased focus on community-oriented policing. Liberty Lake's program started pedaling in 2004. Since then, officers patrol once or twice a week on bikes, from May through September. The program, Sergeant Gibson said, offers the opportunity to interact with the community on the ground level, with two to three times as many contacts compared to a patrol car. Bike officers also have the advantage of stealth approach and heightened awareness because they can see, hear - and even smell - more than when in a patrol car, Gibson said. Plus, it's fun, he added. "We're able to see and be more observant when we're on a mountain bike because we're not caged in with a patrol car," Gibson said. "We're able to roll into things more easily on a bike than in a car, because people don't expect to have a police officer on a bike." Last Thursday, Gibson and Van Hyning focused on spotting traffic violations that would lead to the discovery of other, more serious offenses. They slowly rolled through the Albertsons parking lot on Liberty Lake Road, looking for suspicious behavior.
During one stop in the parking lot, an observer leaned against his truck and flicked a lit cigarette on the ground, watching the officers interact with another driver. "You're not going to litter right in front of the police, are you?" Van Hyning said to the observer. "You're going to pick that up, right?" The man slowly scooped the burning stub from the ground. The bike officers also planted themselves at intersections - often near Liberty Lake Road and Country Vista and then Liberty Lake Road and Appleway Avenue - where traffic naturally comes to a stop. That way, they can avoid chasing down cars. One drawback of being on a bike is getting from "point A to point B very fast," Gibson said. But bike officers also maneuver places that cars can't, such as the local trail system, parks and between houses. On Thursday, the pair pedaled between and through lanes of traffic. Similar to a patrol car, bike officers don't have to obey traffic laws when it's needed for their work. Van Hyning spotted a small truck driven by a man with his seatbelt under his arm. He pumped his bike across Liberty Lake Road and caught the truck after it turned into the Safeway parking lot. Gibson wheeled in behind. The driver searched in the glove box and under his seat, but couldn't produce proof of insurance. Van Hyning cited him for it, as well as failing to properly wear his seatbelt. Drivers without insurance irk him, Van Hyning said. If that driver gets in an accident with someone with limited insurance, lives will forever be changed, he added. Oftentimes on bike duty, officers will slowly cruise through parking lots and along busy roadways, but they also will sprint after moving vehicles. It requires an officer to be fit, Gibson said, especially with the roughly 20 pounds of equipment and full police gear. Bike officers bring everything they would normally need in a patrol car: ticket books, maps, tools, handcuffs, baton, gun, Taser and more. They wear a Kevlar vest under their police uniform, which often is made from a breathable material and can zip off into shorts. When running license plates, bike officers call dispatch for help from radios strapped to their shoulders. They also typically have a patrol car on duty as backup. Even if a driver decided to split - which no one has so far in Liberty Lake - the officers have a record of their license plate and description, Gibson said. In the last few years of bike patrol, Gibson said the department has made some significant arrests. Two years ago, an older minivan drove by the bike cops, and "you could smell alcohol rolling out of the minivan," Gibson said. When the officers pulled it over near Walgreens, they spotted the butt end of a gun. It turned out to be an assault rifle with a loaded magazine - and ended in a felony arrest. On other occasions, they arrested a drug dealer in the McDonald's parking lot, caught a man smoking cocaine in a handicap parking spot near Albertsons and nabbed a DUI golf cart driver on Liberty Lake Community Yard Sale day. On one of the last stops of the day last week, the bike officers contacted the driver of a sports utility vehicle in the Albertsons parking lot after running the plates and discovering the registered owner had a suspended license. The driver told police he just acquired the vehicle and hadn't changed ownership on it. Van Hyning recognized the man from previous contacts. The man had a history of driving under the influence and is required to use an ignition interlock device on his vehicle. The SUV didn't have one. "I just got it," the man protested. "That's why they call it driving privileges," Van Hyning said. The man was arrested and released. After receiving his court date paperwork, he shook the officers' hands. His passenger, who had a valid driver's license, drove the pair away. "Our main goal," Gibson said, "is to modify behavior." |