BMTSoulja1 Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Quote
thetragichippy Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 I've always had a problem with stuff like this. I get the money is probably from an illegal activity, but at the same time, why should he have to prove it was not? Shouldn't it be the Government's job to prove it was from illegal activity?Β Β Quote
InMAGAWeTrust Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 1 hour ago, thetragichippy said: I've always had a problem with stuff like this. I get the money is probably from an illegal activity, but at the same time, why should he have to prove it was not? Shouldn't it be the Government's job to prove it was from illegal activity?Β Β Legalized theft, is what it is. Donβt question the cops, ever, especially if black. Move along folksΒ Quote
tvc184 Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 1 hour ago, thetragichippy said: I've always had a problem with stuff like this. I get the money is probably from an illegal activity, but at the same time, why should he have to prove it was not? Shouldn't it be the Government's job to prove it was from illegal activity?Β Β Yes It is the governmentβsΒ job to prove it and beyond a reasonable doubt. HeΒ was charged with a crime and arrested, not a civil forfeiture.Β thetragichippy 1 Quote
tvc184 Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 Go to Facebook if you want to see some comedy on this story. I did not realize there were so many lawyers in this area. BMTSoulja1 1 Quote
BMTSoulja1 Posted June 24, 2021 Author Report Posted June 24, 2021 His previous convictions was probably ultimately this guyβs undoingβ¦. π€·πΎββοΈπ€·πΎββοΈ Quote
raideroldtimer Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 The real question is how much money got by while the dogs were on this rabbit. You know they had to have a tip to know to stop this guy and his stash was probably peanuts compared to what really got by. Quote
thetragichippy Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 28 minutes ago, tvc184 said: Go to Facebook if you want to see some comedy on this story. I did not realize there were so many lawyers in this area. All day every day...... I've learned to limit my comments on new stories.......but every once in a while I take the bait.....lol Quote
baddog Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 Gee, I canβt remember the last time I went traveling and forgot my $million in cash in my other suitcase. It was embarrassing, to say the least. TVC, if he was pulled over for speeding or whatever, they run his ID, does it show out of state convictions? Quote
tvc184 Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 54 minutes ago, BMTSoulja1 said: His previous convictions was probably ultimately this guyβs undoingβ¦. π€·πΎββοΈπ€·πΎββοΈ I started to post my response but I will use your post as a nexus and yes you are probably correct, it sure did not help him. Money laundering is a crime. Money laundering under Texas law is to possess money with intent to commit a crime or wereΒ the proceeds from a crime. The man in the article was arrested for money laundering. He was not taken into custody for possession of money or the money was not seizedΒ for a civil forfeiture. To justify an arrest and a seizure of money for evidence the officers had to have probable causeΒ which is under the 4AΒ to the United States Constitution. Probable cause is a reasonableΒ beliefΒ by a person of caution, who knows the facts that the officerΒ knows at the time of the arrest orΒ search, that will leadΒ the person to believe that a crime itβs probably happening or has happened. So what do we know about this case going strictly by the article? WillΒ these facts make a reasonable personΒ believe that a crime has likely happened or about to happen? Probable cause is a looking at the totality of the circumstances and not any single item which in itself might be legal.Β 1. A traffic stop was made IH10. 2. The driver was from South Carolina so at least several hundred miles from home. 3. The article says the officer spoke with him and he gave indications that something was up. Iβm going to speculate that he was overly nervous or simply gave an answer that made absolutely no sense. Either of the situations might not mean much alone however I can give inference that a crime has been committed. This is especially true if youβre caught in a lie. 4. Due to these indications a narcotics dog was brought to the scene. 5. The dog alerted on the vehicle meaning it is very likely there were drugs for in the vehicle or had recently been in the vehicle. 6. A search of the vehicle with probable cause letβs do the discovery of almost $1 million in cash. 7. A check of the manβs record shows that he has not only been arrested but been convicted for drug charges, possibly selling drugs. We do not know what the guy said that tipped the officers off that something was up but Iβm sure it will be on camera. Also unlike the sidewalk lawyers on Facebook, a warrant is not needed to search a vehicle on the roadway. The United States Supreme Court has ruled that waiting for a warrant on the side of the road was unreasonable so a warrant was not needed for a vehicle. The 4A to the Β Constitution guarantees the right against βunreasonableβ searches and seizures. They have ruled that is not unreasonable to search it vehicle without a warrant. A warrant might take two or more hours and it would be unreasonable to believe the suspect will still be sitting there waiting for the cop two hours later.Β So the officers very likely hadΒ probable causeΒ to make the stop, the search and ultimately arrest the suspect. Β It was not a single fact that the guy had cash on him. Out of curiosity and honesty, with the seven things that I just listed, how many people believe this guy was just riding down the road with almost $1 million cash or if he had just made a drug transaction or was in route to a drug transaction? bullets13 and BMTSoulja1 2 Quote
Derf Nosneb Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 3 hours ago, InMAGAWeTrust said: Legalized theft, is what it is. Donβt question the cops, ever, especially if black. Move along folksΒ "especially if black" Can't do it can you, just have to troll and stir the pot, his color has nothing to do with this.Β WOSdrummer99 1 Quote
tvc184 Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 20 minutes ago, baddog said: Gee, I canβt remember the last time I went traveling and forgot my $million in cash in my other suitcase. It was embarrassing, to say the least. TVC, if he was pulled over for speeding or whatever, they run his ID, does it show out of state convictions? No. MerelyΒ running an IDΒ will not return out-of-state convictions orΒ records or even in Texas however a routine check on aΒ drivers license will show traffic citations within the last few years. There has to be a specific reason to run a persons criminal history. Any officer can request it however he hasΒ to tell the dispatcher at that moment why it is being run and that reason hasΒ to be logged into the FBI database immediately. The officer that at time is pretty much locked into his reasoningΒ so if he lies, he is committing a crime and the FBI has the evidence. There are several reasons that we can run such as the suspect in an active criminal investigation, a detention such as a traffic stop or a criminal activity is suspected,Β criminal historiesΒ to a person applying for the police department, etc. I can assure you that you do not want to be running your ex girlfriendβsΒ current boyfriend to see what kind of record he has and get caught. I would not want to go to prison to find out who is dating who. It is also a crime to divulge criminal history to someone other than the police and if you sell the information, it is a felony in Texas. ForΒ example if someone that I know saysΒ Iβll give you $20Β if you tell me if this guy has been arrested and I use the FBI database, if I get caught I might as well get ready for the big house. Quote
thetragichippy Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 11 minutes ago, tvc184 said: Out of curiosity and honesty, with the seven things that I just listed, how many people believe this guy was just riding down the road with almost $1 million cash or if he had just made a drug transaction or was in route to a drug transaction? I doubt he was transporting his life savings...... Your explanation helped my reasoning of the situation.Β Quote
thetragichippy Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 7 minutes ago, tvc184 said: There has to be a specific reason to run a persons criminal history. I did not know that.....I thought your criminal history was public info?Β Β Quote
Derf Nosneb Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 7 minutes ago, tvc184 said: I started to post my response but I will use your post as a nexus and yes you are probably correct, it sure did not help him. Money laundering is a crime. Money laundering under Texas law is to possess money with intent to commit a crime or wereΒ the proceeds from a crime. The man in the article was arrested for money laundering. He was not taken into custody for possession of money or the money was not seizedΒ for a civil forfeiture. To justify an arrest and a seizure of money for evidence the officers had to have probable causeΒ which is under the 4AΒ to the United States Constitution. Probable cause is a reasonableΒ beliefΒ by a person of caution, who knows the facts that the officerΒ knows at the time of the arrest orΒ search, that will leadΒ the person to believe that a crime itβs probably happening or has happened. So what do we know about this case going strictly by the article? WillΒ these facts make a reasonable personΒ believe that a crime has likely happened or about to happen? Probable cause is a looking at the totality of the circumstances and not any single item which in itself might be legal.Β 1. A traffic stop was made IH10. 2. The driver was from South Carolina so at least several hundred miles from home. 3. The article says the officer spoke with him and he gave indications that something was up. Iβm going to speculate that he was overly nervous or simply gave an answer that made absolutely no sense. Either of the situations might not mean much alone however I can give inference that a crime has been committed. This is especially true if youβre caught in a lie. 4. Due to these indications a narcotics dog was brought to the scene. 5. The dog alerted on the vehicle meaning it is very likely there were drugs for in the vehicle or had recently been in the vehicle. 6. A search of the vehicle with probable cause letβs do the discovery of almost $1 million in cash. 7. A check of the manβs record shows that he has not only been arrested but been convicted for drug charges, possibly selling drugs. We do not know what the guy said that tipped the officers off that something was up but Iβm sure it will be on camera. Also unlike the sidewalk lawyers on Facebook, a warrant is not needed to search a vehicle on the roadway. The United States Supreme Court has ruled that waiting for a warrant on the side of the road was unreasonable so a warrant was not needed for a vehicle. The 4A to the Β Constitution guarantees the right against βunreasonableβ searches and seizures. They have ruled that is not unreasonable to search it vehicle without a warrant. A warrant might take two or more hours and it would be unreasonable to believe the suspect will still be sitting there waiting for the cop two hours later.Β So the officers very likely hadΒ probable causeΒ to make the stop, the search and ultimately arrest the suspect. Β It was not a single fact that the guy had cash on him. Out of curiosity and honesty, with the seven things that I just listed, how many people believe this guy was just riding down the road with almost $1 million cash or if he had just made a drug transaction or was in route to a drug transaction? "Out of curiosity and honesty, with the seven things that I just listed, how many people believe this guy was just riding down the road with almost $1 million cash or if he had just made a drug transaction or was in route to a drug transaction?" Or maybe, he was the leader of a group of auto brokers who you see regularly on I-10, 59 or 77 in a caravan hauling cars to Mexico,Β that would be a cash deal. Could be he had gone to Houston to buy a high end car or class A motor coach. Quote
tvc184 Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 1 hour ago, raideroldtimer said: The real question is how much money got by while the dogs were on this rabbit. You know they had to have a tip to know to stop this guy and his stash was probably peanuts compared to what really got by. I worked highway interdiction. Iβve never made a single drug arrest from a tip in that position. I andΒ my partner at one time made what I believe wasΒ the largest crack cocaine seizure and some cash (not the biggest) Β in Jefferson County. Of course that was about 25 years ago. Since the police probably stopΒ about one out of every 500 or less, every time they get tied up with any arrest, it isΒ safe to say several people drove past them with moreΒ drugs and money.Β Quote
tvc184 Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 11 minutes ago, thetragichippy said: I did not know that.....I thought your criminal history was public info?Β Β Some or most of it is but it has to be obtained through another channel. Β Using the FBI/police Β computer is a crime. When I used to work for Lamar Port Arthur, they wouldΒ want me to run the license plateΒ of people who would receive citations for parking on the campus. I could not provide it. They were a government agency since they were in public school and they could go down to the Jefferson CountyΒ tax office and requested and would receive it for free through them.Β thetragichippy 1 Quote
baddog Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 34 minutes ago, thetragichippy said: I doubt he was transporting his life savings...... Your explanation helped my reasoning of the situation.Β Me either, hence my sarcastic post above. Lol thetragichippy 1 Quote
baddog Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 41 minutes ago, tvc184 said: No. MerelyΒ running an IDΒ will not return out-of-state convictions orΒ records or even in Texas however a routine check on aΒ drivers license will show traffic citations within the last few years. There has to be a specific reason to run a persons criminal history. Any officer can request it however he hasΒ to tell the dispatcher at that moment why it is being run and that reason hasΒ to be logged into the FBI database immediately. The officer that at time is pretty much locked into his reasoningΒ so if he lies, he is committing a crime and the FBI has the evidence. There are several reasons that we can run such as the suspect in an active criminal investigation, a detention such as a traffic stop or a criminal activity is suspected,Β criminal historiesΒ to a person applying for the police department, etc. I can assure you that you do not want to be running your ex girlfriendβsΒ current boyfriend to see what kind of record he has and get caught. I would not want to go to prison to find out who is dating who. It is also a crime to divulge criminal history to someone other than the police and if you sell the information, it is a felony in Texas. ForΒ example if someone that I know saysΒ Iβll give you $20Β if you tell me if this guy has been arrested and I use the FBI database, if I get caught I might as well get ready for the big house. Thanks. I learn a lot on here sometimes. Quote
tvc184 Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 1 hour ago, Derf Nosneb said: "Out of curiosity and honesty, with the seven things that I just listed, how many people believe this guy was just riding down the road with almost $1 million cash or if he had just made a drug transaction or was in route to a drug transaction?" Or maybe, he was the leader of a group of auto brokers who you see regularly on I-10, 59 or 77 in a caravan hauling cars to Mexico,Β that would be a cash deal. Could be he had gone to Houston to buy a high end car or class A motor coach. Yes, we could what if all kinds of scenarios. What if he said, yes I have a bill of sale here for 50 cars andΒ theyβre going to be truckedΒ back to South Carolina?Β Here is a number you can call to confirm. Having worked in that position I would suspect itΒ did not quite go like that. Of course the guy can shut his mouth and not answer any questions whatsoever and he has that right. My guess is that he openedΒ his mouth and they easily were able to prove or suspected thatΒ he was lying. I have made some of my best arrest by people who agree to talk and it is not usually hard to prove that someone is lying even the side of the street. If there are two people and they agree to talk it is so simple to discover a lie,Β itβs almost like cheating. I was riding with a couple ofΒ Beaumont PD officers one time and they made an interdictionΒ Β stop. A white male with Georgia license plates was heading eastbound in a pick up. The pick up was registered in his name. He agreed to talk and he gave some story about he left a week ago to go visit a friend in Houston and he was on the way back home. Then theyΒ start asking what his friends name was and all of a sudden he did not remember. TheyΒ askedΒ him where the friend lived so theyΒ can sendΒ Houston PD by the check and he did not remember that either. The officers wouldΒ take turnsΒ talking to him while he was outside of his truck. He would talk freely with a little nervousness but every time an officerΒ got nearΒ the tailgate he would lock up stiff as a board and shut up. It was almost comical.Β Β Walk a few feet away and he would loosen up and start talking again.Β ThenΒ the big question, do you mind us looking around your truck? The answer was no, I donβt mind. One of the officers looked under the truck and saw that the spare tire was brand new. ItΒ had no mud on it whatsoever and looked like it had just been mounted the day before. So then the follow up question. How long have you had this truck? He mightβve saidΒ two or three years. Have you had any flats? No. Are all of your tires original including a spare? Yes. Hmmmmβ¦β¦ Wellβ¦β¦. The officer tookΒ Β the spareΒ out from under the truck and rolled it down the side of the shoulder. For some reason it rolled faster at some spots andΒ slower at some spots like there was somethingΒ heavy inside. Then the tire was bouncedΒ a few times and we noticed part of the tire was more stiff in the other parts. The pickup was take him to the city garage about 3 miles away. The spare tire was openedΒ and 6 kilos of marijuana popped out.Β If a person opens his mouth he decides to lie, it is not usually very hard to figure it out. At the Police Academy I have a allowedΒ twoΒ cadets to go outside and make up any storyΒ that they wished. The premise was that they had just robbedΒ someplace but they had time to getΒ their stories together. I would give them as much time as I needed to make up the story. They could even write it down on paper if they wanted to. I would then bring one back in the class and question him. I would then have him leave the class and bring the other person in and question him in front of the other cadets. It was almost comical how quickly it was discovered that they were lying. It isΒ because you cannot anticipate all the questions that will be asked.Β A person has the right to remain silent. If he gives up that write anything he says can and will be used against him in a court of law. I suspect in this case and going by the article, theΒ guy decided he would talk, probably believing he could give a reasonable explanation to whatever they ask. WOSdrummer99 1 Quote
SmashMouth Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 2 hours ago, Derf Nosneb said: how many people believe this guy was just riding down the road with almost $1 million cash Hell, I do it all the timeβ¦ π WOSdrummer99 1 Quote
tvc184 Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 Omgβ¦ the Facebook lawyers!!! π€¦π»ββοΈ Quote
Derf Nosneb Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 1 hour ago, SmashMouth said: Hell, I do it all the timeβ¦ π "how many people believe this guy was just riding down the road with almost $1 million cash" That is not my quote, not my words, check my post... Quote
SmashMouth Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 10 minutes ago, Derf Nosneb said: "how many people believe this guy was just riding down the road with almost $1 million cash" That is not my quote, not my words, check my post... Yep. It was a TVC quote. Sometimes this site can get a little haywire from time to time.Β Quote
Derf Nosneb Posted June 24, 2021 Report Posted June 24, 2021 21 minutes ago, SmashMouth said: Yep. It was a TVC quote. Sometimes this site can get a little haywire from time to time.Β Ok, I didn't want credit for a great post, that would ruin my credibility.Β SmashMouth 1 Quote
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