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Should the Government post Citizen Humiliation Pics?

Should the Government post Citizen Humiliation Pics?

  • YES

    Votes: 5 20.0%
  • NO

    Votes: 20 80.0%

  • Total voters
    25
i dont think you can just get "caught up" in a prostitution sting

when i see the episodes on "cops" they always take down one perp at a time, as he propositions the undercover officer

not saying it CANT happen....just trying to picture how it would happen in real life

not exactly an expert in this field....all assumptions on my part

but i do see your point where someone "could" conceivably get caught up in something as an innocent bystander

and maybe their picture gets taken with the other perps....

as long as they are never arrested, or charged, i think it would be easily dismissed by most as "wrong place, wrong time"
My wording was lazy, I'll grant that. It's not common, but it does happen.
 
Drug overdose photos: To share or not? - CNN.com

View attachment 67207355

I say no, just as I say no to the government running names and sometimes addresses of those who they find using prostitutes, just as I say no to sex offender registries being broadcast.....in order for the justice system to be credible the ones running it must have the appearance of impartiality, and this sort of thing is more about bullying than it is about justice.

Anybody who thinks it is OK to post pictures of people in public without their permission is as bad as the people who used to burn witches. They are ignorant and hateful and need to get treatment for their personality disorders.
 
As familiar as they are with overdoses, city leaders still recognized the power of the photo. They spent hours debating what to do with it.

Their decision to put it on Facebook was, in some ways, a cry for help.

It was also a strategic move. Police saw the photo as indisputable proof that the adults passed out in the front of the car had endangered the child in the back — and should never again get custody. Posting the image online, they told STAT, was a way to protect the little boy in the dinosaur T-shirt.

"We knew we would save this child," said Brian Allen, director of public safety in East Liverpool.

He added: "We were hoping, anyway."
How heroin took over this Ohio town

WOW, that is just bizarre....members of government say that they posted the humiliation pics of citizens because they did not trust the government to do the right thing if they did not.

They claim.
 
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