Man ticketed after handing change to cop posing as panhandler

Quest

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A man who received a $175 traffic ticket for unbuckling his seatbelt to give change to what turned out to be a police officer posing as a panhandler is likely to think twice before giving to the less fortunate again.
Dane Rusk was driving away from a mall in Regina on Wednesday when he spotted what he thought was a panhandler on the side of the road.

“As I came up to the stop sign, I stopped and looked and I saw this homeless guy holding a sign,” Rusk said. “I instantly felt sorry for him.”
That’s when Rusk said he took off his seatbelt and grabbed $3 from his pocket.
“I reached out – I had to undo my seat belt, hang over and drop the change on the curb,” Rusk told CTV Regina.
Moments after dropping the change, Rusk was pulled over by police and issued a ticket.
“I said, ‘What do you mean? I didn’t talk to any police officer,’ and he said, ‘Well ya, you gave him money,’” Dusk said.
“I said, ‘Oh, the homeless guy?’”
The person Rusk handed change to was an undercover cop, and Rusk received the fine for not wearing a seat belt.
Rusk said he was “pretty shocked” by the incident. “The ticket’s $175 and the three dollars I gave to him – I’m out $178 all because I was trying to help out a homeless guy.”
But Regina police say this is nothing new. It’s part of a project that has police watching for traffic violations at intersections.
“Intersections are probably one of the most critical areas when it comes to accidents obviously, and our high-volume intersections are ones that we tend to target,” said Insp. Evan Bray. “So we will run random intersection projects throughout the city.”
The police officer’s sign was not soliciting money. In Regina, panhandling is not considered a crime, however, the city does have a bylaw that prohibits soliciting to vehicle occupants in high-traffic areas.
It’s the reason Dale Lakeman no longer holds up a cardboard sign on the streets of Regina. Instead, he collects bottles to support himself. He told CTV News he feels bad for Rusk.
“Cancel that seatbelt ticket to that gentleman because the poor guy took pity on a homeless person to give them some money.”
Lakeman said he hopes it won’t deter others from giving to homeless people.

http://www.ctvnews.ca/mob .. dler-1.2940070
 

Scoop

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No way this holds up in court.

You can't be coerced into breaking a law by a cop.
 

GzUp

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Smh

I just gave a dollar to a old man who was standing in a big street intersection, it was like 102 that day.... I only give to the very old.
 

ORDER_66

I am The Wrench in all your plans....
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ARE YOU fukkING KIDDING ME?!!?! :what: Corrupt ass taxation ass b*stards man... how much they gonna bleed the citizens dry???
 

ⒶⓁⒾⒶⓈ

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No way this holds up in court.

You can't be coerced into breaking a law by a cop.
:mjlol: You sure about that
VANCOUVER – The lawyer for a man found guilty of planning to bomb the British Columbia legislature says the RCMP broke the law by supplying her client and his common-law wife with the means and the spiritual justification to carry out their terrorist plot.
She said officers paid for the couple’s food, coffee and cigarettes, offered them transportation and accommodation, and provided technical advice about building and planting the pressure-cooker explosives.

This financing helped free up money for buying bomb-making supplies that would otherwise have been unavailable, she told the court.
 

Scoop

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:mjlol: You sure about that

VANCOUVER – The lawyer for a man found guilty of planning to bomb the British Columbia legislature says the RCMP broke the law by supplying her client and his common-law wife with the means and the spiritual justification to carry out their terrorist plot.
She said officers paid for the couple’s food, coffee and cigarettes, offered them transportation and accommodation, and provided technical advice about building and planting the pressure-cooker explosives.

This financing helped free up money for buying bomb-making supplies that would otherwise have been unavailable, she told the court.

Idgaf about Canada stuff...
 

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:sas2: cos it cant happen here
On March 15, 2014, Booker is said to have posted Facebook messages about “going to wage jihad” and “getting ready to be killed in jihad.” On the same day, the FBI was notified about his comments via a citizen’s complaint, and and agents interviewed Booker a few days later.

But according to the Justice Department’s complaint, it appears Booker did not know what materials he needed to make the bomb. A CHS had "provided Booker with a list of supplies that they needed to purchase in order to build the bomb." Nor did Booker have a map of the Fort Riley area. Instead he was provided with one after asking informants.

The informants also supplied him with what he believed was a bomb. “On or about April 10, 2015 … CHS 2 met Booker and CHS 1 in the van in which CHS 2 had purportedly constructed the VBIED [vehicle-borne improvised explosive device],”
 the report reads. Booker, who in 2014 voluntarily checked himself into a mental health institution, had to been shown how to arm the device. If convicted, he could face life in prison.

according to the new report from HRW and Columbia University Law School’s Human Rights Institute. The study found that many of the over 500 terrorism-related cases since the War on Terror began in 2001 have alienated the communities that the government should rely on to prevent terrorism.

“This is a number that sounds really big, and it makes it sound like Americans are being kept safe from terrorism attacks,”Andrea Prasow, deputy Washington director for HRW, said in a video released with the report. “But we found that in a lot of these cases, people were prosecuted who never would have committed a terrorist attack in the first place, if it weren’t for the involvement of the FBI.”
“The theory behind some of these cases is that these people are terrorists-in-waiting: If the FBI hadn’t shown up and taken them down the path of committing this terrorist act, Al-Qaeda would instead,” Prasow said. “But we don’t have evidence of that actually happening.”


“What this means is that American Muslim communities are being treated as suspect, that law enforcement approach them not just as partners in countering terrorism or providing information about potential terrorist attacks, but as places where terrorism could be bred,” Naureen Shah, former associate director of Columbia School of Law’s Human Rights Institute, said in the video.
 

Brofato

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No way this holds up in court.

You can't be coerced into breaking a law by a cop.

Cops Pose As Panhandlers To Catch Distracted Drivers

They've been doing it for a while now.

a34502db1bdd87901-482x396.jpg
 

Gentility

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As they should.

Texting while driving, Minnesota teen kills father and daughter

CBS News said:
A 17-year-old teenager is now charged in the July traffic accident that took the life of a father and his young daughter, reports CBS affiliate WWCO.

Carlee Rose Bollig was behind the wheel of a pickup truck on July 21 when it ran a red light at an intersection.

Charles Mauer and his 10-year-old daughter, Cassy, were on their way home from the Monticello library when Bollig slammed into their car.

Now, crosses stand at the intersection as sad reminders of the senseless cost of distracted driving.

"From what I knew of Chuck, he was a nice guy," said Nick Wickham, his next door neighbor.

Wickham added, "You're not supposed to be on the phone while driving. It was something that shouldn't have happened."

Minnesota State Patrol Lt. Tiffany Schweigart says investigators now have a clear picture of what led to the fatal crash.

They have strong evidence that Bollig was texting on her phone and blew through a red light, even ignoring early caution lights of the signal change ahead.

"What a senseless behavior that caused all of this trauma to this family, using a phone while operating a motor vehicle, 3000 pounds of mass through an intersection, tearing this family apart," Schweigart said.

Sherburne County prosecutors have now charged the 17-year old driver with criminal vehicular homicide, using a phone while in motion and driving without a valid license.

According to the complaint, her passengers on 8 or 9 occasions told the defendant to stop using her phone, but she refused.

Officials say that moments before impact, Bollig's passengers yelled "red light, red light!"

"That is a horrific trauma to go through, even as the driver who caused that incident," Schweigart said. "You have to live with that the rest of your life."
 
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