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Shame on councilwomen

Cowards — those who have disdain for police officers and the work they do. That’s the simplest definition that I can come up with following Monday night’s Gettysburg Borough Council ....

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When Can Government Kick Open the Door of Your House?


Commentary
By Terence P. Jeffrey
| April 21, 2021 | 4:52am EDT
(Photo by PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP via Getty Images)
A 69-year-old woman was walking her poodle in a public park in Northern California in late November. She was not wearing a mask.
She walked by groups of people who were.
A police officer, meanwhile, monitored her movements from the security of his squad car.
As she moved past the park into a middle-class neighborhood, he clandestinely trailed her. She walked past other people who were also out for strolls sometimes coming within three or four feet of them.
Being friendly neighbors, they nodded and smiled. ....

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SCOTUS Case May Determine If Police Can Enter Your Home WITHOUT a Warrant – Investment Watch


A new Supreme Court case may determine if police have the power to enter a person’s home 
without a warrant. Years of American law precedent and the US Constitution are quite clear in the restraints put on government agents. However, that isn’t stopping the police, government, and activist judges from doing what they can to continue to chip away at those basic protections.
We know the First Amendment and Second Amendment are under attack. Now the Fourth Amendment is taking another volley.
Turn down the volume, folks, or you may have to face the Supreme Court
Lange vs. California is a case that centers around a traffic stop in California. California Highway Patrol followed Arthur Lange, and only a few seconds elapsed between when the officer turned on his blue lights and when Lange made the turn into his driveway, then his garage. ....

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Supreme Court Weighs Expansion to Warrantless Entry


What Normally Allows a Police Officer to Enter and Search Your Home
The Fourth Amendment requires that police officers have a warrant to enter and search a home. The goal of this provision is to protect privacy and offer freedom from unreasonable intrusions by the government. 
Generally, there are a few exceptions. Warrantless searches are permitted when a person gives consent to a home search. It can happen if a police officer already has the right to be on the person’s property and sees evidence of a crime. Police also have the authority to search and seize evidence if they are conducting a valid arrest in a person’s home. Another exception is the “emergency aid” case, when an officer sees a resident collapsing for apparent medical reasons from the window and can run into the house to administer aid. ....

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