Letters From Prison
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wrote on 15 Aug 2022, 14:56 last edited by
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wrote on 16 Aug 2022, 14:27 last edited by
".........bogus trespassing charge"
She obviously doesn't think she did anything wrong.
The police, judge and jury disagreed (as they have done with alot of others who participated).
Seems like she has "martyr syndrome"
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wrote on 16 Aug 2022, 14:31 last edited by
Is it normal for a SWAT team to raid a private residence for a misdemeanor trespassing charge?
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Is it normal for a SWAT team to raid a private residence for a misdemeanor trespassing charge?
wrote on 16 Aug 2022, 15:32 last edited by@Jolly said in Letters From Prison:
Is it normal for a SWAT team to raid a private residence for a misdemeanor trespassing charge?
I'm guessing no.
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@Jolly said in Letters From Prison:
Is it normal for a SWAT team to raid a private residence for a misdemeanor trespassing charge?
I'm guessing no.
wrote on 16 Aug 2022, 16:37 last edited by@Horace said in Letters From Prison:
@Jolly said in Letters From Prison:
Is it normal for a SWAT team to raid a private residence for a misdemeanor trespassing charge?
I'm guessing no.
Wonder what TG thinks?
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wrote on 16 Aug 2022, 16:41 last edited by
We really need to balance this story against all the ones written by convicted criminals who readily admit their culpability and agree that their sentencing was fair.
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wrote on 16 Aug 2022, 16:49 last edited by
That point doesn't matter, does it?
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wrote on 16 Aug 2022, 16:56 last edited by Doctor Phibes
@Jolly said in Letters From Prison:
That point doesn't matter, does it?
So you automatically believe everything she says because it reinforces what you already believe?
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wrote on 16 Aug 2022, 16:59 last edited by
No, I don't.
Here are the facts:
- She was convicted of simple trespass.
- They gave her a hefty sentence for a misdemeanor.
- They arrested her using a SWAT team with a battering ram.
Why use excessive force for a simple arrest?
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wrote on 16 Aug 2022, 17:00 last edited by Jolly
And while you're thinking on that one...Why haven't all of the January 6 defendants gone to trial?
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No, I don't.
Here are the facts:
- She was convicted of simple trespass.
- They gave her a hefty sentence for a misdemeanor.
- They arrested her using a SWAT team with a battering ram.
Why use excessive force for a simple arrest?
wrote on 16 Aug 2022, 17:00 last edited by Doctor Phibes@Jolly said in Letters From Prison:
Why use excessive force for a simple arrest?
Maybe they thought she was poor. If you believe what you read, it happens all the time.
Why only worry about police use of excessive force for this particular case?
I don't think this woman should necessarily be in jail. Along with tens of thousands of other Americans if you compare the USA with the rest of the non-shithole countries.
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@Jolly said in Letters From Prison:
Why use excessive force for a simple arrest?
Maybe they thought she was poor. If you believe what you read, it happens all the time.
Why only worry about police use of excessive force for this particular case?
I don't think this woman should necessarily be in jail. Along with tens of thousands of other Americans if you compare the USA with the rest of the non-shithole countries.
wrote on 16 Aug 2022, 17:04 last edited by@Doctor-Phibes said in Letters From Prison:
@Jolly said in Letters From Prison:
Why use excessive force for a simple arrest?
Maybe they thought she was poor. If you believe what you read, it happens all the time.
Why only worry about police use of excessive force for this particular case?
I don't think this woman should necessarily be in jail. Along with tens of thousands of other Americans if you compare the USA with the rest of the non-shithole countries.
She's a physician. They knew that. Most physicians are not poor.
And I've never seen a SWAT team used for a misdemeanor arrest.
Never.
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wrote on 16 Aug 2022, 17:20 last edited by
I wonder if any paper trail must exist before a swat team is deployed. Maybe a search warrant requires more documentation than a swat team.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in Letters From Prison:
@Jolly said in Letters From Prison:
Why use excessive force for a simple arrest?
Maybe they thought she was poor. If you believe what you read, it happens all the time.
Why only worry about police use of excessive force for this particular case?
I don't think this woman should necessarily be in jail. Along with tens of thousands of other Americans if you compare the USA with the rest of the non-shithole countries.
She's a physician. They knew that. Most physicians are not poor.
And I've never seen a SWAT team used for a misdemeanor arrest.
Never.
wrote on 16 Aug 2022, 17:40 last edited by@Jolly said in Letters From Prison:
@Doctor-Phibes said in Letters From Prison:
@Jolly said in Letters From Prison:
Why use excessive force for a simple arrest?
Maybe they thought she was poor. If you believe what you read, it happens all the time.
She's a physician. They knew that. Most physicians are not poor.
I was being what you chaps probably refer to as ironicalist.
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@Jolly said in Letters From Prison:
@Doctor-Phibes said in Letters From Prison:
@Jolly said in Letters From Prison:
Why use excessive force for a simple arrest?
Maybe they thought she was poor. If you believe what you read, it happens all the time.
She's a physician. They knew that. Most physicians are not poor.
I was being what you chaps probably refer to as ironicalist.
wrote on 16 Aug 2022, 20:19 last edited by@Doctor-Phibes said in Letters From Prison:
@Jolly said in Letters From Prison:
@Doctor-Phibes said in Letters From Prison:
@Jolly said in Letters From Prison:
Why use excessive force for a simple arrest?
Maybe they thought she was poor. If you believe what you read, it happens all the time.
She's a physician. They knew that. Most physicians are not poor.
I was being what you chaps probably refer to as ironicalist.
Don't you mean ironiclast? I think that'd be a far better descriptor.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in Letters From Prison:
@Jolly said in Letters From Prison:
@Doctor-Phibes said in Letters From Prison:
@Jolly said in Letters From Prison:
Why use excessive force for a simple arrest?
Maybe they thought she was poor. If you believe what you read, it happens all the time.
She's a physician. They knew that. Most physicians are not poor.
I was being what you chaps probably refer to as ironicalist.
Don't you mean ironiclast? I think that'd be a far better descriptor.
wrote on 16 Aug 2022, 20:23 last edited by -
And while you're thinking on that one...Why haven't all of the January 6 defendants gone to trial?
wrote on 16 Aug 2022, 20:43 last edited by@Jolly said in Letters From Prison:
Why haven't all of the January 6 defendants gone to trial?
Insufficient DOJ prosecutorial capacity, insufficient trial court capacities. Heck, we still have Guantanamo Bay detainees who has been detained for over TWENTY YEARS and still not given a fair trial. Justice delayed is justice denied. I am all for promptly giving every accused a fair trial. Let’s see an appropriation bill that increases funding to expand prosecutorial and trial court capacities.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in Letters From Prison:
@Jolly said in Letters From Prison:
Why use excessive force for a simple arrest?
Maybe they thought she was poor. If you believe what you read, it happens all the time.
Why only worry about police use of excessive force for this particular case?
I don't think this woman should necessarily be in jail. Along with tens of thousands of other Americans if you compare the USA with the rest of the non-shithole countries.
She's a physician. They knew that. Most physicians are not poor.
And I've never seen a SWAT team used for a misdemeanor arrest.
Never.
wrote on 16 Aug 2022, 21:18 last edited by@Jolly said in Letters From Prison:
And I've never seen a SWAT team used for a misdemeanor arrest.
Never.
When I was in 5th grade, we were all sent home from school early because a SWAT team was brought in to arrest my cousin that lived next to the school. He was being arrested for breaking windows of cars.
Of course, they DID have good reason to call in the SWAT Team. He was a 2 time loser and had only recently been released after biting a man’s face off. I mean that literally. 32 bites around the guy’s face…
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@Jolly said in Letters From Prison:
And I've never seen a SWAT team used for a misdemeanor arrest.
Never.
When I was in 5th grade, we were all sent home from school early because a SWAT team was brought in to arrest my cousin that lived next to the school. He was being arrested for breaking windows of cars.
Of course, they DID have good reason to call in the SWAT Team. He was a 2 time loser and had only recently been released after biting a man’s face off. I mean that literally. 32 bites around the guy’s face…
wrote on 16 Aug 2022, 21:24 last edited by -
wrote on 16 Aug 2022, 22:56 last edited by
@Copper said in Letters From Prison:
@LuFins-Dad said in Letters From Prison:
32 bites around the guy’s face…
Why stop at 32?
Because it was off…