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Originally posted by Benevolent Heretic
Boston's Door-to-Door Searches Weren't Illegal, Even Though They Looked Bad
There were two components to last week's shelter-in-place request in Watertown, Massachusetts. The first was a request that people not to leave home. The second was a door-to-door search by heavily armed law enforcement officials. Those are two very different things, with different implications. But neither was illegal.
...
The ACLU agreed. In a phone interview Monday, Carol Rose, executive director of the ACLU of Massachusetts, told The Atlantic Wire that her organization was in contact with attorneys for the city, state, and the Department of Homeland Security on Friday.
...
Under the Fourth Amendment, homeowners have the right to refuse a request for a search if the police don't have a warrant. But that rule has an exception. If there are exigent circumstances, like the threat of imminent danger, a warrant isn't necessarily needed, but the police must still have probable cause.
Are there any links to stories told BY THE PEOPLE whose houses were searched? How did they feel about this? Anyone?
Originally posted by S3rvoV3ritas
Must've been really easy for the commanding officer (or whoever gave the order to go house-to-house) to justify in his head that the suspect is "probably" in one of the house's in Watertown.
Originally posted by S3rvoV3ritas
Must've been really easy for the commanding officer (or whoever gave the order to go house-to-house) to justify in his head that the suspect is "probably" in one of the house's in Watertown.
Originally posted by Benevolent Heretic
Boston's Door-to-Door Searches Weren't Illegal, Even Though They Looked Bad
There were two components to last week's shelter-in-place request in Watertown, Massachusetts. The first was a request that people not to leave home. The second was a door-to-door search by heavily armed law enforcement officials. Those are two very different things, with different implications. But neither was illegal.
...
The ACLU agreed. In a phone interview Monday, Carol Rose, executive director of the ACLU of Massachusetts, told The Atlantic Wire that her organization was in contact with attorneys for the city, state, and the Department of Homeland Security on Friday.
...
Under the Fourth Amendment, homeowners have the right to refuse a request for a search if the police don't have a warrant. But that rule has an exception. If there are exigent circumstances, like the threat of imminent danger, a warrant isn't necessarily needed, but the police must still have probable cause.
Are there any links to stories told BY THE PEOPLE whose houses were searched? How did they feel about this? Anyone?
Yes because it's entirely possible for 2 individuals to hold an entire city hostage...
Originally posted by eLPresidente
There were reports of residents having guns pulled on them when they refused a search.
Agents/law enforcement also confiscated items from residents that had nothing to do with the 'manhunt' for the supposed terrorists.
Originally posted by buckrogerstime
I guess you missed the subsequent reports that said the earlier reports were all wrong.