This is like the world's worst Abbott and Costello episode.
Man this guy is a total shitcunt.
Idiots like this are the number one reason why I would never want to be a police officer.
[QUOTE=Eonart;51357456]I don't understand how people are willing to drag a 2 minute stop on for 20 minutes over nothing.[/QUOTE]
My guess is that they want to feel like they've gamed the system.
Or maybe they're just really smug cunts.
I know it's not really a "win" for the officer, but I still would've liked to see him drag the guy's ass out of his car and arrest him.
QLD is very bad when it comes to unlawful laws.
is he under arrest though
[QUOTE=latin_geek;51357553]I know it's not really a "win" for the officer, but I still would've liked to see him drag the guy's ass out of his car and arrest him.[/QUOTE]
i love the way he knew his rights
[QUOTE=Sims_doc;51357591]QLD is very bad when it comes to unlawful laws.[/QUOTE]
Queensland and a lot of Australia so have some realllly stupid laws when it comes to driving, however this guys an idiot. It takes a minute or less for a RBT and as far as I'm concerned, as long as it keep drunken idiots from taking me out on my motorbike I'm happy.
However, the random pulling over of P platers or performance car drivers for "RBTs" is pretty excessive and they really should target everyone not a specific demographic.
[QUOTE=Sims_doc;51357591]QLD is very bad when it comes to unlawful laws.[/QUOTE]
Unlawful laws?
It's not like anything unreasonable was being requested then.
what is this cunts fucking problem, he's just talking shit to try and sound smart
oh god the sovereign citizens are spreading to here
[QUOTE=ScottyWired;51358800]oh god the sovereign citizens are spreading to here[/QUOTE]
I've had one on the phone at the hospital before - kept calling back because the medical records department continually hung up on him, so I called Records, and they explained that he wasn't willing to provide his address so they could send forms that needed signing for a released and just wanted to sort it all over the phone (which they can't) so they hung up in frustration.
Went back to talking to him; explained why they were hanging up and he said he was entitled to his records and that he doesn't recognize the privacy law that's stopping him from immediate access - the call went in circles for about 3minutes (usually a call lasts 10sec tops); I said "Sorry, I'm terminating this call." Hung up on him.
Never heard back from him.
the sovereign citizens' movement is spreading oh god
"am i under arrest or am I free to go" repeat ad nauseam
:downs:
I love these. They look like the kind of people that just sat through an entire season of some show about cops and lawyers and now think they know every trick in the book against the law, so they can just spit out whatever they heard as if it had no bad consequence for them and as if they were on the right side of the park.
Everytime I hear these sovereign citizens I feel a never ending urge to just see a video of some police officer pulling those fuckers out of their cars and arresting them.
I don't get it, the officer let him go, was he just bullshitting the breath test law or is it an actual law?
Regardless I deal with people similar to this all the time in the psych hospital. They think they know the law and throw a pissy fit when you tell them what they think they know is wrong. After a few minutes you just gotta give them the ultimatum and carry out the consequences if they don't comply. Don't feed into their bullshit, their goal is to tire you out and waste your time so you let them go and allow them to think their behavior is acceptable... which is exactly what happened here.
As soon as he said he didn't consent to the test the officer should have arrested him, period.
This is better than the U.S sovereign citizen videos because Australia has none of the laws that U.S sovereign citizens think 'work'
[QUOTE=FiveEyes;51357472]My guess is that they want to feel like they've gamed the system.[/QUOTE]
"Police Officers HATE him!! Click to find out this man's SIMPLE, EASY, and COMPLETELY FREE 2-step system for getting out of ANY law violation."
[QUOTE=EagleEye;51359190]I don't get it, the officer let him go, was he just bullshitting the breath test law or is it an actual law?[/QUOTE]
It might be different over here and we don't know what the officer can see, but I assume he made the judgement that the guy wasn't drunk, and it would have been a waste of time arresting and taking him to the station
[QUOTE=Bradyns;51358888]I've had one on the phone at the hospital before - kept calling back because the medical records department continually hung up on him, so I called Records, and they explained that he wasn't willing to provide his address so they could send forms that needed signing for a released and just wanted to sort it all over the phone (which they can't) so they hung up in frustration.
Went back to talking to him; explained why they were hanging up and he said he was entitled to his records and that he doesn't recognize the privacy law that's stopping him from immediate access - the call went in circles for about 3minutes (usually a call lasts 10sec tops); I said "Sorry, I'm terminating this call." Hung up on him.
Never heard back from him.[/QUOTE]
...How did he think that he would get his records anyways?
[QUOTE=haloguy234;51359958]"Police Officers HATE him!! Click to find out this man's SIMPLE, EASY, and COMPLETELY FREE 2-step system for getting out of ANY law violation."[/QUOTE]
Whoa, I could murder ANYONE and rob ANYTHING with this
i am
INVINCIBLE
[img]https://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/arbitrage.png[/img]
Every time I see things like this, I think of this image.
The massive issue with their line of thinking is that society doesn't work if everyone is out to be the biggest law-avoiding smartasses they possibly can.
Yes, some restaurant may give you free breadsticks with your food, but normal people will understand that you're not supposed to fill your backpack with breadsticks and go home.
If everyone who were stopped for a breath analysis acted like this (and were lucky enough to get away with it), what would've happened?
The result would be more deaths due to DUI.
That's it.
And only because these people wanted to feel superior.
"Where do you live"
"I live in my body mate"
i cant tell if this guys drunk as fuck or just retarded
[editline]13th November 2016[/editline]
kudos to the cop for keeping his calm tho, i'd want to scream at this guy for being so obnoxious
This made me so mad, I did chuckle at his "what is queensland", but holy fuck, what a dick.
He just did that so he'd have some time to sober up.
[video]https://youtu.be/U6Hkc9VGiXQ[/video]
I'll nitpick here, because honestly, I just wanted the cop to taze him.
But technically speaking, the Queen has representatives in Australia, so that while she is the Queen of England and Queen of Australia, any paperwork like that, would be signed by her representatives, which in this case would be the attorney general of Queensland.
[url]https://au.news.yahoo.com/qld/a/33231624/has-the-queen-enacted-it-queensland-driver-tests-cops-patience-insists-breath-tests-are-illegal/#page1[/url]
He gets to explain the law to a judge now.
[quote]Refusing a roadside breath test in Queensland is punishable by 40 demerit points, a fine of $4000 or six months in jail.[/quote]
every cop administering a breath test should definitely know the laws around it 100% to avoid cases like this.
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