Materials Of Potential Interest
Active Entries
- 1: Snoflake Challenge 2026 #15: Five Stars
- 2: Snowflake Challenge 02026 #14: Primers and Recommendations
- 3: Snowflake Challenge 02026 #13: Community
- 4: The commenting culture of my writing space (now with mini-bio!)
- 5: Snowflake Challenge 02026 #12: A Token of Our Appreciation
- 6: Snowflake Challenge 02026 #5: Wishlist
- 7: Snowflake Challenge 02026 #11: Wish-Granting Engine
- 8: Snowflake Challenge 02026 #10: The Aesthetic of It All
- 9: This year begins with an increase in atrocity and destruction - Early January 02026
- 10: Snowflake Challenge 02026 #9: Tropes Are Tools
Style Credit
- Base style: Refried Tablet by and
- Theme: Black Eye II by
Expand Cut Tags
No cut tags
no subject
Date: 2007-11-23 07:01 pm (UTC)Yes, it is illegal for police to enter a house without a warrant unless they can prove they had reasonable suspicion that a crime was taking place there (meaning if the police saw someone in your house with a knife brandished, they could probably use the keyless entry technique and have it stand up in court). Yes, they should get in trouble for it. No, they won't.