Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like the officer was harassing citizens at a private gathering on private property.
You may want to read more about it then. It was not a private gathering on one of the participant’s private properties. It was an unauthorized gathering by trespassers on the property of businesses who did not welcome the event.
Can you show me the trespassing notice that had been served by an authorized representative of the private property?
LOL you are hilarious, must serve a trespassing notice by an authorized representative before the police can do anything? Where do people come up with this nonsense? This is what happens when people dream of turning their car around in circles in empty parking lots rather than being educated and productive members of society.
https://www.findlaw.com/state/virginia-law/virginia-criminal-trespass-laws.html
By your logic, if someone comes onto private property to shoot someone else, the police can't do anything until the property owner serves a trespassing notice. This is silly. In that situation, murder laws kick in. And here, there are laws about disorderly conduct, nuisance, operating a motor vehicle unsafely, etc.
Trespass can't happen until you are given notice by the owner. That's the law. Don't like it? Change it.
Got it. Looks like the police were responding to unsafe use of motor vehicles, disorderly conduct, and nuisance. Not trespass.
On private property?
Yes, the law allows it. Don't like the law? Change it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like the officer was harassing citizens at a private gathering on private property.
You may want to read more about it then. It was not a private gathering on one of the participant’s private properties. It was an unauthorized gathering by trespassers on the property of businesses who did not welcome the event.
Can you show me the trespassing notice that had been served by an authorized representative of the private property?
LOL you are hilarious, must serve a trespassing notice by an authorized representative before the police can do anything? Where do people come up with this nonsense? This is what happens when people dream of turning their car around in circles in empty parking lots rather than being educated and productive members of society.
https://www.findlaw.com/state/virginia-law/virginia-criminal-trespass-laws.html
By your logic, if someone comes onto private property to shoot someone else, the police can't do anything until the property owner serves a trespassing notice. This is silly. In that situation, murder laws kick in. And here, there are laws about disorderly conduct, nuisance, operating a motor vehicle unsafely, etc.
Trespass can't happen until you are given notice by the owner. That's the law. Don't like it? Change it.
Got it. Looks like the police were responding to unsafe use of motor vehicles, disorderly conduct, and nuisance. Not trespass.
On private property?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like the officer was harassing citizens at a private gathering on private property.
You may want to read more about it then. It was not a private gathering on one of the participant’s private properties. It was an unauthorized gathering by trespassers on the property of businesses who did not welcome the event.
Can you show me the trespassing notice that had been served by an authorized representative of the private property?
LOL you are hilarious, must serve a trespassing notice by an authorized representative before the police can do anything? Where do people come up with this nonsense? This is what happens when people dream of turning their car around in circles in empty parking lots rather than being educated and productive members of society.
https://www.findlaw.com/state/virginia-law/virginia-criminal-trespass-laws.html
By your logic, if someone comes onto private property to shoot someone else, the police can't do anything until the property owner serves a trespassing notice. This is silly. In that situation, murder laws kick in. And here, there are laws about disorderly conduct, nuisance, operating a motor vehicle unsafely, etc.
Trespass can't happen until you are given notice by the owner. That's the law. Don't like it? Change it.
Got it. Looks like the police were responding to unsafe use of motor vehicles, disorderly conduct, and nuisance. Not trespass.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like the officer was harassing citizens at a private gathering on private property.
You may want to read more about it then. It was not a private gathering on one of the participant’s private properties. It was an unauthorized gathering by trespassers on the property of businesses who did not welcome the event.
Can you show me the trespassing notice that had been served by an authorized representative of the private property?
LOL you are hilarious, must serve a trespassing notice by an authorized representative before the police can do anything? Where do people come up with this nonsense? This is what happens when people dream of turning their car around in circles in empty parking lots rather than being educated and productive members of society.
https://www.findlaw.com/state/virginia-law/virginia-criminal-trespass-laws.html
By your logic, if someone comes onto private property to shoot someone else, the police can't do anything until the property owner serves a trespassing notice. This is silly. In that situation, murder laws kick in. And here, there are laws about disorderly conduct, nuisance, operating a motor vehicle unsafely, etc.
Trespass can't happen until you are given notice by the owner. That's the law. Don't like it? Change it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like the officer was harassing citizens at a private gathering on private property.
You may want to read more about it then. It was not a private gathering on one of the participant’s private properties. It was an unauthorized gathering by trespassers on the property of businesses who did not welcome the event.
Can you show me the trespassing notice that had been served by an authorized representative of the private property?
LOL you are hilarious, must serve a trespassing notice by an authorized representative before the police can do anything? Where do people come up with this nonsense? This is what happens when people dream of turning their car around in circles in empty parking lots rather than being educated and productive members of society.
https://www.findlaw.com/state/virginia-law/virginia-criminal-trespass-laws.html
By your logic, if someone comes onto private property to shoot someone else, the police can't do anything until the property owner serves a trespassing notice. This is silly. In that situation, murder laws kick in. And here, there are laws about disorderly conduct, nuisance, operating a motor vehicle unsafely, etc.
Trespass can't happen until you are given notice by the owner. That's the law. Don't like it? Change it.
Not the PP, but I think a police officer asking folks to disperse on behalf of the owner should generate a non belligerent response. Does this property have any signs posted?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never would have thought I'd see the day when behavior like this was normed
Democrat progress
They look like J6 wanna bes
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like the officer was harassing citizens at a private gathering on private property.
You may want to read more about it then. It was not a private gathering on one of the participant’s private properties. It was an unauthorized gathering by trespassers on the property of businesses who did not welcome the event.
Can you show me the trespassing notice that had been served by an authorized representative of the private property?
LOL you are hilarious, must serve a trespassing notice by an authorized representative before the police can do anything? Where do people come up with this nonsense? This is what happens when people dream of turning their car around in circles in empty parking lots rather than being educated and productive members of society.
https://www.findlaw.com/state/virginia-law/virginia-criminal-trespass-laws.html
By your logic, if someone comes onto private property to shoot someone else, the police can't do anything until the property owner serves a trespassing notice. This is silly. In that situation, murder laws kick in. And here, there are laws about disorderly conduct, nuisance, operating a motor vehicle unsafely, etc.
Trespass can't happen until you are given notice by the owner. That's the law. Don't like it? Change it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like the officer was harassing citizens at a private gathering on private property.
You may want to read more about it then. It was not a private gathering on one of the participant’s private properties. It was an unauthorized gathering by trespassers on the property of businesses who did not welcome the event.
Can you show me the trespassing notice that had been served by an authorized representative of the private property?
LOL you are hilarious, must serve a trespassing notice by an authorized representative before the police can do anything? Where do people come up with this nonsense? This is what happens when people dream of turning their car around in circles in empty parking lots rather than being educated and productive members of society.
https://www.findlaw.com/state/virginia-law/virginia-criminal-trespass-laws.html
By your logic, if someone comes onto private property to shoot someone else, the police can't do anything until the property owner serves a trespassing notice. This is silly. In that situation, murder laws kick in. And here, there are laws about disorderly conduct, nuisance, operating a motor vehicle unsafely, etc.
Anonymous wrote:If this were a different country the police would have zero qualms about billy ubbing, gassing, and beating the crap out of these anarchists.
I'm so sick an tired of 'muh rights!' in the US. There's way too much emphasis on the individual in the US and not on community.
They should all have been rounded up and thrown in jail for 20 years. Attempting to open a door to get at an officer should be met with lethal force. All cars caughts at meetups should be impounded and crushed. Track down all people who get away based on their cell phone locations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like the officer was harassing citizens at a private gathering on private property.
You may want to read more about it then. It was not a private gathering on one of the participant’s private properties. It was an unauthorized gathering by trespassers on the property of businesses who did not welcome the event.
Can you show me the trespassing notice that had been served by an authorized representative of the private property?
LOL you are hilarious, must serve a trespassing notice by an authorized representative before the police can do anything? Where do people come up with this nonsense? This is what happens when people dream of turning their car around in circles in empty parking lots rather than being educated and productive members of society.
https://www.findlaw.com/state/virginia-law/virginia-criminal-trespass-laws.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never would have thought I'd see the day when behavior like this was normed
Democrat progress
Anonymous wrote:I never would have thought I'd see the day when behavior like this was normed