A new officer talks about his personal experiences as a police officer in small-town, rural Texas. The stories are a compilation of fun events, unique experiences, and tragic circumstances as experienced by the author in his first five years of law enforcement. They are written in a non-technical, casual format that can be enjoyed by readers with or without law enforcement knowledge. The stories are told as if you were sitting around the fireplace drinking coffee with an old friend. If you think you know what it is like to be a small town cop, you may have a different outlook after reading Full Report.
Aaron is from my home town , I missed his book signing ,so I was excited to find this on Amazon, thanks. When you start reading you don't want to put it down,.Funny parts, sad parts but this book will help you understand what our peace officers deal with day in and day out. ,on duty and off.
I realize that I am in the minority of readers when rating this book. It got many good reviews, so just chalk it up to the main reason I didn't like it. The narrator judges the people arrested with such disrespect. Yes I understand that arrestees are not the cream of society, but why does he refer to them as: ox-strong redneck, chucklehead, cowboy, knucklehead, Chuckles the clown, greasy gump,ragin' reggie, droopy dog, mad dog, fucklehead jerky, motorcycle moron, pee pee herman and various other names. His favorite seems to be fucklehead. I got very tired of this. Also he must be a Republican because he uses every chance to downgrade Democrats - such as referring to one arrestee as "Lying Hillary", "Slick Willie". Just not my cup of tea. Read it and judge for yourself - you may really like it.
We forget that the cops are regular guys too. It is nice to get a better understanding for what their thoughts and concerns are during situations. Dash cam doesn't always tell the whole story.