The person I decided to interview is a young woman by the name of Shaunna Beaudoin. She grew up in Brookton, Main and attends school at Husson University where she is pursuing her degree in criminal justice. She is currently a law officer in Wells, Maine and even though she is just starting out in this profession at the age of 21 she is certain that police work is her calling. When asked why she wanted to be in law enforcement she replied “well my family has been in law enforcement for the past three generations so I was kind of raised to follow suit” not to say she did not think any other professions growing up, but it was police work that that she ultimately came back to every time. Though there was lack of support from her family she has noticed the pressure of being a female in the police force. Just listening to her describe how much she felt she had to prove to be seen as an equal in this profession, I could sense a presence of excitement as she was explained it to me as if it were a challenge that she had been waiting for, for a long time. Shaunna says she was not pressured into the career from her family, and she knew how stressful and demanding the lifestyle could be…show more content… E. as law which dominates life itself even though it has not been posited in legal propositions. It has the ability to recognize when it makes a mistake and corrects it, for example the bright line rule. The originally allowed you mirandize an individual and let them go after speaking with them, but prevented you form questioning them again says Shaunna. The Supreme Court realized that this was not effective in the justice system so they created the Bright line rule, which enable an officer to mirandize someone, release them back into the population they came from, and then mirandize them again 14 days