Posted on 10/06/2011 10:16:19 PM PDT by Borough Park
Two teenagers broke into a California home in order to steal a few valuables, including a stack of blank CDs. When they returned home with their loot they discovered that the CDs werent actually blank, they contained Kraig Stockards child pornography collection. The two robbers decided to turn themselves in to police in order to turn over the collection.
The Huffington Post reports that the Merced County Sheriffs Department decided not to arrest the two burglars. They did, however, decide to raid Stockards home.
The police seized several computers, laptops and other hardware, but they did not say if they found any more contraband. Regardless, the police still had plenty of evidence on the stolen disks to arrest Stockard. According to a statement from police, 30 of the 50 stolen disks contained child pornography. The Sheriffs Department said that thousands of photos and videos were found on the disks.
Stockard was booked on possession of child pornography, but Fox 40 reports that he has already posted his $25000 bail.
My Fox 40 reports that although the police did not press charges against the two thieves, the two teenagers arent completely off the hook. Their case has been turned over to the Merced County District Attorneys Office for review.
Deputy Tom McKenzie said:
We did not actually go out and arrest the suspects for the burglary. They were obviously the lesser of two evils.
Should the two robbers, a minor and a 19-year-old, be punished for stealing? Or should their misdeeds be over looked because they uncovered a greater evil?
(Excerpt) Read more at inquisitr.com ...
And a good defense attorney will question their motives. Is there proof that the CD’s came from his home?
Not applicable. The State was not involved in the initial illegal seizure of evidence, according to the story. Had the State prompted the burglars, maybe. This is akin to a civilian trespasser reporting a pot plantation, not an unwarranted intrusion by law enforcement.
And a good defense attorney will question their motives. Is there proof that the CDs came from his home?
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The first point is irrelevant. Chain of custody is relevant, which is why I said that if the seized materials are clean the defendant has a case.
In the event of an illegal act itself? One could argue it for days, but no matter—the perv has been outed and will rightly be shunned.
Look, as a retired police officer, I have watched how a good defense attorney can sink a prosecuting attorney over something like this. The fact that they let the burgers off for their testimony is a start.
As for chain of custody, the miscreants that gave the CD’s to the police doesn’t give credence to any chain of custody.
“Yep, I can tell youre a college perfesser alright, by the punctuation and questionable ethics!”
Really. So you think I was defending the guy? I just wondered why the police would believe the robbers.
OK, by the same reasoning I infer that you are a Ron Paul supporter, right?
“In the event of an illegal act itself?”
It depends on who did the illegal act. For the Exclusionary Rule and so on to apply, “illegally seized” means specifically that a government actor or proxy violated the law to obtain the evidence, not that the evidence was obtained in the course of a crime by a private citizen.
All of this is rooted in court decisions on the workings of the Fourth Amendment, which puts a curb on -government- actions. It was not even applied to the states until 1961, but only to the US government. It does not apply to private persons.
“The Huffington Post reports that the Merced County Sheriffs Department decided not to arrest the two burglars.”
Excellent decision. Let them go. They could have saved themselves by staying quiet.
Those must have been some really poor prosecutors you watched, more than the defense attorneys being good.
This is not a hard case to win if the seized materials are inculpatory as well. If the ONLY incriminating evidence is what the two burglars brought in, then a case could be made that there is reasonable doubt that it was ever in the defendant’s possession.
I have more problems with the approach to possession of child porn as a status crime in itself, without proof of intent. It is too easy to be planted, even remotely.
Excuse me all to hell for getting too fast on the fingers. You and I know what I meant to say! Burglars, ashat, burglars.
My point exactly.
He can’t stay in the community and wherever he lives, somebody will look him up for his sexual offender status and try and chase him out of the community.
Lots of potential for mischief on this one. I know it’s really a problem, but whenever “child porn” is brought against someone, my BS flag goes up. Especially when it’s ‘discovered’ by questionable means.
"We burglarized a house, officer, and stole these CD-ROMs of all unlikely things and we took them straight home and looked at them and found that kiddie porn you told us to find... Er, I mean, we found kiddy porn on them so we did the Christian thing and turned ourselves in so you policemen could catch that bad man! So now you're going to look the other way on that illegal chop-shop we were running out of that phony auto repair business where we had all those stolen cars, right?"
Right.
The ATF does stuff like this all the time, as you might have heard recently.
It's not his stuff the kids broke in and put it there.
And the kids say they broke in specifically to steal 'empty' CD ROMS? What made them expect to find a huge stack of CDs in the first place? Sorta like stealing paper plates and leaving the sterling silverware alone.
My first and only thought is that it was foolish for both of them to turn themselves in. It would have been more logical to flip a coin.
NOT even close! I think Ron Paul is a crackpot and wouldn’t even trust him to guard my yard! He would surrender it to a bunch of potheads if they promised to vote for him!
JC
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