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Funny, but the part that kind of rankles me a little from a rights standpoint is this:
I'm no law expert, and I'm sure the search was technically legal, but you've got to feel sorry for the guy. I realize the cops can't just take someone at face value when they say a 911 call was a false alarm; for all they know, someone's tied up in the basement or something.
But really, it strikes me as borderline BS that they can take that as a carte-blanche reason to search your stuff top to bottom. I realize there's probably no legal basis for that feeling but it just feels off to me.
Thoughts?
A B.C. man probably wishes he had given his 11-month-old son a set of keys to play with instead of a phone, after the infant accidentally dialed 911 and brought police to his dad's marijuana grow-op.
Funny, but the part that kind of rankles me a little from a rights standpoint is this:
"We saw him playing with the cordless phone and just pressing all the buttons, so evidently he had called 911," Canning said.
With that mystery solved, officers began inspecting the residence and soon discovered a 500-plant marijuana grow-op.
SOURCE: CBC News
I'm no law expert, and I'm sure the search was technically legal, but you've got to feel sorry for the guy. I realize the cops can't just take someone at face value when they say a 911 call was a false alarm; for all they know, someone's tied up in the basement or something.
But really, it strikes me as borderline BS that they can take that as a carte-blanche reason to search your stuff top to bottom. I realize there's probably no legal basis for that feeling but it just feels off to me.
Thoughts?