other duties as assigned
The Fugitive Samantha Bowerman, CMP President, Strategic Meetings Group
sions. At one point, the guy who was our contact at the convention center came running over to me in a panic, saying, “Oh my God, we have a situation. The sheriff is here, and he wants to arrest your speaker.” My first question was, “Which one?” My next question was, “Where’s the
I
sheriff?” He was in an office right off the exhibition floor. The convention manager told me that the sheriff wasn’t looking to create a scene, but he did need to bring the speaker before a judge.
104 PCMA CONVENE JUNE 2012
was running a convention, a trade show that was mainly exhibits, but there were a few educational ses-
So I tracked down the president of the organization and explained what was going on. I suggested he might want to go along with the sheriff to make sure that there were no issues. As it turns out, the speaker was just finishing up his presentation — the organization’s president helped to cut the question-and-answer session off. Then he told the speaker, “There’s a police officer waiting outside, who apparently needs to take you to go see a judge.” The speaker went very willingly. The issue was something to do
with a business that the speaker had sold. He was in a legal battle and was
supposed to be before a judge, and didn’t show up for his court appoint- ment. They apparently Googled his name and saw that he was speaking, and that’s how they found him. I posted about it on Facebook,
and one of my friends who has a production company responded that something like that happened to him with one of his camera operators. The police waited until after that session was finished, too.
. —As told to Barbara Palmer
ILLUSTRATION BY GRAHAM ROUMIEU