Posted on 09/03/2007 3:19:20 PM PDT by antiRepublicrat
I’ve been slightly surprised a couple of times, but never have I been outraged. This is a bunch of hooey.
Everybody must be a thief,,right..??
Some people just want to be outraged.
I agree with you, and I question if the story is true.
Interesting read; I suggest reading the whole article. Also, I reposted, from the article, the Ohio law, which states that citizens do not have to produce anything to law enforcement more than their name, address, etc. This guy was arrested and booked for not producing his driver’s license....but was not driving a vehicle.
I have no problem letting the store check my receipts. I’m on their property, it’s part of their antitheft measures, like cameras in the store. I grant it’s irritating, but if it brings the prices down, I’m fine with it.
2+2 does not = 4 here. The guy is a jerk there is no other way to put it. What is so hard about showing a receipt let alone looking in your bag?
Might I suggest he read all store rules regarding packages the next time he enters.
I agree with you. Nothing but a bunch of whiners on this thread. Maybe if they owned their own businesses, they'd think a little differently.
I would have invited Santura to go ask the checker for confirmation. Otherwise he can screw off.
ACLU fundraiser?
If this story was real, the guy was delusional. A driver’s license is an official form of identification. Since he did not say he didnt have one, it implies he did. The cop would have asked him for another valid ID. Cops have a right to check a suspicious person’s ID.
He was just exiting a retail store...someone else’s property. Shoplifting goes on at the store. If there is reasonable cause someone can be asked to provide receipts for what is in the bag(s). He was stopped outside the store on suspicion. If he was in the store, he has plausible deniabilty.
He should immediately cry himself a river, go to the bridge, and get over it already.
< /s>
...against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated
I guess this story begs for the answer if it was an unreasonable search to ask for a receipt?
IMHO, the answer is no, but I've been wrong before.
The aspect I am interested in is being arrested for failure to show a driver’s license even if you weren’t driving, as it’s too “Papers, please” for me. That plus the abuse of the police officer in falsely arresting him for not showing a license, then making up other charges when he found out he couldn’t do that.
As far as Circuit City is concerned, don’t shop there if you don’t like getting your bag searched. He was an ass for going there with his aversion to bag searches and to the Circuit City employees, but I believe the law also protects asses from unlawful restraint (Ohio Statute 2905.03) and a demand to show ID (2921.29 (C)).
Why does it seem the asses are the ones who produce the cases that protect our freedoms? Parody and satire are firmly protected speech because of Larry Flynt of all people.
LOL, this moron was looking for trouble. On Labor Day weekend!
I’m sure this idiot’s sister and family are delighted that their self-absorbed, righteously indignant bunghole of a relative went and screwed up the weekend for everybody else.
How utterly selfish and rude....
When you enter a store, you are entering private property; you are a guest in the store. You behave yourself and play by the rules on someone else's property. If the rules state that you will show your receipt, then it is boorish not to do so. There is no civil liberties issue here at all.
"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." - Manuel II Palelologus
Not according to Ohio law. They may ask your name and address...not demand a driver's license. You can read the article in its entirety to find that information, or see my post #18.
I have no liking for the ACLU whatsoever. But I dislike arrests because some, who is not driving a car, after calling the police himself, is arrested for not producing a driver’s license, especially when he was not driving a vehicle.
On a practical level, nothing. You give consent when you walk in. Don't like it? Don't walk in.
Don’t shop in places with a policy of checking receipts.
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