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BillP
Guest
Well, the “good faith exception” to procedural errors mentioned above would seem to validate your position. It seems that we DON’T throw our evidence if the police made an “honest” mistake. Your experience may be different, not the least because our systems is administered by fallible humans.This is a false dilemma, can’t you see that? You ASSUME that there is no way to improve the current system! The system I proposed above would place the consequences of violation on the policeman in question instead of on the victim (or their family). Enforcement would still lie in the judicial branch of government, where it does today.
How is this eroding anyone’s rights? It seems to me that the current system is preferred because it is easier to implement, not because it is more just. In other words, it is laziness, not justice primarily at work in this principle.
FWIW, I don’t think our evidence exclusions are a result of laziness so much as an excess of caution where the rights of the accused are concerned.
Absolutely not a problem. I had no idea that you were personally involved in a situation like that.For my part I am sorry I didn’t read your posts more carefully. In retrospect there are indications that such was the case.Bill, I apologize for phony cussing at you. It was a long time ago, and few she knows today have any knowledge of it. Best keep it that way. My own mental health is probably not best suited to spending hours researching other such cases, so I’ll just let it go.