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  1. #11
    Iceman sniper7's Avatar
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    So its okay for them to do this stuff off camera and then the group of them lie further about the kid. What happens if they planted drugs in the car and arrest the kid? If they mentioned it on the tape he would be free and paid and they would be jobless. Without the video he is wrongly convicted his record tarnished and the rest of his life he will be questioned for something he didn't do.

    Sorry but a video camera now is a necessity. I'm considering putting a camera in my vehicles full time.
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  2. #12
    Machine Gunner ben4372's Avatar
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    Good for him. He was polite and law abiding. I wish more people knew the law. When one doesn't exercise rights, they disappear. If we were assholes about gun rights, I could buy a full auto from Sears.

  3. #13
    Witness Protection Reject rondog's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by J View Post
    So are you mad he had a camera to video tape it? Or are you mad he didn't immediately submit to search without due process, reasonable suspicion or probable cause?
    I'm not "mad" about anything. The punk was obviously out looking for this kind of confrontation, why else would he have a video camera set up and ready when he drove into the checkpoint? We've all been through DUI checkpoints - if you haven't been drinking and have nothing to hide, you roll down the window and say "howdy". A few seconds of chit-chat and you're on your way.

    You refuse to roll down your window and come back with all this "am I being detained? I know my rights!" bullshit and guess what? There's the "reasonable suspicion" and "probable cause" right there. Pull your ass over boy, we're gonna have a chat.

    I'm not anti-cop, not in the least. Far from it. But I AM anti-asshole! Regardless of which side of the fence they're from, an asshole is an asshole. And we don't need more assholes in this world. Self-righteous punks running around with video cameras trying to antagonize cops for no reason so that they can be internet heros on YouTube for "standing up for our rights" are assholes. That's my opinion. Everybody's got one. Just like assholes.

    And I didn't see anything from the cops that I would consider out of line. The kid wasn't screamed at, he wasn't beaten, he wasn't shot, the dog didn't bite him...he was merely removed from his car, asked some questions, and the car searched. I wouldn't expect anything less myself if I did the same shit he did.

    Now doing that to people who DIDN'T antagonize the cops, now that would be out of line. We've all seen videos of that before. But people like this punk are from the opposite end of the spectrum.
    Last edited by rondog; 07-06-2013 at 16:58.
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  4. #14
    Crusade Eating Porker
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    Quote Originally Posted by rondog View Post
    Contrary to the other thread and the discussion about LEO's who shoot first, I also have very little patience or regard for assholes like this kid who go out of their way to deliberately antagonize LEO's who are merely doing their job. There's far too many of these "YouTube heros" out trying to "assert their rights" by needlessly pissing off cops. This guy had a camera all setup and ready to go, and I bet he was tickled shitless to find himself a DUI checkpoint to throw himself into as a "victim".

    There was absolutely NO reason for this punk to refuse to roll his window down, and to then start with the "am I being detained? I know my Constitutional rights. I don't consent to a search. Etc. etc..." bullshit. That cop did nothing other than react to a suspicious driver, at a checkpoint LOOKING for suspicious drivers.

    Don't start none, won't be none.
    You are monumentally full of shit. The cops produced a fake "hit" by the dog, told him his rights didn't matter and violated multiple laws. They were way out of fucking line.

    Don't assume no rights, won't be no rights. Fuck that and fuck bowing to power hungry crooked cops.

  5. #15
    QUITTER Irving's Avatar
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    A DUI checkpoint is a "set-up" right off the bat. An unconstitutional one at that. The only reason they are allowed to do them is if announce them in the paper before hand if I remember correctly.
    "There are no finger prints under water."

  6. #16
    Zombie Slayer kidicarus13's Avatar
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    Law enforcement is so accustomed to receiving "compliance without question" that most of them do not know how to answer basic questions involving the 4th and 5th Amendment when they are asked. As the video demonstrates, often times the next step is to use deceit and coercion to obtain a result. For those of you who will say, "It's only a small percentage." I know better.
    Lessons cost money. Good ones cost lots. -Tony Beets

  7. #17
    Joey Trebbiani wannabe RonMexico's Avatar
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    http://www.motorists.org/dui/roadblock

    What To Do At A DUI Roadblock


    The following article appeared in Volume 2, Issue 4 of the NMA Newsletter.


    By William Pangman, a past president and founder of the Wisconsin Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.


    What is a motorist obliged to do when confronted with a police roadblock?


    The United States Supreme Court arrived at an answer to this question in Michigan Department of State Police v. Sitz, 110 S.Ct. 2481 (1990). In Sitz, a group of Michigan motorists challenged the constitutionality of a highway sobriety check-point utilized by the Michigan State Police. The only check-point operated in Michigan was in Saginaw County. The operation lasted for an hour and fifteen minutes and every vehicle passing through the designated location was stopped for approximately 25 seconds. When officers believed that the drivers stopped at the check-point might be under the influence of an intoxicant, those vehicles were asked to pull over to the side of the road and drivers were requested to perform field sobriety tests.


    Out of the 126 motorists which passed through the check-point, only three motorists were asked to pull over. These facts were apparently important to Supreme Court Chief Justice Rehnquist, who wrote the opinion for the majority. The Court determined that the Michigan check-point, under the facts and circumstances presented, did not create an overwhelming intrusion on individual's privacy under the Fourth Amendment.


    Rehnquist applied a three-point balancing test to determine whether sobriety check-points in general are reasonable under the Fourth Amendment. This test involved balancing the State's interest in preventing accidents caused by drunk drivers, the effectiveness of the sobriety check- points in achieving the goal, and the level of intrusion on an individual's constitutional right to privacy caused by the check-points.


    The Chief Justice reasoned that no one could seriously dispute the magnitude of the drunken driving problem or the State's interest in eradicating it. Moreover, Rehnquist found that a 25 second delay in travel was minimally intrusive on motorist's rights, especially considering the fact that traveling motorists could turn off the road when they saw the roadblock, or make U-turns to avoid passing through it. As to the effectiveness of the sobriety check-point, the court held that the procedure was effective, even though only 1 of the 126 drivers stopped was arrested.


    In the final analysis, it is now the law that from a narrow Fourth Amendment standpoint, nondiscriminatory sobriety check-points in general are not unreasonable. Bear in mind that other Fourth Amendment problems with sobriety check-points may exist when individual drivers passing through the check-point are asked to pull over.


    Police do not have the right, per se, to check driver's licenses or registrations when the stop is not initiated by a violation. However, where the police have a reasonable suspicion of illegal conduct, even though there is not actual violation of the law they may examine drivers' licenses or registration.


    In the Sitz case, officers were not allowed to make a driver pull over and show his/her license or check the driver's registration unless the officer noticed signs of intoxication. Moreover, a driver never has to consent to a police search of his or her person or vehicle, but, the police may make such a search even without the driver's consent when either: 1) they have probable cause to believe the vehicle contains contraband or the fruits or instrumentalities of a crime; 2) when the driver has been placed under arrest; or 3) they may make a visual inspection of the inside passenger compartment from the officer's position outside the vehicle, to observe illegal articles in plain view.


    As to the extent of motorists rights; when citizens are faced with roadblocks, they should be cooperative. If they do not roll down their window it seems that the officer's suspicion would be heightened and, at minimum, may give the officer grounds to require the driver to pull over to the side of the road.


    Upon initial contact with the roadblock, citizens may politely refuse to answer any of the officer's questions. The following is an example of an assertion of rights that can be reproduced and handed to an officer at a roadblock:


    Assertion of Rights:


    Officer, please understand:


    I refuse to talk to you until I consult with my attorney. I also refuse to consent to any search of these premises or any other premises under my control, or in which I have a possessory, proprietary, or privacy interest, including my car, my body, or effects. I hereby demand to immediately be allowed the reasonable opportunity to obtain the advice of my attorney by telephone.
    I desire to exercise all my rights guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of this State, to be free from your interference with my person or affairs.
    If you attempt to question me, I want my lawyer present. I refuse to participate in any line-up or to perform any physical acts, or to speak or display my person or property at your direction, without first conferring with my lawyer.
    If I am under arrest, I wish to invoke and exercise my Miranda rights. If you ignore my exercise of these rights and attempt to procure a waiver, I want to confer with my lawyer prior to any conversations with you.
    If I am to be taken into custody, removed from my present location, or separated from my property, I request a reasonable opportunity to make arrangements to secure my own property. I do not consent to any impoundment or inventory of my property. I do, hereby, waive any claim of liability for loss, theft, or damage against you, your superiors or any other authority, and agree to hold all harmless therefrom, if I am afforded the reasonable opportunity to arrange for the safekeeping of my own property. If this reasonable opportunity is denied or is unavailable, I demand that only such intrusion occur as is minimally necessary to secure such property, hereby waiving any claim of liability for your failure to scrutinize the property or its contents prior to it being secured.
    If I am not under arrest, I want to leave. If I am free to leave, please tell me immediately so that I may go about my business.
    We advise our clients to hand this card to the officer along with their license when stopped or contacted by police. However, drivers need not even present their license during the initial contact with the officer in a roadblock situation.


    Drivers may also refuse to perform field sobriety tests. This does not prevent the officer from arresting the driver. However, the arresting officer will have substantially fewer factors to support the arrest when it is challenged later in court.


    Generally, by the time the officer has requested a driver to perform these roadside agility tests, the officer already believes the driver is intoxicated. Citizens should think long and hard before deciding whether or not to provide the officer with additional "evidence" of intoxication by performing the field sobriety tests.


    If the motorist does not wish to comply, the police, in absence of an articulable reason to believe a crime has been or is being committed, must allow the driver to proceed. In the face of police inquiries based on less than probable cause, the citizen has the right to remain silent and move on without fear of retaliation in the form of further detention. The "right not to respond" permits motorists to refrain from engaging in alphabet recitations or other "command performances" of verbal and physical exercises.


    The Supreme Court of Oregon observed:


    "I know of no law that obliges a driver to answer an officer's questions or perform 'field tests' directed at determining whether the driver has committed the crime of driving under the influence of intoxicants. Reluctance to inform the detained driver that such cooperation is voluntary can only demonstrate the state's willingness to take advantage of those of its citizens who are ignorant of their rights though it must respect the rights of those who know them."


    Merely recognizing that a motorist is not obliged to cooperate with a police investigation, however, grants the citizen little security given the setting within which the questioning occurs. Understandably, the average motorist will hesitate to invoke this "right not to respond" to police questions and "requests" to perform so-called coordination tests. A late-night confrontation with an armed police officer will normally induce cooperation from all but the boldest citizens whose main concern is to appease the officer and avoid "trouble."


    Indeed, the consequences of non-cooperation are undoubtedly understood to be further coercive detention. While this is, unfortunately, not unlikely to occur, it is, nevertheless, often advisable that the motorist insist on invoking his or her rights.

  8. #18
    Varmiteer
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    [QUOTE=rondog;1218591 We've all been through DUI checkpoints - [/QUOTE]

    i have never been through a DUI checkpoint. I have never even seen one.

  9. #19
    OtterbatHellcat
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    I've never been through one either HBAR.

  10. #20
    Witness Protection Reject rondog's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Cylinder Head View Post
    You are monumentally full of shit. The cops produced a fake "hit" by the dog, told him his rights didn't matter and violated multiple laws. They were way out of fucking line.

    Don't assume no rights, won't be no rights. Fuck that and fuck bowing to power hungry crooked cops.

    And if the kid had rolled his window down and talked to the cop like a man, none of this would have happened at all. And he wouldn't have gotten his video for YouTube. No rights violations, no bowing to anybody. "Fake hit by the dog", please. Kid was acting suspicious, that's all the PC they needed.
    There's a lot more of us ugly mf'ers out here than there are of you pretty people!

    - Frank Zappa

    Scrotum Diem - bag the day!

    It's all shits and giggles until someone giggles and shits.....

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