DEFENDTHISHOUSE
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Sep 3, 2006
- Messages
- 29,187
- Likes
- 32,994
Damned if you don't, danned if you do...He probably shouldn't have agreed to the search.
I have nothing in my car and still wouldn't allow a search... Advice from my sergeant buddy.Damned if you don't, danned if you do...
I guess most people assume that if you cooperate with LEOs that the repercussions would be less. If something like this occurs, however, what incentive would civilians have to cooperate with cops in the future?
Or you could take the drugs from him, dump them down a storm drain and let him go about his business. The taxpayers would thank you because that's one less jail cell that is occupied... plus you did your duty and got some drugs off the streets.That is an arrestable offense. I wasn’t commenting on the seriousness of the crime
You can’t dump narcotics down a storm drain. It could affect the city’s water supply. Taxpayers don’t want drug dealers out on the streets. Hate to tell youOr you could take the drugs from him, dump them down a storm drain and let him go about his business. The taxpayers would thank you because that's one less jail cell that is occupied... plus you did your duty and got some drugs off the streets.
Ps i don't break the law either... That always helps.
Or you know. Don’t commit crimes
If you reside in America and it is dinnertime, you have almost certainly broken the law. In his book Three Felonies a Day, civil-liberties lawyer Harvey Silverglate estimates that the average person unknowingly breaks at least three federal criminal laws every day. This toll does not count an avalanche of other laws — for example misdemeanors or civil violations such as disobeying a civil contempt order — all of which confront average people at every turn.
