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by whatpad 2864 days ago
Armchair grandstanding.

If an EMT asks a bystander for help and he refuses, he did not commit a crime.

3 comments

The situation with Verizon is more like a case of an EMT asking a bystander to get out of the way, which the bystander absolutely has an obligation to comply with. But it's complicated by the fact that Verizon isn't just a bystander but a company that had an existing contract with the fire department, and had previously been informed that their throttling was causing problems.
No, but if I as an EMT or paramedic, ask you to get out of my way, and you refuse, you absolutely are committing a crime.
Telecoms is CNI its entirely different