- Forwarded message from [EMAIL PROTECTED] -
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Mon, 21 Jun 2004 21:19 -0400
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [IP] When police ask your name, you must give it,
Supreme Court says
X-Mailer: SnapperMail 1.9.2.01 by Snapperfish, www.snappermail.com
Reply-To:
On Jun 21 2004, Steve Schear wrote:
| Not a problem. Its legal to use any name you wish, including those that
| use gyphs and sounds which cannot be represented by standard Roman and
| non-Roman alphabets (as is common in some African tribes). So, those that
| wish to avoid
WASHINGTON - A sharply divided Supreme Court ruled Monday that people who
refuse to give their names to police can be arrested, even if they've done
nothing wrong.
The court previously had said police may briefly detain people they suspect
of wrongdoing, without any proof. But until now, the
On 2004-06-22T02:52:15-0400, Gabriel Rocha wrote:
On Jun 21 2004, Steve Schear wrote:
| Not a problem. Its legal to use any name you wish, including those that
| use gyphs and sounds which cannot be represented by standard Roman and
| non-Roman alphabets (as is common in
On 2004-06-21T22:38:01-0700, Steve Schear wrote:
Not a problem. Its legal to use any name you wish, including those that
use gyphs and sounds which cannot be represented by standard Roman and
non-Roman alphabets (as is common in some African tribes). So, those that
wish to avoid this data
incriminating, and the State has a substantial interest in knowing who you
are -- you may need medicating, or you may owe the government money, or
Exactly ... and maybe you are on this consumer list:
http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/328/7454/1458
The president's commission found
Morlock Elloi wrote:
incriminating, and the State has a substantial interest in knowing who you
are -- you may need medicating, or you may owe the government money, or
Exactly ... and maybe you are on this consumer list:
http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/328/7454/1458
Thanks for