This is why you get some of the responses you do. Someone that deals with this on a day to day basis as part of his profession explains something to you and you continue to argue based upon speculation and assumptions while trying to act like an expert. If you at least based your arguments on the facts and laws, your arguments would have much more credibility.gigag04 wrote:Wrong. You are missing some key parts of the statute that I have touched on twice in this thread.EEllis wrote: Police have the right to ask, and it's against the law in Texas to refuse to identify, if you are a witness or suspect in a crime.
Was this arrest legal? Or a violation of the woman's rights?
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- mojo84
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Re: Was this arrest legal? Or a violation of the woman's rig
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Re: Was this arrest legal? Or a violation of the woman's rig
Fine if insults are par for the course then you can insult yourself. I'm done with this threadmojo84 wrote:This is why you get some of the responses you do. Someone that deals with this on a day to day basis as part of his profession explains something to you and you continue to argue based upon speculation and assumptions while trying to act like an expert. If you at least based your arguments on the facts and laws, your arguments would have much more credibility.gigag04 wrote:Wrong. You are missing some key parts of the statute that I have touched on twice in this thread.EEllis wrote: Police have the right to ask, and it's against the law in Texas to refuse to identify, if you are a witness or suspect in a crime.
Re: Was this arrest legal? Or a violation of the woman's rig
You are right it is only after arrest that you must identify and I doubt they had PC to arrest so It makes the whole situation much more doubtful in my estimation.gigag04 wrote:Wrong. You are missing some key parts of the statute that I have touched on twice in this thread.EEllis wrote: Police have the right to ask, and it's against the law in Texas to refuse to identify, if you are a witness or suspect in a crime.
Re: Was this arrest legal? Or a violation of the woman's rig
Oh what do you know... Like you are a LEO or went to school for this stuff or somethinggigag04 wrote:Wrong. You are missing some key parts of the statute that I have touched on twice in this thread.EEllis wrote: Police have the right to ask, and it's against the law in Texas to refuse to identify, if you are a witness or suspect in a crime.


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Re: Was this arrest legal? Or a violation of the woman's rig
Produce the papers and be done with itE.Marquez wrote:Oh what do you know... Like you are a LEO or went to school for this stuff or somethinggigag04 wrote:Wrong. You are missing some key parts of the statute that I have touched on twice in this thread.EEllis wrote: Police have the right to ask, and it's against the law in Texas to refuse to identify, if you are a witness or suspect in a crime.![]()
