CdwJava
Senior Member
Correct. Unless they were in pursuit, they cannot force entry absent a search warrant for the guest residence or some articulated exigency.A "resident" like someone who actually lives in the house? Not someone who pulls up to visit?
Two things in your favor ... One, the section only applies to a PUBLIC PLACE. Inside someone's home doesn't count. And, two, the fine is $250 and from 24 to 32 hours of community service if convicted - no jail time. Likewise, that generally means no public defender eligibility, either.So the code is b&p 25662 - I think...and then it looks like an A...I think
Bad news is that if convicted your license "shall" be suspended.
That section does not appear applicable here unless you were in a yard that was readily accessible to the public. Any gate or fence, and it is likely NOT a public place. And if inside the house, likely NOT a public place.Which confuses me now - I looked that up to see if it was anything close or if I was reading wrong and that says stuff about public places?
Subsection (b) has to do with the seizure of the alcohol. It is not an offense.I don't get it? It seems like B makes more sense...sort of...at a stretch.
If they had badges, guns, police cars, and uniforms, they probably were. They just may not be all that experienced in such matters. I have seen MANY officers cite for 25662(a) at such parties when, in reality, it is not usually applicable. Sometimes the only person you can charge is the person holding the party.Maybe they weren't real cops...
You haven't learned, yet??And I have actually had that b&p25662A before so this would be second...so that's bad...
That means a fine of $500 and 36 to 48 hours of community service ... and a license suspension. IF convicted. And, unless this is public property, that seems unlikely.