You saw one you tube video and your now qualified to diagnose ones mental shortcomings? I think the cop is an asshole indeed. If more people acknowledged thier limits more often than exaggerate their limited scope of knowledge we as a society could eliminate most of these sorts of mistakes and failures
@dmcd7333 I see what your connecting BUT..I made it a big part of my agenda to understand and know my states penal code laws my municipalities policy etc and this video the first story with the cop with a smart ass smile on his face as he attempts to unlawfully Id'ing the property's owner and Its my opinion in many of this exact situation when cops are legally entitled to request ID it's something that occurs very often and I began to wonder why it happens so often .He is an asshole cause I believe he knows the man does not have to present Id and yet he continues as if he does seems like an asshole move to me ? also Notice how asshole a derogatory term used to describe somebody exploiting thier position an unlikable person. especially : one who is cruel, rude, or small-minded. a selfish jerk. NOTICE Its not associated as a mental health condition a condition only a certified psychologist can diagnose such things but calling an asshole an asshole self explanitory.
@dmcd7333 YOU should reconsider your direction on this I'm not being a hypocrite here your drawing a conclusion out of Apples and oranges and the cop was being an asshole he knew he was in the wrong but continued on anyway.seems like something assholes do.
I love it when the obvious profile a black man, thinking they can bully, only to get smashed. It demonstrates the cops tactics rolling over black people and exposes the corrupt system.
@@joski9030I’m not gonna say profiling occurs every-time but it does happen all the time. EVERY black and brown person I have known in my life knows someone that has been profiled or knows someone that has. However when I was in the Army two guys (one Hispanic and one black guy) had admitted they didn’t know anyone that had been profiled, the issue was the almost 20 of us raised hands to actually being profiled including EVERY officer of color, and someone pointed out and I quote: “Now you know more than 15”
So, if I’m a thief about to break in to your house, and the cops come, I can just say where is your warrant? And they have to leave if they don’t have one?! So I can go about my work!
5:14 yes, by looking at that time stamp, and the houses on the other side of the street its a real upscale area, blacks in texas is real suspicious in poorer areas. Both houses acrossed the street look vacant, one has no windows and any landscaping done was finished 10 years ago. The only lawnmowers its seen have gone past on trucks. The white house is what known as a scraper. You roll up in a catapeller and scrape it off the earth.
Every cop who cites “suspicious behaviour” as a reason to demand ID had better have a good set of facts to back that up. Otherwise, tell them to pound sand!
Or... Or... Hear me out now...or allow them to violate your rights, sue, get awarded a 6 figure settlement, submit for time off work and take the family on a nice ass vacation.
They would’ve arrested him and charged him with assaulting an officer, resisting arrest, failure to identify, obstruction, and maybe even attempted murder to get him to plea.
@@ALB28ableNo, here is the list of Stop and ID States: There are 23 stop and ID states: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, Rhode Island, Utah, Vermont and Wisconsin. What does "stop and identify" mean? It's a simple concept. In states where this statute is enacted, a person suspected of committing a crime is legally obligated to identify themselves to authorities. Even in states with this statute, a person is not required to provide identification without a reasonable belief that: a crime has been committed, a crime is currently being committed, or a crime was committed. I hope this helps, this 2024 at the moment
2:55 Texas Penal Code 38.02 , is Very Well Established, Every Officer Should know by Heart. NO Excuse for Ignorance of The Law. Many Officers Know, and Choose to Ignore Texas Penal Code 38.02.
It's not just important to know your rights. It's also important to be able to verbalize them when confronted by authority attempting to give unjust demands. ( 4:50 ) American Intermediary 12/18/23
I used to love this show. It was on for like two hours every Friday when I was younger. They're in receivership so he could probably post full episodes.
This is the type of policing we can expect if the police department continues to hire high school graduates who can barely write a sensible essay and solve a simple mathematical equation.
if he wasn't rich enough to afford the attorney he would have been held longer and probably actually charged and prosecuted. because of a bar fight that i never even saw i was searched and seized at home with a "legal" warrant, arrested, held for over a year, charged and prosecuted for a crime that el paso pigs had already searched, seized evidence for and arrested other people for (90 days earlier). when it finally came time for them to bring the 11 OTHER PEOPLE (how were there 11 other people?) they had charged (only 2 people were ever accused of the assault that i ever heard of) and i to trial they dropped all charges. but i was held for 12 months because : 1. "Your Honor, the people would like you to consider NO BOND at this time because the suspect is a flight risk with no ties to the community (22 years and 4 months active duty military service disabled combat veteran employed and owns home in el paso - military community) and 2. is a danger to the community... yes that's right folks, i'm so dangerous to my community that when the cops came beating on my door at 0400 in the morning to arrest me in my "house full of guns" i said "sure, what for?" i couldn't possibly be in trouble i don't really even go out that much. and then i let them put handcuffs on me and i sat in a car for about 8 hours while they completely trashed my house. i guess its just the "few" bad apples...
If these cops think a small grass fire in a rural area is a "high stress" situation there needs to be some re training done with these overbearing officers.
Around here half the drivers would pull over and help move the cows to the other side of the road. But there's a lot of farmers and ranchers here in Oklahoma.
One thing I have learned from this video. From the heroin addict I learned a very valuable lesson. if they ask you if you understand your right to remain silent, you don’t have to answer you invoke your right to remain silent. You don’t need to confirm that you understand. Mind blown.
1. Burden of proof is always on the government you don’t have to provide nothing 2. Once you’re asked to leave that’s your trespass warning if you fail to leave the property right away you’re now criminally trespassing. 3. You don’t have to ID unless you’re suspected of a actual crime with facts to back up such claim. Update: since there’s signs the moment the officer stepped on the property he was trespassing. The signs are your trespass warning.
That's what I was thinking. When the owner told him to leave and he didn't it was criminal trespass, and he should have made a citizen's arrest on camera
LAWYER FIRSTLY must have collaborated evidence to make assumptions about the so called crime what is being done here is fishing for self criminalization upon one common sense HENCE why you have innocent till proven guilty ABSOLUTELY A ARTICULATE COMMENT much respect and peace towards your new year
@@chrishenley4179 so are you an armchair police supporter/bootlicker? You dont have to identify at all unless you have been arrested. If you give a name it can't be false. To be detained the officer has to have reasonable, articulateable, suspicion OF A CRIME. Looking suspicious by itself does not foot the bill. In regards to the castle doctrine that you seem to be unaware of, there is case law regarding this very situation. The cop can come on the property like anyone else going to your front door. However, as soon as you are told to leave you MUST leave, or it becomes criminal tresspass. Police don't have more rights unless they are holding a duly executed warrant. Get YOUR facts straight.
@@MACTEP_CHOB he doesn’t have the power to actually arrest the cop but once the cop was told to leave and he didn’t do so immediately he broke the law.
First story reminded me of my teacher from back in the late 80s. She had been a teacher for about 5ish years moved down from Ohio. Her first school (volusia high) was troublemaker central which was taken over by Bethune Cookman college and she ended up in campbell jr high as a teacher. While coming to work one day she was pulled over (her car was kind of run down at the time as to be expected from somoene for all intent and purpose out of university with a teaching degree and the debt to boot) the police officer treated her poorly as she was white in an area just 2 blocks away from the housing project. This seems to be the MO of police and has been for a while. Its only gotten worse as the years gone by and thankfully technology is shining a light onto this.
"Suspicious activity" is great. Had a pig pull me over and say i was "driving suspiciously" because... In his own words...I was following all traffic laws.
Love your channel. Awesome, Court Analysis Watching one before, corrupt cops hurting the old woman walking out Walmart. Her family got 350,000. Pure A holes cops.
I would ask everyone to read and please understand this statement. "I hereby envoke and refuse to waive any of my CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS," you must say this!
I saw on another tube " lawyer" channel yesterday that in many states that a cop does not have to tell someone why they have been arrested until an arraignent, but most people would find out at the police station when they are being "booked" into the system.
The very first line in the Miranda Warning is: “You have the right to remain silent.” Cops will argue that the person must verbally state that they are invoking their right to remain silent and they must also verbally state that they do or do not understand their rights as read to them. However, the first thing said to the accused is that they have the right to remain silent. If the person must verbally state that they are invoking their right to remain silent and/or that they understand their rights as read to them, then that is contradictory to the Miranda Warning and would mean that the person does not have the right to remain silent.
The very same thing happened to me recently!😮 I didn't answer because I have the right to remain silent. He said I do, so I did just that, and he got super upset.
The second guy has to say that he wishes to exercise his right to remain silent or else his silence can be used against him in court as being "uncooperative". It's the dumbest interpretation of our rights that the Supreme Court has used but it's already been used successfully.
As i get older, my veiw of the police/sheriff has deteriorated. I have recently had to deal with a few sheriff deputies come into my home, unannounced, and when i woke to ask who was in my home. One of them claimed it was a "welfare" check on me, as two or three others scampered about, going to the basement that im renting to a friend, looking for a guy who is on the run over a warrent. This was the second time they have come here searching. The inability to track a suspect and breaking the law themselves, speaks volumes of their integrity. I am over 50 and handicapped from MS. So I'm an easy target for crooks. But I've only been wheelchair bound for a year and a half. 7 or 8 years ago i was working a good job and not having such problems. If anyone knows the agency that one would contact in Kentucky to file a complaint, i would greatly appreciate that name. Going from over 100k a year to disability is brutal. I would lawyer up in years past and only request their badges to decorate my Xmas tree and them to be fired over breaking and entering. Blah, blah, blah... This is gonna be my own video on here. Thanks for reading my rambling. 🙈🙉🙊
Everybody makes mistakes.. you just have to be man enough and mature enough to admit your mistake apologize and leave. It is the egocentric prideful cops who insist after the mistakes that are a danger to society. Good for the 2 cops who decided to leave without escalating the situation, it may be kind of humiliating but the best leçons are! Now, normally they would serve better.