It was a jailmate, who said she became despondent after her family refused to take her calls. Sorry, I don't have time right now to go back through all the links to find the exact quote.
I do have this. Apparently her mother was called immediately, and nothing happened with that.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articl...bail-before-allegedly-committing-suicide.html
But why, even if true, does this matter? There are all sorts of reasons her family may not have responded - we simply don't know why. Either way, it's hardly indicative of them not caring for her - I'm sure they didn't for a moment ever think her life was at risk.
I just don't get why her prior convictions, past marijuana use, or failure to pay fines matter in a traffic stop gone bad. Or how her family not bailing her out - for whatever reason - is in anyway relevant to either a traffic stop gone bad or a jail not following standard operating procedures.
To me, it comes across as justifying the actions of a trooper whose own boss states he didn't follow procedures correctly and the intake process of a jail that's already been cited for failures specifically in regards to suicide prevention. Regardless of anything Sandy did, or didn't do, you still have both a trooper and a jail failing to follow protocol.
Respectfully BBM, your correct, SOME PEOPLE do keep saying that, on these 3 threads, and in SM. HE DID HAVE A RIGHT TO HAVE HER STEP OUT OF THE CAR. There is even US Supreme Court cases to back it up. SOME PEOPLE are also keep saying that he had to tell her what she was arrest for at the time she kept asking, Again, that is incorrect and also US SUPREME COURT cases to back that up. I posted links few pages back... There are a lot of stuff SOME PEOPLE keep saying that isn't true.
Absolutely you're right but in this case it isn't quite so simple as quoting People vs. Mimms. Here's a great article explaining the different points of constitutional rights - and may go a long way in explaining why Sandy felt she had the right to not comply with the officer's 'lawful' order...
So in short: Bland did not have to put out her cigarette. She likely had to exit the car, although it’s possible to that she didn’t have to because the officer was ordering her out of the car for reasons of retaliation — a possibility that might have been raised later in court, but wouldn’t persuade the officer.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news.../23/the-law-of-the-sandra-bland-traffic-stop/
I'm not going to sit here and argue about how my opinions and perceptions differ from someone else's, but I will say that I don't believe that he had the right to grab her and/or try to yank her out of her car. I also don't believe (not quite as firmly, but enough to state it) that he had the right to point his taser at her and threaten to use it when she was sitting in her car, had not threatened him in anyway (other than with a call to her lawyer), and hadn't even raised her voice much. He had already called for back up by that time, and he should have just waited for it or let her leave since their business was already completed once he gave her the warning.
MOO
Having the right and being right are wholly different in my opinion. Legally, an officer
superficially has the right to order someone from the vehicle and if they don't comply, he/she can use reasonable force to remove that person from the vehicle. But was he right? I'd say absolutely not.
BE escalated events very, very quickly and made several errors. At no point did he explain to Sandy why he wanted her to exit the vehicle and the transcript certainly seems to imply it was somehow related to her refusal to extinguish her cigarette - which was framed as a request but technically 'could' be a lawful order citing officer safety. And then you have the added issue that the warning was already written and did BE even have grounds to detain her further? And that becomes a sticking point, was his lawful order to exit the vehicle actually legal because if it wasn't, Sandy didn't have to comply in the first place. JMO
These both go into great detail about finer points that, if followed correctly, may have made all the difference:
The question there becomes, is the officer’s order lawful? What crime is he investigating, is there a lawful basis to detain her there by the side of the road at this point? If it is a lawful order for her to step out of the vehicle, she does have to follow it. But I haven’t seen any basis in the dashcam video for the detention to continue at this point.
So breaking it down further, we have a woman stopped by the side of the road. Alone with a police officer who is making unlawful demands of her. You dont have to obey an unlawful order, but on the other side of it, with what amount of force can you resist an unlawful order? Because, it is important to remember that you still have the right to defend yourself against a police officer’s unlawful actions.
http://www.attn.com/stories/2498/sandra-bland-arrest-lawful
You can’t tell why. Certainly, telling her to put out the cig was not a lawful order. Just saying ‘Get out of the car,’ in and of itself, without an explanation, is not lawful. And you see him say that throughout the video without ever saying why [or] what’s going on here. It’s clear to me that he’s trying to assert authority that he probably does not have under the law, and he’s escalating the situation because he is upset. [He] doesn’t exercise the training that he needs to be exercising to de-escalate this situation
http://www.texasstandard.org/storie...a-bland-traffic-stop-every-texan-should-know/