Dad almost strangled a young deputy who left a gate open and let some heifers out. He thought it a good idea to come up into the field thinking he was going to catch us spotlighting, we were delivering a calf. Another one stopped me while spreading manure because of the smell, I accidentally kicked the PTO in and covered his car.
Granddad almost shot an ABC officer poking around his shed. That was a mess.
Game Warden, brand new to the area tried to ticket me and take my rifle for hunting without a license. He refused to believe it was our land. He was wrong.
In the end they all worked out once cooler heads with some sense got involved.
I have no issues with that. First thing I do is introduce myself; tell you why I am there; and ask you for your cooperation. I didn't come there for a fight, and I'd prefer to not have one, or inadvertently start one.
When I run into the "you ain't got no right to be in my yard" greeting, which is rare but does happen, I try to explain why I am there, including my legal standing to be there. If they don't want to hear it, I retreat. Like I said, I didn't come there to fight.
If it is, or turns into, the kind of stuff that makes the 11 o'clock news, I let the green jumpsuits handle it. I'm too old for that nonsense now.
Interesting story right here...Your assertion is incorrect, however...it IS your right to be wrong.
I hope no one ever gets hurt, including you, because of your flawed assumptions. All I ask is that, if you really believe that, please do not get confrontational with anyone who in fact does have legal standing to be on your property, whether you understand it or not.
My home is my castle, and I live in a "Castle Doctrine" state. But there are limits, and restrictions, on what I can and cannot do if someone enters on to my property with legal standing. If you think this is all about "cops", it's not. It extends to utility workers as well, for example.
I agree with your premise, but as is the case with all things, it pays to read the fine print.
:hi: