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Question:

How do I keep my son from taking his clothes off?

My son is 2 months shy of being 2 years old and here recently has learned how to take all his clothes, including his diaper, off. He used to just know how to remove his pants and shirt but he couldn't remove his onesies (sp?). Now he knows how to take his onesies off. Yesterday we went through 10 diapers because he kept removing them. I've thought about putting safety pins on his onsies to see if that will keep him from taking them off but I'm afraid he will end up hurting himself with one. I've thought about going ahead and letting him run around naked and just trying to potty train him but I'm going into the hospital tomorrow to have our second child and would not being able to continue with the training for a little while (I'm having a repeat c-section). Anyone else have any ideas? Duct tape maybe?

Answer:

Yes. You gave them permission. They could have pulled up the carpet if they wanted. I assume the trunk was also locked. They opened that as well.
Yes. The glove box is part of your car. You gave them permission to search your car, and that includes the glove box. If you had something in your car that you didn't want the police to find, you were a fool to consent to a search.
If you gave them permission to search your car they can open the glvoe box, it is part of the car!
Some alarms are silent alarms, and will indeed send a signal to the police if they go off. Most high-security installations use these, whereas domestic alarms are of the traditional variety. The usual aim of the alarms that make noise is twofold: * To let everyone else know that a burglar has attempted to break in (this is for the homeowner's safety more than anything else). * To scare the burglar off.
Yes they can, and heres why: When you gave them permission to search the car, that is what they did. You could have said Yes you can search the vehicle, but not the glove box it actually is legal to do this. However, if you do that, it seems suspicious and that may or may not (depending on local laws) give them probable cause to have a K9 unit come and sniff the vehicle. If the dog hits, then it is probable cause for them to open it. So it is a double edged sword, kinda. But the way you described it: Can I search the car? yes, yes, that was legal

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