Corporations are only as powerful as their lawyers.
In my context, lawyers are politicians. Corporations and politicians rule this country in spite of the citizen's needs.
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Corporations are only as powerful as their lawyers.
In my context, lawyers are politicians. Corporations and politicians rule this country in spite of the citizen's needs.
No doubt arresting him was an extreme thing to do, but hey - they succeeded in making an example out of him. I bet EV owners will think twice about plugging in their car somewhere "public" and walking away from it.
This is different from plugging in your phone because a phone doesn't draw a kilowatt. The guy here only got 5 cents of electricity - but the cop didn't know that. All the cop saw here was a wire going from a vehicle to a plug in front of the school - someone uneducated in basic electronics doesn't know how much electricity could be moving through that wire. Say a cop saw a someone siphoning gas out of a government vehicle: even if he only got a nickel worth of gas I would expect him to be reprimanded.
What I imagine happening is that when the man returned to his car and he probably made a dick out of himself prompting the police officer to further pursue the situation. The man wasn't arrested until a few days later when it was confirmed that it did indeed qualify as theft. Why the situation wasn't defused there is beyond me - clearly the guy doesn't know how to deal with cops.
TLDR: Idiot backwoods cop seizes opportunity to make example out of idiot self-entitled electric vehicle owner.
That also teaches them when told to stay off of school grounds
If you read the article the cop had to go find the guy, he then tried to claim the cop damaged his car.
there was nothing extreme here really. Guy wouldn't stay off the school grounds where he had ZERO right to be. He didn't have a child in that school, he had been told multiple times before to stay off that school grounds. They could have just as easily arrested him for trespassing and been valid.
Walk into a park and fill up a cup with water...
Bored cop wastes everyone's time, news at 11.
Exactly, next thing you know people will be up in arms because the water had to be cleaned at the local sewage plant. "Insert 10 cents to drink at this fountain please."
Wow I guess I missed that part. It would have been a completely different headline, but it sounds like the cop could have shot the guy and been within his rights... Particularly considering the uneasy atmosphere surrounding schools lately.
So his son was NOT a student at this school, he has been told to stay off the school grounds, and did not listen. It is his own fault for all of this.
Wow I guess I missed that part. It would have been a completely different headline, but it sounds like the cop could have shot the guy and been within his rights... Particularly considering the uneasy atmosphere surrounding schools lately.
Which is odd. He should have been arrested for trespassing. The article update paints a very different picture than when the story broke.
Gotta love journalism.
This is different from plugging in your phone because a phone doesn't draw a kilowatt..
He did break the law but common sense should be used here.
Yeah but another difference is that you get additive effects of large numbers with cell phones. How many people have electric cars vs cell phones? How many of those electric car owners are going to plug in to random places vs. cell phone users? I see that crap all the time in my class, students coming in, often I'll see anywhere from 1 to 6 cell phones plugged in around the room, not a big deal IMO, they paid their tuition, and much like they get to use the lights over head to help them see they get to use the electric socket to charge their cell up.
Easiest solution? Unplug the cord from the wall, leave a note on the windshield that says you can't do that, or perhaps write a ticket if he was in fact breaking the law to a point that obviously he felt justified enough to arrest.
I don't understand why so many people are comparing this to people charging their cell phones in coffee shops, restaurants, etc. Typically the proprietor of the business generally doesn't preclude paying customers from using available wall sockets for charging devices, and explicitly or implicitly allows it. Sometimes they'll disallow the use of the business' power, and post warnings/notifications or verbally tell customers, and in that specific case, it's not okay to use the power. Or better yet, they'll remove wall sockets if they don't want people using them.
The big difference is assuming an available wall socket that you don't own is there for your personal use. It's not. And if you have been told to stop using the socket and continue to do so, you're a dick, and deserve whatever situation you brought upon yourself.
zero right to be on school grounds? The the part about him picking up his kid or watching his kid play sports was completely fabricated?
True enough, however unless they did ban him any sort of sporting event usually implies permission to all.Keep in mind the difference between a "right" and a "privilege". Good luck getting on any school campus without permission/authorization. The powers that be can bar him from being on school property.
zero right to be on school grounds? The the part about him picking up his kid or watching his kid play sports was completely fabricated?
zero right to be on school grounds? The the part about him picking up his kid or watching his kid play sports was completely fabricated?
zero right to be on school grounds? The the part about him picking up his kid or watching his kid play sports was completely fabricated?
True enough, however unless they did ban him any sort of sporting event usually implies permission to all.
The report made its way to Sgt Ford's desk for a follow up investigation. He contacted the middle school and inquired of several administrative personnel whether the individual had permission to use power. He was advised no. Sgt. Ford showed a photo to the school resource officer who recognized Mr. Kamooneh. Sgt Ford was further advised that Mr. Kamooneh had previously been advised he was not allowed on the school tennis courts without permission from the school . This was apparently due to his interfering with the use of the tennis courts previously during school hours.
Based upon the totality of these circumstances and without any expert advice on the amount of electricity that may have been used, Sgt Ford signed a theft warrant. The warrant was turned over to the DeKalb Sheriffs Dept for service because the individual lived in Decatur, not Chamblee. This is why he was arrested at a later time.
I am sure that Sgt. Ford was feeling defensive when he said a theft is a theft and he would do it again. Ultimately, Sgt. Ford did make the decision to pursue the theft charges, but the decision was based on Mr. Kamooneh having been advised that he was not allowed on the property without permission. Had he complied with that notice none of this would have occurred. Mr. Kamooneh's son is not a student at the middle school and he was not the one playing tennis. Mr. Kamooneh was taking lessons himself.
Poor analogies, always poor analogies. It's MUCH more like he got himself a cup of water without asking.
Up until the point where he was told to not be using the tennis courts in the past, and until the officer instructed that he should be using the power and to stop.It'd probably be closer to 'he stole a cup of coffee from the school break room' in terms of actual cost parity. I was fine overlooking the cost as it's the act of taking something that isn't yours to take that matters, but if you want to nitpick then I suppose we can go that route as well.
I heard from a someone i know that heard from a cop that when they are bored they give tickets out. They give tickets to just give them out usually. There are quotas that these police men have to meet. I think LA got busted recently for leaking out the quota information. Anyone who tells you they don't have quotas are liars.
What's your point? People don't get tickets for obeying the law. If you're obeying the law, you won't get a ticket.
FWIW, I'm a cop, we don't have quotas and I'm not lying. /end stupid argument from someone who gets their information from "someone i know heard from a cop."
What's your point? People don't get tickets for obeying the law. If you're obeying the law, you won't get a ticket.
You just might get anally violated repeatedly.
Here we go again...what is that about the 10th time you've posted that in a thread about police.![]()
What's your point? People don't get tickets for obeying the law. If you're obeying the law, you won't get a ticket.
FWIW, I'm a cop, we don't have quotas and I'm not lying. /end stupid argument from someone who gets their information from "someone i know heard from a cop."