That's right. But you did not read what I wrote. I said that the cop has the discretion to either give you a ticket or a warning. Most of us would hope he gives us the warning, even though he is within his rights to give us the ticket. I was speaking to those who think that rules are ALWAYS to be followed- except when they don't want them to be. Because, you know, this time it involves them.
Tthis thing could have been avoided long before she had a problem with the rules. As I said in my original post, no one in this situation handled it well- not the offical, not the runner or her family, not the coach. Where the offical went wrong was not realizing that because this involved religion, it would blow up in his face and get bigger than it needed to be. Where the kid and parents went wrong is because they expected special treatment when none was required. Where the coach went wrong was in not following the rules and in letting his anger get out of hand. No one wins here. And all becauese her uniform was two colors rather than one- just stupid, when you think about it. Yes, you can speed and not get caught 14 straight times, but when you do, hey, you get a ticket. But here, she wore that outfit for some time, and was never called on it. I still think a warning would have been appropriate rather than a DQ, because the DQ is punitive, when it need not be. It's just a running event, not anything life threatening, so the issue could have been raised and addressed and handled, and really, it was not. What is surprising is how angry people get about it, which probably comes back, in part, to the fact she is a Muslim.