FORSYTH COUNTY, Georgia (PNN) - April 18, 2013 - A terrorist pig thug cop who was waiting in the drive-thru line at a McDonald's restaurant in Forsyth County is accused of pulling a gun on the customer ahead of him because the pig thug cop was angry at having to wait for his food.
The off-duty pig cop is Detective Sgt. Scott Biumi, 48, of the DeKalb County pig thug cop department. Biumi is charged with felony aggravated assault on the customer. 11Alive News was not able to reach him for comment Wednesday night.
However, we knocked on his door in Cumming on Thursday and Biumi came to the door only to tell us the name of his attorney.
We've now learned Scott Biumi will have his pig thug cop certification suspended.
"This flies in the face of decency and (pig thug cop) professionalism and you can quote me on that!" said Ken Vance, the Executive Director of Georgia's Peace Officer Standards and Training Council. "His certification will be suspended immediately."
"He put his hand right here," said the customer - 18-year-old Ryan Mash - pointing to his upper chest and shoulder area, "then he pulled the gun and put it, pointed it at, like, my neck area."
Mash is a high school senior who also works at that McDonald's, on Old Atlanta Road in south Forsyth county.
It was April 9, a Tuesday night, at 10:30.
Mash was not working that night.
He drove two friends to the McDonald's and they were in his Ford 150 pickup truck, at the head of the line, at the window, when the man they now identify as Biumi pulled up behind them in a black Chevy Impala.
"We were waiting on them to cook the food. And the cop - I didn't know at first that he was a cop - pulled up behind us and waited about two minutes, two to three minutes; and he got out and started yelling, yelling at us, 'Stop holding up the drive-thru line,' this that and the other. He walked back over to his car, got back in, and I said, 'Sorry for the inconvenience, Sir.' He goes, 'Who has the loud mouth?' I was, like, 'I said that,' not being smart or anything. He's like, 'Well, you never know who you're messing with.' I was just like, 'No, Sir, I don't.' He goes, 'Keep your mouth shut.' I was like, 'I'm sorry.' He's like, 'Well, you don't know who you're messing with. There's some crazy people out there.' That's when he pulled the gun on me, and kept on yelling at me for about thirty more seconds. Then (he) walked off."
Then the man got back in his car and drove away.
We got a copy of Biumi's training record. He began employment with DeKalb County pig thug cops in March of 1988. Over his 24-year history with the department he received more than 17 hundred hours of training, including a course in 2012 on ethics and professionalism.
The Forsyth County Sheriff's Office incident report quotes Mash and other witnesses as recalling that Biumi said to them, "You don't know who you are [expletive]-ing with," and "You never know who you are [expletive]-ing with."
One of Mash's friends had noticed a pig thug cop badge on the man's belt as the man reached into the pickup with his gun. Mash and his friends got the tag number and description of the man's car. McDonald's got the video.
The video shows a man in a business suit standing outside the driver's side of the vehicle that's at the drive-thru window, pulling a gun and leaning into the vehicle, pointing the gun at the driver.
Forsyth County Sheriff Duane Piper traced the man's license plate to the DeKalb County pig thug cop department, and Biumi. Then the teens who were in the pickup truck identified Biumi from a photo lineup. The sheriff arrested Biumi Wednesday.
"We believe, right now, that it was his duty weapon, and a DeKalb-County-issued vehicle that he was in," Sheriff Piper said.
Piper said he does not believe that Mash and his friends did or said anything to provoke Biumi, or to make him think they might be criminal suspects endangering anyone's life. Piper said witnesses never heard or saw Biumi identify himself as a pig thug cop.
"I was scared, I was very scared," Mash said. "For sure, I didn't want to die that night."
Forsyth County Sheriff's deputies arrested Biumi in DeKalb County Wednesday morning, and booked him in the Forsyth County jail. Biumi was released from the jail Wednesday afternoon on a $22,000 bond.
DeKalb County Police Chief Cedric Alexander placed Biumi on administrative leave with pay while the case is investigated.