</font><font color="blue" class="small">( in that the cop that's by the side of the road is the only one close enough to do anything about it )</font>
That's frequently true, but not always. I was lucky and never got hit, but some people enjoyed seeing just how close they can come by, some even blew their horns as they went by to see if they could startle the officer. And I did have one that I really enjoyed. I was issuing a traffic citation when a Corvette ran by real close, and just as he got even with me, he stepped on the clutch, gunned the engine a couple of times, and took off. Of course, he didn't realize that I was just handing the other violator his citation, so I was ready to go; jumped in my car and took off after the Corvette. Now of course that Corvette could have easily outrun the Ford cruiser I had then, but instead of continuing in a straight line, he turned right, lost control, spun 360 degrees and came to a stop very close to the curb with no damage to anything. Hmmm, a smart alec SMU law student. Of course, I got him out of the car, told him he was under arrest for "fleeing or seeking to evade", took him and put him in the cruiser. He quite beligerently claimed that he didn't even know I was behind him, so I couldn't arrest him on those charges, saying, "Just give me a speeding ticket and let me go."
Now he had a passenger in the Corvette, but the passenger hadn't moved, so I hadn't spoken to her until I got him in the cruiser, then I went to speak to her. She was holding a birthday cake in her lap and they were on their way to a birthday party. It seems it was only their second date, and the young man had borrowed his older brother's Corvette. And the first thing she said to me was, "I was trying to tell him to slow down, but he said, I can't, the cops are after me." Kind of blew his defense, so he didn't even show up for court to contest the charges. /forums/images/graemlins/laugh.gif