Glenn E. Meyer
New member
I cannot get past the Dominion's force field - the lasers were set to destroy old Hondas with dented hoods and 256K miles on them.
San Antonio - joke.
San Antonio - joke.
No, not in America. Not legally, despite the truth of the statement that it happens. I already listed the criteria established by the Supreme Court. In order to initiate an investigatory stop, an officer must have a reasonable suspicion based on clearly articulable facts that a crime has been committed, is being committed, or is about to be committed. In a vacuum, despite the fact that robbers often wear hoodies, the fact is that other people often wear hoodies, too, so a hoodie could not be a sufficient "clearly articulable fact" to justify a stop.The NatureBoy said:Black Person, black hoodie = reasonable suspicion? In America, yes unfortunately.
I'm 23 years old, and i live in the inner city. I dress in what I feel is comfortable and reasonably fashionable (i don't keep up on the latest trends, but I wear things most other people my age would). If someone thinks a young person wearing young peoples clothes automatically means said person is somehow gang affiliated or a thug, well excuse me but its high time they get a glass stomach so they can actually see with their head shoved that far up their own...
When she drove to the side of the road, the police unit stopped behind her vehicle. After a few minutes, she said, the officer used a loudspeaker to tell her to put her hands outside the window.
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She said an officer handcuffed her hands behind her back, and asked if anyone else was in the vehicle.