The Mark Dannels Regime: Sworn enemies of the US Constitution and of Us the People

1 month ago
11

Full footage, including evidence that the unlawful arrest was committed clearly in retaliation for the REAL victim reporting REAL threats to public safety: rumble.com/c/c-6642597

Caught here on video in the act of committing an unlawful arrest (unlawful because there was no credible accusation or confession), Cochise County Deputy Sergeant Taylor “Guy” Hudson can be seen glorying in his devoutly held belief that the Supreme Court “allows [him] to lie.”

Yet according to Civil Rights Litigation Group, “They can’t lie in every instance, and they can’t fabricate evidence (Florida v. Cayward, 1989), but most of the time it’s completely legal for them to lie, so it’s important to remember this if you are ever interrogated. The Supreme Court ruled in Frazier v. Cupo (1969) that police officers can lie during an investigation as long as it does not “shock the conscience of the court or the community.” For instance they can’t tell someone that they will lose custody of their children if they don’t confess (Lynumn v. Illinois, 372 US 528 (1963). But they most certainly can lie about a lot of things that can intimidate people into confessing to crimes they didn’t commit. And as long as the court determines that a confession was voluntary and not obtained through violence, the court could allow it” (rightslitigation.com/2022/11/21/can-the-police-lie-to-me).

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