Indiana Supreme Court Is WRONG! If Cops Don’t Have A Warrant DON’T OPEN YOUR DOOR! | Phoenix Content, Phoenix Lawyer, Phoenix Online Newspaper, Phoenix e Newspaper, Phoenix Sports, Phoenix Shopping
This entry was posted
on Thursday, May 19th, 2011 at 10:09 am and is filed under Government.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
25 Responses to “Indiana Supreme Court Is WRONG! If Cops Don’t Have A Warrant DON’T OPEN YOUR DOOR!”
I’d say that cop is lucky to be alive. The Bill of Rights was set up to allow us to defend ourselves against a tyrannical government. Once that cop violates the 4th amendment he stops being a legitimate police officer and instantly becomes an agent of a tyranny, against which we have the full constitutional right to defend ourself by any and all means.
@cruiscinlan Oh Please this is one state that has gotten out of line. The system will fix itself it needs time. Now stop wasting your precious bandwidth. Its not hard, we’ve got our problems, but as far as I am concerned we’re better off than you guys in terms of freedom. We don’t want your pity.
Our founders gave us the 2nd amendment to back up all the others.
The 2A wasn’t written into law for duck hunting
The 2A wasn’t written into our laws for target practice
Since I break no laws, ANYONE that forces their way into my home is to be considered a criminal and a serious threat to me, I will use the 2A to enforce the 4th amendment, as we all should.
@AwakingTV It’s actually good that he is on FOX because a lot of FOX viewers (any MSM for that matter) are used to being spoon-fed an opposing view of slave-of-the-state propaganda.
I wish he’d run for president so we’d have more constitutionalists running. Anything to push this message. Or perhaps as vice president to Ron Paul.
@spamllpitdept
Whether or not one of our officers would defiantly enter a home based on a local or state judge’s decision in blatant disregard for federal law…well, that’s something only that person can answer. I can safely say most would refuse…but I can’t honestly say that one or two wouldn’t take the opportunity to pounce on a known felon. Those are bad seeds, and they may get away with it a few times, but I’ve seen them come and go.
I hope that answers your question.
@spamllpitdept
I’m not exactly sure what you’re asking, but I can think of an instance just today where someone informed us (anonymously, of course) that an individual we had warrants on for production of meth was staying at a certain address. Our officers went to the residence, secured every door (to make sure he didn’t run) and asked to come in. The owner refused, and our officers left.
The SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES does not agree with you Judge. They just ruled 8-1 that police officers under “exigent circumstances ” have the right to enter a residence for any reason, without a warrant. – KENTUCKY v. KING – Decided May 16, 2011
@wfly81 It seems like you’re in LE, if so, let me ask you this; if you were awakened to the sound of your front door being kicked in a 3am, what would you do?
Would you take the potentially lethal chance of assuming that they’re real police and have a warrant, or would you assume it’s a trick by deadly home invaders & attempt to repel them with deadly force?
it’s funny how i tell many ppl that we’re now, and have been for a while, living in 1984 half of them never even heard of the book. these are sad times..
@egderegor but the individual soldiers signed up and/or fought for the ideal of freedom, not for corporations. they are betrayed is the point i was tryiing to make
See THIS:
wikipedia: Kathryn Johnston shooting
I’d say that cop is lucky to be alive. The Bill of Rights was set up to allow us to defend ourselves against a tyrannical government. Once that cop violates the 4th amendment he stops being a legitimate police officer and instantly becomes an agent of a tyranny, against which we have the full constitutional right to defend ourself by any and all means.
There is no protection and no recourse from the brutal heinous cimes of government authorities.
@KevinADCarter Jude Napolitano was critical of bush too. He didn’t have a show on FOX at that time.
@superfuzz No idea why the title mentions opening your door. If you read the ruling it specifically says you cannot “resist unlawful entry”.
@cruiscinlan Oh Please this is one state that has gotten out of line. The system will fix itself it needs time. Now stop wasting your precious bandwidth. Its not hard, we’ve got our problems, but as far as I am concerned we’re better off than you guys in terms of freedom. We don’t want your pity.
@TheGrayman1234 You CAN, they’re just hoping to convince you that you can’t.
Our founders gave us the 2nd amendment to back up all the others.
The 2A wasn’t written into law for duck hunting
The 2A wasn’t written into our laws for target practice
Since I break no laws, ANYONE that forces their way into my home is to be considered a criminal and a serious threat to me, I will use the 2A to enforce the 4th amendment, as we all should.
@AwakingTV Fox BUSINESS is not Fox “news”
Not being argumentative here, but if I can resist unlawful entry by a robber into my home, why can I not resist unlawful entry by LEO’s.
@PrudenceWright Fox hired someone who was critical of Bush? Truly the end of the world is nigh.
GO TO WELLAWARE1 DOT C O M
@AwakingTV It’s actually good that he is on FOX because a lot of FOX viewers (any MSM for that matter) are used to being spoon-fed an opposing view of slave-of-the-state propaganda.
I wish he’d run for president so we’d have more constitutionalists running. Anything to push this message. Or perhaps as vice president to Ron Paul.
@spamllpitdept
Whether or not one of our officers would defiantly enter a home based on a local or state judge’s decision in blatant disregard for federal law…well, that’s something only that person can answer. I can safely say most would refuse…but I can’t honestly say that one or two wouldn’t take the opportunity to pounce on a known felon. Those are bad seeds, and they may get away with it a few times, but I’ve seen them come and go.
I hope that answers your question.
@spamllpitdept
I’m not exactly sure what you’re asking, but I can think of an instance just today where someone informed us (anonymously, of course) that an individual we had warrants on for production of meth was staying at a certain address. Our officers went to the residence, secured every door (to make sure he didn’t run) and asked to come in. The owner refused, and our officers left.
The SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES does not agree with you Judge. They just ruled 8-1 that police officers under “exigent circumstances ” have the right to enter a residence for any reason, without a warrant. – KENTUCKY v. KING – Decided May 16, 2011
This is OUTRAGEOUS and WE the people must stand UNITED for our First Amendment RIGHTS……Thanks to The Patriot Act.
People of Indiana need to march! Tell them you aren’t giving up your Rights to anyone!
What in the hell is going on in Indiana, that is such bullshit
wow this has to be the most sensible thing that i have ever heard come out of his mouth.
indiana is the back-woods of the universe
@wfly81 It seems like you’re in LE, if so, let me ask you this; if you were awakened to the sound of your front door being kicked in a 3am, what would you do?
Would you take the potentially lethal chance of assuming that they’re real police and have a warrant, or would you assume it’s a trick by deadly home invaders & attempt to repel them with deadly force?
@KevinADCarter yeah, it’s getting pretty strange.
it’s funny how i tell many ppl that we’re now, and have been for a while, living in 1984 half of them never even heard of the book. these are sad times..
@egderegor but the individual soldiers signed up and/or fought for the ideal of freedom, not for corporations. they are betrayed is the point i was tryiing to make