They're just asking to get a kick out of how you react. If the police want to search your vehicle they'll just do so, they won't ask you. Same thing with asking you to exit the vehicle (NEVER do so because you are now totally vulnerable to them, the frame of the vehicle protects you from them.) They will simply remove you by force.
@@danan9061 That's what I was getting at, if they really want you out you're out but don't voluntarily make yourself vulnerable to them just because they told you to. If they mean it they'll smash their way in and rip you out anyway. Probable cause or not they don't give a fuck so why should you--they can just make it up on the spot anyway.
That a cop openly says he's willing to follow someone around just to get them for SOMETHING just to prove himself right, is next level pettiness. Welcome to Jerkwater, USA.
That police chief coming down to “tell you what’s going on” needs to be fired and added to the Brady List. He is eminently unqualified to lead a Baskin Robbins.
Police chief reminded me of Jackie Gleason as Sheriff Buford T Justice in the Smokey and the Bandit movie. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-ciUV77AzIB4.html Best of Buford T. Justice - Smokey and the Bandit
@@76133rconner the guy has his own channel (OKC Vet HPA) and made an update called "UPDATE!!!! Blanchard Police Dep"rtment!!!!" He didn't lose the lawsuit, it got rejected. They claimed there was not enough evidence.
That should be illegal, stating that he is going to find a crime before it happens with no probable cause. It is stated stalking behavior while using official authority and resources.
@@fbksakskier Welcome to the Internet. You must be new here. Just so you know, the person who complains about other people's grammar in comments sections always looks dumber than the people who made the spelling error or whatever it is the other person is complaining about. Especially if they seem to do it because they can't argue against the substance of the person's comment.
Cop was being very manipulative: "Just so you know, I can search it" "you dont mind confirming that I can search your vehicle" over and over to try and trick him into a double negative. Most people would either be scared or annoyed in that situation and accidentally fall into a double negative ending in them getting cuffed on the hood of the car while the cop cuts open all of their carseats. If that lawyer answered slightly too wrong even a single time he would have had everything stolen from his car for "evidence." I doubt you would have been able to make it through that situation as smoothly.
@@chillbro1010 In the video, the Officer says "you don't mind confirming what you said is true by allowing us to take a look", which isn't him saying 'just so you know, I can search it'. He asks for consent, is denied consent, and moves along with business while maintaining courtesy & professionalism. That officer didn't even ticket the dude. Yet, even with him doing nothing wrong, he gets put on a 'corrupt cops' compilation.
@@augustuscinematics9008 The trick is the part where he says "You don't mind." If you say No, he can infer you meant "No I don't mind confirming, you may search my car." The only correct answer is "I do not consent to a search" or other such variations. That is the trick. Many people slip on "You don't mind" because it flips the meaning of Yes/No when answering a question/request.
@@nick4paokaraCop was searching for any reason to get into a car lmao. Routine traffic stop and his immediate go-to is to try and gain access to search the vehicle. Screw that piggy
*The fact that cop called a lawyer and needed to have probable cause explained to him by a lawyer is about as scary as it gets. We can’t allow people this stupid to become law enforcement officers. It’s a disaster waiting to happen 🤦🏼♂️*
@@jaredf6205 AND be willing to go sit in jail for 24-48 hours. Not many are willing to do that over showing their license. How many times have you done it Jared?
I honestly believe it is because of EGO mixed with too much coffee/redbull or something similar; refuse to think that they are that silly and uneducated
You're right it should be easy to know the more complex laws that are around if you study them. But as officers, they should understand the basics like when they can get someone's identification. I guess it can be confusing with so many states having different laws in America but still, basics are basics.
I've had a cop tell me it wasn't up to them to determine whether I had any rights violated or the law for that matter, when there was no reason to arrest me other than they didn't like my attitude. That was my lawyers job. His job was to just toss me in jail.
im pretty sure theyre all violating our rights constantly but their strategy is to let it go to court as its just a numbers game to them and most people will take a plea deal. its literally how cops and court works.. maybe they didnt read you your miranda rights so technically your confession is not allowed at trial but whos going to know how to get that evidence dismissed and also the court has no intention on taking your case to trial.. thats not how all of this really works.. they got us all thinking it works a certain way but thats just a strategy they use to get to the truth to trick you into confessing and making their case against you as strong as possible and it can be very difficult for someone to maintain themself throughout this whole process even if their case against you is very weak they will act like they got you even with very bad evidence.. and if you hire a lawyer theyre just going to take you for a ride and get you that plea deal.. theres a lot of truth to what the free men on the land say but it takes nerves of steel and strong wits to actual pull that off and maybe years of experience trying things and learning things and luck and intuition as well as actual honor and the ability to know how to make things look and utilize the theater of the mind to your advantage if you have to.. and im honestly not entirely sure if cops and prosecutors really just dont know what the law is or what theyre doing simply because day in day out they just run everyone through this bs plea process and have made it easy on themselves to try and end cases quickly or if playing dumb and doing things wrong is their strategy in court because its the burden of the defense to catch them on their trial mistakes which can be very difficult to do in the moment which is where it actually takes a highly skilled attorney to beat another attorney and is the source of their pride n the court room. it isnt as simple as relying on your rights to stand on their own believing they will magically come to your aid like guardian angels. if you dont know how to cite every one of your rights in court at the exact time they are being violated you are considered to have waived them.. and thats why court is difficult. you have to know what all of your rights are and all of the trial procedures and rules of evidence and all that and you have to be able to call out the prosecutor every time he breaks one of these ules in a timely manner otherwise your rights are waived.. and you waived them by not saying anything in the moment.. and that right there is what makes court pretty messed up in my opinion.. who would know any of this stuff let alone all of it and have the ability to actually defend all of their rights properly which is why so many people have their rights trampled on every day..
So the officer openly admitted to an attorney, on camera, that he is willing to “stalk” (which is a felony) a law abiding citizen for as long as it takes, in the hopes of catching him in some kind of law violation??? 😮
...and all of that is legal. The courts have ruled it does not matter, as long as a traffic violation occurs, the motivation does not matter. I don't 100% agree and I think motivation should be a factor when following someone...but the motivation itself does not cause the violation to occur.
@redeastwood4850 ...because it doesn't fit the legal definition. It's really not that difficult to understand. I even explained the situation and why it's legal.
@@SB-cm9jh if he makes up an invalid reason to stop him, it's conspiring. Which is usually how retaliatory stops work. Your taillight is out. Oh now it's working but it wasn't when I pulled you over is an example. Although that one is not used as much now because of dashcams proving otherwise.
That last lady was nothing more than a busybody. If she waited until the cops finished their job and then relayed the info to the young mans father, she wouldn't have been arrested.
She was the Attorney from hell.She was completely deranged and wanting to be the centre of attention even though it had nothing to do with her.She’s looking for a big pay day now.The cop showed a lot of restraint imo.She was an embarrassment.
She was trying to make sure that the minor doesn't have unrepresented discussions with the police. No need to use such force on someone for being annoying.
@@LarryJL Yes there was. it's a chaotic scene and the officers have to get everything under control. get in the damn car as told and we'll get back to you in a bit. i got in an accident underage (under 21) and it wasn't my fault. cops didn't pester me, they asked me what happened. no, i was not represented. what, i'm going to call my mother or father and tell them get me a lawyer over here in the middle of a busy intersection?? just told the truth. that's it. and this was like 30 years ago. tow trucks came quick and removed the vehicles. not some blabbering idiot who's trying to cash in on an auto accident by calling dad. come on man.
Choosing not to answer questions and pleading the 5th are two separate machines. It’s knowing when to plead the 5th that makes the difference. If you plead the 5th for everything on a car stop you could end up going to jail. Because some questions are regulatory such as possessing a DL. Just be careful because you want to protect your 4th and 5th rights. It’s a slippery slope. Great video!!!
I will never forget what an old man told a bunch of us teens 50 years ago- he said if any of us was too lazy or stupid to hold down a job we could always get a job as a cop
Well hell then both of y’all should be employed tomorrow then and then maybe both of u could find other living arrangements than still living in your mommies basement huh.? See we knew y’all were smart. 😂😂
You must be one of those people who bad mouth cops like your tough but run crying to them when you get looked at wrong. That is, when mommy is not around. Fool
@@Farthernort i think she just knew the law well enough and knew it would be better to be put in a mental health institution rather than a prison. because if she isnt actually mentally ill as soon as she enters the mental health institution she can start to show 'progress' in her state of mind and get out earlier than prison and with no criminal charges so she saved herself.
The first cop didn't really seem bad to me. Sure, he'd like to search the car by sneaking in with consent, but he clearly fully intended to follow the code of conduct, and he wasn't being rude at all.
I had a friend like Beatrice. He was trained as special forces. He was schizophrenic voices and hallucinations, telling him that he need to kill his friends and family. He was discharged from the military because he reported himself. He went to treatment was on medication and permanent disability Some years later, he told me that they were starting to come back and then a few weeks later I found out he committed suicide.
@@Free-ud9xq thank you for that, that’s kind of you. 🙏🏼 I had a family member that used to say suicide is one of the most selfish acts, and I shared that story with them and it certainly opened their mind to the idea that it’s not often that simple. The kindness you showed, in that message, showing up like that for people, even strangers like me, saves lives, never lose it. ✊🏼 🍻
@@f0xh0nd51 nothin in this life is ever simple, something ive been noticing as i grow older. and your welcome of course, the internet can be a very hostile place its like we forgot we need each other
"This district attorney was calmly sitting in his truck, waiting to inspect someone's roof". Jesus, you know the economy is bad when a DA has to have a side hustle.
"You want to avoid going to jail for a roof safety violation? Hire your local district attorney today, he will check every single slat on that roof to make sure it's in compliance!"
@@lt4753 enough time to have read on the screen that the cop is citing their right to conduct any of this during a traffic violation stop, not an idling suspicious car.
Very correct .. I like to use the hours of training needed .. a barber 1500 to 1800 hrs to carry scissors and LE 525 to 750 hrs to learn how to drive, run radar, how to use pepper spray, use a taser, perform a traffic stop, testify in court, write tickets and fill out reports, DUI training, traffic control, physical fitness, some jujitsu and hand to hand, Firearms training (1st time for more than half of applicants) oh and yeah a few laws and codes, ect...all in 6 months or LESS
“You don’t belong over here” “Who said” “We’ll you said you have a purpose to be here” Also that line “do I look like I’m breaking into a house” “Idk you have a ladder” WTF!? 😂
Cocky policeman: "Well, we have a right to demand that you identify yourself when we're investigating a possible crime." Smart lawyer: "What 'possible' crime?" Cocky policeman: "Well, it hasn't occurred yet as far as we know."
It's sad how far the standard has fallen. My late grandfather was an RCMP in bc and when he'd go to a small town they were the post office police station and jail. My mom tells me stories about hearing the town drunks in the cells. Now a days just cops not royal not mounted.
@@jimdevlin4949 RCMP are some of the most corrupt assholes even more so than regular Canadian cops lol they have their own wikipedia page for how much bad shit they've done over the decades en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_controversies_involving_the_Royal_Canadian_Mounted_Police
..while asking questions and starts screaming at you when you dont answer. never forget the cop who stoped someone on a weekend asked him where is he heading, he told he is driving to work and the cop instantly called him a liar because nobody works on a weekend (wtf dude?) and the guy just responded so youre offduty right? and the cop gets real pissed because he is somehow a smartass, yeah from the perspective from a retard this ackknowlegement of the clear illogical statement must come from a genius.
@@watersnortmoment3734 Wouldn't fucking matter. The law is such that they can find whatever they want to waste your time & humiliate you with. Even if you end up driving away, you're still sitting there for no reason, wasting resources & time at their discretion. Municipalities in most states also have the right to investigate THEMSELVES & unless you have the money to hire a private law firm, the law (meaning the municipality that seeks to incriminate or wrongfully detain or arrest you) has the upper hand.
@@shechshireIncorrect. It has been stated by the Supreme Court that a "sufficient amount of time" is legal, but to go beyond that is illegal. This is easily researchable...
It's not that insane if you think about it. She was self aware enough to realize she has a serious mental illness and wanted to get herself locked up to prevent her from harming anyone she loved. I mean, she was already hearing voices telling her to drown her young niece. If it was you, wouldn't you want to get locked up too before you ended up murdering your whole family? If all insane people were actually this sane we'd live in a better world.
@@eancola6111 Uhm...I believe I said it wasn't that insane. In fact, my comment was making a case in favor of her being sane enough to seek help. How you read that as me saying she's insane I don't know.
takes over 2 years to become a lisenced barber, but only 6 months to become an armed cop in the US. that says WAY more about everything then it should, and that alone is concerning af.
@@4renchopesort of correct, it can take a few months to get the most bare bones education to be a barber. If you want to practice hair colouring, women’s hair, all that extra stuff, it takes extra time
@@BroomeBlocker4Seems like the police need much longer and better training before being allowed in that position then. If you are unable to do your job properly, especially such an important one that has the ability of controlling the lives and well-being of others, then you should never be given the opportunity to do so.
After my own run in with a dirty state trooper, I bought a dash cam that records inside and out. Not only to catch dirty bish state troopers, but to show my behaviors pre-pull over. Sad. I recently lost a stellar relative who was an amazing member of law enforcement. He even fought the dirty cops in his division. RIP Uncle Phil. So many will miss you!
So sorry to hear of your loss. That's not easy for you. As for the dash cams, I too HIGHLY RECOMMEND that everyone get at least 2. One for the front, one for the rear. Or even one of those fancy kits that has the front, rear and inside the cabin cameras (3 cams). When one can afford it, the best kit to get is one that not only records to the local SD card, but also streams up to the cloud to an account you set up, where videos can NOT be deleted, except by your home computer. In other words, if dirty cops try to delete the local SD card videos, they are still safely up on the cloud service. I've had dual full HD cams, with incredible video even at night, full color. These have been vital. Cams are a must!
"First thing first, rest in peace to Uncle Phil, for real. You're the only father that I ever knew, I get my bitch pregnant I'ma be a better you. prophecies that I made way back in the Ville, for phil." - J. Cole, "No Role Modelz"
That lady at the end is a perfect example of why you never willingly get involved with police. Don't talk to them, don't call them, don't even wave at them.
Kop's just doingg his job. The 'Lawyer' / Ladder Guy prolonged this into a Pissin' Match which caused him to be hand-cuffed. THIs tells yoiiu vilumes about why this 'Lawyer' is doing Roof Inspections at $15/hr.
Second Story work? Not everyone keeps the windows on the second floor locked, and you can't always count on security firms to install Sensors up there.
“I’ll follow him out of town until I get one.” This is the problem with police today. You make an unlawful request of someone, then say they’re obstructing because they tell you to get lost? Then often it escalates to where a victim of this harassment gets annoyed, then they say it’s “assaulting a police officer”. Very convenient.
The investigator that dealt with Beatrice is a great guy. He actually had compassion when she was talking him stuff that a lot of folk wouldn't have had compassion for. I really hope she got the help she needed before she hurt herself or someone else. 🙏
It actually broke my heart to listen to her talk so calmly about wanting to take her own life and others. Much respect to people who work with individuals like this for a living
She's trying to plead insanity so that she doesn't have a hard enough charge or prison time he's being nice because he has to regardless if she is actually insane
As a healthcare provider, I was impressed with the way that the detective dealt with the woman who had tried to mow down pedestrians. She was clearly psychotic, but he was gentle and caring. Of course, one of the tricks that the cops use is to trick you into believing that they are on your side and just trying to help you. But, this detective figured out pretty quickly that this woman was in a dangerous mental state and needed help to prevent her from harming herself or others.
The FL Vs. Bijoux case is super sad. Other than being one fine piece of ass, She was quite successful. VERY Successful for being so young. Had her own firm specializing in Personal Injury (of all things!). Pretty horrifying to think that the human brain can basically just "flip a switch" & absolutely destroy your life. Whether it's in Seconds, Months or Years; You're just along for the ride. Wild stuff. She was found Not Guilty (But surely liable) Due to Insanity. Just because she isn't going to prison doesn't mean she won't be locked away for quite some time - Perhaps somewhere worse.
Saying she will kill the detective and as many people as she can is her cry for help in her own way. She knows what she's doing, she's trying to exercise some control in the limited way she can.
Though you are correct about him definitely not being a lawyer, I thought that he was a private detective? I could be wrong but I think the insurance adjuster thing was said as an example of who he could be and why he could be sitting there. This is an older video and I watched its entirety many time. It is either PI or IA though. Definitely not lawyer.
The insurance adjuster isn't a "district attorney" but I guess Chinese AI content doesn't really care about accuracy. They won't even hire a narrator and always use this same text to speech, so I guess we can't expect any quality from them.
I watched the OG video and he was an insurance adjuster. Its ridiculously annoying to know they aren't providing accurate information on most of their videos..
If they knew all the laws, they'd go be lawyers. More money and it's safer. They should understand the basic laws that are commonly used on their job though, completely agree.
i think the worst thing that can happen to you as a cop is arresting a lawyer and them letting you do it without any resistance cause you already know theyre cooking up a case
@@chancecooper4006 Ya know, I get it, I really do. There's kids of this era and their hip "newspeak" have an overbearing urge and a near incessant yearning for the word "cook" for some reason and it gets old really quick. Yes it's overused, yes it's cringe, and yes it's rather abusive to the English language in my opinion. *However,* I do not believe this one of those instances. Lend some grace. Given the context of the comment, it's enough for me to not put OP and his comment in that category. Give me a break, cut the crap.
@@LFSPharaoh Who TF are you talking about "kids" usage of "cooking". Cooking something NON-Kitchen/Food related goes back to the 17th Century, And has been widely used as a modern phrase for many decades. At a minimum Baby Boomers who are in their 70s and 80s were using the phrase when they were in their 20s. So you calling anyone a "kid" using that term must make you what 95 or 115 years old or something?
Imagine finding out 3 years later that this is the woman that represented you when you got 2 yrs in prison for boating while intoxicated first offense 😂
does it really matter who knows the law and who doesnt if the people with the badges and guns will lay you out flat just because they really really want to?
Worst thing about cops is that when you try to exercise your rights, they say that you’re being difficult because you don’t just roll over for them like everyone else does, and then they’ll make you jump through all kinds of hoops
Those OK cops including the CHIEF were such an embarassment - they don't know the law, acted as tyrants, rude, intimidation, making up crimes, retaliation. They need immediate federal oversight. I'm so glad for body cameras.
@@nash2609doubt the cop was fired, the chief of my local town was found guilty of racial discrimination in a civil trial and still has his job, they get away with it all
Weird thing is he didn’t seem like he forgot the camera. As the citizen pulled up his phone they said ”no reason to film me, we all got cameras” I wonder what’s worse - cops that hide their petty shit or those who are unaware it’s even wrong
The guy in the parked pickup wasn't telling you how to do your job. He just wasn't gonna help you do your job. He never said you couldn't ask your questions either. He just legally chose not to answer them.
Being from the EU, I never understood why people don't just comply with police. But after seeing so many bad officers being so unprofessional, I totally get it. Escalating completely calm situations..
The US has a long history of distrust of the government and anyone in authority. There are good law enforcement officers and there are bad and how each of them behaves when you stand up for your rights is considered a litmus test to tell them apart in the US.
Yeah, a good amount of the people who get hired onto the police force here in the U.S. are nutjobs with control issues. Most are raging alcoholic's as well.
@@Metylanerwhat a horrible take. 95% of the situations could be resolved by the police actually doing their job correctly and respecting the law they are paid tax dollars to “enforce”. Even after being told directly by a lawyer this one officer chose to call himself that the man does not have any legal obligation to ID himself as no crime has been committed, his peanut brain cannot comprehend that he’s wrong and won’t let it go because of his power trip ego. The worst part is who pays all of the lawsuits when the cops overstep? They wonder why there is so much distrust and lack of respect for the police today and this is a perfect example. Trying to hold people to the law while 1. Not knowing it at all 2. When corrected just ignoring it anyway.
That was actually very sad, I felt for that woman. She spilled her guts so she could prevent herself from harming more people. I hope she got the help she needed.
@@josku5to protect your rights that you’re too stupid to understand. The fact that police are accustomed to violating the constitutional rights of citizens is a problem that every American has the duty to defend against.
@@josku5I can't speak for the bloke and I've never had any negative interaction with cops but I have with Dr's, nurses and mental health workers and the thing is when you have your own rights violated enough times (Iwon't explain theres been so many) I'm mainly talking about my human rights violated and seen other peoples too It can put you in a mindset of it doesn't matter how easy it would of been to just say his name and d.o.b or given his ID etc, you know you don't have to and that's that. Another thing that rockets me crazy (I'm already crazy so rocket is better than just saying drives 😂😂). Is the Dr's and nurses favourite game of "oh well I've just started my shift so I don't know or I've just finished my shift but I've handed everything over (meaning told the new shift what's going on). Or being told to just lay down and try stay calm when I'm having a panic attack ooooo this one is the worst when they say why are you panicking and I explain that I KNOW I'm safe and I KNOW that no-one is trying to KILL me but try telling my BROKEN adrenaline and cortisol buttons in my brain! Wow what a rant 😂😂
What's bugging me is in most cases, even if you know the law better than the arresting cop, you're forced to spend one or more nights in jail before you appear in court to state your case. So, even if you ultimately win, you can potentially loose your job or your reputation because you were arrested. Not to mention mental exhaustion due to thinking over what you're going through, which can lead to a downward spiral.
this!!! plus, if they do something like resist arrest, that charge can still be upheld and they can be convicted of it even if the arrest is later found to be unlawful. both sides need to grow the fuck up and stop arguing about stuff. it wastes so much time. imagine the number of people who could potentially lose their lives because cops are too busy arguing with a lawyer on private property about whether he is required to identify himself or not
If you have nothing to hide then you would have no problem with a search. A cop is trying to do his job. Guy probably had lots of opened alcohol in his car.
@@rayromano6249 Except it is very easy for cops to slip in some illegal stuff in your vehicle and arrest you for it, in the guise of a search. Don't be naive.
This is off topic from the OP, but the female attorney who had been recently diagnosed with schizophrenia, shouldn't be included in this video. I think it's bordering on being unethical. She's obviously having a mental health crisis.
@@B_Bodziak I think that it is a good thing he included her, since this is the first time I saw and listened to someone with such mental issues, and that will help me identify them in the future. Mental illness should be studied and I want to get myself informed about mental illnesses without paying 400k for a college course.
@@coaiemandushman1079 she hadn't been charged at the time of the video. I think it's in poor taste. She was claiming to have killed people, but there was later no evidence of it. She's clearly having an episode. I understand where you're coming from, too, but I don't think it's appropriate. That said/full disclosure, it's possible that I feel this way because I am a retired atty.
Legend has it that the unconventional "Let them step on their own dick" strategy has occasionally been used utilized effectively when interrogating a certain breed of psychopath.
The last video was totally not OK by the police. The only reason the narroator considered it OK by the police was that it was an annoying woman. She was trying to make sure that a minor is properly represented in their communication with the authorities. The amount of force used by the police was excessive.
why do people hate on the cops there, he was just trying to make sure that the suspect was not committing a crime, and the suspect was being an arrogant piece of shit to them, "i DoNt HaVe To GiVe YoU mY nAmE" like stfu, just say you are doing a job for someone and get on with it and stop wasting people's time. im from australia so idk if my views on cops are different because i atually live in a good country non run my commie joe biden, or if you guys actually are so low life that you have to "use my amendments" to just annoy the cops. absolute tomfoolery...
Yet her and her activist type firmly believe they are the voice of reason and refuse to ever listen. That's the part that always leads to the violence. It's not the right that generally incites violence, it's most always the very concerned very emotional and overly talkative left.
#2 is beyond insane that such a thing is allowed to even occur with the chief even exasperating it. Scary what kind of people hold a badge. There needs to be top down review of all these incidents.
First off, I'm not defending the officers considering how the whole thing went down. However, all the dude had to do was show them his fucking ID or do anything else to prove he's there for nothing suspicious. Couldn't have been difficult, he could have easily done that. The entire shit show could have been easily avoided but he just had to go with "I HAVE MY RIGHTS" route. Then again what the fuck do I know.
@@mekz22 haven't gotten far into the second clip but went down to the comments to see if anyone was talking about it. Dude just parked and sat in the weirdest spot possible to wait for what he had to do, and when questioned about it decided it was his time to be a dick unnecessarily. Some people need to realize that sometimes it's much better to realize the situation you're in, what it looks like to others, and then just be a decent human being and talk it out. While he fully has the right to act the way he did, he just made his situation look worse by dodging everything asked.
"I have no reason to believe you are the owner of this vehicle" he said to the person inside the vehicle. It's a bit like saying "I have no reason to believe you are a doctor" to a person in a hospital wearing a lab coat and a stethoscope
that second encounter was painful. true sign that you live in a police state when they think they can come up to anyone and start making demands that are clearly unreasonable. just sitting in your vehicle is NOT suspicious.
As much as I dispise how the police acted there, calling this "police state behavior" is incredibly incorrect. They spent a lot of time trying to get the lawyer to cooperate, spent time double checking the laws, called the police chief himself out to discuss the issue, and eventually let the lawyer go. None of this is me saying that their behavior isn't unacceptably awful, but an actual police state wouldn't have bothered with any of this. They would have just dragged him out of the truck and beat him into the squad car. Hell, these officers would have been shot for wasting the state's time if they did half these things. Let's just call these guys what they are: Pieces of $#!?
@AlphaOmega1237 the lawyer didn't need to dude that's the point. He wasn't doing anything and mind you even though they double checked they still ignored what the lawyer said and continued to harass the lawyer in the truck
@@AlphaOmega1237 police state: a state whose government institutions exercise an extreme level of control over civil society and liberties. just because they didn't drag him out of his truck and beat him to a pulp doesn't mean their actions weren't inline with police state actions. most police are government run, so when they blatantly violate your rights and insist and persist in doing it to the point where they threaten arrest THAT is police state action. are they pieces of sh!t? absolutely yes. are they acting like a police state? absolutely yes.
@@aimalkhan5028 How many times did I say, "These officers were out of line/horrible/acting unacceptably..." ? Actually read what I said, you moron. T_T And yes, I'm calling you a moron because I went out of my way multiple times to explicitly state that the officers were in the wrong. It's more than a little annoying that you're acting like I didn't do that.
@@aimalkhan5028 They were doing their job, answering a call about a suspicious car. Of course they are going to be persistent if the guy acts like a petty child. The lawyer knew why they were here and still chose to be a smartass and waste everyones time.