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Quoted: There's always a way to creatively lie after the fact to keep the government agent out of hot water and redirect the consequences onto an innocent party. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: You forgot to add children in danger. Nice There's always a way to creatively lie after the fact to keep the government agent out of hot water and redirect the consequences onto an innocent party. Your own camera posted on YouTube to show the crooked cop is hard to backtrack from. |
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Noise complaint, but there is no noise when he arrives. I can't see any justification for his behavior.
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Quoted: They’ll threaten you with misusing 911 then. Best to treat them with the same advice that police give about rapists: Don’t resist and let the police investigate it. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: "Hello, 911? There's an armed home invader in my living room who won't leave, I'm in fear for my life." They’ll threaten you with misusing 911 then. Best to treat them with the same advice that police give about rapists: Don’t resist and let the police investigate it. Or you take a shot at winning the hood lottery and escalate the situation to a point that can’t be swept under the rug. |
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Quoted: Your own camera posted on YouTube to show the crooked cop is hard to backtrack from. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: You forgot to add children in danger. Nice There's always a way to creatively lie after the fact to keep the government agent out of hot water and redirect the consequences onto an innocent party. Your own camera posted on YouTube to show the crooked cop is hard to backtrack from. One of the great benefits of technology. I hate a lot of it, but the ability of any random citizen to create a video recording on the fly of a government agent who may be lying is glorious.. I mean, body cams do a lot, but how often do they get shut off or covered? |
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Quoted: Fired. Department sued, settlement comes out of the pension. View Quote I've always believed that if Bad Cops had to pay the settlement themselves or it comes from their department pension fund, they'd very soon learn that crime should not pay. Taking settlements & judgements from the Department's Pension pool .... and soon Officers & Deputies would be motivated to sort out their own "bad apples" much sooner. Bigger_Hammer |
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Quoted: I hope you are trolling, otherwise this is the stupidest comment I have read all week. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Yes, am aware, but every case is unique. Was the child at the door in distress, prompting officer to enter to investigate? He tends to support the government side of things. And by that I mean he finds any sliver of possible excuse for government actors. Can't speak to his motivating factors though. |
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Quoted: Still waiting for the cops to do the right thing and fire his ass. They say the only thing the cops hate worse than criminals, is a bad cop. But ya know what, turns out that’s horse shit and the thin blue line is more important than civil rights and integrity, every time. View Quote Every single time, they will stomp on your civil rights. |
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Even if the cop THOUGHT [HAHA] he was invited in, an invitation can be revoked at any time. It's really not much different then invoking your right to remain silent and refusing to speak any more. And even if a cops sees something he ''thinks'' may be criminal, he's better off leaving and getting a search warrant for it unless he can show it may be destroyed or ''disappeared.''
Since she said she would talk to the officer on the porch, he had ZERO right to remain inside the house unless he saw criminal activity in progress in plain view. |
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Quoted: Yes, but deputy dipshit should pay, and as another member said the departments pension fund. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: She should get paid. Deputy Powertrip there entered her home without consent or a warrant. Yes, but deputy dipshit should pay, and as another member said the departments pension fund. Ha! They didn't believe in individual accountability by the kings men, only by the little people. Otherwise why is it well known that ignorance of the law is no excuse?* Except for those changed with enforcing it. |
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This is actually a pretty good case for the cop to get QI denied. He absolutely 100% violated her Constitutional right on purpose and actually defended his authority to do so when called on it.
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Quoted: You condone this? Also, I thought there was no list... View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Damn the ACAB list is just getting bigger. You condone this? Also, I thought there was no list... You must be reading this wrong......and the list is when more and more of these videos pop up. |
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Remember, always ask questions when government agents are involved. There may be a, ah, slight chance they aren't on the side of good.
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She shouldn't go after his job, she should go after his POST certification. That would make sure he'd have to leave the state to get another job in law enforcement.
This kind of stuff just kills me. You hear videos of cops talking about "I have the right to do X". Nothing could be further from the truth. Cops have no rights. They are agents of the government when they put on their uniform. The government doesn't have rights, it has authorities. He, as an agent of the government is authorized to do a defined list of things as it pertains to entering that woman's house. He exceeded his given and legal authority. As soon as he did that, he was working outside of his capacity as a government agent and was within his capacity of an armed asshole invading their home. At least that's how I see it. He broke the law and it's plain as day. He did it knowingly and willingly. |
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Pretty wild. Dude opened the door and invited himself in.
Where was this at? AZ? I like how body cameras were supposed to be the end all be all for nailing criminals, but all they seem to catch is cops acting like criminals themselves. |
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Quoted: She shouldn't go after his job, she should go after his POST certification. That would make sure he'd have to leave the state to get another job in law enforcement. This kind of stuff just kills me. You hear videos of cops talking about "I have the right to do X". Nothing could be further from the truth. Cops have no rights. They are agents of the government when they put on their uniform. The government doesn't have rights, it has authorities. He, as an agent of the government is authorized to do a defined list of things as it pertains to entering that woman's house. He exceeded his given and legal authority. As soon as he did that, he was working outside of his capacity as a government agent and was within his capacity of an armed asshole invading their home. At least that's how I see it. He broke the law and it's plain as day. He did it knowingly and willingly. View Quote Why should she do that? Shouldn't the state be doing that while charging him? |
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I have a window in the kitchen right next to the front door.
I never open the door, I slide the window up and talk from there. I love the look on solicitors faces when I look at 'em without opening the window and walk away. A police officer would at least get a " what do you want " before I walked away. |
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Would I be wrong to think this is armed invasion and assault? Regardless of the end result I have the right to defend myself, my children and domicile? Not everyone will go home happy if an armed intruder invades my threshold.
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Quoted: Quoted: Yes, am aware, but every case is unique. Was the child at the door in distress, prompting officer to enter to investigate? https://i.imgur.com/xeYzahc.jpeg In before his protectors tell you to knock it off. |
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Quoted: Why should she do that? Shouldn't the state be doing that while charging him? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: She shouldn't go after his job, she should go after his POST certification. That would make sure he'd have to leave the state to get another job in law enforcement. This kind of stuff just kills me. You hear videos of cops talking about "I have the right to do X". Nothing could be further from the truth. Cops have no rights. They are agents of the government when they put on their uniform. The government doesn't have rights, it has authorities. He, as an agent of the government is authorized to do a defined list of things as it pertains to entering that woman's house. He exceeded his given and legal authority. As soon as he did that, he was working outside of his capacity as a government agent and was within his capacity of an armed asshole invading their home. At least that's how I see it. He broke the law and it's plain as day. He did it knowingly and willingly. Why should she do that? Shouldn't the state be doing that while charging him? But yes, in an ideal world, you're right. |
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Here is the Deputy Dipshit's boss complaining that police get no respect.
https://www.reddit.com/r/ACAB/comments/15mnfuv/riverside_county_sheriff_chad_bianco_whines/ |
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Quoted: Here is the Deputy Dipshit's boss complaining that police get no respect. https://www.reddit.com/r/ACAB/comments/15mnfuv/riverside_county_sheriff_chad_bianco_whines/ View Quote I feel like his mustache probably reeks of another man's balls |
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Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Damn the ACAB list is just getting bigger. Nobody cares They will when they have to pay out. Experience has demonstrated that it's incredibly uncommon for an individual cop to actually feel any negative consequences for abusing the public. Means there's little incentive to do right. |
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Quoted: Here is the Deputy Dipshit's boss complaining that police get no respect. https://www.reddit.com/r/ACAB/comments/15mnfuv/riverside_county_sheriff_chad_bianco_whines/ View Quote What I have seen in the past 5 years are cops willing to turn the other way when ''some'' people egregiously break the law and more then happy to bust others that used to support them for the most asinine reasons. Good luck winning the support of the second group back because it wont be quick or easy. And if you support forfeiture laws with no actual police work or reasonable proof, you'll NEVER get mine back. And ouija dogs should be certified yearly by a state agency and all hits documented. Drop below a certain percentage and Cujo gets decertified until additional training is done. The K9 officer also gets scrutinized and made to retrain and is decertified to work with a dog on the road until he/she has done so. |
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I remember I got a warning for playing a certain song from back in the day. It fit this situation so well.
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Even though I was a Sheriffs Deputy from 2007 to 2015, I always thought it was ridiculous to arrest someone for “resisting arrest” when they weren’t under arrest in the first place.
Edit to add: I left law enforcement because of witnessing to much corruption within the department. Way too many shady dealings within the good ol boy system. |
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Assume every interaction is the cop trying to find a way to ruin your life.
It may or may not be true, but we have been left with no choice but to operate this way. Just shut the fuck up. Always. |
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Quoted: Cop is investigating a noise complaint. Cop rings the doorbell, kids answer door, they realize a cop is standing on the porch and so they run to get their mother. Officer proceeds to open the door, invites himself in the house and refuses to leave when asked to leave. Homeowner demands cop leaves, cop says he owns the house if he is standing inside and that he doesn't have to leave. Officer then drags woman outside and arrests her for contempt of cop. At what point is the cop an armed home invader? What could possibly justify this thinking? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SfGooi1JJUg View Quote |
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