Did he declare the currency to US Customs when he landed in Chicago?
Why did he not have a cashiers check or some other monetary device? Why did he feel the need to hide $124,700 in a cooler?
Honest people do not do that. I have yet to encounter an honest, law abiding person who transport currency in that fashion.
Just because the bad guy got his backers to come up with some half assed excuse about a truck purchase, doesn't mean that it wasn't drug money.
Yes it is. He already committed one criminal act by smuggling the money in. What is the Trooper to think?Is it the responsibility of Nebraska State Troopers to pursue US Federal Law
If it quacks like a duck and walks like a duck...Why should possession of large sums of money *necessitate* a criminal act, instead of merely implying one?
He had in his possession a Nevada's drivers licence, so he is a resident of the US, probably illegal, but still a resident. So he is not living in "some backward country".Maybe he's from a backward country where things are run by drug gangs and a largely purchased police force, and only trusts CASH? Maybe he's an idiot. Maybe he's uneducated in financial instruments. .
My problem is that based only on the presence of cash and drug residue on a RENTAL car, he was assumed to be a drug dealer.
My problem is that based only on the presence of cash and drug residue on a RENTAL car, he was assumed to be a drug dealer.
It's very frustrating for me, because while you may not agree with me, I get the feeling you don't even see where I am coming from on this...and I'd like you to *get it*, even if you think I'm wrong...
I do not believe the Trooper did anything wrong. I would have done the same thing.
Quag said:All these examples are terribly sad.
However, anyone can pull extreme examples. All of these examples are bound to happen, as no justice system is perfect. Extremities happen.
Quag said:While it is high, Canada's recidivism rates are comparable internationally.
Quag said:Yes the justice system needs work, yes the judges should have a more careful quality control regulation and yes citizens are p'd off at the judiciary.
We know this.
Quag said:But to classify all judges as the thing that is wrong in Canada is terribly ignorant. It would be a hasty generalization and a fallacy of insufficient statistics.
.zipperhead_cop said:Hmm, as opposed to your well thought out "judges are good just cuz" argument.
Bad guys on the streets--judges fault.
Civil allowances that encourage people to sue for the stupidest things--judges fault.
Welfare and Disability system that lets people suck the State teat ad infinatum--judges fault.
Terrorism law that is potentially being de-fanged and lets killers out on the street--judges fault (potentially)
Immigration laws that allow illegals and criminals to linger here well after they have been rejected and get to stay anyway--judges fault.
Natives that have an insane sense of entitlement from preferred treatment--judges fault
Organized crime that can operate almost without reproach because of criminal assest seizure restrictions--judges fault.
I guess I could go on, but it is 0500 and I am too tired to keep on. I think I got my point across.
You have fun in your rosy little world, Quag. Some day, if reality slam dunks you into the pavement, you may "get it". Perhaps all the books will break your fall.
Quag said:Most of your arguments are very wrong. For the most part, these are shortcomings and flaws in the judiciary as a whole, NOT the judges.
Edit: I guess we are going to agree to disagree, and leave it at that.
System a joke: Cop
http://calsun.canoe.ca/News/Alberta/2006/09/13/1833909-sun.html
A Calgary cop said he has lost faith in the legal system after a justice of the peace released a man with 65 convictions back into the public pending his next court appearance.
Const. Shaun Horne is now facing internal charges of discreditable conduct after he called justice of the peace Kristine Robidoux's decision to release the man, with conditions, "a mockery and a joke" and swore at the suspect in court last December.
Although the suspect, Albert Walter Brazill, was only facing a charge of meal fraud, he has 65 convictions for offences ranging from kidnapping, extortion and armed robbery, to forcible confinement, drugs and theft and was wanted on warrants across the country.
Horne, who has worked as a presenting officer for the arrest processing unit for 4 1/2 years and for the Calgary Police Service for almost 25 years, said the release of Brazill was the final straw in a long list of complaints against several JPs.
"It's a farce," he said.
"The justice system for whatever reason doesn't see him as a danger to this community and if that's the case, then no one should be incarcerated.
"If he shouldn't be locked up, then who should?"
To emphasize his point, Horne said Brazill failed to show for his next court appearance in January, after Robidoux released him.
Robidoux said she is not going to defend her decision to the media.
"It would be inappropriate for me to comment while the matter remains before the courts," she said.
Horne has since been moved from the APU to another district and is awaiting a disciplinary hearing that's scheduled to begin Oct. 24.
If found guilty, he could lose his job.
Horne is planning to retire in January, but said even without his pending retirement, his reaction would have been the same.
"I shouldn't have said what I said, but do I regret it? No," he said.
"You can have a professional system if you have all parties doing their job but if you have a missing link, it makes it difficult to maintain composure... What is happening is wrong and it takes away any incentive to do your job."
SARAH KENNEDY
Inspir said:Can you blame the officer? I would probally lose my composure as well.