Friday, November 15, 2013

HOW to NOT get ARRESTED in the UNITED STATES POLICE STATE

Dale Carson is an ex-cop and former FBI worker who wrote a book called, Arrest-Proof Yourself, which just came out in its second edition. In it, he gives tips about how to not get arrested. He offers advice like, don't go out of your house, be obsequious to cops, and poop your pants if all else fails. The Resident (aka Lori Harfenist) discusses.

This essential "how not to" guide explains how to act and what to say in the presence of police to minimize the chances of being arrested and to avoid add-on charges—which can often lead to permanent disqualification from jobs, financing, and education. Citizens can learn how to avoid arrest both on the street and when pulled over in a vehicle and are alerted to basic tricks cops use to get people to incriminate themselves. Sprinkled with absurdity and humor, this urgent, eye-opening book is a guide to criminal justice for all Americans.


Adult/High School—Carson has been both a cop and a criminal defense attorney. Here, he puts his years of experience into a "how-not-to" book. He feels that most people who get arrested aren't the worst criminals; they are just the most "clueless"—small-time offenders who make bad decisions and end up in what he calls the "electronic plantation." Now that computers make it ever so easy to track people, getting arrested, even if you're not ultimately convicted, can and will come back to haunt you. Carson has three golden rules: "If cops can't see you, they can't arrest you," "Keep your dope at home," and "Give cops your name and basic info, then shut the f*@# up!" While the book read straight through may seem a little repetitive, it ultimately does come back to one of these three rules, which are imparted with examples and behavior charts. Carson uses a blunt style to make these points, but it's a style that is sure to hit home with his target audience—the underclass. And he does make it plain that while there are many middle-class and white-collar criminals, the police tend to focus their patrols in bad neighborhoods. Those most likely to be in situations where they or those they know might get arrested will get the most out of this book, but even readers in more lofty areas with an interest in law enforcement could find much to discuss

At the advice of a reader, I read the book Arrest-Proof Yourself. The author, Dale Carson, is a defense attorney who used to be a cop, giving him a unique insight into the criminal justice system.

Carson starts off by explaining how an arrest can hurt you for the rest of your life. As anyone who went to law school knows, evidence of an arrest is inadmissible in court. However, background check on you, such as employers. And employers don't care about the rules of evidence. An arrest for something stupid can permanently hurt your career by making it harder to get hired, regardless of whether you actually committed the crime you were arrested for. Employers will just see the arrest and not hire you without telling you the reason and without giving you a chance to explain that you were innocent. And as Carson points out, you can get arrested for just being unlucky; a neighbor who hates you gives the police a false tip which then gives the police probable cause to arrest you. Then the arrest screws you up for life even though you are completely innocent.
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The above scenario therefore gives you one idea of how to reduce your chances of being arrested: avoid having that type of neighbor. In fact, neighborhoods where criminals live. If you live in a ghetto, the police are a lot more likely to assume you are a criminal than if you live in a well-off suburb. Your neighbors in the well-off suburb (unless you happen to live on Wisteria Lane).

Don't drive in a car with someone who is likely to be carrying drugs around with them. In fact, it's a good idea, if you are a man, to never have any male passengers in your car, because the more males in a car, the more likely you look like a criminal to the police. Thus the following table should help: shia law


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