It’s so true. We call the cops on a lot of people at my job and we look up their records and it’s insane the records they have. And they just get let go again and again and do the same thing again and again.
Three favorite people! Soup,Ethan,and Nik. Had to do a double look when I saw that raid name. My Miller and vitamins were setting in…..gobbles bORtherS
16:31 "he ain't got no place to yell at the youngins like that" My man is welcome down here in Louisiana with that accent every day of the week 😂 reminds me of an uncle😂
I love the evolution of what is "the" Ethan,at first he was roasted,he took it all like a champ,and now,the people demand him on the podcasts...maybe thank jimbo,either way,he deserves it,seems like a guy I'd like to have a beer with,vote Ethan for president,a true american
My favorite cops scene is by far the one where an officer is detaining a man with awfully drawn on black eyebrows and the officer says “are those your real eyebrows?”
on my speaker i literally at 1:55 when he sung that part from you never called me by my name by david allen coe it was perfectly timed up to where they both sung it
@@thatdamncrow9197 People always get arrested on probation lol. And judges just put them on more probation. When I worked in warrants we'd see people get probation on like 6 different cases and they'd dip out on their PO and go do more crimes.
@@thedeviouspanda More than three-quarters of the 4.5 million Americans on probation or parole were convicted of nonviolent offenses. Nearly a third of the roughly 2.3 million people who exit probation or parole annually fail to successfully complete their supervision for a wide range of reasons, such as committing new crimes, violating the rules, and absconding. Each year almost 350,000 of those individuals return to jail or prison, often because of rule violations rather than new crimes. That means only about 30% violate parole From 2007 to 2016, 37 states experienced simultaneous drops in their community corrections and crime rates. In many cases, these gains followed adoption of evidence-based sentencing and corrections reforms that prioritized scarce supervision and treatment resources for higher-risk individuals, invested in risk-reduction programs, and created incentives for compliance.