Hey mike, what if someone takes a legal ID thinking it’s fake, and refuses to return it once proven wrong? Love your content, keep keeping people informed!
@@lucomc32607 even if you think you’re innocent, don’t say anything. Cops and prosecutors can and will use anything you say against you in court. Innocent people talk themselves into jail much more often than you’d think.
Attempts to obtain cigarettes or alcohol, underage, often are misdemeanors, but the clerk who sells, even if the ID is a convincing fake, gets a felony. Ironically, many police officers forget that the offering of a document as if signed by a party, when the party did not sign it as it currently appears, is still forgery, whether it is by an imitated signature, or by altering the item with the authentic signature. That is always a felony. Therefore, an altered license, which carries an approved imprest of one or more state officials, or a completely faked facsimile of a license, with facsimile signatures, is a felony item. Thus, regardless of the low penalty for the underage purchase, the use of the instrument--the inauthentic ID--is a felony. That need not be taken lightly, regardless of the misdemeanor typically assigned to _use_ of a fraudulent license for driving. The forgery is an entirely different charge, too often overlooked.
Actually they cant charge the clerk for not knowing, the key here is intent and the fact that there are fake ID's that have even higher quality than the real ones
Yeah the cool thing is it's infinitely easier to ask a friend who is 21 or just not get caught the likelihood of an underaged indivual being caught and charged is incredibly unlikely usually at the very worst be nice to the officer they will confiscate it but don't care as much about the teenager as they do the store you'll get hit with 10 to 25k fines for selling nicotine products to people under 21 thats where the money is at they arent trying to deal with the paperwork and crying of some kid I promise you that 😊
@@conradchester Thats a lie I did the math of the time of this video and the time you said you watched, and it did not add up correctly to what you said.
@@conradchester if you've watched this 358 times, as one shows up every single video, it would be a total of 15036 seconds, which makes it 4 hours and 17 minutes.
For every loop, that's another twin. That poor mother who had to give birth to a million kids at once. Edit: A lot of people take jokes too seriously. It's called an exaggeration. I didn't literally watch it a million times.
But a fake ID that’s pretending to be somebody else with their photo on it? I’d assume that’s a felony since it’s identity theft…. I get people who come into my store with fake ID trying to access somebody’s account to get info and order merchandise through it. I catch them everytime but it still amazes me how real the IDs look and the audacity these people have lying straight to my face…..
Best advice, dont live in america or the city, then youre either old enough soon enough or cops only really care about underage drinking if its associated with other crimes
We live in a college town, and I warned my daughter,when she went to that school, to avoid using a fake ID to drink downtown like her buddies. If the Police find you drunk, you can get amnesty for the liquor charges by requesting to be taken to the hospital. Unfortunately, the thing those kids fail to realize is, that amnesty does not extend to their fake ID, which the police are delighted to charge them with, as they are skating on the alcohol charges.
@@DinsRune College kids are going to underage drink. It’s a matter of making sure they don’t have multiple life-wrecking felonies if they get caught. His advice is pretty damn smart.
In the state of North Carolina, everyone in the Fact is a Principle of the Fact, and not just an Accessory. If one twin commits a crime and conspires with the other to cover it up by not confessing, they both get arrested for the crime and the conspiracy to commit it. Of course, you still need some kind of evidence, but the twin loophole is almost impossible in NC.
It can still be an issue if one of the twins is unable to be proven guilty even for conspiracy, like if they were legitimately innocent and didn't want their sibling arrested, so they didn't confess innocence.
@@stinkychair If one twin is guilty of a crime and the other is innocent, yet neither one confesses, it can sometimes be impossible to arrest the guilty twin, as you don't know who is the perpetrator.
It's hard to prove a conspiracy to cover up a crime unless someone talks. If DNA from one twin is found at the murder scene and both twins deny doing it, then either: 1. Twin A did it and lied. Twin B is truly innocent. 2. Twin B did it and lied. Twin A is truly innocent. 3. Twin A did it and told twin B. Both lie to the cops. 4. Twin B did it and told twin A. Both lie to the cops. 5. Both twins conspired together to do the crime. Both lie to the cops. In cases 1 and 2, one twin is guilty and the other is innocent. In the absence of a confession, an alibi or evidence that points to one twin only (such as fingerprints or bloody clothing), they would have to let both go free.
He also lied to a L.E.O then recanted the lie confirming he lied to them. This kid would be facing so many charges he could never possibly win against in court. Purjury also sticks around for life.
The suspect never swore an oath to tell the truth, so Perjury would not apply. Obstruction of Justice, however, is broad enough that it may stick, though it can easily be argued that the suspect really engaged in the Furtherance of Justice. 😝
I have had people claim my own ID was fake, and when I disputed it, they essentially told me that they are not allowed to recognize IDs from my State. Super strange...
Are you from *New* Mexico? For whatever reason (they were probably drunk during Geography class) people out there don't seem to understand it's a state. I did do a double take when someone presented a sideways ID. Note:I just looked it up, evidently if your ID is vertical it indicates your under 21.
I am actually from Minnesota. We have a photo id permit that isn't accepted in Illinois and a few other states because they have restrictions against accepting permits as photo ids. In Minnesota, a permit has everything necessary for it to be a Photo ID on it. I literally traveled multiple states over in the past, to Illinois, just to be turned away at the entrance to a party my friends and I were attending. I was literally the only person NOT allowed in and I was in my late 20s. It actually got worse for me in another situation in Illinois. A person driving me to the place I was staying got pulled over by a cop. They asked for my ID, I showed them my instructional driving permit, and then arrested me for having no valid proof of identity. From what I learned after the fact, Illinois has a paper permit that has to be carried in addition to a State ID. So after that experience, I had to bring my passport around with me. Which was total BS, in my opinion.
Is it really a crime to not have id in Illinois... I know a lotta cops across this country remark about it as of it was criminal,. However I've never seen any statutes enforced to showit ais in fact criminal...I've had no dl or state id in 11 almost 12 years no passport no id and I've always been told from various sources that itß not actually illegal unless I was driving a vehicle....it turns out at least in the handful of states I've been stopped in....which is a handful ru-vid.comi2yo9wwBIXc?feature=share ?
A coworker who’s also a notary almost got in a lot of trouble for that unintentionally. She did a certified copy of a birth certificate and in PA we’re not allowed to do that. Luckily the state let her off for it being an accident and it not leading to any laws being broken
Laos and Myanmar. I live in New Zealand you wouldn't believe the amount of people with fake Laos and Myanmar passports and IDs, that Custom Officers caught at our airports and seaports.
Lol he didn't say it wasnt but his wording could have been better. It isnt a felony in all places in the US he meant. It's still a crime everywhere in the US, just means it's a lesser crime.
The only important part of this video is the part that you left out. Don't answer questions. Never make a statement about anyting you've been accused of until you talk to your lawyer and you are made aware of any and all evidence the state may be planning to use against you.