OK, so you don't know what the "dangerous felony" is.
I've been reading about Stalin's "Great Terror", and the responses of the Russian people when the NKVD showed up at their doors in the middle of the night.
The Russians seem to have similar ideas about "law and ordure" that I see on a lot of conservative forums.
"How can agents of The State possibly be wrong? They're chust enfarcing the lore!"
Remind me how much time the felons Clinton served in prison, again... ;-)
One of the biggest problems with DV laws today is an angry ex makes a DV claim and the (usually) ex-husband takes a plea instead of fighting it in court. The DV sticks even if he doesnt do jail time. Well, thats sadly the law and if thats you, you better be smart enough not to get caught possessing after that, or fight the charge in court and make the prosecutor prove his damn case instead of giving him a win with a reduced charge plea.
Very sound advice. Two thumbs up! :-)
Actually felony doesnt describe anything about the crime except the penalty. Im not an attorney, and various states may have different laws, but a felony is usually described as a crime with a penalty of one year or more incarceration. A misdemeanor is a crime with a penalty of less than a year incarceration. So I can only presume (I try to never assume) that a dangerous felony involved some threat or action of violence, as opposed to cheating on your taxes. Not sure what the legal definition is.
Happy Easter