Antiboyscout wrote: ↑Mon Jun 04, 2018 4:02 am
Sobriety can also be measured via hand-eye coordination and reaction tests not just with a breathalyzer.
It can be decided in that way, but I am pretty sure in many if not most jurisdictions merely having the blood alcohol level makes you impaired (if there is doubt about the accuracy of the breathalyzer you could hold hot for direct blood test), even if you have the working reflexes of a top jet fighter pilot or neurosurgeon at the time you are pulled over you are assumed impaired (or at least can be depending on how the prosecutor feels that day) just because of your blood alcohol level that is the way the law works as far as I know.
Antiboyscout wrote: ↑Mon Jun 04, 2018 4:02 am
As for statutory, I think the age gap and pre/pubescent has a lot more to do with it. Take it as it comes. Check the relationship dynamic. It it based on manipulation or is it honest?
Age and being pre/post-pubescent are correlated but not everyone goes through puberty at the same age, the law is just assuming stuff like that happens and is at play (As mentioned this cuts both ways if you know the age of the person you are allowed that to assume that all the pre/post pubescent manipulation stuff has taken care of itself at least with respect to statutory rape charges), just as the laws Fuzzy Necromancer is suggesting are needed make it illegal for police to have sex with prisoners assume there is a deep power imbalance that negates any apparent consent. The law's assumption is just if X then not Y, if not age of majority then no consent and if detained by the cops then no consent, if blood alcohol level above x parts per million then not fit to drive and so on. You can bring all that other stuff into play about pre and post pubescent manipulation and so on, but the prosecutor can get you just for the age difference of a day if he wants to, the judge may lesson your sentence if you can prove mitigating circumstances (assuming there are no mandatory minimum sentences at play), but again that is him being nice the assumption of the law is still there. Presumably the laws Fuzzy Necromancer suggests would likewise be subject to prosecutorial discretion and pleas of mitigating circumstances, so I fail to see the difference.
Admiral X wrote: ↑Mon Jun 04, 2018 5:49 pmThat isn't a case of someone making an accusation and then everyone just believing them.
Exactly what Fuzzy Necromancer is saying is if cops admit that they had sex with a person who was in their custody, they have admitted to the elements of a crime. He never said you did not have to prove that sex occurred or that the person was in custody.
Edit: Now in the main story Fuzzy brought up the cops seem to be preparing to deny they actually detained the person in question, so even if the laws Fuzzy is advocating for were brought in force in New York, the prosecutor still has to prove to the judge or jury that the woman was detained, so no assumption in the sense you seem to me. However the story mentions at least one or two if not more cases where police officers have been cleared of all charges despite admitting that there were sex acts on detained (handcuffed etc.) individuals, and such stories seem to have incited Fuzzy's "there should be a law" (in more states than currently) stance.