My question involves criminal law for the state of: Iowa.
Is it abusive of the law for a Sheriff to agree with the landlord (co-resident in multi-unit compound) of a private residence to never return to a tenants residence, for trespass claims against a tenant (by a homeowner at the end of that public road, who conceals his property from the public instead of marking or protecting it), or any other motive, and then go ahead and saunter past lawfully parked tenant vehicles up the landlord-owned alley and bang on the tenant's back door with the effect of kidnapping the tenant when they open to remind the cop that the behavior is criminal?
https://youtu.be/CYNkbQWdE0k
https://youtu.be/lCx4dqYZtoI
Is it abusive of the law for a Sheriff to agree with the landlord (co-resident in multi-unit compound) of a private residence to never return to a tenants residence, for trespass claims against a tenant (by a homeowner at the end of that public road, who conceals his property from the public instead of marking or protecting it), or any other motive, and then go ahead and saunter past lawfully parked tenant vehicles up the landlord-owned alley and bang on the tenant's back door with the effect of kidnapping the tenant when they open to remind the cop that the behavior is criminal?
https://youtu.be/CYNkbQWdE0k
https://youtu.be/lCx4dqYZtoI
Arrest Procedure: Sheriff Avoids a Landlord Residence Call in Favor of Breaking in to Next-Door Tenant
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