^Don't have to tell me this, I work at a bank.![]()
Actually, exactly the opposite is true. You can conduct a transaction of $10,000+ and the IRS typically (unless you're suspicious in other ways) won't give it a second thought as long as you fill out the Currency Transaction Report (CTR). It's really only when people go out of their way to avoid filling out this document (which basically says, yes, I just made a cash transaction of more than $10,000) by making, say, two $8,000 transactions almost simultaneously, called "structuring," that the thing gets flagged and the IRS investigates. Fortunately for those of us who prosecute these cases, drug dealers tend not to twig onto this and continue to structure their transactions.Want to get on the IRS's radar? Just have $10,000 or more deposited in a bank account of yours or move $10,000 or more out of a bank account of yours. Yes, this reporting rule goes back to the 80's as a means of trying to out drug dealers. Too bad that during the recent economic boom of the 90's and onward, a lot of folks who were doing well kept getting tripped up by that antiquated law.
I'm just saying. There are perfectly legitimate reasons for a person to have a lot of cash on them.
Oh, I don't know. You'll see some of them that look like they've got it together. Usually the younger ones who haven't been doing it long enough to manifest any of the telltale signs.Simple reason: In my neck of TN hell, large undocumented cash sums screams "meth dealer/pot dealer" to the cops".Just![]()
Really? Even if you're dressed clean and have all of your teeth?
Really? I did a semester at UCO (2007) and even went around town often with no hassles and I drive a faded, dirty 1997 Dodge Ram. I do remember when Nichols Hills was cracking down on pickups -- until irate homeowners complained that it was their trucks and not "the help's"Oh, I don't know. You'll see some of them that look like they've got it together. Usually the younger ones who haven't been doing it long enough to manifest any of the telltale signs.Simple reason: In my neck of TN hell, large undocumented cash sums screams "meth dealer/pot dealer" to the cops".
Really? Even if you're dressed clean and have all of your teeth?
On a side note, you ever drive through Edmond? Those cops will pull you over for any old reason. The car I drive to work is about 12 years old, missing a couple hubcaps and has a few dents and dings. That's the only reason I can think of for the fact that they pull me over ALL the time just to ask me what I'm doing out so late and where I'm going. My car is not worthy of Edmond!
One day I went over to my parents' house(they live in Edmond)on my lunch break. A cop followed me all the way there, and when I came out 45 minutes later, he was still circling the block. He followed me all the way back to work.
True, but then again-- and I know this isn't the norm-- I've had a couple of friends that got hauled in on a "drug paraphernalia" beef just cause they had a disposable Bic lighter in their jacket-- and yes they were of legal smoking age and no they didn't smoke pot just cigarettes.I'm just saying. There are perfectly legitimate reasons for a person to have a lot of cash on them.
Yes, there are. There are also plenty of legitimate reasons to have scales on you. Perhaps you're a chef, or have one of those ones that weighs money.
The point is that having large amounts of cash and scales on you opens you up to suspicion.
Not conviction.
Not life in prison.
Suspicion. Because those items in your car are strongly associated with drug dealing. It doesn't mean you don't have an innocent explanation for it, and I strongly doubt the article's assertion that merely possessing those items was actively illegal. It just means that your activity is legitimately suspicious. You have no right, Constitutional or otherwise, to freedom from proportionate investigation of reasonable suspicion.
My wife cuts through Nichols Hills all the time, and it makes me nervous as hell when I'm with her, even though her car is decent. It's a 2003 Accord, but I'm not sure that's up to Nichols' Hills standards.Really? I did a semester at UCO (2007) and even went around town often with no hassles and I drive a faded, dirty 1997 Dodge Ram. I do remember when Nichols Hills was cracking down on pickups -- until irate homeowners complained that it was their trucks and not "the help's"Oh, I don't know. You'll see some of them that look like they've got it together. Usually the younger ones who haven't been doing it long enough to manifest any of the telltale signs.Really? Even if you're dressed clean and have all of your teeth?
On a side note, you ever drive through Edmond? Those cops will pull you over for any old reason. The car I drive to work is about 12 years old, missing a couple hubcaps and has a few dents and dings. That's the only reason I can think of for the fact that they pull me over ALL the time just to ask me what I'm doing out so late and where I'm going. My car is not worthy of Edmond!
One day I went over to my parents' house(they live in Edmond)on my lunch break. A cop followed me all the way there, and when I came out 45 minutes later, he was still circling the block. He followed me all the way back to work.![]()
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