Two US police administrators were expelled after they went Pokémon hunting instead of responding to a robbery call. Louis Lozano and Eric Mitchell voyaged the streets looking for fantastic creatures in the augmented reality smartphone game Pokemon Go. According to the documents, capturing a relatively rare Snorlax as well as a difficult-to-trap Togetic – but no criminals.
An in-car recording of their discussion demonstrated that they heard the call for help at the Los Angeles department store but chose to drive away. The Los Angeles police officers seized the Snorlax before moving on to a Togetic which proved difficult to subdue. “Officer Mitchell alerted Lozano that Snorlax ‘just popped up,” legal documents relating to their dismissal show. The (recording) captured (the two officers) discussing Pokemon as they drove to different locations where the virtual creatures appeared on their mobile phones for about 20 minutes.”
Both men were guilty of numerous counts of misconduct. After confessing to failing to answer back to the theft call during the April 2017 incident. But they refused to accept playing Pokemon Go. In disciplinary hearings, the duo asserted that they had only been communicating the game. And they challenged the city of Los Angeles’ dismissal. However, the California Court of Appeal rejected their explanations and upheld their dismissals.
The officers eventually acknowledged leaving their patrol area to hunt the Snorlax
Pokémon Go went viral in the mid-2010s. With millions of people around the globe stuck to their smartphones in the exploration of imaginary creatures. It is one of the introductory mainstream applications of augmented reality. Players would scan for round-eyed “pocket monsters” that emerged in the real world when glimpsed on a smartphone screen. Participants would capture the creatures which were stimulated by everything from mice to dragons with Pokéballs. And then educate them in Pokegyms to combat in fights.
The court documents notified, the officers eventually acknowledged leaving their patrol area to hunt the Snorlax. Claiming they did so to procure “extra patrol” as well as to “chase this mythical creature.”