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20 Arrested, 171 Vehicles Impounded At Checkpoint
AP ^
| 10-24-05
| (AP) POMONA, Calif
Posted on 10/24/2005 9:22:30 AM PDT by VRing
AP) POMONA, Calif. Pomona police arrested 20 people, impounded 171 vehicles and issued 194 citations during a sobriety and license check operation that wrapped up early this morning.
(Excerpt) Read more at cbs2.com ...
TOPICS: Crime/Corruption
KEYWORDS: donutwatch; jbt; leo; papersplease; papierenbitte
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To: A CA Guy
You position is clear
"Should be no big deal, unless you are hiding something while traveling public highways."
I vehemently disagree with you, but you do have the right to your opinion
101
posted on
10/24/2005 7:26:55 PM PDT
by
vrwc0915
(I do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against al)
To: bird4four4
Old land line phones were sometimes turned into bugs. I would imagine that they are already doing it with cell phones...
102
posted on
10/24/2005 7:48:51 PM PDT
by
sheik yerbouty
( Make America and the world a jihad free zone!)
To: calrighty
Hope you're right. You and I are probably marked targets already for having this exchange of ideas...
Good luck.
103
posted on
10/24/2005 8:17:34 PM PDT
by
ZOTnot
("Toto, I don't think we're in Kansas any more....")
To: vrwc0915
104
posted on
10/24/2005 8:18:30 PM PDT
by
A CA Guy
(God Bless America, God bless and keep safe our fighting men and women.)
To: VRing
To: elkfersupper
Driving is a privilege by the rules of the local road and is not a right.
If you have private land like a ranch you could drive with far less restriction. You can be ten and maybe drive.
106
posted on
10/24/2005 8:20:42 PM PDT
by
A CA Guy
(God Bless America, God bless and keep safe our fighting men and women.)
To: metalurgist
It's very rare that anyone has a birthright to anything at all, but driving doesn't come close to that in our country.
The highway patrol's job is to check out what people are doing on the roads and having spot checks randomly that picks on no particular person. It is just a method of verifying compliance on public roads. They only do that on public roads, they won't do that on private roads. If it were happening on your private road there would be an issue.
107
posted on
10/24/2005 8:25:09 PM PDT
by
A CA Guy
(God Bless America, God bless and keep safe our fighting men and women.)
To: vrwc0915
I gave my son a response that a lawyer put on FreeRepublic years ago. Something about telling a policeman that he did not have permission to search his vehicle but that if the policeman did search the vehicle that he would not resist.
Right after a bunch of his friends were intimidated into allowing their vehicle to be searched, he was stopped by the same cop. He had the balls to tell the cop that he was not giving permission but that if a search was done that he would not interfere in any way. The cop tried the "nothing to hide" routine when he told the cop that he was only following his father's instruction.
Cop did not search and let him leave. Must have thought that the father was a lawyer.
To: american_ranger; All
If a law enforcement officer of any kind ask permission to search he does not have RS or PC to search, If there is PC or RS then they don't ask the just search!
Most LEO's will call your bluff if you deny consent to search, many will say well we will just hold you until we can get a K-9, ect at that point if things are still calm ask to speak to a Sgt. or supervisor and call their bluff 9/10 you will be waved through
109
posted on
10/24/2005 8:30:21 PM PDT
by
vrwc0915
(I do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against al)
To: sheik yerbouty
"Politicians in California want a Soviet Union with sunshine.."
And we GOT it!!
110
posted on
10/25/2005 6:48:21 AM PDT
by
calrighty
(Taglines for sale or let......1 liners 50 cents! C'mon troops, finish em off!!)
To: jjmcgo
"I rarely book sufficient time for intermittent totalitarianism."
I agree! Anyway, it's hard to book time for intermittent totalitarianism. You don't know if you'll get a Lenin, a Stalin, or a Hillary.
111
posted on
10/25/2005 6:58:39 AM PDT
by
calrighty
(Taglines for sale or let......1 liners 50 cents! C'mon troops, finish em off!!)
To: A CA Guy; All
The secret police's job is to check out what people are doing and having spot checks randomly that picks on no particular person. It is just a method of verifying compliance in public buildings They only do that on public buildings, they won't do that on private roads. If it were happening on your private road there would be an issue.
You may chose to give up your liberty, you may not make that choice for others!
112
posted on
10/25/2005 7:37:16 AM PDT
by
vrwc0915
(I do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against al)
To: vrwc0915
Your sounding way out there. It's the highway patrol and random spot checks on public roads for compliance has been used to help keep the highways safe for decades. You kind of just need to get over this.
I think it is good that people are made to be licensed with current driving skills, made to have safe compliant cars and to carry insurance.
113
posted on
10/25/2005 10:48:17 AM PDT
by
A CA Guy
(God Bless America, God bless and keep safe our fighting men and women.)
To: A CA Guy
You can be ten and maybe drive.I was driving an 80,000 lb. grain truck (loaded) when I was 9 years old.
I'm thinking that this obsession of yours to enslave us all and make us subject to random searches and seizures is rooted in fear, anger, frustration, or a desire for vengeance.
Which is it?
To: elkfersupper
Sure, you could on your parents farm at the age of 9 drive an 80,000lb grain truck.
In my last trip to Hawaii I had a ten year old kid drive one of his fathers cars around the farm to show it to me.
I know another family whose kids had to also drive around the age of 9 because they lived in California on a 3000 acre farm.
Nor problem with those situations at all.
It's a different story on public streets. They public streets are NOT your private roads and as a condition of being allowed to drive on those roads you may be subject once or twice in your life to highway patrol stops to check your compliance with the rules of the road.
You have no problem with being required to have a license, insurance and a compliant operational car, do you?
115
posted on
10/25/2005 4:50:27 PM PDT
by
A CA Guy
(God Bless America, God bless and keep safe our fighting men and women.)
To: A CA Guy
You have no problem with being required to have a license, insurance and a compliant operational car, do you?Yes I do, and so should you.
And there are no more "public" streets or roads, as I explained in a previous post.
I drove the grain truck 50 miles one way on "public" roads, by the way. Several times a day, as many trips as I could make in a day (night also).
Scary, huh?
To: elkfersupper
You have no problem with being required to have a license, insurance and a compliant operational car, do you?Yes I do, and so should you.
If you were in the sticks long ago, I'm sure all kinds of things were possible. But in today's world if we practiced what you are preaching we'd be closer to anarchist than conservative folks it seems. We need to be rashional and responsible. Just doing anything in the name of freedom can be dangerous IMO.
117
posted on
10/25/2005 5:37:13 PM PDT
by
A CA Guy
(God Bless America, God bless and keep safe our fighting men and women.)
To: A CA Guy
We need to be rashional and responsible.You forgot "for the children".
The first laws written covered murder, manslaughter, robbery, kidnapping, then reckless endangerment. That should have been enough.
Thank you and yours very much for seatbelt laws and random roadblock fishing expeditions.
Enjoy your gulag. The rest of us don't.
To: elkfersupper
You have a rare and extreme view, but you are welcome to it.
119
posted on
10/25/2005 5:58:33 PM PDT
by
A CA Guy
(God Bless America, God bless and keep safe our fighting men and women.)
To: A CA Guy
Thank you. This country's founders were rare and extreme also.
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