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Originally posted by dgtempe
Incredible.
They keep taking and taking and we just give. This nation is asleep. Another Orwellian attempt at our rights.
Originally posted by dgtempe
This nation is asleep. Another Orwellian attempt at our rights.
Now I understand that the point is to discourage drinking and driving. I whole heartedly support punishing those that do.
Originally posted by Eden
Ex: What if your neighbor does not like you?
Originally posted by Eden They call the police and say, "Hey I saw this person driving while intoxicated" What happens next? What if you were having a beer at home and relaxing? A cop comes in with "probable cause" due to the call they received, what happens next? How would you be able to defend yourself and prove that you were not driving while drinking that beer?
Originally posted by Harte
Ex: What if your neighbor does not like you?
Sounds like good reason to make friends with your neighbor.
Really, what would happen without this law if your neighbor lied on you like that?
Suspection is a broad term. Do you not agree that there has no been distinction made?
Police may enter Californians' homes without warrants to arrest those suspected of driving under the influence
Didn't you read the posted article? Perhaps you don't understand what "exigent circumstances" means?
Originally posted by Eden
If the police did show up, they would not have a warrant to search my home, and I would not have to let them in. That is not the case with this new law. Nowhere in the article does it state that the officer must observe the actions for his/herself.
Originally posted by EdenTo quoteSuspection is a broad term. Do you not agree that there has no been distinction made?
Police may enter Californians' homes without warrants to arrest those suspected of driving under the influence
Under the Fourth Amendment, authorities are prohibited from entering a home and making an arrest without a warrant unless so-called "exigent" circumstances are present. Those include "hot pursuit" of a fleeing felon, imminent destruction of evidence and the risk of danger to the police or other persons inside or outside of a house, among others.
In this case, Justice Marvin Baxter wrote that the loss of evidence at issue was obtaining a measurement of the suspect's blood-alcohol level. Baxter added that a contrary ruling would allow "the corruption of evidence that occurs when the suspect takes advantage of any delay to ingest more alcohol -- or to claim to have done so -- or when the suspect evades police capture until he or she is no longer intoxicated."
Originally posted by EdenI understand the article and the word meaning just fine. There is entirely no distinction made as to who the accuser can be, police or someone else. That's all this law needs is a clarification that it be a police officer who must observe the dui.
Originally posted by EdenOtherwise this leaves a very wide open door for anyone to become the accuser. It is up to the officers discretion as to whether they purse this as a "exigent circumstance"(emergency) or not.