Highest Rated Comments


Hubblesphere56 karma

Allegedly. Yet police raided the house and found nothing. So clearly no justification for a no-knock if there wasn’t anything in the house to find. Police should have clear evidence of criminal activity to justify a warrant.

Hubblesphere27 karma

Police found no drugs or any evidence of wrongdoing.

Hubblesphere4 karma

Hey Jenny! Just wanted to say I enjoyed the new album! Also I became a fan after seeing you on tour with Against Me! in Indiana so if you could do some more touring in the midwest it would be pretty awesome to say the least!

Question: Would you rather fight 100 duck sized horses or 1 horse sized duck?

Hubblesphere2 karma

It's more or less a very nice power point presentation(usually in PDF form) explaining everything, showing examples etc to give whoever you're pitching to a nice visual representation of your ideas. Usually a pitch deck can stand on it's own without needing a narration which makes it a bit different from a power point or meeting presentation.

Hubblesphere1 karma

They didn't even have probable cause.

We aren't talking about a normal search warrant we are talking about a no-knock raid. It was rubber stamped without any reasonable cause. Anytime a no-knock warrant is issued it needs some serious justification IMO like risk to life. Otherwise it is excessive force to bust in with guns out.

You're acting like there was even probable cause in the first place. Looking at the evidence so far seems there was falsified probable cause and rubber stamping. No one should want police to operate in this fashion. I'm glad these raids have since been banned in Louisville.