Clearly the officer was in the fault here, he knew that and tried to explain and pay his way out. Given the way the review / discipline process works it will probably take 18 - 24 months for there to be any "resolution" on this.
I don't know what the regulations are for license plates, presumably they have to be mounted in a certain way and illuminated at night. If a rider has a flip plate or goes to the trouble to remove the OEM brackets and then mount a plate under the fender and make it less visible then it's easy to see why a cop would reasonably assume that there was a much higher probability of the rider running. Doesn't excuse his actions, but are there any videos out there of a cop throwing a rider off of a touring bike in a similar manner?
Aren't small and discrete video cameras great. These types of abuses have always happened and it is the cop's word against yours. Now there is hard evidence of what really happened.
I don't know what the regulations are for license plates, presumably they have to be mounted in a certain way and illuminated at night. If a rider has a flip plate or goes to the trouble to remove the OEM brackets and then mount a plate under the fender and make it less visible then it's easy to see why a cop would reasonably assume that there was a much higher probability of the rider running. Doesn't excuse his actions, but are there any videos out there of a cop throwing a rider off of a touring bike in a similar manner?
Aren't small and discrete video cameras great. These types of abuses have always happened and it is the cop's word against yours. Now there is hard evidence of what really happened.