I was surprised at something my attorney is saying about my case. I hope I've understood it correctly. A policeman/woman may legally detain someone whom he or she believes has committed a crime and it wouldn't be false imprisonment, but a private individual may only detain someone who has actually committed a crime or the detention is false imprisonment. "Probable cause" is irrelevant to a private individual. That I was found to not have committed a crime necessarily means that I was falsely imprisoned, even if there had been probable cause to believe I had committed a crime.
----- nightoftheiguana2000 <nightoftheiguana2000@yahoo.com> wrote:
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>--- In vpFREE@yahoogroups.com, "rob.singer1111" <rob.singer1111@...> wrote:
> > I've been at a machine when tapped on the shoulder, & taken into an office
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> I think the lawyers all say that you should never agree to go to any backroom or office out of the public eye and away from cameras. That's usually where the bad stuff happens. If they don't want you to play, ask to cash out your comp and leave. If they won't let you cash out your comp, call gaming. You have their number on your cellphone, right? As long as you haven't committed a felony, they can't detain you, that would be false arrest.
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Re: [vpFREE] Re: LVSun: Lawsuits pile up as alleged casino assaults continue
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