Did I misread it?
> The point here is that the police were called to the scene of a crime and,
> when asked to take a report by the victim who wished to press charges
> against those who wrongfully detained him, the police told the victim to get
> lost and, when he insisted on a report being filed, he was arrested. That is
> the crime from which the police officers managed to walk away unscathed.
From what I understand (I may have misread it) the police were responding to the casino's call, not the AP. The casino probably called the police bofore he did, so they thought they were being dispatched to a public disturbance call.
Let's face it, communication is not one of any police department's strengths. I have been pulled over, handcuffed, detained and even held at gunpoint at various times by the LAPD despite my squeaky clean record. There must be some serial killer somewhere that looks just like me! Hopefully they'll find him (and stop finding me) soon.
Among the PD's other weaknesses is their lack of "people skills." Obviously they don't know what the hell is going on when they arrive on a scene, so they treat everybody as a suspect or a potentially dangerous individual. Their first priority is to keep themselves safe. Since they are usually not given nearly enough information about the conditions they are being sent to, often times they end up pulling stunts like this one simply out of ignorance or miscommunication.
As far as security guards go, don't ever trust them! I used to be one too, so believe me when I say that I and many of my brethren were DUMBASSES! I was given a training manual to study for 30 minutes, then a 15 minute written test. The next week I was on the street as a security guard. A week later I got my paycheck for $400. Not exactly ideal circumstances, eh?
-Sonny-