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<blockquote data-quote="Michael Brown" data-source="post: 1810654" data-attributes="member: 18"><p>From a previous post, I seem to recall that you are an attorney.</p><p></p><p>Do you practice criminal law?</p><p></p><p>The reason I ask is that just about every 4th Amendment decision is pages and pages long, so apparently your "no lengthy explanation" statement would fly in the face of most appellate courts past practices.</p><p></p><p>I mention this only because if you give a one-line answer to something that encompasses a large body of legal work and opinion, you are giving folks here the impression that they may do things that might be legally precarious i.e. the term "allow" that the OP uses certainly gives the impression that if the answer is "no" that you have the legal right to physically resist, which the person may not have based on the situation.</p><p></p><p>You're the attorney so you know the gig, but simple answers to complex questions can cost people who don't have your legal background.</p><p></p><p>YMMV.</p><p></p><p>Michael Brown</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Michael Brown, post: 1810654, member: 18"] From a previous post, I seem to recall that you are an attorney. Do you practice criminal law? The reason I ask is that just about every 4th Amendment decision is pages and pages long, so apparently your "no lengthy explanation" statement would fly in the face of most appellate courts past practices. I mention this only because if you give a one-line answer to something that encompasses a large body of legal work and opinion, you are giving folks here the impression that they may do things that might be legally precarious i.e. the term "allow" that the OP uses certainly gives the impression that if the answer is "no" that you have the legal right to physically resist, which the person may not have based on the situation. You're the attorney so you know the gig, but simple answers to complex questions can cost people who don't have your legal background. YMMV. Michael Brown [/QUOTE]
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