So, just say you happen to own a Ferarri F50. It's worth three-quarters of a million dollars.
It gets stolen. Hey, it happens.
However, on this occasion, the cops actually find it. Cool eh? Well, the cops hang on to it, you know, to help with their investigation.
Er, okay.
Now, say a cop and a prosecutor decide to take your $750K car out for a spin while it's in their custody and total it. Who'd pay for that?
Not the cops.
The insurance company tried to get the feds to pay for the wreck, but the judge cited a law that stated that the gov is immune to lawsuits when property is in the custody of authorities.
Is it just me that sees anything wrong with this?
It gets stolen. Hey, it happens.
However, on this occasion, the cops actually find it. Cool eh? Well, the cops hang on to it, you know, to help with their investigation.
Er, okay.
Now, say a cop and a prosecutor decide to take your $750K car out for a spin while it's in their custody and total it. Who'd pay for that?
Not the cops.
The insurance company tried to get the feds to pay for the wreck, but the judge cited a law that stated that the gov is immune to lawsuits when property is in the custody of authorities.
Is it just me that sees anything wrong with this?
Comment