View Full Version : Modern Roadrobbery
VipertheSniper
08-21-13, 11:35 AM
Found this at another forum, it's a pretty long article and I've not yet finished reading, but WTF?
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2013/08/12/130812fa_fact_stillman
AVGWarhawk
08-21-13, 12:36 PM
In most cases cited there is criminal activity of some sort. The old antiquated law seems to be abused to some degree. There has been a few old TV programs that dealt with wayward police taking cash for speeding tickets. If not paid the speeder spends a night in jail or loses his car. These old programs on TV have been around since the inception of TV. The law of civil seizure longer than TV.
VipertheSniper
08-21-13, 12:53 PM
I can get my head around the purpose of civil seizure, but the law pertaining to this needs some serious reform, if it can be abused in such a way, that it's "give us all the money you have on you, or we're gonna charge you with something".
AVGWarhawk
08-21-13, 01:10 PM
I can get my head around the purpose of civil seizure, but the law pertaining to this needs some serious reform, if it can be abused in such a way, that it's "give us all the money you have on you, or we're gonna charge you with something".
That is how it was working in the sleepy town of TX cited several times. It turned into a free for all. Sadly, police mooching and corruption has gone on for decades. When backed by a fuzzy law called civil seizure it is hard to prove otherwise.
AVGWarhawk
08-21-13, 01:41 PM
Barry Washington is a real piece of work. He honestly believes everything he had done was correct. Good Lord! Washington speculated on every stop! The car was red. Drug dealers are known to drive red cars. :doh:
Very interesting read. Thanks for posting!
Aktungbby
08-21-13, 01:45 PM
That is how it was working in the sleepy town of TX cited several times. It turned into a free for all. Sadly, police mooching and corruption has gone on for decades. When backed by a fuzzy law called civil seizure it is hard to prove otherwise.
It also doesn't help to have any thing in your bank account(s) when walking into the IRS(MT beforehand) as they can freeze and/or attach your assets under an assumed name! This all essentially violates the bill of attainder portion of the constitution. ( No cap. 'C' for that piece o' Schiessen!) When having a car taken, kick out the windshield with your feet while exiting, remove gas cap and toss keys to sewer if possible: they can't get mad as its not officially in their possession at that point and they can't sell it until repairs are made-especially with todays' coded keys. A bag (packets) of sugar for gas pipe doesn't hurt either. Their convenience is not your problem. Been there, done this! Do not however, throw a flare in the trunk as that is felony arson and a serious offense. Most are not aware that the request to search can be denied without probable cause( they rely on fear and ignorance) and a second agency or a watch commander may be summoned-too many witnesses. A Bay area city towing regime used to play these games right up to the corrupt hearing officers. I let em' keep the Tercel (200+Kmiles) after recovering my possessions. (They don't like that) and the practice was eventually halted and the tow contractor removed. I've paid illicit fines at scale houses, Chicago, Louisiana, Texas, Tennessee, Ohio, Montana and New Mexico port of entry, where my 18 wheeler doubles rig fell victim to a stretchy tape measure. The judge barely spoke English,("Ole") I paid my $50.00 (yup, back in the day) and drove my rig one trailer at a time 20 miles each way to Albuquerque. My 6" length problem was miraculously cured when I returned to CA! My fifth wheel and my connector gear were not adjustable (and CA is brutal too.) Upside: you learn the facts of life-"that which is not feeding is being fed upon!". Never had problems in the graft capital of AmeriKa though, THE BIG APPLE (NYC), I'm a Brooklyn boy and they love fresh strawberries-do not impede!
AVGWarhawk
08-21-13, 01:52 PM
Never fool with the IRS. Period. :yep: They conduct a seizure of a different nature.
Jimbuna
08-21-13, 02:13 PM
Never fool with the IRS. Period. :yep: They conduct a seizure of a different nature.
Same in the UK with HMRC...almost unlimited powers.
WernherVonTrapp
08-21-13, 02:24 PM
You think that's bad? Look up the U.S. Eminent Domain (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eminent_domain) law.:o
AVGWarhawk
08-21-13, 02:33 PM
You think that's bad? Look up the U.S. Eminent Domain (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eminent_domain) law.:o
Another obscure fuzzy law open to any interpretation. :yep:
Wolferz
08-21-13, 02:34 PM
No officer, I do NOT consent to searches of my person or my property without a warrant. An officer saying that he smells weed, is not probable cause, nor is my destination and point of origin. The police state is rife with abuse these days, on a par with the corrupt Mexican law dogs. Being robbed under threat of jail isn't much different than being robbed at gunpoint. The officer has a gun and should be charged with armed robbery.
To protect and to serve? Seems to be a joke in Tenaha Texas. More like serve themselves. The USAG should be sending some federal marshals down there to catch these jokers in the act. If it were me, I'd be filing a complaint. Technically, this isn't much different from a speed trap where they haul you in to face a corrupt local judge within minutes of arresting you for going 5 MPH over the limit.
I think I'll just stay home from now on.:-?
WernherVonTrapp
08-21-13, 02:38 PM
An officer saying that he smells weed, is not probable cause,..
It is if the officer proves to the satisfaction of the court that he can recognize the odor of Marijuana. In NJ police academies, they actually burn real marijuana during training for this very purpose. Don't know about other states, but I would think the same.
Aktungbby
08-21-13, 02:52 PM
Good point; falls under " what is apparent to your senses" As I lived in a college dorm in the 60/70's ( MN green-essentially hemp) and occasionally actually guard a "medical sinsemilla" facility (at least until the Feds close it down) here in enlightened, sunny CA, my olfactory judgement is seldom contested by defense council. Like Wyatt Earp, the best work both sides of the issue for that encompassing perspective. Nothing you learn is completely useless over time...:arrgh!:
Aktungbby
08-21-13, 02:57 PM
Same in the UK with HMRC...almost unlimited powers.
The Bobbies are'nt too cordial either and they don't ride two by two...:arrgh!:
Wolferz
08-21-13, 03:21 PM
Gee officer, if you smell weed, maybe you shouldn't smoke it while on duty.:-?:haha:
IIRC, the Texas officer used the same shtick in that roadside strip search not long ago. Not only are the bad cops flim flamming folks, they're sexually molesting them too and using bogus probable cause to do it.
America turning into a police state?
I think we're there already.
AVGWarhawk
08-21-13, 03:31 PM
If I'm not mistaken a NJ cop was asking for oral sex in lieu of issuing a speeding ticket. Strangely, he was getting them. :o
Aktungbby
08-21-13, 03:39 PM
Guys or GalS or both?:arrgh!:
AVGWarhawk
08-21-13, 03:51 PM
Guys or GalS or both?:arrgh!:
:hmmm:
WernherVonTrapp
08-21-13, 04:58 PM
Strangely, he was getting them. :o
Yes indeed, that is strange, but I highly doubt it's resrticted to NJ.
I couldn't begin to tell you all the stories of the cheating spouses I came across in cars at night, tucked away in the darkest corners of the parking lots I would patrol.:03:
Aktungbby
08-21-13, 05:21 PM
Yes indeed, that is strange, but I highly doubt it's resrticted to NJ.
I couldn't begin to tell you all the stories of the cheating spouses I came across in cars at night, tucked away in the darkest corners of the parking lots I would patrol.:03:
coppus interuptus?:arrgh!:
WernherVonTrapp
08-21-13, 05:23 PM
coppus interuptus?:arrgh!:
President Clinton-interruptus.:haha:
AVGWarhawk
08-21-13, 05:51 PM
Yes indeed, that is strange, but I highly doubt it's resrticted to NJ.
This was just one I read about on the news a few years back. No doubt this type of activity happens elsewhere.
WernherVonTrapp
08-21-13, 06:12 PM
No doubt this type of activity happens elsewhere.
Indeed. From my own personal observations (forget all the News stories), sexual improprieties are rampant in our society. The hardest part was harboring the fact that I knew some of these people, yet I was legally obligated to maintain their confidentiality.
Jimbuna
08-22-13, 04:36 AM
Indeed. From my own personal observations (forget all the News stories), sexual improprieties are rampant in our society. The hardest part was harboring the fact that I knew some of these people, yet I was legally obligated to maintain their confidentiality.
Agreed, I always found that a tough call to make but that was probably aided and abetted by a fair amount of envy :)
Aktungbby
08-22-13, 10:55 AM
Indeed. From my own personal observations (forget all the News stories), sexual improprieties are rampant in our society. The hardest part was harboring the fact that I knew some of these people, yet I was legally obligated to maintain their confidentiality.
Actually all sex is an impropriety...if yer doin' it right-with apologies to Woody Allen of Course!:arrgh!:
WernherVonTrapp
08-22-13, 11:17 AM
Agreed, I always found that a tough call to make but that was probably aided and abetted by a fair amount of envy :)
Wish I could reconcile it like that. I did try to joke about it like some of the other guys, but eventually/inevitably, I would end up on some of the calls where the other spouse found out. It would become a Domestic Violence incident followed by separation, restraining orders, divorce, and all with their children caught in the middle.:nope:
Jimbuna
08-22-13, 03:47 PM
Wish I could reconcile it like that. I did try to joke about it like some of the other guys, but eventually/inevitably, I would end up on some of the calls where the other spouse found out. It would become a Domestic Violence incident followed by separation, restraining orders, divorce, and all with their children caught in the middle.:nope:
Can't say it happened over here in my patrol area...possibly more out of luck than design though.
WernherVonTrapp
08-22-13, 06:51 PM
Can't say it happened over here in my patrol area...possibly more out of luck than design though.If you were Metro, you probably had a much larger patrol area than I did.:yep: Mine was about 3.3 square miles packed with 10,000 residents.
Aktungbby
08-22-13, 07:30 PM
Try doing two of the most notorious FED housing complexes-Crack palaces all-and a third in the murder capitol of the country otherwise known as the iron triangle...fornication was the least of our problems. Shots heard every night, not including New years where its only celebratory exuberance! You know it's close when you hear the shot AND the brass hitting the pavement ...full auto.:arrgh!:
Jimbuna
08-23-13, 07:31 AM
If you were Metro, you probably had a much larger patrol area than I did.:yep: Mine was about 3.3 square miles packed with 10,000 residents.
Rgr that...Newcastle has a population of 190,000 in 43 square miles (both approximations).
WernherVonTrapp
08-26-13, 06:06 PM
Try doing two of the most notorious FED housing complexes-Crack palaces all-and a third in the murder capitol of the country otherwise known as the iron triangle...fornication was the least of our problems. Shots heard every night, not including New years where its only celebratory exuberance! You know it's close when you hear the shot AND the brass hitting the pavement ...full auto.:arrgh!:
(Sorry I missed your post.)
That sounds like you're describing Paterson, NJ.:03:
I didn't know you are/were 5-0.
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