Quote:
Originally Posted by braisler
Not to get off topic too much, but I saw something else that I thought was borderline entrapment on that same TV show COPS the other night. The police where staking out a lower income neighborhood late at night. They were putting a nice, new, shiny bike leaning unlocked against a pole. When some unsuspecting teenager comes along and sees this bike and decides to go for a ride, they pounced on him, tackled him to the ground and put him in cuffs. I don't know whether they actually tried to arrest him or not, but they did search him roughly and tell him that he had broken a law by stealing that bike. "He knew the bike wasn't his, didn't he?" Cripes! When you leave an unlocked bike leaning up against a building, likely it isn't going to be there when you get back. What's next. Are they going to drop a $20 bill on the ground on the sidewalk of a busy street and arrest the first person who picks it up? "You knew that $20 wasn't yours, didn't you?"
Cops are too often motivated by the wrong interests. Or we, the people, are too naive when it comes to the true role of the police in our society. They aren't here to protect and serve us.
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I couldn't disagree more with your post. "Sees this bike and decides to go for a ride," my ass. What if I leave my bike in my front yard? Does that mean it's open season for anybody who'd like to "go for a ride?"
/threadjack off
Yes, prostitution stings are idiotic. In my city, vice cops regularly visit strip joints to try to make sure there's no "inappropriate touching." Even the city councilwoman who represents that district has publicly stated that there has never been a complaint registered against the strip joints.
So the argument that prostitution stings are done to reduce other kinds of crime doesn't ring true to me. More likely, they're done as a source of revenue for the city. Especially since they can confiscate the john's car, which I personally feel is a gross travesty, because it makes the total "fine" exorbitant.
/soapbox dismount