Matt2496
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Dec 2, 2016
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I missed that originally, but you are right. As soon as they arrived, they were looking to pry themselves in.I love the part where he lied about how they have been knocking on the door for awhile. So can the police just get a call and not identify themselves and just start picking a lock to gain entry?
Might as well call it what it is. If white folks were getting murdered by the police the same rate minorities are, things would change quickly. Same with incarceration. Same with parole and probation.You can thank your fellow citizens for that. Most people have no bad experience with the cops we have today.
Soon...Might as well call it what it is. If white folks were getting murdered by the police the same rate minorities are, things would change quickly. Same with incarceration. Same with parole and probation.
Maybe it was truly an accident, but I’m having a hard time wrapping my head around it. I suppose she could have been mentally wiped out from a long day of being a cop.I could see how someone could go up the wrong stairwell if they're on their phone,
Just open the door instead of trying the key because you have a roommate who you expect to be home,
And then seeing the guy in the entryway and reacting quick as hell, popping off a shot.
But if any of those details is off, how do you explain that?
I had a dude walk into my apartment at 330 in the morning looking for some girl. I was playing drunk Battlefield on the couch after going out and didn’t lock the door behind me. He said where was so and so, I said you’re in the wrong place and he said I don’t think so. I had a .45 in the drawer of the coffee table so I wasn’t too concerned. I placed said .45 on the coffee table and he apologized and left. Could have been a different story if I’d been asleep and caught him wandering around our bedrooms or something.How do you not know that you’re in the wrong apartment? Wouldn’t the different furnishings be a clue?
