Monday, June 15, 2015

Painful Story about Judging People

Once upon a time I lived in Brooklyn Heights – for seven years.  It was a good neighborhood and one subway stop away from lower Manhattan where I worked.  The car I purchased while living there was a Subaru wagon.  According to Consumer Reports, it was the least targeted car by thieves.
In Brooklyn Heights if you parked on the street, like I did, you had to race home by 6 PM two days a week and move your car for “Alternate Side of the Street Parking.”  I hated it and did it religiously.
One day I received in the mail about eight traffic tickets of all flavors.  Each ticket called out my license plate number and a loose description of my car.  I went and looked at my car and as it turned out, someone had stolen one of my license plates, and proceeded to try to set the Guinness world record for traffic violations.
So I trudge to city hall in Brooklyn with my police reports in hand and plead my case to the judge.  After a commensurate amount of whining, the judge dismisses all the tickets.  I then walk over to the court clerk with my pile of official documents in hand and ask that my record be cleared.  After a couple of dirty looks, my request is accepted and I head home.
Fast-forward about three weeks.  I race home at night to move my car back across the street for alternate side of the street parking.  My car is not where I left it.  I scratched my head a few times and question my sanity.  I decided to call the local police station and ask for some help (Like do you know where my car is?)  They tell me, “We don’t have it, but you must be in a ton of trouble because the Sheriff has your car.”  The officer’s tone was something in the realm of:  You are so screwed. 
But first, really, a Sheriff in New York City in the early 1990s?  Why would we even need a Sheriff?  I doubt his six-shooter would be any match for the automatic weapons currently available on the streets.
So the next morning I’m back at the Kings County Court House in Brooklyn Heights with all my documents, re-pleading my case.  After significant pain and suffering on my part, they came to the conclusion that as much as I am a raving lunatic, I had been mistreated and things needed to be made right.  As it turns out, the original clerk decided not to do the data entry on my original acquittal, so the system still thought I was a dead-beat.  Turns out my problem brought to light a major gaff on their part and the “clerk people” were none to happy with me.  Senior clerk personnel were hovering about looking very disgruntled and put out.  I assured them that my dissatisfaction level was a couple orders of magnitude greater than their’s, and to please step on it, as I had a “Meet’in with the Sheriff”, pronto.   Actually I needed to be somewhat civil, as I needed a release document from the court so that I could deliver it to the Sheriff…who had offices in the middle of Staten Island.  For those of you unfamiliar with the geography in this area, there is no way to get from Brooklyn Heights to Staten Island…especially if you don’t have a car.
So now with new documents in hand, I take the subway from Brooklyn, back into lower Manhattan.  I walk to the Staten Island Ferry, which I’ve never been on, and cruise to…Staten Island.  I was told to take a non-descript bus to a place that seems like no man’s land.  The bus eventually stops and the driver looks at me and asks, “Didn’t you want to go to the Sheriff’s office?”  I reply in the affirmative.  I step off the bus into a fairly desolate area.  I look up and I’m facing a trailer, a long trailer.  With that the bus door closes and it takes off.  He’s too far away now and I can’t catch him.  (Think the movie, Trains, Planes, and Automobiles, where Steve Martin was dropped off at a remote rentacar location only to find there is no car in the slot he’s assigned…and subsequently goes berserk.)  I’m thinking this must be part of the court clerk’s plan for revenge.  It’s late afternoon now and with no where else to go, I walk up to the Sheriff’s…trailer.
It was an interesting set up.   Half of the trailer was a boiler room where people appeared to be dialing for dollars.  The other half was the Sheriff’s office – times must have been tough.  I show my paperwork to the Sheriff and he’s incredulous.  He made it seem like he’d never had a situation like this ever happen.   As special as that made me feel, I was toast at this point, so I say to the Sheriff, “Can you bring my car around?”  He replies, “Oh we don’t have your car here.  It’s at the Brooklyn Naval Yard docks off the East River.”  He goes on to warn me, “Now as much as I’m going to give you another release document, the guys at the docks are still going to want you to pay them $180 for towing.  You’re going to have to stick to your guns with these guys.”  What would cake be without some icing on top of it?   
Now the challenge is that I have to do a reverse commute back, starting with… finding the ghost bus to nowhere.  Once I get through Manhattan, I need to figure out where the Brooklyn Naval Yard is and how to get there.  Then I’ll need to wrestle someone for my car.  And it’s starting to get dark.
So there were two other gentlemen who completed their transaction with the Sheriff right before me.  The best way to describe them would be to say they could have easily been in Bob Marley’s band – very Rastafarian with massive dreadlocks to the point where they almost looked like they had the medusa sitting on their heads.  Not exactly the kind of dudes I’m used to hanging out with.  (For that matter, I don’t think I’ve ever known any dudes.)  They’re going to the Brooklyn naval yards too.  As we’re all walking outside, the guy who seems to be the leader asks me if I want a ride.  Their vehicle is an old Volkswagen bus, something you’d see in a Cheech & Chong movie.
I hesitate for a second (remembering my Mom warning me, never speak to strangers) and mull over the decision I have to make.  It’s like when you’re on a plane, taxing on the runway about to take off.  The pilot suddenly stops the plane and comes on the PA system and says, “Folks, we think one of the breaks might be leaking.  We have three other break systems, but we want to check it out just to be sure.  I know it’s insane, but I’m thinking to myself, “I can live with those odds.  Come on, let’s roll the dice and get this bucket of bolts off the ground.”  I tell my new friends, “Thanks, I’d appreciate the ride.”
Then the side door of the van slides open, I step in and the door close behind me.  In the van are the leader who is driving and his co-pilot who I’ve met.  The driver’s son, who looks to be 9 years old is sitting with them.  In the back with me are the rest of Bob Marley’s band mates.  I immediately get a major sinking feeling in my stomach – much worse than the one you get when you pass a State Trooper on the highway pointing the radar gun at you while cruising at 90 mph.  No, this is more like the feeling you have for Ethan Hawk in the movie, Training Day.  It’s towards the end of the movie and a corrupt Denzel Washington is setting up Ethan.  While playing cards with some very bad guys, he’s tricked into giving up his gun.  When he realizes what’s going to happen, and that he had no way to protect himself, the whole audience simultaneously has an anxiety attack.
My new travel companions did not seem thrilled to have me with them, but at the same time, they weren’t bothered either.  It was like after acknowledging that I was in the van, they acted as if I was invisible - which I was fine with.  We get to the Naval Yard just before closing.  The driver of the van aka Bob Marley, and I are transacting our business simultaneously.  And true to the sheriff’s word, the guys running the Naval Yard acted as if they’d never coughed up a car without getting paid.  Heels are dug in deep and I refused to blink.  They finally threw my car keys at me and gave me a vague idea of where my car was located among the sea of vehicles in the darkness of night.   Naturally they had disconnected the car battery which made extricating my car that much more fun.

But the lesson of the story is this: (other than, “Always spring for the parking garage.”)  Be sensitive to how you judge people who are different…than you.  When the driver and I were parting at the naval yard, I tried to give him money for helping me out.  He refused.  I finally gave him $20 and asked him to buy something for his son, which he reluctantly agreed to.   He was just one person looking to help another person.