First off, I'm not advocating shooting a cop for anything remotely close to what we are discussing here.AndyC wrote:How can you say that:Katygunnut wrote:I have a hard time believing that it could be legal to arrest someone when there is no suspicion that they may have committed a crime, but the officer just wrongly believes that the lawful behavior they are engaged in is in fact illegal.
1. "there is no suspicion that they may have committed a crime"
And then in the same breath say:
2. "the officer just wrongly believes that the lawful behavior they are engaged in is in fact illegal"
So there's no suspicion of a crime on 1 hand - but it's illegal behavior on the other???
You can't have it both ways - and my point is that the officer did believe that it was illegal behavior, hence the arrest. It doesn't mean that the arrest was correct - far from it - but it doesn't make it an illegal or unlawful arrest.
You're assuming that the officer knew that the behavior was legal - but decided to arrest them anyway. You know it's legal to OC there, I know it's legal - but apparently the cop didn't, or maybe he even did. Welcome to the real world - it happens, as we've seen many times by harassment of OC folks. Why do you think I posted the story in the first place?Katygunnut wrote:It is indeed a scary world we live in if the police can in fact "legally" arrest someone because they don't like that person's behavior, even though the behavior in question is clearly legal.
If I was arrested for OC where it was legal, I would darned right be upset - and if it was a case where the officer just plain didn't know that it's legal, I would be hollering at his captain to get the ignorant little twerp retrained. However - if I somehow found out that he did know that it was legal and he decided to deprive me of my rights "under color of law", that's a felony and you can be darned sure that it would be taken a heck of a lot further than that.
And once again - you cannot shoot a cop and claim self-defence just because you thought his arresting you was wrong - but feel free to try it and we'll talk again in 50 years.
Secondly, I think you are placing way more importance than I would on whether these cops were in fact ignorant of this law. They should be held to a much higher standard in this area than an average person (since LEO's are after all charged with actually enforcing the law). I understand your distinction between a LEO knowingly arresting people for something that they know for a fact is not illegal versus a genuine ignorance of whether something is unlawful.
I may have some sympathy for a LEO that is not up with all of the nuances related to the laws on breeding livestock or something similar. However, knowing when and where a person can legally carry a weapon that is capable of causing death is a pretty important thing for our LEO's to understand. If we have LEO's that are genuinely ignorant on something of this magnitude, then they really don't need to keep their responsibility to arrest people in the first place.
Back to the case at hand, it sounds like this police chief, at a minimum, is not ignorant, and that he did in fact knowingly direct his officers to act in a manner that he knew to be contrary to the law. I would advocate that the appropriate actions should be taken against this individual for his willful infringement on the civil rights of the subjects which he has sworn to serve and protect. However, I would not advocate that the good people of Wisconsin start opening fire on LEO's who falsely arrest them for OC (or any other made up crimes for that matter).