>> That's been a federal law, thanks to the NRA, since 1986: No searchable database of America's gun owners. So people here have to use paper, sort through enormous stacks of forms and record books that gun stores are required to keep and to eventually turn over to the feds when requested. It's kind of like a library in the old days—but without the card catalog. They can use pictures of paper, like microfilm (they recently got the go-ahead to convert the microfilm to PDFs), as long as the pictures of paper are not searchable. You have to flip through and read. No searching by gun owner. No searching by name.
Do we still trust that these types of rules are being followed (particularly in the context of mass surveillance)? If I recall correctly, the public has been told on many occasions that the NSA/FBI/local police were not doing something only to be told years later that this was not the case.
Laws such as this just highlight how asinine gun policy can be. Allowing a paper trail but not allowing digital records doesn't really benefit gun owners (Completing a 4473 would be a lot easier if they could verify that you are already a responsible gun owner) or make policing gun laws any safer (straw purchases would be easier to track if the records were digitized).
> Do we still trust that these types of rules are being followed (particularly in the context of mass surveillance)?
No we (I) do not.
In my state, it is a violation of state law to have a record of gun owners. When the state police force started saving records of every purchase, they were sued, but won on the basis that since they were only storing records of the purchase of new firearms, and not those few types of firearms exempt from a transfer background check, that it wasn't a record of all gun owners and was therefore legal.
In practice, though, unless you are buying a used rifle or shotgun from another person, the state police knows what firearms you own in direct contradiction of state law.
There is no doubt in my mind that agencies like the FBI or NSA would go far beyond this in order to determine what firearms Americans owned if it served their purposes to do so.
Wasn't the DC sniper case solved by a tip and not by the widespread abuse and hard press interrogations of law abiding people tracked down through these gun sale records?
It definitely wasn't solved by the well publicized abuses of Maryland law enforcement, using their records to "check out" owners of the sort of rifle used. Seeing as the two snipers were from out of state and had bought the rifle Washington State.
And even then, with millions of them in civilian hands, they've been sold to us since the '60s, we're talking needle in a haystack. In general, the search for the perpetrators totally screwed up, right down to when the police finally got the correct car and license plate, they refused to release this to the public, it got out by other means and that directly led to their capture.
Disclaimer?: I was living in Arlington, Virginia at the time. The FBI woman shot while at a Home Depot? That was my Home Depot.
That was my Home Depot too. I was volunteering with a local high school (Wakefield) and had been there a couple days before getting supplies. It was all kinds of f*d up when I realized which one they were talking about.
(I lived near Shirlington before it got trendy and expensive.)
They simply out-source it to a corporation that would be willing to do what it takes to collect the information, or as much as possible. It's not uncommon for the three letter agencies to delegate the illegal ramifications to a "corporate" entity, freelancers, mercenaries, etc... The FBI hires gangsters and criminals to "gather information" or "assist in investigations" when they need something done that is highly questionable. It's a really grey area, and a very large market.
Snowden for example succeeded in pinning "illegal surveillance" on the NSA, when the work was contracted out to the American corporate security-cartels, although he is a very rare exception, especially considering he is alive and not jailed.
Don't they get around some of this "you can't spy on your own countrymen" thing by just swapping data with the British surveillance service i.e. "I'll spy on yours and you spy on mine and we'll swap afterwards"?
> Allowing a paper trail but not allowing digital records doesn't really benefit gun owners
I'd say anything making the job of the police a little more tedious is worth bonus points. There is so much asymmetry of power against citizens that such measures restore a little bit of balance. You can't have both Freedom and a super effective police force on the other hand. It's always a trade-off.
And this isn't even a Republican/Democrat or conservative/liberal thing. I know plenty of what Republicans would call "big government liberals" who would agree that many cultures (largely western European in this case) are too far in that direction.
> What other cultures consider just fine, many Americans would consider unacceptably collectivist.
It's odd to focus on that one conflict of 'cultures', of the almost infinite possibilities. As one tiny example, some things other cultures do would also seem unacceptably individualistic and lawless.
>since that is clearly the country you are referring to
no not really, there are a lot of countries without armed or heavily armed police forces.
>That seems a fairly shortsighted estimation of what balances power between police and the people.
So does the NRA's idea that the second amendment will allow people to overthrow the government if they still own guns.
But at the end of the day, forcing your police force to think deescalation first has some real benefits. Carrying a fatal weapon and being trained that people within 25-30 feet are in your 'danger zone' has had a very poor outcome.
Carrying a fatal weapon and being trained that people within 25-30 feet are in your 'danger zone' has had a very poor outcome.
But the "within 25-30 feet" at least has it being the truth in its favor. And none of this has changed, US cops have always been well armed, right?
The problem I see is the switch from their being "peace officers" to warrior cops, or at the very minimum, having as their #1 objective making it home safely when their shift ends. Rather negates the "Thin Blue Line" concept of their being there to protect us, also calls into question their outsized benefit packages.
Not really, they carried a revolver or .38 special, might have had a shotgun between the front seats or in the trunk, Using khaki as the only body armor. Now there are police whose primary weapon is an ar-15 and the backup is a semi-auto .40 mm glock. everyone else has an ar-15 in the trunk and a glock in hand plus varying levels of body armor.
That's a far cry from having a 6 shot revolver on your hip just in case.
By those days standards that was "well armed", some police and some criminals carried semi-autos, the 1911 was obviously popular being the military issue sidearm since that year, but it wasn't common. And a shotgun is a fearsome weapon at shorter ranges, out to 100 yards or so; it's just that an AR-15 is better for almost all police purposes, ditto for civilians for self-defense.
And in the long run, I suspect trading their khaki for body armor and the disdain or worse of civilians will be viewed as a mistake.
There is some basis for it. If someone actively and aggressively wants to stab you you should have your weapon drawn. But the training seems to be around assuming everyone within 30 ft wants to stab you.
I'm an American, and I have no problem with responsible gun ownership, nor do I have a problem with electronic records of gun purchasers. I assume FOID cards are in a database already.
If I was a law enforcement officer responding to a domestic violence call of a husband battering his wife, I'd want to know if the oldest male in the house purchased an AR-15 derivative and several handguns.
EDIT: Many adults also explicitly show their possession of a lethal weapon every day: their car, which is registered in a statewide database.
EDIT2: I'd further like to be able to query that database as a civilian, so I know which of my neighbors may own an unusual cache of guns, so that I can have better situational awareness if I'm ever in a dispute with one.
EDIT3: To apply a standard of transparency to this data collection, the person whose data about firearm purchases should be able to be notified by some immediate or otherwise automated means that their record was viewed by a LEO or a citizen or another state/federal agency.
I often see statements like your one about the car but it's entirely irrelevant to this thread.
And if you get into enough disputes with your neighbors that you feel you need to know what things they've purchased perhaps you should focus more on conflict resolution and less on their shopping habits. Because your definition of "unusual" may be very different from theirs, and whether or not I purchased a handgun, or a rifle, or a shotgun, or a Bowie knife, or a pallet of rifle ammunition is not my neighbor's business.
People outspoken in favor of gun ownership have been routinely swatted by those who disagree with them. Nothing is gained by giving those mentally ill people more information with which to put innocent lives in danger.
I would suggest that my approach to any conflict resolution would be tempered knowing if they owned a cache of assault rifles. We already have access to other information as a matter of public record, I really don't see a problem knowing that someone has a gun. Also, you seem to imply that I either have a conflict with a neighbor, or am ill-equipped to resolve one respectfully. Neither is true.
But I can understand how that data, in civilian hands, could be used for potentially nefarious purposes. I only suggested the idea as a way to make the information more "transparent", but someone a lot smarter than me would have to discern the risks involved, and I am 100% able to adjust my expectations based on such risks. I'm not committed to the issue one way or another.
>>We already have access to other information as a matter of public record
2 wrongs do not make a right.
There is FAR FAR FAR too much information accessible to police and even other citizens now. It is clear you believe everything about a person should just be open to everyone.
What does the Second Amendment have to do with privacy. Your right to own a gun isn't being infringed in any way. We the people would simply like to know who owns the guns. If the police every really decide to come take away everyone's guns, they are going to search every home, armed to the teeth, anyways just to be sure they get them all. Being a registered gun owner does not endanger you in any significant way.
"We the people" have no right to know who own the guns, and if the police infact when armed "to the teeth" door to do looking for any object, gun or not, then any vestiges of a free society will have long been abolished.
I desire liberty above all else, I do not derive this belief in liberty from the Constitution or any other document, I derive my liberty from the Philosophy of liberty which itself is based in the Principle of self ownership. These beliefs transcend the constitution.
It is sad you are willing to give up essential liberty for perceived protection by the government, who will ultimately take your liberty but never provide you with protection.
>>>>Being a registered gun owner does not endanger you in any significant way.
Actually it does, in a large number of ways. However that is also not relevant, even if there was no danger I would still oppose such a registration, as you have no right to require me to submit to such a registry.
Anyone the respects individual liberty, and freedom will agree.
You do know that cops are so trigger happy because they don't know who has the guns, right? Granted, the database would be avoided by some owners with criminal intent.
Cops are so trigger happy for a wide range of reasons, not knowing who has a gun is not one of them
The reasons include but not limited to (and in no particular order)
1. Poor Training in Gun Operations and Saftey
2. No Training in deescalation
3. No Accountability for murdering people
4. Decades of "War on X" public policy that makes the citizens the "enemy" of the police
5. Militarization of police. We have effectively turn the Modern Police force into a Paramilitary organization with less oversight and fewer rules of engagement
#5 is the root of #3. Police should be well trained in the operations of their firearms, but at the end of the day the vast majority never draw their weapon outside of training.
My state police force specifically uses the phrase "paramilitary organization" to describe itself. They do not view themselves as civilians charged with protecting other civilians (which is what they are). They view themselves as a higher subset, with different rules and laws.
>They do not view themselves as civilians charged with protecting other civilians (which is what they are)
that is what I have been attempting to dispel. The common misconception that the public has is that the police are in fact a protection force. They are not.
I actually give your State Police credit for being honest with the public. Every other police force lies when they claim to be their for the protection of the people.
there is never been any legal basis for this belief, every single court ruling on the subject in in fact direct contradiction to the statement "the police are for protection"
Police are there to enforce the law. period, end of statement. They have no other purpose.
There are very very very very very few cases where police provide any actual protection. For the most part they are revenue generators, tax collectors. They also provide needed protection and security for the government apparatus of power. they ensure the citizens do as their masters in goverment demand.
this idea that police are simply citizens here to protect other citizens is a myth and we can not have real police reform until people wake up to reality and stop living in that myth
By your own admission, a registry of legal gun owners would in no way diminish the perceived risk to police officers - because criminals own and carry illegal guns.
> I'd further like to be able to query that database as a civilian.
You are not entitled to know the details of my private property, similar to how a civilian can't access a list of cars you own.
More pragmatically, this can lead to increased crime. Owners of valuable firearms would be targeted by burglars. A robber would easily know which homeowners don't have any guns, and would target them with less risk.
I can see, in some ways, the point of being targeted by burglars. The same burglars who see the box of your new big screen tv on trash day (or dive for receipts), or who case your house for a few weeks before Christmas to see what you;re unloading from your car. I would think that a thief would be less interested to steal from someone who is, by virtue of owning a gun, equipped to defend his or her property with lethal force.
I honesty don't see this as a threat vector, unless I'm missing something. What am I missing? I admit ignorance here, and please don't mistake my responses as an argument. If this is a legitimate concern, I'd like to know. I'd hate to think my opinion was uninformed.
Your hypothetical robber would need to conduct labor-intensive physical surveillance operations in order to ascertain which houses on which streets had big screen TV boxes outside on their respective trash days. Big screen TV purchases are rare events due the cost and longevity of said devices, so this becomes a statistical sampling problem: One may need to spend several months driving through target neighborhoods on their respective trash days in order to discover a house with a big screen TV box outside it, at which point your hypothetical robber has done two things:
1. Engaged in suspicious behavior that increases the risk of arrest.
2. Spent more in food, fuel, vehicle maintenance, and opportunity costs than the expected value of a stolen big screen TV (which would sell well below its retail price because of its questionable provenance).
Let's say instead, for the sake of argument, that consumers must register their big screen TV purchases with the government. (Some governments, notably the UK, use such registrations to tax consumers in order to pay for public broadcasting.) If such a registry were publicly searchable, your hypothetical robber could conduct their surveillance from the safety and anonymity of the parking lot of the local Starbucks or McDonald's. This significantly lowers the robber's surveillance costs/risks, as they no longer have to spend hours driving fruitlessly through random neighborhoods, only to be ratted out by some nosy busybody itching to call the police whenever the least little thing is out of place on their cul-de-sac. Furthermore, a sufficiently intelligent robber may automate said searches, further lowering their costs/risks.
Now, given the above, let's say some poor sod is off on holiday, washing their cares away with mojitos and all-you-can-eat buffets, when your hypothetical robber steals their big screen TV---only to use it to commit some assault the day our rum-soaked homeowner returns to the good ol' USA (who collapses into bed without noticing the theft). And by "assault" I mean something REALLY heinous, like setting it up in front of a daycare playing Rick Astley on infinite repeat with the volume at 11. Think of the children! When the cops investigate, of course they will search the big screen TV registry and find said homeowner, who in the midst of the DTs discovers he has no alibi.
I would think that a thief would be less interested to steal from someone who is, by virtue of owning a gun, equipped to defend his or her property with lethal force.
What you're missing is that in the US, criminals in almost all the states and cities know there's a good chance their targets have guns in their homes, so they generally choose to burglarize them when unoccupied.
They also prefer to do so in countries other then the US, because they are there to burgle, not to get into a potentially dangerous altercation with the resident.
Nothing good will come out of burgling an occupied house.
1. You may be identified - this will quickly shut down your criminal career.
2. You may be physically harmed.
3. You may physically harm the resident, which will turn your crime from a police-don't-really-care burglary into a violent robbery.
So we should presume guilt whenever someone is accused without evidence of domestic violence?
If it's currently possible to get a SWAT team to show up and break into someone's house with an anonymous phone call, I sure as hell don't want to give police the idea that it's OK to show up and take someone's guns because they got an anonymous phone call accusing them of hitting their wife.
> I'd further like to be able to query that database as a civilian
You need to consider for a moment how this can be abused. Who do you think is going to be targeted for robbery? You'd be efficiently putting guns directly into the hands of criminals.
How about you stop worrying about the statistically negligible threat that your gun-collecting neighbor is secretly about to go berserk? We don't need to spy on each other all the time.
I didn't say anything about presuming guilt. More like a law enforcement officer having increased situational awareness when responding to a call of a violent crime. Nor did I say anything about a cop taking anyone's guns. They have no right to, unless of course they were illegally acquired, or the owner isn't licensed to carry one.
As it stands now, I believe a law enforcement officer can discern if you have a FOID card in the US, which may set the expectation that you are armed to the teeth, while a purchase database might show that you purchased a non-functional collector piece. I'd think that information would improve their situational awareness and make their approach more context-appropriate.
>More like a law enforcement officer having increased situational awareness
I.e. more likely to shoot you? Many people have irrational responses to knowing that someone has a gun, police officers included.
>Nor did I say anything about a cop taking anyone's guns.
I assumed you were referring to the number of recent proposals to allow for the "temporary confiscation" of guns from people accused (but not convicted) of domestic violence.
>I'd think that information would improve their situational awareness and make their approach more context-appropriate.
Why would you think that? What would be more context-appropriate?
I am sure violent criminals would love such a database as well, this way when they need an illegal gun they know which homes to rob.
No, you have no right to know what I own, be that Gun, Drones, or TV's. You have no right to compel me to publicly list my assets in a database you can search.
It always blows my mind to see people suggest that making the job of people sworn to protect them more difficult is not only acceptable, but preferred.
It should be made more difficult because of the harm that could come if it's used unjustly is much greater than any good it can cause by being used correctly.
Just because someone has sworn to protect you doesn't mean they'll actually do it. And that doesn't prevent anyone else from using it against you either. In a perfect world, all the police follow the law, all the governments follow the law, and there are no criminals to steal this information.
> at making the job of people sworn to protect them more difficult
What job is made easier by providing a list of all gun owners?
> is not only acceptable, but preferred.
It's pretty much the entire foundation of America. You don't trust the person. You trust the system, and hopefully design the system in a way that minimizes abuse. No, it's not perfect and never can be. But one concrete example is the fourth amendment. The ability for an officer to search a home for evidence without permission is just too ripe for abuse, even if it does allow criminals to get away with things.
It always blows my mind to see people willfully misinterpret the meaning of a statement.
In this context there is obviously a belief that the police are doing something they should. Whether it's illegal, or immoral, or legal but contrary to the spirit of the Constitution, or whatever the reasoning may be.
They could just as easily have said "anything that makes it more difficult for the NSA to track my interests and whereabouts is bonus points" and I think a majority of people on here would probably agree with that statement.
Just because it's a local cop sworn to protect Americans vs. an NSA analyst or FBI agent doesn't make them any more likely to actually do it.
>They could just as easily have said "anything that makes it more difficult for the NSA to track my interests and whereabouts is bonus points" and I think a majority of people on here would probably agree with that statement.
Perhaps I have a different view of the NSA than you do, but I would have had the same response to that. Like the police, they exist to protect us, and if they're doing something irresponsible/immoral/illegal, they should be made accountable and corrected, rather than just made less efficient at it.
Information is a powerful tool, and can be utilized to protect us in powerful ways. IMO the problem is not collecting the information, but how it's used. I'd much rather see a super-efficient all-knowing and well-intended protector than an inefficient bumbling mess.
Fortunately, it's the standard recipe for many utopian scenarios, also. Given the choice between the two, I like to think people are generally good and that a utopian world, if possible, is more likely.
I think we have very very very different views of what a utopia would be.
In no way could a society where I have no privacy be a utopia. Not to me. I value my Freedom and Privacy above all else
What is it that gentlemen wish? What would they have? Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God! I know not what course others may take; but as for me, give me liberty or give me death!
You clearly are not a person who studies history. Most of our progress as a nation is a direct result of people breaking the law in various ways. Would there have been a Civil Rights movement at all if an all knowing protector would have stopped Rosa Parks from even getting on the that bus? Or the Woman's Rights movement if an all knowing government was able to eliminate the movement before it got an mass attention.
You want to see a complete conformist society with no ability for any person to exist with out the "approval" of that society. I shutter to think would have happen to LGBT persons if your vision of a "utopia" existed
Today we are locking up people based on what plants they choose to grow, and are raiding home because they happen to throw some loose leaf tea in the garbage after shopping at a gardening store.
How will giving these incompetent morons more power going to make things better, going create a utopia. That is unless North Korea is your view of a "utopia", where the politically connected, the politically correct, and the conformists are rewarded by government and anyone that speaks out, or has an opposing view is simply disappeared.
Regardless of whatever you think the police are "sworn" to do, we have incontrovertible experimental evidence that they often do not have our best interests at heart.
You know what also makes the jobs of police officers harder? Checks and balances. The right to a lawyer. Miranda rights. The fact that they have to get warrants.
It is hopelessly naïve to assume that anything good can come of giving the police more authority.
Does the requirement for a warrant, or that you be "secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects" blow your mind as well? These are fundamental limits on police powers.
With that database they began querying hundreds of thousands of dna samples with cold case samples. Ignoring the false-positive probabilities they started going after those hits. Long story short, they solved none of their cold cases, but investigated and harassed many innocent people; treating them like murderers.
Joe Schmo down at the PD isn't a statistician, or even a 'data scientist'. Giving total data access to the unqualified and over impulsive will harm more our society more than it will protect it.
> It always blows my mind to see people suggest that making the job of people sworn to protect them more difficult is not only acceptable, but preferred.
The police aren't sworn to protect the public. They are sworn (like all public employees) to protect the Constitution, which is a very different thing, and even there accountability to that oath is pretty weak (and most of the things that people complain about making their life harder just provide some small measure of accountability for them doing what they are, in fact, sworn to do.)
>> They are sworn (like all public employees) to protect the Constitution
Sorry no.
Federal Law Enforcement, Military, and Elected officials maybe. Probably some other Federal Employees
But there is no requirement, nor do many local police dept, require any oath at all, and I can not think of any off the top of my head that have a oath to the Constitution in their ceremony.
Sorry, no: you need to look into the text and application of Art. VI, cl. 3 (the "Oaths Clause") of the U.S. Constitution, as well as the similar provisions in many U.S. state constitutions.
Yes, it does. (Well, arguably not to legislative branch officers who are not themselves legislators, though AFAIK both the federal government and all states actually do have such officers make a similar oath or affirmation to the one required by the Oaths Clause.)
> That apples to Elected Officials, Judicial Officers.
No, it applies to:
(1) All federal and state legislators,
(2) All executive officers, and
(3) All judicial officers.
"Executive officers" is not the same as "elected officials". The oaths clause use of "officers" has similar breadth of that in the Appointments Clause (Art. II, S. 2, cl. 2) except that the Oaths Clause expressly applies to both state and federal officers, and the Appointments Clause only to federal officers.
> Further my state has no such clause in its constitution
The main additional effect of state oaths clauses (whether Constitutional or statutory) is to require an oath to the state constitution in approximately the same class of state officers that are covered by the federal oaths clause. (They often also reiterate the federal requirement.)
It always blows my mind to see people suggest the police exist to provide protection. The government and the court system is very clear that the police are NOT a protection unit, any protection provided is merely a by product of their primary mission, Law Enforcement.
Law Enforcement has nothing to do with protection, but rather order and control. Protection can be a side effect of order and control but it is not the primary goal, or reason for the existence of Police.
Come now, the police, as individuals, first priority is filling the belly of themselves and their immediate family. Their second and subsequent priorities are also as, or more so, self-serving.
I'm not sure what you mean, especially since these licenses do expire if not renewed, whereas a 4473 records an event that doesn't stop being true.
However, it's still the case that the legislature sure thought it had made such an information transfer illegal (but it's Republican and the Governor and AG are Democrats, not the first time the AG has refused to do anything about state executive wrongdoing).
And the legislature made that even more clear by completely changing the way the physical license is issued, its now through each county's sheriff, with the only renaming common database being MULES (http://www.moga.mo.gov/mostatutes/chapters/chapText043.html):
"MULES", Missouri uniform law enforcement system, a statewide-computerized communications system provided by the patrol designed to provide services, information, and capabilities to the law enforcement and criminal justice community in the state of Missouri;
Which as I understand has much stricter and long standing protections against the obvious potentials for abuse.
And knz's point stands, nope, we don't trust the Feds on this.
The purpose of a license is to grant a privilege, and use that grant as a lever to enforce desired behavior. That's why we license things like sales tax collection and driving. If you don't tow the line, you lose the privilege.
So I think it's completely legitimate and expected that licensure information would be retained for as long as the state's record retention law calls for it to be retained -- potentially an extended or even unlimited period of time. Possession of a license in the past for a license is relevant to future licensing, as is your good or bad conduct with respect to the license.
At the Federal level, my understanding is that with respect to firearms purchases, there isn't a way to correlate a transactional background check to a human.
Possession of a license in the past for a license is relevant to future licensing
That's not the case to my knowledge, as a matter of law or procedure, excluding special cases like someone being a bit late to renew and getting grandfathered. Otherwise, getting a license again requires going through the whole process again, although you won't have to take a new qualification class or the like, as long as your retained your record of it.
As for good or bad conduct with respect to the license, the former is inferred from a lack of records of the latter, and those are, indeed, permanent records, aside from various process laden executive or judicial remedies to pardon or otherwise expunge them.
So, no, I see no need to keep forever records of CCW licenses.
BTW, did you know 10 states have no concealed carry license requirement? And Missouri very possibly will join them this week.
To be honest, I don't really care about concealed carry. I personally think that it's a dumb thing to do, but don't have an issue with anyone else doing it.
But if licensing is required, you shouldn't have any special privacy right. If my dog license is available to whenever asks via FOIA, so should your carry permit.
You can't see a problem with the release of such politically charged info? That some people, even if they follow their employer's rules about not possessing on the job, would lose their jobs if that information was released? Or how such information is being used to trash people's careers in our field?
Very few states, and only anti-gun ones like New York---in fact, the only one I know off the top of my head---make the lists public. And I think New York goes further with handgun possession permits, which few states require.
Although that was useful for me to personally count the total number of NYC possession licenses, less than 60K each for long and handguns. A real outlier for the US, heck, it was noted as the Soviet Union fell that they trusted the residents of the capitol of Soviet Georgia more prior to instigating a seizure of them, then again, I've read estimates that the real number is more like 2-3 million for the 8 million total in the city.
> You can't see a problem with the release of such politically charged info? That some people, even if they follow their employer's rules about not possessing on the job, would lose their jobs if that information was released? Or how such information is being used to trash people's careers in our field?
Most of the stuff is overblown.
I've worked in public and private sector jobs where my or my family's political affiliation, public displays of support (ie. campaign contributions), current and past salary history and other info were all potentially career impacting, and all trivially available to the public. The reality is, that stuff didn't matter too much at all.
New York's handgun laws are both insane. That's a separate issue.
And you have no sympathy for those for whom it's not overblown? "If it saves just one career...."
It's NYC's gun laws that are particularly insane, and ought to go down to a McDonald based challenge, but the Federal Courts, even before Scalia died, stopped enforcing such except for stun guns, even backtracked on Heller with SF's lock up your safety law.
> Allowing a paper trail but not allowing digital records doesn't really benefit gun owners (Completing a 4473 would be a lot easier if they could verify that you are already a responsible gun owner)
I believe most of the gun rights people are of the opinion that digital records would enable a large database of the location and type of guns and the identity of their owners. A database which they believe can be used as a tool in the event government policy shifts towards confiscation of certain firearms rather than forward looking sale or manufacturing prohibitions.
Or just makes it's way into the hands of thieves. When someone breaks into your home, they typically go after a few kinds of items: Electronics, tools, cash/silverware, and guns. All of which are high-value and easily sold/fenced. Imagine if you had a list of homes that could be sorted by number of profitable items and the street address. It'd be a thief's dream.
Response time for the police is usually on the order of tens of minutes. A friend lives in the country and called about a suspicious person and had a deputy show up 3.5 hours later. Thieves know this and will be in and out pretty quickly. They know where to look - under the mattress. In the refrigerator/freezer. In the nightstand. On the top shelf of the closet.
Ah, an obvious factor that I failed to consider (homeowner being absent), thanks.
Is this different from a thief "casing" your house to determine if you've purchased big ticket items? If their access to the information is logged (which I know isn't always going to be valid) and you're notified that a civilian accessed your gun inventory record, is that more or less problematic than someone who just watches your house every weekend for a few weeks after, say, Christmas, to see what large packaging you throw out without breaking down?
I'm reconsidering my opinion on public access, for certain, and I'm sincerely trying to be as informed on the caveats as best I can.
There's currently a problem with "package bandits" that cruise neighborhoods after the UPS and FedEx trucks have been through. They'll hop out of their car and grab your delivery off the front porch. So they don't even have to break-in to steal from you. :(
A fairly large and obvious difference is that around Christmas I can (and usually do) break up the cardboard boxes into smaller pieces, and put them inside my trashcan instead of just on the curb, so the fact that I got, say, a large tv is hidden.
The vectors for a loss of information are already out there - it wouldn't even have to be the big online gun shops. A list of ammunition/gun accessories/hunting supplies etc is probably sufficient to make a good guess for whether someone owns a firearm.
Obviously there is a possibility for a database loss if they tracked all gun sales, but considering the stat that 30% of households have a firearm and the many other possible associated data sets the risk seems minimal.
The very latest survey, released by Pew on August 26th, ups that to 44% of all households, see http://www.people-press.org/2016/08/26/opinions-on-gun-polic... for the executive summary and up in the right hand corner the full release with that number http://www.people-press.org/files/2016/08/08-26-16-Gun-polic... Survey size was a bit over 2,000, so if they got a good sample, which is getting harder and harder, it ought to be a solid number (most national political surveys are half that size, 1,000 is considered to be a minimum for any degree of accuracy).
That percentage goes up and down depending on people's willingness to admit that to a nosy surveyer; RKBA activists attribute this recent increase to the huge numbers of first time owners who haven't yet decided on a policy of discretion. Me, I wonder how many of us longer term owners have adopted a FU attitude in the presidential campaign with the starkest choice ever presented to us, excepting perhaps G. H. W. Bush vs. Dukakis, but Bush the father was much closer to total prohibitionist Dukakis, and in fact we're still living with his import bans....
You are of course right that a list of suspected gun owners could be generated in a whole bunch of ways, although I note that when it comes to online ammo dealers I've never seen a group of vendors who are faster in discarding their records of past sales.
So, then it just takes an OCR step somewhere in the process. But it doesn't really stop the feds from knocking on your door 10 years after you sold the weapon. (this actually happened to a buddy of mine when his gun showed up as one of the "fast and furious" guns, or that was their excuse).
That's only at the federal level, though. Here in Washington State, a handgun purchased by a permit holder is entered into a state level database which is most certainly computerized.
Sadly, I know this because there was a shooting spree just a couple of years ago in my hometown.
The above news blog post has a screen shot of how local cops were able to pull the records on the six legally owned handguns of the (mentally disturbed) murderer. They include serial numbers and purchase dates.
So, no, NRA does not know how to avoid big brother. They know how to perpetuate their power and influence by using concentrated voting blocs in a relatively few key congressional districts in order to invent a wedge issue of dubious relevance. But when it comes to having lists of guns in a computer run by a government, that train has sailed.
(All that said, there is certainly an effectiveness to what NRA has achieved here. But couldn't we acknowledge that effectiveness and then put in place a distributed crypto / key escrow system that would allow the guns themselves to be tracked by serial / model / dates of transfers, and then with the second keyholder's approval to unlock the names of individuals?)
TL;DR - if a gun shop goes out of business and has and sends the ATF an excel spreadsheet or MySQL database with names and serial numbers, the ATF has to change the data so it's not unsearchable by name (often converting it to PDFs). It's asinine.
Actually I find it surprisingly effective. I suppose if you think there should be a large government run searchable database of gun owners then, yes, the process could be "asinine", but if you assume the purpose is to simultaneously provide a framework to trace the transfer of firearms used in crimes while denying the ability of a government agent to hit a few keys on a keyboard and see how many and what kind of guns Joe Q. Public has then it is reasonably effective.
First, the notion of 'unsearchable' is asinine. Anything can be searched via linear scan. Anything. The current system is de facto illegal. We have a large searchable database of gun owners, servicing 5500 queries per day.
Second, the value of search is, as i'm sure you know, simply how the data is sorted. A pure paper system could take advantage of modern inventory control systems. Just stick each 4473 in an envelope. put a hash code on the envelope. build indexes of relevant information to hash codes, automate or manually store the envelopes. This is also stupid, but clearly feasible.
Finally, resources do not imply corruption. It's been shown time and time again. You seem to think the Democratic Republic of the Congo would be a lovely place if they just didn't have all those diamonds and cobalt. Really, because the Congo is corrupt, they put diamonds and cobalt to poor use.
I believe you believe it's a good solution. I believe you haven't really thought deeply about the separation of concerns. We ought to have a system that's used ethically and responsibly with whatever safeguards are necessary to keep the system that way. Nobody likes paying taxes, but the IRS seems to do fairly good job of tracking income. You ever have a problem with selective service? Do you think they're secretly trying to draft you specifically as punishment for some imagined slight?
The current system doesn't catch people it should. The current system fails to exonerate people it should. The current system creates a ridiculous regulatory burden on tens of thousands of small businesses. The current system is a perfect example of government waste, because we've forced the government to handle the problem in a completely fucking stupid way.
edit
Just to continue the rant,
At the time of sale, generate a UUID. Register the serial number and UUID with the ATF. Register the Name, address and DOB and UUID with the census bureau. With any given investigation, require a judge to get a warrant to get the ATF to release the UUID for a gun. get another warrant to get the name from the census bureau.
Pepper the census bureau's data with other UUID's, like tax filing, voter registration, getting farm subsidies, whatever other random stuff is handy. it's just a big map of names to stuff. stuff that has no value in isolation. It requires conspirators in 2 agencies to target individuals, it requires stealing 2 databases to reconstruct useful information.
This provides a real separation between guns and people, that can be reconstructed as needed, but requires local authorities to make the connection, and only under judicial review. This not only catches bad guys, it keeps people who did nothing wrong out of jail. The current system ruins innocent people's lives.
Worth noting that records for people in Texas with a License To Carry are computerized - a cop will know it when they pull you over and run your plates. Not saying this is a bad thing, just worth noting.
I'm sure that's true in any state with a CCW licensing regime, I know it is in Missouri, which has a system cutely named MULES. But those are set up to deter fishing expeditions, for they contain a lot of sensitive information, such as arrest records as well as charges, convictions, outstanding warrants, etc.
More infamously, some states share that info, Florida with Maryland, where travelers have been pulled over and hassled about whether they've got a gun, which due to the FOPA of '86 safe passage protections, probably doesn't even apply when they're just passing through the state (in the case mentioned below, the gun owner has no legal way to possesses it in NJ, so left it behind in his safe).
I think it's time for the return of a "reverse intelligence agency", something like the old Government Information Awareness[1] idea. We need an intelligence agency for the people that monitors government agents of all sorts, and integrates all the open data databases, to make it easier for us to monitor the government. First, because transparency is the ultimate disinfectant, and two, because once they see how it feels to have the shoe on the other foot, it might change the way certain people feel about ubiquitous surveillance.
> once they see how it feels to have the shoe on the other foot, it might change the way certain people feel about ubiquitous surveillance.
I like the general idea, but it's more like kicking a hornets' nest. These people won't have an empathetic enlightenment about surveillance on everyone, but rather will double-down on laws to protect themselves (marketed as protecting the public). Such a system must be built on technology which can withstand attacks by the 'legal' system.
Sousveillance is much more broad. It doesn't just mean watching government officials, it's watching everyone. Essentially "democratising" spying.
Watchdogs for government, absolutely, great idea that I support 100%. Sousveillance sounds like a horrible dystopia where your nosy judgemental neighbour down the street broadcasts your house guests on youtube to demonstrate the moral decay of society.
Do you walk around with a body camera and microphone everywhere you go? And constantly upload those recordings to a big public database somewhere? Because that's my understanding of sousveillance.
Wow, I haven't heard that term in so long, I'd forgotten about it. You're 100% right though. And the Wikipedia article on the subject is quite interesting. One thing I didn't realize was that Steve Mann coined the term.
That's a fair question. I think thr0waway1239 basically said what can be said about it. It's down to checks and balances. Right now, we have nearly unlimited State surveillance with little work to counter-balance that. So I would think anything that serves the end of transparency and "undersight" would be a positive simply by balancing out the current state of affairs.
I feel like we'd have to go a VERY long way before things flip-flop and the problem goes the other way. But I could be wrong, and just to be clear, this isn't something where I've sat down and planned out a detailed proposal or anything. It's more an idea that's been stirring on my mental "back burner" for a while, but has never been fully fleshed out.
This question has come up before in the context of governing bodies before (e.g. legislature vs executive). The usual answer is that we do our best to create checks and balances, because there is no good answer to your question.
Note: I am not saying that the existing system of checks and balances are actually doing any checking or balancing in any country presently. I am just suggesting that it is usually what we can aspire to.
The current ones aren't corrupt as much as eager to overstep their bounds in order to perform their designated tasks. If the proposed agency has the same problem, that's a feature, not a bug.
As the article mentioned, these field contact cards have been around for a long time. A few were even filed on me in my youth ;-). The problem is when it was a simple card system there was an inherent time limit on the usefulness of the info. The police officer had to recall filling out a card that might tie someone to a crime. And I doubt that cards were kept in perpetuity since the value of the info (for criminal investigations) fell rather quickly over months or a year. In a major case, such as a murder, investigators might do a blind search of all the cards filed in some area around the time of the murder to find leads, suspects or potential witnesses so the card system was a valuable tool for legitimate police action. Now that everything is computerized there is no longer any time limit on the data and the potential for abuse is now becoming clear. So the time limit on the collected data that was implicit has to be made explicit as a matter of policy instead of tacitly due the limits of the system for the collection and use of the info. The real problem is that explicitly drawing that line is forcing us to clearly define the nature of government and what "freedom" actually means.
Either I'm numb to all the "data" that's out there or I don't really understand the threat. But I'm feeling a bit "meh" about all of these reports.
Don't get me wrong, the use of personal data for vendettas and retaliation is clearly wrong and should be prosecuted.
So yea, I don't like misuse of data, but simply having data that they collected no longer seems bad to me. And if it was warrantless then it's inadmissible anyhow, right?
If you don't want them "taking" your info, just don't speak to them. That's your right. And if you make the data publicly available on the internet, they scrap it, and you get upset, isn't that the same as distributing free pamphlets and getting annoyed at the police for taking a couple and photocopying them?
Do you view the government as benign? What if that were to change?
Do you view all governments as benign? Foreign governments can further justify their actions by pointing at so called "free", and "democratic" nations and say if they can do it, so can we.
Do you trust these organizations (government or otherwise) to secure your data?
Governments change. Conditions change. Imagine another large criminal act in the US where thousands perish. The citizenry starts demanding more and more invasions of privacy, in futile attempts to stop further attacks. As each generation grows up with less and less privacy, they become even more accustomed to it. Is it possible to have a free society that's completely surveilled?
> And if it was warrantless then it's inadmissible anyhow, right?
In 2015, not a single one of the FISA applications for a warrant were rejected.
> If you don't want them "taking" your info, just don't speak to them.
GHCQ in the UK collects massive amounts of data on all internet users. You don't have any choice, if you're operating on anything but the dark web. The issues we're facing here have never been faced before. It's never been possible for the police/governments to just record and store everything, making it possible for them, or some future government, to use it against you.
I should also point out - when I say you, I don't mean you. Or me. We're just two idiots on the internet. I'm talking about people with power. Or journalists, who want to expose wrong doing. Judges, who are going to decide whether or not to put that person in jail (or let them off). Maybe even other police. Oh, this officer wants to report me for corruption? Find out what shit we have on him, make it stick. Nothing? Well, easy enough to add data, and problem solved.
If you're not convinced - think about it this way. This is the exact opposite of what should be happening. We should know what our governments are doing, what they're spending OUR money on. We should know when a corporation is planning to pollute the air so that they can sell more cars. We should know if a moral pillar of our community is a den of pedophiles. WE should have the information on THEM, not the other way around.
> Is it possible to have a free society that's completely surveilled?
It is, if a society's ethical and legal code and how its members actually behave are closely aligned (which prevents blackmail), surveillance is done by all to all, and the government has limited ability to arrest and prosecute.
>> Is it possible to have a free society that's completely surveilled?
>It is, if a society's ethical and legal code and how its members actually behave are closely aligned (which prevents blackmail), surveillance is done by all to all, and the government has limited ability to arrest and prosecute.
Anonymity and privacy would still have to be respected for it to work. While I believe that this is possible (just finishing up first draft of my first novel, a scifi that looks at this) it's not going to be achieved by legislating our way to it (or that it'll even originate from our governments).
The main thing I think to point out is that individuals shouldn't be the ones we're keeping eyes on. Governments, corporations, charities, religions, and unions - basically any group of people - is where we should be demanding complete transparency, and surveillance by all.
> If you don't want them "taking" your info, just don't speak to them. That's your right.
One problem is that it sets up a very adversarial relationship between the police, and the people they are supposed to protect. My every interaction now has to be weighted - do I expose myself to more risk by talking to this police officer, or by not reporting something fishy I just witnessed?
And as far as the threat, one of the problems is that it's the unforeseen threat that's the problem. I listened to a podcast that described how birth records were used to deny people of their rights based on their race - the law changed from how a person was categorized based on their ancestry, and overnight some people became "legally black", and were denied many rights.
Sure, you can say that that's in the past, that's in the south, there's nothing like that in your data, but you can't really know what will become problematic in the future.
The example of birth records highlights the issue with such "unforseen" threats - anything and everything can become such a threat. In the past it was birth records, or census records. In the future it may be liquer store sales data or air quality metrics. We can't just stop improving things with data because of a vague fear that it may one day be used against us. Especially that data abuse is mostly a small symptom among numerous, more serious issues (e.g. by the time birth records were used for exercising racism, the problems with that government were most likely pretty visible, and even if they didn't have that data, they'd find another way to do what they wanted to do).
I see what you're saying, but I think that the onus should be on the government to clearly demonstrate where the value from collecting this data will come from.
What improvements has the Charleston PD made with this data? What improvements are they planning on making? They offer precisely one example of a man convicted for murder using that information, but while they claim it's "crucial", we can't exactly go back and see if he would have been convicted without that one particular row in the database.
We can't even get the data without paying nearly a quarter of a million dollars.
Fine; let's use data about me to improve things. But tell me what you're going to improve, tell me how long you're going to keep the data, and find a damn good way to reassure me that it won't be used to harm me, either.
I agree. There should always be a good justification provided for the data collection, as well as a description of safeguards against malicious use and also a way to verify if the data is indeed used as intended and brings in value. This should be a minimum standard to hold a government to.
I come from a country where we had the secret police(Poland) and everyone knew that there was an archive somewhere where most citizens had a folder with whatever the police gathered on them. Any telephone conversation always started with the operator announcing "this conversation is monitored, this conversation is monitored". Letters would be opened randomly and read.
And you know what - vast majority of people didn't care. They accepted this as reality they lived in and that was it.
Well, almost 30 years on after fall of communism, these folders are still coming back and haunting people. People find facts about themselves or about others, that shouldn't have been collected in the first place.
Not to mention the old story of completely innocent data that actually lead to people dying(governments before WW2 collected census information about religion, and that very information was used by the nazis to hunt and kill jews).
My point is - even if right now it seems like collecting this data is harmless, you never know how it's going to be used in the future. Governments fall all the time, wars happen, people look where they shouldn't. The less data the government collects the better.
To be honest - 30 years after fall of communism, the vast majority of people still doesn't care, because why should they? Those folders are only a talking point for the media, and something our asinine politicians use against other asinine politicians. Pigs fighting in mud, nothing you want to be close to.
My biggest gripe is with those from general population who care that other people have some entries in their folders. It's their attention that weaponizes this information. If that minority didn't give a shit either, those folders wouldn't be an issue nowadays.
It's also a general point about surveillance state, I think - a lot of its power to hurt people comes from the personal immaturity of citizens, who get aroused by the knowledge that someone else has commited some indecency in the past. I know this is a collective problem so it's hard to change, but again - if people minded their own morals instead of those around them, data collection would be much less of an issue.
I love the quote (I think it was from Edward Snowden): "Saying you don't care about mass surveillance because you have nothing to hide is like saying you don't care about the First Amendment because you have nothing to say."
> And if it was warrantless then it's inadmissible anyhow, right?
This only matters if the government collecting the data continues to be relatively democratic and free. That can change nearly in an instant given the right circumstances (see the crackdown following the coup attempt in Turkey) and all that gathered information then becomes a great way to go fishing for "undesirables".
The nonchalant attitude of many towards this proves George Santayana's adage true: "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it".
I'm not sure if that really matters anymore. So much data is being collected on everybody all the time that the government doesn't need a warrant to collect the information because they generally aren't the ones collecting it. The police often can just ask the individuals and companies that are actually collecting the data to see what they have. They might be told to come back with a warrant and that warrant is super easy to get.
A guy in my neighborhood set up a license plate reader outside of his house. He logs all the traffic into and out of the neighborhood. I would bet the police would just have to ask him for the data and he would turn it over. I believe his data helped catch a couple that was stealing Amazon packages during the day.
> And if it was warrantless then it's inadmissible anyhow, right?
Generally, no. Only if it was a product (1) of a search (not all information received or acquired by law enforcement comes from what is legally a search), that was (2) warrantless, (3) of the property of the person against whom it was used (the exclusionary rule does not exclude evidence illegally seized from someone else), and (4) occurred in a context which is not covered by one of the exceptions in which a warrant is not required for a search to be reasonable.
> If you don't want them "taking" your info, just don't speak to them. That's your right
But that's the point. They're so used to people complying that anyone who politely declines to provide the information when asked is then treated as a criminal, with (perhaps illegal) detentions and escalations.
The problem I would see is that if the cops were called to a particular address, they could look up "how many guns are registered to this address" on the way there - and this will greatly affect their demeanor upon arrival.
People have guns for many reasons - but the police will only make the assumption that if you have them, you'll be wielding one or potentially have it ready to go once they get there.
I was a bit shocked, though I probably shouldn't have been, to notice recently that police in the local airport all carry assault rifles now. Assault rifles. I'm not that knowledgeable about guns, so I'm not sure what kind exactly - maybe M-16s?
A few years ago there was something about military personnel being stationed with unloaded rifles in airports as part of the War on Terror(TM). I now imagine that was to desensitize us to this future - everyday cops carrying loaded assault rifles in public all the time.
The reason the military personnel carried unloaded weapons is that commanding officers live in fear of an negligent discharge ending their career, this was true for most base sentries before and after 9/11, you can pretty much only count on those guarding nuclear weapons to have rounds in their weapons. "Nothing personal".
As for police carrying rifles/carbines in our airports today, well, they're much better weapons than pistols, more accurate and more likely to hit the target and not an innocent, much harder hitting if they have the right ammo in them, all police should have a "patrol carbine" instead of a shotgun in their trunk or secured in the passenger space of their vehicles.
The only question here, is the threat level at the airport high enough that routinely carrying rifles is warranted? That I can't say, but as noted by others, it's routine in more "civilized" Europe.
In Europe, it depends on the cop: Traffic cops are often unarmed schlubs. Federal police are armed and well-trained. China also seems to have multiple tiers of cops and relatively few are carrying guns in public.
This is partly because of the North Hollywood bank robbery, with the two men dressed head-to-toe in home-made body armor, where the 9 mm pistols and shotguns the police had were ineffective in stopping them. Some of the cops went to local gunshops to borrow some AR-15s that were able to penetrate the armor.
Afterwards, a lot of police departments started issuing Patrol Rifles (M-16s) to their officers (usually carried in the trunk of their cars) either purchased from firearm dealers/wholesalers, but also via the Department of Defense's 1033 program.
Seeing heavily armed police (with actual assault rifles not AR-15's) and paramilitary members (the Carabinieri and Gendarmerie etc) is much more common in Europe than the US and been the case for decades.
Full automatic fire isn't really that interesting of a distinction. 30-40 shots spread over a few minutes is probably going to do more damage than 30-40 shots in a minute.
And if you consider how a police officer acting in the public interest is going to use it, there isn't really any difference at all between automatic and semiautomatic fire.
"I was a bit shocked, though I probably shouldn't have been, to notice recently that police in the local airport all carry assault rifles now. Assault rifles. I'm not that knowledgeable about guns, so I'm not sure what kind exactly - maybe M-16s?"
Airport police in every European airport I have ever traveled in, since well before 9/11, have always carried fully automatic submachineguns.
The US may or may not be a police state, but that's not a good metric upon which to gauge it.
> everyday cops carrying loaded assault rifles in public all the time.
It's to protect you against these evil terrorists who hate your Freedom! I'm joking, but that's basically what politicians in the US say the whole time to justify such measures. 9/11 has been a Godsend for all the ones who wanted to push for militarization of police forces.
My office is in the same building as a police substation. Every day when I leave it's the officers' shift change, so I'm walking while a bunch of officers are milling about, holding M4s in the parking lot. I own and shoot firearms, but it's a bit fucking insane.
QUESTION for Americans: If you approach a police officer and ask for directions (or any context where youre not a suspect) and the police officer asks for your ID can you legally refuse to comply?
*Edit: This has happened to me before. After politely asking 'why do you need my ID?' things escalated. I complied out of fear of being detained.
> If you approach a police officer and ask for directions (or any context where youre not a suspect) and the police officer asks for your ID can you legally refuse to comply?
Often, yes, the police ask for ID in conditions where they have no legal authority to demand it and you are perfectly free, legally speaking, to refuse. [0]
Of course, the officer asking for the ID may not be aware that they lack legal authority to demand it, and may not care if they are aware.
I think this depends on whether the policeman has probable cause and if the state has any statute or common law speaking to the question.
If you challenge the policeman's (assertion of cause and) lawful order, what a policeman can do is take you before a neutral magistrate and have them decide if you refused a lawful order. This usually involves handcuffs and jail so you cannot abscond beforehand. And more punishment if you are wrong. But again I think this depends on the statute/common law of the state.
Yes, legally you can refuse, but then the cop will come up with some reason to detain you so you can't refuse. If you approach a police officer, you've already made a huge mistake and pretty much are fucked. Don't do it. That's the only thing you should care about. If you're already interacting with one, you fucked up really bad. Pray that you get out alive. I'm really NOT exaggerating. Being white helps tremendously, so be white if you can.
The police officer is a person, so they are free to ask you whatever they want. In most circumstances, you are free to decline to answer.
Some states do have a "duty to identify" law making it illegal to decline to identify yourself to a police officer. If you're traveling I would imagine it's incumbent upon you to know whether or not you're legally required to present identification if asked by a police officer.
Yes, in most states, you could refuse legally. Whether or not the Officer will accept that, and whether or not you actually want to risk potentially having to fight the legal fight to prove you were within your rights is a completely different question though.
Based on the details of the encounter, I would disagree. The police repeatedly (apparently) asked for his ID and escalated the encounter. Based on those facts, I would not assume that I was not being detained and was free to go.
The Supreme Court has held that even if the police have a flawed understanding of the laws and rules they are enforcing, their flawed interpretation governs the interaction on the street. So what the office believed matters, and that in turn guides his/her behavior. If you're in the right, you can usually be vindicated after a brief trip through the criminal justice system (arrest, jail, court). But it's guaranteed to ruin your day.
Safest bet would have been to ask "Am I free to go?" to find out.
> The police repeatedly (apparently) asked for his ID and escalated the encounter. Based on those facts, I would not assume that I was not being detained and was free to go.
Even if one is detained, one is not legally obligated to produce ID (even if one has it in one's possession, which also is not required.)
Stop and identify statutes apply to detentions (they are not merely overlapping), but AFAIK the only one requiring identity documents considered by the federal courts was struck down as unconstitutional.
Reiterating a point from my comment (and others here): you can be right legally, but you may have to risk jail to prove yourself right.
In practice, this means that you may assert your right to the police officer, who stridently disagrees based on his misunderstanding of the law. You will then be put into handcuffs and taken into custody (at best) and be jailed. Your arrest mugshots will be posted to the public Internet, handily available for any employer doing a background check on you. You will get someone to come to the jail and post bail on your behalf. You will spend money on a lawyer to defend you. Your charges may be summarily dismissed, but you may not find that out until the day of your court appearance (so you had to hire a lawyer anyway).
You will have proven your point.
It's far easier to ask "Am I free to go?" in an encounter like the one described. Even better: ask a civilian for directions.
However, I note as a counter example that the last time I asked a member of the public for directions it was in the US, in Baltimore, the morning before a riot. He directed us to a station far from where we needed to be and in an area of town which looked a bit dodgy.
> "The Supreme Court has held that even if the police have a flawed understanding of the laws and rules they are enforcing, their flawed interpretation governs the interaction on the street."
Gee, how convenient. And not consistent with the constitution, particularly according to this case, the fourth amendment doesn't have an exception for "cases where the agent of the state is confused".
Thanks. The police officer made it seem quite to the contrary. It's a shame that one of the police officer's core duties _isnt_ clarifying finer points of laws even when it works in criminal's favor.
The ELI5 is that the police officer's duty is to enforce the law, not explain it.
The slightly (but not much) more nuanced explanation is that 99% of police officers do not know the finer points of laws because they don't need to. They know just enough to get an idea of whether or not a person has broken a law. Once they get enough information to arrest someone, it's up to the DA if a law was actually broken and if they want to pursue charges.
It's not generally relevant to the police officer's day-to-day interactions with the public to have enough knowledge about the law to clarify the finer points of it to a layman, as they're mostly laymen themselves.
Edit: Just to clarify, I'm not saying this is the ideal, just that this is how it is currently in the US. The police pack the pipeline to the DA and the DA decides which cases to pursue (press charges) and which to ignore (release).
I don't know what police agencies expect to happen. A certain number of grenades in babies cribs are going to happen, but if these things go unpunished and merely asking for directions (or calling 911 because your kid is suicidal resulting in cops showing up and executing him) results in a negative outcome, how can they expect continuing public support?
I go out of my way to avoid the police and for most cases where I might be the victim of a crime, I'm just not going to involve the police, unless it's something on the order of murder. And even in that case I expect there's a good chance if they feel they can pin it on me they will, without regard for the evidence or truth. The cost of defending myself would bankrupt me.
If it's impossible to reverse the tide, what if this could become a database of innocence instead of a database of guilt?
Instead of cops pulling over some poor innocent guy every few weeks because he has a suspicious looking beaten up car, instead the police computer would green flag the person. The records might show that:
1. CCTV shows the person has not been driving in the vicinity of any crime they might currently be looking for suspects in connection with
2. The person has been stopped before, but was not involved in any criminal activity. This prevents unintentional repeated harassment.
3. The person has no known associations with any people involved in criminal activity.
Just like Uber, we'd be glad people were recording feedback about us because it helps people get a ride even in a high crime area where taxis would be otherwise afraid or unwilling to service.
Maybe the solution would be to have Swiss style direct democracy so that people could directly approve or disapprove of any particular system of data collection.
The likelihood of Swiss-style direct democracy being instituted in the United States is low. From the Federalist Papers onward, protection from the "tyranny of the majority" of minority interests has been been fundamental to the U.S. political system. The system of checks and balances was primarily instituted as a prevention against a tyrannical legislature, not the Executive. There would be intense pushback from both major political parties, political science academics, think tanks, and lobbyist firms.
Using current events as an example, I don't think it would be out of the realm of possibility for a national referendum to pass that called for mandatory citizenship checks of people who appeared to be not born in the United States. Direct democracy works for homogenous populations, but I doubt it is the right fit for the United States.
Pulling someone over for having a 'suspicious looking beaten up car' is part of the problem. While I applaud you looking at this from a practical, real-world point of view (I've been the guy in that beaten up car, an '83 Cutlass Supreme), I believe that you might have forgotten about that whole "presumption of innocence" thing granted to residents of the US.
If we had a benevolent artificial intelligence and the data were locked away from any humans, I'd be OK with that.
Unfortunately, humans ruin a lot of things that would otherwise be pretty good.
For instance, this kind of data would also make it far easier to frame someone, since you'd be able to craft your story around the narrative of their actions.
This sounds almost exactly like the plot of the anime "Psycho-Pass".
The story takes place in an authoritarian future dystopia, where omnipresent public sensors continuously scan the Psycho-Pass of every citizen in range. The sensors measure mental state, personality, and the probability that the citizen will commit crimes, alerting authorities when someone exceeds accepted norms. To enforce order, the officers of the Public Safety Bureau carry hand weapons called Dominators.
The weapons themselves only activate if the intended target has a sufficiently high "crime coefficient", as dictated by a central AI. It's pretty interesting (if you can tolerate a pretty high level of graphic animated violence).
From the article, it sounds like they record every single innocuous interaction. The city portion of Charleston is fairly small, confined to a small peninsula. Given the small size and not-so-large population, there are actually quite a few well-known bums in the town that one would just run into every day or so walking to and from work, usually in one of the major areas of the city. So imagine if you've got cops working the streets, it's totally conceivable that one or more officers run into one of those guys several times a day.
Community policing. Beat cop. 1 a day is even possible. You should be alarmed if such cases stop being outliers and start approaching the mean i.e. papers please.
That was my point, exactly. [edit: to be clear, that a beat cop may have to deal with a handful of local louts, for exmple. But not the entire neighborhood.]
Doesn't our Justice Department have people monitoring this sort of metric?
I would wager that most people who don't work in the criminal justice system and yet have weekly interactions with the police probably describe it as "unwelcome."
There's a possibility that he's a persistent prolific offender. A very small number of people require intense monitoring because they're involved in very many crimes.
But even then it seems like a very high number over a very long time.
And the other numbers - nearly a quarter of the population of the city - is a bizarrely high number.
he is an active snitch...almost surely a paid informant who supplements his street-hustle money with a little side job telling his cop buddies whats really happening on the streets.
So, basically, don't ever talk to the police, don't even say 'hi'. There's no such thing as a casual conversation with the police. They should be avoided at all costs. Isn't this common sense? That's the first thing I'd teach my children.
I have a friend who is a sergeant in the LAPD. She was asking me a question and followed it up with something about trying to not seem stalkerish, and I made a joke about "isn't that what NCIC (National Crime Information Computer) is for?"
She comes back a few minutes later and tells me that she finds much more information on the internet than she could ever find through NCIC.
At some point there will be a really massive fuck up, that will resist the usual cover ups and smear campaigns that have been used to silence the fuck ups that manage to boil to the surface these days.
Only when that one really bad thing finally happens, and doesn't just go away; when it refuses to be swept under the carpet, only then will anything change.
Either that, or it will break us, and usher in a new unstoppable tyrrany.
On one hand, we feel anxious if our government has more information about us than we believe they need. We feel that, in a truly free society, the government should keep its nose out of our day to day lives.
On the other hand, we demand that our government somehow prevent crimes and catch criminals, ensure that people treat each other fairly in day to day life, business dealings, even personal relationships. And for-profit corporations have huge databases about our commercial (and other?) activities -- and we have few if any legal tools to force them to stop collecting data or to purge those databases.
That dilemma is as old as our republic. At its founding we decided it's better to let guilty people go free than to put innocent people behind bars. In the beginning we valued Liberty above all else, as the ultimate virtue of our country.
It appears now we value security more, or else these types of things wouldn't be tolerated. History tells us this is a mistake but maybe we haven't yet learned the lesson.
I agree with the overall assessment of goals, but I don't think I agree that the surveillance tools are at odds with them.
> At its founding we decided it's better to let guilty people go free than to put innocent people behind bars
Ubiquitous surveillance record makes it easier to discern the facts of an event. It makes it less likely that the innocent will be put behind bars (relative to the alternative solutions of faulty witness memory and after-the-fact narrative construction).
I wish it were true, but in practice it turns out quite the opposite. With enough surveillance you can turn anybody into a criminal. I'm reminded of a quote that's also mentioned in this[0] article:
> Alan Dershowitz discusses his time litigating cases in the old Soviet Union. He was always taken by the fact that they could prosecute anybody they wanted because some of the statutes were so vague. Dershowitz points out that this was a technique developed by Beria, the infamous sidekick of Stalin, who said, “Show me the man and I’ll find you the crime.”
With vague laws and arbitrary enforcement it's very easy to produce a society that lives in fear.
Ubiquitous surveillance record makes it easier to discern the facts of an event. It makes it less likely that the innocent will be put behind bars (relative to the alternative solutions of faulty witness memory and after-the-fact narrative construction).
That might be true IF the "ubiquitous surveillance record" was gathered, maintained, and monitored by a truly neutral party. But it's not. It's maintained by the State, who are your adversary if you are charged with a crime (and possibly at other times, but that's a different topic). Anyway, if the State owns the surveillance and they decide to target you, do you expect that - as a defendant - you will be given full and unfettered access to an unaltered record of events? History suggests that this is not the case.
Inconvenient evidence gets mislabeled, misplaced, corrupted, deleted or, conveniently, was never recorded. See: CCTV, police dashboard and body camera footage.
Eventually, selectively and taken out of context, a pretty ugly narrative can be constructed with full access to anyone's data.
History isn't over, and I think it's worth considering the possibility that threat environments change, too. Perhaps there isn't a single, simple criterion that fits all cases.
As a libertarian, I'm extremely upset at the police and security state we've created. This has to stop.
At the same time, if a major crime occurs and there were indications it was going to happen, police are not supposed to be caught flat-footed. So I would expect any professional police force to have files on groups and people that they believe could cause major crimes. I also think they should have contingency plans for when major threats happen.
The problem is that computers have taken away any definition of "reasonable" If J. Edgar Hoover wanted to detail a platoon of FBI agents to monitor MLK I feel that it was a waste of time. Hell, it was probably also a travesty of justice. Hoover should have been fired for it.
But he could only do that so many times before he ran out of agents. The physicality of the system made it self-limiting.
Now we're living in an era where those limits are gone. There is no limiting factor any more.
In the U.S., we need constitutional guidance here -- some agreement on the limits we expect the government to observe. I thought we were clear enough about that the first time around, but the courts seem to think that the plain language of our Constitution and Bill of Rights has so many loopholes and odd provisions that it doesn't actually do any of the things it was supposed to do. That's gotta be fixed. I don't see a solution outside of that.
Perhaps the solution is bilateral surveillance which is to say a database of all the interactions of everyone who works in government which can be consulted by people outside of government when they suspect the government employee may be engaged in criminal activity.
I mention that because there is mounting evidence that police wearing always on body cams really curbs complaints about police brutality and excessive force. Now some of that is clearly people who realize that if their behavior is shown they won't be able to sustain the argument that the police action was unwarranted. However, evidence is accumulating that police are less likely to engage in risky or borderline unethical behavior when they know they are being monitored.
The bottom line is better governance with fewer complaints and that is a good thing for everyone involved.
It's a good proposal, and needs to be extended to government contractors (and subcontractors, and sub-subcontractors, ...) and all those who work for them, otherwise it would just provide another excuse to contract everything out.
There is a way out of this dilemma--sacrifice privacy in favor of freedom by making all surveillance feeds and all data mining resources and link to them public. If the average person can't have privacy, then no one should have privacy.
Our University required the police to collect and write down the names of everyone they ever spoke to... so they could prove they weren't being racially biased?
http://www.gq.com/story/inside-federal-bureau-of-way-too-man...
>> That's been a federal law, thanks to the NRA, since 1986: No searchable database of America's gun owners. So people here have to use paper, sort through enormous stacks of forms and record books that gun stores are required to keep and to eventually turn over to the feds when requested. It's kind of like a library in the old days—but without the card catalog. They can use pictures of paper, like microfilm (they recently got the go-ahead to convert the microfilm to PDFs), as long as the pictures of paper are not searchable. You have to flip through and read. No searching by gun owner. No searching by name.