The Common Potato
Muse
No. Joe has this one sorted. You're meant to go to the wrong door and shoot someone else.
Police in Arkansas arrested a man for piercing his son’s ear last week. Now, he faces felony charges.
The incident was caught on video that went viral on TikTok.
In the clip, four members of the Tontitown Police Department can be seen pushing their way into a home and forcing Jeremy Sherland, 45, against the wall as the man’s wife and son react with shock.
Under the Natural State statute cited by law enforcement, it is unlawful to perform body art on a minor without parental consent. The statute also expressly does not apply to minors “when piercing the earlobe.” The statute does, however, make it “unlawful to perform body art in any unlicensed facility.”
I don't have my thumb on the pulse of the dumb and stupid anymore, is "pierced ear" still considered a "gay thing" by some?
I don't have my thumb on the pulse of the dumb and stupid anymore, is "pierced ear" still considered a "gay thing" by some?
I don't have my thumb on the pulse of the dumb and stupid anymore, is "pierced ear" still considered a "gay thing" by some?
I don't have my thumb on the pulse of the dumb and stupid anymore, is "pierced ear" still considered a "gay thing" by some?
A Black California youth leader says he woke last week at 4 a.m. to find deputies in his bedroom, guns drawn, who then escorted him out of his home half-naked — only to let him go after they realized he was not a burglary suspect they were looking for.
Derrick Cooper, 54, said that when he was wrongfully detained on April 18, he felt “less than human” and “humiliated.”
“I was not valued as a human being,” he said Tuesday. “To just come in and blatantly take me out of my safe place and put me in a place that I’m helpless and afraid for my life —it’s one of the worst things imaginable.”
The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department said deputies from the Compton Station were dispatched to an attempted burglary call near the L.A. City Wildcats facility, a youth sports academy Cooper has run for 27 years. Cooper’s apartment is in the same building, he said.
Cooper was detained in the facility but was later determined not to be a suspect and was released, the sheriff’s department said in a statement.
So, not sure how much of a thing, "ear-rings are gay", would be especially now, were people have so many body piercings.
It's Arkansas. People there still point at planes.
What really happened is that the cops got a dodgy tip about a guy getting drunk and putting holes in his son's ear. They investigated, they were annoyed that this guy didn't immediately submit to their wishes, found out the abuse charge was almost certainly BS, and they probably sat around the cop store scouring the code for a crime that would stick even without the son's testimony. So they came up with the license bit.
So then they charge him with all the crimes they can't prove along with the one they can and offer a deal that he probably needs to take because fighting these people in court is extremely expensive and carries massive personal risk. Especially when you are going to lose on at least one count.
In this case the license bit probably wouldn't hold up on appeal, but extremely expensive again.
As I mentioned upthread, they're in a bit of a spot... investigation wise.I guess cops just can't get their addresses right.
Black youth leader says he was mistakenly detained and escorted outside half-naked by Los Angeles County deputies
Probably won't. The license thing, is you cannot operate a business, ie you cannot do this thing for profit. If it does holdup, that would also mean things like a mom cannot cut her own kids hair without a stylist/barber license, and you cannot put down insecticide in your own house.
As I mentioned upthread, they're in a bit of a spot... investigation wise.
Not a damn thing they do right now is gonna surprise me. Shock and disgust, yes. But not surprise.
[LINK]
US police officer 'flips' car driven by pregnant woman who was following police guidance on what to do when pulled over by the police.
https://jalopnik.com/cop-flips-pregnant-womans-while-she-tries-to-pull-over-1847062704
I have not heard of this manouevre in the UK, but it seems to be a commonly adopted policy by US police. Is it something commonly done elsewhere?
Police chases seem from statistics to be dangerous, half of those injured are by-standers and usually for trvial offences. Although the evidence suggests police chases should be resricted, it seems that like appropriate use of guns, appropriate use of cars by police is hard to enforce.