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#14
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11-29-2014, 05:58 PM
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Re: Denver Cops Beat Junkie, Attempt to Destroy Video Evidence
Absolutely not an illegal search or seizure...that's perhaps the only thing they got completely correct. How many times must I explain this? Learn the law before you start spouting off about it.
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#15
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11-29-2014, 09:27 PM
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Re: Denver Cops Beat Junkie, Attempt to Destroy Video Evidence
You even said it yourself. They took his phone and deleted the video. What gives them the right to go and take his phone and go through his shit. He's in the wrong. I can film anything I want, no cops going to take my phone away. That's breaking the law.
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#16
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11-29-2014, 11:27 PM
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Re: Denver Cops Beat Junkie, Attempt to Destroy Video Evidence
These pigs used excessive force and yes it was an illegal search and seizure. They tried to illegally obtain and destroy video evidence. These pigs at the very least should lose their jobs and serve jail time, period.
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#18
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11-30-2014, 12:07 AM
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Re: Denver Cops Beat Junkie, Attempt to Destroy Video Evidence
Oh...ok you're talking about the cell phone issue. I thought you were talking about the initial contact and drug issue. I'm sorry...see I look at these cases in very separate parts. So I'll look at the initial reason for the contact, then the initial contact, then the reasons for other officers, then the first use of force issue, etc. Since I'd already determined the reasons for the initial contact was righteous and the initial search was righteous...I wasn't getting it. But, yeah, you're correct about the illegal search and seizure...sort of...nothing involving lawyers will be easy. You are correct, as long as you're clearly not interfering or being an overt dickhead/smartass, filming the police doing their job is completely legal (about 98% of the time). Filming police activity in certain instances involving the Feds (national security issues) or at certain specific locations (national security locations) can result in your camera being seized and you being detained and even arrested so be careful who and where you're filming. The police have no right to not being filmed with very specific exclusions. As for what they did to the semi-retarded witness being called an illegal search and seizure...that's more of a civil issue not so much a criminal matter. Of course he's going to have to prove a loss of some kind...and since the video wasn't really lost and his recording device wasn't damaged he's got no property losses. He wasn't illegally detained for any significant amount of time so I'm not sure the copper's actions are going to lead to much in the way of a law suit. He'll do far more damage as a witness in the Internal Affairs investigation. He might get lucky and get a minor civil settlement out of court just to go away. Who knows? |
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#19
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11-30-2014, 12:13 AM
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Re: Denver Cops Beat Junkie, Attempt to Destroy Video Evidence
What did I just say? You got the charges wrong...it's going to be intentional destruction of evidence that's going to get them...not anything having to do with an illegal search and seizure. They did do both, but it's a civil issue not a criminal issue. And they never destroyed anything...the damn video went to the cloud and was retrieved...that's what we watched. They'll get fired and both the cops and the department will get sued, but I really doubt they'll be criminally prosecuted.
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#20
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11-30-2014, 03:04 AM
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Re: Denver Cops Beat Junkie, Attempt to Destroy Video Evidence
If you accept this type of behavior as being the norm then how are you any different from the pigs in the video? Then you wonder why the public is turning on cops. |