Jensenman wrote:
billy3, you are a consummate wiseass. I like that.
Right back at ya.
Jensenman wrote: But please point out where I said these folk shouldn't work to get themselves out of those 'hoods?
I'm not saying you didn't. But your argument seems to be that the people stuck living in such hoods "need" the police to violate the rights of themselves and others to "protect" them and their children. Perhaps I misunderstood.
Jensenman wrote: During the time they are in poor 'hoods, they are no less entitled to police protection than any other law abiding citizen. Or at least the idealistic law school view holds that to be true. Did you perhaps cut class that day?
I didn't cut many classes. I was paying so much in tuition I wanted to get my money's worth. However, I'm not arguing that the people in the hoods are less entitled to police protection, rather I'm arguing that they should be protected from unconstitutional exercises of those same police powers.
Also note, I never said curfews were always unconstitutional. It's just that it is very easy to go from a permissible one (e.g., in NOLA after Katrina) to an impermissible one (e.g., a nationwide one imposed this evening for no good reason). Even in a permissible one it is easy to go too far (e.g., the confiscation of firearms in NOLA after Katrina).
Jensenman wrote: And can you kindly explain, with your great big legal brain, what happens to a private citizen who executes a dope dealer by 'returning fire' when that individual is outside their home, rather than inside?
In Harris county they probably get referred to a grand jury without charges and subsequently no-billed.
Jensenman wrote: Hint: he or she winds up on trial for murder. The law has found that to be the case over and over. INSIDE the house is another thing entirely. Now our poor person is really hamstrung; can't shoot back and the cops won't come. Whaddya do now?
Well, if you're "executing a dope dealer" you probably end up in trouble. On the other hand, if you're "firing in self defense" (which is presumably why the children are hiding on the floor--or whatever your hypothetical was) you're free and clear. The key is "returning" fire. I don't know what the law is outside Texas, but here you'd have no problems. Maybe a little paperwork hassle, but that's about it.
Moreover, as somebody else said, I'd rather be judged by 12 than carried by 6.
Jensenman wrote: Somehow I have a hard time viewing this sort of situation as being 'pretty minor in the grand scheme of American life'.
Maybe you do, but I've studied enough law to know that hard cases make bad law. The fact is that one neighborhood, (or hundreds of them that certainly make up less than 1% of the United States) is not worth rewriting the Constitution over.
I'm sure it sucks to be the one living next door to the crack house. However, I don't want to give up my rights to get them busted. It's sort of like the tag line for the movie "The People v. Larry Flynt"--You may not like what he says, but are you prepared to give up his right to say it.
The same thing applies here. I may not want drug dealers roaming the streets, but I don't want to have to show my papers to the Gestapo every time I want to buy a pint of ice cream for my pregnant wife, either.
Jensenman wrote: Let me guess: you'll get back to me with some more sarcasm, right?
A little bit, but mostly what I think is reasoned, dispassionate analysis.