Posted on 07/19/2013 9:10:11 PM PDT by tpmintx
After leaving her operating room scrub nurse duties at Sarasota's Doctors Hospital on Wednesday, Louise Goldsberry went to her Hidden Lake Village apartment.
Her boyfriend came over, and after dinner about 8 p.m. Goldsberry went to her kitchen sink to wash some dishes.
That's when her boyfriend, Craig Dorris a manager for a security alarm company heard her scream and saw her drop to the floor.
Goldsberry, 59, said she had looked up from the sink to see a man wearing a hunting vest.
He was aiming a gun at her face, with a red light pinpointing her.
I screamed and screamed, she said.
But she also scrambled across the floor to her bedroom and grabbed her gun, a five-shot .38-caliber revolver. Goldsberry has a concealed weapons permit and says the gun has made her feel safer living alone. But she felt anything but safe when she heard a man yelling to open the door.
He was claiming to be a police officer, but the man she had seen looked to her more like an armed thug. Her boyfriend, Dorris, was calmer, and yelled back that he wanted to see some ID.
But the man just demanded they open the door. The actual words, the couple say, were, We're the f------ police; open the f------ door.
Dorris said he moved away from the door, afraid bullets were about to rip through.
Goldsberry was terrified but thinking it just might really be the police. Except, she says she wondered, would police talk that way? She had never been arrested or even come close. She couldn't imagine why police would be there or want to come in. But even if they did, why would they act like that at her apartment? It didn't seem right.
(Excerpt) Read more at heraldtribune.com ...
That is something I have worried about. How would someone handle something like what happened to this lady, if they had dogs?
Locking them in a room probably isn't an option, because if the police go in the room *blam* *blam*.
Also, the police may break the door in whilst you're trying to get your dogs safe, then what? That would surely freak a dog out and get them in a tizzy.
I don't think leashing them is fool-proof either, I've read a few where leashed dogs were shot. Would muzzles work to keep the dogs safe?
Also, did this cop have a warrant to be going in all these apartments? How does that work?
I am starting to wonder what is the big difference from what we have and a police state? We're at the very least on the fast track, no?
I predict a lawsuit and settlement will follow (no warrant for that residence from what I’ve read).
Ironically, since the cop didn’t shoot the innocent homeowners and showed a modicum or restraint, he’ll probably be fired. No joke.
Yes, the police state is here.
Last time I checked, you don't need a permit for having weapons in your home. But with the corrupt government we now have that's probably not far off.
I would much rather go to jail for shredding a bunch of dog-killing, pack-animal cowboys with badges than risk being duct-taped to a chair and being made to watch thugs who yelled "POLICE!" gang-rape my wife.
Too bad for the LE rumpswabs, but that's just the way it is.
They most likely could never find my house anyway. My mailing address has no relation to my home, and my driveway is all but impossible to detect from the road. Remember, the correct question is no longer, "Are you paranoid?"
It's, "Are you paranoid enough?" LMAO!!!
8-\
Because that's exactly what it was!
Agree.
What I want to know is what made this cop think that by her/her husband’s actions that it suggested the rapist was in her apartment?
A woman looking out the window and holding a gun ? Wouldn’t that indicate she thought the ‘rapist’ was OUTSIDE PEEKING IN THE WINDOW ?
What kind of ‘rapist’ lets the woman he’s raping have a gun and argue with someone knocking at the door ?
In this case, not only were the cops at the wrong ‘address’, they weren’t even in the right ZIPCODE.
When does it take 30 COPS in swat gear to search for one ‘at large’ rapist ? Has anyone ever heard of a 30 man team searching an apartment building looking for a rapist?
Why the various uniforms ?
I think they were just going around the apartment building seeing if they could wake up women in their nighties and get them to answer the door.
Was there a ‘rape’ report from that apartment complex, or just a rumor that he might be there?
I think the whole story stinks to high heaven.
“I asked him what happened. He said they had a tip that a child-rape suspect was at the complex.
That suspect, Kyle Riley, was arrested several hours later in another part of Sarasota.
The tip was never about Goldsberry’s apartment, specifically, Wiggins acknowledged. It was about the complex.”
And this gets to the point about the 4th Amendment.
It is precise and clear as to what the government must meet as a minimum for search and seizure:
“The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized”
It’s very specific as to the person, place and things.
Yet, here we have an LEO telling us they are going to search an entire complex for someone, who supposedly lives there.
But, Where is there? It has to be an apartment right?
What precluded them from surveilling the place, to ascertain if he even enters the complex, much less if bunks in one of the abodes and more importantly, which one.
Seems like they didn’t have a dog.
Lucky them.
The dog would most surely be dead and they would be severely injured...
Texas Rangers are bad Azz and just so Kewel...
Was that /sarc? Couldn't tell. Sorry.
Naw. They are Chuck Norris bad.
Maybe it is time to revisit exactly what "arms" in the 2nd Amendment means. Surely it would include sufficient fire power to confront an out-of-control State. "Say hello to my little friend" comes to mind.
That “thin blue line” is becoming more like a “broad autistic smear”. No insult to autistics intended.
I'm sure he'd be fine with it if it happened to his family.
Just a layman but it sure looks like the cops/marshalls broke the law.
Hunting a fugitive does not give them authority to enter every apartment without consent.
They need probable cause, imminent danger or consent.
Anybody else see it this way?
If this happened at my house, several people - probably including me - would have died.
This kinda police-state $hit MUST stop!
Matt Wiggins is an incompetent, power-crazed hack who is not fit to be a U.S. Marshal, much less dog catcher.
To the Police:
To you these tactics seem good and just, Why? Because you want to go home to your family at night. To us the citizens of the United States they are terroristic in nature and deed.
Now I want the police to think about something: What if the Criminals say; “Hey this works for the PO-PO and the suckers, (I mean citizen), allow it then let’s do the same thing Man! Just yell police when we bust in and them when the suckers drop their weapons and hit the floor we can blast them!”
The natural reaction once that becomes the normal ‘home invasion’ tactic is to get the heaviest rifle you can afford and just start blasting through the door at the ‘home invaders’ Badged or not. Why? Because I have to sleep at night knowing that I did the best to defend my family from the criminals who posed as police to invade my home.
Stand your ground laws or not. Your HOME is your Castle and you have the natural right to defend it however you can,
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.