Stingray warrant

\0xDynamite dreamingforward at gmail.com
Thu Nov 16 16:28:24 PST 2017


Technically speaking, all an officer needs is his elected official
taking responsibility and backing him/her to do something.  The court
is over-stepping its jurisdiction and intruding into the executive
branch.

What needs to happen in cases like these, is that a charge must be
brought by a citizen against the police (if operating personally) or
the city (if acting officially; i.e. by directives of the elected
official) and THEN heard in the Courtroom, so that both parties must
testify and conclusions can be drawn.  Without a charge where two
parties can bring out all of the issues, the court has no real
competency or authority to say what the executive can and cannot do.

Anyone else question what "circuit court" really means, in relation to
the Constitution?  Are circuit judges APPOINTED by circuit city?

Marxos, JD

On 11/16/17, jim bell <jdb10987 at yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> Judge rules NYPD needed a warrant before using cell-site simulator
> https://www.yahoo.com/newsroom/vibes/news/v-dd323ebb-416a-3b40-b6ef-7e9c677f40d2_c-645869bc-ed23-32cb-b67d-15f65e240573_a-645869bc-ed23-32cb-b67d-15f65e240573
>


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