Vindicarre wrote:
Are you being serious? When you stated, "Second, of course you don't have the right to resist illegal entry.", I assumed you were speaking about not just Indiana, but everywhere in the US, including Indiana. Before yesterday would you have said the same thing?
Yes. Until you pointed it out, I was not aware of the prior Indiana rulings, so I would have said the same thing about everywhere, although in the case of Indiana I would have been incorrect.
Everwhere
Quote:
I guess I am rather surprised that you'd say such a thing. If a cop shows up at my door, I have to let him in for any reason whatsoever, or none at all? The Fourth Amendment doesn't allow you to stop them from entering for any reason? I don't believe you think I have to let a police officer into my home any time they choose to do so.
Not at all. You can refuse entry. If he comes in anyhow, you do not have the right to
physically resist, unless there is some tangible circumstance that makes you think he will use excessive force against you personally. (And no, the entry is not
by itself, necessarily such a circumstance. It could be a contributor to the totality of the circumstnaces though.)
Nothing about this ruling requires you to ever grant permission to anything. More importantly, it does not in any way allow any evidence he obtains in the process of doing so to be used against you. Finally, it does not remove any legal remedies in civil or criminal action against him.
The fact of the matter is that while this may grate on one's sensibilities, if it were not the case law enforcement would be impossible. Every criminal would resist, claiming unlawful entry, even when a warrant had already been issued, most because criminals don't understand the law very well anyhow as a general rule, and some figuring on the off chance they'd be right.
If you want to have the right to resist simply based on your own legal opinion, fine. Expect to have a society with no law enforcement, and essentially, no law.