Can you do this while talking on the cell phone and eating a Whataburger?KD5NRH wrote:Also, I'd bet the requests for that information are logged, so he'd be setting himself up for a hard time if he got it then *anything* happened to you.srothstein wrote:911 data is a public record. If someone wants your name or phone number, all they need to do is request the records for the calls that day. But, they have to know you called, want to do something about it, and know that they can get the records.
As far as doing anything differently, digital cameras with audio/video recording are cheap and easy to operate. WalMart even carries the little flexible tripods that can be wrapped around the passenger seat headrest or the rearview mirror post for handsfree recording, and a 2GB SD card holds about 30 minutes of video at 640x480 30fps, though 15fps is plenty for documenting bad driving and will give you an hour of recording in case you just want to drive around with it on all the time. Turn on the time/date stamp, and make sure you speak the plate number and anything else you've noticed clearly once you start the recording. Even low-quality video can provide plenty of evidence for a stop if the guy's driving problem miraculously clears up at the sight of a cop.
Anygun