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PostPosted: Tue Jul 16, 2013 4:02 pm 
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I should point out, that the incidence rate of things related to this law is likely to be so low as to be "statistically insignificant."

It's an interesting philosophical exercise to discuss it, but I have to imagine cases where it is successfully used are essentially nil.

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PostPosted: Tue Jul 16, 2013 4:04 pm 
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TheRiov wrote:
Shyung seems to be saying his judgement supersedes that of the legal system. If he feels there is no crime going on in the house, he's free to defend himself.

But worse than that-- if someone makes a clerical error, you're suggesting the best option, is deadly force against those executing that order? Seriously?? are you aware how psychotic that sounds?

I will say that my judgement is superior to yours. I am willing to debate my judgement with the legal system via their preferred method. As to whether or not I'm free to defend myself in my house, I'm always free to defend myself in my house. It's my house. If I am defending myself and shouldn't be, then that's another story.

I'm not attempting to argue it's the best option, but it needs to be an option.

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PostPosted: Tue Jul 16, 2013 4:17 pm 
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shuyung wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
shuyung wrote:
... And someone's mere uninvited presence in my house certainly IS grounds for killing them ...

You might want to re-word that. Let's suppose they have a warrant for your house issued by a judge.

Also, I think you might want to reconsider whether the number of opponents you're facing is something you need to figure out before getting into a firefight. What they're doing is also something to concern yourself with. How do you think it's going to go for you if you get into a firefight with a number of men with body armor, rifles and shotguns? Assuming your wife and kids are unharmed, wouldn't it be better for them to have you alive and able to fight the intrusion in court than dead?

I don't see any need to reword that. A warrant for my house issued by a judge is irrelevant to the scenario. Either I have been doing something to warrant (hah) such an issuance, or I haven't. If I have, then I know the score, and would make sure to not be around my wife and kids. If I haven't, then law enforcement has **** up. If law enforcement has **** up, they deserve no protection.


Warrants are issued upon probable cause, so it is entirely possible that you were not actually doing anything criminal, but probable cause could still be established. The warrant is completely relevant to the situation. A warrant means that the officers to whom it is issued have a duty to execute it - not a right, not a privilege, nor an option, but rather that they must do so and in a timely fashion. Your personal certainty that you have not done anything illegal isn't relevant, even if it is justified.

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As to how I'd fare against some number of opponents, either they've already invaded my house and that's an unknown, or they're standing around where I can count them which would probably mean there's been no invasion yet. Or are you assuming that I have some foreknowledge of the invasion otherwise?


I'm saying that you should probably make some tactical assessment before you engage in a firefight. Obviously there will be limits on your ability to do so, but that doesn't mean you shouldn't. Exactly how much foreknowledge you have of the situation depends entirely on the situation. It might be considerable; it might be nonexistent.

What I'm getting at here is that regardless of the law and your rights, getting into a firefight with the police is not likely to be a good idea. This law creates the impression that the citizen actually has a reasonable chance of winning the aforementioned fight, which is not going to be the case very often, whether the citizen is in the right or not. It would be preferable for citizens to survive encounters where the police are in the wrong and pursue redress through the court, rather than to simply punish the officers after the citizen is already dead.

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PostPosted: Tue Jul 16, 2013 4:19 pm 
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DFK! wrote:
I should point out, that the incidence rate of things related to this law is likely to be so low as to be "statistically insignificant."

It's an interesting philosophical exercise to discuss it, but I have to imagine cases where it is successfully used are essentially nil.


And this is the biggest problem with it. Unsuccessfully employing it is likely to be worse for the citizen than the prospect of defending against a criminal charge for which they are innocent.

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PostPosted: Tue Jul 16, 2013 4:20 pm 
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Diamondeye wrote:
What I'm getting at here is that regardless of the law and your rights, getting into a firefight with the police is not likely to be a good idea.


No disagreement here.

DE wrote:
This law creates the impression that the citizen actually has a reasonable chance of winning the aforementioned fight, which is not going to be the case very often, whether the citizen is in the right or not.


I disagree with that impression.

DE wrote:
It would be preferable for citizens to survive encounters where the police are in the wrong and pursue redress through the court, rather than to simply punish the officers after the citizen is already dead.


Sure. It's also preferable for there to be an incentive to not make unlawful entry. There now is.


I don't see the negatives here.

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PostPosted: Tue Jul 16, 2013 4:25 pm 
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DFK! wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
What I'm getting at here is that regardless of the law and your rights, getting into a firefight with the police is not likely to be a good idea.


No disagreement here.

DE wrote:
This law creates the impression that the citizen actually has a reasonable chance of winning the aforementioned fight, which is not going to be the case very often, whether the citizen is in the right or not.


I disagree with that impression.


I think that's the problem. The law is not written with you or Shuyung in mind; it's written with society in general in mind. The law has to be viewed in light of how it can be taken by that relatively large portion of the populace that are unable or unwilling to rationally understand the law and the reality of the situation, nor make a sound judgement about it.

Unrealistic tactical fantasizing is not an uncommon vice.

DE wrote:
Sure. It's also preferable for there to be an incentive to not make unlawful entry. There now is.

I don't see the negatives here.


There already is one - the loss of employment, possibilities of criminal and civil proceedings, being publicly embarassed by the press.

The problem of those entries that shouldn't be done in the first place is best addressed by not permitting no-knock warrants. As for those entries that are made with total disregard for the law, officers that do that sort of thing are not likely to be deterred by homeowners defending themselves. They'll just come up with new ways to cover things up.

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PostPosted: Tue Jul 16, 2013 4:56 pm 
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Diamondeye wrote:
DFK! wrote:
Sure. It's also preferable for there to be an incentive to not make unlawful entry. There now is.

I don't see the negatives here.


There already is one - the loss of employment, possibilities of criminal and civil proceedings, being publicly embarassed by the press.


Except that all three of those are rare, with the last one being the only one that I wouldn't classify as "extremely" rare.

DE wrote:
The problem of those entries that shouldn't be done in the first place is best addressed by not permitting no-knock warrants. As for those entries that are made with total disregard for the law, officers that do that sort of thing are not likely to be deterred by homeowners defending themselves. They'll just come up with new ways to cover things up.


What about wrong-door raids?

Personally, I think that, beyond no-knock (which we appear to be on the same page on) using SWAT for arrest warrants non-violent offenders, as well as for search warrants on non-violent offenders, should be outlawed and that specific forms of redress for homes entered unlawfully should be laid out. Including, but not limited to revocation of criminal prosecution immunity for the officers (and leaders) conducting and authorizing the raids.

That's a pipe dream, but probably more effective than a law like this.

That said, I see nothing wrong with this law, it has effectively simply codified the right to shoot at armed home invaders, even if they have badges on.

Edit: While codifying that right, it says nothing about whether doing so is "good," "effective," or "smart."

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PostPosted: Tue Jul 16, 2013 6:08 pm 
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TheRiov wrote:
Due process in getting a warrant means there is strong enough evidence that you committed/or are committing a crime. If they're executing a warrant legally and you open fire, you're in the wrong.

Say your child or spouse committed the crime and lied to you about it? If you 'know' they're innocent, you feel you have the right to prevent, with deadly force, police from acting on a legal warrant?


There's the problem. I'm not opposed to the law on its face, but the proverbial devil is in the details. Generally speaking I'm not a big fan of advocating shooting at cops (who are usually better trained and armed) on iffy circumstances. Then again, it could be a good in cases like the so called "Third Amendment violation" in the other thread. Either way, It's Indiana's sovereign right to weigh those issues against the laws merits, and we'll have to see how the case law grows out of it and if applications to be police officers in the state are adversely affected.

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PostPosted: Tue Jul 16, 2013 6:31 pm 
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A government that does not fear reprisal of its citizens is a government that will abuse its citizens. Not can, not might. Will. Will abuse its citizens. Every time, in every country, through every era of history.

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PostPosted: Tue Jul 16, 2013 11:18 pm 
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DFK!"
Except that all three of those are rare, with the last one being the only one that I wouldn't classify as "extremely" rare. [/quote]
How do you establish that they are rare? Also, you just said that you expect successful employment of defense under this law to be "essentially nil", so how does that make a difference?

[quote="DE wrote:
What about wrong-door raids?


What about them? If the police are simply at the wrong house, a need to knock adds one more chance for them to realize the mistake before they bust in. If they still don't realize it and do bust in, how does the citizen benefit from getting into a firefight with them? Now he's traded the likelyhood of being handcuffed for a far greater likelihood of being shot to death. I don't see how being allowed to defend himself gains him anything other than the chance for even greater

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Personally, I think that, beyond no-knock (which we appear to be on the same page on) using SWAT for arrest warrants non-violent offenders, as well as for search warrants on non-violent offenders, should be outlawed and that specific forms of redress for homes entered unlawfully should be laid out. Including, but not limited to revocation of criminal prosecution immunity for the officers (and leaders) conducting and authorizing the raids.


Police do not have immunity from prosecution for conducting raids. Qualified immunity only affects good faith actions taken in areas where the law is not already clearly established, and the laws regarding warrants are pretty well established. Police have a duty to execute warrants, but if the warrant is wrong and they know it is wrong, they have a duty not to execute it and to have the mistake fixed. If they don't know it is wrong, there arises the question of whether the same officers actually conducting the entry are the ones responsible for the error. It doesn't make a lot of sense to do anything to the ones conducting the entry if they were assured by their superiors that the warrant was correct.

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That's a pipe dream, but probably more effective than a law like this.


Then I really don't see why you think this law is a good idea. I don't see that it actually addresses a problem at all. It makes citizens feel like they can defend themselves by avoiding prosecution, but in the event something happens, there's a very high likelyhood it won't matter to the now-deceased citizen.

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That said, I see nothing wrong with this law, it has effectively simply codified the right to shoot at armed home invaders, even if they have badges on.

Edit: While codifying that right, it says nothing about whether doing so is "good," "effective," or "smart."


I don't see much point in a "right" whose primary effect is to get the citizen killed exercising it. Self-defense against criminals is one thing; criminals are not able to bring the type of resources to bear that the police can.

I predict that among those will be people shooting because they have the law as they think it should be confused with the law that is.

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PostPosted: Tue Jul 16, 2013 11:19 pm 
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Corolinth wrote:
A government that does not fear reprisal of its citizens is a government that will abuse its citizens. Not can, not might. Will. Will abuse its citizens. Every time, in every country, through every era of history.


Which this law has absolutely nothing to do with.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2013 8:27 am 
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DE:

I establish those things as rare because most wrong door raids don't lead to reprimand, much less charges.

We're on the same page on no-knock, so it's not worth discussing.

And finally, it doesn't matter if exercising a right gets you killed. It's your right to choose.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2013 8:32 am 
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DFK! wrote:
DE:

I establish those things as rare because most wrong door raids don't lead to reprimand, much less charges.


How do you know? Wrong-door raids are rare to begin with, so where do you get this from, or do you just imagine that it must be like that?

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We're on the same page on no-knock, so it's not worth discussing.

And finally, it doesn't matter if exercising a right gets you killed. It's your right to choose.


This is a right established by law, and the discussion is whether the legislature should establish that right in the first place. The fact that it serves no purpose except to get the citizen killed indicates that the legislature should not establish it.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2013 8:42 am 
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Diamondeye wrote:
DFK! wrote:
DE:

I establish those things as rare because most wrong door raids don't lead to reprimand, much less charges.


How do you know? Wrong-door raids are rare to begin with, so where do you get this from, or do you just imagine that it must be like that?


I get it from the all the stats I've ever seen, which I'm choosing to not bother sourcing. And personally, I wouldn't call wrong door raids "rare" at all, except perhaps on a relative scale.

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Quote:
We're on the same page on no-knock, so it's not worth discussing.

And finally, it doesn't matter if exercising a right gets you killed. It's your right to choose.


This is a right established by law, and the discussion is whether the legislature should establish that right in the first place. The fact that it serves no purpose except to get the citizen killed indicates that the legislature should not establish it.


No rights are established by law, only protected by law. They've merely codified the rights of the homeowner, here.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2013 8:48 am 
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DFK wrote:
DE wrote:
Quote:
We're on the same page on no-knock, so it's not worth discussing.

And finally, it doesn't matter if exercising a right gets you killed. It's your right to choose.


This is a right established by law, and the discussion is whether the legislature should establish that right in the first place. The fact that it serves no purpose except to get the citizen killed indicates that the legislature should not establish it.


No rights are established by law, only protected by law. They've merely codified the rights of the homeowner, here.

Except this one, where the Supreme Court of Indiana ruled homeowners have no right to self-defense during illegal entries. So this law does in practice create a right that didn't exist.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2013 8:53 am 
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DFK! wrote:

I get it from the all the stats I've ever seen, which I'm choosing to not bother sourcing. And personally, I wouldn't call wrong door raids "rare" at all, except perhaps on a relative scale.


In that case, I'll just choose to disregard your assessment.

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No rights are established by law, only protected by law. They've merely codified the rights of the homeowner, here.


The idea that rights exist independent of law is entirely a conceit of the writers of founding documents. It sounds great on paper, but it doesn't make any sense. If rights are not codified, how does anyone know they have them? Because a certain philosophy says so?

In any case, that's the sort of abstract debate that takes over altogether too many threads. Functionally, there is no difference between rights being protected and rights being established. The UN can make all the silly "Declarations of Human Rights" it wants; whether North Korean people have those rights and the state is not protecting them, or whether they don't have them because NK didn't make laws establishing them is irrelevant. Either way, the rights are not available to them.

Claiming that rights are only "protected" by law is just a way of begging the question. Any law that gets passed protecting any arbitrary right could be justified that way. Some people would claim a universal right to free health care and use that argument to claim a national health system is merely "protecting" it. The fact that other philosophies would claim that right can't exist for whatever reason is irrelevant; we do not have a system under which certain political ideologies are acceptable and others are not.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2013 12:03 pm 
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There are two huge problems with these kinds of laws:

1. The homeowner has absolutely no way of discerning the difference between a lawful and unlawful police raid. How do you know the cops have the warrant for the wrong house? You don't. Even if you somehow knew you hadn't committed any crimes (pretty much impossible due to how many laws we have and how all-encompassing they are) the police could still have probable cause for any number of reasons. All laws like this do is randomly get criminals, who were going to shoot at the police anyways, off after the fact.

2. In many cases the police officers risking their lives executing the warrant also will have no way of knowing the warrant is unlawful. If the copy of the warrant they get has the wrong address printed on it, how are they supposed to know? Furthermore, if the homeowner shoots at them and they kill him, now they're guilty of murder despite the fact that they did everything right.


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2013 12:13 pm 
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Xequecal wrote:
There are two huge problems with these kinds of laws:

1. The homeowner has absolutely no way of discerning the difference between a lawful and unlawful police raid. How do you know the cops have the warrant for the wrong house? You don't. Even if you somehow knew you hadn't committed any crimes (pretty much impossible due to how many laws we have and how all-encompassing they are) the police could still have probable cause for any number of reasons. All laws like this do is randomly get criminals, who were going to shoot at the police anyways, off after the fact.


This is equally a problem with or without this law. It won't get criminals off, however. If the criminal is likely to shoot at the police anyway, he's likely to get killed. While criminals might try to assert that the raid was illegal just because they wish it was, this usually doesn't work out too well for them. Criminals tend to get their ideas of the law from "street" or "jailhouse lawyers" who are less than expert.

Quote:
2. In many cases the police officers risking their lives executing the warrant also will have no way of knowing the warrant is unlawful. If the copy of the warrant they get has the wrong address printed on it, how are they supposed to know? Furthermore, if the homeowner shoots at them and they kill him, now they're guilty of murder despite the fact that they did everything right.


In this case, it's the person obtaining the warrant and issuing the order to execute it that's at fault, not the team actually going in.

There is an actual value to this law, and that is that criminals impersonating the police are less likely to be able to do so.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2013 12:35 pm 
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It makes much sense because it places equality of opportunity and mutual respect for differences at the center of political philosophy.

Saying it doesn't make sense is like saying nothing anyone has or will use to make a moral judgement makes any sense.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2013 1:35 pm 
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Diamondeye wrote:
This is equally a problem with or without this law. It won't get criminals off, however. If the criminal is likely to shoot at the police anyway, he's likely to get killed. While criminals might try to assert that the raid was illegal just because they wish it was, this usually doesn't work out too well for them. Criminals tend to get their ideas of the law from "street" or "jailhouse lawyers" who are less than expert.


The point is that before the law, a criminal who shoots at the cops is always guilty, provided he survives, even if there's a mistake with the warrant. After the law, if there happens to be a mistake, the criminal gets off.


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2013 1:45 pm 
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I'm a little unclear on how you think this scenario could actually come about. Are the police at the house of the person specified on the warrant, or the wrong house in the situation you imagine?

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2013 1:55 pm 
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Diamondeye wrote:
I'm a little unclear on how you think this scenario could actually come about. Are the police at the house of the person specified on the warrant, or the wrong house in the situation you imagine?


Let's say the police are at the wrong house. A law-abiding homeowner can't shoot at them, before or after the law. Before the law it's explicitly illegal, afterwards he still can't because he has no way to know that the raid is illegal. However, if the homeowner is a criminal and shoots at the police, he gets off regardless of the fact that he also had no way of knowing the illegality of the raid and would have shot at them regardless.

Yes, I realize it's pretty unlikely that the cops raid the wrong house and the people in the wrong house are also criminals, but since it doesn't really provide any benefit at all to law-abiding individuals the whole thing is just a useless net negative.


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2013 2:57 pm 
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This "can" and "can't" distinction you're making, it is nonsense.

If your home is invaded, and you shoot the invader(s), and those invaders were police, and they were acting unlawfully, there is no legal penalty accruing to you.
If your home is invaded, and you shoot the invader(s), and those invaders were police, and they were acting lawfully, there is no material increase to the crap you're in.
Either way, there's nothing stopping you, other than your natural inclination to either shoot or not shoot an invader.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2013 3:17 pm 
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shuyung wrote:
This "can" and "can't" distinction you're making, it is nonsense.

If your home is invaded, and you shoot the invader(s), and those invaders were police, and they were acting unlawfully, there is no legal penalty accruing to you.
If your home is invaded, and you shoot the invader(s), and those invaders were police, and they were acting lawfully, there is no material increase to the crap you're in.
Either way, there's nothing stopping you, other than your natural inclination to either shoot or not shoot an invader.

You forgot "If Your home is invaded, and you shoot the invader(s), and those invaders were not police, there is no legal penalty accruing to you."

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2013 4:13 pm 
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Technically, it's true that a homeowner could not know for sure if the police have a warrant or not, but as a practical matter it's very very VERY unlikely that someone would have absolutely no idea that they were doing something illegal enough to warrant a no-knock or raid-type warrant service, and yet have a completely legitimate warrant out for them.

As for a criminal getting away because the police raided the wrong house but it just so happened that the people raided were criminals... that's really not a problem. If you raided the wrong house, you discovered that criminal evidence illegally and it wouldn't be admissible.

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