CdwJava
Senior Member
You believe A cop lied. Even if true, it hardly follows that all or even most cops lie.It is not BULL when cops lie since this is what i see in my report.
And if you are hanging your hat on his statement that says you refused to cooperate, you do not understand what the police report is supposed to be for. it is not an exact recounting of verbatim statements, and it is not evidence.
No, that is not what it means. Under the CVC if any part of the plate is obstructed it is a violation. Most people that have license plate frames or trailer hitches can easily fall into this pitfall. It is certainly an issue that can be argued in court in a motion to suppress based upon a lack of reasonable suspicion for the detention, but that's not likely to prevail. It might, but it's not likely to unless the officer admits that there was no obstruction.Traffic stop was itself illegal. Traffic stop was for according to the report, Obstructed Lisence Place which means the lisence plate does not show any reasonable person would understand.
Okay. But, he could have asked you to step out of the car for any reason - or even for no reason. Whether he could have compelled you to step out of the car is another story.Second, he asked if had ID on me, i asked him back why do you need my ID then to retaliate he asked me to step out the car cuz my eyes are weird that's what he said.
Again, MAYBE this one lied, that does not extend to all or most.Then went from there he simply did not like me... now do they lie or you still do not agree.
Plus, he does not have to tell you the truth out in the field. No law requires it. There are limits as to what can be accomplished through deception, and an officer has to be careful that he does not create involuntary consent through such a deception, but he can certainly say your eyes look weird and ask you to step out of the car. If he ORDERS you to step out of the car, then he'd better have something to articulate later on besides "weird" eyes.
Complete bull. NO agency, supervisor, or administrator I know of condones unlawful, unethical, or improper procedures. None. And it is not how officers are trained, either.And when u say they dont like the job, sure they do. THey can simply harrase ppl show his supervisor couple bs arrests and say we have completed our job.
Officers in CA lose their jobs every day when they are discovered intentionally pushing the envelope or breaking the rules. Most the time we don't read about it because it is handled internally. If this officer is a screwup and this is verified in the internal investigation, the agency will likely take action to either correct the action in the officer through training or closer supervision, or, if it is to endemic, they might let him go. If there are no prior actions, they will likely see this as a training issue and either retrain him or put him on a very short leash for a while.
No, you do not know the system if you characterize officer training, supervision, and officers as you do. You THINK you know it based upon your perception in one or more encounters, but that is not the system. And most people who are on the receiving end of enforcement believe they have been wronged and do not understand the precepts of the law. Almost weekly, I have to try and explain the concept of reasonable suspicion or probable cause to people that want to complain about something, and about 3 of 4 times they walk away ALMOST understanding it, but not quite. So even when the officer acted entirely within policy and the law, the person feels they were violated. I understand that, but in those cases they were not - legally, anyway.U think i dont know the system ? Trust me i just aint got the time to argue or challenge your words here.
I'm in the system and have been for two decades. I suspect I know the inner workings a good deal better than you do.
And, once again, the report is a summary of actions. Unless it is written to reflect an exact quote, it is not meant to be a literal interpretation of statements made. That would be nearly impossible short of recording and transcribing each encounter. If you declined to close your eyes and refused to cooperate any further, then his statement that you refused to cooperate is, in summary, true. If on the stand he is asked whether you said, "I will not cooperate any more," and you do not believe you said that, then that can be challenged. Although being wrong does not a lie make. Being mistaken about a conversation is not a lie.
But, as I have said from the very beginning, if the ONLY thing they have to go on is that you did not close your eyes as part of an FST then the arrest for the 148 is weak, and I cannot see how a prosecution will prevail. My prediction would be that it does not go to trial if that is all they have to go on since you do not have to participate in the FSTs in the first place. Now, if they have something else, then, maybe.