
What the hell is up with midwestern cops this week? First they steal your pot (and don't even know what to do with themselves once they have it), and then they steal your play ideas and book it to L.A. for theatre amateur-hour. Is there something in the water up there, or what?
An Ohio police officer who dabbles in amateur theatre has been suspended from work for plagiarizing a Canadian play and staging it as his own.
Det. Jack Herman of Kent, Ohio, has admitted to plagiarizing one of Belke's plays and agreed to pay an out-of-court settlement of $2,500, according to reports from the Edmonton Journal.
Detective Herman was busted, in particular, for his "interpretation" of Edmonton playwright David Belke's The Reluctant Resurrection of Sherlock Holmes, written in 1992 but produced in his hometown as recently as last year. I'm trying to imagine what it must feel like, discovering someone else claiming your work as their own like that, but it's just too horrible. The poor guy.
And it would have been enough to have stopped with just the one play. I mean, he might have been able to explain it away just a little bit better, I'd think. Everyone has overlapping ideas sometimes, right? But it seems that the siren song of Canadian playwrights was just too overwhelming, because he's now suspected of pinching from two other Canadian writers as well. I guess Detective Herman got a little confused and thought that "what happens across the border, stays across the border" was a real law and not just an unwritten code of conduct.
Herman may also have plagiarized scripts written by at least two other high-profile Canadian playwrights, Peter Colley's I'll Be Back Before Midnight and Kim Selody's Suddenly Shakespeare, according to the Edmonton Journal.
In 1999, Herman produced a play called The Unexpected Return of Sherlock Holmes, which was character for character, word for word the same as Belke's. It played twice in Ohio with his Tree City Players, an amateur troupe in Kent, a university town near Cleveland.
Whoops. Maybe that "word for word" thing was a bad idea. The funny thing is that he probably would have gotten away with it, if not for his meddling friend. See, it's entirely possible that what happens in Ohio stays in Ohio, but only the biggest fool imaginable would think that anything happening in Los Angeles might stay.
Herman's friend, Bill Wolski, asked for the rights to produce the play for a Los Angeles theatre company.
Wolski didn't pay Herman for use of the play, but said Herman was reluctant to include biographical information on the program.
Wow, why so reluctant, Herman? What a genius.
One would think that he might be a little more secretive about his plagiarism -- seeing as he's a detective and all, I'd have pegged him to be a little more paranoid about getting found out. But I guess that's more Officer Pothead's jurisdiction. Now Detective Herman's got all the real life drama he can hold on a plate. He says he stole the play to keep his amateur theater troupe alive, but one can only speculate on its fate now. Hope it was worth it.
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10000Pillars
Montreal, QC
February 2007
MAY 18, 2007 10:07 PM
seraphicchaos
Lewistown, PA
January 2007
MAY 18, 2007 10:31 PM
ink_slinger
Edmonton, AB
October 2005
MAY 18, 2007 11:22 PM
Admiral_Pants
Austin, TX
May 2004
MAY 18, 2007 11:30 PM
lock
United Kingdom
December 2003
MAY 19, 2007 02:24 AM
ASSH0LE
Las Vegas, NV
June 2003
MAY 19, 2007 09:16 AM
Johnny_Flapjacks
Williamsport, PA
September 2006
MAY 20, 2007 04:25 AM
Lemonkid
Canada
May 2003
MAY 20, 2007 12:50 PM
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NEWSWIRE
San Diego, CA
MAY 20, 2007 01:01 PM