You may consider being cuffed a detainment, but SCOTUS doesn't.
I never asked to leave. I spent most of my time there chatting with the officer on my own while not in cuffs. Just two guys talking about the weather. No harm done.
I would question that statement. Im looking at Supreme Court Law and not seeing what could be applied to this thread topic or what happened to you.
It isnt clear cut but the Supreme Court seems to make it clear in the TINY amount of case I just reviewed that as a rule ... well instead of me typing here it is. But there is not a blanket you can be handcuffed statement, under certain conditions such as this and being they were put in handcuffs it was considered a detention. Detention is mentioned in all three paragraphs 1,2 & 3
This was a case of a court ordered search warrant.
" 1. Mena’s detention in handcuffs for the length of the search did not violate the
Fourth Amendment. That detention is consistent with
Michigan v.
Summers,
452 U. S. 692, 705, in which the Court held that officers executing a search warrant for contraband have the authority “to detain the occupants of the premises while a proper search is conducted.” "
https://www.law.cornell.edu/supremecourt/text/03-1423
@wwillson
In defense of what happened to you, you have a good point. I just found this, I think very informative to this discussion as I even learned something here too. But do note, it is still a detention, called an investigatory detention and allow by law if it fits the requirements below in the link we does give police a wide latitude.
"When a police officer detains you, you are held in police custody for a short period of time. Under certain circumstances, police officers can temporarily detain a suspect while the officer conducts a brief investigation to determine if the suspect is involved in criminal activity. This is called an investigative detention.
During an investigative detention, the suspect is not free to leave, may be handcuffed for officer safety, and may even be frisked (briefly searched) for weapons. This is often referred to as a “Terry stop,” named for the U.S. Supreme Court decision,
Terry v. Ohio, that first approved the concept of investigatory detentions."
Source =
https://jmarshlaw.com/detain-or-arr...-what-does-it-mean-to-be-detained-nbsp-strong