CaptUSA
Member
- Joined
- May 17, 2011
- Messages
- 18,925
Yes. Good advice.Call a lawyer.
It's nice to have one as a friend.
Yes. Good advice.Call a lawyer.
Seriously. If this type of action is allowed to stand unopposed, then what's to stop them from saying that anytime they want to search any premise!!! And if you oppose, it gives them the right to use force?? I can't believe someone actually tried to defend this in here.
Happens routinely. File the complaint. A "bow-tied-pig" will talk to you face to face. He'll say in carefully crafted language that his officer acted out of line as per what he expects, that he understands your concerns, but that one must look at it from their perspective. He'll cite vague references of officers being killed in the line of duty and that every call may be their last. He will hope you accept this guilt tripping, Orwellian double speaking implications that ultimately the blame lies on both parties and let it go. He'll be friendly though assertive, especially if you question the officer's professionalism. Mark my words, he will never overtly admit the officer was at fault. PBA lawyers have trained them well. He'll (or she'll, I know I keep saying "he'll" but the gender is irrelevant) say it won't happen again, that he understands why you acted the way you did, and that you must also understand why they acted the way they did. Again, the ball is in your court. Be aware of devices that will record what you say and carefully choose your words. I'd recommend hiring a lawyer but have had negative results with regards to blatant human rights violations. Harassment is a possibility. I would file a complaint and contact local reporters. Explain your situation and the officer's reaction. Perhaps show them an angle on substantive reporting. (the militarization of the police forces, for example) I find the competency of many to be overvalued.The problem I have is that he put me in handcuffs, searched me and was about to go into my home without a warrant, or consent. I was not being aggressive or violent. I may not have been friendly, but there is really no nice way to say "you are not allowed in my house". There was no evidence that any crime had been committed. The only thing that gave him any suspicion was that someone had apparently called 911 from inside my house. He never even asked me if I called 911 myself.
I understand there are situations where police have the authority (whether I like it or not) to enter a house to keep people safe or to prevent the destruction of evidence. In these cases, they should be 100% certain they are at the correct location.
It turned out that my neighbor had someone back into her fence and she called and hung up.
Did the cop actually search your house without a warrant? Or did he just detain you on your porch and then release you? If it's the former you have a case, if not you probably don't. If they searched your house, gather evidence. Take pictures, write everything down, etc. Contact the ACLU, local media, hyperlocal media, city media, etc. Make it a big deal.
Probable cause.Hindsight is 20/20 but you shouldn't answer the door for cops. If you don't have a peephole + another method of seeing who is at the door, get that taken care of. Do not open the door for the police. Worse things could have happen from that visit.
*edit nevermind. You were on your front porch. Should have went inside when you saw them approaching.
Hindsight is 20/20 but you shouldn't answer the door for cops. If you don't have a peephole + another method of seeing who is at the door, get that taken care of. Do not open the door for the police. Worse things could have happen from that visit.
*edit nevermind. You were on your front porch. Should have went inside when you saw them approaching.
They realized their mistake after they put me in handcuffs, but they didn't go inside my home yet. If I didn't tell them the address, they would have gone inside. They already asked me if my dog (that was inside) was gong to bite them.
I was just handcuffed on my front porch by my local PD because they came to the wrong house.
I was sitting on my couch reading.(George Orwell's 1984 . of all things)The officer came to the door and told me he was going to come inside and look around because they got a 911 hang up call from inside my house. I told them they were not going to come into my house. I said "I do not have a house phone, so that is impossible; I am here alone." The office told me he was in fact going to come inside my house to which I told him he wasn't entering my home without a search warrant. He then put me in handcuffs and said he did not need a search warrant. I said I was going to relax and there was no reason to put me in handcuffs. He said that he believed he did need to put me in handcuffs. He said I was not under arrest, but was being detained while he searched my pockets. He said he was going inside and if anyone was in the house, I was going to jail for obstruction. I asked him if he knew the 4th amendment to the United States constitution and he did not answer. Again, I repeated that I do not have a house phone and I was the only one home. He asked me if this address was 1410 _____ Trl. I said "yes it is". That is when the female officer that was with him asked "This is 1410, because the call was from 1430?". I said that 1430 is next door and they had the wrong house. I said "how do you feel now officer?" to which he replied "well if you weren't so hostile, I wouldn't have put you in handcuffs." I told him he just needed to apologize and leave.
I went inside and called the city to make a complaint. I talked to his supervisor, and a few minutes later he came back to apologize. He tried to justify his actions... after a few minutes of talking he apologized and left.
his excuses were "we have to be careful, we never know why we get a 911 hang up call" I asked him if he was being so careful, why he went to the wrong house. He said it was because I didn't have numbers on both sides of my mailbox...
Can you imagine the audacity he must have to accuse me of being hostile? I was sitting on my couch reading, he knocked on my door and put me in handcuffs, and I'm the hostile one??
What should I do?
I would go this route as well. Definitely don't talk to cops without one present.Could I?? Maybe I could if I can show that the did not have probable cause to detain me. Do they need to know what crime they are accusing me of to have probable cause? Is a 911 hang up call considered probable cause? Does the fact that they came to the wrong house affect any of those answers? i guess I really need a lawyer..
Ok, when you craft your complaint, be careful about making it personal. You want to get across that you are displeased with your tax money being spent on people who don't know the law and abuse their position of authority. While your incident ended without further complication, the actions of this officer demonstrate a lack of training that could cause serious harm to the public.
You see? the problem is not between YOU and THIS guy. Your problem is that the department would allow such a circumstance to exist.
What should I do?
Well, yeah, maybe... but in strong enough terms so that they understand this behavior is entirely unacceptable.I agree with this. Take the position that you are providing constructive criticism. You want them to improve their training and process so nobody accidentally get shot in the future. Keep it professional.
Stop calling them "officers" for starters.
Could I?? Maybe I could if I can show that the did not have probable cause to detain me. Do they need to know what crime they are accusing me of to have probable cause? Is a 911 hang up call considered probable cause? Does the fact that they came to the wrong house affect any of those answers? i guess I really need a lawyer..
I'm telling you from experience, what you will receive is a carefully crafted apology and an assurance that the chief's expectations were let down that day though no specific admittance of guilt will be admitted.yeah, but is it going to be worth the money? I hate to just let this go, but I don't have extra cash laying around to spend on lawyers.
Hindsight is 20/20 but you shouldn't answer the door for cops. If you don't have a peephole + another method of seeing who is at the door, get that taken care of. Do not open the door for the police. Worse things could have happen from that visit.
*edit nevermind. You were on your front porch. Should have went inside when you saw them approaching.