Why is it OK for you to assume the officer had RS when you don't know the RS but not OK for others to assume the officer did not have RS?EEllis wrote:How is it appeasement to say you can't judge the RS without knowing the RS?
Are you?EEllis wrote:You don't see anything on the video but you are not a cop with years of experience
Do you? If you don't, why do you assume he had RS?EEllis wrote:and you also don't know if there are any other circumstances or evidence that also played a part in the officers RS.
Do decisions in civil cases impact criminal cases? Are you aware that cases decided in one jurisdiction do not apply to other jurisdictions until a similar case is tried in the alternate district?EEllis wrote:There is also a line between what you might think it should be, and I'm talking about all laws here, and what the courts say the law is. Several times it has been said that mere possession of a gun if legal to do so doesn't give RS but that doesn't always hold true. There was just a decision in Fed court about a civil case in Georgia that say oc of a handgun does give automatic RS.
Would that include you? Because a decision in a federal court in Georgia does not apply to Texas until a similar case is decided the same way in a Texas court.EEllis wrote:That just came out this year. Seeing that an officer could make a stop in good faith with just a gun for RS. Now whatever I personally believe and how I would want police to act you should judge it based on the actual law not what random individuals believe should hold true.
Despite multiple threads about questionable police behavior you have consistently held in each case that the police did nothing wrong. (If I'm wrong about that, please post a link to the thread where you argued that the police did something wrong.) You have argued that you have been right and everyone else is resorting to ad hominem because they don't have a good argument to refute yours. (Which, BTW, makes you guilty of committing ad hominem. Your argument sucks is not a form of argumentation.)
While you will grudgingly grant that there might have been some little thing that an officer did wrong, you consistently insist that we citizens, who are supposed to be free men, should simply comply with the police officers' demands without complaint or protest.The issue some seem to have is I demand people make a case based on facts and logic. Then of course when they can't name calling ensues.
The police are not always right. Yet, according to you, that doesn't matter. We should still comply. I suspect our founding fathers might have some disagreement with your position, but I doubt that would dissuade you. You apparently would argue that they should have paid the tax, not dumped the tea into the harbor and followed proper protocol and channels to make their protest of the tax known to the king.
You argued earlier in this thread that Grisham's mere speech constituted interference with the officer,
State law expressly exempts speech: "(d) It is a defense to prosecution under this section that the interruption, disruption, impediment, or interference alleged consisted of speech only." (Texas Penal Code 38.15) So nothing Grisham said can be used to charge him with interference.Yelling "Shut up I'm talking to your Frigging Sargent right now!" doesn't fly and on a legitimate stop it shouldn't.
Watch the video. He wasn't cuffed until after he handed the camera to his son, which the officer clearly allowed him to do. The officer never asked him to put his hands behind his back until after he handed the camera to his son.When a cop says put your hands behind your back you don't get to tell him no wait until I am ready. and resist him moving your arms.
The officer allowed him to give the camera to his son, so he apparently disagrees with your assessment. Once the son had the camera, Grisham put his hands behind his back and was cuffed.You don't get to wait until your kid gets the picture framed right before you put your hands behind your back.
TPC 38.15 states "(a) A person commits an offense if the person with criminal negligence interrupts, disrupts, impedes, or otherwise interferes with:"
TPC 6.03 defines criminal negligence: "(d) A person acts with criminal negligence, or is criminally negligent, with respect to circumstances surrounding his conduct or the result of his conduct when he ought to be aware of a substantial and unjustifiable risk that the circumstances exist or the result will occur. The risk must be of such a nature and degree that the failure to perceive it constitutes a gross deviation from the standard of care that an ordinary person would exercise under all the circumstances as viewed from the actor's standpoint."
Please explain how Grisham's behavior rose to the level of criminal negligence under the law. You cannot use his speech, only his behavior.