subgenius wrote:Themis wrote:All we are looking at is what we know which is only this factor of speaking Spanish.
But it is not just speaking Spanish, the agent clearly states that it because speaking it in that area...you cannot honestly consider this without that blatant fact.
I haven't ignored that factor, and even addressed it many times trying to get you to address it. You bring up that even that town will have some Latino people which means Spanish is something other people in town will hear from time to time. It provides no evidence to suspect they are not American or in the US illegally.
or you could still ignore them.
I cannot address what has not been shown to exists yet. They have video in which they ask him and he only gives speaking Spanish in an area you don't here it often. If he had better reasons he would have given them instead of his lame excuse.
No it is not...cite the demographics of Havre and then move your goalposts. Besides, the agent's claim that Spanish is not heard around there much is a valid claim that is backed up by reality (a.k.a. facts). So, the real question is whether such a rare and/or unusual circumstance is suspicious....at least suspicious enough to justify a inquiry insamuch as that inquiry is allowed by law.
Stop trolling. You know we are using a vague term and I haven't disagreed with him saying it is not heard much. You know I disagree that it provides any reasonable ground to suspect they are not American or in the US illegally, and you have avoided explaining how speaking a language creates reasonable ground a crime has occurred.
We are talking about a specific gas station at a specific gas station and within a specific jurisdictional distance from a border...your argument here, while not good, may better justify the agent's suspicions because - as you would admit - a gas station near a border would seem to get lots of "traffic", including traffic from those illegally crossing the border...i would suspect (by using your logic) that near any border is the higher occurrence of illegal activity with regards to ICE concerns.
Proximity does not create reasonable grounds they are doing anything wrong, and it's close to the Canadian border. I doubt border agents are stopping anyone speaking french close to the border with Quebec.
Naw, I have answered it more than once (and in Havre, clearly speaking Spanish in public is unusual) - but in this particular circumstance it is evidence that the person(s) may be in the country illegally, because even with an occurrence of tourist traffic your premise is that it is uncommon to hear a foreign language spoken in that area, which creates a "believable" circumstance that the foreigner may not be a citizen and/or legal entrant - and being in the country illegally is a criminal violation.
I asked you how it is evidence the person may be in the country illegally and you haven't answered this. Someone there could be wearing a shirt with a Canadian flag on it making you think they may be Canadian, but that does not establish reasonable grounds they are Canadian or that they are in the US illegally.
maybe you could answer the question upthread i asked of you?
viewtopic.php?p=1123910#p1123910
I already said there could be other factors, but when asked he did not give any. I'm sure there can be many factors that could give him probable cause to stop one and check there status. Speaking another language is just not one of them.