marcusluvsvols
Blue collar skoller
- Joined
- Jan 7, 2012
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Rare is the politician who's motives are honest (e.g. - serving the public interest). Most of them know they can always kick the can down the road for the next generation to worry about. Some of them just want the power; some the fame; some the money; some all of it. Some of them are politicians because they would never make it in the free market. And almost all of them can be bought.
One need look no further than the Haslam family for a glowing example of all of the above except the "rare" part.
As much as Ras and I disagree on certain subjects, I am with him almost without reservation when it comes to government in general.
I'm curious when the riots will start in Baltimore over this
Suspects in killing of Baltimore County police officer arrested, eyed in burglaries in area | Fox News
I'm curious when the riots will start in Baltimore over this
Suspects in killing of Baltimore County police officer arrested, eyed in burglaries in area | Fox News
Because if you protest government corruption that goes unpunished, you should also protest individuals who are going to jail for their crimes?
If the roles we reversed, BLM and the left would be protesting rioting and crying non stop and you would have rushed to post about it. Black guy kills a cop and not a peep from you, the rest of the left or BLM.
That's bull! I don't care who you are or if you have a warrant or not, you break into a persons house you take your chances.
That's bull! I don't care who you are or if you have a warrant or not, you break into a persons house you take your chances.
I'm with you here, for the most part. At issue is the "no knock" provision in search warrants. It's a good idea gone bad. The intent is to allow LE to execute a warrant without announcing their office and allowing the occupants to open the door, in theory to prevent the destruction of evidence inside the structure, or to interrupt a determined, armed reaction.
The reality is that it has been, in some cases, abused, and it has also resulted in shootings that should never have occurred. You come through my door at 2 am, you are going to be met with gunfire. Auditory exclusion is real, and I likely won't hear "Police...Search Warrant" when you come through the door.
I served many a search / arrest warrant on high-risk locations and subjects back when I was on the SRT. Some of them were "no knock", but we had a very strict protocol for deciding if we would ask for the no-knock provision. I learned from a good unit commander, who laid it out for me like this: "If you are expecting to be met with gunfire, why are you going in? Smoke 'em out." Solid advice.
We arrested a murder suspect out of Jacksonville on a phone call once. JSO had advised us that the guy was a known gang member; carried guns; had shot at cops before; and "would not be taken alive." We had a no-knock warrant, and just knew this was going to end with a gunfight. We managed to set up a good, tight perimeter at about 4 am; did a comm check; and our team commander called the guy on his cell phone. Told him we were there; he was not going to get away; if he wanted a fight to come on out; but we would guarantee his safety if he walked out and followed our instructions. 15 minutes later, he's in cuffs, not a shot fired, and no one hurt. They don't all end that way, but that was a powerful lesson for me.
I've made more than my share of stupid mistakes, so I don't claim the high ground here, but yes...sometimes we are our own worst enemy.
I'm with you here, for the most part. At issue is the "no knock" provision in search warrants. It's a good idea gone bad. The intent is to allow LE to execute a warrant without announcing their office and allowing the occupants to open the door, in theory to prevent the destruction of evidence inside the structure, or to interrupt a determined, armed reaction.
The reality is that it has been, in some cases, abused, and it has also resulted in shootings that should never have occurred. You come through my door at 2 am, you are going to be met with gunfire. Auditory exclusion is real, and I likely won't hear "Police...Search Warrant" when you come through the door.
I served many a search / arrest warrant on high-risk locations and subjects back when I was on the SRT. Some of them were "no knock", but we had a very strict protocol for deciding if we would ask for the no-knock provision. I learned from a good unit commander, who laid it out for me like this: "If you are expecting to be met with gunfire, why are you going in? Smoke 'em out." Solid advice.
We arrested a murder suspect out of Jacksonville on a phone call once. JSO had advised us that the guy was a known gang member; carried guns; had shot at cops before; and "would not be taken alive." We had a no-knock warrant, and just knew this was going to end with a gunfight. We managed to set up a good, tight perimeter at about 4 am; did a comm check; and our team commander called the guy on his cell phone. Told him we were there; he was not going to get away; if he wanted a fight to come on out; but we would guarantee his safety if he walked out and followed our instructions. 15 minutes later, he's in cuffs, not a shot fired, and no one hurt. They don't all end that way, but that was a powerful lesson for me.
I've made more than my share of stupid mistakes, so I don't claim the high ground here, but yes...sometimes we are our own worst enemy.
TBI investigating raid on wrong house in Bradley County; DEA apologizes to family | WTVC
This guy is lucky hes not dead. DEA busted down the door and he grabbed his gun thinking it was a robbery. Also please note the guy they were looking for was black and this guy is white. I thought cops look at suspect photos before going on these raids?
