The Law Bug: Herbie Cracks The Whip in
Tennessee
Mar 25, 2008 11:00 AM Filed in:
Fun &
Interesting
Okay, this is pretty funny, and I
love the fact that the county jail inmates helped work on the
conversion. Priceless!

License
And Registration … Stop Laughing
'Bug-erceptor'
gets more attention than respect for deputy
By Robert Wilson
It's hard to say how much intercepting the Blount County Sheriff's
Office's 1973 Volkswagen Beetle cruiser is capable of doing, but
it's got the emblem, anyway. It says "Police Interceptor," but in
truth the intimidation quotient of veteran law enforcer Archie
Garner's cruiser isn't very high. It has all the right markings,
decals and required equipment, but it just doesn't look like the
rest of the Blount County Sheriff's Office fleet.
Assistant Chief Deputy Garner's car looks like a police car, only
smaller.
Garner has spent as much as $2,000 of his own money giving a 1973
Volkswagen Beetle, seized in a DUI case, a new life as a department
cruiser, if that term can be used loosely.
The 59-year-old Garner is a veteran of more than four decades of
law enforcement experience and has been with the Sheriff's Office
since 1991, he said. His responsibilities include overseeing the
corrections division, garage and the vehicle fleet. When the VW
"Bug" was seized it was red, Garner said, and originally was turned
over to a Blount County beautification organization to be reborn as
a "Lady Bug." But when the group changed its mind and handed it
back to the BCSO, Garner's idea was born: Turn the car into a
cruiser bug.

Blount
County motorists are generally amused at seeing the Blount County
Sheriff's Office's "new" 1973 Volkswagen Beetle
cruiser
Garner nowadays can be
seen tooling around the county in the "Bug-erceptor," which has
accurate markings and is outfitted with a siren, radio, barred rear
side windows, a side-mounted spotlight, a 1960s-vintage red
bubble-type light on top, a blue light on the dash and more. The
car's accessories are almost all surplus items removed from other
cruisers. Garner found the red bubble on the Internet.
It has all the required equipment of other cruisers, including a
fingerprint kit, a fire extinguisher, a blanket, a measuring device
and traffic cones, although these cones are only about four inches
tall. The Bug even has front and rear radar units, though those are
the only pieces of equipment on the vehicle that do not work.
It's probably just as well. It's hard to know how useful the Bug
would be as a pursuit vehicle, with its 1,600-cc, air-cooled
engine, four-speed transmission and top-end speed of about 70 mph.
Indeed, one person told Garner that "if you pulled me over I'd be
too embarrassed to stop."
But what it lacks in horsepower and wheelbase, the Bug makes up for
in personality and wow-factor. The car will be used mostly as a
public relations tool for the department, Garner said, making
appearances in parades and at school events. But he says he has
driven the car to three emergency locations since work on it was
completed earlier this year.
It's been fun, Garner says, to "see the expressions on people's
faces when they see it. Some grin, and others laugh out
loud."
The county still owns the Bug, and Garner says that the total
expenditure on it by the county is about $400. The front license
bears Garner's badge number, 302, and the vehicle fleet number is
53, the same as Herbie, the Volkswagen in the movie "The Love
Bug."
The decals were made by Adverco Inc., an Alcoa company that makes
the markings for all the BCSO vehicles. Garner said he contacted
the company about making some for the Bug, so Adverco scaled down
all the authentic decals to be proportional for the Bug.
Inmates who work in the county garage helped with the Bug's
conversion, he said.
The Bug-erceptor was created with the knowledge and approval of
Chief Deputy Ron Dunn but without the knowledge of Sheriff Jim
Berrong. Berrong only found out about it when he was "pulled over"
by Garner as a surprise.
"He was impressed," Garner said.