Article Yaniv raided / arrested by RCMP

This is the last time I'm going to repeat myself on this point, but no, that doesn't happen all the time, and "federal officers" (FYI all RCMP are federal police officers, it's just that some are posted to local detachments and some are in federal offices--they have the same powers) are not needed to execute a search warrant for weapons. "Local" RCMP execute search warrants for weapons offences regularly.

This explanation for the length of the search keeps being repeated here but it's simply wrong and nonsensical. That's my last word on this issue because the people who don't believe me at this point just aren't going to believe me.
Most everyone is on board with you, it’s just like two or three people who have been hurt before and don’t want to get their hopes up. Or they can’t fuckin read, I dunno.
 
(Originally composed after reading through page 14; posted now due to DDOS).

- Langley RCMP have known about this tazer and given him coaching on how to not get in trouble with it
Why would Langley RCMP help him? They are the ones that have a file full of complaints against him. Starting to think he might have friends in law enforcement.

This is one of the most head-scratching aspects of the thread. I could understand the police investigating someone who turns out to be a nuisance as opposed to someone committing illegal acts and advising them that they will get arrested if their annoying behavior crosses the line into illegal conduct. However, I can't grasp the idea that police would in effect tell someone "We know you have an illegal, prohibited weapon. Here's what you can do to stay out of trouble."

One can only speculate as to this being why the RCMP assumed administration of this search warrant over the local constabulary. If Yaniv truly does have any kind of close rapport with local law enforcement, outsiders executing the warrant would be needed to avoid any claims of partiality or impropriety.

I wouldn't anticipate them fucking up, though. If they find anything, it's probably legit, because they're acting like they're doing things seriously by the book to avoid such a fuckup, probably ironically thanks to Yaniv's own litigiousness. They're cutting out the local goofballs who have cucked out to him over and over and having it done by actually competent police.
Considering the time, effort, and resources that go into obtaining a search warrant that will stand up to legal challenges, those involved don't want anything to happen during its execution that would jeopardize their case. The fact that Yaniv is serial litigant likely adds an additional degree of making sure everything was in impeccable order before the warrant was executed.

Remind me to not use sarcasm on an internet board.
Supposedly, blue text is the universal sarcasm font. Try that next time.

Call me a party pooper, but I'm not holding out much hope for this.
As I write this, it appears Yaniv is under arrest for having the taser. Whether other charges -- especially for creeping on underage girls -- come or not remains to be seen. Still, Yaniv is now in a situation where an attorney will be necessary. This charge isn't something that can be swept away by the BCHRT.

Oh my god that's super fucking exceptional, she just gave them more than enough probable cause to go digging through her computing devices for CP. Jesus.

That seems like the most exceptionally-wrong way to report unwanted CP to law enforcement.

A few years back, someone with a middle school-aged child told me how the pair attended a parent/child assembly on cyber-safety sponsored by the middle school and our local (US-based) police. One of the topics that came up was how to handle an unsolicited message that contains inappropriate images such as indecent pictures of minors. I can't recall the full process outlined, but I seem to recall that those assembled were told to do some form of documentation (date, time, who sent what, etc.) before contacting law enforcement so to minimize the chances they would be seen as soliciting or distributing the image.

TL;DR - Yaniv (unsurprisingly?) appears to have handled this in the worst way possible and could possibly get much-deserved scrutiny for past creepiness that still falls within any statute of limitations.
 
Yaniv, of course, interprets this as the cops loving him because in his world, everyone is either an ally who will defend him or an evil enemy bent on destroying him. There's nothing in-between because everything is personal and all about him.

Interestingly enough this is one of the diagnostic signs of borderline personality disorder


People with BPD also have a tendency to think in extremes, a phenomenon called “dichotomous” or “black-or-white” thinking. People with BPD often struggle to see the complexity in people and situations and are unable to recognize that things are often not either perfect or horrible, but are something in between. This can lead to "splitting," which refers to an inability to maintain a cohesive set of beliefs about oneself and others.

Because of these extreme patterns of thinking, people with borderline personality are prone to slip from one side to the opposite side in their thinking. For example, they might one day believe that their partner is the most wonderful, loving person in the world, and the next thing that they are evil, hateful and full of contempt. This can harm their potential to hold lasting interpersonal relationships and how they can interact with others.

More colloquially if your opinion of people suddenly switches from thinking they're your best friend to your worst enemy it's a sign you're fucking nuts. I suspect at some point he'll try and report the RCMP to the BCHRT for transphobia or something and in classic cop fashion they'll point to his earlier statements claiming he had a good relationship with them and make the case that his complaint is motivated by them investigating him.

Of course he's probably not smart enough to sense that the mood about him has changed and someone seen as a scumbag is treated much more peremptorily by the legal system than someone seen as a victim.
 
Apparently that wasn't enough. The icing on top is where the article mentions, "Yaniv’s discussion of the weapons followed a lengthy racist rant disparaging the East Indian and immigrant communities of British Columbia, asserting “we have f*cked up people who migrate here, who think they can do whatever they want.”" That's one way to fuck yourself even harder.
I mean neighboring country or not, this comes a day after you have a weekend of two mass shootings, one of which has a guy with a manifesto basically saying the same thing about immigrants. It's tasteless of me to say that I think that played a part in the RCMP finally taking minuscule action but it's certainly not a good look.

Not that JY is aware of shit outside of himself and his own existence.
 
Even if they didn't have a cp warrant at the time, they sure would get one after he calls them up to say he has some cp. Let's say he lied about that though. Idk why he would but let's just say he did. They could probably get a warrant just for him giving a quote to a national newspaper that he has child porn. Even if he's lying. The cops don't know that. It's honestly so stupid he even said it at all. What a fucking tool, seriously.
Most everyone is on board with you, it’s just like two or three people who have been hurt before and don’t want to get their hopes up. Or they can’t fuckin read, I dunno.
I can't fuckin read, sorry

Interestingly enough this is one of the diagnostic signs of borderline personality disorder




More colloquially if your opinion of people suddenly switches from thinking they're your best friend to your worst enemy it's a sign you're fucking nuts. I suspect at some point he'll try and report the RCMP to the BCHRT for transphobia or something and in classic cop fashion they'll point to his earlier statements claiming he had a good relationship with them and make the case that his complaint is motivated by them investigating him.

Of course he's probably not smart enough to sense that the mood about him has changed and someone seen as a scumbag is treated much more peremptorily by the legal system than someone seen as a victim.
Yaniv is just saying whatever he thinks sounds best at the moment, it isn't a reflection of his real opinion. BPD people torture themselves a lot about who are their real friends/enemies out of an emotional obsession with abandonment, while Yaniv is trying to score pity or intimidate people for saying things he doesn't like. BPD patients are reeeeeeaaal fucked up, but they have a conscious, even if they tend to think that the intensity of their emotions justifies amoral behavior. as frightening as that is, it is better than the absence of morality as a concept.
 
Call me a party pooper, but I'm not holding out much hope for this. Until the fat pedo is on trial and convicted for weapons and cp charges, I'm going to remain cynical.

Given how Yaniv has gotten away with so much so far, it'd be just typical for him to be let free later in the day so he can laugh about how the silly police (his friends, naturally) were sooo apologetic about having to search his place but nasty hate-filled terfs made them do it, and the police found nothing (apart from his stun gun, which they kept and told him not to be so obvious if he bought a replacement for it). Well, Jonathan will be so sorry, but he will be taking every officer of the RCMP who was involved in this raid to the BCHRT because it hurt his feelings and didn't validate his gender.

I really hope I'm wrong. No-one is as obvious about their pedophilia as Jonathan Yaniv is unless they have plenty of experience and believe they won't be caught. But tampon Jon has a horrible habit of always coming out smelling of roses (and wearing a smug smile), no matter what shit he throws.

Please, RCMP, don't let us down. Seeing this fat fuck gloating about getting away with child grooming and illegal weapons possession will be so frustrating.
Let me tell you what I know about these raids, at least in the USA. They show up, raid your place, van you, interrogate you, etc and then there's a long period of....nothing. Maybe up to a year while you stew and don't know what will happen or when. Then one day they show up to process you and they throw your ass in jail, and if you're lucky, someone bails you out. It ain't cheap and you better have a good bail bondsman. Then a few months later, you stand trial and they decide whether you get prison, probation, etc and if it's related to... certain types of images... the registry and extremely tight restrictions on where you may live, work, and be in public. You get 48 hours to move to an approved location, and good fucking luck finding it. If you don't find such lodgings, you go straight to prison. So if they get him for CP, his life is going to be hell forever.
 
I can't fuckin read, sorry


Yaniv is just saying whatever he thinks sounds best at the moment, it isn't a reflection of his real opinion. BPD people torture themselves a lot about who are their real friends/enemies out of an emotional obsession with abandonment, while Yaniv is trying to score pity or intimidate people for saying things he doesn't like. BPD patients are reeeeeeaaal fucked up, but they have a conscious, even if they tend to think that the intensity of their emotions justifies amoral behavior. as frightening as that is, it is better than the absence of morality as a concept.
Yeah I really think Yaniv has a lack of empathy and a lack of morality because of the lack of empathy. I'm sure he's got one of the scarier disorders you don't want to go anywhere near, but not one that has an underlying empathy or morality behind it.
 
Interestingly enough this is one of the diagnostic signs of borderline personality disorder




More colloquially if your opinion of people suddenly switches from thinking they're your best friend to your worst enemy it's a sign you're fucking nuts.
Yaniv definitely has cluster B fuckery going on, but I’d seriously doubt he’s BPD. One of the hallmarks is intense feelings of shame, worthlessness and emptiness. We all know he has none of those things. The idealising/devaluing thing is called splitting, and it’s something narcissists also tend to do (as well as borderlines), but with narcs it particularly applies to authorities that they believe support or are against them.
 
All he had to do was to shut up back in December and hide out for a couple of years, and, of course, quit publicly being a piece of shit, and this would have all blown over. How did he ever think doubling-down and becoming ultra-public litigious pedo-tampon queer rights activist was a good idea?

Regardless, what he have here is the better outcome, but he could have easily dodged.

It is pretty clear that in addition to being a pedo Yaniv has a lot of other issues. Sadly Canada doesn't have the death penalty because this dude is always going to be a predator of children and nuisance to everyone else.
 
What a ride this thread has been so far. So if I have this right:
>Local+neighboring municipality cops had Yaniv and his mom removed from his apartment/condo
>they either searched for 14 hours or secured the premises until someone could get there to search
>they found two stun guns and two cans of spray
>as of right now, Yaniv is getting a slap on the wrist


So what we're looking at is the continued building of a case or a "wait and see" while the attorney/judge side of things determines what to do, basically?
 
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Interestingly enough this is one of the diagnostic signs of borderline personality disorder




More colloquially if your opinion of people suddenly switches from thinking they're your best friend to your worst enemy it's a sign you're fucking nuts. I suspect at some point he'll try and report the RCMP to the BCHRT for transphobia or something and in classic cop fashion they'll point to his earlier statements claiming he had a good relationship with them and make the case that his complaint is motivated by them investigating him.

Of course he's probably not smart enough to sense that the mood about him has changed and someone seen as a scumbag is treated much more peremptorily by the legal system than someone seen as a victim.

I think he's more narcissistic than borderline, but there's so much overlap between Cluster B personality disorders and their behaviors. I agree, I wouldn't be shocked if he splits the RCMP black, should he ever face any sort of charges from them. The HRT, too, if he loses his cases.
 
My understanding from reading the same material is that they were waiting for a federal officer instead of a local one. because of jurisdiction bullshit. That is exactly the type of shit that happens all the time. Everything takes god damned forever in the legal system.

Yup.

I don’t why the jurisdictional issue is so hard to understand. Just because local police searches for weapons, drugs, etc on a regular basis, it doesn’t make it unthinkable that the complaint was made to another RCMP office, and they therefore are doing the investigation.

Especially if the local branch (for legitimate reasons or not) can be seen as too friendly or too close to Yaniv. (He has bragged about his good relations with them numerous times.)
So the RCMP expend *more* resources when someone *isn't* a "high priority target?" How does that make any sense?

Surely you’re not so exceptional, that you don’t realize that: “A weapons complaint is serious enough to be investigated” and “Yaniv isn’t important enough for the Federal RCMP to station officers in BC to shadow him” are two mutually exclusive statements.
 
Yaniv definitely has cluster B fuckery going on, but I’d seriously doubt he’s BPD. One of the hallmarks is intense feelings of shame, worthlessness and emptiness. We all know he has none of those things. The idealising/devaluing thing is called splitting, and it’s something narcissists also tend to do (as well as borderlines), but with narcs it particularly applies to authorities that they believe support or are against them.


The DSM-5 indicates that persons with NPD usually display some or all of the following symptoms, typically without the commensurate qualities or accomplishments:[6][9]

* Grandiosity with expectations of superior treatment from other people
* Fixation on fantasies of power, success, intelligence, attractiveness, etc.
* Self-perception of being unique, superior, and associated with high-status people and institutions
* Need for continual admiration from others
* Sense of entitlement to special treatment and to obedience from others
* Exploitation of others to achieve personal gain
* Unwillingness to empathize with the feelings, wishes, and needs of other people
* Intense envy of others, and the belief that others are equally envious of them
* Constantly demeans, bullies and belittles others

Wow. That describes him to a T.
 
Yup.

I don’t why the jurisdictional issue is so hard to understand. Just because local police searches for weapons, drugs, etc on a regular basis, it doesn’t make it unthinkable that the complaint was made to another RCMP office, and they therefore are doing the investigation.

Especially if the local branch (for legitimate reasons or not) can be seen as too friendly or too close to Yaniv. (He has bragged about his good relations with them numerous times.)


Surely you’re not so exceptional, that you don’t realize that: “A weapons complaint is serious enough to be investigated” and “Yaniv isn’t important enough for the Federal RCMP to station officers in BC to shadow him” are two mutually exclusive statements.

Federal RCMP offices don't duplicate the same day-to-day, street-level policing that local RCMP detachments are there to do. Federal offices deal with things like training, specialized investigations, forensics, etc. They don't get assigned files like this and local detachments don't have officers stand around for them instead of doing work they themselves are qualified to do.

And the idea that Yaniv delusionally boasting about being buddies with the cops somehow creates a conflict of interest that would cause the RCMP to bring in people from another detachment is laughable. Police deal with insane people who claim stuff like that all the time.

P.S. I know I said the last post was my last on this, but a few more points were made here. I realize this argument is stupid as hell and apologize for shitting up the thread.
 
What a ride this thread has been so far. So if I have this right:
>Local+neighboring municipality cops had Yaniv and his mom removed from his apartment/condo
>they either searched for 14 hours or secured the premises until someone could get there to search
>they found two stun guns and two cans of spray
>as of right now, Yaniv is getting a slap on the wrist


So what we're looking at is the continued building of a case or a "wait and see" while the attorney/judge side of things determines what to do, basically?

Well, eventually it’ll be brought to court, and yes, Yaniv will most likely get a slap on the wrist.

Some people speculate that they might try to build a bigger case with CP, online grooming etc. but it’s all kind of optimistic. (Though not impossible.)
 
Yup.

I don’t why the jurisdictional issue is so hard to understand. Just because local police searches for weapons, drugs, etc on a regular basis, it doesn’t make it unthinkable that the complaint was made to another RCMP office, and they therefore are doing the investigation.

Especially if the local branch (for legitimate reasons or not) can be seen as too friendly or too close to Yaniv. (He has bragged about his good relations with them numerous times.)


Surely you’re not so exceptional, that you don’t realize that: “A weapons complaint is serious enough to be investigated” and “Yaniv isn’t important enough for the Federal RCMP to station officers in BC to shadow him” are two mutually exclusive statements.
Ok but I don't understand what's so hard to understand about the fact that the RCMP are federal like, all the time. There is no such thing as the RCMP waiting for RCMP because only the RCMP have jurisdiction so the RCMP can't do anything until the RCMP get there. Seriously. Dude. All RCMP are federal officers. All of them.

RCMP take the place of local police forces that don't have them. That doesn't change the fact that they are federal officers. They don't get demoted or lose federal jurisdiction.
 
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