The citations of St. Tammany Parish Sheriff’s Office Reserve Deputy J.P. Jardine, clocked at 81 mph, and Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office Deputy D. Zanotelli, clocked at 87 mph, expose a crackdown on everything illegal by new Causeway Police Chief Nick Congemi.
“The message is very simple: We won’t tolerate speeding from anyone, nobody, whether it’s our own administration or law enforcement,” said Congemi.
|
|
In the latest incidents, the first names of the lawmen were not listed in police reports, but Causeway officials confirmed their identities and positions within the two sheriff’s offices.
Jardine, 40, from Mandeville, was driving a gray 2006 Chevrolet when he was ticketed southbound about 5 p.m. Sept. 26, four miles from the southbound exit ramp, according to reports.
“He identified himself by flashing his St. Tammany Parish Sheriff’s Office commission” and told officer Kirby Robert he was a reserve deputy in District 3, according to the report.
While providing his driver’s license, registration and proof of insurance, Jardine approached Kirby’s unit and asked, “’Do you really want to do this?’ in an aggressive tone,” according to the report.
Meanwhile, Jardine picked up his cell phone and stated Kirby’s unit number to an unknown person. Then he told the person, “I’m getting a citation” and signed the ticket paperwork.
Kirby handed Jardine his copy, and the reserve deputy “grabbed the citation and his paperwork and threw it on the passenger seat,” the report revealed. Then “Jardine rolled up his windows and pulled away, still on the phone,” according to the report.
On Oct. 12, Zanotelli, a 42-year-old Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office deputy, also from Mandeville, found the same fate.
Clocked driving a 2005 blue Ford Crown Victoria 87 mph in the 65 mph zone, Zanotelli was reported tailgating and weaving in and out of traffic by at least three commuters, including an off duty Bogalusa police officer.
At about mile marker 15 headed southbound, officer Brandon Menesses turned around in a crossover to stop Zanotelli but could not catch up with the deputy. Menesses radioed ahead, but again officers could not reach Zanotelli because of heavy traffic.
About 10 miles later, Menesses caught up with Zanotelli and turned on his lights.
Zanotelli “signaled that he would not stop,” Menesses wrote in the report. “I again told the driver to pull into the crossover,” but he passed the crossover and continued to the southbound plaza, according to the report.
Zanotelli was finally stopped exiting the Causeway.
When asked for his insurance, Zanotelli handed Menesses a green form labeled “Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office Insurance.”
Zanotelli said he was “not identifying himself as a police officer,” according to the report.
Twice Zanotelli was told to have a seat in his vehicle and refused, according to the report. When a second officer arrived on the scene, Zanotelli was told to stand behind his Crown Victoria. Again he refused, according to the report.
A fourth time when he was told to step to the rear of his vehicle, Zanotelli complied, according to the report.
Zanotelli then “advised that Causeway officers speed through Jefferson Parish and Jefferson Parish deputies do not cite them,” the report revealed.
“It almost appeared we were choosing them to make examples, but that’s not the case,” Congemi said. “The bottom line is, and we all know, speeding kills people. It has to stop.”
“You can imagine that these deputies are thinking, ‘If they’re going to give me a ticket, then I’m going to give a Causeway officer a ticket,’” Congemi said. “Well, that’s what we want.”
The tickets come in the midst of an enforcement crackdown spearheaded by Congemi, who was hired two months ago to restore law and order to a scandal plagued Causeway department.
The public’s confidence in bridge patrollers was rocked April 22 when Mandeville Mayor Eddie Price busted down a tollbooth and continued to drive more than three miles south without his headlights on.
When stopped he admitted to “drinking a few beers” but was not issued a field sobriety test.
At least three officers, including then Police Chief Felix Loicano, resigned in the fallout.

View Jobs
View Homes
View Autos
Comments
Andre wrote on Nov 3, 2008 11:31 AM:
For the Causeway Officers, Im sorry you no longer have officer discretion and HAVE to write tickets.
Im glad other agencies maintain and back their Officers integrity, and discretion. "
Give me a break! Integrity is earned, not given. Everyone should be held accountable for breaking the laws, no matter what. "
Ben wrote on Nov 1, 2008 5:48 PM:
COPWAR wrote on Oct 27, 2008 5:04 PM:
LeftLaneUser wrote on Oct 27, 2008 1:36 PM:
The bridge authority should be eliminated and the policing of the bridge divided between Jefferson and St. Tammany Sheriffs. Give each parish 1/2 the money and let them absorb it. It's not rocket science and doesn't require a seperate entity. "
SafeDriver wrote on Oct 27, 2008 11:42 AM:
I think the causeway police should be disbanded and the responsibilities for traffic and safety on the bride should be shifted to the St. Tammany Sheriff's department. Sheriff Strain has made St. Tammany a very safe place to live and would do a super job with the bridge while saving the taxpayers money. The bridge is just a bridge, there is no need for a special police department to oversee it. "
TMO wrote on Oct 27, 2008 9:28 AM:
Driving at 112 mph he should have gone to jail b/c if it was one of us non cops they would not have waste the time to put the cuffs on us. "
Lewis wrote on Oct 26, 2008 8:58 PM:
just a local officer wrote on Oct 25, 2008 9:31 PM:
Walk a mile in our shoes... wrote on Oct 25, 2008 1:07 PM:
Matt Monus wrote on Oct 25, 2008 4:10 AM:
I remember not only having a flat and engine overheating a Causeway Policeman escorted me with lights on to a crossover and not only helped me change the tire but refilled my Radiator as well. That officer was Russell Simmons and he is truly a man that is there "To protect and serve!"
Matt "
PR Davis wrote on Oct 24, 2008 11:09 PM:
Jack wrote on Oct 24, 2008 9:40 PM:
Chill a bit folks! "
AgencyWars wrote on Oct 24, 2008 2:29 PM:
I guess its the economy....can't blame it on the soaring gas prices! "
Wow wrote on Oct 24, 2008 1:25 PM:
For the Causeway Officers, Im sorry you no longer have officer discretion and HAVE to write tickets.
Im glad other agencies maintain and back their Officers integrity, and discretion. "