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FeedRank: 4/10  4/10  Good  ---  www.wickedlocal.com
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Friday, July 11, 2008 --- 56 days ago
Early in his career, when Paul Hayes was a narcotics detective for the Hanover Police Department, an interesting scenario unfolded during an attempted drug bust. A local teenager had been selling marijuana by the pound to clients on the South Shore. Working together, the Hanover and Braintree Police Departments set up a “buy,” and arranged to have a female undercover officer meet the suspected seller in a Braintree parking lot. A group of officers waited nearby for the undercover officer to give them a signal the suspect had drugs in his possession — a quick tap on the brakes to illuminate the break lights. The suspect got in the car and quickly the vehicle’s brake lights shone. “We see the brakes being tapped,” Hayes recalled this week. “So we all move in.” But as he approached the car, Hayes said he looked at the undercover officer and saw she was shaking her head, signaling ‘no,’ and the arrest was to be off. Seeing her makeshift signal, Hayes began waving his hands at his fellow officers, who at this point were on the move with guns drawn. It was too late, though, because the officers were in plain sight and the suspect in the car could see them coming. With some quick thinking, the officers pretended they were looking for a man who’d just committed a robbery. They looked at the man in the car, said, ‘no, he doesn’t fit the description,’ and then moved on. After that, the undercover officer and the suspect drove back to the suspec ...




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