Comment by duxup

10 days ago

What is wild about this is the cops showed up, held the guys, they showed them their letter that they were authorized and the cops called the references on the letter and everyone was fine.

Then the Sheriff showed up and insisted they be arrested...

Everything was fine until one person who didn't get it, who happened to be in charge, showed up.

>When Sheriff Leonard arrived, the tone suddenly changed. He said the Dallas County Courthouse was under his jurisdiction and he hadn’t authorized any such intrusion.

Reading only ever so slightly between the lines, it's clear that he probably did get it, just that he either wanted to swing his dick around for its own sake, or, more likely it seems from the dedcription in the article, resented that he was kept out of the loop on "his turf".

Per the legal system, arrested is probably safe course of action until they could verify the authenticity of the letter. It's really the ensuing events after that were abysmally stupid.

  • They did verify the authenticity. The police won't launch a full investigation for every single possibility and doing so would be a colossal waste of resources. They are, in fact, allowed to make some calls and be satisfied at that point that the letter is authentic without investigating every single fraudulent possibility.

  • So you read this:

    > the cops showed up, held the guys

    > they showed them their letter that they were authorized

    > the cops called the references on the letter

    > Then the Sheriff showed up and insisted they be arrested...

    and your response is:

    > Per the legal system, arrested is probably safe course of action until they could verify the authenticity of the letter.

    ?

    • Anyone can write a letter and the police shouldn’t have called the numbers on the letter until they verified the numbers were legit.

      This is the equivalent of a phishing email providing you a phone number.

      I think that arrest was warranted until thy could independently confirm the phone numbers…

      2 replies →

  • > arrested is probably safe course of action until they could verify the authenticity of the letter

    How would that even work? How could you possibly establish probable cause in that situation? It's certainly not credible that there'd be an above 50% chance someone presenting such a letter is a criminal.

  • If they know who they are, what's the point? You can track them down later and throw on ~fraud charges if the letter ends up fake.