Don2 (Don1 Revised)
Contributor
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...her-for-doing-her-job/?utm_term=.6ccf9ae010c6
Video at link. Essentially, police wanted blood from a truck driver who was a victim of a driving accident. The truck driver ended up bloody, in emergency room, and unconscious. The other opposing driver in the accident was the one at fault and died. It is entirely possible that the at-fault driver was on drugs but that is neither here nor there. The truck driver was just a typical person: "innocent."
Remember your Bill of Rights. Police have no right to seize blood--no warrant, not even reasonable suspicion. The nurse objects to helping police because there must be one of three elements: (1) the patient must have given consent for the blood, (2) the police must have a warrant, or (3) the patient must be under arrest for a crime. The nurse showed a document that the police department agreed to in a contract stating these three elements and had her supervisor on the phone. [about 5:50 in the video]
Someone told the police officer [about 6:45] that he's "making a huge mistake threatening a nurse" and that triggered him into angry arrest mode.
While this is just an anecdote, I have to wonder if the atmosphere of the country is at play. You have laws (like the Constitution) that are barriers to him and his one-man authority, but with Trump pardoning Arpaio and other shenanigans, in the police officer's mind he may be the hero victim of the story. And there are millions of other people just like him.
Video at link. Essentially, police wanted blood from a truck driver who was a victim of a driving accident. The truck driver ended up bloody, in emergency room, and unconscious. The other opposing driver in the accident was the one at fault and died. It is entirely possible that the at-fault driver was on drugs but that is neither here nor there. The truck driver was just a typical person: "innocent."
Remember your Bill of Rights. Police have no right to seize blood--no warrant, not even reasonable suspicion. The nurse objects to helping police because there must be one of three elements: (1) the patient must have given consent for the blood, (2) the police must have a warrant, or (3) the patient must be under arrest for a crime. The nurse showed a document that the police department agreed to in a contract stating these three elements and had her supervisor on the phone. [about 5:50 in the video]
Someone told the police officer [about 6:45] that he's "making a huge mistake threatening a nurse" and that triggered him into angry arrest mode.
While this is just an anecdote, I have to wonder if the atmosphere of the country is at play. You have laws (like the Constitution) that are barriers to him and his one-man authority, but with Trump pardoning Arpaio and other shenanigans, in the police officer's mind he may be the hero victim of the story. And there are millions of other people just like him.