Some Palo Alto residents are expressing concern after police officers were prevented from pursuing a two men on suspicion of burglary because of a department policy that strictly limits car chases.
Plainclothes detectives investigating a burglary wave in the Midtown area were the first to spot two men loading items into a mid-1990s BMW M3 around noon Wednesday on the 2400 block of Greer Road, police Agent Dan Ryan said.
Deeming the situation suspicious, the detectives called for uniformed officers, who arrived just as the men were leaving.
Police stopped the BMW on Oregon Expressway, but the driver made a beeline for Highway 101 as soon as officers stepped out of their cruiser. At that point, they had to drop the chase because of a policy that forbids car pursuits for property crimes, Ryan said.
"This is a carefully thought out policy," he said. "We will not chase certain types of violations. This is one of those situations."
Some residents, however, said the policy may need to be re-examined, especially when authorities themselves are witnesses to a crime.
"This kind of policy does not give the residents a lot of confidence that police will protect us," said Midtown Residents Association Vice President Sheri Furman.
"It kind of says we're wide open; the police can't chase you."
Ryan said Palo Alto is one of several cities with such a policy on the books. It was adopted more than five years ago in response
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