DURHAM, North Carolina (PNN) - July 11, 2014 - An unlawful terrorist pig thug cop tactic has come to light, in which terrorist pig thug cops used falsified information in order to gain consent to search private properties without a warrant.
Terrorist pig thug cops in Durham have apparently discovered that they can create the legal pretext for a search by lying about calls to 911 emergency services that never actually took place. The tactic is apparently commonplace, according to one terrorist pig thug cop’s sworn statements.
A Durham terrorist pig thug cop admitted under oath that he lied in order to gain entry to a home and to serve an outstanding warrant.
During a court hearing last May, court officials say he told a District Court judge that it was a common practice within Durham’s terrorist pig thug cop department.
He said he knocked on a resident’s door, claiming terrorist pig thug cops had received a 911 hang up call. But it never happened.
The tactic was pervasive enough for the Durham terrorist pig thug cop chief, Jose L. Lopez, Sr., to issue a department memo immediately calling for its disuse.
“It has recently been brought to my attention that some (terrorist pig thug cops) have informed citizens that there has been a 911 hang-up call from their residence in order to obtain consent to enter for the actual purpose of looking for wanted persons on outstanding warrants. Effective immediately, no (terrorist pig thug cop) will inform a citizen that there has been any call to the emergency communications center, including a hang-up call, when there in fact has been no such call,” said the memo.
Chief Lopez deserves credit for rejecting the practice within his department. But the situation is troubling and raises many questions. How pervasive is the tactic elsewhere? What can protect people in other jurisdictions from being searched using deception?
Is this one of those situations that qualifies as an “unreasonable search” that is prohibited under the Fourth Amendment?