Monky15 wrote:Should of listened to his buddy.
That's a good friend. He was doing what he could to keep Hayes out of trouble.
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Monky15 wrote:Should of listened to his buddy.
Cubbies2120 wrote:Nate505 wrote:What a dumbass. Guess he's never heard of probable cause.
Yep, stupid ass rule applied in this case. Just follow the logic for one second here:
Woman in house apparently texts her friend saying she's in trouble, and can't call the authorities.
Friend then calls cops
Cops show up and have probable cause
So, the woman can text her friend but can't text 911? You know that 911 can be texted now, right? Been that way for over 5 years. She can text but can't call 911 (even without speaking into the phone, if you call 911 and aren't responsive they'll show up). I can't imagine how this can be abused for someone you don't like...for example:
A person I dislike has drugs in their house
They're having people over
I anonymously call or text 911 off a burner and say I heard screams for help from the house
Police now have probable cause and enter his home and find drugs and he goes to jail. Probable cause (made up) but they bust him for something they never would have busted him for without that anonymous made up tip.
See where I'm going with this? Slippery slope.
Cubbies2120 wrote:Nate505 wrote:What a dumbass. Guess he's never heard of probable cause.
Yep, stupid ass rule applied in this case. Just follow the logic for one second here:
Woman in house apparently texts her friend saying she's in trouble, and can't call the authorities.
Friend then calls cops
Cops show up and have probable cause
So, the woman can text her friend but can't text 911? You know that 911 can be texted now, right? Been that way for over 5 years. She can text but can't call 911 (even without speaking into the phone, if you call 911 and aren't responsive they'll show up). I can't imagine how this can be abused for someone you don't like...for example:
A person I dislike has drugs in their house
They're having people over
I anonymously call or text 911 off a burner and say I heard screams for help from the house
Police now have probable cause and enter his home and find drugs and he goes to jail. Probable cause (made up) but they bust him for something they never would have busted him for without that anonymous made up tip.
See where I'm going with this? Slippery slope.
Cubbies2120 wrote:Nate505 wrote:What a dumbass. Guess he's never heard of probable cause.
Yep, stupid ass rule applied in this case. Just follow the logic for one second here:
Woman in house apparently texts her friend saying she's in trouble, and can't call the authorities.
Friend then calls cops
Cops show up and have probable cause
So, the woman can text her friend but can't text 911? You know that 911 can be texted now, right? Been that way for over 5 years. She can text but can't call 911 (even without speaking into the phone, if you call 911 and aren't responsive they'll show up). I can't imagine how this can be abused for someone you don't like...for example:
A person I dislike has drugs in their house
They're having people over
I anonymously call or text 911 off a burner and say I heard screams for help from the house
Police now have probable cause and enter his home and find drugs and he goes to jail. Probable cause (made up) but they bust him for something they never would have busted him for without that anonymous made up tip.
See where I'm going with this? Slippery slope.
leolozon wrote:Cubbies2120 wrote:Nate505 wrote:What a dumbass. Guess he's never heard of probable cause.
Yep, stupid ass rule applied in this case. Just follow the logic for one second here:
Woman in house apparently texts her friend saying she's in trouble, and can't call the authorities.
Friend then calls cops
Cops show up and have probable cause
So, the woman can text her friend but can't text 911? You know that 911 can be texted now, right? Been that way for over 5 years. She can text but can't call 911 (even without speaking into the phone, if you call 911 and aren't responsive they'll show up). I can't imagine how this can be abused for someone you don't like...for example:
A person I dislike has drugs in their house
They're having people over
I anonymously call or text 911 off a burner and say I heard screams for help from the house
Police now have probable cause and enter his home and find drugs and he goes to jail. Probable cause (made up) but they bust him for something they never would have busted him for without that anonymous made up tip.
See where I'm going with this? Slippery slope.
What's your point? The positive of probable cause (protecting victims) is way bigger than the negative. If you don't want to be caught with drugs in your house, don't have it there.
Your argument is that someone doing something illegal could be caught... Not convincing.
FinnTheHuman wrote:leolozon wrote:Cubbies2120 wrote:
Yep, stupid ass rule applied in this case. Just follow the logic for one second here:
Woman in house apparently texts her friend saying she's in trouble, and can't call the authorities.
Friend then calls cops
Cops show up and have probable cause
So, the woman can text her friend but can't text 911? You know that 911 can be texted now, right? Been that way for over 5 years. She can text but can't call 911 (even without speaking into the phone, if you call 911 and aren't responsive they'll show up). I can't imagine how this can be abused for someone you don't like...for example:
A person I dislike has drugs in their house
They're having people over
I anonymously call or text 911 off a burner and say I heard screams for help from the house
Police now have probable cause and enter his home and find drugs and he goes to jail. Probable cause (made up) but they bust him for something they never would have busted him for without that anonymous made up tip.
See where I'm going with this? Slippery slope.
What's your point? The positive of probable cause (protecting victims) is way bigger than the negative. If you don't want to be caught with drugs in your house, don't have it there.
Your argument is that someone doing something illegal could be caught... Not convincing.
Nope, you don't get the situation well enough then, there's a lot of room for abuse and people can frame other people all kinds of stuff, that's why it's a slippery slope. But as I said in my previous post, I'm making an educated guess that it's probably not possible to charge somebody with illegal activity not connected to the activity which triggered the police to enter the private property without a warrant.
leolozon wrote:FinnTheHuman wrote:leolozon wrote:
What's your point? The positive of probable cause (protecting victims) is way bigger than the negative. If you don't want to be caught with drugs in your house, don't have it there.
Your argument is that someone doing something illegal could be caught... Not convincing.
Nope, you don't get the situation well enough then, there's a lot of room for abuse and people can frame other people all kinds of stuff, that's why it's a slippery slope. But as I said in my previous post, I'm making an educated guess that it's probably not possible to charge somebody with illegal activity not connected to the activity which triggered the police to enter the private property without a warrant.
Everyting can be a slippery slope, I'm tired of hearing this as if it's an argument. If slippery slope was a good argument, there would be no rules at all.
leolozon wrote:FinnTheHuman wrote:leolozon wrote:
What's your point? The positive of probable cause (protecting victims) is way bigger than the negative. If you don't want to be caught with drugs in your house, don't have it there.
Your argument is that someone doing something illegal could be caught... Not convincing.
Nope, you don't get the situation well enough then, there's a lot of room for abuse and people can frame other people all kinds of stuff, that's why it's a slippery slope. But as I said in my previous post, I'm making an educated guess that it's probably not possible to charge somebody with illegal activity not connected to the activity which triggered the police to enter the private property without a warrant.
Everyting can be a slippery slope, I'm tired of hearing this as if it's an argument. If slippery slope was a good argument, there would be no rules at all.
FinnTheHuman wrote:leolozon wrote:FinnTheHuman wrote:
Nope, you don't get the situation well enough then, there's a lot of room for abuse and people can frame other people all kinds of stuff, that's why it's a slippery slope. But as I said in my previous post, I'm making an educated guess that it's probably not possible to charge somebody with illegal activity not connected to the activity which triggered the police to enter the private property without a warrant.
Everyting can be a slippery slope, I'm tired of hearing this as if it's an argument. If slippery slope was a good argument, there would be no rules at all.
I know where you're coming from, but this one is more problematic than your usual laws because it's so easy to frame somebody this way, and on top of that it discourages you from calling the cops if you're that girl and you have drugs in the house. Imagine if she did, because she's a user or a dealer, and then she doesn't wanna call the cops because of that, and then this guy kills her? Nah, you gotta make rules to protect a person from taking that risk of hoping that the violent partner is gonna calm down.
nikster wrote:FinnTheHuman wrote:leolozon wrote:
Everyting can be a slippery slope, I'm tired of hearing this as if it's an argument. If slippery slope was a good argument, there would be no rules at all.
I know where you're coming from, but this one is more problematic than your usual laws because it's so easy to frame somebody this way, and on top of that it discourages you from calling the cops if you're that girl and you have drugs in the house. Imagine if she did, because she's a user or a dealer, and then she doesn't wanna call the cops because of that, and then this guy kills her? Nah, you gotta make rules to protect a person from taking that risk of hoping that the violent partner is gonna calm down.
but whats the alternative? The Victim calls 9/11, the abusive partner refuses to let police inside and police just go home for the abuse to continue?
JimmyPlopper wrote:Cops need to de-escalate when they turn up to heated situations. That is their responsibility and one that we say neglected to do here. Lucky for them, they don't need to pay the price and you will have a part of the community who actually backs that behavior. Cowardice all around
FinnTheHuman wrote:nikster wrote:FinnTheHuman wrote:
I know where you're coming from, but this one is more problematic than your usual laws because it's so easy to frame somebody this way, and on top of that it discourages you from calling the cops if you're that girl and you have drugs in the house. Imagine if she did, because she's a user or a dealer, and then she doesn't wanna call the cops because of that, and then this guy kills her? Nah, you gotta make rules to protect a person from taking that risk of hoping that the violent partner is gonna calm down.
but whats the alternative? The Victim calls 9/11, the abusive partner refuses to let police inside and police just go home for the abuse to continue?
No, the alternative is police can enter, but there's a law prohibiting the state from persecuting you for anything illegal going on in the private property but the domestic violence. Which I like to believe is the actual case, just like when they find drugs in your trunk but they had no warrant to look at your trunk. But I don't know the law.
MrGoat wrote:No one looks good in that video. Hayes came off as a complete clown. The LAPD showed why they have a bad reputation, terrible job of de-escalation there.
GobertReport wrote:JimmyPlopper wrote:Cops need to de-escalate when they turn up to heated situations. That is their responsibility and one that we say neglected to do here. Lucky for them, they don't need to pay the price and you will have a part of the community who actually backs that behavior. Cowardice all around
Bro it sounds like you know what you are doing, go be a cop!
FinnTheHuman wrote:leolozon wrote:Cubbies2120 wrote:
Yep, stupid ass rule applied in this case. Just follow the logic for one second here:
Woman in house apparently texts her friend saying she's in trouble, and can't call the authorities.
Friend then calls cops
Cops show up and have probable cause
So, the woman can text her friend but can't text 911? You know that 911 can be texted now, right? Been that way for over 5 years. She can text but can't call 911 (even without speaking into the phone, if you call 911 and aren't responsive they'll show up). I can't imagine how this can be abused for someone you don't like...for example:
A person I dislike has drugs in their house
They're having people over
I anonymously call or text 911 off a burner and say I heard screams for help from the house
Police now have probable cause and enter his home and find drugs and he goes to jail. Probable cause (made up) but they bust him for something they never would have busted him for without that anonymous made up tip.
See where I'm going with this? Slippery slope.
What's your point? The positive of probable cause (protecting victims) is way bigger than the negative. If you don't want to be caught with drugs in your house, don't have it there.
Your argument is that someone doing something illegal could be caught... Not convincing.
Nope, you don't get the situation well enough then, there's a lot of room for abuse and people can frame other people all kinds of stuff, that's why it's a slippery slope. But as I said in my previous post, I'm making an educated guess that it's probably not possible to charge somebody with illegal activity not connected to the activity which triggered the police to enter the private property without a warrant.