Watching the video might help you discuss the video . The private property thing is null to this situation; if there was a seatbelt violation, it would've been observed before the guy got out of his car, so likely it was spotted earlier and off the property, if it happened. Like you said, an off-property violation can be pursued onto property. Getting onto private property isn't like crossing the border.Having not watched the video, I can't speak to this specific situation.
A surprising number of people with warrants for their arrest are found through normal traffic stops. Thus a number of seemingly simple violations can result in more than a ticket, and officers have been killed during such minor stops because the driver did not want his license run through the system.
So all officers treat every stop, no matter how minor, with a high degree of alert.
As far as private property, I've pulled into a property then had an officer pull in and then ticket me for a violation they observed minutes prior.
Again, I haven't watched the video so I don't know if any of this applies to this case.
Damn, I want to still get paid after I get caught using my position of power to torture, murder, and falsely imprison poor people. When's the next academy class?A former Chicago police commander who for decades ran a torture ring that used electrical shock, burning and beatings on more than 100 black men has been released from federal prison after spending less than four years behind bars.
...
While Emanuel has described Burge as a “stain on the city’s reputation,” the 66-year-old ex-cop is still receiving a $4,000-a-month pension from the city.
According to In These Times, the Burge affair has cost taxpayers more than $120 million, including more than $22 million in pension costs for Burge and his former cohorts, plus an additional $15 million in investigating and prosecuting Burge’s crimes.
Not really. If they put you in Gen Pop, you tend to be dead in a few weeks. The real hell is reserved for the ones that go into protective custody and basically spend their term in solitary.The worst thing in the world for anyone would be a former cop or guard in prison. Your life would be a living hell.
Police should support comprehensive prison reform. Then when they get caught breaking the law, they wouldn't be subject to that living hell.The worst thing in the world for anyone would be a former cop or guard in prison. Your life would be a living hell.
Police supporting it does not equal it going into effect. The American prison system is a business; do you really think a business gives a shit what the police think?Police should support comprehensive prison reform. Then when they get caught breaking the law, they wouldn't be subject to that living hell.
Probably just as much as the plantation owners cared about the people who piloted the ships.Police supporting it does not equal it going into effect. The American prison system is a business; do you really think a business gives a shit what the police think?
Therein lies probably the biggest issue with the American justice system.The American prison system is a business
Well, since the subject sprang up because of one getting out of jail, logic would dictate at some point he was charged with at least one crime and found guilty, thus went in jail. I don't think he just wandered in and thought, "This would be a nice place to spend the next four years." I get the source of your hyperbole and it pisses me off too, but it's contradicted by your own article eight posts up.I was operating in a wild, fantastical hypothetical world where cops are ever even charged with crimes.
He... Ass..assess
Yep, another cop was shot at. Happens quite a lot.
Everything is an assumption at this point.It says in the news story a gun was recovered at the scene...but isn't St. Louis open carry? I mean, what if the dude really did have a sand which in his hand?
Aren't we jumping to conclusions if we assume the cop was shot at?
Yeah, that news story basically boils down to "We have no idea what happened, so lets jump straight to outrage."Everything is an assumption at this point.
You could also have suggested that all the police were lazy, or that they were all busy attending to hundreds of other crimes in the crime-ridden area, or that the department is horribly understaffed due to budget cuts. All are equally as plausible.There wasn't a riot and no militarized police were brought in since it was happening in a white neighborhood.
I don't see all cops are racist fascists in there. Way to be part of the problem!You could also have suggested that all the police were lazy, or that they were all busy attending to hundreds of other crimes in the crime-ridden area, or that the department is horribly understaffed due to budget cuts. All are equally as plausible.
--Patrick
I thought that was implied via "white neighborhood."I don't see all cops are racist fascists in there. Way to be part of the problem!
Darren Wilson swinging in the town square even wouldn't change the minds of the people systematically repressed and sometimes literally beaten down for over 200 years by the white men in power.I doubt, however, that this news will change the minds of those still agitating in Ferguson.
Good thing there aren't any of those.Darren Wilson swinging in the town square even wouldn't change the minds of the people systematically repressed and sometimes literally beaten down for over 200 years by the white men in power.
Yeah. After 200 years you'd think they'd literally have enough trouble standing up under their own power. Or breathing.Good thing there aren't any of those.
Everyone should read this article.Man, this is a GREAT article. By a guy you may have heard of. Frank Seripco.
http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2014/10/the-police-are-still-out-of-control-112160.html
Only a few years ago, a cop who was in the same 81st Precinct I started in, Adrian Schoolcraft, was actually taken to a psych ward and handcuffed to a gurney for six days after he tried to complain about corruption – they wanted him to keep to a quota of summonses, and he wasn’t complying. No one would have believed him except he hid a tape recorder in his room, and recorded them making their demands. Now he’s like me, an outcast.