Not at all. I already said the way it went down was not the way it should have gone down. You asked why they didn't ask for the white woman's name. I gave you a reason why they might not have. So stop thinking I'm justifying anything. You don't want an opinion from the other side of things? Don't ask questions or make ignorant remarks like Ras.
Now if you want to have a rational conversation unlike most of the others in this thread, I'll be glad to. But don't accuse me of defending anyone like I already stated before. Or if your reading comprehension is off, go back a few posts and see where I said what went down shouldn't have gone down.
I obviously have to look it up since nobody else was going to since it might blow a hole in the argument...
California law is vague on the subject as you have two court cases that conflict with each other. One that says a person is under no obligation to identify themselves to police (
Kolender v. Lawson) and yet another that says police have the right to identify if suspected of a crime (
People v. Long).
Two conflicting cases with two different approaches. And it could be argued that there was a suspicion of a crime vis a vis the erratic driving and threats in the parking lot.
Now the question I have for you is why are you trying so hard to justify her actions after the police asked for her name?
I see someone looked up Terry Stop. Now, it could be argued that the patrolmen in the video did suspect something had gone on and the stop went beyond the consensual level to possible detainment where identification would be considered "minimal intrusion" as People v. Long stated. And it might very well have turned out that the white woman in the video could have been completely in the wrong had both sides of the story come out in a rational fashion.