SuppaSlick wrote:Harcore Fenton Mun wrote:azcatz11 wrote:Read the police report. She was screaming at the top of her lungs. The cops had every right to be there
Have a link?
They have a right to be there, just not inside the house without a warrant. Otherwise, they need proof. Not just some random text.He wasn't even home as it turns out.A woman called 911 and said she received “disturbing” text messages from her cousin, who allegedly told her Hayes was “getting loud and violent”
https://www.yardbarker.com/nba/articles/jaxson_hayes_arrest_video_shows_physical_altercation_with_police/s1_127_35721227
That is completely wrong....
Why are so many people commenting on things that are completely out of their depth...
A simple...and I mean SIMPLE google search explains exigent circumstances. If police are acting in good faith (the radio call that appeared to be credible information) then they can enter a place without a warrant to protect and preserve life. If the text was real and he was violent with her and she was in there bleeding in a corner it makes no sense to let him back in the house....
https://www.lacriminaldefenseattorney.com/legal-dictionary/e/exigent-circumstances/
You know damn well there would be a civil suit if based on the information officers had they let him go back into the house while they went back to the station and spend hours typing a warrant and she was actually seriously hurt....
So, who's the victim then?