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Drunk Driver Mugshots Featured On Facebook

An anonymous reader writes "Get yourself a DUI and your mugshot may get some exposure on Facebook. That is, if you get caught in New Jersey by Evesham Township's police, which have begun posting mugshots of arrested people, convicted or not, on its Facebook page. Now, we know that if you get arrested, your privacy is pretty much limited to the brand of your underpants, but the local police department has started a controversy and may find itself in hot water. How much value does a public mugshot on Facebook have to the public? What privacy rights do you have if you get arrested?"

321 comments

  1. here, let me fix that for you by hypergreatthing · · Score: 4, Insightful

    and may find itself with a lawsuit for millions which tax payers will have to pay up while the police department will suffer no ill effects.

    Fixed.

    1. Re:here, let me fix that for you by Shakrai · · Score: 2, Insightful

      and may find itself with a lawsuit for millions which tax payers will have to pay up while the police department will suffer no ill effects.

      That's silly. Have you ever worked with a small municipal Government? They aren't the Feds or State -- they can't print/borrow massive amounts of money. A large legal settlement would most definitely be felt by the police and all other municipal departments.

      Of course, I'm not sure what grounds these people would have to sue. When I got arrested my name and street address were featured in the police blotter. Paper never bothered to do a story when the Grand Jury refused to indict me though. That's life -- I got over it. Not sure what my cause of action would have been if I didn't get over it. Arrests are a matter of public record. The paper/facebook/cousin-billy-who-works-for-the-PD are all free to talk about them.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    2. Re:here, let me fix that for you by alexo · · Score: 1

      and may find itself with a lawsuit for millions which tax payers will have to pay up while the police department will suffer no ill effects.
      Fixed.

      Can't you sue the involved policemen directly?
      After all, this is not a part of their official duties.

    3. Re:here, let me fix that for you by operagost · · Score: 1

      They aren't the Feds or State -- they can't print/borrow massive amounts of money.

      No, they just raise taxes. Usually property taxes, although employment and per capita (or, as I like to call it, "tax on air") taxes are also popular.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    4. Re:here, let me fix that for you by zero_out · · Score: 1

      When a relative of mine was arrested for DUI, their name was printed in the newspaper. That's how their mother found out. I don't know what was worse for them; the 6-month suspension of their license, following their conviction, when their job required driving 100% of the time, or the shame of their mother knowing they were arrested (prior to the conviction), because some newspaper printed it.

    5. Re:here, let me fix that for you by gandhi_2 · · Score: 1

      plenty of police departments do this. at least facebook saves the taxpayer on hosting.

      https://news.washeriff.net/bookings/

    6. Re:here, let me fix that for you by gandhi_2 · · Score: 1

      And all the federal bailouts of city and county governments?

    7. Re:here, let me fix that for you by davev2.0 · · Score: 1

      While someone might sue, it is doubtful it would get far as records of arrests and mugshots are public records. The plaintiff would have to argue that the public records should not be available to the public. This is just an example of a government agency being open and accessible.

    8. Re:here, let me fix that for you by cosm · · Score: 3, Informative

      What privacy rights do you have if you get arrested?"

      Not many. I work in public safety in the Southeastern United states. In most jurisdictions, when you are detained, your charge details and mugshots are public record. We even have a local paper that publishes HUNDREDS of mugshots every single week. It is completely legal, albeit frowned upon, but completely legal. If you went to your county courthouse and asked for a mugshot of some shmoe you saw in the public records page of your gazette, they would be obliged to give it to you.

      Don't believe me? Go to Myrtle Beach SC, and at every gas station is a copy of Just Busted .

      This is not new. Electronic mugshots are not new either, many counties host pages that offer up all of their current inmate data.

      We actually deal with news agencies who get mad because we don't help provide enough data. The news sites eat this junk up. They want it in the most easily consumable format possible, and want a copypasta job so they can just put our data straight into their paper.

      Also, mugshots and inmate data online is not a new thing. Check out VINE , you can find out when they are released and even be notified by cell phone.

      This is a non-story. This is a public safety agency using a new medium, and so it is "scandalous". Same dog, new tricks folks. Check your local laws, hell call your courthouse, you have less "privacy" than you think. Much less.

      --
      'We are trying to prove ourselves wrong as quickly as possible, because only in that way can we find progress.' RPF
    9. Re:here, let me fix that for you by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      "That's silly. Have you ever worked with a small municipal Government? They aren't the Feds or State -- they can't print/borrow massive amounts of money. A large legal settlement would most definitely be felt by the police and all other municipal departments."

      Speed traps, red light cameras and photo radar are money printing schemes for small governments, especially speed traps along 2 or 4 lane highways.

    10. Re:here, let me fix that for you by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Hell, my mugshot is on the internet because I had a valid out of state ID instead of a local one and unconstitutionally failed a "papers please" check that resulted in my arrest. Fortunately the judge was somewhat less of a fascist pig and threw out all charges even before I was bussed over to the courthouse. My mugshot is still up there. Its just another part of living without liberty in a police state.

    11. Re:here, let me fix that for you by StikyPad · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Unfortunately, the alternative to public arrest records is much worse: secret arrest records. Do we really want to go down that road?

    12. Re:here, let me fix that for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a local newspaper reporter: the paper didn't do a story on your non-indictment because most papers don't have the resources to cover every court proceeding. The police blotter is usually provided directly from the police; the courts don't release similar blotters, and in fact often do their best to avoid releasing any information to the press. So if your non-indictment wasn't covered, it was most likely because the paper didn't hear about it.

    13. Re:here, let me fix that for you by nacturation · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, the alternative to public arrest records is much worse: secret arrest records. Do we really want to go down that road?

      The problem is that the publicity is unbalanced. While we have public arrest records, we have secret exoneration records. When somebody who gets arrested later has all charges dropped, there is no publicity around that fact. It's trivial for a newspaper to publish all the details of everyone arrested, but tougher for them to follow every court case and publish the results.

      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    14. Re:here, let me fix that for you by harl · · Score: 1

      The posting says, in effect, that you committed a crime. If found not guilty you may have a libel and/or slander case since you didn't commit a crime.

      --
      I find being offended by me offensive.
    15. Re:here, let me fix that for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a non-story. [...] Check your local laws, hell call your courthouse, you have less "privacy" than you think. Much less.

      I think given that, this is very much a story, and an important one at that.

    16. Re:here, let me fix that for you by mmaniaci · · Score: 2, Interesting
      So why should we should sit back and let this blow over us? I get really pissed off by people like you who just accept the status quo and figure some things will never change. Somehow I'm not surprised though; after all you do work for the prison-industrial compl... uh, I mean the public safety system.

      This is a non-story. This is a public safety agency using a new medium, and so it is "scandalous". Same dog, new tricks folks.

      But yet here it is, on the front of slashdot with a very active comment thread, and it *IS* scandalous. Why just DUIs? Why Facebook, not their own website? Are they trying to profit off of this service? Was going to the station to request this information too hard? No, not really. Is releasing these people's personal information before they are convicted of any crime morally okay? Absolutely fuck-tastically not. It may just be the same dog with some fancy new tricks, but I for one still want the mutt neutered.

    17. Re:here, let me fix that for you by cosm · · Score: 1

      I completely empathize with your point.

      Contact your local politicians and voice your opinion. Print out flyers. Let people in your jurisdiction know of what is possible and what you feel needs change. And vote out those who continue to allow these practices.

      Otherwise your are part of the status quo as well. If you want the mutt neutered, actively participate in the process. We can armchair quaterback our policies all day, but if we vote out on the local level those who do not serve our interest, well, it is better than not participating.

      And at the end of the day, if that doesn't change anything, well some things will never change.

      --
      'We are trying to prove ourselves wrong as quickly as possible, because only in that way can we find progress.' RPF
    18. Re:here, let me fix that for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, the alternative to public arrest records is much worse: secret arrest records. Do we really want to go down that road?

      There is alternatives. Slashdot recently wrote about Wikileaks servers in Sweden and there was some, very misinformed and confused, discussions about the system used in Sweden (and some other Scandinavian countries).

      Stupidly simplied, it is a rather complex system, and propably very confusing for an outsider:
      * To be allowed to publish some types of information in Sweden you have to have an "ansvarig utgivare", roughly an editor that is personally responsible for that the content published is legal and ethical. If you don't have an "ansvarig utgivare", then you are automatically guilty of slander if you publish some types of information. If you have an "ansvarig utgivare" you are protected from police investigating your sources or hinder you from publishing (as described in the slashdot article about the Wikileaks server).
      * If you have an "ansvarig utgivare", your right to publish ANY kind information is protected by your rights as a journalist, NOBODY CAN STOP YOU FROM PUBLISHING ANYTHING, BUT if you don't follow the press ethical guidelines (created by a privetly held media organisation with members from all mayor and most minor news publishers), you may be reported to the "pressombudsman" (press ombudsman), an institution with no dependence or obligations to the Swedish government, created by the same privately held Swedish media organisation. If the "pressombudsman" find that there might be a wrong doing, he will forward the case to another private institution created by Swedish media, the "Pressens opinionsnämnd" that will clarify if the information was unethical to publish and what should be done to rectify any wrong doings. If you don't follow the recommendations from the "Pressens opinionsnämnd", your case might be taken to court.
      * The core of the rather complicated press ethical guidelines boils down to this: "is it of public interest for this information to be published". Usually there is, sometimes things have to be clarified or retracted in another article (if it is untrue) by the same journalistic outlet. Rarely the original article has to be removed (from a website for instance).
      * Arrest records are even more public in Sweden then in USA (both countries sometimes classify arrest records, in Sweden usually to protect underaged from being exposed, in USA to protect politicians and other powerful people and organisations to be exposed e.g. trade secrets or military secrets). Anyone can get copies of arrest records anonymously in Sweden, without any justification of why they want them, but some parts of that information can't be further published anonymously.

      Swedish media would never publish names of people just because they where arrested for drunk driving, in Sweden alcoholism is considered an illness, not something to be punished for or something that will get better if the names will get published. Sometimes names of drunk drivers have been published, but then there has been more to the story than they just being drunk and driving (for instance they may have been public figures, especially if they are polticians, or they have a profession with great responsibilities (e.g. surgeons) and/or have repeatedly been arrested for drunk driving (you loose your drivers license first time you get arrested for drunk driving in Sweden, so they are likely driving without a license too)). There have, however, been names published of rapists at one occassion (by media with an "ansvarig utgivare", it has happened several times anonymously (i.e. illegaly)) and that case was barely considered ethical (any new publishing of names of rapists will not automatically be approved). Swedes consider rapists to be sick people too, and there is an heated debate wether or not anything is to gain (from the point of providing public safety) by punishing them.

      This system have been working pretty well since mid-18th century.

    19. Re:here, let me fix that for you by Chowderbags · · Score: 0, Troll

      So how about this: any person who is arrested who is not later convicted gets put in an section that offers unconditional apologies. At least then you don't see just an arrest record for the person, you also see that they were exonerated.

    20. Re:here, let me fix that for you by Kjella · · Score: 3, Informative

      Wow, talk about a false dichotomy. Nobody here in Norway will publish my name if I get arrested (except in some few exceptional circumstances) but there's nothing like a secret arrest. I can still contact the media, or have my lawyer contact the media. I can waiver the confidentiality requirements of the police. This is the same as if e.g. I wanted to run a story on my medical condition, they could interview my doctor if I waiver the confidentiality on my journal. A secret arrest would imply the police could prevent me from telling anyone that I am arrested, or to not acknowledge that I've been arrested.

      Hell, around here I can't even get a copy of my criminal record without reason. Employers in general can't ask for one, and even when they're legally required to then only for relevant crimes. So for example I might have to get one to become a school teacher, but it'll say nothing about any tax dodging. Only if I have committed crimes against children that'd make me unfit to be a teacher. Only applying for the police or security clearance in the military will bring out your full record. You make it sound like we'd be some Kafka-esque country with secret trails and all that but we're not. There's more choices than that and public scapegoating the way the US does.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  2. Meanwhile, on Long Island... by AndyAndyAndyAndy · · Score: 4, Informative

    Newsday has been publishing DUI arrestees' mugshots on their website for at least the last few years.

    --
    It's always confirmation bias!
    1. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by IBBoard · · Score: 1

      Seems like a slightly more sensible version, even if it would still cause controversy.

      How much value does a public mugshot on Facebook have to the public?

      A fraction above zero for the public, but a huge amount for Facebook. Why use some locked-in, trendy hip site of the unwashed masses that profits some other organisation when you could do it yourself?

      TBH I'm a bit ambivalent about mugshots of convicted people, since they've committed a crime and so using their face as a "we'll catch you - see, we caught him" thing doesn't seem that terrible. That said, I did read something recently that said (IIRC) naming and shaming doesn't actually help reduce crime rates. Arrest doesn't have to be proven, though, so I'm sure there'll be lots of cases of mild defamation by association of being on the site.

    2. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by alen · · Score: 5, Insightful

      it's different when the news does it because they are reporting on a government agency. in this case the government agency is showing off people accused of a crime simply to humiliate them before a trial. this is wrong

    3. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by AndyAndyAndyAndy · · Score: 1

      Really though, what's the difference? Humiliation is the same no-matter what the source.

      --
      It's always confirmation bias!
    4. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by cronius · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Newsday has been publishing DUI arrestees' mugshots on their website for at least the last few years.

      Just to follow up with an example: http://www.newsday.com/7.25434?q=mugshot&type=example.Image

      I always find it strange that there has to be new laws whenever a new medium comes a long. Why aren't laws generic? If there is no problem posting mugshots on the internet, then posting it on facebook should be no different. If it *is* a problem, then it was a problem all a long, and the involvement of facebook actually put a light on the issue (that someone then should fix).

      --
      Life is Reality
    5. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by alen · · Score: 2, Interesting

      anyone can stand out in front of a police station and take pictures of people on a public street. when a government agency peddles these pictures it's the same as inciting a mob in the old days to lynch or beat up people before a conviction at trial.

    6. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I thought it was a common trait for oppressive regimes to make use of public shaming/humiliation for ... helping enforce the law? Let's see how well the formula would work:

      1) depressed person starts drinking
      2) becomes alcoholic
      3) starts driving a car under the influence
      4) gets caught eventually
      5) public humiliation - gets more depressed
      6) goes back to drinking, and starts driving without a license

      let's say step 6 is they go into rehab. They come back into public, random strangers start saying things like "hey - I remember you - you were caught for DUI" ... talk about not even getting a chance to put your past behind you. Sounds like a formula to keep these people in a permanent cycle of alcoholism.

      I don't see how this helps at all.

    7. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 2, Insightful

      big difference, here.

      FB is a commercial enterprise. why on hell is a police force (governemnt agency) HELPING PROMITE THE PROFITS of a stupid commercial (and crass) website?

      what would happen if 100 other FB clones showed up and asked for equal treatment? is this is the internet and society we WANT? are we even THINKING about what this will encourage?

      give the police free reign to make fun of people in public (this is the undercurrent; the unsaid) and you've just glorified their jobs. new sport: frame someone, get their pic *permanently* on FB and then say 'haha, just kidding. you can go free now'.

      WAY too much abuse and FB has shown it is 'the spoiled child of the internet' and they REFUSE to honor actual privacy requests.

      the linkage between law enforcement and some stupid social networking website should never be allowed in any official means.

      jersey cops being dumb asses. again. is there NO adult in charge, there, who can actually think about the repercussions?

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    8. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by alexo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      anyone can stand out in front of a police station and take pictures of people on a public street. when a government agency peddles these pictures it's the same as inciting a mob in the old days to lynch or beat up people before a conviction at trial.

      Extra-judicial "justice" is all too common nowadays.
       

    9. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 4, Interesting

      go ahead and try it, then. stand outside a police station and snap photos. ...let us know how dark the inside of their jail cell is, too.

      cops today are UBER sensitive about us taking their pics. I'm a photographer and I follow all the news stories (mostly UK but the US is trying to catch up) where the cops arrest this guy for shooting a pic of a cop in public or they demand your camera or even worse: demand you delete photos (all are technically beyond what a cop can demand! only a judge can demand you delete photos, IN COURT).

      I find it the worst kind of doublespeak for cops to encourage bullying of the public by posting photos of arrest victims and yet will arrest YOU if you try to take THEIR photo.

      we need a 'cop book' site that has photos, names and addresses of all cops and public politicians. let that run for, oh, say, 10 years. lets see how that experiment goes. at the end of 10 years, we'll see if this 'idea' is good or not. if its good and the beta test passes, we'll then OK it for the cops to take our pics during arrests and post them.

      but just like all new ideas, this needs a beta test period. I hereby volunteer all cops and politicians to have their picture and personal details posted and collected in an easy to search format.

      good idea?

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    10. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by Seumas · · Score: 1

      I don't understand what the controversy is. Police departments have been publishing arrests in news papers forever. There are magazines in many states which sell for a dollar and feature current mugshots. There is The Smoking Gun, too. Many police departments post mugshots directly on their websites. If you are unfortunate enough to be arrested for anything - even wrongly - you will be named featured in numerous outlets to be laughed at and ridiculed just as if you were actually convicted of some heinous crime.

      What does the fact that it's on Facebook versus all these other outlets have to do with anything? It's just one more place they're mauling your reputation on top of all the others.

    11. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by causality · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Arrest doesn't have to be proven, though, so I'm sure there'll be lots of cases of mild defamation by association of being on the site.

      It's funny that of all the crimes out there, they choose to do this with DUI suspects. The notion that "driving is a privilege, not a right" has been twisted and abused so that if you are accused by the state of a DUI offense, you either have to incriminate yourself or suffer a punishment for not incriminating yourself. On a MVR (motor vehicle record) the charge for refusing a breathalyzer is quite similar to the charge for having taken and failed a breathalyzer. DUI, certain asset forfeiture laws, and maybe sexual harassment are the only crimes where the accused must demonstrate innocence. None of this is compatible with a reasonable interpretation of the Fifth Amendment, yet it goes on, because it's "for our own good" or something.

      So it's interesting that this is done with DUI arrestees. They're basically screwed either way. This attempt to attach a stigma just makes that more so.

      That said, I did read something recently that said (IIRC) naming and shaming doesn't actually help reduce crime rates.

      That makes sense. It's common sense, really. Criminals generally do not believe that they will get caught. If they believe that they will certainly get caught they tend not to do the crime. A stigma is a punishment that takes place after they get caught. Of course this isn't going to have much of a deterrent effect. If you really want to prevent crime, clever ways to make people suffer won't do the trick. That is punishment but it's not much of a deterrent. It'd be better to understand what personal/character flaws make someone like a DUI offender want to be so careless with the life and safety of others. Then you'd have some ability to prevent. But that's a much harder problem than locking people up or publically humiliating them which are quite easy to do by comparison.

      Arrest doesn't have to be proven, though, so I'm sure there'll be lots of cases of mild defamation by association of being on the site.

      I've always believed that there should be no such thing as an arrest record. There should be only a record of convictions. Otherwise someone can be haunted for the rest of their lives by a mere accusation that they have to explain to all future employers and others when in fact they are innocent. Otherwise people get the idea that cops and judges and politicians are something other than human beings who can make serious mistakes. Arrest records don't do anything to serve any real notion of justice. Neither does defaming someone who has not actually been convicted.

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    12. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by stanlyb · · Score: 0

      Very good idea. But you are a dreamer, as am i.

    13. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by alexo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I thought it was a common trait for oppressive regimes to make use of public shaming/humiliation for ... helping enforce the law? Let's see how well the formula would work

      Here's another scenario:

      1) Cop makes a pass at your daughter and gets rejected.
      2) Cop now has a chip on his shoulder.
      3) Cop arrests you for DUI (bogus).
      4) You are not charged with anything, but...
      5) Your mugshot is now prominently featured on that facebook page.

      And before you reply with the quaint notion of suing them, let me continue

      6) It is your word against the cop's, guess whose carries more weight?
      7) The police dept closes ranks, finds "witnesses" and manufactures "evidence".
      8) You lose the suit and are now short an unspecified amount of dineros as well.

    14. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by Shakrai · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The notion that "driving is a privilege, not a right" has been twisted and abused so that if you are accused by the state of a DUI offense, you either have to incriminate yourself or suffer a punishment for not incriminating yourself.

      The choice there isn't a hard one at all. One gives the state the evidence needed to secure a criminal conviction against you. The other is a civil citation that takes away your license for six months and raises your car insurance rates. I'll take option B Alex....

      Agree with you that "implied consent" laws are bullshit. Thanks for nothing MADD.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    15. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by gandhi_2 · · Score: 1

      Ooh! I got a scenario:

      1: Former high school football star Jake Hoyt (Ethan Hawke) has only been on the force for a short while.
      2: He's assigned to an anti-drug unit in the Rampart Division of the LAPD
      3: He's shown the ropes by Detective Sergeant Alonzo Harris (Oscar winner Denzel Washington).
      4: Hoyt will lose his innocence during the course of this single day because of what Alonzo exposes him to.
      5:They encounter various gangstas, victims, dealers, snitches, and "civilians."
      5: Along the way, we learn more about Alonzo's fall from grace, his morally dubious private life, and his explosive secret plan that involves Jake.

    16. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 1

      You forget the easiest option C: don't drink and drive. Thanks a million, MADD.

      --
      by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
    17. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, since they are the government they should build their own facebook, and while they are at it they should build their own Google, and their own computers, their own police cars, their own guns...

      If you think Facebook is stupid feel free to not use it, but don't demand that everybody else stop using it.

    18. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by davev2.0 · · Score: 1

      I think you have it backwards. The police force is using a free commercial enterprise (FB) to publish public records on the internet as opposed to spending the money to add the feature to their website. They are not promoting FaceBook, they are exploiting FaceBook.

    19. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by arkane1234 · · Score: 1

      Interestingly, the location I'm at does not do this.
      Many police also have big hats and carry sticks as primary weaponry, does that mean that it's what needs to be done by everyone?

      To recap common sense and the very REASON the article exists here, the reason it's bad:
      A) Pictures like that on Facebook are public flogging, and go above and beyond punishment fitting the crime.
      B) It's Facebook, who wants their picture on Facebook? (a joke, I keed I keed)
      C) It ostracizes people wrongly since it's basically remotely accessible whimsically by just about anyone with a computer, a 'net connection, and a little time to search Facebook. A newspaper actually takes more effort than most people have in this world, unless they are truly interested. (passive vs. active search)

      --
      -- This space for lease, low setup fee, inquire within!
    20. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In my opinion, showing that people will be held accountable for their actions and crimes and making an effort to show people what happens is a good deterrent. I think most people do not think about the actions or the penalty until after they are caught. If more people see actual people getting caught and punished, it might make someone else think twice before doing it themselves. I guess some of these people have not actually been convicted yet though so that's a little different. More chain gangs out doing cleanup work on the highways would help too. Parents driving by them can point out to their kids, "Look son, if you keep fucking up, you'll be there someday" ;)

    21. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by Shakrai · · Score: 5, Interesting

      MADD can kiss my fucking ass. They aren't even about drink driving anymore -- their Founder left the organization because they've turned into (in her words) a neo-prohibitionist organization.

      The fact that I have to drive through a roadblock and explain why I'm using the roadway just because I had the nerve to buy groceries on a Saturday night is infuriating.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    22. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by causality · · Score: 1

      You forget the easiest option C: don't drink and drive. Thanks a million, MADD.

      I sure as hell don't need MADD to tell me that driving drunk is a bad idea. Do you?

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    23. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      Really though, what's the difference? Humiliation is the same no-matter what the source.

      One is State sponsored, the other is protected by the 1st Amendment. Other than that, yes, the same.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    24. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by natehoy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      FB is a commercial enterprise. why on hell is a police force (governemnt agency) HELPING PROMITE THE PROFITS of a stupid commercial (and crass) website?

      Because the police have been doing the same exact thing for newspapers (another commercial enterprise) for many, many years now, and Facebook demanded equal treatment?

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
    25. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by alexo · · Score: 1

      Are you suggesting that all policemen are beyond reproach?

    26. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      I don't have names tied to the people I take pictures of when I do that, though

    27. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      Ehhh. They're going to post so many pictures that nobody will actually remember them. Not saying I agree with it (I'd prefer it done only after an actual conviction), but there are much bigger police abuses to worry about before getting down to publicizing mugshots

    28. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by causality · · Score: 5, Insightful

      MADD can kiss my fucking ass. They aren't even about drink driving anymore -- their Founder left the organization because they've turned into (in her words) a neo-prohibitionist organization.

      That's an inevitable and unfortunate side effect of basing public policy on extreme visceral emotions, like the loss of a loved one. The idea that someone you care about is hurt, maimed, or killed because of the completely preventable, blatant irresponsibility and disregard for life of a drunk driver is quite naturally an extreme and very emotional position. I'll make an understatement and say that it's downright fucking horrible and I wouldn't wish it on any enemy. That's quite understandable.

      The problem is that because this begins with an extreme and emotional position it has its basis in visceral satisfaction. It does not have its basis in a reasonable approach to making changes to the law and the culture to ultimately benefit society. It is natural that what begins with an extreme finds its home within an extreme such as neo-Prohibition. Prohibition of any sort is quite simply the failure to recognize human beings as moral agents capable of making choices and being held responsible for those choices and instead transferring that status to inanimate objects like bottles of ethanol. It's completely unreasonable and dehumanizing. It also doesn't work.

      Just as a judge is expected to recuse himself from a case to which he has personal connections, those who have been deeply, personally, and tragically affected by drunk driving are the least qualified to create public policy concerning it. The neo-Prohibition is because enough is never enough. Enough is never enough because the pain of such a staggering loss like these mothers have unjustly suffered is so great that no piece of legislation can hope to take it away.

      I'm 100% behind using the police power of government to stop drunk drivers. I drive a car, too. So do my friends and family. I don't want to be endangered by someone else's blatant stupidity, nor do I desire that for anyone else. But I say that based on sound principle of what is reasonable, not emotional hatred of people who perpetrate such crimes. What I support even more than stopping drunk drivers is the preservation of our civil liberties while doing it. You can't get that with ends-justify-the-means thinking.

      If someone refuses to use reason and principle, and death and loss are the only criteria they recognize, then I want them to consider this: lots of people die because of drunk drivers. How many people fought and died to secure the civil liberties that made this country the light of the world? How many more will suffer and die if we erode those civil rights and become a totalitarian police state?

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    29. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by gandhi_2 · · Score: 1

      Yep. That's exactly what I was saying: no police officer in the world has ever done anything wrong.

      Or: i was enjoying the "make up a scenario" game.

    30. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by compro01 · · Score: 1

      I find your faith in breathalyzers disturbing. They are not reliable machinery in any sense of the word. They're accurate to within a factor of 3 at best (The base assumption that breath alcohol and blood alcohol are correlated by a factor is faulty, as that factor is not even close to constant between people) and can throw false positives off many things. Use Listerine or eat a ripe fruit in the past hour? As far as the machine is concerned, you're three sheets to the wind.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    31. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by iamhigh · · Score: 1

      There are vast differences in a newspaper and Facebook (or any site). With the internet archive and such we can now preserve these things for eternity. We can also search VERY easily.

      So not only is a new medium, but it has drastically different abilities to put that information out to EVERYONE, and to keep it FOREVER. This isn't newsprint to magazines, it's a "paradigm shift", to use a buzzword. We have changed the way we disseminate and consume information, however it's doubtful that the founders of this country, or even laws from just a few years ago had any idea that we would have such a change in the way we can communicate. So the laws were written using current standards of how humans communicate and store data. Now that these standards have drastically changed, some of the laws may need to be updated.

      This is a great example, because before the internet only people in that local area would see it, and they would have to remember it, or go to the local library and dig up the old newspaper. Now you just google it. This changes the concept of privacy and therefore privacy laws should be reviewed.

      --
      No comprende? Let me type that a little slower for you...
    32. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by iamhigh · · Score: 1

      Newspapers publish articles in the newspaper, not the police.
      Users, in this case the police, publish data/articles on Facebook, not Facebook.
      There is a difference.

      --
      No comprende? Let me type that a little slower for you...
    33. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by DigiTechGuy · · Score: 0

      How many more will suffer and die if we erode those civil rights and become a totalitarian police state?

      Newsflash, this is a totalitarian police state... Welcome to the USSA

    34. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      I'm fine with posting pics and names of uniformed cops, but addresses serve no legitimate end that I can see, and they allow pissed off idiots to go after cops personally. Doesn't seem like a smart thing to do.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    35. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by DavidTC · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Incidentally, the reason they're doing this is usually that they're required. See, before they were required to publish that information, we had secret arrests...

      Anyone who'd looking at the issue of 'We've decided you have no privacy rights when arrested' is utterly wrong. We didn't say that. We made cops release that information to safeguard people's rights.

      You can't have people demanding 'habeas corpus' if the police don't tell people they've arrested you. (And please note the 'one phone call' is a myth.)

      If they're using the release of that information in an abusive manner, or we just don't think it's worth it anymore, we have every right to make them stop.

      Incidentally, as we've recently gone back to having secret arrests, I'm not entirely sure we should get rid of this yet. It might be a good idea, in fact, to apply it to the CIA and whatnot, who have apparently determined they can imprison people without informing the public.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    36. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It is worse than what you're saying. The GP poster is suggesting doing something to a Police Officer that they wouldn't want done to themselves. There is an "us vs them" mentality (group politics) going on there, and the rules they are suggesting for others, they don't want applied to themselves.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    37. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      5) Public Caning
      6) Vows and never goes drunk driving again.
      7) Wants rehab.

      I'm sick to death of coddling people who don't care about anyone or anything else besides themselves. WHY should society pay for their "rehab" when it won't work unless they REALLY want it? Rehab doesn't work when people don't care. And they don't care about themselves, why should I care about them?

      Look, don't get me wrong, because I'm all for wanting to help people WHO actually want help. But I know too many people who LIKE staying drunk all the time, and drive and no amount of REHAB is going to ever change them. THEY like who they are (or at least pretend to).

      Man this is depressing, I think I need a drink before I go home tonight. (wash rinse repeat)

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    38. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      I only really knew one alcoholic in my life. Hardcore alcoholic. Was a the father of two friends of mine. He seemed like an OK guy but man would he drink. I am pretty sure he lost several jobs because of it, as well as got several DUI's.

      I remember going over to visit my friends at their house, and noticing when I was walking up the driveway that the truck was still running. Their dad was passed out on the steering wheel, totally out. Apparently out drinking, managed *somehow* to make it home safe, once in the driveway threw it into park, head on steering wheel, asleep. Truck still running hours, and hours later. I wonder if it ran out of gas... I sure as hell wasn't about to wake him up!

      Anyway I think I just want to point out that their are those that might get a DUI because they made a bad judgment call at a restaurant or bar had a couple too many and blew slightly over the limit and was unlucky enough to get caught (people can debate impairment all day). There are also those that will get absolutely fall down drunk, sloppy, very impaired and jump in their truck and drive where ever. One is a lot more dangerous than the other.

      I think if that alcoholic guy I knew saw it (picture on facebook), he might say "nice picture" and get a laugh out of it and generally not care, as I said he had more than several DUI (He eventually lost his drivers licence). Where as some guy who had one too many beers at dinner with his wife might be absolutely horrified, particularly if anyone he knew found out. This without a conviction? Not cool in my books. I think it is a bit different if the picture is of a repeat DUI offender, then by all means. Anyway I think it is pretty common sense.

    39. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by nolife · · Score: 1

      That's an inevitable and unfortunate side effect of basing public policy on extreme visceral emotions, like the loss of a loved one. The idea that someone you care about is hurt, maimed, or killed because of the completely preventable, blatant irresponsibility and disregard for life of a drunk driver is quite naturally an extreme and very emotional position.

      DUI is only an issue BECAUSE there is a loss of life, if no one was dying or getting hurt from it, no one would care and it would be perfectly legal. If you ignore the emotional impact of the loss of life then DUI doesn't look to bad but in reality, that loss of live is there what you are trying to prevent. Using the emotions makes sense to show the impact and the real danger. That being said, using DUI as a soap box to push prohibition is taking it to far.

       

      --
      Bad boys rape our young girls but Violet gives willingly.
    40. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me get this straight.
      You way people who drive drunk are bad and that knee-jerk policies based on a few accidents caused by drunk drivers are equally bad.
      So far, so good.
      You then go on to suggest that a mother losing a child to drunk driving is somehow justification for said knee-jerk laws because people can't be trusted to use their own judgment. This makes no sense. After all we are supposed to trust the judgment of people effected by the loss of children, right?
      But then you go on to say that we shouldn't even trust the mother's judgment, which is good -- right up until you say this is really the only way. So now you want me to trust the judgment of someone who wants to punish a minority of people by putting aside one of the most cherished assumptions of our system of justice, that of the right for a person to be innocent until proven guilty.
      I can hear you now, "I did no such thing." But you did. You argued that the Shakrai should have the right to drive to a grocery store without being stopped to see if he/she was intoxicated. In that case Shakrai is assumed guilty and must prove his innocence. This is the truth regardless of what MADD has made our court system decide. They are just plain wrong. At some time in the future this will be rectified and the laws allowing this will be overturned. Either that or my faith in the USA is misplaced and we live in a state run by the whims of the powerful.
      In other words, dear sir/madam, MADD is an organization bent on using its political clout to push an agenda that the majority of Americans do not agree with and would not wish on themselves but that a majority of elected representatives and judges find politically expedient to agree with.

    41. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Anyone thinking it might be a good idea to post the names and addresses or phone numbers of cops on a website might want to check their state laws first. It's illegal in many states to list or expose the personal addresses and phone numbers of cops and in some cases, the personal email addresses too. Here is a copy of the California code citing this, I know Ohio, Kentucky and a couple other states have laws very similar.

      Just posting this because while it sounds like a good idea, it might actually be illegal to do it. Head of the trouble before it starts.

    42. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well weed would definitely be a start, and I fully stand behind that idea. The rest ... err ... kind of hard to justify, I just think the approach of treating these people as criminals is misdirected.

      I know you've been voted down as flamebait, but I don't care, I want to address your point. I never said that we should be legalizing drugs to eliminate related crimes. I just don't see how this really helps. Public humiliation? wtf? Just arrest them, make them serve time, what not. Sure - there's the people who will be repeat offenders - publicly trying to humiliate them will not make things better, it will only worsen things.

      I hope you never fuck up in your life.

    43. Re:Meanwhile, on Long Island... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is why we need some sort of constitutional amendment to explicitly protect our right to privacy. Something like...

      All natural persons shall have a basic right to privacy regarding criminal accusations, things of a personal nature (medical records), ...

  3. Ummm... by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What privacy rights do you have if you get arrested?

    I suppose thats depends on what you get arrested for, but I would assume in most cases - all of them?

    1. Re:Ummm... by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 0

      I disagree. You get arrested by a public law enforcement agency, have a public trial, and essentially no rights (depending on the crime).

      While I'm not for the police state, I do believe that those convicted of a crime need to have their mugshots put up, especially for the following crimes:

      DUI/DWI (doc, specifically Colorado's numbers but I imagine the true holds same in TN given the number of those in court for it repeatedly)
      Pedophilia
      Rape (pdf, specifically Deleware's statistics)
      Murder (pdf, Washington state)
      Scam/Con

      People should know who you are and what your proclivities are. In the above cases you should expect no right to privacy after your first conviction (recidivism in these crimes is high, see links and also this document on recidivism).

      I couldn't find numbers for scammers/con artists, though I'm sure they don't give up after their first arrest either. If anyone could find national averages it would be appreciated. All the above docs referred to national averages that I didn't turn up in my searches (search term: <crime> recidivism)

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    2. Re:Ummm... by DJRumpy · · Score: 4, Informative

      All well and good, except these are being posted when these people are arrested. At this time, they are still presumed innocent until guilt is proven or they are convicted of a crime. This smacks of harassment.

      People should know who you are and what your proclivities are. In the above cases you should expect no right to privacy after your first conviction

    3. Re:Ummm... by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 1

      While I'm not for the police state, I do believe that those convicted of a crime need to have their mugshots put up

      Thanks for coming out, but thats not the issue we're talking about. Arrest and conviction are two seperate things.

    4. Re:Ummm... by davev2.0 · · Score: 1

      The arrest itself is public record, as is the name and mugshot of the arrested party.

    5. Re:Ummm... by DJRumpy · · Score: 1

      Yes, they are public record, BUT, you must generally also go through procedures to access such public data. They were not intended for random access in such a manner.

      Generally, a formal state/county/city public records request must be made in writing, the agency you're making the request of has a state-law designated amount of time to reply within, and the agency has a right to charge you a reasonable fee to cover the cost of obtaining and copying the record.

      Posting these on Facebook bypasses all of that, and could damage a persons reputation, without due process.

    6. Re:Ummm... by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      True, true.

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    7. Re:Ummm... by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      Perhaps, but the rate of conviction (aside from dismissals based on technicalities (improper procedure)) on the list of crimes I made (and DUI was one of the ones stated in the submission) is rather high.

      I don't see how this would be any different then televising the proceedings (which given the money the local court systems need now-a-days, might not be a bad idea). This way if someone is innocent and can prove it, or is guilty and is convicted, you have a more public venue (cable access, sell some advertising (no recesses for commercial breaks, but perhaps a voice-over recap of what happened), and bam, you have real reality television).

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    8. Re:Ummm... by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      I don't know if I'd define it as harassment. Definitely not a good thing to do so on just an arrest.

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    9. Re:Ummm... by natehoy · · Score: 1

      You'd assume incorrectly, unfortunately.

      Just ask any one of these possibly fine, upstanding citizens: http://www.theforecaster.net/section/term/144

      Check every newspaper in the country for lists of others.

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
    10. Re:Ummm... by davev2.0 · · Score: 1

      No, you generally don't have to go through a procedure to access it. As an example, check out the arrests in Hillsborough County Florida.

    11. Re:Ummm... by DJRumpy · · Score: 1

      You deny that they have to go through procedures to access it, and then immediately link to a page that requires very specific info, such as the persons first and last name, booking date, release date, race, sex, and date of birth?

      You really don't see how this differs from a Facebook page?

    12. Re:Ummm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That entirely depends on whether your local paper (or other media outlet) takes an interest in the fact that you've been arrested.

      I've long maintained that the multitude of stories on the "news" every day about people being arrested are no one's business beyond the accused, police, and attorneys.

    13. Re:Ummm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This smacks of harassment.

      I'll say! I don't know what nation the GP is from, but where I come from, we generally hold it to be true that once someone who was convicted of a crime has served their time, they have paid back their debt to society and are allowed and in fact encouraged to become normal, productive members of society again. We don't do that "scarlet letter" thing anymore where people permanently suffer consequences for the rest of their lives.

    14. Re:Ummm... by davev2.0 · · Score: 1
      One does not have to put in "very specific information". One is only required to put in just enough to limit it to a displayable format.

      After all, the database has everyone who has been arrested in Hillsborough county for the last 10 years.

      Try putting in a booking date and only a booking date and then clicking the Inquire button. You will see everyone booked on that day.

    15. Re:Ummm... by causality · · Score: 1
      I for one completely agree with you.

      You really don't see how this differs from a Facebook page?

      No, he doesn't. Not if he doesn't want to. This is why so few debates actually remain civil or convince anyone of anything no matter how many facts are presented, no matter how sound the reasoning used.

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
  4. It's stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your privacy rights should matter even if you're arrested, given how many people are falsely accused of things these days plus the situation of our society makes people desperate enough to do desperate things.

    It makes me angry to see somewhere like The Smoking Gun put up mugshots for everyone on the internet to see (and shame on places like Fark which constantly make fun of them). It's implying that criminals are somehow less than human and fair game for ridicule and horrible privacy violations. Just shows how far our society has devolved into an uncaring, unfeeling mass of idiots.

    No, I've never been arrested so I don't have a personal stake in my words, but I do believe in privacy and basic fucking human decency and kindness, all of which seems to have been thrown out the window in modern society.

    I post Anonymous Coward because I fight for my right to privacy. How about you?

    1. Re:It's stupid by Shakrai · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It's implying that criminals are somehow less than human and fair game for ridicule

      They are fair game for ridicule. You don't think idiots who crawl into a bottle and then behind the wheel of a car are fair game for ridicule? How many innocent do they place in harms way?

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    2. Re:It's stupid by oldspewey · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's implying that alleged criminals are somehow less than human

      FTFY, because until the charges are proved in court, simply being arrested could mean any number of things that fall well short of being guilty of an actual offence. Unfortunately, by posting mugshots to the internet (read "the public domain"), it ensures that these people will be forever linked to a crime they may or may not have even committed.

      --
      If libertarians are so opposed to effective government, why don't they all move to Somalia?
    3. Re:It's stupid by oldspewey · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So then wait for them to be convicted in court, and then ridicule away. Is due process really such an inconvenience for you?

      --
      If libertarians are so opposed to effective government, why don't they all move to Somalia?
    4. Re:It's stupid by LanMan04 · · Score: 1

      Yes, because everyone who was ever arrested for a DUI was guilty. Thanks for clearing that up.

      Moron.

      --
      With the first link, the chain is forged.
    5. Re:It's stupid by Shakrai · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You have the right to due process before the state takes away your life, liberty or property. You do not have the right to due process before the community can ridicule you. See, there's this thing called the 1st amendment. It means I can tell you and others what I think about you.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    6. Re:It's stupid by Shakrai · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, since the AC that I was responding to said criminals not the accused it's a safe assumption he was bemoaning the fact that we ridicule criminals after they are convicted for their crimes.

      Jackass.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    7. Re:It's stupid by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      You have the right to due process before the state takes away your life, liberty or property. You do not have the right to due process before the community can ridicule you. See, there's this thing called the 1st amendment. It means I can tell you and others what I think about you.

      The local government is bound by the same constitution as everyone else, so your premise that the community has first amendment rights to slander a person before the slander becomes fact due to inapplicability of the law is false.

    8. Re:It's stupid by Anachragnome · · Score: 1

      "...it ensures that these people will be forever linked to a crime they may or may not have even committed."

      Or, they did do it and the reporting agency simply misreported the information. I was arrested (big deal, fuck you) for one thing, but the arrest report (the one that makes it into the state website) was listing a crime I had never even been charged with, let alone committed.

      Regardless of whether or not it was accurate, in the minds of John Q. Public, it is not only accurate, but accurate forever because web caches do not take corrections.

      But that is OK, because I've come to realize that none of it really matters, except to the people that really don't matter to ME.

    9. Re:It's stupid by Shakrai · · Score: 2, Informative

      Releasing an arrest record is not slander. Newspapers have been publishing police blotters for decades. Arrests are a matter of public record. Get over it.

      I was arrested for a crime I didn't commit. Police blotter was on Page 2. Guess which page it was reported on when the Grand Jury kicked the charges against me? Oh, that's right, it wasn't reported at all. Such is life. I bet if you were in my shoes you'd sue, wouldn't you?

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    10. Re:It's stupid by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      The local government is bound by the same constitution as everyone else

      No. You don't understand what the constitution is: It is the enabling document for the federal government; it has some effect upon states, particularly in the bill of rights (amendments 1-10), and where states are mentioned explicitly (e.g. ex post facto laws), but it doesn't really go into great depth. In fact, it explicitly hands off a lot of legal territory to the states.

      From there, states have (or can have) their own constitution, which describes how that state handles various issues -- which may not be very similar at all to another state. The only catch here is that the states are required to recognize the laws of the other states when issues cross borders.

      Local government is then bound by the state rules, which may vary, and only the federal rules that over-ride.

      Generally speaking, though, the constitution (the one we usually talk about) is a federal document.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    11. Re:It's stupid by fast+turtle · · Score: 1

      Sorry but it's called the "Police Blotter" that many newspapers used to run where they reported the names of those arrested by the Police. All that's happened here is that the department has taken it upon themselves to publish a bad photo of those arrested for a specific crime.

      --
      Mod me up/Mod me down: I wont frown as I've no crown
    12. Re:It's stupid by History's+Coming+To · · Score: 1

      Bingo. You can legitimately be arrested for something you haven't done, in fact the UK police will generally arrest you "on suspicion of x" if there isn't some pretty concrete evidence. In this case they could arrest you on suspicion of drink driving if they saw you take a gulp of beer and get in a car, brethalyse you, find you're well under the limit and send you on your way. No reason to get all social networking on your arse.

      --
      Please consider this account deleted, I just can't be bothered with the spam anymore.
    13. Re:It's stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I was arrested for a DUI early this year. Admittedly, I had gone off the deep end and was overdrinking. However, I was NOT driving drunk. My wife was concerned and called the police reporting that I was, on a Sunday morning. In reality, I had a single drink, then hit the road. . I got home before the cops. I was knocking back straight bourbon IN MY HOUSE. . I was cuffed, my BAC was .1. I spent eight hours detained. . My trial is next week. My wife is testifying that she saw me drinking in the house. The cop says he saw no such thing. My lawyer says it's far from a slam dunk, since it's a DUI. . I've been forced to breathe into a hyper-sensitive device to start my car for five months. It can lock up the ignition because I've used mouthwash, or because I had a couple of beers within the last couple of hours. It also locks out if I pull into the garage, I shut the car off, and it wants a test anyway. No doubt the judge will have all the details at my hearing. It costs me 75 bucks a month. . There's nothing worse than being accused of something politically incorrect. Even if the charges are tossed, I'm out almost two thousand bucks. . So no, I don't think this is a good idea.

    14. Re:It's stupid by tycoex · · Score: 0

      Wow, your wife sucks.

    15. Re:It's stupid by goldspider · · Score: 1

      How do you feel about "Wanted" posters?

      --
      "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    16. Re:It's stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It got the job done. I'm straightened out and flying right now. Eight hours of confinement would have seen to that all by itself, though.

    17. Re:It's stupid by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      The local government can't take away rights granted by the federal constitution. Federal law overrides state law.

    18. Re:It's stupid by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      Newspapers didn't go the extra step and post a picture, which makes this a slightly different story, especially when coupled with today's ultra sensitive attitude towards the possibility that someone has done something wrong.

      Companies scour Facebook constantly looking for beer cups and people generally living their private life in FB albums; the problem with posting pictures is an extension of that. It's much easier to go "Hey, I know that guy!" when there's a picture associated with the name.

    19. Re:It's stupid by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Civics 101...Libel and slander are not sanctioned under the 1st amendment.

    20. Re:It's stupid by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure he was saying local governments, within their own constitutions, cannot do things that violate the US Constitution. I'm pretty sure the 14th amendment makes that clear. While states can do their own thing, especially when not specifically addressed in the Constitution (10th amendment), they can't do things that are unconstitutional at the federal level.

      A good example would be Arizona cannot usurp the constitution on the 4th and 5th amendment, nor can they make laws that are clearly enumerated as powers of the federal government, just because they have an immigration problem. Yes, address the immigration problems, but no, don't violate the US Constitution while doing so. Otherwise, as we've seen, your new law gets struck down as, wait for it...unconstitutional.

    21. Re:It's stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, good luck with all that.

    22. Re:It's stupid by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      Newspapers didn't go the extra step and post a picture

      Yes they do. Our local newspaper has pictures of people in handcuffs all the time. They have pictures of them being loaded into the police car, pictures of them walking into the court house, pictures of them doing work details, etc, etc.

      Companies scour Facebook constantly looking for beer cups and people generally living their private life in FB albums

      So? Perhaps one ought not to live ones private life in a public forum if one wants to maintain his or her privacy?

      It's much easier to go "Hey, I know that guy!" when there's a picture associated with the name.

      What's your point?

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    23. Re:It's stupid by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      Are you sure about that?

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    24. Re:It's stupid by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      nor can they make laws that are clearly enumerated as powers of the federal government

      No, but they can arrest people for breaking Federal law.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    25. Re:It's stupid by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      Common sense 101: Repeating a factual event (stewbacca was arrested at 10pm last night by the state police for DWI) is not libel or slander.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    26. Re:It's stupid by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      RIDICULING stewbacca for an offense he didn't commit IS libel/slander. You can't call me a child molester or a drunk driver until I'm convicted as such.

    27. Re:It's stupid by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      Yes I can. You are welcome to sue me if you can prove damages and think you might have a case. Good luck with that.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    28. Re:It's stupid by GrumblyStuff · · Score: 1

      It's a shame that your experience didn't show you how unfair and unethical it is. And, by the way, the fact that it has been happening for years and years doesn't make it right either.

      Arrests should never be public record. Conviction? I suppose. That and jail time being the price to pay.

      It's not easy to devise a fair system, one that can be lenient at times and proactive against clear dangers to the public at large. This... pre-conviction punishment is just as outrageous as continued punishment as jail (lost of voting rights, sex offender lists, etc.).

    29. Re:It's stupid by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      Yes, I am. The first issue is that the Sullivan Act isn't a ban on handguns. It requires a license to carry them. Those are two very different concepts; there is no provision against requiring a license specifically to carry a handgun (only to handguns does the Sullivan Act apply, after all) in the constitution, as you can see right here:

      "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."

      Then, you have this, taken right from the Wikipedia article you linked:

      Some question the constitutionality of the act, due to the Second Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. While the Supreme Court has only recently ruled that the Second Amendment prevents localities from enacting outright handgun bans, (See: Incorporation), the question of whether the Second Amendment provides grounds to invalidate local gun control laws like the Sullivan Act may be addressed given the recent decision by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in Parker v. District of Columbia, which was affirmed by the Supreme Court in the case District of Columbia v. Heller.

      If you read that block of text, it makes clear that the question isn't whether the constitution supersedes local regulation, but rather what exactly the constitution means. You see, it's completely true that the local government cannot infringe on rights given in the constitution. The question is truly "What rights does the constitution grant, and where do the lines of those rights get drawn?"

    30. Re:It's stupid by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

      So wait, because you've been through it, and realise how terrible it is, you think everyone else should go through it as well?

    31. Re:It's stupid by causality · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You have the right to due process before the state takes away your life, liberty or property. You do not have the right to due process before the community can ridicule you. See, there's this thing called the 1st amendment. It means I can tell you and others what I think about you.

      I have the right to say "fuck you, you're a god damned idiot". That doesn't make this a good, worthy, or noble thing to do. Now, that's a hypothetical. I'm not actually trying to insult you or call you an idiot but I wanted to make a point. If I used my free speech in that manner, it would say little or nothing about you while revealing quite a bit about me.

      Sure, you can insult people with no fear that the law will stop you because of the 1st Amendment. But tell me, do you really need to have the 1st Amendment repealed and laws of censorship enacted before you would think twice about insulting someone who is presumed innocent until convicted? And if so, is that because you really see something wrong with that practice and found self-restraint? But in that case why did it take a censorship law to change your behavior? That's why you can use the 1st Amendment to cover up any non-existant legal challenges to this behavior, but that will never escape the objections to it that don't involve using the government to censor you.

      If you believe in due process at all then you honor the principles behind it even if there is no law compelling you to do so. I mean fuck, if you won't believe or honor anything except under the threat of the force of law, your beliefs and your honor are quite worthless.

      If I want the state to honor due process because due process is a sound principle, why would I suddenly consider it unsound when faced with a choice of whether I will personally honor due process? You see, that makes no sense. If I take a "do as I say, not as I do" attitude towards the state, then I'm a garden-variety hypocrite. I'd be a hypocrite because I would want it to represent principles that I myself refuse to even try to embody.

      That kind of hypocrisy is the position of immature and self-serving people. Very simply, they want to be protected from a capricious state that can harm anyone it wants on a whim, because such a protection benefits them. They also want to be able to look down their nose at someone and judge that person as beneath them, because this (in one form or another) is extremely important to empty, hollow people who have no principles or nobility. For them there is only gratification and when they don't achieve it by making themselves higher, they do it by making someone else lower. So that also benefits them. By "benefit" I mean it feeds their childish mentality and makes sure they are never made to feel uncomfortable for having it. Thus, they give lip service to ideas like due process but routinely contradict it anytime they are not forced to honor it.

      That's why this is about publically posting mugshots for arrests and not for convictions despite the fact that both approaches are equally practical. This and the whole "eighth-grade emotional level our nation is at" (to paraphrase Bill Hicks) is what you are defending.

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
  5. How much value does a public mugshot have? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    None.

    But it lets officials appear to be "tough on crime" to the electorate.

  6. The question by Thelasko · · Score: 1

    The question is, do they tag you in the picture?

    --
    One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
    1. Re:The question by StuckInSyrup · · Score: 1

      Only

      --
      Ni.
    2. Re:The question by StuckInSyrup · · Score: 1

      ...if police is your friend.

      OT - I have no idea what happened.

      --
      Ni.
  7. Not really taking advantage of FB features... by indeterminator · · Score: 1

    ... they're not tagging the people in photos! A shame.

    1. Re:Not really taking advantage of FB features... by arkane1234 · · Score: 1

      That starts up and I'll personally take pictures of police officers, and implant them into pedophile pictures, then tag them.

      It's facebook, so it has to be true, right?

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      -- This space for lease, low setup fee, inquire within!
  8. Move along by Custard+Horse · · Score: 1

    The scurge of facebook strike again.

    The people who frequent facebook are insignificant therefore their opinion is too.

    It matters not what they think as Evesham Police Department is unlikely to assist during harvesting season on Farmville therefore they will move along and, presumably, get off the lawn.

  9. What is the motivation by jDeepbeep · · Score: 0, Troll

    From the pig point of view, what is their motivation for doing this?

    --
    Reply to That ||
    1. Re:What is the motivation by alexo · · Score: 1

      From the pig point of view, what is their motivation for doing this?

      Because they can?

    2. Re:What is the motivation by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      From the pig point of view, what is their motivation for doing this?

      Shame. Community opinion is or can be a strong motivator. Knowing that if you get caught DUI, not only do you face fines and restrictions on your driving but everybody in your community will know about it, is an added deterance. IIRC, this has been done in local newspapers before and has been shown to cut down on the number of drunk drivers.

    3. Re:What is the motivation by jbeach · · Score: 1

      The Police will probably say it's "Using public shame as a deterrent". But what I think it is, is to flaunt their power.

      --
      The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
  10. Ohio "Scarlet Letter" License Plates by cycleflight · · Score: 1

    Ohio has (or had if they discontinued it, not sure) a law where repeat convicted offenders of DUI laws get a special yellow license plate with red letters, contrasting the normal colors of Ohio license plates. The biggest difference between that and this is those are served upon convictions.

    Not so sure about arrests. I mean, there's really nothing you're going to do to refute a breathalyzer, but due process has to be respected.

    --
    "...And who wants to make buttprints in the sands of time?" ~Bob Moawad
    1. Re:Ohio "Scarlet Letter" License Plates by Bieeanda · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually, there are a number of ways that a breathalyzer test can give a false positive, and a number of ways that an officer can otherwise cock up an arrest.

    2. Re:Ohio "Scarlet Letter" License Plates by pgmrdlm · · Score: 1
      My girlfriend calls them party plates. They still have them. Complete different color than normal license plates.

      But the point is, these are issued on convictions. Unlike what the Florida police are doing.

      I think a previous poster tagged it perfectly. Due process.

      Hell, I think everyone should have their picture plastered all over the internet once they have been convicted. Especially child molesters. BUT, only after they have had their day in court and been convicted.

      --
      Anonymous comments are as pathetic as the anonymous "sources" that contaminate gutless journalism from the New York Time
    3. Re:Ohio "Scarlet Letter" License Plates by nospam007 · · Score: 2, Funny

      "..a law where repeat convicted offenders of DUI laws get a special yellow license plate with red letters,...."

      A yellow star?

    4. Re:Ohio "Scarlet Letter" License Plates by snd_chaser · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure if they are still issuing those, but those were issued in OH for any number of "point" infractions and/or suspended license issues, not just DUI.

      The majority of them were for DUI, I'm sure.

    5. Re:Ohio "Scarlet Letter" License Plates by nacturation · · Score: 1

      Ohio has (or had if they discontinued it, not sure) a law where repeat convicted offenders of DUI laws get a special yellow license plate with red letters, contrasting the normal colors of Ohio license plates.

      Do they look anything like this?

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      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    6. Re:Ohio "Scarlet Letter" License Plates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why does she call them party plates? cause she sees a convict in them and goes and has a party with them in their car? I bet she takes it up the ass of a recently released criminal who wants a slutty piece of ass. I bet she's taking it in all 3 holes right now by a group of 20 niggers. LOL LOSER

    7. Re:Ohio "Scarlet Letter" License Plates by cycleflight · · Score: 1

      Actually, they look almost exactly like New Mexico plates.

      --
      "...And who wants to make buttprints in the sands of time?" ~Bob Moawad
  11. Um..... by baptiste · · Score: 1

    Bernard Bell, Rutgers University law professor and Herbert Hannoch scholar, said it could be argued the Facebook posting of photos and arrest details is a privacy violation, even though such information is part of the public record.

    How can you say that with a straight face? If the mug shots are part of the public record - that's that. How they're made public is irrelevant. If you don't liek it - get the law changed to make arrests NOT part of the public recored - but nobody will want that will they?

    1. Re:Um..... by plcurechax · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How they're made public is irrelevant. If you don't liek it - get the law changed to make arrests NOT part of the public recored - but nobody will want that will they?

      But it does matter how accurately they portray those public records. That is, if they are found to not make it clear that those are only arrest records, not convictions, they set themselves up for the same liability that journalists avoid by the usage of "suspect", "alleged", and "accused." If they are considered to be misrepresenting or obscuring the fact those depicted people were only arrested, not convicted, they risk a libel suit.

      It also complicates matters if an arrest was made in bad faith, or any mistakes or wrong-doings. If charges are not pressed, or the court dismisses charges due to lack of evidence or other reasons, the accused may be able to seek compensation for both the bad arrest, and the bad publicity the police activity generated for the accused.

      I know a someone who was arrested for DUI, but it was thrown out of court due to the total lack of evidence (no evidence they operated any vehicle that night). That person could of had their professional life ruined by such police's active attempt to "name and shame" people who was never found guilty of a crime. Frankly that smacks of police exceeding their authority and mandate, as if the police think they are judge and jury as well, and that they would never accuse an innocent person incorrectly. The history in reality shows otherwise. That why justice has a due process.

    2. Re:Um..... by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      public record is a lame excuse.

      here's why. the phone book (remember those big thick things?) are also 'public records' and yet you cannot easily do a reverse number->name search.

      the concept is about the EASE of which you can use 'public info' to abuse.

      that subtle difference is all-important.

      making something online and searchable changes things.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    3. Re:Um..... by alexo · · Score: 1

      How can you say that with a straight face? If the mug shots are part of the public record - that's that. How they're made public is irrelevant.

      Well, Mike, your address and phone number are also a part of the public record -- just one "whois" away. However, I assume you'd object to others posting them on random web sites, particularly those frequented by people not known for outstanding morals and social responsibility.

      If you don't liek it - get the law changed to make arrests NOT part of the public recored - but nobody will want that will they?

      No, I do not "liek" it, mostly because arrested does not automatically mean guilty. So yes, I for one would want the law changed although I have no misconceptions about the chances of logic prevailing over the "tough on crime" rhetoric.

    4. Re:Um..... by FatGath · · Score: 1

      Frankly that smacks of police exceeding their authority and mandate, as if the police think they are judge and jury as well, and that they would never accuse an innocent person incorrectly.

      I thought that WAS their mandate.

    5. Re:Um..... by Unkyjar · · Score: 1

      A phone book isn't considered part of the public record. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_records

    6. Re:Um..... by baptiste · · Score: 1

      You're joking right? There are hundreds of sites that let you do reverse phone to name lookups. If it's not unlisted (ie its in the phone book) you can reverse it.

    7. Re:Um..... by baptiste · · Score: 1

      The key thing is if you're arrested, right or wrong, it's public record. Published in newspapers, etc - so why is publishing it on Facebook any worse? Because it's 'more' public? Currently the laws don't split that hair, so bottom line is - it's public record and can be made public as the police see fit. As for my name, address, etc - again, if I was that worried about it I'd take steps to try and conceal it. But I'm not. The point is - the statement made by that professor was silly. It's a public record, and until laws are enacted which differentiate manners in which such information is publicized, hard to see how anyone would have recourse for it.

  12. This has illegal written all over it by Haedrian · · Score: 1

    But it'll still be a while before someone sues for an exorbant amount of damages because of "psychological damage" and "lost job because I got angry at teasing and punched someone".

    And then money will come out of police department and into someone's pocket. And then 'everyone' is happy.

    1. Re:This has illegal written all over it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Police depts publish arrested peoples' mugshot all the time. It's public information.

    2. Re:This has illegal written all over it by alexo · · Score: 1

      Police depts publish arrested peoples' mugshot all the time. It's public information.

      Are they tagged with a prominent apology if it turns out to be a false/wrongful arrest?

    3. Re:This has illegal written all over it by Kijori · · Score: 1

      But it'll still be a while before someone sues for an exorbant amount of damages because of "psychological damage" and "lost job because I got angry at teasing and punched someone".

      Your example makes it sound like any lawsuit following this move would necessarily be frivolous - I don't believe that to be the case. If the police have gone out of their way to publicise someone's arrest then I don't see why they shouldn't be liable if the arrest turns out to be wrongful or malicious (e.g. "driving while black").
      (Note that the cause of action would be the arrest; the publishing on Facebook would serve to increase their liability, not to create it)

  13. does that dept NOT have any laywers? by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

    or even common sense?

    I hope they pay thru the nose on lawsuits until the next century.

    this is a horrible precedent!

    (contrast this to the recent series of stories where the police seem to believe its 'illegal' to take pics of THEM. while. on. duty.)

    doublespeak raised to a new art form.

    --

    --
    "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  14. The Smoking Gun by slashtivus · · Score: 1

    The Smoking Gun has been posting police photos since about 10 years ago already. That does not change any questions about privacy, but this is hardly 'news'.

    1. Re:The Smoking Gun by pgmrdlm · · Score: 1
      How long have newspapers been posting names of people being arrested? I would be surprised if we are not talking hundreds of years.

      And newspapers also post pictures at times. Prior to conviction. TV stations post pictures of people being arrested all the time.

      Whats the difference.

      I'm not saying its right, but seriously. What is the difference. These people have already had their name listed in the news paper. So this is all public knowledge already.

      --
      Anonymous comments are as pathetic as the anonymous "sources" that contaminate gutless journalism from the New York Time
    2. Re:The Smoking Gun by sjames · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The difference is that today your name is in the paper. Tomorrow it's wrapping fish and by next week it's in the dump or recycled. Sure, the newspaper is still available on microfiche in the library, but there's no index, certainly not for a police blotter.

      Meanwhile, your mugshot is still up on Facebook being seen, effectively re-published every day it isn't taken down. It's indexed on Google.

      It's the difference between catching a bad cold and catching HIV.

    3. Re:The Smoking Gun by dangitman · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying its right, but seriously. What is the difference.

      The difference is that when it appears in the newspaper, the newspaper pays for the cost of publishing that. In this case, police resources are being wasted publishing stuff to a private company's site. Why are police resources being used to profit Facebook?

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
  15. Already public record by goldspider · · Score: 1

    Arrests are already a matter of public record, are they not?

    --
    "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
  16. I see absolutely nothing wrong with this. by khasim · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Because FaceBook has such incredibly great security there is no way this could ever be abused by a bored high school kid who decided to post pictures of his teachers there.

    Absolutely no possible way this could ever be abused. None whatsoever. Therefore, this is a great idea.

    1. Re:I see absolutely nothing wrong with this. by butterflysrage · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm sure defence lawyers are just squeeing right now, this is perfict misstrial fodder / cause for dissmissing jurors.

      --
      the preceding post was not spell checked... suck it.
    2. Re:I see absolutely nothing wrong with this. by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      How so?

      That Fred was arrested for a DUI would seem to be a pretty obvious conclusion to draw without having to see a mugshot on facebook if you are a juror on Fred's DUI trial. You are at the trial after all...

    3. Re:I see absolutely nothing wrong with this. by butterflysrage · · Score: 1

      Juror predisposition. One of the more common causes of dismissing a juror is due to them being predisposed (one way or the other) due to media coverage... the fact that this is an "official" posting adds quite a bit of prejudice towards guilt to many who see it... who would then be dissmissed by the defense.

      --
      the preceding post was not spell checked... suck it.
    4. Re:I see absolutely nothing wrong with this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure defence lawyers are just squeeing right now, this is perfict misstrial fodder / cause for dissmissing jurors.

      In some cases, maybe, but I don't see it working in general. If a juror is on a trial for someone charged with crime X, then they can reasonably infer that the defendant was arrested for crime X. Since that's more or less the same information that's on the site, it's not likely to taint the juror.

      I only see it working in cases where the mugshot would be deemed prejudicial and inadmissible or there's a significant difference between what the person was originally arrested for and what they're being tried for.

    5. Re:I see absolutely nothing wrong with this. by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      If the jurour knew about the alledged circumstances of the arrest then you would have a point but just knowing the fact they were arrested for crime X does not predjudice the case. If that were true then it would be impossible to form a jury. OTOH you can dissmiss a potential juror if they are too stupid to understand what the term "presumption of innocence" means.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    6. Re:I see absolutely nothing wrong with this. by butterflysrage · · Score: 1

      depends on the case... for a domestic violence charge seeing the accused on an offical police site with a DUI charge could prejudice the juror.

      --
      the preceding post was not spell checked... suck it.
  17. You don't have privacy if you get arrested by Nikkos · · Score: 5, Insightful

    For good and for bad, getting arrested is a matter of the public record. (You wouldn't want to be arrested and held secretly, would you?) For some, the fact of public disclosure and "loss of face" is reason enough not to do bad things. For the innocent, it's our society's willingness to ostracize someone based merely on accusation that is the problem, not the posting of the picture.

    Somewhat relatedly, recent studies have shown that 44% of men would be unwilling to help a lost child because of the ease of which false accusations could ruin their lives. Maybe it's our knee-jerk judgmental culture that needs to be fixed instead.

    1. Re:You don't have privacy if you get arrested by nawitus · · Score: 1

      Well, obviously an arrest should be private by default, and if the person wants to go public then it would be a personal choice.

    2. Re:You don't have privacy if you get arrested by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People get imprisoned all the time and then aquitted years later. This is simply to keep the public happy... even if it's not the criminal that gets locked up. So the justice system doesn't always work.

      I just ask myself, How much is 14 years of your life, your careea and the respect of the general public worth?

    3. Re:You don't have privacy if you get arrested by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Worse than that, how many men are willing to be educators, especially in primary education? The "lost child" thing is rather nebulous to people, many have never come upon a lost child. But nearly everyone attends some sort of schooling. Schools have been lamenting for years the lack of male role-models before highschool. I know I'll be in partial retirement in 10-12 years, even though I had played around with the idea of going into education, why would I want to risk it? My dad's good friend took early retirement after a false accusation of this sort in highschool. He was quickly exonerated as he had a classroom-full of students who saw the whole affair and said he'd done nothing of the sort, but he just said "screw it" and was gone a few weeks later. I don't know if he was a fantastic teacher or anything, but he did have 40 years of experience teaching.

      As to the issue at hand, posting pictures of arrested folks just seems like trying to punish them outside of any conviction. It's stupid and brutish. It continually surprises me that we aren't more removed from all these "barbaric" people and religions with which our culture and country are so often at war.

    4. Re:You don't have privacy if you get arrested by diggum · · Score: 1

      Apart from the privacy concerns, I would think police might be against this due to detrimental effects on future investigations. If I'm a victim of a crime and need to look at a group of mugshots to see if I choose the person the police believe is responsible, and I've been looking at every new mugshot that they've taken, I may recognize or be subconsciously drawn to those pictures I had seen before. This could hamper some investigations.

    5. Re:You don't have privacy if you get arrested by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      For the innocent, it's our society's willingness to ostracize someone based merely on accusation that is the problem, not the posting of the picture.

      Why make it easier for those idiots amongst us to perpetuate this problem? If you don't post the picture, Average Joe who doesn't understand the difference between an arrest and a conviction won't be able to form faulty conclusions about an innocent person.

    6. Re:You don't have privacy if you get arrested by Nikkos · · Score: 1

      Why dumb down and/or restrict information to society because Joe Blow can't make the connection?

    7. Re:You don't have privacy if you get arrested by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      So that Joe Blow doesn't become a danger to society?

    8. Re:You don't have privacy if you get arrested by Nikkos · · Score: 1

      To some people, YOU'RE Joe Blow.

  18. We're considering the Wrong Problem by localman57 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The problem here is not the fact that the photos are being presented on Facebook. They're public record. Local newspapers have printed booking photos since the beginning of Local Newspapers (or maybe the beginning of booking photos).

    The problem is with us, the public. We react to this as if it is a shame to the person. We really need to be working to change the public mindset with the reminder of "Innocent until proven guilty". The proper response to these photos is "Huh. Joe got arrested for DUI. I wonder how it's gonna turn out?" That's how we need to get people thinking. At that point, all this Facebook crap doesn't matter.

    1. Re:We're considering the Wrong Problem by DriedClexler · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But if you think that's a problem, you can take it back another level: why do people draw such strong inferences from the fact that you've been arrested? Arguably, this could be because of the difficulty of getting a conviction, which makes an acquittal uninformative, meaning people have to place more weight on the fact of an arrest.

      --
      Information theory is life. The rest is just the KL divergence.
    2. Re:We're considering the Wrong Problem by arkane1234 · · Score: 1

      It's either that or too much CSI/Law & Order/etc. The shows always portray people valiantly putting every ounce of their life into bringing one person to justice, and in some cases (in Law & Order, at least) the ending showing the person dodging the legal proceedings even when the camera shows them doing the work. Most of the time in those situations, they trump it up with the offending individual mocking the officers in court, and walking out like some sort of mob gangster all smug.
      As much as I hate to say it, and it irks me, a large dose of people are influenced by television and believe it to reflect reality in most cases.

      --
      -- This space for lease, low setup fee, inquire within!
    3. Re:We're considering the Wrong Problem by alexo · · Score: 1

      why do people draw such strong inferences from the fact that you've been arrested?

      Because people are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it.

    4. Re:We're considering the Wrong Problem by neminem · · Score: 1

      I like to think I'm influenced more by shows like Castle, where there's one guy who is shown to have means, motive and opportunity to commit the murder, and it's really obvious he did it, except that of course he never did, it's always someone else. Which is of course equally unlikely - usually the guy standing at the scene of a murder with a gun in his hand *did* commit the murder, but it's still a good lesson in not confusing "likely assumption" with "fact".

  19. So... by webheaded · · Score: 1

    Correct me if I'm wrong here, but getting arrested and being CONVICTED are different things, yes? What exactly gives them the right to publish these on Facebook before you've been convicted of a crime? Sure, I guess if you are later convicted that's somewhat okay (though they are giant douches for it), but when you've merely been arrested? That seems a little draconian to me. That seems like a slander lawsuit waiting to happen.

    --
    "Those who would sacrifice essential liberties for a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - BenF
    1. Re:So... by gfreeman · · Score: 1

      While I agree, consider the alternative. Without public, verifiable stats who's to say that the police aren't arresting every other person on the street? Or that in a township of 20% blacks the black arrest stats show 80% arrest rate but 20% conviction rate?

      I really don't like it myself, but the alternative is worse. The solution is to remove the public stigma of being arrested and then released without conviction - and that ain't gonna happen any time soon.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas un sig.
    2. Re:So... by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1

      What exactly gives them the right to publish these on Facebook before you've been convicted of a crime?

      The arrest is a matter of public record. The same way that newspapers and TV have been publishing this stuff forever. Not saying it's right, but there it is.

  20. Are they tagging the people as well? by axl917 · · Score: 1

    I could see where that could be a bit problematic.

  21. Posting not convicted - very dodgy - an example by fantomas · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Posting pictures of people who have been arrested but not convicted would seem to be very dodgy territory, the police could be exposing themselves to all sorts of law suits. While the police generally try their hardest to do a good job, mistakes can be made. Putting up pictures of people who are later released without charge might still cause those people complications in their lives, whether it is over-zealous local vigilantes, or employers.

    A friend of mine is a primary school teacher. He had to break up a fight between two ten year old boys a couple of years ago. As he was separating them, one of the parents arrived (end of school day) and then claimed my friend had assaulted her son. This all took a couple of months to sort out, nearly finished my friend's professional career. He was proved completely innocent, classic case of an insane parent believing their little Jimmy never did any wrong. My friend was incredibly stressed and depressed throughout, years of hard work possibly destroyed by one stupid parent, and ended up moving town to take up work in another school where he is very successful, has been promoted twice.

    I can only imagine what might have happened to him if his pictures had been on Facebook for those two months with the caption "suspected child assault". He would have been under intense psychological pressure, and perhaps local parents might withdraw their children from his care, or pressurise his head teacher to sack him, or even taken illegal direct vigilante action. And then at the end after they'd ruined his life they'd find out he was innocent. Even if they gave him his backpay and reinstated him in his old job, he could have been in a very bad way psychologically if he'd been attacked as a result of this, maybe rumours would have spread that couldn't be stopped (his neighbours in his street saying "well he was proved innocent but I don't want my kids near his house" etc).

    Posting pictures of arrested but not convicted folk in any circumstance, whether on Facebook, or a town billboard, or in the local paper - no - I think this is difficult territory.

    1. Re:Posting not convicted - very dodgy - an example by davev2.0 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And, if your friend had been arrested and your local police department had electronic records available over the internet, any background check would have turned up an arrest for "child assault". Even if the records were not available over the internet, a professional background check would turn up the arrest. Also, see my post about public records as to the existence of mugshot magazines.

    2. Re:Posting not convicted - very dodgy - an example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really though, this problem goes beyond posting mugshots. Ever filled out a job application? They typically ask if you have ever been arrested, and possibly also ask about convictions. Simply being arrested and later exonerated can generate quite a bit of strife in the average person's life, despite having done nothing wrong.

    3. Re:Posting not convicted - very dodgy - an example by daveywest · · Score: 1

      How is posting photos any different then the very public police blotter in the local news, or the booking log at my local county jail. I'm aware of at least one situation where a newspaper began publishing home addresses in the arrest report because a repeat criminal had an identical name as a prestigious businessman and politician. Mug shots certainly would be helpful in those instances.

    4. Re:Posting not convicted - very dodgy - an example by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      Not to mention, if his face was in a local paper or some BS he can always move... FB is everywhere. Maybe if he looked for employment somewhere else and some principle goggles him and his face comes up as suspected child assault... well that can't be good. Particularly if eventuality proven innocent.

  22. Of course this is completely legal... by JayPee · · Score: 1

    ...unless you're posting photographs of the police acting in an assinine manner, then, of course, you'll get arrested for violating their privacy.

  23. Trust by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As if the general public needed another reason to be suspicious and distrustful of law enforcement.

    1. Re:Trust by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      As if the general public needed another reason to be suspicious and distrustful of law enforcement.

      insightful. if I had MP's I'd mod you up.

      regardless of how right or wrong you think this is: exactly HOW is this going to endear the public any more to the police? they already have a credibility problem. instead of trying to avoid conflict, they seem to be a magnet for it.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  24. Publicity by kaoshin · · Score: 1

    Mugshots are already public domain, so I can only suspect this is just for publicity. They are trying to make it look like a lot of cops are doing something more than showing up after crimes to file a report, falling asleep in their patrol cars on the side of the road, talking on cell phones, causing wrecks (had to throw this one in there since I've been rear ended by one), beating up old people, harassing and beating up kids, racial profiling, ambushing people on a dark lonely roads for minor traffic violations like driving 3 over the limit, engaging in illegal activities, etc. There are many good cops out there, but it seems to be overshadowed by all of the negative, and made cheap by all the publicity stunts such as taking criminals from jail and parading them down the street for the press and then bringing them back.

  25. Don't think this can be stopped by fyngyrz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As part of the "save the children" panic, the supreme court has already decided that such listings "aren't punishment", which is why they say they can be applied retroactively, after conviction. Without the (ridiculous, sophist) determination that such listings do no harm in and of themselves, the ex post facto prohibitions would come into play (as they actually should, of course.)

    Consequently, I doubt that any listing of arrest subjects will be determined to be damaging or harmful, or that they require a conviction.

    Shaming - permanent and otherwise - is part of America's new commitment to retribution over rehabilitation, and its support for the creation of a permanent rock-bottom lower class. The public is all for it; they love the drama and the fuckarosis that it all engenders, and it is a very rare citizen indeed that has any concept of how and why these things are wrong.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    1. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by HungryHobo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I'm just surprised that they can list you before you're actually convicted.
      If you suffer negative consequences, say you get fired from a job as a bus driver or something after your boss sees the accusation and you are later found innocent how do you not have the right to sue for lost earnings etc?

    2. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by tompaulco · · Score: 0

      say you get fired from a job as a bus driver or something after your boss sees the accusation and you are later found innocent
      Can you even be found innocent on a charge of drunken driving? I know many crimes you can not be found innocent, only "not guilty", which is decidedly not the same thing. Although everyone always says we are "innocent until proven guilty", then why do you have to sit in a jail cell or post bail? That doesn't sound like something an innocent person would do. Then if they are unable to prove your crime, you are found "not guilty". Does anyone compensate you for the bail you posted or the time you spent in the slammer for a crime they couldn't prove you committed? Innocent until proven guilty is a fallacy. I'm not just being bitter. I've never even been arrested. But the legal system just seems remarkably unfair to me, and the system seems to come down on the easy targets (mostly law abiding citizens who commit a minor infraction) rather than hardcore criminals.

      how do you not have the right to sue for lost earnings etc?
      You do have the right to sue for lost earnings. If I lost my job today, I could sue YOU for lost earnings. Whether I will when or not is another matter.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    3. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by magarity · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Can you even be found innocent on a charge of drunken driving?
       
      Yes, though not if you were really driving drunk. But in some cases erratic driving that makes one look like (and get arrested as) a drunk driver can turn out to be a legit medical condition.

    4. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Brad+Eleven · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The new meaning of justice is revealed. It's "revenge," aka "closure."

      --
      "Press to test."
      (click)
      "Release to detonate."
    5. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      Can you even be found innocent on a charge of drunken driving?

      No such thing. You are convicted or acquitted.

      then why do you have to sit in a jail cell or post bail?

      Because society has an interest in seeing that you show up for your trial?

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    6. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wouldn't painting you as a criminal via the facebook group technically be a form of libel in that case? You weren't a criminal, so it was a false accusation, but you suffered irreparable harm to your reputation and lost your job because of their action.

    7. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by natehoy · · Score: 1

      I'm just surprised that they can list you before you're actually convicted.

      The sad part is that this has been happening for years, and a precedent has already been set. This district is doing online what has been done offline for as long as I can remember, and I'm not exactly a spring chicken.

      Get thee to the newsstand, and obtain the thy local fish-wrapping. Seek therein a section called "Police Blotter" or similar, usually somewhere in the vicinity of the "Letters to the Editor" and the editorials. Ye shall find a list of names, ages, cities of residence, often specific streets within that city, sometimes even full addresses, and what they were cited for. All citations from speeding on up are usually listed, including search warrant executions and subpoenas served.

      Anonymized example from my local fish-wrapping: "8/10/2010 7:30PM. John Q. Public, of 32 Spring Street in Anytown, Arrested on report of domestic disturbance and inappropriate sexual contact with a minor"

      The only thing missing in the newspaper is the mug shot, and those are usually printed along with a larger story on high-profile arrests and citations.

      I'm not saying that posting these to Facebook is right. It certainly isn't. But the police aren't doing anything new here.

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
    8. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by allseason+radial · · Score: 1

      fuckarosis

      Is that some new-fangled legal term?

    9. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Restil · · Score: 1

      You never get "found" innocent. You already ARE innocent until PROVEN guilty.

      A more serious question would be, if you are acquitted, and decide to later get the arrest expunged, you would then have the right to force the department to completely remove all public records that you were ever arrested. Their failure to do so completely would technically give you grounds for a libel lawsuit, since legally the arrest never happened. It would be interesting what might happen if the arrest records were copied and republished by a third party. Would it be the responsibility of the police to then track down and enforce the removal of all of that data as well? It's one thing if you're a public figure. If you're a popular football player or movie star who's arrest trial were tabloid quality events, and you later get your record expunged, or get a pardon, people are still going to remember what happened, and will likely remember for many years. Then again, most of those people don't generally don't have to play in the same sandbox with the rest of us, and football teams and movie studios alike don't seem to consider felony convictions to be a showstopper (no pun intended) when it comes to employment, so why would they care one bit about an acquittal?

      -Restil

      --
      Play with my webcams and lights here
    10. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by donnyspi · · Score: 1

      You could probably get off on some sort of technicality even if you were actually driving drunk.

    11. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by jackchance · · Score: 1

      Ya.. but you probably shouldn't be driving with a legit medical condition. That shows lack of judgment and lack of consideration for others on the road.

      There of course are exceptions.... if you had no idea that you had an aneurism and it burst while driving.... for example

      --
      1 1 2 3 5 8 13 21 34 55 89 144 233 377 610 987 1597 2584 4181 6765
    12. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Sarcileptic · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the link. In the Smith V. Doe case, the court found that the public address listing of convicted sex offenders was primarily for public safety rather than punishment (incorrectly IMO). The published facts of the Evesham situation make it difficult to argue the same, as some of the victims have not yet been convicted, and there is no question of public safety based on the type of crimes alleged. The police readily admit as much: "This arms the public with information and puts a face with a name," said Evesham police Lt. Walt Miller.

    13. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by natehoy · · Score: 1

      Dunno. Good point.

      Hey, want to ask any one of these people if "listed in the online version of the newspaper" constitutes libel?

      http://www.theforecaster.net/section/term/144

      If it's libel, then pretty much anyone who has ever been arrested or accused of a crime where the accusation requires a visit by the police has a case. Pretty much every police department across the country reports their activities to the local papers, and has done for a long time.

      Note: I've redacted the names and ages below, but they are right there in the reports.

      What do you think [name and age redacted] of Saugus, Mass., who was arrested on Route 1 by Officer Kurt Fegan on a charge of operating under the influence might think of this? His name is a matter of public record for something he's accused of having done.

      How about [name and age redacted], of Litchfield Road, Freeport, Maine. He was arrested by Officer Thomas Gabbard on Main Street on a warrant from Sanford Police Department on a charge of sexual abuse and abuse of a minor. Gee, ya think he might be having an interesting chat with his soon-to-be ex-boss right about now? What if it was his ex-wife wanting to get even over an argument? Not saying it was or wasn't, I don't know him, or the case. But it could have been. Or he could be an asshole who deserves some lovin' from Bubba. I'll only ever find that out if he's found guilty, because innocent/acquittal/dismissal cases rarely make the paper, and there's no "judicial blotter" because that doesn't sell inches of ad space in the paper.

      Not saying it's right, only that it's not new. The Police Blotter existed in the paper since I was a wee 'un, and unless you are delivering said paper you can get off my lawn now.

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
    14. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      I learned "fuckarosis" from reading Steven King. It's perfectly cromulent, you know. No need to embiggen the issue.

      Young folk generally say "drama." Same thing. I prefer fuckarosis because it embodies the deep disdain I feel for the apparent inherent value drama has for the current population. As evidenced by "reality" shows, the popularity of the idiots on Fox, etc.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    15. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Personally that's the ONLY way they should do it.

      For arrests, just release statistics.
      "This weekend we arrested 5 people on DUI. 1 Burglary. 1 Indecent exposure."

      Only AFTER someone has been convicted in the court of law should their names be released. Release their names, photos who cares.

      I remember there were some people up in arms that Spain refused to release the names of the guys that were accused of running a bot net. I'd love to see a sane law in the United States, but I'm not going to wait on it.

    16. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      Ah well, on this I'm happy I'm not in the US.

      If you have been charged or are in custody but have not been charged with a crime there are rules here about the police divulging your identity to the press.

      If they're trying to identify or catch you that's a different matter but once they have you in custody there's no good reason to say anything to the press till after the trial.

    17. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Korin43 · · Score: 1

      It's worth noting that you have no chance of this actually happening, because all the police have to do is say you looked drunk to them and you go to jail.

    18. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by BigDXLT · · Score: 1

      My brother successfully fought a DUI by proving that he was locked out of the car and thus, could not have been driving. The fact that he was trying to get in his car doesn't mean anything, he was not driving it (maybe he wanted to get the case of beer out of the back seat to take back in the house, who knows.) So to answer your question: Yes, if the cop is an idiot and you were arrested for something you didn't commit, you can be innocent. I can't say if there is something better he should have been caught for, but that is what was claimed at the time.

      That's not to say that I'm not happy the cop made sure he didn't drive. Just his method of going about it was wrong.

    19. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By George, well said.

      Let me just add, if I may that I would bet the better part of my savings that you will not see any police, politicians ( etc.) on this list (unless they've had a falling out with the others in the in crowd). Of course you can't include celebraties in this line-up, as they profit from this type of exposure.

      I think a good response to this "Exposure of Shame" could be an exposure of a different sort, where police are video taped doing civil crimes like traffic infractions. Changing lanes while not using a turn signal, speeding, parking within 50ft a of stop sign, etc.

    20. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      In the Smith V. Doe case, the court found that the public address listing of convicted sex offenders was primarily for public safety rather than punishment (incorrectly IMO).

      I find it quite instructive to read the dissents (Ginsberg, Stevens) in this case. I think it is perfectly clear that this decision is an error of huge magnitude, based upon faulty reasoning, and direct evidence of judicial incompetence (not to mention explicit violation of their oaths.)

      The published facts of the Evesham situation make it difficult to argue the same, as some of the victims have not yet been convicted

      Conviction is irrelevant; that's the upshot of the case. It is irrelevant because the listing is determined not to be punitive.

      there is no question of public safety based on the type of crimes alleged

      I'm not sure you can argue that drunk driving has no impact on public safety, at least, not with a straight face. Likewise any perceived or actual odds of recidivism.

      Arrests are, generally speaking, public events. Whether they should be or not is an interesting argument; but certainly listing arrests is common. For instance, my local paper has a "police blotter" section that lists every arrest made since the last issue of the paper.

      "This arms the public with information and puts a face with a name"

      Yes, well, is that arguable? I don't think it is. Is it right to do it? I don't think it is, but I will bet you anything that the courts support it, especially if it goes to the top and SCOTUS gets its collectively bewildered hands on it.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    21. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by NFN_NLN · · Score: 1

      Can you even be found innocent on a charge of drunken driving? Yes, though not if you were really driving drunk. But in some cases erratic driving that makes one look like (and get arrested as) a drunk driver can turn out to be a legit medical condition.

      This only proves that drunk driving isn't about keeping the roads safe. It's about drinking.

      If someone is drunk and hits a car or if someone has diabetes with has low blood sugar and hits a car... the result is the same.

    22. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by allseason+radial · · Score: 1

      I'm just surprised that they can list you before you're actually convicted. If you suffer negative consequences, say you get fired from a job as a bus driver or something after your boss sees the accusation and you are later found innocent how do you not have the right to sue for lost earnings etc?

      Ah, the voice of the never-arrested, never-charged, never-taken-into-custody. LOL, such innocent brethren who unexpectedly find themselves immersed in "The System" are always shocked, SHOCKED by how irremediably cold and unforgiving it is.

      If you really want a good idea of what "they" can do to you before you are convicted, have a look at this Inmate's Handbook for those arrested in Waukesha County, Wisconsin. As far as "rights" go, the only thing separating you from an earthworm is that you (theoretically) are allowed to shut up and call a lawyer. That's it. You have no other rights while in custody.

      They

      • WILL

      use

      • EVERYTHING

      you say AGAINST you in court.

      Support pretrial release programs.

    23. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by natehoy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ironically, the US law that started this was, IIRC, designed to protect people from police abuses. Making arrests and charges part of public record makes it very hard for police departments to arrest people secretly and hold them without due process.

      Unfortunately, we have a tendency as Americans to equate "arrest" with "guilt".

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
    24. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by The_mad_linguist · · Score: 1

      It's far easier to control how much alcohol is in your blood.

    25. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Intent matters.

      To paraphrase you, if someone hunts you down and kills you or if you accidentally walk in front of a moving car... the result is the same.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    26. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      If they aren't punishment, then why the hell are we spending government resources to do it?

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    27. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      I'm just surprised that they can list you before you're actually convicted.

      You are thinking about this in the wrong way... this is a protection, not a punishment.

      How many countries arrest or detain people and then deny that the person is being held? Forcing the police department to list detainees is a protection against this abuse of power.

      Yes, a "suspect" can lose their job and have other negative effects to their life... such is the price to pay for open and transparent government. You can't very well have the police arresting people in secret - and frankly your employer might wonder why you went missing anyway :)

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    28. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Kymermosst · · Score: 1

      If someone is drunk and hits a car or if someone has diabetes with has low blood sugar and hits a car... the result is the same.

      Yes, and you can still be charged in either case, though drunk driving is seen as a willful act and you will be charged for a voluntary act.

      The case where the diabetic has low blood sugar because of a bad meter reading or accidental overdose of insulin would at most bring up charges for an involuntary act.

      However, if someone has an acute medical condition while driving... say a seizure, having never had a seizure before. The ultimate result is the death of another driver. What charges do you levy against the person? Failure to see into the future?

      --
      "Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives" should be a convenience store, not a government agency.
    29. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      The explanation of the legal doctrine of necessity, which basically says, 'You can commit a crime to stop greater harm', actually uses 'driving drunk to escape a kidnapper' as an example.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    30. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually there are plenty of ways you could be not convicted (there really is no such thing as being "found innocent" in the american court system, since no difference is made between jury nullification, innocence, lack of evidence, etc). The most probable way I can think of is if the arrest proves to be wrongful for some reason. This can happen, for example in the following situation: someone is drunk off their ass, drives into a guard rail, cop shows up does accident report, but never saw the drunk actually driving, cop makes an arrest without a warrant. At least in texas, since the actual crime wasn't in view of an officer, a warrant is still necessary, even though a retarded chicken could connect the dots at that point. Supposedly it happens fairly often.

    31. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Ah, the voice of the never-arrested, never-charged, never-taken-into-custody. LOL, such innocent brethren who unexpectedly find themselves immersed in "The System" are always shocked, SHOCKED by how irremediably cold and unforgiving it is.

      Hey, not all of us. I got a rude awakening when I plead guilty to a traffic ticket when 20 (I just wanted to pay the thing) and, tada, they suspended my license.

      Since then, I've assumed that every aspect is entirely against you.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    32. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The de jure answer is, of course, that they aren't painting the arrest-ee as a criminal, all they're saying is that they were arrested for committing [alleged offence], which is a matter of public record anyway.

      The position of the law-enforcement establishment will be that de facto interpretation of the masses (i.e. if you've been charged, you're guilty, and if you're later found not-guilty, it's probably because of a technicality) is not something they have control over...

      C'est la vie in the zeitgeist of the 21st century...

      -AC

    33. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Haffner · · Score: 1

      (IANAL) Involuntary vehicular manslaughter, likely either not taken to court, dismissed, or guilty conviction with no sentence.

      --
      "Going to war without the French is like going deer hunting without your accordion." ~General Norman Schwarzkopf
    34. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by causality · · Score: 1

      I'd love to see a sane law in the United States, but I'm not going to wait on it.

      Sane laws tend to place hard limits on the availability of political power. That's why they aren't so popular among politicians.

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    35. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Moridin42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If they were required (and I think the news media should be held to the same standard) to be at least as public in announcing your acquittal or that the charges were dropped as they were in announcing your arrest, I might not think the police and media were such douchebags.

      --
      I don't expect morality, equality, consistency, or justice from the law. I expect only legality.
    36. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like diabetes... my uncle, who wasn't diabetic most of his life, aquired the condition. He was arrested for DUI and it turned out he was in insulin shock and didn't even know it. That's not something you can really hold against someone as long as it's a new condition for them.

    37. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      Shaming - permanent and otherwise - is part of America's new commitment

      Shshsshuuuun!

    38. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by rgviza · · Score: 1

      court records have always been public.
      You can now search them. Just put anyone's name into the search and you can find their entire legal history, look up the property they own (hence their address).

      There is no privacy. On the flipside, a potential spouse or employer should be able to find out what they are getting into before they engage someone by searching court records for criminal convictions.

      I do believe that property records should require a good reason to be accessible (such as title search). It's too easy for any random sicko to find out where someone lives just because they own property. My GF was recently assaulted by someone that looked her up from her name on facebook and decided to assault and rape her at her house one night. Luckily she got a call off to 911 and the cops got there as he was tearing her clothes off after he beat the snot out of her.

      He found her address through property records within the court system. That is pretty fucked up that any random sick bastard can get this kind of information with nothing more than a name and a picture and hunt you down through the court system when you don't even have a criminal record. She has disabled her facebook acct, but jesus christ.

      Feel free to add this to your list of legitimate reasons why no gov record privacy is a bad thing.

      --
      Don't kid yourself. It's the size of the regexp AND how you use it that counts.
    39. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by eleuthero · · Score: 1

      arresting him for public intoxication should have been sufficient, but this way, I guess, your brother has nothing on his record at all now... of course, the downside to this is there will be no court mandated alcohol awareness / rehabilitation but he may not need that in your particular situation.

    40. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Yold · · Score: 1

      Can you even be found innocent on a charge of drunken driving?

      Yes, though not if you were really driving drunk.

      A lot of DWI charges get dropped to reckless driving or other lesser charges with the help of lawyer.

      As a side note, a lot of background check databases include arrest records also. They are not supposed to, but they do. So even if you are not convicted, there is a good possibility that any run-ins with the law will show up on a pre-employment screenings.

    41. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Only AFTER someone has been convicted in the court of law should their names be released. Release their names, photos who cares.

      I remember there were some people up in arms that Spain refused to release the names of the guys that were accused of running a bot net. I'd love to see a sane law in the United States, but I'm not going to wait on it.

      You aren't going to get sane laws in the US, ever. The reason is the first paragraph of the quotation: once they're convicted, who cares what happens to them? Let's make it really easy to vigilantes to go give some extralegal punishment, and they're criminals so let's keep them from ever getting employed again - that's true justice, right? You wouldn't want to be soft on crime, now would you?

      Only it turns out that this kind of attitude has consequences. Bloodthirst is never sated, those who succumb to it are always looking for more targets. It's not enough to punish just criminals, you must also punish those who have been arrested, because you just know they must be guilty, right? And since we're going for zero tolerance, let's make the bar to arrest someone really low too.

      Who cares? The the people of Spain do, and they get sane laws. The people of America don't, and they get the kind of laws a bloodthirsty lynch mob deserves. But hey, at least your criminals get their faces shown on the Web to ensure their eternal punishment, so it's worth it, right?

      Enjoy watching people get torn apart in Circus Maximus if you will, but don't complain, then, when it's your turn to face the lions.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    42. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by cayenne8 · · Score: 2, Informative
      "You could probably get off on some sort of technicality even if you were actually driving drunk."

      Well, and this depends on what state you live in...laws vary, but first thing to do...don't say SHIT to the cops. Here...you refuse the breath test, and for God's sake in my most every state, don't do the small tests they do, walking a straight line, touching your nose...that does NOTHING but give them probably cause, and they now film it..so, it is just evidence gathering.

      If it is your first offense, and you are trashed and you know it...face it, you're going to jail. Just don't say anything, and put your hands out for the cuffs. Refuse any test you can. Even in states where refusing is an automatic loss of license for like 6mos or so...better than a DWI on your record. And even with that, and this is step #2 lawyer up...and your lawyer can generally get you a license waiver or temp or whatever they call it in your state...so that you can still drive to and from work,and often for groceries. That will get you by.

      Also, (again lawyer up, less money that a DWI conviction)...a good atty can usually plead it down to something like wreckless driving. It sucks..but still MUCH better than a DWI. If first offense, you can usually get by on this.

      Should people drive smashed? No. But with them lowering the BAC drunk limits to .08...a ridiculously low number, a grown man CAN be very close to it with like 3x glasses of wine with a meal, which is not unreasonable.

      And lets face it...at least in the US, bars are everywhere...they all have BIG parking lots, so, don't kid yourself that people, a LOT of people go out, drink...and will have to drive home. Fact of life no matter how you wanna argue it. Likely the overwhelming majority of people leaving a bar...are legally drunk. Most everyone makes it home.

      But to allow bars to serve people with cars...it is a bit hypocritical to have such low BAC to catch people and try to enforce it so much, if they also allow the situation that encourages such behavior to be so plentiful and accepted.

      If nothing else...there should be a much more subjective test. The problem is impaired driving. Some people can't drive on 2 beers...some have virtually no effect on 5. A 250lb grown man can easily handle more drinks than a 110lb woman.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    43. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Well traditionally, you didn't get a photo with your fish wrapper unless it was a crime so serious that warning the public warranted it (Ie murder, larceny or being) or you were a public official of some sort. To get one of those, you would have needed to either wait until they were convicted or request the record which requires someone to be identified in the process.

      What this stops or limits to some degree is vigilantism. If your picture is out there, it's easier for people to identify you because not only is it easier to remember a face then a name, you do not need to ask someone their name to assume you have identified them (if you already know them, well that another story). And contrary to some people's belief, the system is supposed to be about justice not punishment- that is to say punish the people known to be guilty not the ones with accusations or not enough evidence to determine their guilt.

      So what has happened is that the police have placed these people's lives in possible danger without any substantial benefit to public safety. And they have done this on a third party website which raises the question of monetary compensation and if this violates any other existing laws pertaining to paying for special treatment or records protected like how it's now against federal to sell certain information from your drivers licenses.

    44. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      In this context I agree - the police are trying shame tactics, which is, well, shameful. There is a process for punishment, and if they want publicity to be part of it, then they should pass a damned law.

      But I do need to point out that courts proceedings are in fact usually open to the public, and I disagree that papers should be forced to announce anything at all - let the government buy space or publish their own.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    45. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      You wouldn't want a law like that. Suppose you and 5 of your friends got arrested on DUI in the same night in different parts of the town. Well, lets suppose they aren't your close friends, just friends who support the same causes like Sane laws in the US. Now suppose all five of you were found innocent down the road but now everyone thinks you only want sane laws because you break them all the time.

      Getting arrested is somewhat embarrassing for most people and they won't volunteer to talk about it except maybe to their close friends. But seeing their names in the paper is about the only way you are going to know that the police methodically attacked your cause by arresting people for false accusations in order to limit the impact of your political speech.

      But you might be thinking, "hey, if they don't put the names in the paper, it won't have that kind of impact". But then you have to think of the story that runs after you go to court that says " 0100010001010011 was acquitted of the charge of driving while intoxicated today in court, the arresting Officer claims 0100010001010011 is involved in a group that is attempting to rewrite laws to make it easier for this to happen." And because your attorney is ignorant of the five other people's cases and they way the scheduling changed, this can happen over the course of a couple months with no one really taking notice if it wasn't for a listing of Tom, Dick, Harry, and 0100010001010011 getting popped all in the same night.

      So yea, it's a way to keep tabs on the police too.

    46. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by theNAM666 · · Score: 1

      I say we find the police chief, and post 24-hour geotagged photos of him online... :)

    47. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Ubergrendle · · Score: 1

      Canada has a relatively modest penal system in contrast to the US; we arrest 1/5th the number of people per capita, with terms roughly half the duration. The last half / third of the sentence is focused exclusively upon rehabilitation and re-entry into society. I prefer our system. Yes, occasionally killers like Karla Holmoka get away with lax sentences and slip through the cracks of true justice, but the overal societal benefit seems to be much higher. Sadly, the US seems to be returning to the days of the Scarlet Letter, with MAAD and "child saftey" pathing the way.

      --
      John Maynard Keynes: "When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do?"
    48. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Changing medical conditions can lead to similar driving as well. My father had been on various medications for his heart problems and had no medical restrictions on his driving. He had been driving for years while managing his condition. One Saturday morning he was driving to work and he ran through a red light and struck a van, killing a passenger in the van. Police went through the usual routine and did the blood test to see if drugs or alcohol were a factor. My father was unresponsive at the accident and it wasn't until later that the doctors detected enzymes showing it probably was a heart attack. Similar to your Uncle's insulin issue, I think it comes down to intent/neglect versus an unintentional accident. Someone drinking chooses to put themselves into a condition where they increase the risk of an accident. Someone that unknowingly has a change in a medical condition isn't the same as a drunk, even though the end result may be the same.

    49. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by uglyduckling · · Score: 1

      Yes - breath and blood tests can go wrong, but it would be pretty unusual circumstances I admit. I know of at least one police officer who routinely pulls over people driving really, really carefully after midnight, especially if they are doing well under the speed limit, because he knows that it's often someone who knows they're over the limit but is sober enough to over-compensate.

      A careful driver plus a botched breath test could lead to someone suffering financial harm due to loss of reputation when the police publish their arrest before they've been found guilty.

    50. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Moridin42 · · Score: 1

      Court proceedings are open to the public. And so are (or if they aren't, they bloody well should be) the accquitals. That is already in proportion. But when the police publish arrest information, they should also publish the fact that the charges were dropped (if in fact they are) in the exact same proportion. Own up to your mistakes.

      Papers make money on publishing sensational headlines. When those headlines turn out to be wrong, they publish a correction/retraction somewhere maybe. They should be compelled to publish with the same prominence and duration that they published the speculation and sensation.

      --
      I don't expect morality, equality, consistency, or justice from the law. I expect only legality.
    51. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 1

      You are thinking about this in the wrong way... this is a protection, not a punishment.

      The people who have been falsely accused of sexual abuse and have had this accusation made public would probably unanimously disagree with you.

    52. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by jandrese · · Score: 1

      Curbside breathalizers can also malfunction and give erroneously high readings. It can be a case of "had a beer at dinner, blew a .32", but typically they can test you again back at the station if you think this is the case and get exonerated.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    53. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Well, that would be the doctrine of necessity but there are other situations that may apply that could be considered a technicality.

      If for instance, the officer claims the reason for the stop was because of excess speed measured by a radar gun and the officer wasn't trained or certified to accurately use the radar gun or the radar gun was tested to be inaccurate an hour later or so, then the reason for the stop and any evidence collected afterward could be tossed out. Similarly, if the breathalyzer machine wasn't calibrated properly or some other problem existed like the calibration solutions were outdated or improperly handled (stored at room temp or whatever), then those results can be tossed allowing someone to escape prosecution.

      I picked those examples because they seem to be the most common reasons people claim to have beaten a DUI rap from what I hear. I seemed to have beaten a DUI on a technicality where the cops claimed to have pulled me over for not displaying a front license plate properly but couldn't answer how they knew that from behind me. I was .001 over the legal limit and they agreed to drop everything if I plead guilty to the license plate charge just to make the stop legit. I also know of a case in which a guy ran his car into a ditch while drinking, walked home, stopped at a convenience store and purchased a 12 pack, drank about 6 of them before getting home where the cops happened to be waiting on him some 4 hours later, then when the cops tested his blood alcohol level and charged him, his lawyer got everything dismissed because no one could prove his BAC was over the limit when he was actually driving. Of course he refused to admit that he wrecked the car too, he claimed he pulled over when the car started experiencing engine trouble and couldn't get it to move so he started walking.

    54. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a reason arrest records are public record in the United States -- it's part of the transparency in the justice system. In other countries, you might come home from work, and your spouse never shows up. You never know -- has she been arrested, kidnapped, or run off with the guy from the gym...

    55. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by mykey2k · · Score: 1

      I've always found it a bit hypocritical to not allow more bars/pubs/dispensaries in local neighborhoods (at least in the US) because of all the NIMBYs, which makes greater chances that people go out, drink, and drive back home even slightly over the limit.

      That, and if you read the arrests for people who actually cause heinous harm, they are far over the "legal limit" for it to matter anyway. I don't think the limit has been 0.16 in over 40 years, but that seems to be the magic number for accidents I've seen ("twice the legal limit").

      I'd love to walk to a bar every once in a while, have a couple drinks, and walk home, but the nearest place is 2 miles away and the route is quite literally peppered with cops on the weekends, and it's getting difficult finding a different route these days.

      -m

    56. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "I've always found it a bit hypocritical to not allow more bars/pubs/dispensaries in local neighborhoods (at least in the US) because of all the NIMBYs, which makes greater chances that people go out, drink, and drive back home even slightly over the limit."

      That's one thing that is nice about New Orleans...the old concept of the "neighborhood bar" is still somewhat alive and well.

      Little hole in the wall places throughout the city, where people literally do "know your name" when you walk in.

      I have one 2 blocks from my house...and several more just a few more blocks than that. Even the furthermost away from me that I like to hit..is easily navigated through back roads.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    57. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by JeffAtl · · Score: 1

      Without the (ridiculous, sophist) determination that such listings do no harm in and of themselves, the ex post facto prohibitions would come into play (as they actually should, of course.)

      You deserve mod points for not quoting the Constitution in your post. Unfortunately, the vast majority of American public are totally unaware that the Constitution is totally irrelevant in determining "constitutionality" via judicial review.

      SCOTUS justices are pragmatic philosphers, not objective clarifiers of the Constitution - cases are decided on personal philosophy and weighed against the impact on the government. The text of the Constitution is then mined to find justification of the decision, but it's just a formality.

      If that can't be accomplished then some combination of standby terms like "interstate commerce", "general welfare", "judeo-christian values", "no rights at the border", "necessary and proper clause", "implied powers", "can't yell fire in a crowded theater", "is a privilege not a right", "exigent circumstances", "no expectation of privacy", ""stare decisis", "lacks standing", "lacks ripeness" or a parade of horrors will suffice.

      It's not necessarily a bad thing as the SCOTUS has been the least oppressive of the 3 branches. Technically the Bill of Rights only applies to the federal government and without the Supreme Court's totally made up concept of "incorporation" it's doubtful this would have ever changed.

      The problem is that the court has been become filled with statists (left and right wing) that are very sympathetic to police state concepts, especially pro-active policing, and attribute little value to personal liberty. Picking justices by national lottery couldn't be any worse than whatever method presidents have been using for the last 40 years.

    58. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you even be found innocent on a charge of drunken driving?

      Yes, though not if you were really driving drunk. But in some cases erratic driving that makes one look like (and get arrested as) a drunk driver can turn out to be a legit medical condition.

      Alcoholism is considered a legit medical condition in most parts of the world.

    59. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

          Terrible, isn't it?

          We've all seen the blurbs on TV that a person is a "person of interest", a "suspect" or "has been arrested". Not tried. Not convicted. "person of interest" may mean as little as the police believe (but not beyond a reasonable doubt) that the person may have information. It doesn't mean that they know anything at all.

          I've seen blurbs on local TV, where the person is described and their photo shown, along with the description of their vehicle and license plate number. Nope, the guy hasn't been proven to have done anything wrong, and it may turn out that he really did nothing wrong.

          Ya, if my friends avoided me, my job fired me, and people treated me like a wanted criminal, just because someone thought I did something, and then they said "oh sorry, not you", your life is still ruined.

          Just because the police dropped any investigation leading towards you doesn't mean that someone won't still be out hunting you. There are plenty of crimes that people get *very* emotional about. Say someone in their family was killed. That doesn't mean someone won't take the law into their own hands. What is the solution? Move far away from there? Hope no one recognizes your name, and that no one ever punches your name into Google.

          "Hey look, Bob in Accounting was a person of interest in that pedophile thing in California". You can't run far enough for people not to be able to dig up that you were a suspect, but you weren't thrown in jail.

          DUI's may seem innocent enough, until you're confronted by someone who lost a family member due to an unrelated DUI. They may take their grief out with a vengeance.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    60. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      Calmly, calmly. On Slashdot, negative moderation simply means "-1, Disagree, unable to articulate my position." Simply browse at -1 and you'll see all the interesting posts.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    61. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      You deserve mod points for not quoting the Constitution in your post.

      Where do you think "ex post facto" comes from?

      SCOTUS justices are pragmatic philosphers, not objective clarifiers of the Constitution - cases are decided on personal philosophy and weighed against the impact on the government. The text of the Constitution is then mined to find justification of the decision, but it's just a formality.

      You're describing the pathology; my interest is in seeing some/any degree of retreat from the situation you (somewhat optimistically) describe.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    62. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

      hen why do you have to sit in a jail cell or post bail

          Bail is not a punishment. It is a guarantee that you'll show up to the proceedings.

          There are plenty of cases where the bail is waived (released ROR). The court sees no reason that you may avoid prosecution, and they believe you will respect the court order to show up at all the required proceedings.

          If it's a case like a murder, there's a strong suspicion that people will run. Most people, even the innocent, know that court is a gamble. Is it safer to run far away to avoid losing in court, or show up and say "nope, I didn't do it." As they say, and I have seen (I worked in a jail for a while), jails are populated with "innocent" people. Some really are innocent. Most are not.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    63. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by JeffAtl · · Score: 1

      You're describing the pathology; my interest is in seeing some/any degree of retreat from the situation you (somewhat optimistically) describe.

      This is not a "disease" of the system - this is the system. From the very beginning of judicial review, the Constitution has only been used to rationalize philosophical decisions rather than used as the prime reference document.

      Jefferson, Madison and later Lincoln all had huge issues with judicial review so this goes way back. The Slaughter-House decisions effectively eliminated part of the 14th amendment that had been ratified just 5 years earlier.

      Like it or not, this is the reality of how judicial review works in common law jurisdictions - it's a mixed bag at best. The only "disease" here is that since at least the 1970s, both parties have nominated and confirmed justices that value the needs and desires of the state (particularly law enforcement and local government) far more than the rights of individuals.

      Sotomayor shows some promise in the areas of civil liberties, law enforcement abuses and individual property rights so maybe there is hope. Alito is decent concerning 1st Amendment and property rights, but seems to totally despise the 4th amendment.

      Roberts has been a huge disappointment in these areas so far as I expect Kagan to be as well. Our best hope lies with the eventual retirement of Scalia which will hopefully allow Clarence Thomas to be more open minded.

    64. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      This is not a "disease" of the system - this is the system.

      You are not only wrong, you are very wrong.

      • The constitution provides the legitimate framework for the government
      • Legitimate legislation must comply with the constitution, and legislators swear an oath to see that is the case as a condition of holding a legislative position.
      • The Judiciary must only act in compliance with the constitution, and they swear an oath to do so as a condition of holding a legislative position.
      • The executive must comply with the constitution, and the president swears an oath to do so as a condition of holding the presidency

      To even give lip service to the idea that the government should exist or operate outside these bounds in any way is to advocate and support tyranny.

      To any degree that the government is operating outside these bounds, it is entirely illegitimate.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    65. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MOTHER. FUCKING. *THIIIIIIS*.

    66. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      In concept I think that sounds good... in practice, I think it would make a newspaper look like a bug tracker! :)

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    67. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      I guess it's a choice between allowing the government to make secret arrests and besmirching some people's reputation. Not a great choice, but I for one find secret arrests to be more frightening.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    68. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Moridin42 · · Score: 1

      I'm okay with that. It will place a greater cost burden upon the people who reap the benefits. So maybe they'll take a moment to do some actual fact checking before they sell some newspapers by trashing somebody's life.

      And if they don't, their finances can match their morals: bankrupt.

      --
      I don't expect morality, equality, consistency, or justice from the law. I expect only legality.
    69. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by Meski · · Score: 1

      You can currently get your photo in the paper/tv going to and from and in court, prior to conviction. How is this different?

      Is it fair? Well, no, because when the court finds you not guilty the paper will print it somewhere back of the classifieds in 8 pt type.

    70. Re:Don't think this can be stopped by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      I think the problem is that we still require governments to take out ad space in the newspaper... Anyone so inclined should be able to log into a centralized web site listing arrests.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  26. I'd make my mugshot my profile picture by swb · · Score: 1

    I mean, why not?

  27. Legal or not, they don't need such a smack-down by GarryFre · · Score: 1

    I've never done DUI, but in this day and age where potential employers look up the background of people on the internet, such a thing could wreck a person's chance of getting a job. Youths do foolish things. It's inevitable. How many of us have not made some big mistakes? How many of us would want to have to pay for them for the rest of our lives? Not many I bet.

    --
    www.Migrainesoft.com - Computer giving you a headache? We can fix that!
    1. Re:Legal or not, they don't need such a smack-down by GarryFre · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, it looks like DUI is the LEAST crime listed. Those other crimes are horrid. I take my comment back at least for those.

      --
      www.Migrainesoft.com - Computer giving you a headache? We can fix that!
    2. Re:Legal or not, they don't need such a smack-down by alexo · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, it looks like DUI is the LEAST crime listed. Those other crimes are horrid. I take my comment back at least for those.

      The crimes may be horrid but it does not mean that the arrested are actually guilty of committing them(*). The fact that you were so quick to retract your objection speaks volumes about why publishing the arrest details is such a bad idea.

      (*) It is not uncommon for police to arrest several suspects while looking for a person to charge with the crime. At best, all but one will be innocent.

  28. conviction, not arrest by peter303 · · Score: 1

    Police do make mistakes sometimes. The legal process tries to sort this out.

  29. Neighbor, Meth by Grizzley9 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    My neighbor was just arrested and had their mug shots on the nightly news and written up by the local news for suspected meth and related paraphernalia. So obviously everyone thinks there was some involved as thats what the news said relayed to them by the police spokesperson.

    Problem is, there wasn't any. It was only suspected (due to past boyfriends) and they found nothing and had to release her later that night but the persona damage is still done to her and to the neighborhood.

    So I'm not really sure how I feel about this as DUI is slightly different when arrested. And I don't see how FB is any different than the nightly news or papers.

  30. Public record by davev2.0 · · Score: 1

    Mugshots are public records, just like arrest reports. All the police department is doing is making those records readily accessible. There is a company that gathers mugshots and arrest reports and publishes them in a flier called "Who's in jail" and sells them for $1.00 each at convenience stores. This is no different and actually prevents people from making money on the misfortune and stupidity of others.

    1. Re:Public record by arkane1234 · · Score: 1

      You know what else is public domain? Most of your information.
      Should I collate that and post it in a facebook page?
      I mean, it's public domain so it's only right...

      --
      -- This space for lease, low setup fee, inquire within!
    2. Re:Public record by davev2.0 · · Score: 1

      Not public domain, public record. There is a difference. Try learning it.

  31. New app from Zynga by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Coming this fall from Zynga: DUI Wars, a click-fest where you drag your friends into posting mug shots from their drunk-driving arrests.

  32. This is true by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    But that doesn't mean there aren't limits to it. It is one thing for arrests to be public record. The details and photos are published and the news reports on them as it sees fit. It is quite another for the police force to be running what is effectively its own propaganda campaign. They are posting these pictures and heavily implying guilt based on that. Well I can see a couple of situations where I'd have a real problem with it:

    1) If I was arrested incorrectly. If I got nailed for a DUI I'd be furious if the police were plastering my picture around before a trial. I personally don't drink so I am confident I'd be acquitted (or more likely charges would be dropped) as there'd be no evidence. However the damage could already be done if the police have been telling people I'm a drunk driver. Believe me there'd be a lawsuit.

    2) If someone was arrested and this happened, they might use it as a way to try and use it to derail proceedings because the jury pool had been tainted. After all if the people use Facebook maybe they've seen these pictures and are going to presuppose guilt. This is an increasing problem as a lot of people use Facebook these days. Could make it difficult to find an impartial jury and give good grounds for appeal, which might just lead to a judge tossing the case.

    I'm completely ok, and in support of arrests being public record. However I am not in support of police saying "Look at this guy we arrested! He's clearly guilty, we are going to post his picture to shame him!" This is NOT the job of the police. The investigate crimes and make arrests, that is all.

    1. Re:This is true by Nikkos · · Score: 1

      If you get arrested your name is released and printed in the newspapers. This is different in which way? I don't think you've got anything near a case unless you can prove that the police department was "heavily implying guilt" - which I think you'd have a hard time proving unless they SPECIFICALLY SAID YOU WERE GUILTY when you were not.

      Regarding #2. I suppose there is some outside chance your jury pool could be tainted, but if publishing your name in a newspaper (as is done now) doesn't meet the litmus test, I doubt your mugshot on facebook will.

      Let's look again, all your arguments are based on the fact that friends/family/business partners/society is going to shun you based upon the mere accusation of guilt. This is a cultural problem.

      While I can't say I wouldn't support you if you were to try and make some changes to the public disclosure of arrests/charges, some sort of blanket policy of not disclosing anything to the public until convicted would be completely out of the question.

  33. This may be legal... by ITBurnout · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...but it sure seems unethical. The police seem to be posting these pictures only to (a) humiliate and shame those arrested, (b) forever stigmatize those people by way of distributing (downloadable) pictures that will now live on in digital form in the public domain, in one form or another, forever. Who knows where they might end up. Sounds like a good way to potentially ruin someone's life over an *alleged* night of over-indulgence and bad judgment.

    There is "being available in the public record," and there is "put on worldwide public display with a big scarlet 'A' for Alcoholic on their chests." They're going over the line here.

  34. Innocent until proven...arrested? by Alkonaut · · Score: 1

    Negative public exposure could easily be considered a punishment, and punishment can't be administered unless you have been convicted of a crime. I know this is about DUI, but in general, in any sane media climate, a mugshot should never be shown of a person who is merely arrested and not convicted! I could understand if media some times can't tell the difference between arrested and convicted, but the police? Publishing images of *convicted* people on a facebook page is more acceptable, but still debatable. For a DUI there probably won't be a lynch mob adding to the punishment, but for another crime (say child molestation) it would be a completely different story.

  35. Surpised? by fyngyrz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm just surprised that they can list you before you're actually convicted.

    Why? The American public has allowed all manner of listings without any conviction, police or judicial action.

    Just offhand: No-fly lists; No-buy lists; Gun owner lists; "offender" lists; land owner lists; boat owner lists; etc.

    Unfortunately, the average citizen fails to anticipate what one seemingly harmless or seemingly desirable invasion of privacy means in terms of enabling behavior when an obviously harmful one comes around.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  36. Other countries by Fnord666 · · Score: 1

    So if the local law enforcement organization in your municipality were to do thesame sort of thing, what would be the repercussions where you live? Obviously we have heard from the US, but what about other countries?

    --
    'The tyrant will always find pretext for his tyranny.' - Aesop's Fables
  37. ! New Term Alert ! GUI by U8MyData · · Score: 1

    GUI: Governance Under the Influence. Why isn't this a crime too? PUI: Parenting Under the Influence. Or this? Seriously, given that one beer or glass of wine can be enough to get you into trouble, this offense can bite the otherwise resposible too. People make mistakes, less repeat or habitual offenses, and deserve a chance to correct and carry on without it following them around as if the had a "scarlet letter" embroidered on their lapel for some extended durration. So, IMHO, this facebook issue is hightly problematic and overly judgmental given there is still due process.

  38. Sheriff Joe has been doing it for years by RayMarron · · Score: 1

    Maricopa County Sheriff's Office has been posting mugshots for years. I still have the screencap that one time a co-worker got busted (and no, he never came back to work)...

    http://www.mcso.org/index.php?a=GetModule&mn=Mugshot

    --
    ON DELETE CASCADE
  39. I disagree with a couple of points. by maillemaker · · Score: 1

    >The notion that "driving is a privilege, not a right" has been twisted and abused so that if you are accused by the state of a DUI offense, >you either have to incriminate yourself or suffer a punishment for not incriminating yourself. On a MVR (motor vehicle record) the charge >for refusing a breathalyzer is quite similar to the charge for having taken and failed a breathalyzer. DUI, certain asset forfeiture laws, >and maybe sexual harassment are the only crimes where the accused must demonstrate innocence. None of this is compatible with a reasonable >interpretation of the Fifth Amendment, yet it goes on, because it's "for our own good" or something. Personally, I have zero sympathy for drunk drivers. When a police officer suspects impaired driving, and they pull you over and suspect you are drunk, I have no problem with asking for a breathalyzer. And if you refuse, I have no problem with assuming that the driver, was in fact drunk. Blowing on a breathalyzer is not a big deal. It is not some infringement on your rights to blow a little air into a straw. No reasonable person would refuse such a trivial request unless they had something to hide. >Criminals generally do not believe that they will get caught. If they believe that they will certainly get caught they tend not to do the crime. I'm not so sure about that. Every choice in life is made by weighing the benefits vs. the risks. While the risk of getting caught surely enters a criminals mind, so surely must the risk of the punishment if they are caught. For example, if drunk drivers were shot on the spot after failing a breathalyzer test, I imagine this would have an impact on drunk driving rates, even though it has no impact on your chances of being caught.

    --
    A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
    1. Re:I disagree with a couple of points. by causality · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Personally, I have zero sympathy for drunk drivers.

      Same here. I just want them to be arrested and prosecuted based on observable behavior, such as the way that they drive. A dangerous driver who disregards safety is not exactly difficult to detect. On the plus side, doing things this way might accomplish more towards addressing the dangerous drivers who are quite sober but just aggressive and/or stupid.

      When a police officer suspects impaired driving, and they pull you over and suspect you are drunk, I have no problem with asking for a breathalyzer. And if you refuse, I have no problem with assuming that the driver, was in fact drunk.

      Then I'd rather you lobby for the repealing of the Fifth Amendment. That's a damn sight better than simply ignoring it. It's also the honest way to get what you seem to want. It's much more honest than coming up with clever ways to get around it, such as implied consent laws. "Driving is a privilege, not a right" is true, but the Fifth Amendment does not say "this law of the land does not apply to privileges". In fact it applies to the government whenever it wants to use its police power against a citizen, for any reason.

      A concept that is totally unrelated in subject but completely related in principle is the notion of a "free speech zone". You see, that's a clever way to get around the First Amendment. That was also perpetrated by someone who did not want to honestly lobby for the repealing of the First Amendment and instead wanted to play clever word games to effectively ignore it.

      I am not saying you are playing clever word games. I am saying that you have adopted the positions of people who are like religious zealots. A "true believer" thinks that the ends always justify the means. If it means throwing out 200+ years of jurisprudence and American traditions of freedom, if it means weakening the highest law of the land, then so be it as long as we catch a few drunks, right? Such people are utterly confident of their position and can be quite convincing. I can tell you are influenced by their thinking as long as the crusade is difficult to argue with, like "we want to catch drunk drivers". That still doesn't make it right.

      Blowing on a breathalyzer is not a big deal. It is not some infringement on your rights to blow a little air into a straw.

      The difference is that in any other criminal matter, you are not punished for refusing to incriminate yourself. When the cop asks you to blow into a tube, he is asking you to prove that you are innocent. That is not the way our system is supposed to work. It's the cop's job to gather evidence that you have committed a crime. The fact that we really don't like this particular crime is not a good reason to change this. That's the sort of reactive emotional thinking that is a complete departure from the wisdom of "innocent until proven guilty".

      No reasonable person would refuse such a trivial request unless they had something to hide.

      That's the most honest statement of your position so far. Not "honest" in terms of deception but "honest" in terms of showing a full awareness of the implications, as in the truth and the whole truth. "I've got nothing to hide, so I'll submit to any infringement of my civil rights" is a very, very dangerous position. The DUI implied consent laws are a clever way to ignore the 5th Amendment. The asset forfeiture laws of the War on (some) Drugs are a clever way to ignore the 4th Amendment. Free speech zones are a clever way to ignore the 1st Amendment. The federal government's practice of unfunded mandates on the one hand, and encouraging states to desperately depend on federal money on the other, is a clever way around the 10th Amendment. I won't even discuss the 2nd Amendment. That's where your sentiment leads, what it produces, what it evolves toward and blossoms into. It is not a static idea but a dynamic entity that expands whererver it can.

      I don't like drunk drivers either but they are rather tame compared to the full expression of that sentiment.

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    2. Re:I disagree with a couple of points. by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      If you think ruining a guy's life just because they drove after drinking 2 beers is good for society, then we disagree.

      I personally prefer non-arbitrary laws to determine what "drunk" means. If drinking impairs our driving so much, then .000001 should be illegal. Why is it ok to be .079 BAC, but not .08? Is there good science to back that up?

      Or, back in the real world, we should acknowledge that a cop with an agenda, two beers with dinner, and driving a car are not a good combination.

    3. Re:I disagree with a couple of points. by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Same here. I just want them to be arrested and prosecuted based on observable behavior, such as the way that they drive. A dangerous driver who disregards safety is not exactly difficult to detect. On the plus side, doing things this way might accomplish more towards addressing the dangerous drivers who are quite sober but just aggressive and/or stupid.

      Indeed, but that would result in much less arrests. Most legally drunk drivers aren't actually a danger to anyone, and certainly aren't driving in such a manner to cause car accidents. A lot of them, in fact, are driving under the speed limit, and have about the driving-skill level of the safest new driver. (The kind that drive cautiously and slowly.) Which is dangerous on the highway, of course, but just insanely annoying on most roads.

      Once we stopped making drunk driving about safety, and started making it about alcohol level (And we kept lowering the alcohol level, as some people honestly can't drive safely with even small amounts. Or with none at all.), arrests sure as hell shot up. Things weren't a lot safer, but arrests were higher, because police could hang out at bars and nab anyone leaving them, and at least 20% would 'fail the test'.

      Now, I can see why we, as society, thought we had to do something. It was absurd that we were letting people get away with repeatedly dangerous driving.

      Of course, we still do that as long as it doesn't include alcohol, so we haven't really solved any problems.

      What we need to do is observe actual reckless driving, and add that up, and perhaps let people argue that downward if they can come up with a good reason. I.e., they can't use 'You was drunk' to punish people, but you can use 'I was sober and tired' as a partial defense.

      OTOH, I'm not sure there are a lot of 'good' reasons to be a bad driver...people who regularly drive while tired as just as dangerous as people who regularly drive while drunk. A better idea might be to partially forgive non-repeating reasons, aka, 'I was in a hurry because someone I know just got hospitalized'.

      Or even up the penalty for repeated reasons. (I.e, someone who drives while tired and then, a month later, drives while drunk, would get penalized less than someone who drives while tired and then, a month later, does the same thing.) Of course, if you refuse to give a reason, it would be assumed you're driving poorly for the same reason as last time.

      The point system is supposed to be something like this, but it's horribly designed and mainly used for speeding. (Which is not normally, in itself, dangerous.)

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    4. Re:I disagree with a couple of points. by causality · · Score: 1

      OTOH, I'm not sure there are a lot of 'good' reasons to be a bad driver...people who regularly drive while tired as just as dangerous as people who regularly drive while drunk. A better idea might be to partially forgive non-repeating reasons, aka, 'I was in a hurry because someone I know just got hospitalized'.

      I'll give a simple example of the kind of behavior I'd love to see a crackdown on. It's the kind of thing that actually does cause accidents. The other day I was driving to work. I had the green light and was going straight through an intersection (i.e. I was not turning). I clearly had right-of-way. Someone with a red light decides to pull out right in front of me. I have good reflexes and it thankfully wasn't that difficult to avoid hitting him.

      Get this: I was the only other car on the road. Had he waited about seven seconds he'd have had the entire road to himself. Additionally, once this individual got in front of me, he decided to drive quite slowly, significantly below the speed limit. Because of those two factors, not even "I was in a hurry" explains this behavior.

      A lot of drivers in my area are like this though I doubt it's specific to my area at all. It's just a childish "me first!" mentality from so-called adults.

      I don't want people like this to have licenses. The purpose of requiring a license is to establish competency, usually by means of instruction and training. This person is clearly not a competent driver. Therefore he should not have a license.

      I'd rather the states stop using traffic violation fines as a revenue source. Instead, I'd like them to institute a severely difficult competency test as a requirement for having a license. This test should have an expensive fee each time it is taken. It should be required for all new drivers, and also to reinstitute a suspended or revoked license. The failure rate for this test should be above 50% due to its difficulty. Following too closely, failure to yield right-of-way, blocking the passing lane by needlessly hanging out in someone's blind spot, impeding traffic by going significantly under the speed limit in good conditions, using the double-yellow line as a guide for the left tires, and swerving into the opposing lane of traffic on sharp curves would all be instant failures with no refund and a six-month waiting period before being allowed to retest. I'd rather they use the fees from this test as a revenue source instead of traffic tickets.

      If "driving is a privilege, not a right" then it should be a privilege reserved for mature adults who understand the concept that their actions can impact others. Let the rest take the bus or hire a cab.

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    5. Re:I disagree with a couple of points. by T+Murphy · · Score: 1

      I think refusing a breathalyzer test is just fine, so long as you understand when it's your word against his in court, you will lose (there's no other good way to prove a DUI case if the driver refuses the test). That way we don't need to conflict with the 5th amendment, as penalties for refusing the breathalyzer are redundant and useless. Of course, given the (relatively) recent case about the breathalyzer code being horribly written, I should hope everyone accused of drunk driving is allowed to opt for a blood test.

    6. Re:I disagree with a couple of points. by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      I can top that in 'sheer incompetence for no reason'.

      Okay, I pull up to a four-way stop, and a car pulls up, at the same time, to the right of me. That car goes first (obviously), turning left towards me...and almost drives into my fucking front bumper. I mean, I'm behind both the line and the stop sign, and it wasn't a tricky turn, it was perfectly normal residential crossroad with 25mph roads. And I'm driving a damn white car, and it's day time.

      But she's talking on their cell phone, so stops, drives left, and almost drive straight into my bumper. The left of her bumper was about a foot away from the middle of bumper. She notices me at the last second, stops, and looks at me for a second like she's expecting me to back up. Um, fuck no. She was so close, she actually has to back up a few feet to get past me.

      Seriously....what the hell? This wasn't 'running a stop sign', this was 'stopping at a stop sign and not bothering to notice the other cars also stopping at the same time'. She's lucky I was to the left of her, or we'd probably have collided in the middle of the intersection as I tried to go first.

      I don't have a lot of issues when observant people break the law. I mean, if someone wants to just slow down at stop signs when no one else is there, whatever. They should get a ticket, but they aren't endangering people.

      But here's someone who's driving around obeying the damn law...and shouldn't be driving.

      Well, technically, she'd have been on over the middle line when finishing her turn(If I hadn't been in the way!), but many people do that, at least a little, when turning left, simple because the damn roads are paved and painted by idiots who don't understand turning radius and expect us to make turns at 5 mph apparently. I always thought it would be interesting to drive around the town I live in and not touch the lines with my wheels...I think I could do it, but I'd sure as hell end up pissing everyone off behind me as I slowed to make exactly right-angle turns because the numbnut construction people painted lines like that.(1)

      She didn't have much of an excuse, because this was a reasonably intersection, but I wouldn't have complained if she'd turned poorly. But good^Wnon-stupid drivers actually, you know, don't drive into other cars when doing that.

      1) The police, about a year ago, pulled me over for 'weaving', aka, 'driving an old car on a known-drug traffic route during the middle of the day', so that whole thing annoys me. I agree that people should stay on their sides of the road when driving around damn curves, especially around here in the mountains, but right now 'weaving' is just a pretext for a search, and damn near impossible to avoid in a lot of places around here thanks to inane road construction, where intersections are apparently made by crossing roads and then erasing all the lines where they physically cross. I.e., the double-yellow and white go up literally to other road, and where the white turns onto the other road at a damn right angle! You can't even not-'weave' turning right.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  40. Bill of Rights by djdbass · · Score: 1

    Pretty sure the bill of rights says we have to save the cruel and unusual punishment until after the conviction... Oh that's right, we're all guilty until proven innocent, cary on.

  41. How is this any different.... by GigG · · Score: 1

    How is this any different than the hundreds if not thousands of local and county law enforcement agencies that post all booking info with photos on their website.

    An arrest, guilty or not, is public record and have been reported for, well, pretty much ever.

    --
    Is buying a Harley Davidson as your first motorcycle since you were 16 at age 49 a midlife crisis issue?
  42. Clarification by alexo · · Score: 1

    I for one would want the law changed

    Sorry for replying to myself but I feel I need to clarify.
    There is a need for arrest records to be public in a free society -- so people cannot be "disappeared". However, the information in the public record should reflect that need.

    For example:
    Name, etc: [...]
    Arrested on [...]
    Charged with [...] on [...] / [_] Not charged / [_] Charges withdrawn
    Released on [...] / [_] Still in custody
    Went to trial on [...]
    Verdict of [...] on [...]

    With all fields being kept up to date after the fact.

    Especially I don't see the need to have the reason for the arrest public unless the person is found guilty by a court of law.

    To illustrate:
    1. A policeman arrests you for the kidnapping, rape and murder of a 4 year old girl.
    2. You are taken to the station, photographed and fingerprinted.
    3. Turns out to be a case of of mistaken identity, you are not the suspect they were looking for, you just happened to drive a similar car.
    4. You are let go with an apology.
    5. The facts of the arrest are public record, the apology is not. Enjoy being ostracized.

  43. A new way to escape jury duty by twright0 · · Score: 1

    Probably would only work in the local/regional court, but:

    Judge: "Any reason you think you would be biased for or against this defendant?"
    Jury candidate #1: "Well, I'm pretty sure I saw him pop up in my facebook newsfeed for driving drunk."
    Defense Lawyer: "Dismissed."

    Would work best when the defendant is charged with something vaguely related but not the same as DUI, like disorderly conduct or domestic violence.

  44. Convicted or not... does it even matter? by Not_Wiggins · · Score: 1

    There have been a lot of posts trying to make a distinction between "it is fine to shame someone, even if they aren't convicted" to "this only makes sense once someone is convicted."
    In any/all cases, there is absolutely no positive value that comes out of this practice, as it relates to DUI. Child molesters... yeah, but drunk drivers?

    What does one get out of this?
    Let's say that instead of posting a picture, one placed a permanent mark on the person's forehead such that the public can now identify that person as having been involved with potential DUI or flat out convicted of it.

    Would it make the person stop drinking and driving if he had to permanently carry the stigma of it?
    Why stop if you're going to be vilified for the rest of time anyway?
    If one does stop, is it fair to keep punishing that person for correcting his mistake?

    And with the Internet these days, it _is_ forever. Sure, it might not be at the fore of your community's thinking, but a quick search and bang... get to relive being outed as irresponsible and dangerous.

    This doesn't prevent it from happening again.
    This doesn't shame someone into stopping.
    It is purely vengeance, with no value what-so-ever OTHER THAN to scare the populace into compliance (the efficacy of which is suspect).

    So, if your police practice such things, you may want to call up and ask why they're spending time and money on something that has no redeeming value.

    --
    Diplomacy is the art of saying, "Nice doggie!" until you can find a rock.
  45. Posting mugshots of those arrested by Hawthorne01 · · Score: 1

    ... is possibly too much, after all, a person is still considered innocent until guilty.

    But.

    I see no problem with this if they're convicted. DUI doesn't have any social stigma associated with it anymore, and that's an outrage, considering the thousands of people killed each year by drunk drivers. If a little shame stops someone from getting behind the wheel after too much to drink, more power to this sheriff.

    --
    "Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former."
    1. Re:Posting mugshots of those arrested by russotto · · Score: 1

      I see no problem with this if they're convicted. DUI doesn't have any social stigma associated with it anymore, and that's an outrage

      It still has more social stigma than in the 70s, but probably less than in the 90s. Want to fix that somewhat? Fight for DUI blood alcohol levels to be increased (so only actual drunks get convicted, not people who have had one beer). Object to travesties such as drunks being busted for DUI for sleeping in their cars. The more ridiculous you make the DUI laws, the less people will find violation of them to be something to disparage others for.

  46. Nothing New by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Puritan justice at its finest.

    In their day, nobody would ever have suggested that the pillories be private, either. Public humiliation of the punished is a pretty clear demarcation between the dispensation of justice and baleful vengeance. IMHO.

  47. LOL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am from germany and can see bad, bad, bad americans on that site... xD

    lots of white people... i see the bias i always had crumbling...

  48. But that is taking the extreme position. by maillemaker · · Score: 1

    >Same here. I just want them to be arrested and prosecuted based on observable behavior, such as the way that they drive.
    >A dangerous driver who disregards safety is not exactly difficult to detect. On the plus side, doing things this way might
    >accomplish more towards addressing the dangerous drivers who are quite sober but just aggressive and/or stupid.

    The rub is, I think driving drunk and swerving over the lines a couple of times should be punished much more heavily than driving sober and swerving over the line a few times. Why? Because I suspect a person who is driving drunk is a far far greater threat to the public than someone who is unimpaired. To me, it is like randomly firing a firearm in the air in a crowded area.

    >Then I'd rather you lobby for the repealing of the Fifth Amendment. That's a damn sight better than simply ignoring it.

    That is a rather extreme position. Why throw the baby out with the bathwater? I like the 5th amendment, and think it should be respected in nearly all cases. But not this one. Just like the 1st amendment doesn't apply in all cases, like yelling "FIRE" in a theater.

    >A concept that is totally unrelated in subject but completely related in principle is the notion of a "free speech zone".
    >You see, that's a clever way to get around the First Amendment. That was also perpetrated by someone who did not want to honestly
    >lobby for the repealing of the First Amendment and instead wanted to play clever word games to effectively ignore it.

    I agree with you on the concept of "free speech zones". But as the example I pointed out before illustrates, there are valid limitations on the 1st amendment. I don't think "free speech zones" are one of them, but there are, in fact, limitations on the 1st amendment. Likewise I think there are valid limitations on the 5th amendment. If blowing in a straw was somehow an imposition, or somehow infringed upon rights or discriminated against people, I could see why it would be a valid 5th amendment issue. But it doesn't.

    Let me ask you this: If a device were invented that could determine a person's blood alcohol level without touching them, would you be against /that/ sort of device being used without consent? Suppose we had a device that could, remotely, detect the amount of alcohol in a person's perspiration, and thus infer their intoxication level? I don't see how it would be much different than a radar gun used to detect speeding.

    >If it means throwing out 200+ years of jurisprudence and American traditions of freedom, if it means weakening the highest
    >law of the land, then so be it as long as we catch a few drunks, right?

    I do not believe that requiring a breathalyzer on demand as a requirement for driving significantly weakens anything.

    >The difference is that in any other criminal matter, you are not punished for refusing to incriminate yourself. When the
    >cop asks you to blow into a tube, he is asking you to prove that you are innocent. That is not the way our system is supposed
    >to work. It's the cop's job to gather evidence that you have committed a crime. The fact that we really don't like this
    >particular crime is not a good reason to change this. That's the sort of reactive emotional thinking that is a complete
    >departure from the wisdom of "innocent until proven guilty".

    Yes, you are correct in that you are being asked to prove that you are innocent, by being asked to cooperate with evidence gathering against yourself. But the reason why it's OK to change this for this situation is not because of the particular crime, but because the requested cooperation is TRIVIAL and does not have any negative effect on the suspect unless, of course, they actually are guilty.

    But it is also important to note here that YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO REFUSE THE BREATHALYZER TEST. My brother-in-law did this, and then got a lawyer to get him substantially reduced charges because of the lack of eviden

    --
    A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
    1. Re:But that is taking the extreme position. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      The rub is, I think driving drunk and swerving over the lines a couple of times should be punished much more heavily than driving sober and swerving over the line a few times. Why? Because I suspect a person who is driving drunk is a far far greater threat to the public than someone who is unimpaired. To me, it is like randomly firing a firearm in the air in a crowded area.

      What exactly would make someone who has been drinking more dangerous swerving over the lines then someone who is sober? I mean the head on collision would be caused by the person being over the line, not because he was drinking verses being sober. If they are over the lines unintentionally, they are a threat.

      That is a rather extreme position. Why throw the baby out with the bathwater? I like the 5th amendment, and think it should be respected in nearly all cases. But not this one. Just like the 1st amendment doesn't apply in all cases, like yelling "FIRE" in a theater.

      Actually, that line is misquoted all the time. There is no law making it illegal to shout fire in a crowded theater. What the laws are making illegal is the ability to incite a riot or create a public panic. These laws do not specifically target the First amendment, they target the reactions to the use of the first amendment. If your speech created a public panic or causes a riot and was intentionally crafted to do so, then you can receive punishment for it. But there is no specific exception like this to the fifth amendment where the use can be for something specific without violating the first amendment provision itself. The government is required to follow a certain set of rules regardless of anything you think. The laws do not stop you from making the speech, they simply apply punishment when the intent is shown to create unsafe civil unrest.

      You can't have an intact fifth amendment with exceptions to it at all. If you are allowed to make exceptions, then it has no effect at all. It is the literal throwing the baby out with the bath water without going through the motions first. This is different from speech as you can make your point without encouraging the harm of others. I guess I could understand more if you were claiming it doesn't apply to non-citizens or illegal ailiensbut you are qualifying the application of the constitution with what you don't like which means sooner or later someone else will too. and they won't like you in the process.

      I do not believe that requiring a breathalyzer on demand as a requirement for driving significantly weakens anything.

      I guess you simply do not understand the right against self incrimination. And yes, the entire "privilege not a right" thing can be transferable to anything. Making a living is a right just like being able to freely travel, making a living in a specific profession such as a gardener is a privilege just like driving a car, suppose there is a law that mandates in order to buy fertilizer or gardening supplies, you have to allow the cops to search your establishment and all places the fertilizer or tools will be used once a month to make sure you are not growing illegal drugs with it. Now suppose that just like with any other search, anything else illegal that is in plain view, it fair game. Doesn't that seem to violate something?Do you believe it would weaken anything?

      Yes, you are correct in that you are being asked to prove that you are innocent, by being asked to cooperate with evidence gathering against yourself. But the reason why it's OK to change this for this situation is not because of the particular crime, but because the requested cooperation is TRIVIAL and does not have any negative effect on the suspect unless, of course, they actually are guilty.

      But it is also important to note here that YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO REFUSE THE BREATHALYZER TEST. My brother-in-law did this, and then got a lawyer to get him s

  49. Sauce for the Goose is also Sauce for the Gander by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

    Ignoring the constitutionality of "Cruel and Unusual", then I see no problem if Government Employees also be socially presented, for example Law Enforcement Officers. And let's also ignore the constitutional issue of "Innocent till proven guilty", lets put everyone on Facebook for any issue?

  50. Arrested Or Not by b4upoo · · Score: 1

    The idea that there is ever any right to privacy is shaky at best. The notion that a person under arrest is entitled to privacy is even worse. After all, arrest is a public function carried out by public employees, using public transportation and public jails and processing areas and based upon public reports. And in relation to drunk driving we are not yet anywhere near punitive enough in cases involving drunk driving.

  51. excusable homicide? by eleuthero · · Score: 1

    ...regarding seizures, and apparently little used, excusable homicide would appear to fit the bill - http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Excusable+homicide. This indicates culpability but lack of ability to alter the situation.

  52. Public Shaming? by sponga · · Score: 1

    Would this really be considered public shaming?

    China recently just banned the decades old practice of public shaming by walking criminals down the street in front of the towns people.

  53. Not really fair, like they care by NetNed · · Score: 1

    With the % dipping lower and lower on what is legal as far as a breathalyzer is concerned, technically a guy that has one beer and leaves the bar a little too soon could be lumped in with a guy that drank 15+ drinks in a night. The only reason the law makers let over-reactionists lobby for unrealistic levels and pass laws as such is because, sad to say, drunk driving has become a money making industry for police, court, and probation department around the US.

  54. It doesn't surprise me at all that this is NJ by jbeach · · Score: 1

    New Jersey cops and traffic court judges, their patrons, have some of the most consistently, mind-blowingly arrogant attitudes you'll ever find.

    I'm recalling some personal experience with Mendham, NJ. The cops put up signs saying "Speed and receive a free ticket."

    I loved the universe when this arrogance backfired and some people actually paid no fines for tickets, by pointing out these official signs could easily be interpreted as meaning the ticket would cost nothing. The signs came down pretty quickly afterwards.

    --
    The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
  55. Arrested, not convicted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This isn't a matter of privacy, but of public perception. Seeing a mugshot in connection with an arrest brings negative connotations and the presumption of guilt. Our justice system places the burden on prosecution to prove guilt, not the other way around, but fighting public perception, instead, places an unjust burden on the defense to prove innocence in order to fight public opinion. A jury is not suppose to use public opinion in their decision, but we are human beings, we can't help it. At least...many people can't help it.

    If a lawsuit comes up that pushes back on the problem of due process rather than privacy, I can see a case being viable because privacy is not really being violated if public record is being published.

  56. The attitude is the problem by jbeach · · Score: 1

    Newspapers report the "Police Blotter" because it's news. It's not the police's job to report it.

    This is the police taking a step further out of their purpose, to post pictures of people specifically to embarrass the arrested and flaunt their own power. And I find it pretty arrogant. Especially seeing how many police think they shouldn't even be videotaped while arresting people.

    --
    The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
  57. That reminds me of something by Minwee · · Score: 1

    None of them have been charged yet, but I heard that many of these people have been brought in as part of an investigation into child exploitation. On top of that, several of them are self-admited pedagogues, pediatricians or even podiatrists, but they are somehow allowed to continue working in positions which bring them into contact with school children on a regular basis.

    Since this is all a matter of public record, can we publish these facts along with their photographs, home and work addresses next to a vaguely worded editorial about the evils of child abuse? That sounds pretty fair to me.

  58. Straw man. by maillemaker · · Score: 1

    >If you think ruining a guy's life just because they drove after drinking 2 beers is good for society, then we disagree.

    First of all, you are setting up a straw man here. I don't care how many beers someone has drunk. All that matters is whether or not they are legally intoxicated.

    Secondly, if someone is legally intoxicated and operating a vehicle, they are running a very real, very serious risk of ruining other people's lives. There have been countless cases of drunk drivers killing and maiming innocent people because their intoxication prevented them from safely operating a vehicle. People who willfully do this should be punished very harshly. It is no different than playing Russian Roulette while pointing a firearm at innocent bystanders.

    People who drink and drive are satisfying a purely selfish desire, and in so doing putting other people at great risk. This should be punished most harshly, in my opinion.

    In my view, if you kill someone while driving drunk, it is murder. And if you are caught before you kill someone, it should be attempted murder.

    >I personally prefer non-arbitrary laws to determine what "drunk" means. If drinking impairs our driving so much,
    >then .000001 should be illegal. Why is it ok to be .079 BAC, but not .08? Is there good science to back that up?

    I doubt the BAC to be considered intoxicated was arrived at in an arbitrary manner. In any case, you have to have a metric by which you can use to enforce the law. This metric has been set.

    I direct you to:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Relative_risk_of_an_accident_based_on_blood_alcohol_levels_.png

    I want you to read this article:

    http://www.cafemom.com/journals/read/208318/Ever_held_a_child_s_decapitated_head

    --
    A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
    1. Re:Straw man. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      11/10.
      Congrats, you're the Spinal Tap of Trolling. The dedication and innate ability to ignore logic and inspire hatred put you in a league of your own.

      /give cookie

    2. Re:Straw man. by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Wait, no! You see, we actually agree! My entire point is that you should only be arrested for drunk driving when you are: 1) drunk, and 2) driving. Not when you've had 2 beers and are driving, not when your BAC is some arbitrary level set by cops, but when your driving is impaired enough by alcohol that you become a hazard to those around you.

      My whole point is that 2 beers shouldn't be the definition of "legally drunk". I in NO WAY condone driving while intoxicated. I do, however, condone having a beer or two with your buddies over a meal then driving home.

      How can you think that BAC rates are not arbitrary when different jurisdictions have different allowable BAC levels? Why are you drunk in some states at .08, but not until .1 in others? It is also arbitrary because different people are affected differently when they have the same BAC levels. According to your linked chart, why don't we make it illegal to drive at .05 BAC, since there's obviously more risk than .00 BAC? See, it's all arbitrary.

      Don't get me wrong, I am not sticking up for any drunk drivers out there. I've never driven drunk, nor do I hang out with people who get arrested for drunk driving. I merely question the legal definition and posit that it, like most things law-enforcement, is set artificially low in the name of public safety and revenue generation.

    3. Re:Straw man. by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      is that at me or at maillemaker? In either case, neither of us are trolling, as far as I can tell.

    4. Re:Straw man. by maillemaker · · Score: 1

      >Wait, no! You see, we actually agree! My entire point is that you should only be arrested for drunk driving when you are: 1) drunk, and 2) driving.
      >Not when you've had 2 beers and are driving, not when your BAC is some arbitrary level set by cops, but when your driving is
      >impaired enough by alcohol that you become a hazard to those around you.

      You are going to have to define "drunk" somehow, and scientists have determined your risk of accident compared to your BAC.

      I don't know who sets the BAC limit for being considered intoxicated, but there will have to be a limit set somewhere by someone.

      >My whole point is that 2 beers shouldn't be the definition of "legally drunk". I in NO WAY condone driving while intoxicated.
      >I do, however, condone having a beer or two with your buddies over a meal then driving home.

      If two beers are sufficient to put you over the legal limit for intoxication, then it cannot be condoned. Since most people don't have portable breathalyzers, this is a risky proposition to undertake.

      You may be interested in this link:

      http://www.healthstatus.com/bac.html

      According to this calculator, for me, 2 beers over the course of an hour would only get me to .02 BAC.

      >How can you think that BAC rates are not arbitrary when different jurisdictions have different allowable BAC levels? Why are you drunk
      >in some states at .08, but not until .1 in others? It is also arbitrary because different people are affected differently when they
      >have the same BAC levels. According to your linked chart, why don't we make it illegal to drive at .05 BAC, since there's
      >obviously more risk than .00 BAC? See, it's all arbitrary.

      OK, you are correct, I did not have a good understanding of "arbitrary". Yes, these levels are set in an arbitrary manner. However, presumably they are set by educated people who have some scientific basis for what constitutes being impaired.

      >Don't get me wrong, I am not sticking up for any drunk drivers out there. I've never driven drunk, nor do I hang
      >out with people who get arrested for drunk driving. I merely question the legal definition and posit that it, like
      >most things law-enforcement, is set artificially low in the name of public safety and revenue generation.

      You have to have some means for scientifically determining whether or not someone is intoxicated. A simple way to do this is to determine their BAC. Admittedly, this does not give an actual measurement of _impairment_. But it does provide a means to determine how much alcohol is in someone's blood, and this, through scientific research, can be used to predict their risk of having an accident.

      --
      A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
  59. "red letter" policy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I got a DUI in New Hampshire about 15 years ago ( yes I was 21 and stupid) and I found out years later that the state had changed my drivers license number to red on my license. They never even told me they did that, and it lasts forever. So, if you get pulled over for *anything no matter how minor you are instantly under scrutiny.

  60. Right by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    So victims of drunk drivers shouldn't get involved in the discussion, but drunk drivers can?

    Why don't we only let the slave owners talk about slavery?

    Only rapers talk about rape?

    You just basically don't want to get hassled to prevent harm to others. Basically you are saying , "I don't want to be troubled because it doesn't affect me". Nice attitude.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  61. Arrested != Guilty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've been arrested 3 times in Oregon. In all 3 cases, the DA declined to press any charges because there was no evidence that a crime had been committed. Being arrested doesn't prove you've done anything wrong other than piss off a cop. In the case of a DUI, I would assume that the overwhelming majority of those detained actually are impaired in some way. However, there are inner ear problems that can affect your balance and therefore make you fail a Field Sobriety Test. So I'd prefer they not "name and shame" people until after it has been proved in a court of law that they have actually done something wrong.

  62. I think this is a good thing. by Paxtez · · Score: 1

    Remember DUI is different then theft or whatever, the crime is driving with blood or breath over XX.  In order to be charged with the DUI you have to either 1) Take and fail either a breath or blood test, 2) Refuse to take a test.

    If it's #1 your only hope of getting off is by a technicality.

    The only people who do #2 are people who are drunk enough to know they are wasted.

    1. Re:I think this is a good thing. by Vegeta99 · · Score: 1

      Or, they're people willing to stand by the principal of "I don't give up shit unless a judge forces me to, and if you want it, wake his ass up at 2AM". Which I think is fair.

      My buddy passed every goddamn sobriety test they gave him, and they STILL made him go give a blood test.

      I want to know who made up the 0.08 rule, because as a 170lb man, that's about 3.5 American beers before its legally unsafe to drive. I dunno bout you, but a single Benadryl fucks me up more than 3.5 beers!

      A buddy of mine got a DUI for taking an amphetamine pill. THEY GAVE THEM TO PILOTS IN WWII TO HELP THEM FLY.

      In PA, the first DUI means one year "probation"; calling a 1-800 number once a month to say you haven't been a bad boy ($350), alcohol classes ($650), and a $2000 fine/costs combination or so. No actual real punishment, and the alcohol classes are a joke, as far as everyone I know who's been unlucky enough to get caught has said. You know, show the people some nasty wrecks, make them listen to a mom who's 10 year old kid was playing in the street at midnight and got whacked by a drunk driver, and then make them write a paper on why the alcohol is the devil. They told one of my buddies that an alcoholic was anyone that drank on a schedule. So granny taking her Sunday Communion sip of wine is an alcoholic.

      (I was a social work major, I know real professionals don't define it as that. However, with my BS, I'm only a test and 4 classes away from being a certified drug and alcohol counselor, 3 years of graduate study away from being a big-boy counselor who actually is worth his salt)\

    2. Re:I think this is a good thing. by Paxtez · · Score: 1

      Remember driving is not a right, it is a privilege.  When you signed up for your drivers license you agreed to take blood/breath test if asked by a law enforcement officer, if you refuse, the state says 'Ok Fine, if you won't honor your part of the agreement, you aren't allowed to drive for a year.'

      In fact I heard about some states looking into passing laws that say: "Refusing to take a blood/breath test is a misdemeanor."

      People always think they 'passed' sobriety tests, they are wrong most of the time.  The things that cops look for are really small.  For example for a walking test people think they have to fall down or something to fail, it is really small things like feet being inches away.  Did your friend fail the blood test?

      I think the amphetamine pills were used more to keep people awake when working long shifts, not because it made them better pilots.

      At the very least being forced to pay a bunch of money might be considered a punishment, and would hopefully reconsider doing it again.

    3. Re:I think this is a good thing. by Vegeta99 · · Score: 1

      In PA, it is now a DUI to not give up the blood. Comes up the same for an insurance company anyway, DUI By Refusal, as opposed to say DUI By General Impairment or DUI By Over the Limit. I think that's unfair. I would be perfectly acceptable with an administrative suspension for a year for refusal to give up blood. Now, as for the sobriety tests, he says he passed. He's a Crim J. major, and they provide your scores on your Affadavit of Probable Cause that you get in your summons. Perhaps he was fibbing, but who knows.

      When I was a kid, if you had a few too many, the cops would make ya park and walk, or get you a cab. They KNEW who the real drunks were, and those guys got hauled to the county jail for the night, and got their DUI. Now, you make the mistake of finishing that pitcher of beer with your wings, and they're going to arrest you, because it means $3000 in their pockets for more toys. For example, my township of 10,000 just bought some ridiculous number of combat shotguns, about 4 per officer! What the hell? I mean, we have a drug problem here, but unless they're planning on forming a posse sometime soon, that's a little over the top.

  63. The second amendment by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

    The first issue is that the Sullivan Act isn't a ban on handguns. It requires a license to carry them.

    Which directly infringes on your right to carry, which the 2nd amendment explicitly denies the federal government the ability to do. And then there's incorporation to consider. There's no way around it: if I don't have a license, and the feds say I can't carry, there's the infringement, plain as day. This isn't a power that has ever been granted the feds. It is a power they have taken in an unauthorized and tyrannical mode, and which they enforce by coercion and/or violence.

    the question isn't whether the constitution supersedes local regulation, but rather what exactly the constitution means.

    In the case of the second amendment, there are two clauses. The first is prefatory, and contains no instructions to the government. This phrase is of historical interest, but it does not enable, or disable, any power or right.

    The second is explicit: "the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed." The meaning of the words here have not changed in any significant way since the amendment was penned. To "infringe" means to affect in any way, even at the meanest boundaries; "shall not" still means "no"; "keep" and "carry" still mean exactly the same things; "Arms", while somewhat broader today, certainly included an extremely wide range of weapons and weapons platforms, and by standing alone, obviously allows for invention, as invention and improvement was the perfectly normal order of business at the time; and the phrase itself can be parsed by anyone who knows what those words mean, or can look them up and successfully take in a dictionary definition.

    Even a moderately intelligent reader will realize that the meaning of the second phrase does not change one whit when one fiddles with the objects in the prefatory phrase; in other words, even if the prefatory phrase stated "in order that teddy bears may not be abducted by native Americans", the second phrase would still constrain the government from infringing in any way upon the keeping and carrying of arms - swords, caltrops, firearms, cannon, brass knuckles, etc. So the prefatory phrase is entirely irrelevant as to the powers of the federal government. In this way, it resembles the preamble to the constitution itself, which is also prefatory / explicatory, but embodies no allocation or restriction of powers.

    Things only began to get foggy when legislators decided they wanted to do things the constitution forbids, but were too lazy and/or cowardly to attempt the appropriate procedure, which is defined in article five: amendment. Then we began to see idiot arguments like the shotgun argument in Miller; the attempt to incorporate the explicatory or prefatory phrase as if it was a filter (not to mention the complete misinterpretation of what "militia" means in this context); and then of course there is the painfully naive "living document" mental meltdown.

    The question is truly "What rights does the constitution grant, and where do the lines of those rights get drawn?"

    That's not how it works in the case of the 2nd. The second amendment consists of two explicit restrictions on the government from infringing upon keeping and carrying arms (not just guns, mind you, which are a single category of arms, but arms in general.) These rights are not granted - they are defined as pre-existing and entirely insulated from any interference from the government.

    There is only one way that the government can legitimately create any infringing law (including licenses, etc.), and that is to instantiate the amendment process, and further, to succeed at it. Since they hav

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    1. Re:The second amendment by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      Despite my agreement with your interpretation of the law, your well reasoned interpretation of the law is not a fact, but rather an opinion.

  64. Not public info in the UK by fantomas · · Score: 1

    It sounds like things work differently here in the UK compared to the USA. We don't tend to have 'police blotters' in the local news (which I guess means photos of arrested people) and the booking log at the local jails certainly aren't public access. Generally people arrested but not yet charged are not reported on publicly: I think its only serious crimes of national interest that might get covered in the press.

  65. Privacy? by Vegeta99 · · Score: 1

    What privacy rights do you have if you get arrested?

    Doesn't seem like much. I got busted for being of age at a college party (hence, I MUST have had something to do with how the alcohol got there... I mean, if the police have no higher an education as the janitor, they gotta take the low hanging fruit). Haven't even had a court date yet, and they came an arrested me AGAIN because I didn't go get my fingerprints taken.

    That's right, they get your prints for life FIRST, THEN you get to go to court. And this is the second time for me - Last time, a judge threw the case out, but the PA State Police kept the prints!

  66. See also GWOT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People in the US have, for the most part, forgotten what it means to be "accused".