Jamal Jones, his girlfriend Lisa Mahone, and their two children, 14 and 7, were going to a hospital to visit Lisa’s dying mother.
Cops stopped them who state that they pulled the family over because Mahone was not wearing her seat belt. After she showed her ID and insurance they asked for Jamal’s ID, who was the passenger.
Shortly after he stated he didn’t have it due to receiving a ticket, cops asked that he get out of the vehicle, which he refused to do.
Click the link below for more info and to watch the video:
You don’t have to show your license. The cop broke the law
If you don’t show ID he can haul you in as a vagrent and you can spend the night in jail.
That mite be a little to much.
Helen no it’s illegal. Do some research
When driving a motor vehicle you are required to produce i.d., if you are walking down the street and a cop stops you, you do not have to produce i.d., unless you live in a stop and identify state, even then you still don’t under federal level, know the laws.
If there’s probable cause to ask for ID you do have to present it at least in Ohio
If a cop walks up and asks you to roll your window down, and you have drugs in the car and two strikes and you don’t roll the window down and the cop patiently stands there and asks again nicely but before he can finish his sentence you pull out a gun and unload on the cop and hit him and three people behind him. Yes the cop always needs to assume the worst or he will not make it home that night. Do you know what they deal with on a regular basis? If a cop asks someone to show id or tells them they are under arrest should everyone just be allowed to say no? I don’t want to be arrested and the cop goes “ok cool see you later.” And is supposed to let you go? Stupid.
BAD RADICAL COP.
No…not always, if a cop insists that you allow him to violate your constitutional rights, no, politely resist. For a cop to do what he did with children right there, he then put the children in danger.
The law states (California) that you must hand over your State issued ID anytime an officer asks for it. Failure to do so can result in loss of license. Having a license is a privilege, not a right. Remember drivers Ed?