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The officer acted intentionally. Therefore he formed an intent.You will (or should have noticed) that 'intent' forms no part of the legal test.
1. The officer acted intentionally. Therefore he formed an intent.
2. Prior to the officer acting he had observed the student for a few minutes. The student was sitting on his dormitory patio.
3. When he got up to continue collecting trash the officer decided to contact him in person.
Please explain how the officer's intent was formed such that his actions could be reasonable.
Statistically, a black man is more likely to be a criminal, all else being equal. ?
Please answer the precise question I have twice asked.1. No-one is actually denying the actus reus.
The issue is: is 'intent' an element that requires demonstration by the law so that the Officer may legally stop (detain) an individual and question him on his: (i) name, (ii) address, (iii) identification if available and (iv) an explanation of his actions.
View attachment 104318
The answer is no: it is not. That is the law. Therefore your post is not relevant to the issues.
If you remember it was your assertion that this is what was required:
View attachment 104319
2 & 3. These are evidentiary matters. We have not actually progressed that far yet. We will. First we just need to establish what the law requires. I'm sure we will get there eventually.
jog on
duc
I did watch the video and I agree there is an inbuilt fear with regard black guys.
Please answer the precise question I have twice asked.
Your points are not relevant because an action was taken and needs to be explained in and of itself.
If you cannot explain the basis for the officer's action then anything else you post is irrelevant.View attachment 104321
Already answered.
View attachment 104322
The Officer's 'intent' is not relevant to the legal question. An Officer 'may' detain an individual if the above section is complied with: viz. that the Officer 'reasonably suspects' the individual fulfils the required elements.
Therefore the legal question becomes: did the Officer have grounds (evidentiary) to reasonably suspect?
Are we ready to move forward?
jog on
duc
When you get pulled over and searched more often you are more likely to be caught for things.
When officers are less likely to give you warnings and let you off for minor crimes you will end up with more charges.
When judges and juries are more likely to assume you are guilty you are going to end up with more convictions.
when societies prejudices make it harder for you to get ahead and find jobs etc, you are more likely to fall into poverty traps and end committing crimes.
Societies Bias show up in many ways, and its not just racial, females get let of more speeding tickets for example, "good looking people" get treated less harshly by juries etc
If you say that being black doesn't expose you to all sorts of negative bias you are a fool in my opinion.
If you cannot explain the basis for the officer's action then anything else you post is irrelevant.
when societies prejudices make it harder for you to get ahead and find jobs etc, you are more likely to fall into poverty traps and end committing crimes.
Then please go ahead and explain the officer's motivation.That is exactly what we are going to explain.
Then please go ahead and explain the officer's motivation.
It's the nub of the entire issue, and you cannot grasp this basic fact.I'm not going to explain his motivation. Again, irrelevant to the legal question.
It's the nub of the entire issue, and you cannot grasp this basic fact.
Where is your explanation of the officer's actions?View attachment 104326
Your words.
Racism cannot occur if the Officer's actions are lawful (and consistent). At the moment we are simply looking at whether the Officer's actions are lawful. If they are, we are half-way to demonstrating that no racism exists, according to your definition.
jog on
duc
Where is your explanation of the officer's actions?
Thanks Rumpy.Reasonable suspicion. That is a matter of personal opinion of course, but police officers are allowed to apply it given their experience.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reasonable_suspicion
The prejudice against people is usually born of something other than inherited genetically, would you be comfortable depositing your money in ratesetters, if it was based in Nigeria? If not, is that racist? It certainly could be perceived as racist.Well that they only thing you have to know to be able to understand that often they receive harsher treatment than would be justified, and that sometimes that harsher treatment results is brutality, death or even just more charges, convictions or harassment.
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