MKEgal
Regular Member
And they say it's a common practice in this situation.
This poor man had just watched his wife die. When the mortician arrived to pick up the body (10 minutes later) the police came with.
No note of how they knew the woman had died, or how they knew she had pain medicines. (She was in hospice at home.)
No warrant, no RAS of a crime, definitely no consent, they just barged in & demanded to search for & confiscate the woman's pain medicines.
This poor man had just watched his wife die. When the mortician arrived to pick up the body (10 minutes later) the police came with.
No note of how they knew the woman had died, or how they knew she had pain medicines. (She was in hospice at home.)
No warrant, no RAS of a crime, definitely no consent, they just barged in & demanded to search for & confiscate the woman's pain medicines.
city manager Ken Bassett dismissed [the widower's] concerns, saying he was "overly sensitive" and that police were just trying to protect the public from illegal use of prescription drugs
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