jlee
Lifer
- Sep 12, 2001
 
- 48,518
 
- 223
 
- 106
 
Mine matches the Google definition.
Google is a search engine, not a dictionary. Stop being obtuse.
Mine matches the Google definition.
They cannot choose "randomly." In order to perform a Terry stop, officers must have specific and articulable facts that reasonably warrant the stop. Without specific and articulable facts which reasonably warrant the stop, it is a violation of a person's 4th Amendment rights under the standard set forth in Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968).
Yeah... Lethal force definitely is NOT authorized here.
(1) "Officer, am I being detained?"
(2)(a) If the answer is no: "Thank you for you time, Officer, and have a good evening." [I walk away.]
(2)(b) If the answer is yes: "Please articulate the facts which reasonably warrant this stop."
(3)(a) If the officer cannot articulate such facts: "Without articulable facts which reasonably warrant this stop, you are violating the 4th Amendment under the standard set forth in Terry v. Ohio. Should you continue this search I will file against the city for violation of my 4th Amendment rights."
(3)(b) If the officer can articulate such facts: [I allow the search to run its course satisfied that the applicable requirements are met and that no law is being violated.]
ZV
All I'm hearing is that they caught 81,000 criminals. Good work boys.![]()
It's not illegal to posses marijuana in NYC. It's only illegal to have it out in the open. You are a disgusting little toad.
Google is a search engine, not a dictionary. Stop being obtuse.
Eh? It's not?
Then why did that kid lose his life by the police who illegally raided his home?
It's not illegal to posses marijuana in NYC. It's only illegal to have it out in the open. You are a disgusting little toad.
Click on this and see what pops up.
http://lmgtfy.com/?q=define%3A+probable+cause
I'd have called it a definition at the top there, Google's definition in fact.
To re-emphasize my earlier point, there are likely hundreds (if not thousands) of people in jails in this country right now who got there because the arresting officer made the choice to take the person into custody. Many of these people have access only to a public defender (whose case loads are massive) and cannot afford bail, or a private attorney. So, they sit in jail, waiting their turn before a judge while the DA's office tries to triage its caseload. Keep in mind that the Constitution is whatever the Supreme Court says it is.
Keep in mind that the Constitution is whatever the Supreme Court says it is.
So much for separate but equal.If we turn to something that's actually, you know, authoritative (like, say, Black's Law Dictionary, 6th Edition we see a more well-fleshed-out definition.
ZV
You have a couple of problems with this.
(1) As has been pointed out, that's really more an attempt at providing a synonym, not a "definition" in the strict sense of the terms.
(2) Even as a synonym, it's wrong.
See, in the US legal system there are two standards, "reasonable suspicion" and "probable cause." "Probable cause" is much more difficult to reach, yet the purported "definition" you offer is clearly conflating the two separate standards.
If we turn to something that's actually, you know, authoritative (like, say, Black's Law Dictionary, 6th Edition we see a more well-fleshed-out definition. "A set of probabilities grounded in the factual and practical considerations which govern the decisions of reasonable and prudent persons and is more than mere suspicion but less than the quantum of evidence required for conviction."
The take-away here is that "probable cause," just as the name suggests, requires that the probabilities support the assumption of criminal activity. "Reasonable suspicion," however, does not require that criminal activity be more probable than not, only that an inference of criminal activity is plausible.
ZV
Sorry, but regardless of what NY state law says, Federal laws dominate the field and are controlling. NY can say that marijuana is "legal" all it wants, but that doesn't make even the tiniest bit of difference because Federal law still says it's illegal.
When state and Federal laws directly conflict, Federal law wins. You may not like it in all situations (I certainly don't), but that's how it works.
ZV
Curious that our so-called cop Ackmed hasn't returned to this thread. I wonder.... perhaps I'll go poke him in another thread he's posting in and ask him why he ran away when about a dozen people called his lie.
Uh... the police are local cops, not federal agents. They're enforcing NYC laws. But, they're going against the spirit of the law.
