frozengopher
Devious and Conniving Member
- Joined
- Aug 5, 2009
- Messages
- 762
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The police report is not certified fact. Given that, if Carter was observed by witnesses as resisting the commands of a police officer and the officer or officers charged him for that, witnesses will have to come forth and intent by Carter needs to be established by the City attorney. If no force unusual to an arrest was not made, the resisting charge should be dropped. Witnesses are his friends, one officer and maybe a by stander or two. While the behavior is unacceptable, this is a minor incident.
I don't intend to start anything with this, but FWIW a police report generally is certified fact. An officer bases his/her reputation on the factuality of their reports, and the truth comes about one way or another regardless. If the report was found to contain fabrications, the validity of every report that officer writes for the rest of his/her life will be brought into question by any defense lawyer and no prosecuting attorney that will want to take any of the officer's arrests to court.
That being said, if it is likely that the reporting officer already has that kind of reputation, the charge will be dropped. I hate this whole situation, but I have a lot of faith in the police brotherhood. It's too bad that there are some bad apples that bring the whole profession into question.