Made with Love

Security guard fired after tackling man who allegedly struck California cop, tries to flee

Loophole

Senior Member
Joined
Aug 25, 2011
Messages
220
A Best Buy security guard who tackled a man wanted on a felony warrant -- and who had allegedly just hit a cop -- was reportedly fired for his good deed because it ran counter to corporate policy.

The Placer County Sheriff's Office said the incident happened at the Best Buy in Roseville, California, located outside Sacramento.

Timothy Trujillo, who was wanted on a felony warrant by Nevada State Police, reportedly struck a police officer and tried to flee when deputies searching for him turned up in Roseville on Jan. 11.

“When they confronted him, the man punched one of the detectives and tried to run off, that’s when the security guard tackled the man, preventing him from escaping,” Placer County Sheriff's Office spokesperson Lt. Andrew Scott told FOX40.

Tyler, who said he was an Army veteran and only wanted to be referred to by his first name, told FOX40 he was working at the Best Buy when he saw the incident unfolding in front of him.

“He started running past me and I thought I was doing the right thing by stopping him,” he said.

Tyler said, however, the company's policy is that employees should not touch anyone, and he soon suspected he might get into "some type of trouble." One week later, he said he was fired.
“My manager called me in and said corporate decided to let me go because I used excessive force and it was against Best Buy’s policy to intervene,” he said.

Best Buy defended its policy in a statement to FOX40.
"Our policy is clear, employees are not to chase potential criminals outside of the store," the company said. "Chasing an individual in the parking lot creates a safety risk that isn’t worth taking, regardless of how noble an employee’s intention is.”

Tyler said he's just happy to have gotten a wanted criminal off the street, and has plans to start college in April.
“Seemed like it was the right thing," he told FOX40. "Like I said, it was someone running from the cops, seemed like the logical thing to do."

Trujillo is facing numerous charges including assaulting and resisting a peace officer, burglary, possession of burglary tools and possession of methamphetamine, according to the sheriff's office. He was booked at South Placer Jail, where he remains in custody without bail.



Video in the link. Best Buy security guard fired after tackling man who allegedly struck California cop, tried to flee | Fox News
 
''"Our policy is clear, employees are not to chase potential criminals outside of the store," the company said. "Chasing an individual in the parking lot creates a safety risk that isn’t worth taking, regardless of how noble an employee’s intention is.”

And I'm betting a lot of the public's policy is going to be to not shop there.


 
An average citizen might do just what he did, but a SECURITY GUARD isn't allowed to.

So if a criminal snatches some ones child in the store, just stand back and watch ?

Who ever made this, in "corporate decided", obviously wouldn't help anybody, chicken shit won't even publicly state their name.
 
Maurice Boscorelli said:

And I'm betting a lot of the public's policy is going to be to not shop there.




Let's hope there is a lot of backslash in social media.
 
I'm sure this story will lead to the brave young man getting another job with better pay.
 
Prim0 said:
I worked for a security company for a short while when I was younger. It's all about observe and report. They generally don't want you doing anything. You are not a cop.....you are just there as a deterrent and as a pair of eyes.

I'm not in agreement with what happened but I don't think this policy is all that rare. Best Buy would probably be held liable if that perpetrator had been injured or if some innocent bystander had been injured. They don't want the trouble in court or the cost. So they just let people go and let the cops deal with it.

It is what it is.
That makes sense, not the emotional, including me, response to this event.

But one must wonder if being sued by some shyster lawyer is reason enough for a "security guard" to not intervein when a customer is threatened, when ordinary citizens likely would step up.

Maybe another example of how our legal systems, not to confused with a justice system, screws up the works.
 
Back
Top Bottom