Part of me wonders whether it is sincerely possible to violate someone's constitutional rights "in good faith". I feel like being a functional police officer should entail knowing the limits on your power, in the same way you're obligated to know what laws you're actually enforcing.
ceejayoz|1 year ago
Person running down the sidewalk pursued by someone shouting "stop, thief!" gets tackled by a cop and cuffed. Turns out to be mistaken identity or they'd done self-checkout. Rights violation? Yes. Good faith? Also, yes.
autoexec|1 year ago
Not sure that'd be a rights violation. The cop would be able to say they had reasonable suspicion that a crime was being committed justifying the detention. Excessive force is a possibility depending on the details, such as the extent of the injuries that resulted from being forced to the ground or if the cop ordered the runner to stop before tackling them.
gs17|1 year ago
Ignorance of the law is no excuse for civilians, police aren't held to the same standard.
LorenPechtel|1 year ago
That being said, there's no justification for sharing the nudes. Doesn't matter if you have a warrant, that's still wrong.