Statistics: Posted by hawkwing — Fri Sep 01, 2017 11:14 pm
Statistics: Posted by EM_Puma — Fri Sep 01, 2017 9:25 pm
Statistics: Posted by BroncoBot — Fri Sep 01, 2017 12:17 am
Statistics: Posted by CrimsonCoug — Thu Aug 31, 2017 2:35 pm
Statistics: Posted by mtnradio — Thu Aug 31, 2017 1:27 pm
The officers have the right and the duty to control the scene for everyone's protection. The managers was standing around the corner of FB's apartment ... which was fine until the dip-stick put himself into the situation and made it blow up. Remember, the officers are IN FB's apartment, THEY have a right and duty to be there ... the manager? Not so much. (PERHAPS there is a) an element of the housing contract which gives him such a duty; or perhaps there is something in Utah Landlord-Tenant law that does ... I can't speak to those.) When the guy steps in and things get hot, the police had the duty to remove the manager and keep the peace.The manager may indeed be a jerk with an axe to grind. But honest question here. Does he have a legal right to be where he is and film? Or to put it another way, is there a law that says he should not have been there and filming? Just because a police officer says to do something that doesn't mean it's the law.
If I'm standing in my own front door and see something going on with my neighbors, is it illegal or just immoral to film? Trust me, I don't like the idea of people recording everything and making it public (I strongly detest most vloggers who just walk around recording every moment and every place they go in their boring lives), but that doesn't necessarily make it illegal.
Statistics: Posted by mtnradio — Thu Aug 31, 2017 12:59 pm