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Chippopotanuse t1_j9ltaj1 wrote

So…you’d think.

It I’m pretty sure the SCOTUS has held that it does not violate the 4th amendment to be arrested even when an officer doesn’t know the law and is literally making up an arrest-able offense on the spot.

As long as they have a good faith belief you are breaking the law (even if what they allege you are doing doesn’t violate a law)…they can arrest you.

Compete insanity and I don’t agree with SCOTUS there.

My guess is the DA drops the charges.

And then the cops will low key harass and target this guy until he leaves town.

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InsuranceToTheRescue t1_j9lvzej wrote

That's what you get when your entire police force is made up of high school dropouts, or roided up jocks that couldn't get a scholarship, who are trained as if they're an occupying military force instead of community guardians.

Many countries require a degree of some kind in criminal justice in order to become an officer. The US has hilariously lax training requirements.

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strugglz t1_j9m2xp6 wrote

It takes more training to be a barber in Texas than a cop anywhere in the state.

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kandoras t1_j9oimah wrote

If you've played Skyrim or Fallout 4 you probably have more hours in that than it takes to be a cop in most the US.

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ImmortalGaze t1_j9olw9o wrote

I guess I’d be Chief of Police by now. Lol

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MiaowaraShiro t1_j9oy3jj wrote

They had to put you behind a desk after you took an arrow to the knee.

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igankcheetos t1_j9m2zow wrote

I remember reading an article stating that some police departments have IQ caps. oh here it is: https://www.yourtango.com/news/police-high-iq-max-limit-degrees-police-reform

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reaverdude t1_j9n8510 wrote

Oh hey, it's also the same article someone posts to farm karma every time this topic comes up. Of course, nobody ever actually reads it including yourself because if you did, you would have seen that it's not a widespread practice.

The case in question was at one small agency, in a small town, with one candidate, over twenty years ago and the candidate was 49 years old at the time he took the entrance exam.

Most cops retire at 50. The agency didn't want to spend thousands of dollars training someone only to have him quit or retire a year later.

But hey, just keep believing the false narrative that people push that police agencies only hire "high school dropouts or roided up jocks". Every agency requires a high school diploma as a minimum and the drug and background check before being hired is more strenuous than many other jobs.

Not a cop supporter by the way, reform is needed in many departments in the country, but really tired of people spreading misinformation. The average redditor would not pass the hiring process for their local police department whether it be for doing drugs, not passing the entrance exams, not meeting physical requirements, bad credit or having a criminal history or just plain not having enough life experience.

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Miaoxin t1_j9nc2yw wrote

The average "local police department" applicant couldn't get a 4-year degree. Raising that bar up just the slightest bit to require a B.S or B.A in a Criminal Justice field before they even get to care about physical fitness or credit ratings would clean up a great deal of those 'rare bad apples' whom so frequently appear on the news each day.

Catering to the lowest common denominator results in exactly more of what we already have plenty.

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Contra_Mortis t1_j9ot667 wrote

You realize that cops as a group are better educated than the general population right?

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Miaoxin t1_j9pz6ed wrote

>You realize that cops as a group are better educated than the general population right?

Police in the US have a combined 9% rate of a bachelor's or higher education. Masters and Ph.D. rates are statistically insignificant to the point that those are effectively 0%.

The average US population above age 25 has a 4-year degree rate of 38%. Roughly 14% has a Masters. Roughly 2% has a Ph.D.

Most of us have access to an internet search engine. This stuff isn't that hard to look up.

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Contra_Mortis t1_j9qb4z8 wrote

Did I say that they had a higher percentage of bachelor's degrees?

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thederpofwar321 t1_j9qy3hz wrote

You do realize you're argument was invalidated by him showing statistics that you can look up yourself right? Saying they're more educated than the average citizen honestly doesnt sound right with what we hear daily.

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Contra_Mortis t1_j9qychg wrote

My claim: cops are more educated than the general public

Their claim: cops have fewer bachelor's degrees.

Do you see that these claims are different?

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thederpofwar321 t1_j9qyses wrote

No, not really. College is a decent-ish indicator of someone that can properly read, process information, and make proper conclusions from it.

Now account for law which requires you to read -or at least absorb the information of the law in some fashion-, process information from the scene, suspects, and victims, and draw a conclusion that matches the information.

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reaverdude t1_j9nd8wb wrote

I completely agree, but then if this was implemented, people would longer be able to make themselves feel better by saying “haha police departments only hire dumb people”.

The news mainly only reports on these bad apples because it gets ratings. You never see news about the thousands of cops who spent their day just doing their jobs. It’s too boring.

One big problem that will also happen and that you’re overlooking is that there would be almost no recruits. Most people who have the means to complete a four year degree don’t want or need to go into law enforcement.

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Miaoxin t1_j9nds6d wrote

> Most people who have the means to complete a four year degree don’t want or need to go into law enforcement.

That would appear to be the very root of the problem, would it not? It doesn't take a psychologist to understand how that inevitably leads to scraping the bottom of that candidate bucket.

Maybe we should start there.

[edit] And now that I think about it, one more thing:

>The news mainly only reports on these bad apples because it gets ratings.

The news reports on those bad apples for doing things that would get the average Joe imprisoned for decades or executed in several states. Is that what it takes to get "ratings?" Unarmed, non-violent people being executed by government officials, in broad daylight, on sidewalks and in their cars and in their homes?

I changed my mind. Let's start there instead.

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reaverdude t1_j9nj9rn wrote

The majority of agencies already hire candidates with a college degree over candidates who don’t. Having a high school diploma is a minimum requirement.

You’re casting a way wider net regarding the news, certain cases involving misconduct, and the justice system in general.

The point I was trying to make is that most cops go through their days doing their jobs. In fact, most cops never fire their service weapon a single time in their careers while on duty. The news never reports on them because it doesn’t get ratings.

It’s the same reason news only reports murders, accidents, and other bad news 24/7. They don’t report on babies being born, rainbows and puppies.

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Rope_blaster69 t1_j9o8bwh wrote

The news doesn’t report on them because that isn’t news, it’s what should be business as usual. Police killing unarmed citizens because they feel like it, however, is news.

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macweirdo42 t1_j9o95fv wrote

I think you're missing the whole "one bad apple corrupts the barrel" thing. There's no such thing as good cops, because those "mostly good cops" know their fellow officers commit horrible deeds and actively cover for them.

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DudeWithAnAxeToGrind t1_j9n8m4v wrote

Those "many other countries" don't have 18,000 police forces like the US has. They have one regular police force, sometime supplemented by gendarmerie.

Remember that every single one of those 18,000 police departments is a fully independent police force that has nothing to do with any of the other police departments in the country. They each answer to and only to their local city council. And we all know how "competent" and corrupt an average "small town USA" city council is. So you get police force to match. Many of these small towns use their police departments as money making machine.

If you are angry at your police department but keep voting same people in for mayor and city council (or worse don't bother to vote, or have no idea who the people running for those offices are and just skip that part of the ballot)... You are totally missing your target. The mayor and city council are 100% responsible for every single thing that the police department does. They are the ones who appoint and command the police chief.

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I-Am-Uncreative t1_j9nj030 wrote

I feel like these different police forces should all be abolished so that each state has one uniform police department with one, uniform, set of policies.

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Rope_blaster69 t1_j9o8wc3 wrote

3rd party review on ALL police interactions resulting in any injuries. Police should also have harsher and more exclusive charges for crimes committed on duty, since they enforce the law, if they abuse it, they should be held to a higher standard. If I commit a crime and get 25 years for it, an officer that commits the same crime should get 30. Above all else, no bad actors left uncharged.

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hurrrrrmione t1_j9mpp4q wrote

> I’m pretty sure the SCOTUS has held that it does not violate the 4th amendment to be arrested even when an officer doesn’t know the law and is literally making up an arrest-able offense on the spot. > > As long as they have a good faith belief you are breaking the law (even if what they allege you are doing doesn’t violate a law)…they can arrest you.

Heien v North Carolina. A car was pulled over for having one brake light out, which lead to the officer searching the car and finding cocaine. Driving with one brake light was not illegal under North Carolina law (although iirc the law's wording was a bit unclear). SCotUS ruled that (Wikipedia's phrasing) "a police officer's reasonable mistake of law can provide the individualized suspicion required by the Fourth Amendment".

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Suspicious_Bicycle t1_j9mxo0l wrote

It's rulings like this that incentivize the police to NOT learn the law. Police: "I thought it was illegal and was never trained otherwise." SCOTUS: "All righty then, it's a good bust."

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jabba-du-hutt t1_j9nmcm6 wrote

And this is what kills me when it comes to educating my kids about how police are aloud to behave in the US. "Law enforcement" means you are enforcing the law. You can't enforce the law if you don't know what it is.

"Oh. I thought the speed limit for that section of road was 25mph. I thought it was a bit odd everyone was going 20 over, but... Oh well! Lucky me!"

"I thought it was illegal for a black man to walk around town in a red hoody. So, arrested him for possession of meth, even though he had nothing on him. Oh. He's also dead because I accidently shot him four times in the back with what I thought was my taser while he was handcuffed and in my car."

SCOTUS: Yup. Seems legit.

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Squire_II t1_j9ow8bj wrote

> It's rulings like this that incentivize the police to NOT learn the law.

That's intended. The entire idea of qualified immunity is a judicially-created concept. It has no basis in law itself since Congress once considered it and then explicitly decided not to implement the idea.

However, since the judiciary in the US has never had its continued self-granted expanse of power checked by other branches, these kinds of abuses continue and will continue.

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Socialistpiggy t1_j9mylvf wrote

That specific case was even a bit more nuanced than that. People like to dumb it down and say, "Cops don't even have to know the law!" It wasn't quite that simple.

The law in North Carolina had even been enforced by judges and prosecutors up until that point. If I recall, for many years. Then, an attorney looked closely at the law and realized, due to unclear wording, it's not explicitly clear that it's illegal to drive with only one tail light. They argued, and won.

People don't realize how specific laws have to be, and how often they can be on the books for YEARS before someone makes an argument that something is in fact, not illegal. In my state years ago a criminal case came up where one of the reasons for the initial stop was driving down the shoulder of the road. I think everyone agrees, it's illegal to drive down the shoulder. Well.....it kinda wasn't. The law that referenced improper usage of lanes referenced another section of the code, but that section didn't mention the shoulder, but kind of did lay out the areas of the roadway are between the fog line and center divider. So it was vague, and it didn't EXPLICITLY say you couldn't operate on the shoulder.

I always wondered how many citations got issued, over many many years, before an attorney finally realized the discrepancy and successfully argued it?

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MiaowaraShiro t1_j9oxwqq wrote

I mean sure, but that doesn't really change the underlying facts.

They were operating on false information, but the fact that operating without a taillight is legal was confirmed so why would any evidence found during a follow up search not be fruit of a poisonous tree?

It shouldn't matter what the officer thinks, it should matter what the law is. If you prove that the probable cause is bunk, then the search wasn't legal despite being done with "best intentions".

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RoundSimbacca t1_j9m3n9b wrote

The charges were already beaten with his acquittal. This was the civil lawsuit.

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diyagent t1_j9m9sb4 wrote

I got threatened with being arrested for jaywalking after a I assume a trumper tried to run me over in the street in front of my own house. I was like wtf he tried to kill me and the cop said he was well within his rights to run me over since I would have delayed him. Fucking dirty cops all over this country.

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DudeWithAnAxeToGrind t1_j9n3qm4 wrote

> My guess is the DA drops the charges.

Per the article, he was acquitted in the case brought by the police against him. The supreme court decline to allow the case where he sued the police for violating his rights.

These are two different things.

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critically_damped t1_j9p3zgy wrote

A "good faith belief" is now literally "any excuse a fascist gives for committing a crime".

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Rope_blaster69 t1_j9o7opk wrote

If they let him. 100% they harass you to get a reaction out of you so they can kill you. You embarrassed them, and you will be punished for it, and any form of retaliation, even after the fact, is punishable by immediate execution.

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NidoKaiser t1_j9ol0cs wrote

You don't have to guess that the DA will drop the charges, the article literally explained that Novak was arrested, tried, and acquitted. No charges were dropped, a jury found him not guilty.

Though (and this is speculative) it may be because the state could not prove that Novak's conduct was intentional/"knowing" . Novak may have thought that his content was obviously satirical and would not disrupt anything, which moves it out of "it's a crime" space and into the "stupid mistake" type space when people actually mistook his satire for reality.

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