An example of a mistake of the hormones happened one day in my division. I saw a day-watch patrol cop wander in, pale and shaken, looking for his sergeant or lieutenant, and not finding them. I called him into my office and saw the kid was white-knuckled and flushed. I sat him down, and as soon as he breathed, "Boss, I screwed up big-time," I snapped the blinds shut and leaned in for the story.
All I really knew about the kid was that he was very well regarded, very positive, not a disciplinary problem at all, and had just returned from taking emergency leave following his mother's death from cancer. I also knew he had been carefully dealing with a problem with a local doctor, one that had already resulted in two unfounded, malicious complaints, and the kid keeping a "CYA file" on the matter.
This cop worked an ambulance unit and made frequent runs to the hospital where the doctor was on staff. One day he stopped a Porsche for speeding and failure-to-yield nearly resulting in an accident. The driver turned out to be the doc, who first tried the old "emergency" gambit. But when the young cop offered to escort him-and confirm the emergency-things got nasty. The kid had the exchange on tape, which the doc didn't know, and which made it a real pleasure to kill the complaints the doctor made afterwards.
Thwarted, the doctor began a campaign of verbal insult and harassment every time he saw that officer. It came to a head that day, the day after the cop returned from emergency leave.
"I slapped him," the kid said. "I mean, I think I did, but I'm sure I did, you know?" He stared at his own hand in disbelief. "And I don't even know what happened. I just don't know. Geez, I'm all messed up. He was just mouthing off, like usual, and...this is gonna be my badge, right? Maybe jail?" He was trembling visibly.