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to my knowledge the thing you thought was bike pegs is a shifter for manual cars usually has a nut that goes on bottom under the rubber grommet for different shifter shaft diameters then itd have a cap on top and they have the screw bit like that so u can make em different sizes because some people like big shifter some people like em short and then itd have a cap on top that screws in i know for a fact 100% theyre not bike pegs tho
Friend bought a truck at a police auction when he lived in Florida. Took the truck to a garage and had them go over it, see what needed to be fixed. Police and DEA showed up at his job, escorted him back to the garage. Turned out the dash, door panels, seats, were all filled with drugs and some cash. Let's just say the DEA was not happy with the police and how they missed it.
Why do the pigs keep drugs in their cruisers? Shouldn’t the drugs be in the evidence room? Pigs probably keep drugs in their car to plant on innocent people.
We bought a jeep from an online government auction. It was a jail administration vehicle, driven ONLY by the jail administrator. (We were told ) When we went to pick it up it was right across the driveway in front of the "Sally Port " gate. It was directly ahead of a camera. I checked the oil and fluids, and looked in the console for the second key that we were told about. I found a small red change purse and under it was the key. I looked in the change purse and found a "Mostly" empty baggy and a short straw. The lady that we got the title from had asked several times which way we came into town and which way we were leaving. After finding the little surprise, we went straight to texaco 2 blocks away and I threw that red bag away. We did NOT leave the same way that we had told the lady at the courthouse. I have a feeling that they may have had a surprise waiting up the road. But it IS a great vehicle.
I've seen worse, vehicles with batons, cuffs, the laptop, all the lights and sirens still in there. As for the camera I'm guessing maybe it's a bit of a last minute thing.
I once saw a cop get called in from patrol, told to drive his Crown Vic around back, and then to move his personal stuff and weapons to his new unit. He was still in the process of doing so when the auctioneer got to the unit that was being retired.
I once came across some evidence of a possible crime and called the local police. An officer came around to pick it up and I found out it was actually evidence of a crime. Unfortunately, because of custody issues it couldn’t be used in a trial but the officer told me at least they could return the PS1 to its rightful owner.
Great finds! Nice explorer! You guys did the right thing and call the SDPD and have it shipped the evidence. The case might be solved or not but it's good to just send it anyways.
This is pretty cool. My husband has a warehouse behind our local police department and we get the pleasure of storing their overflow of vehicles. It’s neat to get to see all the cool things they have to use to patrol our city. Idk how many years it’s been but we’ve gotten to see the changes over the years. We’ve built a pretty solid relationship with a lot of the officers and commanders.
Those strobes are only illegal because they're red/blue. If they were amber, anyone could have them, and you'd just have to make sure the buyer is knowledgeable about the proper use of them. I know this because I have my personal vehicle wired up with ambers, and I made sure to check the various local/state/federal statutes regarding the ownership and use of different colors of strobes before installing them
Wisconsin you can not possess a blue light on or in a vehicle. You may not use a blue light in the view of public that might be thought to be cop by others. Red lights require permits fire, towing, ambulance.
In 1981, I was in the US Army as a Military Policeman and nearing the end of my enlistment. It was practice where I was stationed not to put "short-timers" on patrol duty in case they caught a case that may later require a court martial appearance. The Army didn't want to keep you longer than the enlistment. So I was doing assorted support duties for my unit and the MP station. While going through a patrol vehicle I found a straight razor stashed between the cushions of the rear seat. Some GI prisoner was lucky some MP did a crappy body search. I turned it into the Desk Sergeant and boy was he pissed. I understand it came up in shift briefings for a while.
I’m new to the channel and quickly got hooked. I purchased a prior police Crown Victoria, And it was a BEAST of a car. I had it painted silver because it was grey . And she only had 42,000 miles. It was 10 years old. I later found out that it was a Fire chief car. It was a “ Rocket Ship” of a car. In 2016 we had a very bad flood and it drowned my beautiful Vic. I honestly loved that car. My wife and children thought I was nuts. But I do miss it. Great content! Thank you. I love this channel.
I worked in a police department radio shop for a career. Whenever I did removals before a vehicle was traded in, I would find weird things. At one point when I tried to bring something to a staff sergeants attention he said basically to just throw the crap away. The main reason was none of the items could be linked to a case and there was no way to catalog something that was just found under a seat or pushed into the upholstery. Some examples of what turned up were some nice knives and in one vehicle I found a pellet pistol.
Double chevron is not Private First Class it’s corporal. It’s private with 1 chevron. Pfc with a chevron and half circle connected. Specialist with a filled in chevron and half circle with a eagle emblem in the center
It is probably for Police Officer 3. SDPD does not have a corporal position. And depending on some departments one strip is just a higher police officer, one stripe with bottom rocker is normally a training officer. But SDPD does not have any corporal rank so not sure where those came from unless their field training officers use them on collars to designate they are a trainer.
@@randycoolon4760 3 stripes is a sergeant. This was corporal. Your not counting the metal bars, you count what the metal makes, in this case two stripes. Either way, San Diego Police doesn’t have a corporal position.
that insignia you found you actually displayed upside down. That is a collar lapel insignia for a "Corporal", just below a "Sergeant" . Rookies start out with no stripes, even tenured officers can have no stripes at all.
The insignia with double bars is corporal and the 9mm rounds you found are practice rounds. They are flat on top and are known as "Wad Cutters". They punch through the target leaving a perfect hole. FYI
Nope the 9mm are semi flat point or truncated cone. They go very deep in tissue deeper than round nose. If u could believe that. Wad cutters are only for revolvers as they’d jam in a automatic
The flat tip hits harder and used for deeper penetration on dangerous game. Wad cutters can be used in semiautomatic weapons S&W made a 38spl semiautomatic for match use and I have loaded 45apc with them long ago only had 1 of 3 was reliable 745S&w would gold cup not
I use to think it was the propeller spinning until I watched a documentary on BMW and the executive for BMW said it was a representative of the Bavarian flag.
We had one of those we'd picked up at a state auction, we used it as a courier car. While it was definitely fun to drive (the acceleration is crazy), we had all sorts of mechanical issues with it over the two years we had it. One of the things that people don't understand about police cars is that the police use them hard, along with a lot of "idle time," so the mileage on the odometer doesn't really match up with the "mechanical age" of the engine. Not to mention that they get truly crappy gas mileage - we were getting around 10-14 mpg.
A lot of people think that Detectives have rank where as they do not, that designation is just their job classification within a unit , for example, you can have detectives in Vice, Homicide, Narcotics and so on but any officer that has stripes has authority over any detective without any.
99% of the people still have no idea what you're talking about. Essentially, for old school phones, you put the hand-held receiver on another TTY box that translates those tones into text. It turns the phones into texting computers.
THAT, is why I'll never buy used luggage or police auction stuff. In the immortal words of Forrest Gump," ya never know what you're gonna get." I don't want dogs sniffing me out at the airport or around my car on a traffic stop...thank you very much?
Yeah, slight problem with the chain of custody. While the actual pictures could not be admitted as evidence they could provide clues to further an open investigation. Good play returning them to the folks in San Diego.
my Charger came with a fire extinguisher "exploded" in it... it took forever to get all of it (and the smell) out of it! I just uploaded video today of how to fix the turn signal bulbs for the police interceptor if you want to check it out, might be helpful
Common misunderstanding: The blue and white segments on the BMW logo stand for Bavaria, the region in Germany where the company began, under a different name (Rapp Motorenwerke GmbH) with a different round trademark. Bavaria's colors are white and blue, so that for legal reasons BMW chose the reverse: blue and white. BMW stands for Bayerische Motoren Werke (Bavarian Motor Works), when only part of its product range had to do with aircraft engines. On the other hand, yes, BMW itself did use this misunderstanding about the propeller image in some of its advertising.
I worked for a taxi cab company. And used 1988, 1989 Chevy Caprice. They are great cars. I will buy another one if I can find one that is as nice as my 1988. When we bought a car and cleaned them out. Mostly found ammo.
To me this shows police waste. Why didn't they search it and clean it. A lot of those items are good and could be used by the police again, it seems. Good finds for you!
Not their money. All government peeps are wasteful to the extreme because they know they will just get more the next year . I knew a firehouse that tossed brand new stuff they had just bought and replaced it just to spend the annual budget to make sure they had a budget increase the next year. Every government entity does this
@@josephhodges9819they don’t have any special police issue cameras. They just use your typical point and shoot cameras. But they would still be able to use that camera as it isn’t that old.
@@mcrchickenluvrMany do because it is bought by the city and many will have a stage on it with a serial number so it can be tracked. The camera might not be old but it is less than $100 so they have already requisitioned another one from their city.
How can this be real? Who sells a car without first removing the valuables. Occasionally you can find something missed but a camera in the glove box?! Missed but (1) the cop who's camera it was. (2) the local department that retired the car (3) the auction house (4) the new buyer when he bought it (5) the new buyer when he sold it. NOBODY looked in the glove box?! Nice med kit. More understandable that it was not found since it was under the seat.
Depends on who at the police department is responsible to clean out the cruiser. Prior to my retirement, it was my responsibility to clean out cruisers before they were sold. Guess these folks were just too damn lazy to do their job
That's what I originally thought, but the FPIUs are a lot less likely to turn you into a Crispy Critter in a rear-end, and handle better. When the weather was too wet to ride, I preferred the FPIU to the CVPI.
@@WilleJamesHuff . . .except it's not, but thanks for playing. The CVPI got the nickname "Patrol Pinto" for the way they tend to become hibachis in rear-end accidents. I've seen it happen. To counter this, the FPIU has special strengthening frames to provide protection in rear-end collisions. I've seen this work in a collision that would have made a Crown Vic go up in flames.
I have had two Ford Police Intercepters and they ran like hell. 1985 Ford Crown Vic with a 351 Cleveland actually a 4 Barrel Carb. 1991 Ford Crown Vic with a 4.6. 281 CID interceptor. The 85 came from a Sheriff's Office and The 91 came from A State Highway Patrol Department. Ll
I used to own a green farlane from the U.S Forestry Service it could only reach 45 miles per on the odometer and was a reliable vehicle i would drive thru my apartment complex and everyone thought i undercover cop lol 😆
BMW emblem is no "propeler" - its the coat of arms of the Bavaria in reverse order (because of copyright laws at the time), the airplane ad was introduced 11years after establishing that logo
It looks like the car was sitting around the motor pool for a long time probably unassigned. Also, police ranks are not the same as military. I don’t think there is any police officer in the country who is titled “private”.
I wonder what goodies I could find if I bought a car from the Puerto Rico PD. Though I do wonder if all that stuff is supposed to be left in there in the first place 🤔
I used to pick up Crown Vic from police departments and sell them to taxi companies and out of every 200 cars I’d probably find five guns. Some were brand new still in the box. usually the trunk that space right behind the rear wheels seem to like to eat pistols a lot
The rank insignia Rick found at the beginning is Private First Class or pfc since the design uses a top and rear bar but if there is only one hole in the middle it is pfc and corporal has two holes or one hole with a stripe down the middle
@@tombs31 I am not sure which service you are referring to. They literally are all different except Space Force is the same as Air Force for now, and Coast Guard is the same as Navy, again , for now. It sounds like you are referring to USMC Rank insignia
They warbling sound "for the hearing impaired" runs a TDD, a device like a computer terminal that displays text. TDD stands for "Telecommunications Device for the Deaf". There are free services where am operator will listen to the speaking side and type it for the hearing impaired person, then the hearing impaired person types their replies and the operator reads it back to the caller. It's a great service for a good cause. But that's when the warbling sound was, the modem data tones to connect to the TDD.
Hey, Cool Finds. I know you Came across a fully stocked medical kit it was the red one that said medic. If possible do you think I could have it I could really use a new one. Thank you and have a great day.
Why would you show the contents of the SD card? You could be putting people in jeopardy as well as putting cases in jeopardy. Those first shots looked like somebody who maybe suffered domestic violence. I don’t see the purpose in you putting these on RU-vid. It seems careless.