508mikey
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Man arrested for kidnapping, assaulting 9-year-old may be connected to Delphi murders: sheriff | CIProud.com sick scum will love his new friends in the yard
Here is a timeline of the girls disappearance.Man arrested for kidnapping, assaulting 9-year-old may be connected to Delphi murders: sheriff | CIProud.com sick scum will love his new friends in the yard
Yeah looks like that lowlife in the photoHere is a timeline of the girls disappearance.
TIMELINE | Disappearance and deaths of Liberty German and Abigail Williams in Delphi | Fox 59
“If an individual who said they had nothing illegal in the vehicle says, ‘No, I don’t want you to search my car,’ it could be an additional indicator [of illegal activity],” the officer, who was not identified, said in the video.
“Are the roads safer because you stopped someone because of an expired tag or an air freshener?” asked David Harris, a law professor at University of Pittsburgh who specializes in police training. “Traffic stops are the most common interaction police have with Americans and also they can be dangerous.”
Troopers have also been trained in recent years to look for more than 50 “criminal indicators,” including high car mileage, if the car is a rental, any amounts of money in the car, audible sighs, or if the driver is being overtly cooperative, according to an unofficial form obtained by Spotlight PA.
High car mileage and cash are criminal indicators? High mileage cars and cash are staples of the poor. Most poor people don’t use a bank or can afford a newer car. This sounds like more of an attack on lower income citizens who cannot hire an attorney to fight frivolous and trivial laws. By these standards I’m a criminal because my daily driver has 150k miles on it.
Tax collection at its finest.
Bingo.High car mileage and cash are criminal indicators? High mileage cars and cash are staples of the poor. Most poor people don’t use a bank or can afford a newer car. This sounds like more of an attack on lower income citizens who cannot hire an attorney to fight frivolous and trivial laws. By these standards I’m a criminal because my daily driver has 150k miles on it.
Tax collection at its finest.
Maybe they should start.
most people who speak on this topic are rather uneducated in the actual definitions, court cases, procedures and laws of WHY and HOW things are, they would rather focus on their feelz and that one bad cop that smarted off to them onceWhen a cop has two seconds or less to make a decision on whether to use deadly force they are not thinking about the parameters of a lawsuit three years later.
What people do not get about qualified immunity is a) it is qualified, meaning it is not automatic; and b) it does not foreclose other kinds of lawsuits or actions. On the latter, even if a cop gets QI on a federal civil rights claim he and his city or agency can still be sued for all sorts of state law torts, negligence, battery, etc.
Folks that do not understand this (and that's most of them) incorrectly say it allows the officers to act with impunity, with no liability, with no repercussions. And that is flat out wrong.
most people who speak on this topic are rather uneducated in the actual definitions, court cases, procedures and laws of WHY and HOW things are, they would rather focus on their feelz and that one bad cop that smarted off to them once
Granted, the cop in Ohio that shot the girl that had a knife had a no time to react. Chauvin had 8.5 minutes. The guy that shot Daniel Shaver had about as much time as Chauvin. The majority of these situations are instances where these cops run on the scene and they just react without looking over the scene and evaluating ETF is going on.When a cop has two seconds or less
Granted, the cop in Ohio that shot the girl that had a knife had a no time to react. Chauvin had 8.5 minutes. The guy that shot Daniel Shaver had about as much time as Chauvin. The majority of these situations are instances where these cops run on the scene and they just react without looking over the scene and evaluating ETF is going on.
I think you are missing the point. I'm not speaking necessarily about specific cases, only using them as examples of a general trend. The general trend is that most of these cops are not making split second decisions. I guess we can go back and forth over particular anomies or anecdotal situations, but most of the cases post in this thread are situations where cops had plenty of time to use a little bit of logic and figure out a reasonable outcome. That's all we're saying.And guess what?
Had it not settled and suit actually filed, Chauvin would not have gotten qualified immunity. The officer in Ohio would.
No, if the people breaking in announce themselves as the police, you are supposed to comply.
most people who speak on this topic are rather uneducated in the actual definitions, court cases, procedures and laws of WHY and HOW things are, they would rather focus on their feelz and that one bad cop that smarted off to them once
That's not me saying to do that. Its the Blue Lives Matter crowd in here saying you should just comply if you hear the people announce themselves as police.I guess we have to take there word for it? If your door was kicked in at 3am and someone yelled "cops" and you threw your gun down - you'd feel pretty silly if'n it wasn't actually the cops but a home invasion wherein the bad guys saw your post about "supposed to comply" on VN PF.
ItZ dA RuL3z!
