Mopar cop cars are cool, unless there’s one behind you with the lights flashing. Then I don’t like them because I have to worry about how fast I was going, how I’m going to pay for my ticket, and how to hide the things in my car that I don’t want the cops to find.
My first Mopar was a cop car. It was the bluesmobile. That’s right, a ’74 Dodge Monaco Indiana sheriff car with cop tires, cop transmission, and so on, just like the car in the movie. One cool thing about that car was that the back doors only opened from the outside so you could keep people trapped in there if you wanted, at least until they figured out how to climb over the seat to get out the front.
Some people get cop cars because they want to act like a cop. People who want to be cops probably shouldn’t become cops because they will usually abuse their authority in some way.
John Wayne Gacy drove a car that looked like a cop car, he used his car to dress like a clown and pick up young men so he could handcuff them, do illicit things with them, then kill them, and bury them in the basement of his mom’s house.
Sometimes cop cars aren’t cool.