Been to criminal court recently?
I understand its a happy coincidence when truth and the courts decree are the same.
Beginning in 1867 at Harvard Law School (give or take a couple years) our understanding of law reversed. Prior to that, at its most fundamental level, we believed that law is derived from truth. It was not the courts job to make something true, it was its job to discover the truth, and declare it. For context we need to understand that Evolution in the sciences was en vogue, and the best way to get published as a Professor was to participate in the trend. Some law professors found a way to use evolutionary theory in conjunction with the law, and they declared that there is no absolute truth, only what the law declares - this was a 180 degree reversal of all legal precedent to that date. It became very popular as it dovetailed nicely into the growth of evolutionary theory into all aspects of academia.
After a few years, all law schools in the US were teaching this principle, and after a few decades, judges, lawyers and police officers across the nation adopted it. Instead of enforcing a law they had received/derived from a pre-existent truth ... an idea our nation was founded on and the creation of our government was based upon, the very foundational principal by which our constitution was written ... our peace officers, judges, justices and congress BECAME the law. Whatever they said was law, regardless of truth.
All we're seeing today is the full harvest of that principle coming to rest in a simple interaction between an officer of the law and a citizen. It has been my good fortune to know many officers at local, state and federal law who see themselves in the context of our early history, where citizens had rights endowed to them by a Creator, and law was an extension of that truth. Sadly, there are many who see them selves AS a law unto themselves, and they make a bad name for everyone else.