Just wants to check him out. That right there is the issue, he has no right and by doing so the cop is actually breaking the law. What legal reason did he have to other than “ he wanted to” ?
San Bernardino Sheriff’s Department To Cough Up $500,000 For Wrongful Arrest
Discussion in 'Other News' started by mjd4277, Feb 9, 2023.
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TheLoadOut and mjd4277 Thank this.
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Your last thought, is what I was thinking about. Why do we as a society accept it?TheLoadOut Thanks this. -
The cop can ask for identification but unless the person is in a vehicle in public roads they have no obligation to give any identification. We don't live in Soviet Russia and "paper please!" isn't something that any lawful American should ever put up with.
It's so sad there are people out there that are such boot licking toadies that even when proven in a court of law the officers did wrong, they still get support. After all, it was proven it was the officer breaking the law, not the citizen that was just making a delivery and not bothering anyone.TheLoadOut, Swine hauler and drvrtech77 Thank this. -
You're walking out of a store with some muffins and a random cop rolls up and says, "what are you doing?"
What is an appropriate response?
"Taking muffins to your wife. In the meantime go .... yourself."ZVar, mjd4277 and TheLoadOut Thank this. -
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