6 Completely Legal Ways The Cops Can Screw You
We are so lucky to be living in an era of law when it's no longer common for, say, suspects to be interrogated with live cobras tied to the ends of nightsticks. Unfortunately, there are still many colorful ways the police can royally screw you while Lady Justice shrugs.
For instance, you might be surprised to learn that right now in the U.S., it's actually legal for the cops to...

Imagine you had your car stolen, but then fortune smiles upon you and the cops find it after the thief used it to smuggle 200 pounds of cocaine across the border, running over 30 children in the process while sexually assaulting the car itself.
You realize you're going to need to get all of its fluids replaced from a mechanic with a soft voice and gentle hands, but you still want it back, because hey, it's your car, right?

Yeeeah, there's some bad news: It has been sold to buy a new espresso machine for the station's break room.
It's called civil asset forfeiture. You probably already have heard of something like this, where the police get to seize the car and house of some drug kingpin and stick the money in the department's budget (that's criminal forfeiture).
But then there's this loophole where the police can seize anything they suspect has been used in a crime, even if it doesn't belong to the criminal, and even if there hasn't been a conviction.

"Let's take the jet. Those bootlegged DVDs from China had to get here somehow."
Then if you, as the actual owner of the goods, try to challenge it, the burden of proof is on you to prove you didn't know it was going to be used in a crime. That's civil forfeiture.
For the police, there is no legal requirement to prove "beyond reasonable doubt" that, say, your TV set was once used by a ring of Dutch pedophiles to view kiddie porn. They can simply take it, without ever giving it back, even if they never formally charge anyone for a crime.
You're Shitting Me!
In 2004, Zaher El-Ali, a Jordanian immigrant and U.S. citizen, sold a truck to a man who agreed to pay for it in installments. Before he could finish the payments though, the man was arrested for drunk driving and the truck was seized. Seeing as the car still legally belonged to Zaher (he still had the title), he demanded it back. The police refused, and possibly laughed.
Because civil forfeitures are so simple, over 40 percent of police executives admitted their budgets depend on cash from them. That means each year, those stations have a quota of forfeitures to fill and technically there is really no stopping them from filling it with YOUR Xbox.

Does this scenario sound familiar to you?
Cop: Sir, do you know how fast you were going?
You: Oh, couldn't have been more than 40, 42.
Cop: Sir, it was over 100. I have it on my radar.
You: I see.
Cop: Sir, where are your pants?
You: That's actually a very funny story, officer...

"All the drug money in the pockets was weighing me down."
Luckily, those days are in the past. Not the part about "spending the night in jail for driving bottomless around school zones," the radar thing. Police don't need them anymore because now they can just guess your speed and ticket you based on that.
That's as of June 2010, when the Ohio Supreme Court decided in a 5-1 ruling that a trained officer doesn't need any of those newfangled gizmos to determine if a car was speeding. In accordance with the ruling, the visual estimate of an experienced police officer is enough to convict anyone of speeding, without the need for pesky wastes of time like independent verification and evidence.
Some might argue that this grants too much power to the police, but really, what's the worst thing that could happen?

A horrible movie gets made.
You're Shitting Me!
Mark Jenney of Akron definitely wasn't the first person to ever get ticketed without a radar reading. But unlike other motorists, he refused to take it lying down and fought back, all the way to the state's Supreme Court.
Sure, in the end he lost and had to pay his ticket, involuntarily helping to legalize radar-less ticketing and probably losing a shit-heap of money in attorney fees but... wait, we forgot where we were going with this.

Was it, "Next time, just pay the damn ticket?"

Picture yourself on a typical Wednesday morning, hunched over a shot of whiskey ready to commit mass murder on your brain cells, the smug little bastards. After taking one sip, a bunch of cops burst in and tackle you to the ground. In your state of shock and confusion you apologize for drinking and beg them not to tell your parents. It takes several minutes before you realize that you are 26, live alone and that you were just arrested for tasting alcohol in a bar.

Yeah, they got me for assault.
That's the scenario in states with very broad Public Intoxication laws, like Texas. In 2006, Texas scored the highest number of drunk-driving fatalities in the country and, after determining that this was the rare problem that could not be blamed on immigrants or homosexuals, state officials decided to do something about it.

First, they fired a bunch of guns to clear their heads. Then they moved on.
Namely, they dusted off an old 1993 law and gang-interpreted it atop a pinball machine until it somehow became legal to arrest people for so much as being near a bottle of booze, anywhere. Including in a bar.
We're not exaggerating for the sake of comedy here. Not only have they decided a bar is part of the "public" that "public intoxication" forbids, but they don't even require a breathalyzer test to determine if a suspect really is drunk. They can make arrests based on nothing more than their hunches.
You're Shitting Me!
In June 2009, Fort Worth officers used the new public intoxications regulations to arrest a bunch of folks at local bars that, by the way, happened to be the area gay and Hispanic bars. Naturally, according to witness testimonies, none of the arrestees were actually drunk, though they were dangerously brownish/homosexual.

So that's what happened to Ricky Martin.
Damn, you mean the police are abusing a law that basically allows them to arrest anyone they please as long as there is some alcohol in their vicinity? In the South?








Anyone else notice that Ohio is kind of a fucked up place?
Replyyeah it sounds pretty bad just avoid Ohio and you will be fine mostly...
im so glad i dont live in screwy america where you can be arrested for any damn thing!! seriously you lot have to f*****g do something about your corruption before you end up f*****g the entire world up!
Reply Hide All See All 4 RepliesShut the f**k up.
No one asked you, commie.
My favorite part of your rant is that your putting down America while reading an american website.
My favorite part about your rant is that you are talking s**t about America while reading an American website.
I am honestly surprised "bestiality" was spelled correctly.
Replythank f**k I don't live in america
Replythis is insane... hell its 6 new ideas for the simpsons, but god man im happy im not american.
Replyin my country there was a tv series a while back, 3 seasons, 10 episodes each, standard 40-45 min per episode about the police and mand you almost feel sad for the rules they have.
All you can really di now is go out with a bang, if the authorities do you wrong send a couple to hell before you reach there yourself, only if its worth it tho, if a pig is about to give you an unjustly speeding ticket let that s**t slide man the city needs the money, but if your about to be locked up for over 15 years for recording these fuckers getting out if line I say feed em a couple bullets, and if you cross paths at the purgatory give em seconds
ReplyLet's not forget that being a cop is a choice. When I was young, people wanted to be “policemen” because they wanted to help, and that was considered noble. Now, it seems people become “cops” to intoxicate themselves with power and shoot the latest, hi-tech, military style “toys”, and kick people's heads in.
ReplyJust think about how the image of the policeman has changed over the years:
English Bobbies – no guns
The Andy Griffith Show – small town sheriff and the town drunk
The TV show ChiPs – never drew their guns
The TV show COPS – AR-15 assault rifles, flash-bangs, shotguns, stun guns, sniper rifles
Today’s headlines – Google “Steven Seagal Joe Arpaio”
You could say crime is worse, but no, statistically it is not. The scary thing is that all of this police escalation is used against people believed to be possessing small amounts of marijuana or other non-violent criminals. Cops certainly aren't soldiers out there killing insurgents on every street corner in America, but sometime you get the feeling that they, in fact, believe just that. So how much further will this escalate?
policeman → cop → thug → criminal
I've been saying that for a while. I've come across some really good policeman who are clearly in it to serve the community, but a lot of police officers seem to be assholes who just joined the force because they like the excuse to have authority over people, and get violent sometimes. So glad I live in a country where they don't carry guns.
Woah. The law barring video recording cops is not funny at all. It's down right scary and authoritarian. We need to have a recourse against authority, we don't give them ALL the power.
ReplyWe didn't give them all this power. Problem is, most Americans have jobs, family, friends, etc. They have lives and if they challenge the government then those lives they worked so hard for are ruined. That's how they control us. They have us just hoping that we'll be left alone by the "authorities". Only when we ALL realize this and stand TOGETHER will anything change. They are slowly taking our rights away and we grumble as we watch it happen, but we are too scared to actually do something about it.
Oh get a life, guys... It's a comedy site. Of course the police or the D.A. TRIED to use a law in their favor. In fact, they do it all the time. But, guess what? That's what courts and judges are for. So, unsurprisingly, the judge threw the charges out in the biker's case (well, except for the traffic violation ones).
Even more, he specifically said that public officials in the line of duty and in a public forum have no expectation of privacy.
Seriously, is it any surprise that this happens? The USA seems to be the only democracy where power to the people is seen as a problem. It's not going to stop. To all the people who say Obama is bad, this legal oppression will continue and get worse with each president.
ReplyI live in Denmark, and I see the same problem in both my country and those surrounding it. I don't think it's even remotely a US thing.
Wow. I am going to apply to the police academy tomorrow.
ReplyA couple of year old Boston case of a guy filming the police finally got resolved with the guy getting $175K. A similar case is going on now in Philly.
ReplyIt wasnt too long ago that Texas still had an open container law allowing you to drive down the road drinking a beer. I worked in a bank and would hear the armored car drivers, who were armed, talk about getting a tall boy on the way home.
ReplyIf I had seen what that cop was doing to the motorcyclist, I would have called 911. Unmarked car, didnt show a badge - what was that dudes deal.
yeah, if a random guy got our a random car and pulled a gun on me, my first thought wouldn't be "Oh, this is an officer of the law, I must have been going a little fast" it would have been "FUUUUUCK HE'S GONNA KILL ME AND STEAL MY BIKE!"
If a cop did that here in NH, he'd get shot, so they don't do it. I think it's somewhere around 1 in 8 citizens who have concealed-carry permits.
I live in Dallas. My brother, who is of legal age, had his girlfriend pick him up from a bar after a night of drinking; he was too drunk to drive home, and she offered to pick him up. She was pulled over for speeding, the cops asked her and my brother to get out of the car so they could search it for alcohol/drugs (apparently it smelled like booze, which I imagine was just my brother). They then proceeded to arrest my brother and charge him with public intoxication because he was now standing on a public sidewalk. Yes, they made him get out of a car, so that they could arrest him.
Reply Hide All See All 3 RepliesTexas is awesome!
Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't that entrapment? Something that is illegal for cops to do, and so your brother could easily fight off the charge? I'm not defending the cops, and in fact feel bad for your brother who acted responsibly only to be arrested, I just think I've heard that term in situations like this before and want to confirm.
I recently heard that in AZ they can slam you for having the keys to your own car if you are intoxicated. "Intent to drive drunk" or some BS.
@StephanieBaker, they can do that in many places. My neighbor was almost arrested by a cop because he was outside with the radio in the car on, and he had to show that the transmission was completely shot.
I can't believe there are people who are still surprised by information like this..are you all brainwashed or what? OPEN YOUR EYES!!!
ReplyThis is just disturbing. It's like the cops forgot what distinguish them from the less-powerful gangsters.
ReplyThanks for adding to the already long list of ways we are getting screwed by cops and law.
ReplyUS COPS Y U NO IN PRISON
ReplyThe prisons are full of pot smokers. Oh, and poor people. Oh, and yes, poor pot smokers.
Ah, so THAT's what "The Land of the Unlimited Possibilities" means.
ReplyYeah...
It's just a bit unattractive for the good ol' US of A...
It's a wonder the whole damn country isn't a no-man's land already.
I've gotten into a habit when it comes to articles about stupid laws:
Reply1. Laugh at stupid law
2. Start to make fun of stupid America in comments
3. Check to see if we don't have the exact same law in Canada making me look incredibly dumb
That being said, after MUCH research (about #6):
From Canada's criminal code: "[cops must prove that] that there are reasonable grounds to believe that the property is proceeds of unlawful activity or an instrument of unlawful activity."
So ha! ......stupid .........America........
By the time I move to Canada, you'll be in jail.
I've been a victim of #6. Cashed my paycheck, was involved in a car accident shortly afterwards, woke up and my wallet wasn't among my personal items at the hospital. Got it back. No money in there. Officer on the scene says he taped my cash to my dashboard and that I should sue the tow yard. Don't carry cash folks, some a*****e might wreck into you and the hero that shows up to sort things out can get away with robbery.
ReplySure, that's what happened. More likely you were blowing the cop and told your boyfriend that story to throw him off the cumtrail.
Saintvader, thats the second time, shithead. Shut the f**k up.