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That’s the part that makes me laugh, ‘argue it in court’. Even if they’re wrong and you’re right. No biggie, right? Just take a day off and go to court while they get paid to go to court and make us explain to yet another person that they’re wrong.
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Well, this has certainly been an enlightening discussion. I was not aware that law enforcement had evolved beyond the previously held norms of civil discourse and respect toward our fellow man. Here I was, foolishly thinking there was still a form of mutual respect and common courtesy involved in encounters with law enforcement officers, but through this discussion I have come to understand that any form of interaction with a police officer is solely dictated by said officer, entirely at their discretion, and for their benefit only. Us mere mortals are not to speak out of turn or ask questions, and we are certainly not allowed to question an officer's absolutely perfect knowledge and understanding of the law. Instead, we lowly subjects are required to obey unquestioningly, lest we be arrested or beaten for our insolence. I apologize for ever daring to question the omnipotence and omniscience of a police officer, to ever question the truth or validity of their statements, or to dare think that I might be able to even talk or move, lest it be at their request. I certainly hope you can find it in your heart to forgive for daring to question the regal power and nobility that comes with the title of being a police officer. You have shown me that I am but dust beneath your jack-boots, not even worthy of speaking in your presence, lest you command it. Thank you for enlightening me, and showing me the error of my ways. Is it just me, or has anyone else noticed that Animal Farm has essentially become a self-fulfilling prophecy? View Quote |
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Late to the party on this one.
You could see after the first or second sentence that sounded like the SC bullshit, the cop took long pauses...I'm sure he was thinking, "I don't feel like dealing with this shit today." This idiot couldn't even soverign properly. He had to bring up the idiots guidebook and read it. Most of the others at least have the grand order of fundamentals memorized. |
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Yes, to spare us both the giant blocks of text. If I am arresting someone, I am not discussing it with them. I am not negotiating. They can run, I guess, but it's not up for discussion. If something that wouldn't rise to the level of arrest originally somehow led to an arrest due to noncompliance with a lawful order, it's still not up for discussion. Given that you're responding to comments regarding the guy wanting cops to be ICE agents... how exactly do you intend for a cop to bust illegals for being illegal? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted: Do you think that's too much to ask? If I am arresting someone, I am not discussing it with them. I am not negotiating. They can run, I guess, but it's not up for discussion. If something that wouldn't rise to the level of arrest originally somehow led to an arrest due to noncompliance with a lawful order, it's still not up for discussion. Quoted:
Like I said above there are plenty of guys breaking the law that are doing bad and need to be in jail but low hanging fruit is where its at. My seatbelt is between me and my insurance company and of no concern to the state. If it were they're concern they would out law motorcycles entirely. But the guy gave the cop no choice but to do it the hard way. cop is going to win every time. No use in fighting on the side of the road, pitch your bitch in the legal system But that is not the point. The point is that the massive law breaking and corruption at top leveled even the FBI and the Clintons along with holder and fast and furious along with the whole idea that 15-20 million illegal aliens can somehow not be found and returned yet you can be ticketed for not wearing a seatbelt in your car with your state mandated insurance is ludicrous. Edit I am not saying that Dumb ASS was in the right but the irony in the unequal enforcement of our laws is getting ridicules. |
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Cops will find a way to do whatever they want to do. That is a fact. But that is not the point. The point is that the massive law breaking and corruption at top leveled even the FBI and the Clintons along with holder and fast and furious along with the whole idea that 15-20 million illegal aliens can somehow not be found and returned yet you can be ticketed for not wearing a seatbelt in your car with your state mandated insurance is ludicrous. Edit I am not saying that Dumb ASS was in the right but the irony in the unequal enforcement of our laws is getting ridicules. View Quote |
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Quoted: They WILL write you a ticket in Mi. Hell, occasionally they stand on a street corner with a stop sign or light and radio ahead for a cruiser to stop you when they do a sting. Easy $$$$$$. Both the top cops and legasslatures swore it would never, EVER be a primary offense. That lasted until the second it was passed. View Quote |
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Quoted: I don't think you understand that cops don't enforce federal law. View Quote The point he is making is that your average, ordinary, law-abidingish American gets a bit jaded and pissed when they see serious crimes go ignored or willfully unenforced while John Q. Public gets the book thrown at him; especially for trivial bullshit such as driving without a seat belt. How on earth did you miss that? |
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The amount of fugitives with felony warrants and other criminals pulled over for traffic stops is staggering. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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Quoted: Yep. Anyone with a lick of police experience knows this. The man responsible for the Oklahoma City bombing was apprehended because of a false tag. View Quote I guarentee GD would be supportive of this stop if THEIR stolen gun was located in the car. |
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Quoted: Yep. People upset with this stop have no clue how many stolen guns, burglars, etc. have been found. Most stops result in warnings. I guarentee GD would be supportive of this stop if THEIR stolen gun was located in the car. View Quote I don't support seat belt violations or many of the voluminous laws that exist by which officers are justified in engaging in fishing expeditions (such as driving under the speed limit or driving while "looking concerned"). It doesn't matter one bit whether or not you could use those methods to find someone who theoretically wronged me. As to people having no clue how many stolen guns, burglars, etc..., have been found from such stops; neither do you because that data, as far as I know, doesn't exist. A basic understanding of math would tell me that if police stop/search/fish an incredibly large volume of people, they are most likely going to find/catch a large number of criminals and contraband. That isn't magic; it's basic common reasoning. |
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Quoted: Yep. People upset with this stop have no clue how many stolen guns, burglars, etc. have been found. Most stops result in warnings. I guarentee GD would be supportive of this stop if THEIR stolen gun was located in the car. View Quote All the eggs broken making the omelet were clearly worth it in the end. Ftr, the SC in the vid was an idiot, no argument there. I've never seen a roadside debate that was productive. |
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There's so many dimensions of retardation in this... it's a multi-spectral kaleidoscope of fucktardation.
Idiotic law? Check. Fucktard picking a stupid hill to die one? Check. Butthurt cop flexing his muscle over said idiotic law? Check. |
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Quoted: Yep. People upset with this stop have no clue how many stolen guns, burglars, etc. have been found. Most stops result in warnings. I guarentee GD would be supportive of this stop if THEIR stolen gun was located in the car. View Quote I'm glad to see people are finally recognizing that fact, lol. |
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I have always wondered...….if these Sovereign's really DO NOT believe or recognize the power of the police then...…...why do they even pull over?
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Of course he understands that state and local law enforcement can't enforce federal laws. That isn't the point he is making. The point he is making is that your average, ordinary, law-abidingish American gets a bit jaded and pissed when they see serious crimes go ignored or willfully unenforced while John Q. Public gets the book thrown at him; especially for trivial bullshit such as driving without a seat belt. How on earth did you miss that? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted: I don't think you understand that cops don't enforce federal law. The point he is making is that your average, ordinary, law-abidingish American gets a bit jaded and pissed when they see serious crimes go ignored or willfully unenforced while John Q. Public gets the book thrown at him; especially for trivial bullshit such as driving without a seat belt. How on earth did you miss that? This thread proves that. |
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Quoted: Average John A Public is ignorant of the laws and how they work. This thread proves that. View Quote There are more than a few situations where cops don't understand what the law says and just arrest the person only to let the courts sort it out. Oddly enough, or maybe not, that sentiment, or one close to it, has been expressed in this thread. Edit: More to his point which you missed, or just ignored, when someone actually takes the time to read the law, to study the law, understand the law, and abide by the letter of that law only to be subsequently arrested by an officer who hasn't read the law, doesn't know the law, and doesn't care to try, only to be released later once an officer with an IQ above room temperature gets his hands on it or once the courts have sorted it out, that leaves a bad taste in a person's mouth. You may not have experienced that however other people have. |
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As are many in law enforcement. That's the nature of the beast when your statutes are as massive and voluminous as ours are while being constantly updated and expanded. There are more than a few situations where cops don't understand what the law says and just arrest the person only to let the courts sort it out. Oddly enough, or maybe not, that sentiment, or one close to it, has been expressed in this thread. Edit: More to his point which you missed, or just ignored, when someone actually takes the time to read the law, to study the law, understand the law, and abide by the letter of that law only to be subsequently arrested by an officer who hasn't read the law, doesn't know the law, and doesn't care to try, only to be released later once an officer with an IQ above room temperature gets his hands on it or once the courts have sorted it out, that leaves a bad taste in a person's mouth. You may not have experienced that however other people have. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
As are many in law enforcement. That's the nature of the beast when your statutes are as massive and voluminous as ours are while being constantly updated and expanded. There are more than a few situations where cops don't understand what the law says and just arrest the person only to let the courts sort it out. Oddly enough, or maybe not, that sentiment, or one close to it, has been expressed in this thread. Edit: More to his point which you missed, or just ignored, when someone actually takes the time to read the law, to study the law, understand the law, and abide by the letter of that law only to be subsequently arrested by an officer who hasn't read the law, doesn't know the law, and doesn't care to try, only to be released later once an officer with an IQ above room temperature gets his hands on it or once the courts have sorted it out, that leaves a bad taste in a person's mouth. You may not have experienced that however other people have. Read this post again. Quoted: Average John A Public is ignorant of the laws and how they work. This thread proves that. |
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I have always wondered...….if these Sovereign's really DO NOT believe or recognize the power of the police then...…...why do they even pull over? View Quote |
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As are many in law enforcement. That's the nature of the beast when your statutes are as massive and voluminous as ours are while being constantly updated and expanded. There are more than a few situations where cops don't understand what the law says and just arrest the person only to let the courts sort it out. Oddly enough, or maybe not, that sentiment, or one close to it, has been expressed in this thread. Edit: More to his point which you missed, or just ignored, when someone actually takes the time to read the law, to study the law, understand the law, and abide by the letter of that law only to be subsequently arrested by an officer who hasn't read the law, doesn't know the law, and doesn't care to try, only to be released later once an officer with an IQ above room temperature gets his hands on it or once the courts have sorted it out, that leaves a bad taste in a person's mouth. You may not have experienced that however other people have. View Quote It's like the people in this thread throw anything they can, no matter how stupid, at any law enforcement. I don't even know how your posts have come around to this sort of tangent- the guy was pulled over for a seatbelt ticket and resisted multiple- as in DOZENS- of lawful commands. Boohoo mean patrol cop on a fishing expedition. The guy could have handed over his license (if he had one), told the cop he could not search his vehicle if he had asked, and been on his way in about 2 minutes. Much like the other guy in this thread who has somehow got an idea that a cop is going to have a debate on constitutional law before arresting him, it doesn't even make sense where you're coming from here, complaining about cops not knowing the law. This discussion has become so schizophrenic that everyone is talking at cross points, and my own posts to the subject have not helped that, either. If it was a thread about a cop "smelling pot" busting out his window, and not finding anything, I'd understand. But, generally speaking, the sort of law that involves traffic stops is not really that complicated in most places. Cops are going to fish on traffic stops. The laws of the road are generally extremely simple, and almost always easy to follow. The people talking about "may your chains rest lightly" when someone suggests they stay within 10 mph of the speed limit and wear a seatbelt just look like whackos. And when John Q Public with a clean record makes a slip up, the vast majority of the time, he's going to get a warning or a 5 over ticket. Because traffic enforcement is absolutely part of the job for patrol officers, and that is what they are going to do, but nobody really likes doing traffic stops for stupid bullshit and they just want to make it as simple and reasonable of an interaction as possible. Regarding your earlier quote towards my post regarding federal law enforcement by cops, it's a stupid sentiment that multiple posters in the thread have wanted cops to enforce immigration law, which they cannot. Is it frustrating to see corruption in high government? Absolutely, but that has about as much to do with how a beat cop operates as the administration of NASA does. |
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Wow, this thread is almost as interesting as the linked video.
Getting pulled over for a seatbelt infraction is something of a debate. I agree more questionable infractions go unchallenged many times. I can name numerous here in WA that just make me cringe. However, the Sovereign Citizen was simply inept and naive. It's my guess that if he simply showed his DL and insurance, he may have easily gotten off with a simple warning. Playing stupid games, as he did, really had no other outcome. Did he really think the officer would just say forget it and drive off? IMHO, simply be polite and provide DL and Insurance. Fight it out in court if you wish, but you will never win in a roadside confrontation. We are all grownups, I hope. Life is not always fare, but no circus either. Fighting with law enforcement on the side of the road is always going to end badly. Again, be polite and fight it in court if needed. Just my opinion, YMMV. |
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Quoted: Cops are going to fish on traffic stops.. View Quote We know, which is why people don't like the ones that do. If cops are literally out to get us, I guess they're the ones that made it 'them against us'.... no complaining when people are against them to, right? Okay if everytime there is an officer involved shooting the public fishes for a reason to jam them up... right? |
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Quoted: All you had to say bro. We know, which is why people don't like the ones that do. If cops are literally out to get us, I guess they're the ones that made it 'them against us'.... no complaining when people are against them to, right? Okay if everytime there is an officer involved shooting the public fishes for a reason to jam them up... right? View Quote |
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Quoted: So you've gone in this thread from complaining about the nature of seatbelt tickets to tying that to officers not understanding the law to unjust arrests. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: So you've gone in this thread from complaining about the nature of seatbelt tickets to tying that to officers not understanding the law to unjust arrests. That happens. That shouldn't be shocking given the fact the law is so massive and even clear statutes can be twisted and contorted via case law. Quoted:
It's like the people in this thread throw anything they can, no matter how stupid, at any law enforcement. What I don't see is a guild of plumbers bitching and moaning because people said mean or silly things about them. Maybe they exist and I just missed their forum? At any rate, I can't speak for the "people in this thread" however I can speak for myself when I say I have not done that here or anywhere else. I judge people by what they say and what they do. I love good cops and I despise bad, stupid cops. Quoted: I don't even know how your posts have come around to this sort of tangent- the guy was pulled over for a seatbelt ticket and resisted multiple- as in DOZENS- of lawful commands. Context matters. Quoted: Boohoo mean patrol cop on a fishing expedition. The guy could have handed over his license (if he had one), told the cop he could not search his vehicle if he had asked, and been on his way in about 2 minutes. Much like the other guy in this thread who has somehow got an idea that a cop is going to have a debate on constitutional law before arresting him, it doesn't even make sense where you're coming from here, complaining about cops not knowing the law. This discussion has become so schizophrenic that everyone is talking at cross points, and my own posts to the subject have not helped that, either. Quoted: If it was a thread about a cop "smelling pot" busting out his window, and not finding anything, I'd understand. But, generally speaking, the sort of law that involves traffic stops is not really that complicated in most places. Cops are going to fish on traffic stops. Sometimes they are just going to take your information, smile, wave, and leave you in peace only to swear out a warrant a week later for a crime they found that wasn't really a crime, and certainly wasn't one they knew of at the time, resulting in an arrest and and a conviction because the law was so damn complicated. All of those are real examples, by the way. The only people who say "Boohoo mean patrol cop on a fishing expedition" are the people who have no idea what could come from them or can't see themselves falling into one of those examples. A person could think they are obeying the law or hell, they could be following it to the letter and still find themselves arrested or worse, convicted of a crime they didn't really commit from some b.s. fishing expedition. Does it happen often? I hope not but it does happen. Quoted: The laws of the road are generally extremely simple, and almost always easy to follow. The people talking about "may your chains rest lightly" when someone suggests they stay within 10 mph of the speed limit and wear a seatbelt just look like whackos. You can obey every observable law when it comes to driving your car and LEO will still be able to generate sufficient reasonable suspicion for a stop BY VIRTUE OF THE FACT THE PERSON IS OBEYING THE LAW. You can do everything "right" and still wind up arrested. Does this happen often? Probably not but it happens. Quoted: And when John Q Public with a clean record makes a slip up, the vast majority of the time, he's going to get a warning or a 5 over ticket. Because traffic enforcement is absolutely part of the job for patrol officers, and that is what they are going to do, but nobody really likes doing traffic stops for stupid bullshit and they just want to make it as simple and reasonable of an interaction as possible.
I do have a problem with fishing expeditions and the only people who don't are people who are ignorant of what the law says (that's everyone, by the way) or think they can't possibly be seen as violating the law whether they are or not. It's the bullshit "I have nothing to hide so go ahead and look" argument. Yes, you have something to hide whether you know it or not. |
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You are confused. Stick to tax law. You don't understand criminal law. View Quote So, what, exactly, are you on about? |
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I am confused about what? My last post was pointing out the fact you claimed another poster said something when he clearly didn't which was unrelated to tax law, criminal law, or criminal tax law. So, what, exactly, are you on about? View Quote |
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Quoted: 1 - I don't support seat belt violations or many of the voluminous laws that exist by which officers are justified in engaging in fishing expeditions (such as driving under the speed limit or driving while "looking concerned"). It doesn't matter one bit whether or not you could use those methods to find someone who theoretically wronged me. 2 - As to people having no clue how many stolen guns, burglars, etc..., have been found from such stops; neither do you because that data, as far as I know, doesn't exist. 3 - A basic understanding of math would tell me that if police stop/search/fish an incredibly large volume of people, they are most likely going to find/catch a large number of criminals and contraband. That isn't magic; it's basic common reasoning. View Quote 2 - It does exist. Follow this link regarding DDACTS from NHTSA. The article specifically indicates how traffic stops were the most effective way of reducing crime. 3 - I absolutely agree. More lawful traffic stops will lead to more lawful arrests and will overall reduce crime. So....what's the problem? |
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Quoted: So the purpose of seatbelt laws isn't to ensure people wear seatbelts... but rather to give cops an excuse to pull people over? I'm glad to see people are finally recognizing that fact, lol. View Quote |
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may your chains rest lightly, although with that type of reply I imagine you're the one demanding compliance View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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Of course he understands that state and local law enforcement can't enforce federal laws. That isn't the point he is making. The point he is making is that your average, ordinary, law-abidingish American gets a bit jaded and pissed when they see serious crimes go ignored or willfully unenforced while John Q. Public gets the book thrown at him; especially for trivial bullshit such as driving without a seat belt. How on earth did you miss that? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted: I don't think you understand that cops don't enforce federal law. The point he is making is that your average, ordinary, law-abidingish American gets a bit jaded and pissed when they see serious crimes go ignored or willfully unenforced while John Q. Public gets the book thrown at him; especially for trivial bullshit such as driving without a seat belt. How on earth did you miss that? |
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1 - Don't break traffic law and no traffic stop will occur. If you do not like the law, lobby for it to be changed. Until then, it is a perfectly legal traffic stop. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
1 - Don't break traffic law and no traffic stop will occur. If you do not like the law, lobby for it to be changed. Until then, it is a perfectly legal traffic stop. You know or ought to know this. Quoted: 2 - It does exist. Officers also catch criminals and find contraband during the normal course of their duties when not enforcing traffic laws. I was commenting on the fact you that you said "People upset with this stop have no clue how many stolen guns, burglars, etc. have been found. Most stops result in warnings" when you have absolutely NO idea how many stolen guns or burglars are found in traffic stops or how how many stops results in warnings. I strongly suspect you don't have that data. Interestingly enough, without diving into the studies themselves, which I am very tempted to do, the data provided from the various studies cited in the NHTSA summary document don't provide that information either because they focus on citations issued or arrests made rather than total encounters or stops conducted. Quoted: Follow this link regarding DDACTS from NHTSA. The article specifically indicates how traffic stops were the most effective way of reducing crime. First, that document does not say that. At all. The studies listed within that document do not say that. At all. That document is a sales pitch trying to get LEA to shift more resources into traffic enforcement which leads to my second point. That document was prepared by the NHTSA. This paragraph in the conclusion summaries the reason for this document and the push for more traffic enforcement: 1. DDACTS capitalized on a more refined understanding of the relationship between traffic enforcement and crime. For many years traffic safety advocates worked to gain the support of law enforcement executives to do more traffic enforcement. Because it was difficult to generate support for crash prevention programs, advocates attempted to convince law enforcement executives that there were residual crime control benefits from traffic enforcement. Consider the NHTSA "Looking Beyond the Ticket" program launched in 2007. In the preface readers are told, "Looking Beyond the Ticket is a strategy to encourage officers to think about each traffic stop as a new opportunity to not only make the roads and streets safer but possibly to discover a more serious traffic offense or a criminal activity" (NHTSA, 2007). This program and the "Conducting Complete Traffic Stops" program emphasized the notion that if an agency makes vehicle stops officers will discover wanted persons and contraband. However attractive on its face, this approach has limitations because the likelihood of such a discovery is very low, and the focus of the program is on "big" arrests, often at the expense of more data-driven strategy. While this "byproduct" approach strengthened the case for those agencies already engaged in traffic enforcement, it probably was not a very strong motivator for those that did not.
Page 22. Agencies that increased police presence and activities in high crime areas saw a decrease in some crime and the take away for a federal agency that deals with traffic safety is that traffic enforcement was the cause of that decrease. Talk about self-serving. Well, at least they quoted enough of the studies for people to read to see what else went into those efforts (assuming they were read). Quoted: 3 - I absolutely agree. More lawful traffic stops will lead to more lawful arrests and will overall reduce crime. So....what's the problem? More stops, deemed lawful or not, will also lead to more arrests that are inappropriate, at least in the eyes of those arrested, but deemed lawful as in being arrested and jailed for possessing candy that was mistaken for contraband or people arrested for DUI when they are not under the influence of anything (both of those are real btw). But hey, let's not focus on that side of the coin because anything deemed legal that helps you catch "bad guys" can't be bad, can it? |
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Quoted: Jesus I have never seen so much drama llama in a thread lol. Get the book thrown at him? You mean for a $20 seat belt ticket or warning? So much oppression!! I guess cops are just everywhere ignoring armed robberies and such to go after those juicy seat belt ticket scores. View Quote I mean spending several months in jail having been arrested for possessing contraband found in a search that began with a traffic stop that turned out to be candy. Or one of more examples where a fishing expedition that started with some bullshit traffic infraction turned someone's life upside down. I'm sure that woman was just a drama llama, right? I mean seat belt laws save laws. And local budgets. |
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1 - Don't break traffic law and no traffic stop will occur. If you do not like the law, lobby for it to be changed. Until then, it is a perfectly legal traffic stop. View Quote I was stopped due to a case of mistaken identity, because the officer involved could not tell the difference between two vehicle of a similar color. I did not break the traffic law I was stopped for. It is impossible for me to have committed said infraction, as I had been parked alongside the road looking at a map, a full half-mile from where the infraction was said to have occured. I watched the police officer drive by me as I was parked, and at no point during that day had I driven on the stretch of road where the infraction was said to have occurred. After asking why I had been stopped, I politely and respectfully explained to the officer that he was mistaken, and why. For all those saying to "argue it in court", you are asking me to sign and accept a ticket for a traffic violation I did not commit, take a day from work to go to court, and then try to convince a judge that it was not me that the officer had seen committing the traffic violation. How would I go about proving my innocence? I would likely have had to subpoena the dash cam footage from the officer's vehicle, hoping that it would still be available for review, and that it would clearly show me parked alongside the road or show that I was driving a different vehicle than the one he had seen commit the traffic violation. Meanwhile, the officer would likely testify that I was in fact the vehicle he stopped, as in his mind, I was. Without the dash cam footage to exonerate me, it would essentially be my testimony vs the officer's. Additionally, at that time I would be trying to describe a situation that happened at least a month or two prior, depending on how soon the court date was. Meanwhile, the officer would be using a citation issed the day of the infraction as his evidence, as well as his testimony that he had personally witnessed me committed said infraction. Anyone care to guess what my odds would be of convincing a judge that the officer had the wrong man? In essence, unless I were able to secure the dash cam footage to support my innocence, to "argue it in court" runs a very significant risk of being found guilty of a traffic violation I did not commit. The more comments I see in this thread from LEO, the more grateful I am that the officer I spoke with had the decency and courtesy to take the time to discuss the situation with me, rather than just say "Tell it to the judge." It saddens me to think that his level of professionalism is the rare exception, not the norm. |
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Yup, they are a special kind of stupid. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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FALSE. I was stopped due to a case of mistaken identity, because the officer involved could not tell the difference between two vehicle of a similar color. I did not break the traffic law I was stopped for. It is impossible for me to have committed said infraction, as I had been parked alongside the road looking at a map, a full half-mile from where the infraction was said to have occured. I watched the police officer drive by me as I was parked, and at no point during that day had I driven on the stretch of road where the infraction was said to have occurred. After asking why I had been stopped, I politely and respectfully explained to the officer that he was mistaken, and why. For all those saying to "argue it in court", you are asking me to sign and accept a ticket for a traffic violation I did not commit, take a day from work to go to court, and then try to convince a judge that it was not me that the officer had seen committing the traffic violation. How would I go about proving my innocence? I would likely have had to subpoena the dash cam footage from the officer's vehicle, hoping that it would still be available for review, and that it would clearly show me parked alongside the road or show that I was driving a different vehicle than the one he had seen commit the traffic violation. Meanwhile, the officer would likely testify that I was in fact the vehicle he stopped, as in his mind, I was. Without the dash cam footage to exonerate me, it would essentially be my testimony vs the officer's. Additionally, at that time I would be trying to describe a situation that happened at least a month or two prior, depending on how soon the court date was. Meanwhile, the officer would be using a citation issed the day of the infraction as his evidence, as well as his testimony that he had personally witnessed me committed said infraction. Anyone care to guess what my odds would be of convincing a judge that the officer had the wrong man? In essence, unless I were able to secure the dash cam footage to support my innocence, to "argue it in court" runs a very significant risk of being found guilty of a traffic violation I did not commit. The more comments I see in this thread from LEO, the more grateful I am that the officer I spoke with had the decency and courtesy to take the time to discuss the situation with me, rather than just say "Tell it to the judge." It saddens me to think that his level of professionalism is the rare exception, not the norm. View Quote Haven't you read the GD advise to never talk to the cops? How come you didn't ask for your lawyer? |
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No, I don't mean a $20 seat belt ticket or warning. I mean spending several months in jail having been arrested for possessing contraband found in a search that began with a traffic stop that turned out to be candy. Or one of more examples where a fishing expedition that started with some bullshit traffic infraction turned someone's life upside down. I'm sure that woman was just a drama llama, right? I mean seat belt laws save laws. And local budgets. View Quote How about making it in less than 50 words? |
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