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Now THIS is fun, and can be informative-- Choose your own adventure: You've been falsely arrested

fabulouslyghetto

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Ignoring the gross underlying truth that this is what the average American is up against, a system that protects abusers given immeasurable authority and affords little in the way of fairness for civilians, it's an interesting concept.

To the unfamiliar, "choose your own adventure" [via wiki] is/was a popular style of interactive fiction, with the reader assuming the role of the protagonist and making choices that determine the main character's actions and the plot's outcome.

basic format: you read page one, at the bottom of the page you're given two choices/actions, and jump to a specific page to continue the story based on your decision. There are multiple possible outcomes all riding on the course of action you choose.

The aim this time is to "win" in a scenario where you're arrested by a dishonest cop and to make legal decisions that you feel will leave you with a satisfying outcome. Now I'm a stickler for puzzles and word problems and shit so I'm GOING to find a way to beat it.

As this story starts, you were falsely arrested for resisting arrest and have been in jail for two days.

Click to start
 
I hope the California supreme court makes the right decision, and the California Congress needs to pass a law that makes it a requirement to report misconduct to the prosecution as well as the defense. This is beyond ridiculous.

Guys, please follow fabulousghetto's link and read the article. Everyone should be outraged over this.
 
I hope the California supreme court makes the right decision, and the California Congress needs to pass a law that makes it a requirement to report misconduct to the prosecution as well as the defense. This is beyond ridiculous.

Guys, please follow fabulousghetto's link and read the article. Everyone should be outraged over this.

I did try Al.

Unfortunately, our website is currently unavailable in most European countries. We are engaged on the issue and committed to looking at options that support our full range of digital offerings to the EU market. We continue to identify technical compliance solutions that will provide all readers with our award-winning journalism.

#-o
 
I won!!!

You're free!
You have spent 131 days in jail
xxxx turns out to be a credible witness
and convinces the jury that the officer was
lying in your case. You're acquitted.
You've lost your job.
Officer Smith continues to patrol. His
misconduct remains secret.
You made the rare decision to file a Pitchess
motion and see it through to trial. But the next
person who encounters Smith will have to go
through the entire process again.
 
You're free!
You have spent 128 days in jail

Mike turns out to be a credible witness and he convinces the jury that the officer was lying in your case. You're acquitted.
You've lost your job.
Officer Smith continues to patrol. His misconduct remains secret.
You made the rare decision to file a Pitchess motion and see it through to trial. But the next person who encounters Smith will have to go through the entire process again.
 
I won!!!

You're free!
You have spent 131 days in jail
xxxx turns out to be a credible witness
and convinces the jury that the officer was
lying in your case. You're acquitted.
You've lost your job.
Officer Smith continues to patrol. His
misconduct remains secret.

You made the rare decision to file a Pitchess
motion and see it through to trial. But the next
person who encounters Smith will have to go
through the entire process again.

:rotflmao:
 
I hope the California supreme court makes the right decision, and the California Congress needs to pass a law that makes it a requirement to report misconduct to the prosecution as well as the defense. This is beyond ridiculous.

Guys, please follow fabulousghetto's link and read the article. Everyone should be outraged over this.

3Y3G.gif


I'm dealing with work stuff that came outta no-fucking-where so I haven't had a chance to run through it, I did start and got so distracted I gave up after just a few moves. Will hopefully have time to try again later tonight.
 
I won!!!

You're free!
You have spent 131 days in jail
xxxx turns out to be a credible witness
and convinces the jury that the officer was
lying in your case. You're acquitted.
You've lost your job.
Officer Smith continues to patrol. His
misconduct remains secret.
You made the rare decision to file a Pitchess
motion and see it through to trial. But the next
person who encounters Smith will have to go
through the entire process again.


I got this too but I think I'd sue the police dept. et al and prolly settle out of court for a hefty sum.
 
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