What would give rise to reasonable suspision as to someone's legal status?
How does an illegal imigrant behave?
What factors about a person would lead you to belive that they are in the country illegally?
What would give rise to reasonable suspision as to someone's legal status?
How does an illegal imigrant behave?
What factors about a person would lead you to belive that they are in the country illegally?
What would give rise to reasonable suspision as to someone's legal status?
How does an illegal imigrant behave?
What factors about a person would lead you to belive that they are in the country illegally?
if they are hispanic
happy now jarod![]()
They're stopped for a violation, when asked for their drivers license they respond with "Que", "EH", "Что", "Che cosa", "Τι", Was (Vas)", "Ce qui", "Wat", or any lanugage that might be recognized as an Amerian dialect and then are unable to provide a proper ID; they might be an illegal immigrant.
What would give rise to reasonable suspision as to someone's legal status?
How does an illegal imigrant behave?
What factors about a person would lead you to belive that they are in the country illegally?
1) they drive 10 miles UNDER the speed limit
2) they do not speak any English
3) they say 'take me to your leader'
If you are talking about the Arizona law, there is a requirement which comes before any "reasonable suspicion" of illegal status comes into play. Do you know what that is? The requirement which must first be met before any law enforcement officer can proceed with any "reasonable suspicion" is very important. There must first be an obvious violation of the law which has occurred. The person in question has to have done something that is a violation of the law in the State of Arizona... do you comprehend this? It can be any number of things, there are lots of things that are a violation of the law, but that has to FIRST happen, before any law enforcement officer can begin to question legal status of an individual. Take a moment and re-read that point, because it is fundamentally important in understanding the Arizona law and what it says.
NOW.... AFTER a law has been broken, and an officer has made what is called a "legal contact" with the individual, they may request identification from them. This applies to every American, regardless of status, across the board. You or I are under the same guidelines, there is NO difference, no one is being singled out and requested something that others do not have to provide. If you or I do not have proper identification, the law enforcement officer CAN place you in custody, do fingerprints, and hold you until your fingerprints are verified by the FBI database, and they know who you are. This procedure is standard across the board, again, regardless of your status as a citizen.
If there is no record of you in the FBI database, and you have no identification, it could be reasonable to suspect you may be in the country illegally. You may not be, but it is still reasonable to suspect this. If you do not speak English, that would be yet another indicator, you may not be an American citizen, because most naturalized citizens do speak some English, they have to in order to pass the citizenship exam. So, if you have no ID, no fingerprints on file with the FBI, and you don't speak English, it is adequately reasonable to suspect you MAY be here illegally. Understand???
WHy would not speaking English make you question someone's legal status? THat simply means they grew up in a non-English speaking family.
Plenty of Americans dont speak English.
What happened to innocent until proven gulity? So if an officer belives you voilated a law, he then has a right to strip you of your Constitutional rights?
I see your cognitive abilities don't include the ability to read a complete post, once you find something to latch onto.
What happened to innocent until proven gulity? So if an officer belives you voilated a law, he then has a right to strip you of your Constitutional rights?
They are innocent until proven guilty. But that does not mean that they cannot be detained or questioned if they are suspected of committing a crime.
Once they are detained or are being questioned, their status as an illegal immigrant can be checked.
So using spanish words leads you to belive the person is not legal?
Bullshit!
That is not reasonable suspision....
Who are you responding to??
What happened to innocent until proven gulity? So if an officer belives you voilated a law, he then has a right to strip you of your Constitutional rights?
I dont have a problem with that, but there is more than that, the Arazona law does not require that they be suspected of having commited a crime.