no its the persons problem they were looking for
2007-02-26 18:30:33
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Most of the time, they can break down the wrong door, in the middle of the night, dressed like a military unit that has suddenly become obsessed with bondage, kill the occupants, rape their dog, an STILL not have any kind of legal liability.
Waco. They killed more than 80 people. Many of them were children. The killers are doing quite well in their careers, thank you very much.
Ruby Ridge. They shot a woman holding a toddler in the face, shot her husband (he lived), shot his son, who died, and somehow saw nothing wrong with what they were doing. Randy Weaver, the victim in this case, was wanted on a paperwork violation.
Unlike many, I don't see this as some kind of a spectacular Clintonista conspiracy. Part of the problem was Janet Reno, who was indeed pure evil, but really, isn't it just par for the course? Have a look at the Cato institute, where they keep a page about the rampages that cops go on every day in this country.
2007-02-26 18:38:46
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answer #2
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answered by Rich Paul 1
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Not if they do so under the guise of a warrant. The door constituted an impediment to an officer carrying out his/her lawful duties.
If it was a mistake, and you are never charged with anything, you have a lot more to go after them for than just a broken door. You need a lawyer.
2007-02-26 18:33:02
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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only if the person who's door it is can prove that they had nothing to with what the fbi was looking for.. example, if a escaped prisoner took refuge in your home and they took a tank and knocked out your living room wall, they would reimburse you for your loss.. although im sure theyd wait to see what your insurance policy had to say about it first
2007-02-26 18:33:38
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Only if it is deemed by a judge to be a dirty search, and even then it will take a ****'s age to actually file the claim and get the money to pay.
If you, or someone who was in the house is found guilty of the crime they broke into the house about, you pay.
2007-02-26 18:32:49
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answer #5
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answered by wo_manifest 4
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it depends,
if they have a warrant to search one's house and the person refuses to be searched, then yes they can without having to pay.
other than that it's against the law, and they do know that they can't just go around and breaking people's property even though they still enforce the law
2007-02-26 18:39:41
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answer #6
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answered by briank1458 4
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well u have to say y they did that
if it becuz of a case then they wont have to
if they just feel like doing it they do
is kinda complicated
u have to ask a lawyer
2007-02-26 18:31:21
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answer #7
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answered by Ryan 2
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not real sure but they probably have to secure the door before leaving --
2007-02-26 18:38:10
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answer #8
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answered by --------------- 2
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no, wrong door yes
2007-02-26 18:37:56
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answer #9
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answered by meandme 4
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If they broke down the wrong one, you bet they do.
2007-02-26 18:31:41
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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