Ruff move: Indiana woman barks at a police dog, attracting the attention of officers, who arrested her on outstanding warrants. https://t.co/tcBJEyoIgc #odd
In the latest incident of authorities being called on black people going about their routine lives, a youth soccer league official in Florida called 911 on an African-American father for yelling instructions at his son during a game. https://t.co/XNlHOZwmFm
Safeway employees called the police on a black woman, claiming she was shoplifting, but who was just feeding the homeless outside the store; she wore a T-shirt reading "Y'all Need Jesus" when 911 was called+it turned out she'd never set foot in the store. https://t.co/1bkSRIH9BA
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The debut episode of our “5 Cases in 5 Minutes” weekly #podcast is here! Listen to @winston_conrad discuss cases about arbitration, vaccination, Yelp and others: https://t.co/KhLq4KlyLu | #podcasts#lawtwitter#appellatetwitter
Join us next Friday (7/13) for the inaugural episode of our "5 Cases in 5 Minutes" legal #podcast! It's a new weekly podcast reviewing 5 case decisions in 5 minutes. Coming soon! https://t.co/19aWcKB9oZ
@jasonCbraatz@FindLaw Thanks, Jason! I don't practice currently, but FindLaw has a great directory of local attorneys, including those who do landlord/tenant law in SF: https://t.co/ghOBubHF8g
Good luck!
@TheDaveCA@FindLawConsumer At some point, the entity would want to accept some form of payment, or assessing fines wouldn't make sense. But again, those are probably entity-specific directives, not federal laws.