RalphInCA
Cleared for Takeoff
Standing in line for a sandwich and being asked if you're on drugs is acceptable to you? .
Wouldn't bother me. It's just a simple question. It's not like I'm being asked to give blood.
Standing in line for a sandwich and being asked if you're on drugs is acceptable to you? .
Hey it is his body. Justification for abortion why not drugs and prostitution?The Police Officer was just doing his job. I'm glad he is actively looking for people who are breaking the laws.
Wouldn't bother me. It's just a simple question. It's not like I'm being asked to give blood.
Coming from the legal field, I'm positive you are not in said field.
On another forum, we call this wild shot in the dark FUD....Fear, uncertainty and doubt. Usually called FUD when the poster want to sound like they are in the know and they make affirmations to the validity of their post. Yet, the post is so full of FUD, it's unreasonable to believe there is truth to any of it at all.
To start with, just google Terry v. Ohio and go from there for a refresher on the T-stop as we call it in our circles.
The Police Officer was just doing his job. I'm glad he is actively looking for people who are breaking the laws.
Clear evidence of marijuana use, munchies. He probably should have arrested that menace to society on the spot.Investigative of what? Ordering a sandwich?
Wouldn't bother me. It's just a simple question. It's not like I'm being asked to give blood.
Anyone ever been asked if you were high after visiting your eye doctor?
Today I was standing in line, at a local sub shop, behind a police officer and got asked that question. It surprised me and the people standing in line.
My reply was that I just got done with an eye appt. Thankfully the guy had a sense of humor as he replied with "That explains why your face is in your phone like your 80".
The Police Officer was just doing his job. I'm glad he is actively looking for people who are breaking the laws.
The OP is lucky he wasn't choked to death for having dilated pupils.
Standing in line for a sandwich and being asked if you're on drugs is acceptable to you? I'd be filing harassment and defamation charges.
Are you "coming from the legal field," or are you a criminal defense attorney?
The reality is that law enforcement is responsible for the FUD surrounding their profession, and much of it is justified. While I would agree that there is no reason to be paranoid, the question asked of the OP was directly related to the possibility that the he was engaged in criminal activity. While the officer may have been joking, there was no way for the OP to make that determination immediately prior to responding to the question. I would argue that a LEO who jokes about someone's possible involvement in criminal activity is, at the very least, unprofessional.
I believe that the vast majority of LEOs are good people. Maybe I'm wrong. Regardless, there's really no way to determine whether the LEO who's asking questions is a friend or foe, and until that is known, it is more prudent under the law to assume the latter and provide limited information without appropriate legal counsel. It's tough to stop digging the hole once you start, and it's even harder to get yourself out of it.
JKG
Coming from the legal field, I'm positive you are not in said field.
On another forum, we call this wild shot in the dark FUD....Fear, uncertainty and doubt. Usually called FUD when the poster want to sound like they are in the know and they make affirmations to the validity of their post. Yet, the post is so full of FUD, it's unreasonable to believe there is truth to any of it at all.
To start with, just google Terry v. Ohio and go from there for a refresher on the T-stop as we call it in our circles.
People who fear police are those who have a reason to fear police. 99% of the cops out there are good, honest people doing a job that could not be stomached by the majority of society.
But the media latches on to a bad apple and paint the canvas with a calibrated firehose, as you have latched on to. But that's typical really. What is seen on on TV must be indicative of all of society because it was on the news and must be true.
And backed by a DOJ and Executive Office which blatantly usurps the laws as written for their own agenda, those who have borne the weight of national persecution are also the same ones you call on to save you from the scurage of life and protect you in your time of need.
Here is some food for thought....
This thug who asked Andrew if he was high observed Andrew and noted something odd; something consistant with a CNS stimulant; dialed pupils.
He asked him if he was high. Is that unreasonable given he was in fact, in a public place, the cop had a right to be there and there was absolutely no custodial questioning? If Andrew had said he was high, should the cop not investigate further to determine if he was in fact under the influence of an illegal substance? Is that not what police are asked to do given t eh facts presented by Andrew.
Yet, Andrew gave a perfectly valid answer and give the facts presented, ordered his turkey, BLT or Tuna sandwich and carried on with his day. He was not searched, cuffed, detained, involuntarily moved from one place to another or any other actions taken against him.
If Andrew had not have answered and used the typical anti-establishment phraseology, "Am I being detained?" With the cop, I have serious doubts he/she would do anything. You see, while there are really no rules of engagement for the people of this nation, LEOs have case, after case, after case law which says how they must proceed. It's like a huge flow chart that is remarkably confusing, many times has multiple routes and they can be held accountable for choosing the wrong direction. That's why it's so easy to sue the police. Not even the best cop does it right Ll the time. We call that being human.
Yet, being human for LE means liability. Being human for everyone else means, well, nothing. Oops. My bad. Sorry. All those don't work in the policing environment.
After all, the majority of thefts, robberies, muggings, burglaries, auto thefts.....well you get the picture. They are generally in support of drug usage. Lock up the druggies, slow down the crime.
So, did the cop do anything wrong by asking if he was high? Was he " out of line" by asking him? In your jurisdiction, would you expect your police to arrest someone high on dope in public? Isn't that what you expect of them?
My suggestion would be for you to contact your local department and do a ride a,one before you beat them up for being rights violating, knuckle dragging robots for the big machine. What you see will surprise you, that I'm sure of.
Last summer I was driving with my wife from San Antonio to Chicago. In Arkansas we both noticed an unusual number of cars pulled over along about a 50 mile stretch of interstate. I wasn't worried as I had the cruise control set for the speed limit and I was wide awake/alert. After passing about the tenth car pulled over, lo and behold, a cop pulls me over. He seemed friendly enough and started out by asking where I was headed and for what reason, yada yada yada. He finally explained my being pulled over was because he had observed me crossing the rumble dohickeys marking the edge of the shoulder when I switched lanes to move farther away from the shoulder with the pulled over vehicle and state trooper. He suspected I was fatigued and dozing off. Complete and utter BS. I wonder how many of those other vehicles were pulled over on similar pretexts to fish for something to write up or confiscate.
Well said. Don't waste too much time trying to explain yourself when it comes to the LE Side, they believe and hate what they want. And I have recommended ride alongs several times here on this forum. I think they be scurrred!! Yup
I never claimed to be "in the legal field." I claimed to be a former Police Officer, which included a certain amount of legal training, mainly in how to use the law to achieve the goal of catching criminals. This was in the early 1990s.
We were specifically trained in how to word requests. Like instead of saying "may I look in your trunk" we would say "I'm going to look in your trunk, okay?" The former is clearly a request, the latter is a request that sounds to the untrained like a statement without an "opt out."
Feel free to tell me specifically where I'm wrong. Not in case law, in police tactics.
Well said. Don't waste too much time trying to explain yourself when it comes to the LE Side, they believe and hate what they want. And I have recommended ride alongs several times here on this forum. I think they be scurrred!! Yup
Well said. Don't waste too much time trying to explain yourself when it comes to the LE Side, they believe and hate what they want. And I have recommended ride alongs several times here on this forum. I think they be scurrred!! Yup
Well said. Don't waste too much time trying to explain yourself when it comes to the LE Side, they believe and hate what they want. And I have recommended ride alongs several times here on this forum. I think they be scurrred!! Yup
No disrespect intended, but if you were a cop, you should have know what a Terry Stop is. Of course, it's been a few years, though. The search is for weapons. And you must have articulable facts to support the search for weapons, e.g., observed, bulges, reaching, etc.
LEOs cannot just go dig in your pockets on fishing expedition, and the facts of Andrews post is that it was drug related. Thus, he could not have gone into his pockets to look for drugs. Absent any other facts relating to weapons, Andrews pockets are secure.
A precursory frisk for " officer safety" is currently disallowed with no supporting facts.
What color is your skin?
http://blogs.citypages.com/blotter/..._arrest_black_man_sitting_in_skyway_video.php
Haha, that would explain you falling off the ladder.
If you can't maintain when you're talking to a cop, you're too high.
Of course I know the purpose of a Terry stop. It's to check for weapons for "officer safety". No offense, but you should know that in the real world Terry is often a pretext to look for other items.
In the scenario I described, where the suspect said "yeah, I'm high", the officer would have RAS that a crime was committed, and could move on to a Terry stop for his safety.
If during the T-stop, he noticed a thick baggy in the suspect's pocket, he could use that knowledge along with the statement by the suspect that he is high as probable cause to expand the scope of the search and "dig in his pockets." Of course the more sure way would be to get a warrant, but why bother a judge and take the time?
His investigation has enough PC to validate the search, especially since once he finds the baggie of pot he can write in his report that in the initial report he "detected a strong odor of cannabis on the suspect's person." True or not, it's subjective and unverifiable that he did not, so he is safe putting that in there.
If the baggie doesn't have pot in it but instead is full of something else, no harm no foul, let the guy go or keep fishing...I'm sure we can find something if we look hard enough. Say, is that your car over there?
No offense, but I know exactly how this game is played, I used to have a season pass.
What about this guy? Is he a real policeman or a social worker with a badge? Can we learn something from this guy?
An officer who has spent 17 years patrolling one of America's worst areas has found a way to keep the peace that focuses less on arrests, and more on helping those who have fallen on the most difficult of times.
Deon Joseph, or the Sheriff of Skidberry as he is known to many in the area, works on Skid Row, the Los Angeles neighborhood known for its overwhelmingly high homeless population, with some 2,000 people sleeping on the streets every night, and where drugs are drug addicts are all around.
He is less concerned with arrests however than with keeping the order by helping those in the community, preferring to do his rounds on foot and not in his squad car as he checks on the homeless and drug addicts, referring to them all as 'sir' or 'ma'am' to show them the respect they do not get anywhere else, and passes out hygiene kits to make sure they are staying clean. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...nse-not-focusing-arrests-never-fired-gun.html
It is interesting how the UK press comes here and looks for the best in America to report on, while our own press looks for the worst.
Our press only wants the shock value news. If your not appalled by it, they don't run it.
The problem I have is that they won't cull their own nuts.
Sir, that may have worked in the 90s, but you'd at minimum today have the evidence suppressed and if it can be shown you knowingly used this mentality, you would be facing a tort claim.
As for the RAS as you call it, you again, cannot go fishing in his pockets. He's either under arrest or not. Your facts indicate your creating a defacto arrest. Terry is not, I repeat, is not your right to go fishing. You said a thiick baggy? Well, you just sunk your entire "case" if you will. Is a Baggie a weapon permissible to search for under Terry?
I'm sorry sir, but you are coloring so far outside the lines in today's court cases with what you think is allowable, you probably end up getting fired by your agency if you were still an LEO. And I mean that seriously. With what you have discribed, a motion to suppress would have to be granted.
Your quoted post below is not just FUD, it's outright Alex Jones material.
Your opinions are appreciated and I always love a great civilized debate such as this. It's a good memory jog and spurs critical thinking for sure.
No disrespect intended, but if you were a cop, you should have know what a Terry Stop is. Of course, it's been a few years, though. The search is for weapons. And you must have articulable facts to support the search for weapons, e.g., observed, bulges, reaching, etc.
LEOs cannot just go dig in your pockets on fishing expedition, and the facts of Andrews post is that it was drug related. Thus, he could not have gone into his pockets to look for drugs. Absent any other facts relating to weapons, Andrews pockets are secure.
A precursory frisk for " officer safety" is currently disallowed with no supporting facts.
It is interesting how the UK press comes here and looks for the best in America to report on, while our own press looks for the worst.