A person has a dispute with on private property but once the police arrive he or she agrees to leave. Before they are officially off the property the police suddenly ask for ID. The person refuses to comply with the ID request, afraid that their wallet might be mistaken for a weapon. Suddenly the police start screaming for the person to get on the floor. The person senses injustice taking place and refuses to get down.
So basically there is a charge for trespassing and resisting arrest that really stem from a justified refusal to ID.
Also I've seen videos where police scream "stop resisting" and the confused person isn't resisting at all. Are you familiar with this tactic?
I have to be honest here.
Your example paints the police as jumpy, outlandish, and unreasonable... it feels really slanted.
Any ways,
Since I've run calls like your example a billion times now... here's how it would work:
Dispatch to police: Units respond to 123 Smith Street. Complainant advises there's an individual refusing to leave his property.
*police arrive*
We talk to the complainant and the person who is on the property but doesn't belong there. We get both sides of the story. Is there a dispute? Can it be resolved? What's the issue? We find out, talk to everyone, try to settle it.
But okay, let's say the "suspect" is at fault, he doesn't belong on the property, and the property owner is telling him to leave. So we tell the guy he has to leave. He accepts.
The police leave. On to the next call.
OR
Yeah, maybe one of the cops asks the suspect to identify himself prior to him leaving. The suspect refuses and continues to walk away and leave the property.
Oh well. The police leave. On to the next call.
The state I work in does not have a "fail to identify" law (except on traffic stops, or in certain other cases)... so if the guy is trespassing, but as soon as police arrive, agrees to leave, but then just keeps walking away and says he doesn't want to identify himself... great, see ya buddy!
Most likely the complainant knows who he is. Plus, it's really the complainant who has a gripe with the guy, so we'll just tell him "if he comes back and trespasses, call us"... cause after being advised by us not to return to the private property, then yeah we can definitely arrest him if he returns.
But again, what's the beef between him and the complainant? Why would he return? Is it some bogus non-sense that is a waste of police time? If it's something bogus and the guy DOES return to the property (but let's say he's GOA or Gone-On-Arrival the second time we show up)... we may just tell the complainant to go file his own charges and let the complainant handle it.
Contrary to popular belief, the police do not want to get involved in every little immature ridiculous nonsense dispute people have with each other. Once you become a cop, you realize grown-adults act like children ALL THE TIME. That's why you'll see a 23 yr old officer talking to a 63 yr old man and the cop talks to him like he's the guy's father. Adults act like kids all day everyday.
So, yeah, very good chance we'll tell the complainant in this case to file his own charges because there's probably some stupid dispute going on between him and the guy who was "trespassing"....
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If someone IS under arrest and they fail to identify that's their problem. They just sit in jail until the correctional staff IDs them through fingerprinting or other methods and so they'll be in jail that much longer.
I'll write up my charges and leave his identity blank or list him as a "John Doe" until the correctional staff gets back with me the results and tells me who he is.
PS: My state doesn't have a fail to identify law, however we do have "false statement" so lying about who you are can likely lead to your arrest...
PSPS: In my experiences, if someone doesn't want to identify themselves it's because they have outstanding open warrants... plain and simple. Or, they have a rap sheet a mile long and just don't want you (the police) to know about it.
People are not out there making political statements and saying they don't want to identify themselves because they want to make their liberal anti-government message heard loud and clear. Nope. It's cause they got warrants.