Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your article leaves out the fact that HE told officers he was in the USA illegally. He was also arrested for driving drunk 2 days before. Pick a better poster child if you want to be taken seriously.
Oh what's that you want to defend your orange god....kkk
You are currently defending a drunk driver who told the police he was here illegally.
He was a passenger in the car. He is a US citizen and held him even after they had proof he was a US citizen.
Abuse of power is an ugly thing. And it starts with marginalized people and eventually makes its way to everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your article leaves out the fact that HE told officers he was in the USA illegally. He was also arrested for driving drunk 2 days before. Pick a better poster child if you want to be taken seriously.
Oh what's that you want to defend your orange god....kkk
You are currently defending a drunk driver who told the police he was here illegally.
He was a passenger in the car. He is a US citizen and held him even after they had proof he was a US citizen.
Abuse of power is an ugly thing. And it starts with marginalized people and eventually makes its way to everyone.
Again, he was pulled over 2 days before this and charged with DUI. He’s a drunk driver, keep defending it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your article leaves out the fact that HE told officers he was in the USA illegally. He was also arrested for driving drunk 2 days before. Pick a better poster child if you want to be taken seriously.
Oh what's that you want to defend your orange god....kkk
You are currently defending a drunk driver who told the police he was here illegally.
He was a passenger in the car. He is a US citizen and held him even after they had proof he was a US citizen.
Abuse of power is an ugly thing. And it starts with marginalized people and eventually makes its way to everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your article leaves out the fact that HE told officers he was in the USA illegally. He was also arrested for driving drunk 2 days before. Pick a better poster child if you want to be taken seriously.
Oh what's that you want to defend your orange god....kkk
You are currently defending a drunk driver who told the police he was here illegally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your article leaves out the fact that HE told officers he was in the USA illegally. He was also arrested for driving drunk 2 days before. Pick a better poster child if you want to be taken seriously.
Oh what's that you want to defend your orange god....kkk
You are currently defending a drunk driver who told the police he was here illegally.
He wasn't the driver, though. He was the passenger. He was drunk but he was the passenger in the vehicle that was pulled over.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your article leaves out the fact that HE told officers he was in the USA illegally. He was also arrested for driving drunk 2 days before. Pick a better poster child if you want to be taken seriously.
correction
The arresting officer ALLEGED that Lopez-Gomez claimed to be in the US illegally. LE officers do not always tell the truth.
Everyone needs to remember and remind your loved ones that LEO are allowed to lie to you.
IMO, they lie so much that they forget when they can and cannot lie. They can lie to your face, but they cannot (well, aren't supposed to) lie on official reports.
My neighbor was murdered years ago, and even though I was at work when it happened and in a meeting with a dozen other people, the questioning by the police had me to the point of going "jesus, maybe I did do this??? Maybe I was pissed at him!"
All the neighbors were questioned. It wasn't like I was singled out at first. We all got questioned, but they went in hard on me because we'd previously had a known property line dispute issue. My fellow neighbors and I were in a room together waiting to be called in and chatting about how unbelievable the entire situation was. We couldn't believe it was that neighbor or happened in our neighborhood, and in broad daylight, blah blah the typical things everyone says when a tragedy like this happens. No one had any lawyers present. We weren't suspects! No one had been treated like a suspect until it was my turn. Others were in and out in maybe 15-20 minutes, but they just kept going and going with me.
They also ask the same question a bunch of confusing ways to try to trip you up. "You and Mr. Smith had had disputes in the past, right? And that angered you." Slipping that last part in fast to try to get you to say yes to both. "So you were angry at Mr. Smith and that's understandable because you had to pay all this money for surveys blah blah." "No..." "No, you didn't pay? No you weren't angry? I'd be angry if I had to pay all this money to prove what I knew was right. I'd maybe want revenge. Did you want revenge?" And they'd say things like "And you did not...not want revenge, right?" "You mean I did not NOT want revenge?" "I don't know, did you?" They pause between the nots to try to trip you up. I remember them telling me that another neighbor said they saw my car driving through the neighborhood before he was found. This was after me telling them what I was doing that morning - at work in a meeting. "We'll check that, of course, but we don't know the official time of death. We don't know when this happened. Do you? Weren't you home early this morning?"
You also don't realize how fast time goes by when you're being questioned. I thought I was in there maybe 30 mins and when the detectives took a break and I looked at my watch, I realized I'd been in there for over an hour and that's when it hit me that it was NOT like my other neighbor's questioning sessions. That's when I started to freak and it hit me: LAWYER. You're supposed to ask for a lawyer, so that's exactly what I did when they came back in. And you know what they said? "You know, this makes you look very guilty."
I will never go in for voluntary questioning again without a lawyer. I don't care if it makes me look guilty. Not after learning how shady they are with asking questions.
Arrest you by surprise, ask you questions, then charge you with lying to the FBI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your article leaves out the fact that HE told officers he was in the USA illegally. He was also arrested for driving drunk 2 days before. Pick a better poster child if you want to be taken seriously.
correction
The arresting officer ALLEGED that Lopez-Gomez claimed to be in the US illegally. LE officers do not always tell the truth.
Everyone needs to remember and remind your loved ones that LEO are allowed to lie to you.
IMO, they lie so much that they forget when they can and cannot lie. They can lie to your face, but they cannot (well, aren't supposed to) lie on official reports.
My neighbor was murdered years ago, and even though I was at work when it happened and in a meeting with a dozen other people, the questioning by the police had me to the point of going "jesus, maybe I did do this??? Maybe I was pissed at him!"
All the neighbors were questioned. It wasn't like I was singled out at first. We all got questioned, but they went in hard on me because we'd previously had a known property line dispute issue. My fellow neighbors and I were in a room together waiting to be called in and chatting about how unbelievable the entire situation was. We couldn't believe it was that neighbor or happened in our neighborhood, and in broad daylight, blah blah the typical things everyone says when a tragedy like this happens. No one had any lawyers present. We weren't suspects! No one had been treated like a suspect until it was my turn. Others were in and out in maybe 15-20 minutes, but they just kept going and going with me.
They also ask the same question a bunch of confusing ways to try to trip you up. "You and Mr. Smith had had disputes in the past, right? And that angered you." Slipping that last part in fast to try to get you to say yes to both. "So you were angry at Mr. Smith and that's understandable because you had to pay all this money for surveys blah blah." "No..." "No, you didn't pay? No you weren't angry? I'd be angry if I had to pay all this money to prove what I knew was right. I'd maybe want revenge. Did you want revenge?" And they'd say things like "And you did not...not want revenge, right?" "You mean I did not NOT want revenge?" "I don't know, did you?" They pause between the nots to try to trip you up. I remember them telling me that another neighbor said they saw my car driving through the neighborhood before he was found. This was after me telling them what I was doing that morning - at work in a meeting. "We'll check that, of course, but we don't know the official time of death. We don't know when this happened. Do you? Weren't you home early this morning?"
You also don't realize how fast time goes by when you're being questioned. I thought I was in there maybe 30 mins and when the detectives took a break and I looked at my watch, I realized I'd been in there for over an hour and that's when it hit me that it was NOT like my other neighbor's questioning sessions. That's when I started to freak and it hit me: LAWYER. You're supposed to ask for a lawyer, so that's exactly what I did when they came back in. And you know what they said? "You know, this makes you look very guilty."
I will never go in for voluntary questioning again without a lawyer. I don't care if it makes me look guilty. Not after learning how shady they are with asking questions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your article leaves out the fact that HE told officers he was in the USA illegally. He was also arrested for driving drunk 2 days before. Pick a better poster child if you want to be taken seriously.
Oh what's that you want to defend your orange god....kkk
You are currently defending a drunk driver who told the police he was here illegally.
He wasn't the driver, though. He was the passenger. He was drunk but he was the passenger in the vehicle that was pulled over.
You can still be in serious trouble.