This guy takes the prize..
http://www.wesh.com/news/23105237/detail.htmlBondsmen Face Charges Of Impersonating Cops
Women Claim Bondsmen Terrorized Them
POSTED: 4:08 pm EDT April 9, 2010
UPDATED: 4:57 pm EDT April 9, 2010
Two women said they were terrorized and thought a couple of men coming after them were police officers.
One man was arrested, and authorities said they're looking for another man.
Detectives said a couple of bail bondsmen, who are supposed to bring people in if they skip their court dates, went over the top when they went looking for clients who broke the rules.
Police said the bondsmen led people to believe they had more power than the law allows.
A 22-year-old woman was so scared that she asked not to have her identity revealed.
"I was more frightened than upset," the woman said.
Major Lanier is accused of grabbing the woman from her job and forcing her into a car for hours. She had signed for a bail bond for a friend, and when the bondsman went looking for him, police said they illegally used her to try to locate her friend.
"They produced handcuffs and told her to put her hands behind her back, at which time she felt that she was under arrest and had to go in their car with them," Lake Mary Police Department Detective Matt Schaefer said.
The law doesn't allow them to do that, and they can't let people think they are police officers when they are not.
"They had tactical vests, they had badges around their neck, and were wearing guns, and she had every reason to believe they were law enforcement," Schaefer said.
"I feel like this is a Sanford situation. It normally is," Lanier said.
Lanier said the accusations are trumped up. His attorney said the case will fall apart.
"They have every right in the world to go and apprehend people -- to use force to apprehend people. The allegation that they forced someone else into a custodial situation is garbage," Attorney Hal Uhrig said.
Bail bondsmen can legally get physical when going after people who skip out on bonds. But they cannot, police said, use the same tactics with people who have only pledged the cash to back it up.
"No bondsman has the right to kick doors down," Sanford Police Department Detective Rich Ayala said.
The women said three men played a role in the false imprisonment case. Police are still searching for one of those men.
The women said the sport utility vehicle had tinted windows, a laptop mounted in the front, and they thought they faced arrest.
Lanier is being held without bond. Copyright 2010 by WESH.COM. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast,