Holy shit yeah, I sometimes think about that like "what would happen if this happens," or something. I would never want to be put in jail for something that I didn't do.
@@MiguelRamirez-mp2st Carloz do made a good example people getting cancel like Depp, even chris hemsworth and cris pratt are getting cancelled, one because he does not like the state of hollywood culture and the other because his faith, like dude wth? I have a muslim friend I did not like the religion but there is no way i would hate them because of it, you see cancel culture are nothing but a yelling at the wrong space but for some reason it hit someone that does not make anything bad at all on the space, one mess up case is like Indie game developer Alec that commit game end over accusation with very little proofs even after his death his family pretending he is guilty because his pass messed up action he pretty much regret which is not even related to the said accusation to him. Just like a wise man said "if you have people said about accusation this and that, give them one question 'is there any proofs? The police record? Anything that is really strong enough?' If not don't trust it "and also "if someone said this is my truth, that person basicaly said even my accusation proven to be false it's still right based on my mind" this is the mindset of cancel culture but a sad but true glimpse quote of no matter how strong the proves if he is guilty or not even if you show it infront of their eyes, some will still not gonna believe it . Sorry for the long and late post.
@@aidanhammer6968 I somehow am hesitant to believe that a country ran by Fidel Castro's bastard child is more respectful of civil liberties than America.
They lost pay for 24 Hrs. One of the cops actually making the arrest later died but the other cop got promoted after this. The interviewer looks to have actually gotten demoted for a little bit at least and 50k is always nice but dude didn't promptly get released, he was held under bail conditions for 9 months
It's more common than criminals being treated this way. There are always more suspects than guilty people, and coos don't give a shit if you're actually guilty or not. They just want to fill their quotas.
I was arrested and charged with 1st degree murder. The victim came and testified he wasn't dead but his testimony wasn't allowed in court because the victim cannot testify on the defendants behalf. It didn't take 2 years but I was in jail in the maximum security ward with murderers and rapist for almost 6 months before I was released with no charges pressed only after I signed away my rights to sue the state for wrongful imprisonment.
They dont even hear that.. they dont care at all.. you and me find this important but cops dont... they just see a guilty person and want a confession..
That means nothing. You should watch the interrogations of the pedophiles caught in the old To Catch a Predator stings. Almost all of the mask if they should be calling their work the next day to let them know they won't be in. They all expect a little slap on the wrist and to be released that night ,despite driving to a minor's house to have sex with them.
One comment said he got accused of armed robbery at 18 right before he was abt to join the military, fingerprints of the real guy finally proved his innocence. It took away a year of his life.
its crazy they thought this dude got of work and his side hustle is breaking into jewelry stores and then going back to work at 8 am lol.... worthless detectives and racist asf
@@theakountant8444 Still North America though Also, the vast majority of such cases happen in the us so it's safe to assume it's the us again Canada and us very close (not just position) anyway
@@NotFalling4it When they get it blatantly wrong and mess with people's lives, unjustly, there should be severe punishments. It's right up there with bearing false witness, which should be punished the same way as you'd punish the falsely accused, if found guilty. The way these people can put your life in jeopardy at little or no risk to themselves is disgusting. In the USA, they can go after a sitting president with illegally obtained warrants and CLEAR malice, and nothing happens to them. There've always been those who operate above the law. It's more blatant, now. They do it right out in the open, and if you're on the wrong side of it, you have no remedy.
That is the part that put a smile to my face, what really got me emotional is how polite & respectful Michael Dixon is to the racist scumbag detective who didnt even think once that this could be wrong. Its amazing how God changes situation & people like Mr Dixon never loose their temper.
The saddest reality is that there's so many people who aren't as smart and well spoken as him who will crack and fall under pressure in this situation. Fire this detective immediately
Agreed, but i see them developing a new way to tell if someone are lying or not. probs gonna use some New methods in the future Imagine a machine that could scan your brain, with inplants or Something. they could see which parts of the brain are active once they ask the suspect questions or smt
@@N0RZC Smells like a scam to me. There will always be a new method and misguided faith in it until the truth comes out about how unreliable it is. No matter how good the tool is, if the person using it is unskilled or biased, it can affect the outcome and interpretation. I have studied my entire life and sacrificed my soul to understand the hearts of men, and to think, men think they can create tools that allow them to do the same with minimal effort and sacrifice. It is laughable. They won't mind sacrificing a few innocent people for the sake of maintaining their delusion of capability.
Like me , my first job was in bus company and i was accused of stealing the money of the passengers. And the HR called me and told me i was seen by the supervisor doing such thing, i said i didn't do that and she said " c'mon man you has been seen by him , now assign here please " . And i kept saying " i didn't do that " And she said again " just sign please " And i thought " maybe if I don't assign they will fire me cuz I'm not obedient, i think it's better i respect them and keep my job , i don't care if they think i stole something cuz i know I'm innocent " Then i assigned the sheet and I left the HR room and one man came to ask me and i said " oh , nothing! They are telling me that i was seen stealing the company but that's no true " And he asked me " did u assign anything?" I said " oh yeah but that's okay cuz i don't wanna they think I'm not obedient " This man got crazy and he asked me " did you steal or not ? I said " i didn't do anything wrong " And he still upset said " wtf did u assign the paper ? Are you stupid? Now you are confirming you stole the company " In that moment my eyes opened and i thought " oh shit that's true " I went to talk to my supervisor and i said " hey man listen, i assigned the paper but i did anything wrong. He said " if u assigned you confess " I became so sad 😞😥 and tried to talk to everyone that i could and i was fired without anything. I was only 18 in that time .
One thing to remember: the police are legally allowed to lie to you about supposed evidence they have against you in order to try and coerce a confession out of you. So if you know you’re innocent without a doubt, *DO NOT TALK TO THE POLICE AND REQUEST YOUR LAWYER IMMEDIATELY.*
how does that make sense tho? if u know ur innocent without a doubt u should just give them all the information u can so they realise it's not you they are looking for..? what do you think could that do bad for u in that moment?
@@crypton1782because police sometimes will try to get a confession out of you or make you look bad because it can lead to a promotion and it’s not always clear if the person you are talking to has your best wishes in mind or if they are looking to just put you in cuffs and climb the ladder, so it’s just better to play if safe if you’re completely innocent
Same feeling. Like dude call their bluff and assert your innocence! but he’s just trying to be nice. I’ve found that when accused it’s important to be direct and resist the urge to sympathize with your accuser-especially if it’s a cop
@@itzAurora_Xoxo I agree. Although, as a black male, he probably didn't want to call even more attention to himself by shouting and being "aggressive" with a police officer!!
At least the fact that there were consequences for the officers beehavior is somewhat satisfying. Wrongful imprisonment is not a minor thing, and many tmes nothing happenes at all to the officers responisble. The state paying restitution is funded through taxpayer money like everything else. The cop couldn`t care less about that. BUt demotion and a blip in his record will teach him to be at least a bit more honest and follow procedure in the future.
"If you didn't do it why are you being so defensive?" My dad asked me this one time when my step-mom found weed (which is illegal in my state) in my sisters room. My step-mom somehow didn't communicate that it was in my sisters room and not mine therefore I was sat down, humiliated in front of my family, and yelled at until 10-15 minutes later my step-mom told my dad that it wasn't found in my room. It's honestly one of the most frustrating thing in the world to be sat down and accused of things you can't defend yourself against because someone has already made up their mind about you.
My heart goes out for Justin. That’s a man that’s making a genuine change for the better and is watching his life be stripped away from him unjustly. It’s hard to watch
@I OFFER YOU THIS wtf are you talking about? there is literally no evidence to suggest this is the case whatsoever, beyond your own stereotypes...just as bad as the cops in this vid man
@I OFFER YOU THIS Where's this coming from? The guy was in the penal system, is working to correct his life and make good with his future. What in ANY of that leads you to believe he's a thinblue type? You sound like you're jumping to conclusions based on biases.
@I OFFER YOU THIS How do you think a man who's been run through the wringer like that could maintain respect for law enforcement? Because he has a beard? Snap back to reality.
"demoted and suspended without pay" yeah sorry, thats not good enough, not even close. They picked a man up off the street that didn't even remotely resemble the suspect, told him his guilt wasn't in question in an attempt to get a confession, threw him in prison for three days, and couldn't even be bothered to check his alibi in the meantime. At that point the "detective" has proven himself not only to be a useless investigator, but also a liability to the functioning of a criminal justice system. They should be permanently blackballed from any position at any police station or court anywhere. I know there are a lot of cops who have done a lot worse, but honestly our standards for law enforcement are far far too low, even something like this cannot stand
idk it's bad but 3 days of jail time isn't the end of the world. If this works 90% of the time to get an actual confession from a real criminal, then maybe it's more useful than not doing it. Michael was compensated massively for this and the detective was demoted and suspended without pay. It'll teach him to get his act straight.
@@thelastvbuck You sound like you'd back the blue until it happens to you. 3 days of jail could mean losing your job, your house, your car, your wife & kids, but surely it isn't the end of the world, right?
@@fftunes That's very extreme. Provided you can make phone calls, all that shouldn't happen. If some of that really did happen, then as we saw, he can sue for that money back. For the record it was 100% some bad police work, but being demoted and suspended without pay is arguably pretty bad. You could lose your job, your house, your car, your wife and kids, but that would be justified for accidentally putting someone in jail for 3 days?
Wish I knew who he was so I could send him a card. Luckily I’ve never had this happen legally, but in my engineering career, coworkers’ ethics has been a huge issue for me. It’s like people are happily and willingly delusional because it “gets the job done”
Yeah this happens way too often. There was another man who tried to turn his life around and started a family only to be wrongfully accused of murder and sentenced to life in prison.
Anybody else find it strange that that guy was in handcuffs in the interrogation room? Usually they at least wait until after the interview to cuff him.
I would probably insult the investigator passively if they started lying like he did here, well actually when he said "we have you on camera" i would start laughing
@@jimmyzhao2673 and the fact that all detectives involved got demoted and suspended without pay... that sounds like fucking dreamland... In the US they would've killed that poor man based on skin pigmentation and then awarded a 3 month paid vacation for the act
A man who is unwilling to compromise or change is a lost cause, regardless of the degree of correctness they are believed to hold. This is frustrating and self-demeaning in friends and family, but it destroys lives and trust in the place of authority.
Man, with all due respect I don't give a crap about humans, there's only one authority and that is God's Law. Doesn't really matter if human laws interfere with God's, he's always the superior law.
@@lanac5793 man you're just stereotyping. What if one Mexican (doesn't matter the gender), gets behind you, steals your wallet and runs away. Then this same thing happens to you six months later, do you really fucking assume all people are like that? NO Now stop fucking crying and get down to reality kid, not all cops are bad, not all cops abuse their power. In fact, it's only a few, but because the fucking MEDIA has told you otherwise, then you're like all these brainwashed people....
@@MrKevin-wu8re Why do you care what the media say? They are humans after all, which you say you don't care about. The cops (also human) are part of an inherently corrupt system that damages innocent lives.
*Don't trust cops, get a lawyer!* I've been in this situation before. Not only is being wrongfully accused stressful and depressing, what I was suspected of is vile and egregious compounding the emotions that comes with it. Not only that, but I'm from a small town and the 2 detectives who questioned me while 15 other cops searched my house, one was my former neighbor for years whom I've had beers with and the other was literally my childhood best friend that I had known for 40 years at this point. Still they lied and tried tripping me up just to get a confession.
That creates a society where no one trusts anyone (except for family members). This develops further into a third world country, as no one is able to co-operate. The USA has gone into that path, sorry for you.
It was 2003 and the police officer was plainly from the UK. At that time and before it, the UK was rife with racial prejudice. A government initiated inquiry, headed by Sir William MacPherson, proved this to be the case (c.f. the MacPherson Report). This officer was plainly operating on the trusty principle of black = guilty.
@TheBull916 The white guy knew the owner of the house, had been in prison for the same crime, and he was (wrongly) identified by a witness. Though he was wrongly accused, there were reasons he was handcuffed and questioned. As for the black guy in Canada, where was utterly no reason to hold him...except he is black.
Cop had an English accent, makes you wonder if he'd been in the police in the UK and had to leave for similar behaviour. Lying about evidence to that extent wouldn't be allowed under English law (not since they started recording interviews anyway).
I can't imagine a worse nightmare than going to jail for a crime you didn't commit. The emotions and thoughts that must run through your head while in jail is frightening.
I feel a deep sadness for Justin. Trying to better yourself and a would be friend screws you over. Then when the police get involved, they make it even worse. How horrible. Clear evidence and lack of evidence puts him back in jail. And all of it hearsay from goddamn girl named Candy.
Lol I had commented a while ago on this video “never trust a girl named candy” or I bet it’s spelled Kandi. But yeah I totally agree. I wouldn’t be surprised if he went back to his old lifestyle after his release having lost any hope in the system
Mixing with girls named Candi can only end badly. Noone in the world has ever had a loyal trustworthy wife and lifelong happy relationship with a girl of that name.
Ngl, watching innocent people being wrongly accused and going through this kind of ordeal, when detectives don’t believe them, is by far more terrifying than watching a heinous criminal confess to gruesome murders.
the first guy was so calm...the robber was much shorter than him different clothes and to put the tin hat on it..was white....he got 46,000 but that's not enough
@@MYKE1111 You mean it’s been happening everywhere in the world since the beginning of time. I’m sure false accusations are not exclusive to America. Or Canada. And obviously not exclusive to black people.
I said what I said. Both of our statements can be true because the statement you said doesn’t make what i said false. America & Canada is included in EVERYWHERE & Nor did i mention its exclusively black people. I just highlighted those things. Sorry not sorry.
The fact that a detective is thinking “Guilty until proven innocent” is truly backwards thinking. Those detectives shouldn’t even be able to be detectives anymore.
That's how law enforcement are. They get called out and make a judgement call if your innocent or guilty on the spot. Have had this happen to me several times by people who just didn't like me. Actually once got arrested for my friend having drugs on him and all I could say was , it ain't mine. Spent 5 days in jail then spent $1000 bonding out. Luckily the guy went to cot before me and told them I had no idea he had the pills on him. Even crazier I think fact that he has just picked up the prescription and had sat 2 pills on his center console to take once he got something to drink. Cops didn't even care he had a prescription. F em .
What amazes me is if a person has social anxiety or something similar then they can be assumed guilty by interrogators because of their pose and most likely lack of eye contact
@@houssemmaiza7082 yeah in the US anyway we are too busy worried about other nonsense then consider how well we are doing. Best of luck if you are in a poorer country.
@@houssemmaiza7082 This video shows bad treatment; what you're talking about is cruel and inhumane treatment. Just because the video could be worse doesn't mean that what happened is acceptable.
Michael is FAR too Canadian. He even tells the investigator "I'm not trying to give you a hard time". MICHAEL, this guy is literally trying to give you HARD TIME!
I freaked out when an american cop accused me of littering once. And people say were the same country 🤣 but yea poor michael tho. Last part here isn't a joke. blm
layney boy it’s how we act in other countries. We send out tons of money for help, we generally don’t get involved in war, as well as our tourists are generally very well behaved. I can tell you for certain Europeans have the same opinion on Canadians as America. Fun fact I actually ran into a travelling couple in Wales, they had Canadian leafs on their backpacks but told me they were American they just have Canadian backpacks because people treat them like shit with American flagged ones lol
@@DonFatherTrump what about his constant ignoring of subpoenas? Just that 1 easy evidence based things right quick if ya want. Not to mention his complete lack of a concrete plan for any of part of our country besides yelling crazy slogans. Or his total rule through executive order which has not teeth and gets nothing done. These are all concrete things that happen and are bad. He just isn't good at his job, he should be a radio host, maybe. He sucks at managing anything, the only thing he has gotten done is what, a little bit of wall? Even by his own measures he is a failure, and his measures suck.
I've been wrongfully accused by my teachers many, many times during my teenage years. Whenever some shit went down in my shool, I was the first to be looked at, which was really annoying, because I had never done any of the things they accused me of. My parents weren't really helpful, as most of the times, they seemed to believe my teachers rather than me. Then I went into reoccuring depressive episodes because of all that stress, which didn't help either. Being really pale and having racoon eyes (because of the depressions, lack of sleep, etc.) didn't help at all. Those mofos started rumors about me taking and selling drugs, which was BS as well. Nobody helped me, nobody sided with me and this went on and on until I finished school. It took a massive impact on me, because eversince then I am scared of getting falsely accused of something really bad, despite me being a perfectly law abiding citizen. Damn....if I'd ever get falsely accused of f.e. murder or rape or something like that and they check my internet history, I am SO fucked, because of all the true crime stuff I watch. Those poor guys in this video had to go through that shit for real....
@@torwne6964 lawyers are different. Some are definitely sociopaths, others sometimes have to defend the guilty, or make cases against the innocent. That is their job and even the criminal has the right to an attorney under law.
"If you didn't do it why are you being so defensive?" Because I don't like being falsely accused of shit I didn't do Edit: damn, just checked this comment after 3 years and I had no idea it had 21k likes 💀
The officer got so excited about finally using the interrogation techniques he learned at the academy, that he forgot to check the most important part of an investigation: the evidence.
@@juliusperseus8612 Jokes on him, if you watched the whole video, he got demoted and suspended for his lack of caring. The evidence he claimed to have "seen" was bullshit too, defenitely thought he'd get the job done quick, get his pay and ruin someone's life.
At a time in my younger day's, some 50 year's ago. I happened to look simular to someone wanted by the police, for apparently nothing but questioning. In regards to a crime that though he wasn't directly envolved in, believed he may have some knowledge about. I was maranded properly, and not just detained but arrested, meaning I was photographed, finger printed and put in a cell with other's who were actaull criminal's. It took two day's for them to determine, oop's, wrong guy, and simply stated "SORRY" and allowed me to leave. Which I did post haste. However, because I had been in my auto, they the police had it towed from the area and impounded it. I now have a record on file with my finger print's, photo, and was forced to pay the tow charge and the impound fee. And also had to face my boss for not reporting for work in any way shape or form for two days. This could have been a longer story, becasue it actually doesn't include some of the various thing's I viewed and almost had to endure myself while in the cell with other's who had actaully commited crimes. All were repeat offender's. But yes, today one is guilty until one has either proved them selves, or after a periud of time, the police somehow determine your not.
People keep saying that cops aren't your enemies, but they're not your friends either. Their job is to arrest people. Always assume the worst in a interrogation and shut up until your lawyer shows up.
they are also trying to get fast track promotions by getting innocent people to confess and build a reputation as a great interrogator. what a crazy system that encourages bad behaviour not good service. throw cops like that out of the service. show people respect. I hope he got demoted to a lollypop lady (a pleasant woman who helps children cross the road in England and she holds a sign that looks like a giant lollypop to stop traffic) or a library security man.
cops are absolutely your enemy. They do not exist to keep you safe, or to "fight crime", whatever that is supposed to mean. They exist to protect capital.
Yeah never talk to the cops unless your lawyer is present even if you have nothing to hide they will always twist the facts against you even if you have good intentions
@@lunchbag_larry fighting crime typically means stopping people from committing criminal activity. It exists in every sector of society, im not sure how thats hard for people like you to get
@@svetaAFG I'll try to steer you guys back towards civility. Having watched JCSs entire library now, it's a tough one. I don't think anyone should be treated like garbage, least of all by police, but it's interesting seeing how detectives DO sometimes manage to break guilty suspects, trapping them into story lines, etc. that I can imagine they might not have gotten JUST with evidence (though hard to say). The main takeaway should always be to NEVER speak to the police without an attorney present, but I can imagine that if you're truly 100% innocent and wanting to genuinely help out that it's hard to think that.
I think CIA's point is that just because they are kind doesn't do much for the police if they are trying to find evidence because monsters can be kind, I personally think it's better to treat people with respect because harassing the innocent is worse than being kind to a monster. They should wait till they have more to go on rather than shoot blindly and injure bystanders until they get the criminal.
@@SaysSamara Oh no, I definitely understood the two sides. It's a bit of the whole "better that 100 guilty go free than 1 innocent be locked up" sort of thing vs. the opposite of that (which is certainly some people's belief too). The good news is that the police from the first video were all disciplined and removed from their positions for the screwup. But I was just noting how I can appreciate that it's probably a very difficult position. I think of the Chris Watts episode JCS did, for example, and had they not broken him, they might well NOT have had the evidence to convict him. Still, that doesn't mean anybody should be berated and to be fair, there was FAR more evidence in the Watts case - albeit still not definitive. I guess I was more just suggesting that there are ethics that should be held dear, but at the end of the day, I can still imagine it's a difficult and uphill battle.
My uncle is a pretty good and respectable lawyer. His words: "If you ever get called or escorted to a precinct for any reason and you start getting asked questions, the only thing you should say is "am I being detained?" If they say no, you get up and leave immediately. Then you call me. If they say yes, or stop you from leaving, the next and only thing you should say is :I want my phone call", at which point you call me."
Kinda figures that a lawyer would tell you to call a lawyer lol But yes, it doesn't take too many slips in the interrogation room to turn you into a suspect. Hardly anyone is as slick as they think they are
@Gia I dont understand that detective, he didntfollow any potential lead to prove his innocence. That's his job. Is to make sure the Innocent *dont* get punished, and that the guilty get found. Not just the latter. He fucked up his life
@@shanebolger7802 they better have reviewed his actions on a false imprisonment and potentially had him fired, or at least demoted to a B-cop. Likely didnt though, unfortunately
I'm so glad the officers in Micheal's case were punished for their actions. Officers are in a unique position where their fuck ups, laziness, or selfishness can infringe on rights of others. Accountability is paramount for the trust of the public.
That so rarely happens, though. More often than not, the courts will bend over backwards to protect the identities of murderous police officers. I just got done researching several such cases where the name of the officers who killed black men in cold blood STILL aren't known. What's the point in having a system of law, when those meant to enforce the law operate outside of it entirely?
This makes me sick how many people who are innocent get arrested and their lives ruined while the actual person who committed the crime skips away free
When I used to work in the courts here in australia (As a video technician, I was the guy who set up all the video-links, fixed the VHS machines (This was the early 2000s when VHS was still a thing) and a Judge once told me that she estimates that in a jury trial about a 1/3 of the people convicted are innocent and 1/2 of the people found innocent actually did it. Non Jury trials the ratio is a lot better because judges are pretty experienced with reading body language and evaluating evidence, (Thoug they do get to hear the discarded evidence which is usually prejudicial and poor quality), but still would likely be around 1/4 innocent found guilty and 1/4 guilty found innocent. Now, imagine that situation with the death penalty? Terrifying isn't it.
@hits*academic Great plan einstein, except what happens when your king is a criminal. Hint: Historically, thats most of them, its the whole damn reason we had to invent democracy. The only "good" kings are kings without power.
Hi this topic is big for me im from Ireland I got badly beating by a garda he us a to take me from school with no warrant he get me in his car and beat me to these places that were broke int he use to beat me show me how I got into these houses then drive me to the station tel me just admit to this u can go home never had celisitor now I am fighting so fukn hard to get justice to stop this it's not fair
the fact that he got framed and charged for robbery after he actively made change in his life to overcome his criminal past and to become a better person is fucking awful
@@jamesalexander6996 you’re right , there isn’t a quota so wrong choice of words but they seem to feel the need to just arrest people and half do their jobs for whatever reason .. there are too many bad cops and these situations don’t need to be overlooked like they’re small incidents . These people should be fired
@@minyon7659 I assume they develop (or maybe already possessed) a sense of dissonance-they tend to deal with scumbags virtually 24/7 and that can get jading, especially when you have to watch them walk away over and over again due to a lack of or contaminated evidence. The moment that occurs though, they need to leave the force because they can no longer hold themselves as the impartial bodies that their work _requires_ them to be.
@@Satfirescat At least he got a 46'000 Canadien dollares for the "inconvinience" (I know, spelling). I've heard that you can spend 20 years, wrongfully convicted in a US prison and don't get a dime for it
I almost cried when the white guy with the beard was talking about how he was working on improving and changing past behaviors, then freaking out when he realized he couldn’t do anything to convince them that they got the wrong guy. It’s like he was taking huge steps forward, only to be dragged back down.
I have a cousin who has been in and out of jail, has recently nearly died for overdosing, I have no idea where his life will go after he recovers, but I do hope nothing like this happens to him, not when he has at least taken the steps to become a better person.
Michael Dixon's reaction to being falsely accused is the reaction of someone who has probably never done anything wrong before and finds the situation utterly ridiculous versus the ginger guy who has been locked up before and knows exactly what's coming and is trying to avoid it all costs. Understandably that's why his reaction is much more emotional.
It's impossible not to get emotional at the thought of going to jail specially if your a law abiding citizen, Micheal is on a different level here, yes you can keep calm but i doubt any innocent person would just accept things like this.
@@deecee7073 I disagree. I believe that video and the commenter was trying to say that Michael as an innocent man can’t believe the situation he’s in and ultimately will find some way out because there’s really no evidence against him. That’s why he was so happy to hear that there’s video evidence
@@deecee7073 lol well you’re obviously wrong because here we have a video of a man who was falsely accused and he managed to stay calm. As tangible as a counter example as you can get lmaooooo
@@aidanleung1298 Very easy, claiming you have video evidence or witness testimony when you don't have such, or any evidence at all for that matter, yet still try to blatantly coerce a confession. Even when directly being called out for his bluff maintained that he had this evidence. There is a point where testing to see if someone would crack, becomes blatant vindictiveness, which is what this officer displayed
Damn, I feel so much for that guy who was falsely accused of burglary. And he spent over 2 years in prison, that’s so horrible. I hope he could sue the city or get some money somehow, and I pray Candy got in big trouble for falsely accusing him
@@frescula there should be no room for shit like this in the justice system. Losing your job because you’re negligent is different than a court room setting.
@@frescula The fact that he's interrupting peoples lives from negligence it's a safe bet it's not the first time he's done so. suspension without pay to investigate previous work and then fire him if it's found this isn't an individual incident.
Seeing that man desperately defend himself, after having already been to prison and knowing that he could be going back again, is so sad and frustrating.
Having been involved with the criminal system before i can only imagine what was racing through his head man. The first time was scary enough. Most stressful period of my life.
@@naysaynetwork5271 This is Canada, not the US. So North America yes, but not the US that I think you think it is. Plus the police officer sounds English. EDIT: The second one is in the US and you probably meant that one..
Demotion and suspended without payment isn’t enough. Everybody who was prominently involved in that scenario should be banned from any type of law enforcement and sent to prison for attempting to unlawfully inprison an innocent civilian, at minimal.
Thank god he lived in a developed country with a justice system. Honestly, it’s cheesy to say, but I’ve never been prouder of my country than watching this video.
And feel awful for the other guy who spent TWO YEARS in jail for a crime he DIDNT commit. Like of course it must of been terrible to go through, but everyone here talking like three days in county jail is anywhere near as traumatic as spending two years incarcerated.
Meh, in a way, yes but I'm gonna say no. Yes he's calm facing a crisis, however he doesnt seem quick to fully grasp a situation and form a plan as well as seems very passive. Yeah, i'm gonna say he'd probably get you killed.
@@justsomeguy892 i don't know maybe yeah , i'm imagining how annoying and uncomfortable the situation will be , because i was involved into similaire thing
Michael’s responses always make me laugh because he is so calm and reasonable in the face of such absurdity. Then he says, “well, thank you, I guess.” He’s so empathetic towards the officer the whole time . I’m so glad he prevailed.
yea makes him seem like a super villain actually, but ig hes just well composed edit - i meant it in a cool way lol, u know like how super villains are always calm and shit
I don't get a super villain feeling at all lol, dude was confident in his innocence and trying his hardest to give the full truth. If anyone sounds like a super villain it's the detective. That guy was trying everything to pin Michael for something he didn't do, just to pad his record.
It’s the cop that should be empathetic towards him though lol, cut straight to the bad cop act without checking out the file.. and this guy is seeking a promotion lol
@@fluxshaman8251 It's not to pad his record, just to avoid hurt ego from admitting he was wrong. He even managed to delude himself. Pathetic little guy.
I feel so horrible for the second guy. The way he slowly increases his leg shake as he puts two and two together and realizes he's being falsely accused is heartbreaking. He knew he wasn't going to be believed because he has a history
yea i mean especially knowing in your heart, that they don't have any kind of evidence to support their claims. just absolutely shitty and horrific feeling im sure.
Arrogant detective: "You're not in a enviable position" Ends up getting sued, suspended, demoted and has to pay damages.... That's not an enviable position either, buddy.
Lol. Good. He deserves it. Appalling that when these people fail at their jobs, innocent people suffer. He’ll certainly think twice next time. Shame there was a first time though.
no amount of money, influence, goods, security, penis or vagina is worth interacting with feds from any country. Simply ask for a lawyer and remain silent unless you are literally the one asking the cops something like the direction to the nearest supermarket, and even then, say as little as possible. Feds are not your friend, Country is not your friend, you have your family, maybe your community if you are lucky and in the luckiest of scenarions you can have people of the same ideological alignment to help you, but otherwise this world is a corporate hell and you shouldn't forget that.
@@AntonioCunningham Better to suffer max 48hs in detention than lifetime in prison because you have stressfully stuttered something that could be taken as a confession out of context.
"How are you gonna prove to me that you didn't do this?" I don't gotta prove shit, you're the one who has to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that i did anything whatsoever.
Well it’s a common tactic to lie like he does, but this is only used after a while into the interview where the directive already sees holes in your story.
Well, for those doubting he's full of shit and shouldn't be doing the job....he didn't do a very good job now did he? He didn't arrest the actual perpetrator. He's grilling someone who's innocent, and he could have easily referred back to the dispatch. This could have been a lot worse. It is a lot worse in MANY instances. They have our lives in their hands, and they know it and when they shirk that responsibility? Lives are lost and destroyed. It's not like if someone got the order wrong in a drive-thru. It's incarceration or worse. It shows a lack of quality in his work ethic, honestly. Should get demoted or reprimanded in some way.
Nothing in the world makes me more furious than being accused of something I didn't do. It's also one of my biggest fears to be accused of a crime. I would be absolutely LOSING it! My reaction probably wouldn't do me any favors in court. 😂😂😂
Seriously, if nothing else, Michael is incredibly intelligent. He read motive with ease, and kept his head in a very consequential situation. I hope his boss saw that, and was able to acknowledge how lucky they are to have him.
Are you new to this channel? Detectives across the world say this and it works. This would have been a successful interrogation if they could be arsed to follow up his alibi and let him go but... promotion comes first for that arsehole.
Sheer incompetence. The officers who made the arrest were not at fault. But for the detective to not check against the 911 description is dereliction of duty, with severe consequences for an innocent citizen.
@@harrymills2770 I think the officers were at fault a little bit, I mean they ought to know the general physique of a person they'd been running after. Plus, walking off the bus doesn't look remotely like fleeing the cops.
Literally racism “well I lost the other guy so I’ll just bring him in, they’ll believe he did it!” And they did for 2 years. Awful. Glad he got his justice
I would've started laughing at him and call him out for lying his ass off, that he's unqualified for his job, and to thank him for the future lawsuit money.
Bro you and JCS are completely skipping over the racial factor at play. "Despite the suspect being described as a short white man" and while Mr. Dickson did not know that, he understood that he was a black man under control of police who were up to some bullshit. I've been in that situation a few times myself, I'm queer and white and it was in a very conservative town, and eventually you get an instinct for detecting bullshit. Much like the analysis of hindsight, you learn to identify certain behaviors that can only be a result of some bullshit going on. In this case, yes we can directly point to the detective ignoring the clear difference between the description of the perpetrator and the person sitting in the interrogation room. In that situation you don't know what's going on and you know that, so the most reasonable thing to do is be polite as possible while getting information and holding your ground.
@@misteral9045As a Black woman, I really appreciate you bringing up the racial factor here!! Thank-you for caring enough and being educated enough to speak on it! I'm so sorry you've been judged bc of your identity as well 💔
Let me get this straight. The cops are chasing a man who was caught robbing a jewelry store. They chase the small white man down the alley, lose sight of him for a second, then they regain sight of him and he's magically a 6'3 black man?
My guess? They were chasing agent 47 and he slipped into a new disguise just in time for them to see this bald guy and arrest him instead. A real 500iq silent assassin move.
I don't think demotions are enough - people who utterly fail at civil service shouldn't be allowed to continue at all. They should be let go after the first time they hurt someone they're supposed to protect. Keeping them in the career they've proven themselves unworthy of is what's breeding a culture of ineptitude, and hurting more and more people.
TheGreatDrAsian, perfection, is an unattainable goal, whilst trial and error is far from ideal, it can create the ability to critique/have feedback. Civilians who are wrongly prosecuted, like that gentleman was, have other due processes that can compensate them. There is not one system of law, nor civilization that is free from error.
So satisfying to hear Michael was granted 46k at the end of it, those investigators should have been fired though. I feel sorry for anyone who is incarcerated under circumstances like this.
Yeah he sucked but we don't know his track record, he could have had a million other amazing interrogations. Perhaps his wife divorced him that morning. lol who knows. but yeah the whole time I'm like... This can't be happening.
@@ThrobbyDobby I'm sorry that you think so, but in reality it's actually a factual thought/observation. are you saying you know a person completely and fully from one encounter? No it's just not possible. Basically what I'm saying is...you should stop looking for comments to put your stink breath attitude on and realize I didn't like the investigators attitude either if you can read. Say you're having a bad day at work like everyone has on this planet, do you deserve to be fired for that? Also let me give you a few examples of excuses so you can understand the English language properly. "I'm sorry for being late, I was stuck in traffic" "I was not in school today because I had a doctor's appointment" However me stating we don't know the kind of day an individual is having nor do we know his life story is not an example of an excuse being used, but a fact. it's what we call giving an alternative view to the current situation being perceived or as some call "not judging a book by its cover". we see this guy is being a bit of a prick, fact. assuming he is always like this based on one situation is not a fact but an observation. I hope you take the progression of your education into consideration as it will prevent you from further humiliation in the future.
Or maybe they should've been charged and imprisoned. Their levels of negligence and injustice can, and does, ruin lives. And people wonder why so few trust in law enforcement.
yeah a man responding to the bluff "we have the incident on video camera" with "great, that's relieving!" should definitely at least have gotten a reaction out of the investigator. but he was so smug & arrogant about Michael's guilt that he didn't even second guess the "suspect" he had in front of him. I can especially only imagine how little he'd have investigated if he were one of the arresting officers AND then the interrogating officer, because no way in HELL he'd have second guessed himself making a mistake.
It almost feels like a bit of a stroke of luck though. I wonder how many innocent people have been the victim of an unscrupulous investigator without the case being audited properly and just disappeared into the prison system :( Imagine that, you're coming home from work one day, minding your own business and you just get disappeared by the supposedly impartial arbiters of the law. Scary.
@@JN.0_o America has the highest incarceration rate in the world by far and is obsessed with punishment. If you have a good enough lawyer/bribes you can get away with almost anything. If you are poor and a minority you are screwed. It’s not about innocence or guilt. It’s about money, ego, and who you know.
@Sony She's saying that seeing innocent people being harassed, put under duress, and even falsely imprisoned is much more depressing than seeing someone guilty being analyzed, which can be stressful on the viewer in different ways (e.g. nature of crime, individual, etc.)
This is why I never understand people who criticize defense lawyers who are trying to make a case for their client-- like everyone hating Jose Baez or Jodie Arias lawyer etc...it is SOO much worse to convict an innocent person than to let a guilty person walk free. Lawyers NEED to provide the best possible defense and portray all possible reasonable doubt, it makes no sense for people to get so worked up about defebse lawyers doing their job we'd all want them to do for us
Strangely I think the opposite. I feel more hopeful when I watch this. Like come on argue your innocence, but when a guilty person argues I put myself in thier shoes to see if they can really outsmart the cops and I facepalm and cringe at every mistake that makes it obvious they did something.
it's even HARDER than you realize. this happened to ME.... and you don't get "paid" any money like that. I was wrongly accused... suffered FAR longer sentencing... was entirely innocent.... and I just feel lucky to be "Free".... except for one thing. we ALL get treated as "Guilty". The title of this thing is correct............. most Americans are entirely unaware of the truth. All that $hyte on TV? yeah... you have NO RIGHTS......... you don't........... stop thinking you do... I think it is LAUGHABLE me, hearing this dude got $45,000 for his 3 days............. if that were (American) truth... they'd owe ME millions.... *it's WORSE than people know* ..... it just is. (the "system" will NOT let you incriminate *The System* .) fact .......................&nobody even realizes it.... until it happens to *Them*
@go away by your logic, it is unfair to assume your parents are their to help you. It is impossible to generalize all investigative officers as completely unwholesome and robotic.
I lived in the U.S. for a few and be falsely accused of something was my biggest nightmare. When I got pulled over for the first time for "following too close" (consequence of being nervous for having a cop follow me too close for ten minutes), I freaked out and knew I couldn't take more risks. Life's is not necessarily better here in Brazil, but at least I can easily blend in and not get profiled the police...
a mistake like this is literally unforgiveable, you can't "blunder" around when your putting someone's entire life at risk. Getting demoted should've been the least of his problems.
I mean if a detective makes errors like these he deserves to be fired but I dont see why he should deserve more, I dont see why the detective also has to risk a lot to do his job
@@WaterPidez my job involves managing hotel operations. If i make unintentional errors, guests are inconvenienced, or certain codes could be violated like cleanliness or private information disbursement. I would be written up or lose my job depending on the severity and my disciplinary history. If I make an intentional error, hotel or guest property could be stolen, guest safety can be jeopardized, I could commit reward program fraud, etc. I would lose my job, AND face potential criminal punishment. PLEASE, do not act like an investigator lying about evidence trying to ruin someone's life is simply making a mistake at a job. This innocent man could've lost his own job, or accidentally said something incriminating leading him to jail or prison, and this douchebag wouldve laughed about it at the water cooler the next day. This is inexcusable, and absolutely criminal in nature, just like if I were to intentionally err at my job jeopardizing someone's safety.
I agree. He should have been fired. Although, to be fair, I would volunteer to spend 3 days in jail if it got me almost $50,000 in punitive damages. Fastest 50k of my life.
Yeah, working for the police is one job but were you literally have to have superhuman intelligence and moralities. There is absolutely not any room for normal human error Or selfishness or other vices in the slightest in that job.
The amount of innocent people behind bars especially in the United states is a truly terrifying thought. I can't even imagine what it would be like. It's extremely depressing to see how many people inside the justice system that are supposedly their to serve justice do not care if real criminals Run Free while innocent people rot in prison as long as they have numbers that look good. Also, I wonder when the next video from this channel is going to be uploaded it's a brilliant channel but it's been sometime since the last one
All demoted and suspended without pay. Music to my ears. Hell, the cop that tossed him in jail for 3 days without checking any other sources should be fired. He doesn't have what it takes to be a good investigator, let alone a good bluffer.
I just can't comprehend why he just wouldn't check any evidence at all. There was absolutely nothing pointing to the innocent dude yet he did nothing but assume he was guilty.
@@DutchMadness77 It was most likely motivation to appear as a skilled interrogator. He was trying to get a confession without evidence which the narrator mentioned would have been a mark of a great interrogator. The detective/interrogator was just a moron.
@@LethalWalou Which means the interrogator cared more about his promotion than the actual truth, or that he potentially would be sending an innocent person to jail.
it must be so terrifying to be in a room with someone confidently telling you that you are guilty for something you had literally NOTHING to do with. my anxiety is so bad in normal living situations. i’m quite confident i would have a stroke of some sort!
Oh my God I can't even imagine. The full force of the government is coming down on your head and stuffing you into a cage for something you had absolutely nothing to do with. And what can you do? Just telling the truth isn't good enough. You have to prove that you didn't do what was done. (Yeah yeah innocent until proven guilty isn't always the way it's done. A cop's word is basically 90% of the way to conviction if it's a judge deciding it, and 75% of the way if it's jury. If you don't have hard evidence to prove your innocence or irrefutably contradict the officer's testimony, then that sworn statement and no further evidence is enough to get you convicted) And what makes this sort of thing even worse is you don't even really need to have a perfect storm of bad luck resulting in genuinely mistaken identity or something for this to happen. The perp might be a short white dude and you might be a tall black guy, but they'll arrest you anyway and even refuse to entertain the possibility that your tall black self is not in fact a stubby white guy.
They are trick questions. All you have to do is answer one or two questions that seem innocent, and now they have the "evidence" and the "confession" to charge you with the crime. They will ask you a series of questions that are similar, with harmless answers, and then they twist your words to fit the motive.
Racism runs very deep in the justice system, I wouldn’t be surprised if this wasn’t his first time and if his colleagues and higher ups have also wrongfully incarcerated other black people. They often protect each other when they’re all doing the same crooked shit.
And or an impressive conviction record, which begs the question, how many people are innocent but is omitted because he wants to look good on record having a lot of arrests. And will pull every dirty trick in the book to achieve his goal.
As an abnormal personality I often have a fear of being falsely accused then some jerk pointing out my weirdness as proof I’m very happy to here this kind of observation is being scrutinized as proof
That why if you get accused of something. You will fight tooth and nail if you want to defend your innocence. Atypical behavior is not evidence of guilt
Wrong place at the wrong time is one of my biggest fears.
Holy shit yeah, I sometimes think about that like "what would happen if this happens," or something. I would never want to be put in jail for something that I didn't do.
I got hit with that.. small shit in the end lucky enough because at first I was shook
i see you a lot
Honestly me too that’s so scary
Thats why I like to be at home gaming better than dealing with society’s craziness
being charged for a crime you didnt commit is truly nightmare fuel
Hi
RANTONI BAMBOYI RATATOULLI RAVIOLI
Ranton come back to making videos ravioli
Miss you bb
Hi
Its sad seeing an innocent man desperately trying to defend himself.
Cancel culture has cost many lives and people's career lost, this why we need law to supress it not censor it( *cough* article 13)
@@MiguelRamirez-mp2st johnny depp
@@MiguelRamirez-mp2st what's the point of cancel culture? 😂
@@MiguelRamirez-mp2st Carloz do made a good example people getting cancel like Depp, even chris hemsworth and cris pratt are getting cancelled, one because he does not like the state of hollywood culture and the other because his faith, like dude wth? I have a muslim friend I did not like the religion but there is no way i would hate them because of it, you see cancel culture are nothing but a yelling at the wrong space but for some reason it hit someone that does not make anything bad at all on the space, one mess up case is like Indie game developer Alec that commit game end over accusation with very little proofs even after his death his family pretending he is guilty because his pass messed up action he pretty much regret which is not even related to the said accusation to him. Just like a wise man said "if you have people said about accusation this and that, give them one question 'is there any proofs? The police record? Anything that is really strong enough?' If not don't trust it "and also "if someone said this is my truth, that person basicaly said even my accusation proven to be false it's still right based on my mind" this is the mindset of cancel culture but a sad but true glimpse quote of no matter how strong the proves if he is guilty or not even if you show it infront of their eyes, some will still not gonna believe it . Sorry for the long and late post.
BLUE LIES MATTER
"Michael was awarded 46k and all the investigators were demoted and suspended without pay" holy shit that was satisfying to hear
It was in Canada. This doesn't go as well in the US
@@aidanhammer6968 I somehow am hesitant to believe that a country ran by Fidel Castro's bastard child is more respectful of civil liberties than America.
@@SmearCampaignsAreEvil yes, this is why many people get out of prison in debt and basically have to resort to crime to pay it back in a timely manner
They lost pay for 24
Hrs. One of the cops actually making the arrest later died but the other cop got promoted after this. The interviewer looks to have actually gotten demoted for a little bit at least and 50k is always nice but dude didn't promptly get released, he was held under bail conditions for 9 months
@@aidanhammer6968 The case mentioned above is that of Andrew Malkinson, and was in the UK. He is still yet to receive his compensation.
It is so uncomfortable to watch these innocent people being treated like criminals.
watch the Netflix show confessions, it'll make you cry. convinced this guy he killed his mom
It happens everyday. Sad!
@@0397rb i would take anything on Netflix with a grain of salt
@@debrogers626 being as a police officer sucks only to silence us. They even killed George Floyd and the other guy too.
It's more common than criminals being treated this way. There are always more suspects than guilty people, and coos don't give a shit if you're actually guilty or not. They just want to fill their quotas.
So the whole “If you are innocent, you have nothing to fear”, is an absolute lie. Innocent people have *more* to fear.
What?
Did you even watch the video and listen to what he talked about?!
I was arrested and charged with 1st degree murder. The victim came and testified he wasn't dead but his testimony wasn't allowed in court because the victim cannot testify on the defendants behalf. It didn't take 2 years but I was in jail in the maximum security ward with murderers and rapist for almost 6 months before I was released with no charges pressed only after I signed away my rights to sue the state for wrongful imprisonment.
AwakenedLemming - intresting
@@soulesslemming What state are you in? That is an insane story.
AwakenedLemming im going to need you to tell the full story fam
The fact the guy was more worried about missing work unannounced than going to jail should've been a big tell for the copper.
Chris Hayes on God!
They dont even hear that.. they dont care at all.. you and me find this important but cops dont... they just see a guilty person and want a confession..
@@andyvankerkhove6902 t. criminal
peeny wallie I’m not a criminal and I can completely agree with their statement.
That means nothing. You should watch the interrogations of the pedophiles caught in the old To Catch a Predator stings. Almost all of the mask if they should be calling their work the next day to let them know they won't be in. They all expect a little slap on the wrist and to be released that night ,despite driving to a minor's house to have sex with them.
this is especially upsetting considering even wrongful arrests can affect people’s job prospects and livelihoods
Murica
One comment said he got accused of armed robbery at 18 right before he was abt to join the military, fingerprints of the real guy finally proved his innocence. It took away a year of his life.
@@rikuzonex This was in Canada.
its crazy they thought this dude got of work and his side hustle is breaking into jewelry stores and then going back to work at 8 am lol.... worthless detectives and racist asf
@@theakountant8444 Still North America though
Also, the vast majority of such cases happen in the us so it's safe to assume it's the us again
Canada and us very close (not just position) anyway
"The interrogating officer and three other investigators were demoted and suspended without pay."
Music to my ears.
I literally perked my head up from my computer while this played in the background, for a second I forgot I was at work
It’s all a show, don’t be so easily tricked. The culture within the Police does not allow for reasonable punishment for f#$’ ups like this.
Hell yeah music to mine too
@@NotFalling4it When they get it blatantly wrong and mess with people's lives, unjustly, there should be severe punishments. It's right up there with bearing false witness, which should be punished the same way as you'd punish the falsely accused, if found guilty.
The way these people can put your life in jeopardy at little or no risk to themselves is disgusting. In the USA, they can go after a sitting president with illegally obtained warrants and CLEAR malice, and nothing happens to them.
There've always been those who operate above the law. It's more blatant, now. They do it right out in the open, and if you're on the wrong side of it, you have no remedy.
That is the part that put a smile to my face, what really got me emotional is how polite & respectful Michael Dixon is to the racist scumbag detective who didnt even think once that this could be wrong. Its amazing how God changes situation & people like Mr Dixon never loose their temper.
JCS heard us asking for an innocent person being interrogated and he delivered wonderfully. Thanks dude!
Yes, awesome man
JCS one of the all time great RUclips channels!! A+ content and he responds to viewer requests.
Y'all do know that the narrator of these videos doesn't create them, right? JCS is a group of people.
Hopefully he can deliver more!!
Delivered what was ordered. Good service. 5 stars 🌟
The saddest reality is that there's so many people who aren't as smart and well spoken as him who will crack and fall under pressure in this situation. Fire this detective immediately
Agreed, but i see them developing a new way to tell if someone are lying or not. probs gonna use some New methods in the future
Imagine a machine that could scan your brain, with inplants or Something. they could see which parts of the brain are active once they ask the suspect questions or smt
@@N0RZC Smells like a scam to me. There will always be a new method and misguided faith in it until the truth comes out about how unreliable it is. No matter how good the tool is, if the person using it is unskilled or biased, it can affect the outcome and interpretation. I have studied my entire life and sacrificed my soul to understand the hearts of men, and to think, men think they can create tools that allow them to do the same with minimal effort and sacrifice. It is laughable. They won't mind sacrificing a few innocent people for the sake of maintaining their delusion of capability.
Like me , my first job was in bus company and i was accused of stealing the money of the passengers.
And the HR called me and told me i was seen by the supervisor doing such thing, i said i didn't do that and she said " c'mon man you has been seen by him , now assign here please " .
And i kept saying " i didn't do that "
And she said again " just sign please "
And i thought " maybe if I don't assign they will fire me cuz I'm not obedient, i think it's better i respect them and keep my job , i don't care if they think i stole something cuz i know I'm innocent "
Then i assigned the sheet and I left the HR room and one man came to ask me and i said " oh , nothing! They are telling me that i was seen stealing the company but that's no true "
And he asked me " did u assign anything?"
I said " oh yeah but that's okay cuz i don't wanna they think I'm not obedient "
This man got crazy and he asked me " did you steal or not ? I said " i didn't do anything wrong "
And he still upset said " wtf did u assign the paper ? Are you stupid? Now you are confirming you stole the company "
In that moment my eyes opened and i thought " oh shit that's true "
I went to talk to my supervisor and i said " hey man listen, i assigned the paper but i did anything wrong.
He said " if u assigned you confess "
I became so sad 😞😥 and tried to talk to everyone that i could and i was fired without anything.
I was only 18 in that time .
Imprison the detective.
did my military time aswell, theyre pathetic
One thing to remember: the police are legally allowed to lie to you about supposed evidence they have against you in order to try and coerce a confession out of you.
So if you know you’re innocent without a doubt, *DO NOT TALK TO THE POLICE AND REQUEST YOUR LAWYER IMMEDIATELY.*
In my country confession in itself is not enough evidence.
how does that make sense tho? if u know ur innocent without a doubt u should just give them all the information u can so they realise it's not you they are looking for..? what do you think could that do bad for u in that moment?
@@crypton1782because police sometimes will try to get a confession out of you or make you look bad because it can lead to a promotion and it’s not always clear if the person you are talking to has your best wishes in mind or if they are looking to just put you in cuffs and climb the ladder, so it’s just better to play if safe if you’re completely innocent
@@crypton1782same way it doesnt make sense prople are aometimes accused when they really are innocent.
i mean, dont talk to the police anyways
It's both satisfying and infuriating to watch him call the cop's bluff about security footage
I can't get over how calm and collected he was ,I consider myself introverted but I'd be def justin in a situation like this !!
SARAH WHAT CHU DOING HERE LOL
Same feeling. Like dude call their bluff and assert your innocence! but he’s just trying to be nice. I’ve found that when accused it’s important to be direct and resist the urge to sympathize with your accuser-especially if it’s a cop
@@itzAurora_Xoxo I agree. Although, as a black male, he probably didn't want to call even more attention to himself by shouting and being "aggressive" with a police officer!!
At least the fact that there were consequences for the officers beehavior is somewhat satisfying. Wrongful imprisonment is not a minor thing, and many tmes nothing happenes at all to the officers responisble. The state paying restitution is funded through taxpayer money like everything else. The cop couldn`t care less about that. BUt demotion and a blip in his record will teach him to be at least a bit more honest and follow procedure in the future.
"If you didn't do it why are you being so defensive?" My dad asked me this one time when my step-mom found weed (which is illegal in my state) in my sisters room. My step-mom somehow didn't communicate that it was in my sisters room and not mine therefore I was sat down, humiliated in front of my family, and yelled at until 10-15 minutes later my step-mom told my dad that it wasn't found in my room. It's honestly one of the most frustrating thing in the world to be sat down and accused of things you can't defend yourself against because someone has already made up their mind about you.
How tf did the weed get into your sisters room
@@babua077 she bought it from her friends
Oh.
@@PotatoheadAsh What did your dad say after he found out the truth?
@@PotatoheadAsh Yeah i wanna know what cherio asked aswell
My heart goes out for Justin. That’s a man that’s making a genuine change for the better and is watching his life be stripped away from him unjustly. It’s hard to watch
@I OFFER YOU THIS wtf are you talking about? there is literally no evidence to suggest this is the case whatsoever, beyond your own stereotypes...just as bad as the cops in this vid man
devotion303 my thoughts exactly
I OFFER YOU THIS why do you think this? dude was in jail before, and got falsely accused and imprisoned later, why would he like cops?
@I OFFER YOU THIS Where's this coming from? The guy was in the penal system, is working to correct his life and make good with his future. What in ANY of that leads you to believe he's a thinblue type? You sound like you're jumping to conclusions based on biases.
@I OFFER YOU THIS How do you think a man who's been run through the wringer like that could maintain respect for law enforcement?
Because he has a beard?
Snap back to reality.
"demoted and suspended without pay" yeah sorry, thats not good enough, not even close. They picked a man up off the street that didn't even remotely resemble the suspect, told him his guilt wasn't in question in an attempt to get a confession, threw him in prison for three days, and couldn't even be bothered to check his alibi in the meantime. At that point the "detective" has proven himself not only to be a useless investigator, but also a liability to the functioning of a criminal justice system. They should be permanently blackballed from any position at any police station or court anywhere. I know there are a lot of cops who have done a lot worse, but honestly our standards for law enforcement are far far too low, even something like this cannot stand
That's how it works
ACAB
idk it's bad but 3 days of jail time isn't the end of the world. If this works 90% of the time to get an actual confession from a real criminal, then maybe it's more useful than not doing it.
Michael was compensated massively for this and the detective was demoted and suspended without pay. It'll teach him to get his act straight.
@@thelastvbuck You sound like you'd back the blue until it happens to you. 3 days of jail could mean losing your job, your house, your car, your wife & kids, but surely it isn't the end of the world, right?
@@fftunes That's very extreme. Provided you can make phone calls, all that shouldn't happen. If some of that really did happen, then as we saw, he can sue for that money back.
For the record it was 100% some bad police work, but being demoted and suspended without pay is arguably pretty bad. You could lose your job, your house, your car, your wife and kids, but that would be justified for accidentally putting someone in jail for 3 days?
i feel so bad for the one guy who turned his life around only to be wrongfully charged.
Wish I knew who he was so I could send him a card. Luckily I’ve never had this happen legally, but in my engineering career, coworkers’ ethics has been a huge issue for me. It’s like people are happily and willingly delusional because it “gets the job done”
Yeah this happens way too often. There was another man who tried to turn his life around and started a family only to be wrongfully accused of murder and sentenced to life in prison.
Those cops probably beat their wives.
I could feel his emotions, hard not to get upset knowing this happened to him and will continue to happen to innocent people.
Anybody else find it strange that that guy was in handcuffs in the interrogation room? Usually they at least wait until after the interview to cuff him.
“I understand the process but I’m not satisfied with it” is so polite I’m dying
That's Canada for you.
So Canadian
I would probably insult the investigator passively if they started lying like he did here, well actually when he said "we have you on camera" i would start laughing
@@jimmyzhao2673 and the fact that all detectives involved got demoted and suspended without pay... that sounds like fucking dreamland...
In the US they would've killed that poor man based on skin pigmentation and then awarded a 3 month paid vacation for the act
And then he thanks him!
theres nothing more terrifying than a person with authority confident in their own ignorance.
Yeah... I also hate cops
A man who is unwilling to compromise or change is a lost cause, regardless of the degree of correctness they are believed to hold. This is frustrating and self-demeaning in friends and family, but it destroys lives and trust in the place of authority.
Man, with all due respect I don't give a crap about humans, there's only one authority and that is God's Law. Doesn't really matter if human laws interfere with God's, he's always the superior law.
@@lanac5793 man you're just stereotyping. What if one Mexican (doesn't matter the gender), gets behind you, steals your wallet and runs away.
Then this same thing happens to you six months later, do you really fucking assume all people are like that? NO
Now stop fucking crying and get down to reality kid, not all cops are bad, not all cops abuse their power. In fact, it's only a few, but because the fucking MEDIA has told you otherwise, then you're like all these brainwashed people....
@@MrKevin-wu8re Why do you care what the media say? They are humans after all, which you say you don't care about. The cops (also human) are part of an inherently corrupt system that damages innocent lives.
*Don't trust cops, get a lawyer!*
I've been in this situation before. Not only is being wrongfully accused stressful and depressing, what I was suspected of is vile and egregious compounding the emotions that comes with it. Not only that, but I'm from a small town and the 2 detectives who questioned me while 15 other cops searched my house, one was my former neighbor for years whom I've had beers with and the other was literally my childhood best friend that I had known for 40 years at this point. Still they lied and tried tripping me up just to get a confession.
That creates a society where no one trusts anyone (except for family members). This develops further into a third world country, as no one is able to co-operate.
The USA has gone into that path, sorry for you.
God the interviewer constantly talks about truth, but you arrest the first guy you see off a bus, GTFO.
Wtf oh shit proto HEY. Random celebrity in the comment. Wow. Omg I’m HII!!!
But...but...the guy off the bus was a BLACK MAN! It doesn't matter if the witnesses saw a white guy.
It was 2003 and the police officer was plainly from the UK. At that time and before it, the UK was rife with racial prejudice. A government initiated inquiry, headed by Sir William MacPherson, proved this to be the case (c.f. the MacPherson Report). This officer was plainly operating on the trusty principle of black = guilty.
HE WAS BLACK! i thought he did it too
@TheBull916 The white guy knew the owner of the house, had been in prison for the same crime, and he was (wrongly) identified by a witness. Though he was wrongly accused, there were reasons he was handcuffed and questioned. As for the black guy in Canada, where was utterly no reason to hold him...except he is black.
Detectives like this is why people don’t trust the justice system.
That's part of the puzzle at least
Makes me sick seeing a dude fully changed his life and knowing he didn't do it, knowing they were gonna charge him when he was asleep at home.
bye
@@cheefqueef6494 sorry to see you go so soon, we'll miss you :')
Cop had an English accent, makes you wonder if he'd been in the police in the UK and had to leave for similar behaviour. Lying about evidence to that extent wouldn't be allowed under English law (not since they started recording interviews anyway).
I can't imagine a worse nightmare than going to jail for a crime you didn't commit. The emotions and thoughts that must run through your head while in jail is frightening.
I think about that a lot and I think my only sanity could come from if my loved ones believed in my innocence. If not I'd be lost
I'm glad it hasn't happened to me. My will to hurt the cops and judges responsible would have overtaken me.
Tero Munakas Are you dumb
TheGreatDane the leading up to it! The anguish. I’ve been a super square person my whole life for that reason! I can’t even imagine.
New Cult King wow, so sorry. Hope you are doing well!
I feel a deep sadness for Justin. Trying to better yourself and a would be friend screws you over. Then when the police get involved, they make it even worse. How horrible. Clear evidence and lack of evidence puts him back in jail. And all of it hearsay from goddamn girl named Candy.
Lol I had commented a while ago on this video “never trust a girl named candy” or I bet it’s spelled Kandi.
But yeah I totally agree. I wouldn’t be surprised if he went back to his old lifestyle after his release having lost any hope in the system
Mixing with girls named Candi can only end badly. Noone in the world has ever had a loyal trustworthy wife and lifelong happy relationship with a girl of that name.
Ngl, watching innocent people being wrongly accused and going through this kind of ordeal, when detectives don’t believe them, is by far more terrifying than watching a heinous criminal confess to gruesome murders.
the first guy was so calm...the robber was much shorter than him different clothes and to put the tin hat on it..was white....he got 46,000 but that's not enough
Been happening in America since the beginning of time lmao even black Canadians get the same treatment.
@@MYKE1111 You mean it’s been happening everywhere in the world since the beginning of time. I’m sure false accusations are not exclusive to America. Or Canada. And obviously not exclusive to black people.
I said what I said. Both of our statements can be true because the statement you said doesn’t make what i said false. America & Canada is included in EVERYWHERE & Nor did i mention its exclusively black people. I just highlighted those things. Sorry not sorry.
Also, go look up “the innocence project” statistics on this matter. Then get back to me.
I hate being accused of little things like eating someone else’s food. I couldn’t even imagine being put through this.
Bro reminds me of my sister if anything went wrong it was my fault
@elgur valid point
It happened to me on a serious assault charge and I'm not ashamed to say I vomited multiple times from the stress. Fun times.
@elgur you can’t stop me!!
Was about to say the same thing! This is basically my worst nightmare tbh
“Prove you’re innocent to me” is insane to hear from a detective. Especially when you’re completely wrongly accused.
The fact that a detective is thinking “Guilty until proven innocent” is truly backwards thinking. Those detectives shouldn’t even be able to be detectives anymore.
The onus is on the cop to prove guilt - what a piece of excrement to pull that one...
They get real bitchy when you remind them it's their job to prove you did it, not your job to prove you didn't
That's how law enforcement are. They get called out and make a judgement call if your innocent or guilty on the spot.
Have had this happen to me several times by people who just didn't like me. Actually once got arrested for my friend having drugs on him and all I could say was , it ain't mine.
Spent 5 days in jail then spent $1000 bonding out. Luckily the guy went to cot before me and told them I had no idea he had the pills on him. Even crazier I think fact that he has just picked up the prescription and had sat 2 pills on his center console to take once he got something to drink.
Cops didn't even care he had a prescription. F em .
I know what u mean but unfortunately its exactly what u would here from a detective.
What amazes me is if a person has social anxiety or something similar then they can be assumed guilty by interrogators because of their pose and most likely lack of eye contact
I’m glad all the investigators got demoted. They were SO wrong. Jeez he was treated so badly.
I think their punishment should be in proportion to the harm they cause.
They should be in jail
You really don't know how bad treatment looks like in third world countries
@@houssemmaiza7082 yeah in the US anyway we are too busy worried about other nonsense then consider how well we are doing. Best of luck if you are in a poorer country.
@@houssemmaiza7082 This video shows bad treatment; what you're talking about is cruel and inhumane treatment. Just because the video could be worse doesn't mean that what happened is acceptable.
Michael is FAR too Canadian. He even tells the investigator "I'm not trying to give you a hard time". MICHAEL, this guy is literally trying to give you HARD TIME!
I freaked out when an american cop accused me of littering once. And people say were the same country 🤣 but yea poor michael tho. Last part here isn't a joke.
blm
Sounds gay
@@rolex907 wrong, Michael lives matter
He even thanks the investigator at the end.
Way too Canadian chill. It's almost as if I feel more upset than Michael.
layney boy it’s how we act in other countries. We send out tons of money for help, we generally don’t get involved in war, as well as our tourists are generally very well behaved. I can tell you for certain Europeans have the same opinion on Canadians as America.
Fun fact I actually ran into a travelling couple in Wales, they had Canadian leafs on their backpacks but told me they were American they just have Canadian backpacks because people treat them like shit with American flagged ones lol
“I have conclusive evidence you’re guilty”
*has zero evidence*
They say lots of things. If the police were allowed to hire smart people anymore it mighht be harder to tell when they're lying.
"The truth is paramount"
uh...ok buddy
I’ve seen detectives use this technique to get a confession on this channel. It works
Pretty much summed up the opposition to Trump.
Edit. Wow this triggered alot of snowflakes. 🤦♂️
@@DonFatherTrump what about his constant ignoring of subpoenas? Just that 1 easy evidence based things right quick if ya want. Not to mention his complete lack of a concrete plan for any of part of our country besides yelling crazy slogans. Or his total rule through executive order which has not teeth and gets nothing done. These are all concrete things that happen and are bad. He just isn't good at his job, he should be a radio host, maybe. He sucks at managing anything, the only thing he has gotten done is what, a little bit of wall? Even by his own measures he is a failure, and his measures suck.
I've been wrongfully accused by my teachers many, many times during my teenage years. Whenever some shit went down in my shool, I was the first to be looked at, which was really annoying, because I had never done any of the things they accused me of. My parents weren't really helpful, as most of the times, they seemed to believe my teachers rather than me. Then I went into reoccuring depressive episodes because of all that stress, which didn't help either. Being really pale and having racoon eyes (because of the depressions, lack of sleep, etc.) didn't help at all. Those mofos started rumors about me taking and selling drugs, which was BS as well. Nobody helped me, nobody sided with me and this went on and on until I finished school. It took a massive impact on me, because eversince then I am scared of getting falsely accused of something really bad, despite me being a perfectly law abiding citizen. Damn....if I'd ever get falsely accused of f.e. murder or rape or something like that and they check my internet history, I am SO fucked, because of all the true crime stuff I watch. Those poor guys in this video had to go through that shit for real....
But why would everyone look at you when stuff went down? It seems random
I hate these detectives that prioritize their own careers over someone’s freedom
Yeah!
Authoritarian Order Followers.
And lawyers..
@@torwne6964 lawyers are different. Some are definitely sociopaths, others sometimes have to defend the guilty, or make cases against the innocent. That is their job and even the criminal has the right to an attorney under law.
Its easy to follow them home...
"If you didn't do it why are you being so defensive?" Because I don't like being falsely accused of shit I didn't do
Edit: damn, just checked this comment after 3 years and I had no idea it had 21k likes 💀
lmao that pfp
@@aren6158 thank ya
Exactly. It can piss a person off.
In order for someone to react as if they have nothing to defend, they must have reasonable faith in their authorities.
Yeah the police in Hamilton fucking suck. I work down the street from where he was arrested and it’s still bad
The officer got so excited about finally using the interrogation techniques he learned at the academy, that he forgot to check the most important part of an investigation: the evidence.
Nah he didn't forget, he didn't care about them at all. the system suit him perfectly though because it worked.
"...evidence? There's supposed to be... evidence??"
@@juliusperseus8612 Jokes on him, if you watched the whole video, he got demoted and suspended for his lack of caring. The evidence he claimed to have "seen" was bullshit too, defenitely thought he'd get the job done quick, get his pay and ruin someone's life.
What do you mean? If a woman says something it has to be true. No need proof of anything.
@@zaehehe ACAB
At a time in my younger day's, some 50 year's ago. I happened to look simular to someone wanted by the police, for apparently nothing but questioning. In regards to a crime that though he wasn't directly envolved in, believed he may have some knowledge about. I was maranded properly, and not just detained but arrested, meaning I was photographed, finger printed and put in a cell with other's who were actaull criminal's. It took two day's for them to determine, oop's, wrong guy, and simply stated "SORRY" and allowed me to leave. Which I did post haste.
However, because I had been in my auto, they the police had it towed from the area and impounded it. I now have a record on file with my finger print's, photo, and was forced to pay the tow charge and the impound fee. And also had to face my boss for not reporting for work in any way shape or form for two days.
This could have been a longer story, becasue it actually doesn't include some of the various thing's I viewed and almost had to endure myself while in the cell with other's who had actaully commited crimes. All were repeat offender's. But yes, today one is guilty until one has either proved them selves, or after a periud of time, the police somehow determine your not.
Should have sued.
People keep saying that cops aren't your enemies, but they're not your friends either.
Their job is to arrest people. Always assume the worst in a interrogation and shut up until your lawyer shows up.
they are also trying to get fast track promotions by getting innocent people to confess and build a reputation as a great interrogator. what a crazy system that encourages bad behaviour not good service. throw cops like that out of the service. show people respect. I hope he got demoted to a lollypop lady (a pleasant woman who helps children cross the road in England and she holds a sign that looks like a giant lollypop to stop traffic) or a library security man.
cops are absolutely your enemy. They do not exist to keep you safe, or to "fight crime", whatever that is supposed to mean. They exist to protect capital.
Especially detectives and lawyers.
Yeah never talk to the cops unless your lawyer is present even if you have nothing to hide they will always twist the facts against you even if you have good intentions
@@lunchbag_larry fighting crime typically means stopping people from committing criminal activity. It exists in every sector of society, im not sure how thats hard for people like you to get
It hurts to see the first guy being nothing but polite, and still treated like garbage. The ginger guy story tho is heartbreaking.
@@DavidSJr when you put it like that, it seems like we shouldn't be sorry for anyone just in case they turned out to be a monster
@@DavidSJr 🙄
@@svetaAFG I'll try to steer you guys back towards civility. Having watched JCSs entire library now, it's a tough one. I don't think anyone should be treated like garbage, least of all by police, but it's interesting seeing how detectives DO sometimes manage to break guilty suspects, trapping them into story lines, etc. that I can imagine they might not have gotten JUST with evidence (though hard to say). The main takeaway should always be to NEVER speak to the police without an attorney present, but I can imagine that if you're truly 100% innocent and wanting to genuinely help out that it's hard to think that.
I think CIA's point is that just because they are kind doesn't do much for the police if they are trying to find evidence because monsters can be kind, I personally think it's better to treat people with respect because harassing the innocent is worse than being kind to a monster. They should wait till they have more to go on rather than shoot blindly and injure bystanders until they get the criminal.
@@SaysSamara Oh no, I definitely understood the two sides. It's a bit of the whole "better that 100 guilty go free than 1 innocent be locked up" sort of thing vs. the opposite of that (which is certainly some people's belief too). The good news is that the police from the first video were all disciplined and removed from their positions for the screwup. But I was just noting how I can appreciate that it's probably a very difficult position. I think of the Chris Watts episode JCS did, for example, and had they not broken him, they might well NOT have had the evidence to convict him. Still, that doesn't mean anybody should be berated and to be fair, there was FAR more evidence in the Watts case - albeit still not definitive. I guess I was more just suggesting that there are ethics that should be held dear, but at the end of the day, I can still imagine it's a difficult and uphill battle.
My uncle is a pretty good and respectable lawyer.
His words: "If you ever get called or escorted to a precinct for any reason and you start getting asked questions, the only thing you should say is "am I being detained?" If they say no, you get up and leave immediately. Then you call me. If they say yes, or stop you from leaving, the next and only thing you should say is :I want my phone call", at which point you call me."
@John Smith in either case, call a lawyer.. does not have to be jim's uncle :)
Kinda figures that a lawyer would tell you to call a lawyer lol
But yes, it doesn't take too many slips in the interrogation room to turn you into a suspect. Hardly anyone is as slick as they think they are
What if I don't have your uncle's phone number?
Better call saul!
10/10 would read and like again!
4:46 "if you've got no questions then why am i in an interrogation room?" good for him for keeping his cool man
"All you have to do is call and ask my mother!"
Man, you can really tell this dude is tired.
honestly feel so bad for both these people
@@timothygeegan558 are you having a stroke bud
@Gia I dont understand that detective, he didntfollow any potential lead to prove his innocence. That's his job. Is to make sure the Innocent *dont* get punished, and that the guilty get found. Not just the latter. He fucked up his life
@@pohorex6834 that is his job. However a lot like to just put the blame on someone or something to simply close the case.
@@shanebolger7802 they better have reviewed his actions on a false imprisonment and potentially had him fired, or at least demoted to a B-cop. Likely didnt though, unfortunately
I'm so glad the officers in Micheal's case were punished for their actions. Officers are in a unique position where their fuck ups, laziness, or selfishness can infringe on rights of others. Accountability is paramount for the trust of the public.
ruclips.net/video/tqophFt2_Qs/видео.html
That so rarely happens, though. More often than not, the courts will bend over backwards to protect the identities of murderous police officers. I just got done researching several such cases where the name of the officers who killed black men in cold blood STILL aren't known. What's the point in having a system of law, when those meant to enforce the law operate outside of it entirely?
@@sophiaa9874 this booty intro doesn’t have anything to do with this video gtfo
@@WobblesandBean That's bc this happened in Canada, not America lol
That was really well said.
If you’re guilty, you need a lawyer. If you’re innocent, you REALLY need a lawyer
In short, get a DEFENSE lawyer no matter what happen.
And don’t say a word without one. From the moment your rights are read, assert your rights.
Wow. First time I’ve ever seen this comment. How clever.
Lol!! Exactly.
Underrated comment
I hope this guy gets millions, the bullshit the system put him through is unforgivable.
"I'll investigate this thoroughly"
Doesn't even read the suspect description
At least he was demoted...
@@Florescentia02 should’ve lost his job. How the hell do you miss something so simple.
@@bozznianbandz1191 I would guess because he's a racist
HOW DO YOU NOT LOOK INTO THE CASE BEFORE QUESTIONING SOMEONE what the heck...
@@CakeHebenstreit It’s cops in general. They do that.
This makes me sick how many people who are innocent get arrested and their lives ruined while the actual person who committed the crime skips away free
When I used to work in the courts here in australia (As a video technician, I was the guy who set up all the video-links, fixed the VHS machines (This was the early 2000s when VHS was still a thing) and a Judge once told me that she estimates that in a jury trial about a 1/3 of the people convicted are innocent and 1/2 of the people found innocent actually did it. Non Jury trials the ratio is a lot better because judges are pretty experienced with reading body language and evaluating evidence, (Thoug they do get to hear the discarded evidence which is usually prejudicial and poor quality), but still would likely be around 1/4 innocent found guilty and 1/4 guilty found innocent.
Now, imagine that situation with the death penalty? Terrifying isn't it.
@hits*academic Great plan einstein, except what happens when your king is a criminal. Hint: Historically, thats most of them, its the whole damn reason we had to invent democracy. The only "good" kings are kings without power.
Hi this topic is big for me im from Ireland I got badly beating by a garda he us a to take me from school with no warrant he get me in his car and beat me to these places that were broke int he use to beat me show me how I got into these houses then drive me to the station tel me just admit to this u can go home never had celisitor now I am fighting so fukn hard to get justice to stop this it's not fair
you could've just stopped at : This makes me sick how many people who are innocent get arrested and their lives ruined
we dont care about the rest.
What is going on...
the fact that he got framed and charged for robbery after he actively made change in his life to overcome his criminal past and to become a better person is fucking awful
So sad to watch stuff like that happen, I don't know why that girl lied about him in the court
I hope he got compensated
@@SocksInAHat that never happens, it's always the legal system being "oopsy, sorry lmao"
@@danielmiyahara320 kinda fucked up but didn’t the black guy get compensated? Im sure this guy would too, especially for doing a few years
it happens a lot because once your in the system you later "fit the description"
There’s an old saying: when you’re guilty you need a lawyer. When you’re innocent you REALLY need a lawyer.
They should re-open every single case that this “detective” worked.
Seriously he’s disgusting .. that lack of effort and amount of arrests they want to meet ** just leads to innocent people going to jail
@@minyon7659 No such quota exists for detectives. Sometimes a bad cop is just a bad cop, no circumstances to justify.
@@jamesalexander6996 you’re right , there isn’t a quota so wrong choice of words but they seem to feel the need to just arrest people and half do their jobs for whatever reason .. there are too many bad cops and these situations don’t need to be overlooked like they’re small incidents . These people should be fired
@@minyon7659 I assume they develop (or maybe already possessed) a sense of dissonance-they tend to deal with scumbags virtually 24/7 and that can get jading, especially when you have to watch them walk away over and over again due to a lack of or contaminated evidence. The moment that occurs though, they need to leave the force because they can no longer hold themselves as the impartial bodies that their work _requires_ them to be.
Great idea seriously.
“Wrongfully imprisoned for just over two years.”
That breaks my heart.
Even the guy staying in jail over night is upsetting.
@@Satfirescat At least he got a 46'000 Canadien dollares for the "inconvinience" (I know, spelling). I've heard that you can spend 20 years, wrongfully convicted in a US prison and don't get a dime for it
@@osvagt 46 000 dollars Canadian for 3 and a half days WHAT A LUCKY BASTARD!! or is that like a 100 euros?
@@fukpoeslaw3613 46k canadian are like 38k american dollars
@@obj_cevu so over 10 000 American dollars for each day!! like I said: LUCKY BASTERD!!
I almost cried when the white guy with the beard was talking about how he was working on improving and changing past behaviors, then freaking out when he realized he couldn’t do anything to convince them that they got the wrong guy. It’s like he was taking huge steps forward, only to be dragged back down.
no lie💀 i could feel bros emotion through every single pixel on my screen
Right! Straight from work to ya moms house, not you in prison cause somebody lied.
@@lothegreat1788 plus hes been to jail before so its even worse that they’re trying to send him back
@@charlesguillergan8759 all 12 of them
I have a cousin who has been in and out of jail, has recently nearly died for overdosing, I have no idea where his life will go after he recovers, but I do hope nothing like this happens to him, not when he has at least taken the steps to become a better person.
Imagine kidnapping someone and the only punishment is some vacation time.
Michael Dixon's reaction to being falsely accused is the reaction of someone who has probably never done anything wrong before and finds the situation utterly ridiculous versus the ginger guy who has been locked up before and knows exactly what's coming and is trying to avoid it all costs. Understandably that's why his reaction is much more emotional.
good way to sum it up
It's impossible not to get emotional at the thought of going to jail specially if your a law abiding citizen, Micheal is on a different level here, yes you can keep calm but i doubt any innocent person would just accept things like this.
@@deecee7073 So, you're saying Michael WASN'T innocent??
@@deecee7073 I disagree. I believe that video and the commenter was trying to say that Michael as an innocent man can’t believe the situation he’s in and ultimately will find some way out because there’s really no evidence against him. That’s why he was so happy to hear that there’s video evidence
@@deecee7073 lol well you’re obviously wrong because here we have a video of a man who was falsely accused and he managed to stay calm. As tangible as a counter example as you can get lmaooooo
Being falsely accused is the thing that triggers me the most.
I would literally cry if I was falsely accused and if I lose the case I would have years in jail
Triggered huh? Sounds guilty
@@ShishakliAus shut up
Giving false accusations need to hold prison time so people don't fucking do it.
same
If an officer KNOWINGLY falsely accuses someone of a crime they should lose their badge/job plain and simple.
How would they prove they knowingly falsely accused though?
@@aidanleung1298 Like first incident. Looking for small white man, but instead arrest 6 foot black guy.
@@aidanleung1298 Very easy, claiming you have video evidence or witness testimony when you don't have such, or any evidence at all for that matter, yet still try to blatantly coerce a confession. Even when directly being called out for his bluff maintained that he had this evidence. There is a point where testing to see if someone would crack, becomes blatant vindictiveness, which is what this officer displayed
@@aidanleung1298 by getting actual evidence and not being braindead
And pension
Damn, I feel so much for that guy who was falsely accused of burglary. And he spent over 2 years in prison, that’s so horrible. I hope he could sue the city or get some money somehow, and I pray Candy got in big trouble for falsely accusing him
He served two years before the whole Candy situation, not because of the Candy situation.
@@Vingul he was in prison before, but he did spend 2 years because of the Candy situation
@@pete6705 I see then, my bad! That’s really bad.
That so called “detective” should be fired.. not suspended.
Exactly, should be one and done. This is just a time that they got caught doing something shitty, imagine all the things we don't see.
@@clockworkNate altho i agree with them getting fired, your reasoning is shitty, imagine if we used that logic in court
@@frescula there should be no room for shit like this in the justice system. Losing your job because you’re negligent is different than a court room setting.
@@beercandan7077 but you cant just assume someone is doing something
@@frescula The fact that he's interrupting peoples lives from negligence it's a safe bet it's not the first time he's done so. suspension without pay to investigate previous work and then fire him if it's found this isn't an individual incident.
Seeing that man desperately defend himself, after having already been to prison and knowing that he could be going back again, is so sad and frustrating.
Having been involved with the criminal system before i can only imagine what was racing through his head man. The first time was scary enough. Most stressful period of my life.
The lady that lied about him probably thought it would stick because he had a record. Absolutely infuriating.
@@yumyumhungry Ill bet she didnt go to jail. America is a joke.
@@naysaynetwork5271 This is Canada, not the US. So North America yes, but not the US that I think you think it is. Plus the police officer sounds English.
EDIT: The second one is in the US and you probably meant that one..
@@Julmaa87 yep. Second guy got 2 years in Kentucky due to a lying witness.
It's SO REWARDING to know that poor dude was compensated for that humiliation and those IDIOTS were demoted and suspended without payment.
Slap on the wrist compared to the havoc they wreaked on the lives of the people they targeted. Demotions, suspensions- BIG EFFIN DEAL!
Demotion and suspended without payment isn’t enough.
Everybody who was prominently involved in that scenario should be banned from any type of law enforcement and sent to prison for attempting to unlawfully inprison an innocent civilian, at minimal.
@@The-Dyland yup!
Thank god he lived in a developed country with a justice system. Honestly, it’s cheesy to say, but I’ve never been prouder of my country than watching this video.
And feel awful for the other guy who spent TWO YEARS in jail for a crime he DIDNT commit. Like of course it must of been terrible to go through, but everyone here talking like three days in county jail is anywhere near as traumatic as spending two years incarcerated.
This unfortunately isn't a rare occurrence. This is why they say you're not supposed to talk to police even if your innocent.
When he says we have a video and that makes him relaxed, that should have been 100% an indicator what he's saying is true
@
Nah, He Wanted dat Paycheck.
@@applepi7641 that's dirty
When they asked Joe if Hunter did it and he said I’m proud of my son, that should’ve been an indicator what he was saying is true
@@letmecatchyouslippin2425 Cmon man, leave politics outta this. You just looking to start an argument.
@@Joesorr324 just saying, Joe was definitely telling the truth in that moment.
Michael is the type of person who you'd want by your side in a crisis.
no he will pissed you of because he is so calm , the contrast will be unbearable
he'd be a sweet boyfriend too
@@RED01SEA But he would be able to logic his way out of the situation much easier than most people because he'd be more calm
Meh, in a way, yes but I'm gonna say no. Yes he's calm facing a crisis, however he doesnt seem quick to fully grasp a situation and form a plan as well as seems very passive. Yeah, i'm gonna say he'd probably get you killed.
@@justsomeguy892 i don't know maybe yeah , i'm imagining how annoying and uncomfortable the situation will be , because i was involved into similaire thing
Michael’s responses always make me laugh because he is so calm and reasonable in the face of such absurdity. Then he says, “well, thank you, I guess.” He’s so empathetic towards the officer the whole time . I’m so glad he prevailed.
yea makes him seem like a super villain actually, but ig hes just well composed
edit - i meant it in a cool way lol, u know like how super villains are always calm and shit
I don't get a super villain feeling at all lol, dude was confident in his innocence and trying his hardest to give the full truth. If anyone sounds like a super villain it's the detective. That guy was trying everything to pin Michael for something he didn't do, just to pad his record.
It’s the cop that should be empathetic towards him though lol, cut straight to the bad cop act without checking out the file.. and this guy is seeking a promotion lol
And glad his damage was compensated with 46k$ and suspension of the officers
@@fluxshaman8251 It's not to pad his record, just to avoid hurt ego from admitting he was wrong. He even managed to delude himself. Pathetic little guy.
Put the so called investigator behind bars for his injustices.
Man just imagine how many innocents souls have died without proving their innocence
😳
More than the people buying into this machine would like to admit.
Not sure about "died" but yes, I know what you mean and it is a scary thought.
a lot
Free Gypsy Crusader
I feel so horrible for the second guy. The way he slowly increases his leg shake as he puts two and two together and realizes he's being falsely accused is heartbreaking. He knew he wasn't going to be believed because he has a history
@@macandfries6765 why would his lawyer say that
yea i mean especially knowing in your heart, that they don't have any kind of evidence to support their claims. just absolutely shitty and horrific feeling im sure.
@@macandfries6765 Did he beat the girl?
@@macandfries6765 but im tslking bout when they don't like both cases shown in the video...
@@macandfries6765 jeez
Arrogant detective: "You're not in a enviable position"
Ends up getting sued, suspended, demoted and has to pay damages.... That's not an enviable position either, buddy.
Lol. Good. He deserves it. Appalling that when these people fail at their jobs, innocent people suffer. He’ll certainly think twice next time. Shame there was a first time though.
@@fernandapartridge5174 agreed.
@@fernandapartridge5174 if it was the first time.... I think not :(
Don't worry, they probably were back at work 2 weeks later after their nice vacation.
I didn't finish this yet. That makes me very happy
PLEASE PLEASE please for the love of god. NEVER TALK TO THE POLICE. ALWAYS ASK FOR A LAWYER.
Never speak to police. Never say any words to police. Do not speak to the police for any reason no matter what
no amount of money, influence, goods, security, penis or vagina is worth interacting with feds from any country. Simply ask for a lawyer and remain silent unless you are literally the one asking the cops something like the direction to the nearest supermarket, and even then, say as little as possible. Feds are not your friend, Country is not your friend, you have your family, maybe your community if you are lucky and in the luckiest of scenarions you can have people of the same ideological alignment to help you, but otherwise this world is a corporate hell and you shouldn't forget that.
Bad advice. It's a sure way you're gonna get arrested / treated terribly by cops.
@@AntonioCunningham police are scumbags. It is in their DNA
@@AntonioCunningham Better to suffer max 48hs in detention than lifetime in prison because you have stressfully stuttered something that could be taken as a confession out of context.
"How are you gonna prove to me that you didn't do this?"
I don't gotta prove shit, you're the one who has to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that i did anything whatsoever.
Thats not true.
@@alexerickson280 actually, yea it is. that’s the main thing about justice systems in civilized societies
@@artyom1792 Fax
@Zachary Alexander Go ahead keep posting more naive spam that is only showing that you have zero experience or knowledge when it comes to the law.
@@alexerickson280 I say you're wrong. Prove you are right then.
“I have a duty to ensure the truth is paramount” he says after manipulating and lying to the suspect
I think the correct form of that word is doody....that's his doody...since he's FULL OF IT. (shit, I mean.)
You nailed it. "Truth" is what these creeps create out of thin air to further their career.
Well it’s a common tactic to lie like he does, but this is only used after a while into the interview where the directive already sees holes in your story.
I see nothing wrong with his tactics, he just kept it up too long after the guy was pretty clearly not hiding anything
Well, for those doubting he's full of shit and shouldn't be doing the job....he didn't do a very good job now did he? He didn't arrest the actual perpetrator. He's grilling someone who's innocent, and he could have easily referred back to the dispatch. This could have been a lot worse. It is a lot worse in MANY instances. They have our lives in their hands, and they know it and when they shirk that responsibility? Lives are lost and destroyed. It's not like if someone got the order wrong in a drive-thru. It's incarceration or worse. It shows a lack of quality in his work ethic, honestly. Should get demoted or reprimanded in some way.
That ending was so satisfying - what a terrible ‘investigator’. Shameful
it was painful to listen to him try and use interrogation "tricks"
Right? He sounded like it's his first day on the job...disgrace
Was just gonna say. Ends with the perfect revenge sting.
Totally agree!!! Canada is a bit shit in that regard
Yes hes a Brit: is probably back on my turf now arresting all sorts of innocent black men.
Nothing in the world makes me more furious than being accused of something I didn't do. It's also one of my biggest fears to be accused of a crime. I would be absolutely LOSING it! My reaction probably wouldn't do me any favors in court. 😂😂😂
same😅
Michael should have that officer's job - he's clearly a better detective ...
Yeah... seemed like a cool guy
He called the bluff of the video camera immediately.
Seems like he has a better job.
No 🧢
Seriously, if nothing else, Michael is incredibly intelligent. He read motive with ease, and kept his head in a very consequential situation. I hope his boss saw that, and was able to acknowledge how lucky they are to have him.
“Wether you did it or not isn’t up for discussion”. They definitely need to re learn their job.
That cop definitely looks at himself in the mirror every morning and says " I AM THE LAW"
Are you new to this channel? Detectives across the world say this and it works. This would have been a successful interrogation if they could be arsed to follow up his alibi and let him go but... promotion comes first for that arsehole.
Watched Judge Dredd one too many times.
THE HALL MONITOR !!!
They're cops they don't re learn 💩
The first case sounds like a really big April fools joke.
“It was a short white man”
Detective: *Brings in a tall black man*
Copied
😂
Sheer incompetence. The officers who made the arrest were not at fault. But for the detective to not check against the 911 description is dereliction of duty, with severe consequences for an innocent citizen.
@@harrymills2770 I think the officers were at fault a little bit, I mean they ought to know the general physique of a person they'd been running after. Plus, walking off the bus doesn't look remotely like fleeing the cops.
Literally racism “well I lost the other guy so I’ll just bring him in, they’ll believe he did it!” And they did for 2 years. Awful. Glad he got his justice
That put a smile on my face at the end. It is TRAUMATIZING being accused to such an extent, and I'm glad Michael was okay at the end.
This whole thing is astonishing. The fact the guy was polite and courteous throughout is amazing. What a man.
He really pushed the "polite Canadian" stereotype to the limit there.
I would've started laughing at him and call him out for lying his ass off, that he's unqualified for his job, and to thank him for the future lawsuit money.
Bro you and JCS are completely skipping over the racial factor at play. "Despite the suspect being described as a short white man" and while Mr. Dickson did not know that, he understood that he was a black man under control of police who were up to some bullshit. I've been in that situation a few times myself, I'm queer and white and it was in a very conservative town, and eventually you get an instinct for detecting bullshit. Much like the analysis of hindsight, you learn to identify certain behaviors that can only be a result of some bullshit going on. In this case, yes we can directly point to the detective ignoring the clear difference between the description of the perpetrator and the person sitting in the interrogation room. In that situation you don't know what's going on and you know that, so the most reasonable thing to do is be polite as possible while getting information and holding your ground.
I know!! When he said, “ok, well…thank you “ I was done 😂😂
@@misteral9045As a Black woman, I really appreciate you bringing up the racial factor here!! Thank-you for caring enough and being educated enough to speak on it! I'm so sorry you've been judged bc of your identity as well 💔
Let me get this straight. The cops are chasing a man who was caught robbing a jewelry store. They chase the small white man down the alley, lose sight of him for a second, then they regain sight of him and he's magically a 6'3 black man?
Nah nah that’s a magical ally
racism and incompetence, what a fantastic duo
@@LuxConcordiae
Pretty sure incompetence explains everything. Especially because you don't know the color of the arresting officer.
My guess? They were chasing agent 47 and he slipped into a new disguise just in time for them to see this bald guy and arrest him instead. A real 500iq silent assassin move.
Cops don't give one shit about the truth, only closing cases.
Dude has the patience of a saint with the investigator coming at him with false accusations. Serves those guys right for not doing thier job.
I know I hope I would have as much patience as him but I feel like I would be a wreck.
He's Canadian thats why lol
I don't think demotions are enough - people who utterly fail at civil service shouldn't be allowed to continue at all. They should be let go after the first time they hurt someone they're supposed to protect. Keeping them in the career they've proven themselves unworthy of is what's breeding a culture of ineptitude, and hurting more and more people.
I’m watching that man thinking, “that’s probably how I would approach it too” yikes.
TheGreatDrAsian, perfection, is an unattainable goal, whilst trial and error is far from ideal, it can create the ability to critique/have feedback.
Civilians who are wrongly prosecuted, like that gentleman was, have other due processes that can compensate them.
There is not one system of law, nor civilization that is free from error.
That ending is ao satisfying. Dude got $50k and all the cops involved got demoted and suspended
So satisfying to hear Michael was granted 46k at the end of it, those investigators should have been fired though. I feel sorry for anyone who is incarcerated under circumstances like this.
Those investigators should be punch on their head
Yeah he sucked but we don't know his track record, he could have had a million other amazing interrogations. Perhaps his wife divorced him that morning. lol who knows. but yeah the whole time I'm like... This can't be happening.
@@hexslayer363 your excuses for him sound like shit
@@ThrobbyDobby I'm sorry that you think so, but in reality it's actually a factual thought/observation. are you saying you know a person completely and fully from one encounter? No it's just not possible. Basically what I'm saying is...you should stop looking for comments to put your stink breath attitude on and realize I didn't like the investigators attitude either if you can read.
Say you're having a bad day at work like everyone has on this planet, do you deserve to be fired for that? Also let me give you a few examples of excuses so you can understand the English language properly.
"I'm sorry for being late, I was stuck in traffic"
"I was not in school today because I had a doctor's appointment"
However me stating we don't know the kind of day an individual is having nor do we know his life story is not an example of an excuse being used, but a fact. it's what we call giving an alternative view to the current situation being perceived or as some call "not judging a book by its cover". we see this guy is being a bit of a prick, fact. assuming he is always like this based on one situation is not a fact but an observation.
I hope you take the progression of your education into consideration as it will prevent you from further humiliation in the future.
Or maybe they should've been charged and imprisoned. Their levels of negligence and injustice can, and does, ruin lives. And people wonder why so few trust in law enforcement.
"Whether you did it or not isn't up for discussion" um, isn't that the entire purpose of having a trial? Those cops should be thrown in prison.
Its canada bruh
@@sleepn_on_me2473 so... racism doesn’t exist in Canada? What are you saying?
@@lulubugz2852 nah
Canada as in
You know what i dont even know what i was sayin
Im straight talkn out my ass
My bad
@@lulubugz2852 what i really meant was due process clause
Its like the 5th or 4th amendment in the US
Does canada have a constitution?
Im from ukiah, california.
Im not familiar with canadian laws
But i heard it’s beautiful in canada
This guy is unbelievably calm and respectful. I can’t believe they didn’t even look into his alibi
what means alibi?
@@LG-cl8ip
It means what he was doing before / at the time of the crime.
@@LG-cl8ip evidence/proof of his innocence
like when he told the officer to ask the bus driver about him being on that bus, that was his ‘alibi’.
It's because he's Canadian ha
yeah a man responding to the bluff "we have the incident on video camera" with "great, that's relieving!" should definitely at least have gotten a reaction out of the investigator. but he was so smug & arrogant about Michael's guilt that he didn't even second guess the "suspect" he had in front of him. I can especially only imagine how little he'd have investigated if he were one of the arresting officers AND then the interrogating officer, because no way in HELL he'd have second guessed himself making a mistake.
I feel so bad for this poor guy. He seems so sweet and the officers treated him so poorly.
At least this story had a happy ending.
Hey, you're that person making rocket engines!
It almost feels like a bit of a stroke of luck though. I wonder how many innocent people have been the victim of an unscrupulous investigator without the case being audited properly and just disappeared into the prison system :(
Imagine that, you're coming home from work one day, minding your own business and you just get disappeared by the supposedly impartial arbiters of the law. Scary.
@@JN.0_o Yeah, unfortunately the guy who exploded into defensive emotion was convicted even though he was also innocent. Miscarriages of justice.
@@JN.0_o America has the highest incarceration rate in the world by far and is obsessed with punishment. If you have a good enough lawyer/bribes you can get away with almost anything. If you are poor and a minority you are screwed. It’s not about innocence or guilt. It’s about money, ego, and who you know.
Think of all the stories that don't - like the guy who sat in prison for two years for no valid reason. Where is the DNA, fingerprints?
This is so much harder to watch than the people who are guilty.
@Sony She's saying that seeing innocent people being harassed, put under duress, and even falsely imprisoned is much more depressing than seeing someone guilty being analyzed, which can be stressful on the viewer in different ways (e.g. nature of crime, individual, etc.)
This is why I never understand people who criticize defense lawyers who are trying to make a case for their client-- like everyone hating Jose Baez or Jodie Arias lawyer etc...it is SOO much worse to convict an innocent person than to let a guilty person walk free. Lawyers NEED to provide the best possible defense and portray all possible reasonable doubt, it makes no sense for people to get so worked up about defebse lawyers doing their job we'd all want them to do for us
Strangely I think the opposite. I feel more hopeful when I watch this. Like come on argue your innocence, but when a guilty person argues I put myself in thier shoes to see if they can really outsmart the cops and I facepalm and cringe at every mistake that makes it obvious they did something.
@Sony hard is harder than easy
it's even HARDER than you realize. this happened to ME.... and you don't get "paid" any money like that. I was wrongly accused... suffered FAR longer sentencing... was entirely innocent....
and I just feel lucky to be "Free".... except for one thing. we ALL get treated as "Guilty". The title of this thing is correct............. most Americans are entirely unaware of the truth. All that $hyte on TV? yeah... you have NO RIGHTS......... you don't........... stop thinking you do... I think it is LAUGHABLE me, hearing this dude got $45,000 for his 3 days............. if that were (American) truth... they'd owe ME millions.... *it's WORSE than people know* ..... it just is. (the "system" will NOT let you incriminate *The System* .) fact .......................&nobody even realizes it.... until it happens to *Them*
"We have a video camera with the proof"
"Okay, then let me see it"
"No."
Shit like this makes my blood boil.
It should make you happy, that proves they don’t have it
Im on the fence here cos both of you make a good point🤔
one opinion doesnt mean everyone. @go away
@go away by your logic, it is unfair to assume your parents are their to help you. It is impossible to generalize all investigative officers as completely unwholesome and robotic.
He was lying at that point in time lol they don't have access to camera footage for the first day usually
I lived in the U.S. for a few and be falsely accused of something was my biggest nightmare. When I got pulled over for the first time for "following too close" (consequence of being nervous for having a cop follow me too close for ten minutes), I freaked out and knew I couldn't take more risks. Life's is not necessarily better here in Brazil, but at least I can easily blend in and not get profiled the police...
How were you falsely accused if you admit to doing what they said you did?
Nervousness isn't an excuse for driving erratically or dangerously.
Are you saying were you racially profiled?
“Demoted and suspended without pay” - so there are happy endings
Should have been locked up and outright fired.
Typical weak ass slap on the wrist for the "brave heroes" of the so-called justice system
This kind of piece of shit needs to be locked up, given the treatment that who knows how many innocent people he's gotten to confess have dealt with.
@@dickcuntsler8742 I don’t think anything would’ve happened if they were American cops. This shit happens all the time
hallo and he got 46gs!
The 1st case sounds like a south park joke.
“The suspect is a small white man.”
“There he is!”
*Officers points to tall black man.*
That made me laugh
That shit happens tho
I got accused of robbing a 711
I’m brown 5’10”
The guy who actually did it was a white male blonde hair blue eyes 😒😒
Followed up by
"He's coming straight for us!!"
@Siya They always suspect black people because of racism.
@@157dodgers dam, my Argentinian neighbor loves kids like that. He also for some reason sounds really German.
a mistake like this is literally unforgiveable, you can't "blunder" around when your putting someone's entire life at risk. Getting demoted should've been the least of his problems.
Yes, indeed.
I mean if a detective makes errors like these he deserves to be fired but I dont see why he should deserve more, I dont see why the detective also has to risk a lot to do his job
@@WaterPidez my job involves managing hotel operations. If i make unintentional errors, guests are inconvenienced, or certain codes could be violated like cleanliness or private information disbursement. I would be written up or lose my job depending on the severity and my disciplinary history.
If I make an intentional error, hotel or guest property could be stolen, guest safety can be jeopardized, I could commit reward program fraud, etc. I would lose my job, AND face potential criminal punishment.
PLEASE, do not act like an investigator lying about evidence trying to ruin someone's life is simply making a mistake at a job. This innocent man could've lost his own job, or accidentally said something incriminating leading him to jail or prison, and this douchebag wouldve laughed about it at the water cooler the next day. This is inexcusable, and absolutely criminal in nature, just like if I were to intentionally err at my job jeopardizing someone's safety.
I agree. He should have been fired.
Although, to be fair, I would volunteer to spend 3 days in jail if it got me almost $50,000 in punitive damages. Fastest 50k of my life.
Yeah, working for the police is one job but were you literally have to have superhuman intelligence and moralities. There is absolutely not any room for normal human error Or selfishness or other vices in the slightest in that job.
The amount of innocent people behind bars especially in the United states is a truly terrifying thought. I can't even imagine what it would be like. It's extremely depressing to see how many people inside the justice system that are supposedly their to serve justice do not care if real criminals Run Free while innocent people rot in prison as long as they have numbers that look good. Also, I wonder when the next video from this channel is going to be uploaded it's a brilliant channel but it's been sometime since the last one
All demoted and suspended without pay. Music to my ears. Hell, the cop that tossed him in jail for 3 days without checking any other sources should be fired. He doesn't have what it takes to be a good investigator, let alone a good bluffer.
if only this happened in the states ever....
I just can't comprehend why he just wouldn't check any evidence at all. There was absolutely nothing pointing to the innocent dude yet he did nothing but assume he was guilty.
@@DutchMadness77 It was most likely motivation to appear as a skilled interrogator. He was trying to get a confession without evidence which the narrator mentioned would have been a mark of a great interrogator. The detective/interrogator was just a moron.
@@LethalWalou Which means the interrogator cared more about his promotion than the actual truth, or that he potentially would be sending an innocent person to jail.
@@tomaskusnir2374 Yes, as said the detective/interrogator was just a moron.
it must be so terrifying to be in a room with someone confidently telling you that you are guilty for something you had literally NOTHING to do with. my anxiety is so bad in normal living situations. i’m quite confident i would have a stroke of some sort!
Oh my God I can't even imagine. The full force of the government is coming down on your head and stuffing you into a cage for something you had absolutely nothing to do with. And what can you do? Just telling the truth isn't good enough. You have to prove that you didn't do what was done. (Yeah yeah innocent until proven guilty isn't always the way it's done. A cop's word is basically 90% of the way to conviction if it's a judge deciding it, and 75% of the way if it's jury. If you don't have hard evidence to prove your innocence or irrefutably contradict the officer's testimony, then that sworn statement and no further evidence is enough to get you convicted)
And what makes this sort of thing even worse is you don't even really need to have a perfect storm of bad luck resulting in genuinely mistaken identity or something for this to happen. The perp might be a short white dude and you might be a tall black guy, but they'll arrest you anyway and even refuse to entertain the possibility that your tall black self is not in fact a stubby white guy.
Facts
Same
Omg same as me
@@angry_zergling yes, and then what's worse is some people are so anxious and scared they will then confess to a crime they didn't even commit
"I mean did she see you sleeping at that time"
What a stupid question. If he was sleeping, how can he know if his mother saw him sleeping or not?
lol
Those are trap questions, most of the time people who are guilty trying to look innocent will fall for them and kinda dig themselves in a hole lol
Lmao the detective didn't think twice before asking the question
@@JosephSampson Sadly innocent people can also get confused by them. In the moment
They are trick questions. All you have to do is answer one or two questions that seem innocent, and now they have the "evidence" and the "confession" to charge you with the crime. They will ask you a series of questions that are similar, with harmless answers, and then they twist your words to fit the motive.
This guys composure was truly amazing
"We're looking for a short white guy" Arrests tall black guy. I'm surprised demoted and suspended without pay was all they got. Poor guy. Damn.
It really is so terrible... He is so composed and smart, and he was treated with so much disrespect 😥
Right??? Like how?? They just arrest the first person they see???
Racism runs very deep in the justice system, I wouldn’t be surprised if this wasn’t his first time and if his colleagues and higher ups have also wrongfully incarcerated other black people. They often protect each other when they’re all doing the same crooked shit.
Are you really surprised lol
I’m not surprised
The Ontario police department should definitely look into that interrogator’s past cases
It’s not Ontario. It’s Hamilton.... terrible city
They won’t
LOOOOL , KIND OF FUXKED UP LOL
@@LoudNicey21 He was demoted
@@aliciamyers8769 whassup doe shawty
The cop doesn't care about the truth, only cares about obtaining a false confession.
That’s why I hate Kamala Harris so much. She was just like them in California.
That cop
And or an impressive conviction record, which begs the question, how many people are innocent but is omitted because he wants to look good on record having a lot of arrests. And will pull every dirty trick in the book to achieve his goal.
@@javimiami92 Are you hating her because of party lines or is there any reason for that? "She was just like them in California" seems quite vague.
@@PurpleCh4lk californian cops have a tainted history
As an abnormal personality I often have a fear of being falsely accused then some jerk pointing out my weirdness as proof I’m very happy to here this kind of observation is being scrutinized as proof
That why if you get accused of something. You will fight tooth and nail if you want to defend your innocence. Atypical behavior is not evidence of guilt