Duty to inform violates your rights

4 months ago
199

Many states have what are called “Duty to Inform” laws. These laws claim to require you to tell law enforcement if you are in possession of a gun. While many people think of this as a Second Amendment issue, most don’t realize it’s also a violation of the Fourth and Fifth Amendments. If the presence of a firearm is a threat to officer safety, then the officer’s firearm is a threat to my safety.

Remember, the Supreme Court believes that to establish reasonableness to detain and search a person, law enforcement must first be able to articulate a reasonable suspicion of a crime. Searching you for a firearm, even verbally, is unreasonable without such suspicion and therefore violates your rights protected by the Constitution. It does not matter if your alleged duty requires the officer to ask; without reasonable suspicion, that is a violation of the Fourth Amendment.

Demanding that you witness against yourself is a violation of the Fifth Amendment. Again, if law enforcement has a reasonable articulable suspicion that you have or are about to commit a crime, they’ve established a reasonable search, but your right against self-witness is not based on reasonableness like your right not to be searched.

Read the full article... watch and learn from Constitutional Expert Paul Engel; there is always much more to learn back at America Out Loud: https://www.americaoutloud.news/.

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