michaelm101
Junior Member
Firstly, I am a staunch supporter of our police and law enforcement personnel. Here's the story::
LOS ANGELES COUNTY, CA- Our friend and housemate (56 years old, 5'5", 140 lbs) left for work on Friday morning, June 29, 2018. As he exited the front door, I heard an abrupt LOUD howl of a police siren. As our friend exited the front door, six parole officers had guns drawn and sighted on him with his hands up in the air. I saw all of this through the window. Within minutes, I saw that my long-time neighbors were able to witness this spectacle.
Since we have known him for over two years to be a gentle and kind person, who assists us in nursing stray and abandoned puppies and kittens, we had no idea why this was happening. I came outside to see what it was all about...
Apparently, he was in violation of his parole for a non-violent conviction back in 1997.
The lead officer then told me they needed to search his room and asked me, "Do you have any guns?"
To keep things simple, I said, "No (I keep my family at the mercy of intruders and bad people)."
I allowed them to search the upstairs room he rented. I locked the master bedroom.
When they came back downstairs, they asked to enter the garage that I had converted into a home office, tennis-racket-stringing, bicycle-repair area with adjacent sleep quarters. It was readily accessible (with no means of locking from the other side). So, of course, I allowed them access.
They snooped around and saw my photographic lenses on my desk and asked if I was a photographer. I replied, "Yes (bring your wife over for a complimentary nude session LOL)."
They opened a file cabinet drawer and discovered athletic undergarments and socks and asked, "Who lives here?" I replied and told him it was my retreat when my girlfriend and I have a dispute.
They asked me to present my driver's license, and asked where I met our housemate, how long I've known him, etc, etc, etc...
I have realized that law enforcement has consistently overstepped their boundaries and abused their authority resulting in millions of tax-payer dollars in the settlement of various law suits.
I have a few questions:
1) Why were SIX officers summoned to do this (other than to waste tax-payer money)?
2) Why were all of their guns drawn at my housemate?
3) Why was I asked if I "owned guns."
4) As they had already found their man, why did they need to search my housemates room?
5) Why did they search my garage area?
6) Why did they require me to give them my driver's license?
7) Why did they require the telephone numbers of my girlfriend and our other housemate?
Any help would be very much appreciated!
LOS ANGELES COUNTY, CA- Our friend and housemate (56 years old, 5'5", 140 lbs) left for work on Friday morning, June 29, 2018. As he exited the front door, I heard an abrupt LOUD howl of a police siren. As our friend exited the front door, six parole officers had guns drawn and sighted on him with his hands up in the air. I saw all of this through the window. Within minutes, I saw that my long-time neighbors were able to witness this spectacle.
Since we have known him for over two years to be a gentle and kind person, who assists us in nursing stray and abandoned puppies and kittens, we had no idea why this was happening. I came outside to see what it was all about...
Apparently, he was in violation of his parole for a non-violent conviction back in 1997.
The lead officer then told me they needed to search his room and asked me, "Do you have any guns?"
To keep things simple, I said, "No (I keep my family at the mercy of intruders and bad people)."
I allowed them to search the upstairs room he rented. I locked the master bedroom.
When they came back downstairs, they asked to enter the garage that I had converted into a home office, tennis-racket-stringing, bicycle-repair area with adjacent sleep quarters. It was readily accessible (with no means of locking from the other side). So, of course, I allowed them access.
They snooped around and saw my photographic lenses on my desk and asked if I was a photographer. I replied, "Yes (bring your wife over for a complimentary nude session LOL)."
They opened a file cabinet drawer and discovered athletic undergarments and socks and asked, "Who lives here?" I replied and told him it was my retreat when my girlfriend and I have a dispute.
They asked me to present my driver's license, and asked where I met our housemate, how long I've known him, etc, etc, etc...
I have realized that law enforcement has consistently overstepped their boundaries and abused their authority resulting in millions of tax-payer dollars in the settlement of various law suits.
I have a few questions:
1) Why were SIX officers summoned to do this (other than to waste tax-payer money)?
2) Why were all of their guns drawn at my housemate?
3) Why was I asked if I "owned guns."
4) As they had already found their man, why did they need to search my housemates room?
5) Why did they search my garage area?
6) Why did they require me to give them my driver's license?
7) Why did they require the telephone numbers of my girlfriend and our other housemate?
Any help would be very much appreciated!
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