I feel your pain kid. Your friend may of very well been a victim of low quality law enforcement officials either filling a quota or on nothing more than a power trip. Harassment on college campuses is far too common especially with todays "zero tolerance" movement. I've had/seen plenty of bad experiences myself so I don't doubt that it could of happened. But you also need to realize that your friend may not be 100% truthful with you about how everything actually happened. And unfortunately people, sometimes even close friends, aren't always 100 percent truthfull about situations like this. And that too, is far too common.
If your friend feels that he has been harassed, he should get a lawyer and see what the local laws are. In one state, this could be legal, in the next it could be a clear violation of his rights. And that should be the biggest factor on this thread, what are the local laws. I'm lucky enough to have a father as a lawyer, and he has a partner that was a former United States Attorney, so I get plenty of advice all of the time. From what I know, your friends incident does sound a little excessive, but then again I don't know your local laws. He needs to figure out what this is going to cost him, and if it's worth hiring a lawyer to fight it. If they give hime pre-trial diversion then it's probably not worth fighting, that is unless your friend is rich, doesn't care about legal fees, and is willing to risk greater punishment in order to stand up for his rights and more importantly, the rights of others. But if pre-trial isn't an option, he will need a lawyer anyway.
I'm guessing with a case like this he will probably be offered pretrial. On college campuses and any other place that wants a clean image, it's all too often the judicial systems way of getting people to waive their rights in order to maintain the kind of order that they want. Tactics like that occur all of the time. It even happens to my father who is a partner at a high priced law firm. He constantly gets screwed on small things, because to him, his time is better spent fighting the bigger more profitable cases. It's too expensive to fight every battle.
Your friend needs to decide if the expense fighting this case is worth it, regardless if the cops are right or wrong. It's a sucky situation to be in, but it's a part of life.
If your friend feels that he has been harassed, he should get a lawyer and see what the local laws are. In one state, this could be legal, in the next it could be a clear violation of his rights. And that should be the biggest factor on this thread, what are the local laws. I'm lucky enough to have a father as a lawyer, and he has a partner that was a former United States Attorney, so I get plenty of advice all of the time. From what I know, your friends incident does sound a little excessive, but then again I don't know your local laws. He needs to figure out what this is going to cost him, and if it's worth hiring a lawyer to fight it. If they give hime pre-trial diversion then it's probably not worth fighting, that is unless your friend is rich, doesn't care about legal fees, and is willing to risk greater punishment in order to stand up for his rights and more importantly, the rights of others. But if pre-trial isn't an option, he will need a lawyer anyway.
I'm guessing with a case like this he will probably be offered pretrial. On college campuses and any other place that wants a clean image, it's all too often the judicial systems way of getting people to waive their rights in order to maintain the kind of order that they want. Tactics like that occur all of the time. It even happens to my father who is a partner at a high priced law firm. He constantly gets screwed on small things, because to him, his time is better spent fighting the bigger more profitable cases. It's too expensive to fight every battle.
Your friend needs to decide if the expense fighting this case is worth it, regardless if the cops are right or wrong. It's a sucky situation to be in, but it's a part of life.
