View Full Version : For Those Who Think Cops Are Honest
glambman
06-08-2008, 06:25 PM
Glamb -
Plus, as Yek pointed out, I'm Canadian, and we have a different view even of tortious conduct. Jane Doe v. Toronto Police Commissioner.
I read the case. We have that here too, it is considered a 'special relationship'.
Cops can be sued here, they cannot act with total immunity, but there is a burden of gross negligence.
glambman
06-08-2008, 06:29 PM
It didn't seem like you understood that. It seemed like you were suggesting that police ignoring serious criminal situations was a perfectly normal, even desirable state of affairs. If you are trying to make a point that perhaps they were dealing with the scene in a way that was not visible to the poster, that is a somewhat different argument that doesn't even remotely touch on the cases that you cited. I would suggest that your favourable interpretation doesn't really match the facts provided by the OP, however.
Post # 37, to here.
massage girl
06-08-2008, 06:34 PM
Hi guys. That's my erotic massage blog you linked to, where I reported on the cops breaking into a massage parlor to steal the video tapes.
I could tell so many stories abut cops, but I won't. It is a scary world, and these guys have power. More in some places than others, but in my experience, way more than me and way too much.
Cameras (and especially hidden cameras) are changing everything, but they are also making things much more dangerous. When dealing with powerful people, the more there is to lose, the more dangerous a situation is. With virtually undisputable video evidence, things go from "routine" to "life threatening" very very quickly. Hidden cameras in massage parlors? How abut hidden cameras in bra straps, hidden cameras in purses? I know one girl who sticks a wireless Internet web came to a lightpole when she goes out to work the streets. Every car she gets into is on video somewhere.
Missy