.

What's annoying about these situations is a bystander can't really do anything because then they get arrested - complete bullshit. She was asking for help but no one can really help.
 
Crazy that she even held up the paper for him. Kudos to her. Unfortunately tax payers will foot the bill for this dick.

 
iacrenter said:
Does this situation apply in California as well?

The article I read said a federal court had upheld those policies/law, so if it was a federal court, probably
 
The real problem is the Police and politicians want to brush it off has this behavior is an outlier.

It's not.

One detective and one officer present, second officer stood and let him go off the rails.

A 3rd officer backs the detective up trying to bully the nurse in the car while in cuffs

The detective said the supervisor told him to do it if she didn't.  Either that's needs to be shown as a lie or yet there's a fourth backing the bully process instead of procedure.

Who do they want the blood from?  The semi truck driver who is in a coma after a reckless driver fled police and was chased then crossed the over into oncoming traffic and slammed into the semi.

The detective claims he was ' trying to protect the semi driver by getting the blood'

Nothing to see here, just a outlier...

The truly sad part, how long would it have taken to get a warrant for this veteran detective that most likely knows the judges in the rural Utah county?
 
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