I was an accidental get away driver, it happened 2 years ago I was an Uber driver and I picked up a young lady from a well known bar and she hopped in and a man rushed to her window and she hid her face and she said just drive plz so I did thinking it was a domestic dispute. However as soon as I got her hone she told me she didn't pay her bill.
Imagine being that guys mother, father, brother or whatever else and finding out a woman got away with murder because she comes from money.. systems a joke.
Yeah.... around 2006ish my Wife and I went through the drive through at our banks ATM. Pulled like $20 and realized our balance was over $40,000.00 and we should of had more like $100.00. We immediately went inside the bank knowing a mistake on their part was made. Thoughts ran through our minds, not gonna lie lol. But knew it wasn't worth it. If it was $40mil idk 😄. They said a small local business owner made a deposit and put a wrong number down on his deposit slip which ended up being our account.
All the bills and obligations you have now are the same when you get locked up except you can't work to pay your bills so you end up losing everything. Imagine 18 months, your home, car belongings, pets, girlfriend/boyfriend all gone and you're innocent. 18 months that guy was locked for is a crime in itself.
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The chick plied him so she could over charge him. Its an old bartender trick. Every bartender is trained to gauge a person and their levels. They are held responsible
0 seconds ago I could have made this list. I drove 4 of us to Georgia for a kayaking trip in 1993. One guy was a friend of a friend that I had never met. I missed an exit and ended up going way over the limit to make time. The river trip and the trip home were fine. I found out the next day that the guy I did not know was a 19yo drug dealer that still lived with his mom. He didn’t want to leave his stash at home so he put 2-1/2lbs of weed and 3oz of Cocaine in his suitcase. I’m sure he would have denied it being his and the car owner, me, would have taken the blame. Thankfully I never saw him again because I’m sure there would have been a fight. Within a year he became a born again christian a a driver for UPS.
Highly doubt someone made a gun on accident. I have a 3D printer and it's not just download skimatics and hit a button to make a gun. It includes other parts not available to be made from a 3d printer. He also had ammo? Hmmm yah he knew what he was doing.
I think that's all the way across the board that you're not suppose to serve ppl who are too drunk for many reasons. My grandpa was color blind and he went into a store came out got into a truck that the keys was in (his was also in) he went to leave the parking lot happened to look in the mirror had 3 guys chasing him their truck was black his was blue and the keys being in the ignition well it happens lol.
I buy it. The less information you spill out, the less chance of getting busted. It's actually a smart move. Evil as hell to put a friend through it, but I think the passenger thought it through.
none of us can be 100% positive, we weren’t there, but either option is totally possible. the “old guy” could be playing a fool, wouldn’t you? when it’s jail time on the table most people will say anything to get out of it also totally possible the bank robber didn’t tell him. hard to say if we weren’t there…but i wouldn’t assume just because someone is old they are naive..isn’t it supposed to be wisdom comes with age?
The Bartenders Code has been in place in some areas for decades. Back in the late 70s and early 80s, it was introduced in British Columbia, Canada. I was pretty young then and it made total sense to me. Lindsey should not have served him when he was already intoxicated and/or should have cut him off and called the police to escort him off the property. Even before these laws were in place and I was only 19 - I would refuse to serve someone who was drunk or getting too drunk. Common sense to me is that I'm responsible for helping someone drive drunk, hurt themselves or hurt someone else. The owners of where she worked should be charged if they had not been very clear about policies, codes and laws or making sure their staff knew this information before hiring them.
I ever get in trouble again? Claiming executive privilege or something. Telling the judge "I don't feel like doing this, I'm going home!" should work just fine.
Number 9 is legitimate in each state. If you work as a bartender or server and over serve someone alcohol who is clearly intoxicated, and the person goes out and kills someone in a car accident or Causes damage, you are responsible. Many bars and restaurants require you, as a bartender or server, to take classes to help you be aware of when to cut someone off,. It seems fucked up, but it’s the law.
The guy who brought the suitcase home for someone should have been convicted in my opinion. It was drugs in the suitcase, but what if it was an explosive device or biologic agent, anything like that? They ask multiple times (at least whenever I've flown) if you have taken a bag or package from a stranger.
A bomb would have been hidden like the coke was. Being a decent person and trying to help someone shouldn’t get you prison time. If he was involved that would have came out at some point.
@@dennisobannon2328 But knowingly and intentionally putting people at risk should get you jail time. When you say that the bomb would have been hidden like the coke was, that actually proves the point I was making. The man knew it was wrong to take the suitcase so he looked inside of it. That shows that he knew that there was potential danger. Even though he took precautions, the coke still got past him, so a bomb would have. When you go to the airport and are checking in, they ask if a stranger has given you any package to carry. He would have had to lie to at least one person at the airport to get through. So again he did something wrong. And I'm just going to give this example. A man in my area was high on drugs and asked a friend of his to drive him to detox. The friend that he asked was drunk. Now apparently the friend who was driving had a very high tolerance for alcohol but he was over the legal limit. He drove the man to detox and had no accidents, but he had to sign some papers to say that he was the one who had accompanied his detoxing friend. They realized he was drunk, called the police, did a breathalyzer and he was over the legal limit. He was arrested. Using the logic of "being a decent human being shouldn't get you jail time" would mean that the man who drove drunk and put all of the other people on the road at risk should be excused because he did it for the right reason. I know it's hard sometimes not to think with your heart, but in cases where dozens if not hundreds of people's lives are at stake, I think we have to look at things more logically, and in this case the man obviously knew it was wrong because he checked the baggage first. If a loved one of mine or even if I had been on the plane and found out that he had taken a suitcase from a man and brought it onto the plane, I would have been the first one asking for his arrest because I would not be able to bear the thought of losing a loved one due to someone else's negligence, especially when he had to actually lie to someone to get the luggage on. It will act as an example of what can happen when you do things intentionally that you know are wrong and put others at risk even if you were well intentioned. While people may Express sympathy for him, and to a small degree I do because he probably didn't have any previous record, we also have to look at all the potential victims and their families. Just because it was not a bomb it does not mean that it should be excused. Saying that would be like saying that a man who drove while drunk for a good reason should be excused. They are logically the same thing.
@@dennisobannon2328 it is called adulting. adults are responsible for the actions to other people and society. we are asked : is it your luggage ? did you pack it yourself ? at the airport. I have a box of laundry powder in Peru can you be nice and bring it to Germany ? :)
I rented a Nissan Versa when I was on vacation in Nova Scotia. I went to the mall to do some shopping and when I left I found the car, unlocked the door and I hopped in and started it. I just happened to look at the floor on the passenger side and noticed a woman's purse and I quickly realized I was in the wrong car. Thankfully no one noticed and I didn't get in trouble but I was shocked that my key unlocked and started someone else's car. I told the rental company and they didn't believe me.
The same thing happened to me!! I had a red Ford Escort. Basic model. I came out of the store, unlocked the door and got in and noticed items that weren't mine and casually got out and found my real car 2 spaces down...embarrassing. lol. I think duplicate locks are pretty common.
@@carolleathers6595 Yes it's definitely embarrassing lol but the car I was in actually started. Both cars were fairly new but maybe there was something wrong with the other cars ignition. I can't think of another reason as to why my key worked in their car.
My sister and her husband both got new vehicles. Her key would lock and unlock his car but not start it. His key would lock and unlock her car plus start it. They were different vehicles.
I got accused of rape,by a police woman in her house ,which my mother owned and rented to her. i was in jail 44 ml.away.before calling her a lier, they accused the jail of letting me out and back in. her ex husband is who kicked in the door and she didnt want to pay for it.
Did I just hear that the kid who 3D printed a gun, managed to load the weapon, before it was even assembled? How do you accidentally fire a weapon that you are still assembling?
In high school, a kid I knew was running around with an older guy. The older guy said he was going into the bank to cash a check. He robbed the bank. They didn't believe the kid that he w wasn't the get away driver. He went to the pen.
Nah man Lindsey shouldn’t get in trouble unless she knew about the murders beforehand, but the pulling out a knife and hinting at a crime someone definitely should’ve called the cops anyone in the bar not just Lindsey No security guards? Get the owner in jail
Nope, she deserves a little punishment. In order to serve alcohol she had to receive certification and take a training class that really emphasizes NOT serving already drunk people and why. She knew better. At the very least it was reasonable that he would get in an accident. You are not supposed to serve people who are stumbling. Period.
@@soulsnatcha402 for doing her job? I think it's stupid you can't drink in a bar technically after your first shot why can't we hold criminals accountable for their actions she didn't force him to drink or kill his ex family he had a choice, she's a bartender her job is to serve drinks and collect money there are other people there to prevent people from getting crazy like security but at the end of the day people just want blood and since they can't get it from him they have to sacrifice the innocent
that's happened to me before I had a 2001 Toyota Camry and I parked next to someone who had the same make and model as me and when I went to use the key fob to lock my door it locked the other person's car too. We started talking about it then for good measure tried each other's key and we were able to start each other's car
I was involved in the get away of a guy who had just robbed a Subway. He had called my friend who had a van and asked him to come pick him up. The guy who owned the van was too drunk and already had a DUI so he asked me to drive. We had another friend who was staying in the homeless shelter who needed a ride any way. So we go to the spot that the guy we were picking up asked us to meet him. We dropped off the friend staying in the shelter and the other guy came up to the van, handed the other one a sweatshirt and told him to get rid of it. That he didn’t care what he did with it, just get rid of it! So we take the guy who we picked up to where he needed to go and on the way he told us that the guy working at Subway owed him money so he went and took it from him. Meanwhile the guy who now had the sweatshirt (which was striped and quite noticeable) went into the homeless shelter. He decided to get rid of the sweatshirt by pouring bleach all over it, wrapping it in a towel and throwing it in the bathroom trash. When the smell of bleach hit the rest of the shelter the people who ran it followed the smell to the bathroom, found the sweatshirt and asked who’s it was. He ended up telling them that it was him so they made him throw it in the dumpster outside. Later that evening they were watching the news and there was the sweatshirt. So they called the police (who happened to be right next door). They came immediately and took him in for questioning, interrogating him all night until he crumbled. He told the story and later in the week the robber was picked up by the police and went to prison for 2 years after convicted. A couple weeks after he was arrested my friend with the van and I were approached by the police (it is a small town so they knew us). They said they needed to take us to see the investigator about the whole ordeal. I was the only one out of the four of us who told the truth and didn’t b.s. my way out of the situation. I told them exactly what I have just told you and because I was the only one being honest I got a subpoena to testify in front of the Grand Jury. There was no way I was gonna go down for something I had no idea was happening at the time it happened! At any rate he was convicted and I was never charged. So… that is my true story!
The beekeeper is not an isolated case. The elderly get scammed into being accidental drug mules, he is lucky that he trafficked into aus. Other countries have much stricter laws/strict judicial systems. I also feel bad for the bank robber. There are also many cases of being duped into driving around friends committing crimes and being implicated. Whoever you run errands for, make sure you really trust them
I knew a ditzy woman who said she was a courier and made money bringing leather jackets from the Middle East on planes. I tried to tell her the jackets probably contained drugs, but she refused to consider it 🤷♀️
To be fair, the laws regarding bartenders & servers over-serving people who are clearly too intoxicated to continue to be served aren’t exclusive to Texas. They exist in virtually every state to certain degrees. In order to serve alcohol, one is required to take classes & be certified in each state. As a general manager/part owner of a number of different restaurants that I’ve opened from Phoenix to Cape Cod, I was required to be certified in food handling, alcohol awareness, allergen certified & CPR certified. I was an EMT in college, so I’ve always just maintained my EMT certs in each state I’ve lived & worked in. But alcohol awareness/dram shop laws are a beast all their own. If someone gets inebriated & kills someone in a car accident driving home, the liability falls on the last person/establishment to have served them. Dram Shop laws are written in ways that could leave a bartender/server facing involuntary manslaughter, or vehicular homicide charges & up to $100,000 in fines. The establishment could lose their liquor license & be closed down. Through college & grad school I worked in super high volume clubs beside 8 - 12 other bartenders, where at a certain point, you just keep your head down & move as fast as you can while 20 people just yell their order at you until you get it, then bitch about how they were there before the last person you served. It’s next to impossible to keep track of how much someone has been served in that environment, especially because they’re usually with a small group, and different people come to the bar to get the next round, paying with cash. But you’re still responsible for knowing. What pisses me off about Lindsey’s case is that she TRIED to do the right thing. She notified law enforcement immediately upon believing this guy was a danger. She even told them exactly who was in danger. They had plenty of time to react to her warnings…but they were too late, and they still used dram shop to hold her liable. While they worked within the strictest sense of the law, it’s bullshit. No one wanted to be held responsible for a fuck up which led to multiple murders, so they put the oneness directly on her, even though she was the only one who tried to save those lives & acted with a sense of urgency. Because legally, they could. Bartenders make as little as $4.25 an hour under the assumption that tips more than make up for it…which is mostly true. But anyone who has ever served or tended bar knows that bad days are really, really bad. I once had to pay the restaurant where I worked $1.25 at the end of my shift, out of pocket, bc we were dead, I was cut after like an hour, and had only one table. It was 2 little old ladies, who I adored, but their tab was $12.50 & they left a $1 cash tip. I had to tip out the bar, food runner, and busser. So I paid them for the privilege of coming to work. And for that privilege, I didn’t have health insurance, a 401k, paid sick/vacation days, FMLA, or any benefits. Unless you consider getting 25% off of meals that I had to eat on the premises & wasn’t allowed to take leftovers home because to go boxes were too expensive for the peasants to use, and what if we brought half a sandwich home for someone else to eat? Then what?? They were assholes. She put herself at risk to do the right thing, and people still died…then she was punished for it because technically, she could be. And they wonder why it’s so hard to find & keep good employees these days?? THIS is why. It’s just not worth the risk & renders people vulnerable in ways that are life ruining. There’s no corporate SOP, or Human Resources. No one protecting your best interests as an employee. And owners take full advantage of it, too.
Wow, so Italy said he had to buy the house or he was being helpful to the mafia? People in the US that think they're oppressed need to pay attention to stuff like this. There's a lot of countries out there you think are free but they're not.
Hello from a Dane living in Norway. My comment to case nr. 2: Excuse me but I have to say I'm pretty flabbergasted here. How in the worlds name does it come about that an seemingly grown up SANE person, in this case a female bartender, continuously serves alcohol to an already waisted person? Of completely LOGIC and reasonable reasons we dont do this in Denmark and Norway, and not because of some law open it (there is not such law here). We just KNOW it would be carelessly, dangerous and irresponsible to serve someone alcohol if they're already wasted. One simply doesn't do that. I completely support a law that actually forbids this or list it as a crime.
Could have made this list- a friend in the 1980's was flying to Reno with a group- last minute invite to me & my bro- dude had an oz of coke in his suitcase. Never said a word about it.
@@Limitedonathios I mean . It's exactly the same if you're making it for airsoft. Hell I've seen the government confiscate toys that "could be converted to real guns" and they were not at all. Not even a little. Too many times the people in charge of making these calls are too stupid or totally ignorant of the subject to be put in that position usually by some other under qualified asshat
My friend and I broke into a place when we were drunk 20 years ago. We thought it was my aunt's place and didn't understand why her name was not on the door. Crazy kid memories
Crimes committed by accident: When I was in maybe 1st or 2nd grade I took a small bag of weed, papers and a pair of roach clips to school with me. I'd snuck the stuff out of my parents' bedroom and taken it to school to show my friend, curious as to what it was. My partner went to school with a guy whose dad was in the military. The kid brought live hand grenades to school once to show his buddies. Both of these happened in the early 90s and no, neither was discovered by teachers or adults.
It's not a crime to have money accidentally deposited into a bank account. It is 1 to realize, then spend or hide it, since that it actual theft, & might be someone's life savings put in the wrong account. If you contact the bank, there's no trouble, they just fix the problem. Knew Someone that had a few hundred extra, assumed it was ok, & used it. The argument that she didn't think it was wrong made sense bc of her behavior. That guy was extreme, running off & spending it how he did. Bartenders & owners can be held responsible for crimes connected to over serving, some DUIs too. It's a huge deal when they serve someone so they're impaired, & is a danger to the customers, to be safe after.
It's crazy but true about the bartender. In Massachusetts if a person goes to the liquor store and buys alcohol then starts drinking it while driving the clerk who sold him the alcohol gets in trouble too.. The worse the crime that the drunk person commits the worse it is for the clerk who sold him the alcohol. I know because I was a clerk in the liquor store that my dad and his brother (My uncle, of course.) owned. I was absolutely incredulous when my dad told me this!
Umber 9 if I remember correctly, she wanted to cut him off and not serve anymore alcohol, but her boss said that she couldn’t do it, so was basically forced to serve him.. and when he left she called the cops, because she was afraid of what he might do..
that dude didn’t accidentally launder $10mil, he was accidentally given $10mil. really shitty that you think he should go free because he accidentally obtained the money even though he purposefully laundered it
Where exactly is this Walmart cause if any car is left for 2 weeks it's definitely being police impounded, & searched as a possible crime, towed for loitering, or stolen before the end of the first week!
Lindsy should have known better. They actually teach you this in bartending school (if you actually go to one). Money above people. Cut them off and call a cab!
Wait a damn minute!! If he was making it for another kid why would he have ammo??!?!?? And how would he have gotten it himself if he did??? Why would he load it if he was still putting the trigger mechanism together?? Who loads a gun before it is assembled??? Thats just beyond strange and stupid. Like a 5 year old would not do that with a nerf gun unless it was put together first.
Someone accidentally stole my car. He was borrowing a friends car to pick up supplies from a store. When he arrived to pick up the black car he accidentally got into my car of the same make and model but my car was blue. The cars were parked near the same intersection near the friends house and my job. For some reason the key work to open the doors and start the car. I was waiting for the police to report my car stolen when the guy came back explaining what the mix up was.
I worked at a gas station and a women had a dog in her truck and truck running while she went in and the dog locked the doors. A guy pulled in while she came in to call around for help and he over heard. He was driving the same exact truck but different color. He said he would try something he heard about and opened her truck with his key. So it would have worked ignition too
The bartender case,, that has been a law in many us states for years..any real bartender should know this, its why alot places make bartenders get certified several times a year...they cover themselves..its called Dram law...its not always easy either..ppl take medication or drugs.. Fine 1 min then not...even if person been out drinking several bars seems ok, goes your bar & you serve them 1 drink & something happens yes you as bartender who last served the person can be liable...
I was Driving my buddy's white Toyota cresida ...Pulled into a Walmart....When in bought stuff came out ...Unlock and got in and started another White Toyota Creseda...But the inside was Cleaner and the Radio was playing Mexican music...Put the car bak in the parking spot and found my Buddy's car 10 space Away...And got the Hell Out of There
i commited a "crime " of going into female restroom/washroom by accident . I did it several times over many years of my life. I am a repeat offender :) well these days I could be charged with some "indicent behaviour" "disturbance of peace " , Voyeurism or something else.
The bartender got screwed! It is absolutely unfair to hold a bartender responsible for the actions of their customers. The ARE times when you can't tell when a person is intoxicated. P.S.: I think "Happy Hour" is an extremely bad idea.
Imagine being part of a huge search party searching for yourself. The bartender, sure she should have stopped serving the drunk but let's face this fact, the U.S. and places around the world have enough problems coming up with appropriate sentences/punishments for REAL dangerous offenders without turning these animals loose on society....again...and again.
That has been a law in many us states for years..any bartender should know this, its why alot places make bartenders get certified several times a year...its called Dram law...its not always easy either with ppl take medication or drugs etc. Fine 1 min then not...even if person been out drinking several bars seems ok, goes your bar & you serve them 1 drink & something happens yes you can be liable...
I wish I knew some billionaires or millionaires I wish I wasn't struggling with life rn I wish I was rich I hate being poor I'm just soooo lost in life and I don't have noone to help me get a life I can see why ppl commit suicide when u have nobody in this life time so sad 😭