Re: No parking
"Rindler Sigurd" <srindler@da2.so-net.ne.jp> wrote in message
news:3eee8e63$1_6@news.uncensored-news.com...
>
> "Kaz" <kaz@ivebeenframed.com> wrote in message
> news:365fcc52.0306160903.72bd16f9@posting.google.com...
> > "Ken" <dvdfan9@hotmail.com> wrote in message
> news:c5fec6f.0306160731.73119f38@posting.google.com...
> >
> > > In Japan, it could be considered as a "koumu shikkou bougai"
> >
> > No, you are wrong as usual. She has just slapped the cop, was not
> > obstructing any of his police duty.
>
>
> Gee, have you gotten a law degree, or did you dream about this one?
> If you slap a policeman, you certainly interfere with his duties. That
> counts same as handcuffing the policeman to a lamp post or punching him in
> the head until he is unconscious.
> After getting slapped, his "duty" is probably to subdue and arrest the
> slapper, no?
Slapping a man is a kind of women's "duty", especially when they are
grabbed by a strange man like the cop. Grabbing a woman's arm is quite
an offensive act and also it's sexual harassment, I think. If you grab
some random young woman's arm on a street, I bet she will slap you.
The cop should have been aware that women always get very scared when
their arms got grabbed by a stranger. The cop in this case is very
immature. It is this immature cop's fault that he tacitly gave her a
sort of threatening feeling.
> This kind of case is a typical
> > false charge caused by arrogant and outrageous Tokyo kind police.
>
>
> Police often use excessive force, but this has less to do with Tokyo.
Tokyo police tend to do this kind of act more than other provincial
polices.
Actually, in provincial regions, no one would be excited about such
trifling parking lot things. Probably there are some trouble in
downtown areas of provincial cities but they won't be such serious
like this case in Tokyo.
> > In this case, the cop was illegally interfering with her and he was
> > illegally grabbing her arm before she slapped the cop.
>
>
> According to the newspaper, she tried to get away. Everybody with a bit of
> common sense can assure you that the police has the legal power to grab
you
> when you try to get away during questioning. Tell me one single country
> where you are right and the police is wrong in a similar case.
Hey you are missing one important point. The cop only had right to ask
her to answer his questioning VOLUNTARILY.
If the place was a public road and she was illegally parking, the cop
had an official right to question her, and she had an obligation to
answer it. Whereas, the place is a private property, someone else's
parking lot, so the cop didn't have any right to interfere with her
trying to leave the place. If the private property was a house or an
office that is completely enclosed by walls or something, she would
have been accused as trespass, but in this country, such a place like
a parking lot which is easy to get in by anyone, and only
distinguished by white painted lines on ground is not considered as a
subject of trespass. As I told before, occupying someone's parking lot
is a private trouble with the owner.
>
> The cops and
> > the owner of the honorary white Tokyoite's super high-class parking
> > lot had no legal right to interfere with her after she apologized
> > about her occupation of his super high-class honorary white's parking
> > lot, but they illegally obstructed her to move. So the cop who had
> > grabbed her arm, and the honorary white Tokyoite who illegally
> > obstructed her to move from there are exactly the violation.
>
>
> Man, you really need to see a doctor since this obsession with your
> hate-love for the Tokyo folks is getting out of hand.
> BTW, according to the newspaper, the "owner of this honorary white..." did
> not speak English... so it can be assumed that he is a Japanese. Or are
you
Of course I am assuming the honorary white is a Japanese. An honorary
white is always Japanese because the Chinese are not honorary whites
and whites are real whites. I'm just using the term "honorary white's
parking lot" for an irony, so never mind it. And most of those
honorary whites Tokyoites in such "upper-class" region in Tokyo don't
speak any English. But they are the typical pseudo westerners carrying
such French brand goods like Luis Vuitton, Chanel things. And they
live in a western life style so I'm ironically calling them so.
> using the South African apartheid term for Japanese businessmen when
blacks
> and colored people were at the same level as dogs???
Yes, I'm ironically using the term for those Tokyo businessmen type or
"upper-class" type Tokyoites who are proud of being treated as
honorary whites in South African Apartheid.
> And where do you get the wisdom that this guy (or anybody else) has no
right
> to call the police? Anybody can, as long it doesn't constitute
harrassment.
Hey who has such a right of calling police about such a private issue?
Does a man have a right to call police if he finds his wife sleeping
with other man? Actually in this case, the owner of the parking lot is
violating the criminal law by placing his van in her way and then
blocking her not to leave. He has no right to confine her.
Calling police without realizing any violation is a false accusation
and a calumny. And blocking her way is a Taiho Kankin Zai(illegal
arrest and confinement) in this country. The honorary white Tokyoite
had no right to forcibly block up her way.
I think he should be sentenced at least a year by the charge of
illegal arrest and confinement toward the woman.
If someone posts this case to the TV program "Gyouretsu No Dekiru
Houritsu Soudansho", I think those attorneys there would claim as same
as I do.
> If you bump into my car, admit your mistake and offer cash, I can still
call
> the police since this gives me more leverage in a legal dispute with you
or
> your
> insurance afterward...
> Whether police involvment helps or has it's dawback is another story.
>
>
>
>
> > Nevertheless, she shouldn't have slapped the cop. She should be
> > accused as a simple outrage against police but since police had
> > grabbed her arm before she slapped him, it shouldn't be accused. The
> > worst one is the honorary white Tokyoite. He should be accused as
> > illegal call to police. Actually occupying someone's parking lot
> > without any permission is not any violation. It's just a private
> > trouble and he had no right to call police. So she can accuse him as
> > defamation of character. Also the Tokyoite should be accused as
> > obstruction of her traffic.
>
>
>
> You sound like an American lawyer who would jump on any money-generating
> opportunity and even sue the lamp post and the parking lot pillar if there
> is a way to win...
>
>
> Sigi
>
>
>
>
>
>
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