Cops Keep Getting This Wrong | Can Cops Force You to ID?



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20 thoughts on “Cops Keep Getting This Wrong | Can Cops Force You to ID?”

  1. cops just don't get they don't know all the laws. nor do they interpret them correctly. this fallacy that they can ask for ID anytime they want needs to end. states that allow stop and identify for any reason need to have those laws overturned. i really don't understand how they are able to be passed in the first place.

  2. Lie lie lie all they do is lie they have to have reasonable articulable suspicion that he's committed a crime before he has to ID. They are violating his Fourth Amendment rights. he has no obligation to help the police with their investigation so they can't charge him with hindering more lies.

  3. Still wish I could find a lawyer willing to fight for Constitutional Rights here in South Dakota. A Karen-city Clerk calls a false report to 911 on me; then cop falsely detains me after finding out crime claim was false … then hauls me to jail to save his face in front of his drinking buddies! Charges later were dropped after almost a month! Nothing has happened to city clerk! She still has job! Still can make false calls to police against anyone she dislikes even if they are on the meeting’s agenda as a speaker, like I was! Yet no lawyers will help because I am a disabled old woman they can’t get instant cash from! Even the law firm I had to pay out of pocket kept holding my retainer AFTER the charges were dropped! I had to make a seen to get my money back so I could pay for my medications ; which was because I’d used the funds to pay for legal defense! The legal system is just as corrupt here in South Dakota as the cops across this country!

  4. Florida has a stop and frisk law Florida Statute 901.151.
    2 – Whenever any law enforcement officer of this state encounters any person under circumstances which reasonably indicate that such person has committed, is committing, or is about to commit a violation of the criminal laws of this state or the criminal ordinances of any municipality or county, the officer may temporarily detain such person for the purpose of ascertaining the identity of the person temporarily detained and the circumstances surrounding the person’s presence abroad which led the officer to believe that the person had committed, was committing, or was about to commit a criminal offense.

    How is this constitutional?

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