ANSWERS: 6
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Generally the officers make a case report from the first event whereby he would reference the situation, the suspects name and relevant information, as well as the facts surrounding the trespass notification. There is no paper trail other than the case (usually a misc report). The suspect (in this case your son) would not be given any paperwork, as the verbal directive is sufficient. Should the officer find the person at the same location again, he can, at his discretion, arrest the person and reference the first initial case as supporting documentation. If the officer has no previous documentation within a report then I would say that the chances of your son being convicted is slim to none.
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that was one sentence?!
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He committed a crime, he should pay the fine or do his time.
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ya i know how that goes they slap cuffs on about 2 seconds after the warning... a casino security guy once arrested me for trying to stay warm in the entryway after my friend and I got 86'd from our room for damages to the room... which I offered to pay to repair... they charged me $400 for a drywall patch and they kicked us out after we brought it to their attention that there was damage but we would pay to repair it... some thanks 8(
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He probably documented the incident but the real issue should be why your son was out getting into trouble. Not if it was his first or second time getting caught or if the officer had him sign something.
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An officer has not duty to warn a criminal before he arrests them.
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