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Re: Florida football player arrested for barking at K9
Posted: Wed Jul 24, 2013 7:26 pm
by KC5AV
Charges dropped.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nc ... s/2580195/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Re: Florida football player arrested for barking at K9
Posted: Wed Jul 24, 2013 10:18 pm
by cb1000rider
But the LEO's point was made.
LEOs: are there any sort of internal repercussions for arrests that get the charges dropped.. Assume you're dealing with a public individual that's asking for it.
Re: Florida football player arrested for barking at K9
Posted: Thu Jul 25, 2013 8:36 am
by Keith B
cb1000rider wrote:
But the LEO's point was made.
LEOs: are there any sort of internal repercussions for arrests that get the charges dropped.. Assume you're dealing with a public individual that's asking for it.
If it was a valid charge, but the DA just decided to drop it, then no. If the person feels it was a false or unjustified arrest, then they can file a civil suit.
Re: Florida football player arrested for barking at K9
Posted: Thu Jul 25, 2013 11:23 am
by VMI77
I like in the video of the arrest where the officer angrily knocks a soft drink off the hood of his car and onto the shoulder of the highway --littering. Nice.
Re: Florida football player arrested for barking at K9
Posted: Thu Jul 25, 2013 6:23 pm
by Oldgringo
Abraham wrote:Why is taunting a K-9 dog O.K. with some?
It's not O.K.
I hope that when such things happen the tormentor is promptly arrested, jailed and fined.
Suits me; especially, if the tormentor is a University of Florida football player. GO VOLS!
Re: Florida football player arrested for barking at K9
Posted: Thu Jul 25, 2013 6:31 pm
by bizarrenormality
College student's dog barks at cop. Cop shoots dog. No charges filed.
Cop's dog barks at college student. College student barks back. Student is arrested.
Re: Florida football player arrested for barking at K9
Posted: Fri Jul 26, 2013 8:51 pm
by JP171
there's that contempt of cop charge again, along with the usual police apologists
Re: Florida football player arrested for barking at K9
Posted: Sat Jul 27, 2013 11:03 pm
by cb1000rider
stash wrote:I don't know what it is with people and police animals. This past week-end a guy in Austin burned the neck of a police horse with a cigarette. Thank goodness they arrested the guy. It is a felony in Texas to do that.
If the guy burnt a horse on the street and got arrested, he more than deserved what he got. That type of action endangered lots of people and could result in injury and death.
That being said, I've seen APD put those animals in to people and use them in a way that would get a civilian arrested, such as yanking the horses head into someone. Someone is going to catch it on camera one day.
The lighter side is that people have been arrested in Austin for DWI while riding a horse (and a mule) through downtown. If I recall right, I don't think the charges stuck, but they definitely were keeping it weird:
http://www.aolnews.com/2011/01/13/austi ... nd-donkey/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Re: Florida football player arrested for barking at K9
Posted: Sat Jul 27, 2013 11:29 pm
by srothstein
Mounted patrol teaches the officer how to use the horse as a weapon when needed. I was taught how to make him swing his head and how to ride him where his shoulder will hit someone to knock him down. Neither one ever hurt the horse but I only did them in training and never needed to on the street so I can't say if it would hurt the horse if used for real. Having been hit by the horse, I can say it stops the person.
The DWI arrests on the horse did not stick and should never have been made. The law is clear that DWI requires you to be in or on a device (PC 49.01 refers to PC 32.34), which makes it not apply to a horse. This is only true since they moved DWI to the Penal Code because the since a horse is treated as a vehicle under the Transportation Code (TC 542.003). So, yes, you can get a ticket for running a stop sign or failing to signal a turn on a horse.
Re: Florida football player arrested for barking at K9
Posted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 8:54 am
by talltex
srothstein wrote:Mounted patrol teaches the officer how to use the horse as a weapon when needed. I was taught how to make him swing his head and how to ride him where his shoulder will hit someone to knock him down. Neither one ever hurt the horse but I only did them in training and never needed to on the street so I can't say if it would hurt the horse if used for real. Having been hit by the horse, I can say it stops the person.
Having grown up riding horses, (and some rodeoing, at a young and dumb age), I can tell you a horse can easily knock a grown man off his feet by swinging his head into them without hurting the horse...horses often do that on their own to keep someone from getting close to them or just to play with you. I've seen a number of broken noses, black eyes, and busted lips when someone was standing right in front of a horse rubbing their face and the horse playfully tossed his head up. Their bone structure and hide is a lot tougher than ours and about the only way they would get hurt would be if the rider accidentally forced them to swing it into a hard manmade structure or sharp edged object, such as a sign post or vehicle. As for the "shoulder butt", it's not gonna hurt the horse at all...but the person is going to go backwards...when a 1000-1200lb object hits into a 200lb object simple physics takes over.