The owners of a New Jersey diner have continued to defy state orders and local police in order to allow indoor dining - even after the police turned up to change the locks to their restaurant.
Couple, Brian and Debbie Brindisi, told NJ.com that they received a call from their alarm company on Friday morning around 4.30am notifying them that three doors at the Lakeside Diner had been broken into.
Debbie said they immediately went to the establishment where they found deputies from the Ocean County Sheriff's Office, a locksmith and the Lacey Township police.
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Welcome to The Soviet Union
ReplyDeleteMore power to 'em. It''s their gdam business and they have a right to do business. Their customers have a choice....and if they chose to eat there.....serve 'em food.
ReplyDeleteIf the owners and operators are competent, they know how to maintain a sanitary environment both in the kitchen and in the dining area. If they don't, the public is at risk for far more than just Covid.
ReplyDeleteGovernment is out of control. What to do.....
ReplyDeleteThey praise the police, knowing the officers are just following orders. The officers should return the favor by putting a "clerical error" on the citation so that the citation will be thrown out in court.
ReplyDeleteGeek
Not a single Democrat has a problem with that?
ReplyDeleteWe need more just like these two. Ef the government already!
ReplyDeleteI’m gonna start a go fund me for my killdozer.
ReplyDeleteNext time camp out in the store, wait for the thugs to break in and waste them.
ReplyDelete"I thought it was a rapist / murderer / thief! I was in fear for my life"
Solved.
You must have missed the part of the story where they stated "this is in New Jersey".
DeleteNo mention of a warrant or court issued restraining order. So they clearly have no real legal authority to bar the owners from gaining access to their building. Just like howbthe California governer is using tactics outside of the law to punish the peasants for disobeying these illegal and immoral edicts.
ReplyDeleteThey should have their attorney ask for a copy of the warrant which authorized them to enter the premises, bearing in mind that a warrant must show specific cause and identify exactly what they were looking for. Since the owners and employees were not present at the time of the break-in, and since it was after hours with the door locked, there was no probable cause to search for a person or persons therein, unless of course the warrant named a suspect other than the owners. Q.E.D., the cops should have known their actions were unlawful. Bring charges against the individual cops - and locksmith - for breaking and entering, attempted burglary, trespassing, etc. etc. Pile on chrages exactly the way most district attorneys and cops do.. Let those individuals identify the ones who conspired to order the break-in.
ReplyDelete