Ryanh1801
Well-Known Member
Dude said:And that "former" cop needs his ass kicked in a bad way. That cop who didn't take that guy in cannot be held responsible for that. That is ridiculous.
Departmental policy not much you can do about it.
Dude said:And that "former" cop needs his ass kicked in a bad way. That cop who didn't take that guy in cannot be held responsible for that. That is ridiculous.
Dude said:And that "former" cop needs his ass kicked in a bad way. That cop who didn't take that guy in cannot be held responsible for that. That is ridiculous.
Ó Flannagáin said:Now I'm all fired up about how much I hate cops... I'm gonna watch some father ted and calm down.
No offense to you at all, Ryan, I total understand your bias. I had a friend in high school who drove drunk and killed an old man, I feel he deserved everything he got for that ****. My dad was hit by a drunk driver and it scalped his head, he was in the hospital for a week. But, the fact is, these people were morons, they ere completely irresponsible and WAY beyond .08. When I'm being responsible and leaving the friend's house after only 2 or 3 beers, or when I decide I"m too drunk to drive and I"m gonna sleep it off in my car, I should be praised if anything. F' those power hungry, egotistical cops.
Whiskey® said:Actually yes the Officer would be held responsible. Legally and civilly. As far as the getting a DUI in a parked car, DUI/DWI apply everywhere, you could be doing donuts in your front lawn with a BAC of .08 and get arrested for DUI.
I've also never seen a DUI case get thrown because the drunk was sleeping his car. It probably happens, but it will depend on the judge and how well the Officer dotted his I's and crossed his T's.
mrkristofo said:On the note of public intoxication, I concur that it is ridiculous, but there is a reason for it other than giving a reason for cops to hassle drunks.
The reasoning is that the law enforcement agencies are established to serve and protect, and that for an officer to acknowledge you're drunk and potentially dangerous to (not only others) yourself, but not take any action, falls into the realm of negligence on the officer's part. It's that liability thing again. I know, it sounds absurd, but we went over it in a state and local government course. There's a case behind it somewhere that maybe one of the legal types can help me out with.
But relevant to public intoxication, you should all know that if you are cited three times for public urination you are a registered sex offender. Just in case anyone's on the verge and has the urge....
Dude said:Oh come on. So I could be dead sober, sleeping in my car, but suicidal. The officer could be held accountable because he was negligent in not taking me in because I was a hazard to hurt myself? BS.
Dude said:Oh come on. So I could be dead sober, sleeping in my car, but suicidal. The officer could be held accountable because he was negligent in not taking me in because I was a hazard to hurt myself? BS.
Ryanh1801 said:Just one of those things I guess.
Whiskey® said:If the Officer found you sleeping in your care, dead sober, wakes you up to check on you and you spontaneously tell him "I was sleeping in my car because I'm going to kill myself" and the Officer does nothing about it and you go on kill yourself, you can bet your ass he would be held responsible.
Whiskey® said:If the Officer found you sleeping in your care, dead sober, wakes you up to check on you and you spontaneously tell him "I was sleeping in my car because I'm going to kill myself" and the Officer does nothing about it and you go on kill yourself, you can bet your ass he would be held responsible.
Evan! said:But me sleeping in my car drunk without the keys is no more a forewarning that I'm gonna go kill someone than if I happened to have a hunting knife in the glove compartment.
We're seriously starting to tread on the realm of Pre-Crime here. Where do we draw the line? And yeah, this also starts to shift this debate over into the realm of civil liability law, which is somewhere I'm just not prepared to venture at this point in the night. But the point is, if you get arrested for DUI, etc., and have to pay thousands upon thousands of dollars just so some doofus police officer can cover his ass from a liability suit, the something is seriously f*cking wrong with our system.
Ryanh1801 said:Not exactly were I was going with that Evan. But point taken. IMHO its the lawyers in this country that are ruining things, more so than the government.
Evan! said:But, see, that's just the problem with so many f*cked up things in our country. It doesn't affect their daily lives, so they shrug it off as "just one of those things I guess". Man, sh*t, I know you're biased and all, but what if that dude who hit you was eating a sandwich instead of blowing a 0.09? Would you be all "let's throw people in prison for eating sandwiches"? Somehow I doubt it...
No offense, because I know some things really hit close to home, but...that kind of passive, "it's just one of those things" attitude is why our government gets away with as much liberty-squashing bullsh*t as it does. No, dammit, it's not "just one of those things". It's "yet another attack on our goddamned personal freedom, all in the name of some sort of amorphous public safety". We're treated like children...grown adults, treated like children, even if we do the right thing and sleep it off in our car. And I don't know about the rest of you, but every day, I feel like I'm treated this way more and more by our government. And every time someone shrugs and says "ehhh, what're ya gonna do?", an Alberto Gonzales Angel gets his wings.![]()
We're the frogs in the slowly boiling pot of water, guys. Sure, if the government came straight out and removed all your freedoms at once, we'd all flip out and they'd get put in their place. But by slowly chipping away, they're able to get one guy to shrug his shoulders at crap and say "it's just one of those things". No revolution, no pushback...and suddenly, no smoking in bars in Washington DC. The march to tyranny is always slow and incremental, so remember that next time you shrug some sort of tyranny off as "just one of those things".
anyway, I'm gonna get off MY soapbox now :fro:
Ryanh1801 said:If it makes any difference our teacher said in those cases the DA would normally not accept charges, so its not like you where out any money, just one night of your life in jail.
Evan! said:But regardless, the spectre is enough to scare someone into attempting to drive home (and risk arrest) or walk home (and risk arrest) or hang out at the bar for a little longer (and risk arrest). All of this has a chilling effect, which is sort of the point of the original article I linked to: it's the new, more insidious and covert type of prohibition. Instead of just outright banning booze, which the public would never agree to in this day and age, they just make it extremely difficult to drink anywhere.
Ryanh1801 said:Not exactly were I was going with that Evan. But point taken. IMHO its the lawyers in this country that are ruining things, more so than the government.
Ryanh1801 said:just one night of your life in jail.
pldoolittle said:Any the predominant occupation for judges, legislators, etc is?
It's not just the lawyers, it's all the judges, cops, lawyers, councilmen, etc. who manipulate our legal system to increase their power/money/etc.
mrkristofo said:Which could bring the burden right back around to falling on the people, the ignorant and impetuous who continue to vote for the corrupt because he's local to them, and he's a "good guy".
Evan! said:But, see, that's just the problem with so many f*cked up things in our country. It doesn't affect their daily lives, so they shrug it off as "just one of those things I guess". Man, sh*t, I know you're biased and all, but what if that dude who hit you was eating a sandwich instead of blowing a 0.09? Would you be all "let's throw people in prison for eating sandwiches"? Somehow I doubt it...
No offense, because I know some things really hit close to home, but...that kind of passive, "it's just one of those things" attitude is why our government gets away with as much liberty-squashing bullsh*t as it does. No, dammit, it's not "just one of those things". It's "yet another attack on our goddamned personal freedom, all in the name of some sort of amorphous public safety". We're treated like children...grown adults, treated like children, even if we do the right thing and sleep it off in our car. And I don't know about the rest of you, but every day, I feel like I'm treated this way more and more by our government. And every time someone shrugs and says "ehhh, what're ya gonna do?", an Alberto Gonzales Angel gets his wings.![]()
We're the frogs in the slowly boiling pot of water, guys. Sure, if the government came straight out and removed all your freedoms at once, we'd all flip out and they'd get put in their place. But by slowly chipping away, they're able to get one guy to shrug his shoulders at crap and say "it's just one of those things". No revolution, no pushback...and suddenly, no smoking in bars in Washington DC. The march to tyranny is always slow and incremental, so remember that next time you shrug some sort of tyranny off as "just one of those things".
anyway, I'm gonna get off MY soapbox now :fro:
Ize said:Nailed it.
To be honest I prefer to drink at home because I don't have to deal with people in general. I deal with people all day long, and when I get home, that's it. I want my family and that's all.
But more and more, somehow D.C. and the States are chipping away, and the simple sad fact is, we're letting it happen.
We've let that vocal minority play the guilt card on us so much, and most of all they have played it to the lawmakers in such a way that we're now left to deal with this BS.
I don't have a problem with an ascending scale regarding drinking and driving. I don't have a problem having a delegated smoking area. But that's not what we're getting. It's coming down to an all-or-nothing, here's the way it is, take it and like it mentality, dictated by a small (very small) few, and it's only going to get worse. And the Pols are buying into it! Sorry, my confidence in politicians achieving ANYTHING good for society as a whole ranks about ZERO. (I'm biased, I'm in Illinois and we have just about the MOST F-d up political system in the country right now. Abe is shatting in his hat...)
Long story short, I'm content to drink at home. (they've already screwed drinking outside your home unless you have a Chauffeur) It doesn't make me happy, but I do it. However, don't think it's going to get any better, because someone out there has a voice to the Gov't that thinks they know what's better for you than you do.
In the end, the only way to change it is to call your Pols and stay on 'em. Let them know what you think. Their phone numbers are in the book. It's just a phone call or email....
Ize