“Your name was brought up.”

  • TranscendentalEmpire@lemmy.today
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    5 months ago

    don’t think you understand how a cop telling you “you are under arrest” works

    Again… It’s not something you have to leave your house for unless they have an arrest warrant.

    can read the links I sent, if you want general guidance. Cheers.

    The quote I used from those sources disproves your claim. Your sources don’t support your argument at all.

    • PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social
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      2 months ago

      I happened to run across a video which is highly pertinent to this situation.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IC2h2bSZJao

      That’s pretty much what you can expect if you try the “I’m inside I’m not opening the door” strategy. Like you can see from the end of the video, the cops didn’t really have any ability to charge them with anything as long as they exercised their shut the fuck up skills (which, to their credit, they did a great job with). But all it accomplished refusing to open the door was to make the situation a lot more violent before the conversation with the cops happened where they refused to say anything.

      I think, probably, the homeowners were correct that the situation wasn’t that big a deal in the first place. But, they made a pretty serious mistake by listening to your brand of TikTok law and getting their door destroyed and getting arrested as a result, instead of just walking outside and having the conversation pre-handcuffs.

      • TranscendentalEmpire@lemmy.today
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        2 months ago

        But all it accomplished refusing to open the door was to make the situation a lot more violent before the conversation with the cops happened where they refused to say anything.

        They had probable cause… A person inside the building was the person who made the report and the officers were able to see blood through the unobscured glass doors.

        This is nothing like what we were talking about.

        But, they made a pretty serious mistake by listening to your brand of TikTok law and getting their door destroyed and getting arrested as a result, instead of just walking outside and having the conversation pre-handcuffs.

        They made a mistake by having glass doors that give them no privacy. And it’s not ticktock law, it’s just the law.

        If you want to abandon your 4th amendment rights, go right ahead.

        Also… How long has this been living rent free in your head? This back and forth was done ages ago.

        • PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social
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          2 months ago

          There are a couple more I happened to run across, this one just seemed really on the nose about what generally will happen if you try to hide in your house. It reminded me of our conversation.

          In another of them, the girl had a warrant and tried to refuse to come out of her house so she wouldn’t have to stay in jail for the weekend. Long story short, she got arrested and more charges. That one, they didn’t have the ability to enter the house without a warrant, they just had the arrest warrant for her specifically, so they were waiting for a judge to sign off on a warrant but were able to talk her into coming out before the warrant came through.

          There was another where the guy was hiding in a closet inside the house. They didn’t have a warrant, but they did have probable cause to enter the place, so long story short he got arrested even with the hiding in the closet part.

          Your summary of how it works, way way above, was actually pretty accurate (warrant or emergency being the two main exceptions to the general rule that they can’t come in your house). The thing is that about 90% of the situations where they’re coming to the door and are planning to arrest you will fall into one or the other of those categories. You gain nothing in the “they just want to talk” situation, and you gain nothing in the “they want to arrest you” situation. These are just some examples of people who tried to solve the problem by not interacting physically with the cops, and then it not working to accomplish anything positive.

          (Again, this is only for local law enforcement, and only if they are generally aboveboard. For ICE or federal law enforcement, or if you’re not sure, I think not answering the door is probably smarter at this point.)

          • TranscendentalEmpire@lemmy.today
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            2 months ago

            Long story short, she got arrested and more charges.

            Like?

            they were waiting for a judge to sign off on a warrant but were able to talk her into coming out before the warrant came through.

            And how does this support your argument? She was talked out of the protection of her home.

            was hiding in a closet inside the house. They didn’t have a warrant, but they did have probable cause to enter the place, so long story short he got arrested even with the hiding in the closet part.

            Again… If it goes to court and the lawyers can defend the officers reasoning for probable cause then they throw out the case. If you volunteer yourself they don’t have to establish a legitimate probable cause.

            The thing is that about 90% of the situations where they’re coming to the door and are planning to arrest you will fall into one or the other of those categories.

            Not at all… They need to be able to provide evidence for their breach of your rights in court. Will it help you beat the ride, no. But it very well may help you beat the case, which is the important bit.

            • PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social
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              2 months ago

              Like?

              Resisting arrest, I think. “You’re under arrest, come out of the house” “No” is literally what it means to resist arrest (without violence). Coming out later doesn’t absolve you of it any more than slowing down absolves you for speeding earlier.

              And how does this support your argument? She was talked out of the protection of her home.

              Have you been checked for short term memory loss? It’s like you forgot the first part of my sentence by the time you got to the second part. Staying in the protection of her home would have just gotten her home busted up once they secured the warrant.

              IDK, dude. I was just trying to send you a video to help you understand, but you’re clearly not into it. I remember now why I stopped talking to you back before when we talked about this.

              • TranscendentalEmpire@lemmy.today
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                2 months ago

                Resisting arrest, I think. “You’re under arrest, come out of the house” “No” is literally what it means to resist arrest (without violence). Coming out later doesn’t absolve you of it any more than slowing down absolves you for speeding earlier.

                Police cannot lawfully order you out of your home without an arrest warrant or exigent circumstances (like seeing blood through the window). You can’t be charged with resisting arrest for failing to comply with an unlawful order. They can try, but it would be easily thrown out in court.

                Staying in the protection of her home would have just gotten her home busted up once they secured the warrant.

                If they got the proper warrant… Cops lie all the time.

                dude. I was just trying to send you a video to help you understand

                You have no idea what you’re talking about and are unable to provide a meaningful interpretation or legal advice based on what you see in a video.

                I remember now why I stopped talking to you back before when we talked about this.

                Yeah… Please continue to not talk to me.