There are only three things you should say to the police: 1) I don't answer questions 2) I do not consent to any searches or seizures 3) I want a lawyer
I would order them as: 1) I invoke my 6th amendment right to my lawyer 2) I do not consent to any searches or seizures 3) On my lawyer's advice I invoke my 5th amendment rights 4) Stay silent until lawyer is present!
@@DarthRagnarok343 3 is very important. It has been ruled that remaining silent without verbally invoking your 5th amendment right to remain silent can be used against you. Sad but true.
I was once arrested for 23 hours years ago for a crime an officer I know later told me the victim staged. Anyway, the investigating officer told me they had fingerprints. I replied, "oh so you already know my brother, and I weren't involved?" The officer asked "what do you mean?" I said "well my brother is in the army, so his fingerprints are on file. My mom does a daycare, and any adult in the household has to pass live scan, so mine are on file from that as soon as I turned 18. If you actually have fingerprints, you already know they aren't ours." So I have experienced the fingerprint lie personally.
@@TaylerKnox I mean they released me pending further investigation, and I never had anything come of it until I tried to get a background check years later. It came up as never being closed, and I had to get a letter from the DA's office. That conversation included deputy DA "I don't know, it looks pretty violent based on the records." Me "okay when is the statute of limitations up on it?" Her "three years ago." Me "okay so there's no way you could prosecute anyone for it?" Her "absolutely no way." Me "then why don't you just write the letter saying that I was never charged with anything, and you won't be pursuing it?" Her "I don't know." Me "fine I want to talk to _____(DA's name)." DA comes to the phone and I explain the entire conversation. He tells me he'll send the letter immediately, and will address her incompetence. She was not working there much longer according to one of the other deputy DAs that I actually knew.
And then you immediately stopped talking, correct? The longer you try to outsmart the police, the more likely you'll screw up and let them get you on something. Especially if you're purposely trying to make them mad at you.
@@jatbatman Now I know you're a pathological liar. "I will address her incompetence" LMAO And then the DA invited you to the office to present you a medal, right? And everyone there started clapping. There is no way in hell that you were told anything about internal matters. Another typical internet loser who lies for meaningless thumbs.
@@B3Band I mean the only crime committed was insurance fraud and staging a crime. Oh and later harassment by an officer, but that last one eventually cost him his badge when he did a completely messed up accident report a few years later giving me written proof. They had absolutely nothing on me, because the crime didn't even exist.
It's really very simple,...when a cop speaks to you,...he is fishing for incriminating evidence to charge you with a crime,...any crime,...no matter how innocent the conversation may appear,...they are on a fishing expedition. Simple solution,...ignore them,...like they are not even there,...and nothing was said at all. Another solution I have used, is I have told them,... " I have no want, need or desire to have a consensual conversation or any other conversation with you. " I have had them persist,...I ignored them. In all probability they will get PISSED OFF,...and act out in an unprofessional manner.
"Some things you say can and will be used against you, but the other stuff you say will be used to hurt our own case and help you instead" Says no cop ever.
I was once accused of breaking and entering and property damage. The police questioned me and insisted that they had evidence and I should talk. I told them that if they had evidence, they didn't need me to talk to them and told them that was all I had to say. After about 2h of them pressing me and me being silent, they simply let me go. If they have evidence, nothing you say will make your case better. If they don't really have evidence, they will let you go.
My favorite line to use is, If you have all this evidence against me, I'd be in a cell by now. If you had anything, what do you need me for? I watched a video where the cops told a guy they had video of the crime, he just said awesome, let's see it and it will prove I didn't do it. No video was provided.
I had almost the same happen to me. "The witness said they saw you doing XXX, how can you explain that." "I can't. I didn't do that, so I can't explain how they got that wrong." They expected someone to try to explain how, either to explain how someone else got it wrong, or to explain "their side" because they did it. A 2 hour interview where I cooperated fully and said nothing. I didn't tell them what they wanted to hear, but didn't tell them anything they can use against me. So case closed. Also, the fun thing with police is when they look in the wrong place, they stop looking in the right places.
I was a cop for over 24 years, retired as a police Chief. Listen to this fellow, he knows what is going on. Never ever talk with the police, it is not in your best interest.
How many lives did you ruin? How many people did you violate (kidnap and put in a cage) without REAL probable cause? How many times have you violated your oath? There is a special place in hell for cops.
Always remember: “Everything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law.” It doesn’t matter whether the cop actually says the words, or whether you’re arrested or not. Everything you say can and WILL be used against you. And note that they say “used against you”. They don’t say “used to find the truth”… or “used to achieve Justice”, or “used to help you”. There is NOTHING you can say to a cop that will help you. Period. They tell you this straight out.
and you can invoke your 5th Amendment right at any time, you don't need to wait until you've been arrested and the cop is reading you your Miranda Rights.
I hate the way cops do things. I had a choking type incident and passed out while driving at 70mph. I went though a guard rail an then into a ravine and hit a tree head on. I get out of my truck all dazed... guess someone that saw it on the highway called 911. I was walking up the hill on my own power and from probably 30ft a way a cop says "I smell alcohol, how much have you had to drink". I didn't say anything because EMT's where there. The cop is trying to make me take a breathalyzer when I couldn't breath good. EMT guy told the cop "We are taking him". I ended up going to our local hospital then transferred to UPMC trauma unit. Had 10 broken ribs, punctured lung, and punctured spleen. The cop just wanted a checkmark on his record... he didn't try to help me at all. And yes I was SOBER.
TRUE STORY: Years ago, before cell phones, there was a nice looking, vintage pick up travelling in front of me on a 4-lave divided highway through Steger's Curve - a notorious, long, sweeping curve on a hill known for accidents. Suddenly something under the front end of it broke, sending it hurtling into a ditch on the right side of the road, where it flipped end over end once and barrel rolled twice, before landing right back on the wheels, facing the right direction on the apron of the highway and looking not much worse than before the accident. However, the teenaged driver was flung through the open window and sent hurtling 25 feet into the air, landing unconscious right on the yellow line dividing the two lanes. It was all I could do to get stopped before killing him. Since it was happened a blind curve at night, I gave my friend a flashlight, and he ran back to warn oncoming cars while I positioned my truck between him and traffic, and did what I could to try and help. He was laying face down on the cold asphalt, had blood trickling from his mouth and both ears, and was making gurgling sounds. I threw my coat over him and sent a passing car to call 911 at the next phone booth. Luckily, a nurse happened along, and was also doing what she could to help. After maybe 30 minutes without change, and with the faint sound of an oncoming siren in the distance, the kid suddenly showed the first sign of improvement when he let out a pitiful groan, and with all his strength, lifted himself to a seated position, opened his eyes, and began to look around with a confused gaze through two dilated pupils in eyeballs that were bloody red instead of white. Throughout the entire ordeal, there had been no signs at all of alcohol or drugs, and we would certainly have known if there was. To everyone's relief, a county deputy pulled up 2 or 3 minutes later and saved the day - NOPE! He gets out of the patrol car with a hateful scowl, walks over, starts screaming at everyone and threatening to arrest us, and yelling at us to clear the scene. He then walks over to the boy, tells him to, "GET UP!!!", and starts kicking him when he doesn't instantly react. The poor flabbergasted nurse said, "PLEASE LEAVE HIM ALONE! He is seriously injured, and you're going to kill him!" The cop then spun towards her with a look of pure evil in his eyes, grabs his handcuffs, and reminds her that HE is in charge, and doesn't need her or any of us meddling in his affairs, and that if we weren't in our cars and driving away in 1 minute, we were all going to jail. Less than a minute later, when I drove past to leave, the cop had thrown the boy over the trunk of his patrol car with his arms pulled backwards and pushed up over his head, and he was kicking his legs apart to search him - and this was after jerking him to a standing position by his hair! I was about 18 at the time, and just didn't want any trouble with the law, but I instantly lost about 90% of the respect I had once had for law enforcement. There was no social media at the time, but 45 years later, I still wonder what happened to the boy and kick myself for not getting involved and coming forward with my story.
@@brianleeper5737 Yep, about 5 or 6 miles north of Huntsville on 231. Almost the same exact thing happened to me about 15 years later too, just west of Huntsville. Only the scene was much, much worse, with a car upside down and the engine racing with fuel spilling. It was smoking and threatening to blow up with an unconscious man inside. There were also about 4 people scattered down the road with TERRIBLE injuries, and there was even a semi-conscious baby laying in a ditch. Again it happened right in front of me, and there was nobody but me to do anything to help. This time I was older and wiser, and quickly told the power-tripping, roid-raging, bass terd cop that showed up to pi ss off. The cops around here are something else.
@@ralphcantrell3214 There are definitely some dramatic variations in the competence and professionalism of cops from area to area....and you can see this on RUclips videos.
@@brianleeper5737 Those are among the worst 3 or 4, but unfortunately, I happen to have been unlucky enough to be at the wrong place at the wrong time to have inadvertently become involved in several rare and tragic events, including a random, high profile murder, up close and personal, for which the perp is now serving life without parole. Again, it had nothing at all to do with me. I was just passing by, and didn't know anyone involved. I'm just an average person, working, supporting a family, and going through life minding my own business. And for some unknown reason, God has placed me in the immediate vicinity of these crazy predicaments over and over. I have witnessed enough hardcore tragedy to send some folks over the edge, and therefore probably do have more experience with unusual, hectic and stressful matters of life and death that involve the police than do most other "Average Joes". I have lots of stories to tell too, but I usually just keep these to myself. Randyreigel's story is what prompted me to relive some of it now. I know their job is tough, and dangerous, and I have certainly seen it first hand. I know they need absolute authority to do their jobs, and I usually back the boys in blue, but sometimes one is just wrong, and might need to be exposed. These days I would just stand back and film the unreasonable BS and share it with the world.
Police are hilarious, I was robbed and assaulted outside a 7/11 and when the police took my statement the detective said he thought I might have been robbed for drugs and if I did it was okay to tell him because it would be like any other robbery. I was absolutely dumbfounded.
Cop probably meant you were being robbed for cash or items he can sell for cash so the dope head robber can support his drug habit. Addicted dope heads get desperate enough to rob. If what you say is true then it was an asshole cop trying to incriminate you then give him reasonable suspension to search you and possibly your vehicle.
The fact that they can lie and are trained to lie plus they have no legal requirement to protect and serve = lack of honor. Dishonorable people, dishonorable training, dishonorable tactics.
The real job of policing is to enforce the law, and all that protect and server bullshit is just public relations attempt. I don't really think you can criticize them for trying to use effective tactics for gathering evidence from suspects it helps the main objective of law enforcement. Do save your anger for when they unlawfully violate people's rights though
@@BillMeyer-l4q Lying is second nature for humans when they want something and know they can get away with lying to get what they want. It’s just human nature.
The reality is, law enforcement serves the politicians, not the people. The politicians are supposed to serve the people but we all know they serve themselves, and the government by extension, first.
@ClarityDetermination I worked in audits to show and bring attention to it in several jurisdictions. You can see on my channel, and I do additional things behind the scenes. Good cops give me tips very regularly, and I run with it. So they don't have to worry about backstabbing by bad cops. I turn over my information to people I know that loath bad cops and I sit back and watch. I hope I explained it to your satisfaction. I did it on the job my entire career as well. I disaplined cops and fired them and made it next to impossible to hire them again as a cop. But I would say I run an 85 to 97% excellent outcome. God-bless you. Don't talk to cops.... It turns out bad for you Record all cop and governments interactions...
What about state wide racism and indefinite containment up to the psychiatric ward evaluation with forced medications until suspect confesses or says something incriminating near agent without uniform? (unrelated, but there is theory some mass shooters were on psychiatric medication "cocktails".) Tried recording government doctor refusing to treat me and inviting national security agent(s) to the room for some reason and got RUclips video recommendations of a silly person filming government workers even before publishing video of government worker double standards. Then the agencies started to stalk me, like uploading files to my PC or taking control of my phone or erasing google review comment about a police station in a region which prides itself of mass people executions that they have access to home electronics. It is so demoralizing, especially officers stalking part when you can't defend even from assaults because bullies run to their friends at agencies telling either it is they that are bullied or just blatantly showing off their power. And press is usually busy collaborating with officers to make fake Fast and Furious or Murder stories. I know that by news telling every day that a house has burned down and some people were killed but if you see such houses in reality and in news they usually show same or a couple of burned houses, the same footage of same burned houses day after day after day instead of footage of a new house every day. UN basically says we need to wait for social change of mentality, which is partially true but it will take how long? 100? 200 years for positive shift to occur in government thinking? @@DCJNewsMedia
Your honesty is truly appreciated!! At the same 'X' it is truly sad to hear that so many OTHER chiefs w/ NO integrity allow such, things 2 happen. If I could ask you 2 questions they would be: 1) If cops know it's a 'no-no' to make-up false 'laws' or situations, to gain an arrest...then Y do it? 2) Do cops receive extra 'brownie points' or incentives back a5 the station house IF, they boost their numbers of arrests out on the streets? In other words what's in it for them if they know it is wrong?
Don't play their game. Don't even sit down in the Interrogation room. Say, "I want an Attorney. Am I under arrest or free to go?" If they were going to arrest you, they knew before you showed up.
Exactly, and the police will piss and moan and threaten you when you ask for an attorney. It is a constitutional right, the 6th amendment, just like the 5th. When you invoke any of your rights, they get belligerent.
@@greenflagracing7067Absolutely never go to the police station for a voluntary interview. As soon as that request occurs, contact an attorney and have them run interference.
About 9 years ago, I was living in my apartment when 5 police started banging on my door. They accused me of beating up a woman. When I told them I was living alone, the officer in the lead asked me if they could come in and search. He said they would be coming in one way or another, so I consented. It turns out they were at the wrong apartment, and nothing bad happened to me in the end. But still, I should have told them I do not consent. Things could've gone badly for me, and I was just sleeping.
The idiots here are more worried about a man in a red sports car with a gopro than any criminal. Theyre about to have half a department fired. My friends are not someone to mess with. You can call them OUT OF THIS WORLD
Former Police Officer here, and that part about "empathize with you to get a confession" made me laugh out loud. I knew a detective who used the same routine every single time and it worked like fishing with dynamite. He sit back in his chair, cross his legs like he was getting comfortable, put his glasses down and say, "look, I don't want to overreact about this thing." ... And they would open up EVERY. SINGLE. TIME.
Salinas vs Tex Supreme Court case . You have to say out right " I invoke the 5th ammendment to remain silent You can't just shut up or say nothing you have to say 5thh ammendment I remain silent Sayit immediately and say it again when you are read your Miranda rights My source is YT channel Delet Lawz
I've talked to the police but I turn it around. I ask staties which barracks they work from then if they mostly came from the military and so forth. Getting info from me is a lot harder. Where you coming from? A jobsite. Where you going? to get some food, you know a good place? What jobsite? not important.
Just as a point of reference that the other poster noted as he pointed out the supreme court decision. Police and law enforcement fought this all the way to the supreme court.
My long time friend was a defense attorney.He told me in no uncertain terms if you are ever questioned keep you mouth shut. Nothing you can say will help you. I’ve never needed to use that advice but I know it’s the best advice.
Shut your mouth AFTER you tell them you are taking the 5th and will not answer any questions. Just remaining silent does not automatically guarantee your rights.
40 years ago, I was falsely charged with a pretty serious crime involving children. The first complaint was to CPS, which was quickly closed The second complaint was to the local police and I was charged. When I went to the police station, I immediately firmly stated that "I am not talking." They did not even try talking to me. I found an attorney. He immediately subpoenaed the records from both agencies. The two sets of records looked like there were for two totally different cases. Meantime, I passed an independent polygraph first time. All the focus was on the complainant's inconsistent and conflicting statements Nobody heard or even cared about my story. The case was dismissed in chambers before I got there for the first hearing.
Great to hear, but polygraphs are bunk science and inadmissible as evidence in court (in the US at least for the latter, they're BS all over the world still).
I moved into a town, on Friday, and on Sunday, was walking into a local bar. I'm talking to a woman on the way in, and I tell her I just moved there, and where I lived. She accused me of being a predator, and she ran in to tell everyone I was a prediator. I turned around and walked away. Within a year, I heard she accused someone else, and the town offered to just put him on the list, and not give them any time, so, they took that deal. The man cut trees for a living. If I'd have known earlier, I would have testified in his defense. It's weird, that law enforcement lets crazy people give them statements, and they go with it, It ruined him. It even damaged his tree business.
this happened maybe 30 years ago in California. guy's arrested for some child abuse crime. this was when child abuse was big in the national press. front page news in the Orange County Register. the guy's public image was wrecked. fired from his job, etc. weeks later the DA declines to prosecute for lack of evidence. that wouldn't be news and his life would still be wrecked. the DA moves to dismiss the case, the guy objects, the trial judge gets it: he won't let the government dismiss and forces a trial and ultimately a not guilty jury verdict. front page news in the Orange County Register.
I’ve also heard to never take a lie detector test. They are used by police to try to convince you that you lied and to “confess”. A private test would be a different thing, but as a rule, those tests are not accurate.
Nobody cares about an independent polygraph. If it were a police polygraph, the first thing your attorney would do is get it thrown out. Don't put yourself in situations where you can be perceived as a pedo, and nobody will perceive you as a pedo.
I had a police officer walk up to my car while sitting in a bank parking lot. I had given my Grandma a ride and was waiting for her with the engine running. The officer said so many people were calling and saying I was suspicious. Only 3 people had come out of the bank while I was there, and one dude that was hanging around in the parking lot who took off when I explained to the cop what I was doing there. The cop wanted my ID and I gave it to him and told him that he had better have a good reason for asking for it. The cop would only say that I was "suspicious". By then I was surrounded by police cars. When something like this happens to you, you are so shocked that your mind is spinning trying to comprehend what is happening and why. By then Grandma had exited the bank and saw all of the police surrounding my car, It was so comical seeing her waving her cane in the air and yelling at the cops "What is going on here"! He was only helping me out!... I could not help bursting out laughing at the scene and the cop as he sheepishly gave me back my ID. About a week later I called the bank and and talked to the manager to find out who called the police on me. It turned out that she remembered the dude in the parking lot because he was the one acting so suspiciously that the bank tellers were uneasy with him around. This occurred around the time that the "If You See Something Say Something" commercials were playing on rhe Walmart video screens by the checkout registers.
You got played. Suspicious is not reason to demand ID. Correct answer is "No" Hope you learnt from that. "what crime do you suspect me of officer? Get a supervisor"
About 20 years ago I had police show up at my house and said that had a warrant for a kid that was at my house visiting my son , there was 5 cars one drove into my back yard and right on tpo of our septic tank and broke the lid , they had a have it towed out. But they came into my house with guns out and pointed at my kids and wife and push me aside and said that they will shot anyone who moves , never got to see a warrant or have the chance to ask for it . In today's world with cameras that would not happen or it would but there would be a lawsuit afterwards. I found out some time later they did not have a warrant only a call saying that this kid was there and the caller thought that this kid was the one who broke into his house, and in the end he was not the one , but he was so beaten up by the police at the time and was so incredibly afraid of them he said he did it even though he had not , it took a long time to prove that he did not do it and cost a lot, so please listen to this man because police will do anything they want to if they believe that they will get away with it, Learn how to protect your home and family from cops and police officers who just don't care about anyone but themselves.
I had a police detective call me on a false allegation from my ex so I just sent my lawyer and they ended up finding out that she lied. I also had a office steal my recorder and use it against me even when I told him he couldn’t have it and he stole it anyways. I went after him until he went to jail and got fired for it because I would let give up on it.
I’ve said the same thing. Told the cop he doesn’t have an ounce of integrity in his entire body if he makes his living doing a job that teaches him to lie.
Wow such a badass. You admit you're dumb enough to actually open your mouth, though. And then sit there and make them upset with you so they will now go out of their way to get the upper hand by any means necessary. Bravo.
Very well done. The advice about interrogation and questioning is vitally important. They are skilled at getting a response from a subject. No matter how innocuous the question, be aware their questions are meant to give an indication whether an individual meets their objective. You cannot talk your way out of an arrest, but you sure can talk your way into one.
If we expect everyone is a lier (and most are) then the world will be easier to navigate. Most of what your stating is the Reid technique 1. Never talk to police other than "am I under arrest or am I free to go" 2. If arrested ask for a lawyer and request your 5th amendment right. This will make your lawyers job alot easier and stop the interigation. Thanks for the content
Thank you for being on our side .Please help represent our auditors who are out there everyday fighting for our rights and exposing these oath breakers .
We love the Law. We have Officers in City, State & Federal going back 120 years. I was moving, was needing money for the move, and not wanting to sell to the public, went to a gun dealer in Vancouver Washington. Firearm was purchsed new from a gun dealer. The employee was an off duty Clark County Reserve Deputy. He stated: You have a illegal firearm". Shocked, I recovered and said Bull Shite, and he threatened to arrest me. I said " do it". The off duty blinked, and the owner of the shop intervened, and purchased my firearm. The off duty was a psyche case, and was trying to intimidate me to sbandon the firearm. It didn't work!
Excellent video. So many Americans are ignorant of their rights. I am trying to learn all I can and share it with family and friends. The cops are getting away with a lot these days, and it’s also extending into the judicial system. The judges seem to be somewhat ignorant also. Don’t know how that’s possible, but it’s happening. Also, we need to end qualified immunity.
The commerce system is a legal fiction and in order for a living man or a living woman to participate in it, we have to consent to it. Then once that happens we get tricked thru dog-Latin the language of the dead ledger. The codes and statutes of the for profit corporation vs the U.S. Constitution which allows for voluntary servitude. It’s all a scam thru paper tiger.
In many places, you don't need to graduate law school and pass the bar exam to be a judge. I could be a judge after attending the Judge Judy School of Law. The judge in the Jack Ruby trial ( he shot Oswald who had previously shot Pres Kennedy) was not a lawyer and from the book I read a very bad judge.
As someone who has never been in trouble, I always thought I had nothing to fear by being honest. Thanks to videos like this and JCS I now now that I do not want to talk... not even as a witness that saw someone else do something.
It was until right wing conservatives infiltrated school boards and manipulated curriculum. An ignorant society is easy to control. They no longer fully teach the Constitution and people have no idea about their rights.
(1) Never talk to the cops, (2) even if you are not a Biker never call the cops (3) Never talk to the cops. Last but not least (5) NEVER talk to the police.
See the video, "Don't talk to the police" However, you should tell them you are asserting your right to remain silent. That way they can't use your silence as anything but what it is.
@@kittyhawk7060 Sorry I have been really sick. I still haven’t recovered. I went septic trying to be a tough guy, didn’t want to go to the hospital now I’m paying for it. I may not recover completely ever.
These things need to be taught in school. No average person is going to know about these tactics. Most people are either going to trust the police, or be intimidated by them. People need to know their constitutional rights and how and when to apply them. Good info.
It has gotten to the point that anyone in police custody needs to have attorney with them during questioning. This should be automatic without being required to be asked for by a defendant.
@@stevek8829 certainly if they are in an interview room at the police station. Maybe anytime they are in custody. Perhaps if you are not free to go; they have to have an attorney present to ask any questions. We need to train people to say “I don’t answer questions” when dealing with the police.
Years ago, in the late 90s I was still fairly new in the trucking industry. I was stopped by a DOT officer and told that I was suspected of hit and run at a grocery warehouse, only problem was I pull a flatbed and was never at a grocery warehouse, I was loaded with steel beams 😂. I politely told him that I don't talk to cops. I ended up handcuffed and choked with a baton, because I hurt his ego. Another cop showed up and pointed out to him that I was a flatbed loaded with steel, why tf and how tf would I ever be allowed into a grocery warehouse and checked in by security. The aggressive cop says "the report states blue peterbilt and he has some damage to the bumper". The other cop pointed out that the report clearly stated "the blue peterbilt backed a trailer into a private vehicle, the truck did not hit the car". The second officer uncuffed me, asked if I needed medical. Then he told me that I most definitely intimidated the first cop being 6'8" 360lbs 😂 and he had a Napoleon issue 😂
See the video, "Don't talk to the police" However, you should tell them you are asserting your right to remain silent. That way they can't use your silence as anything but what it is.
@jasondyrkacz8270 A Supreme court case have established that you have to verbalize the 5th ammendment to remain silent . I that was explan and thr court case was udentifurd on the Delectz Laws channel
Wouldn't it be interesting to have a full recording/transcript of your state's LEO training from start to finish. This would expose the lies and acts being taught the new Police Academy applicants.
I initially didn't intend to watch the whole video when I saw it was 15 minutes long. I just wanted to see if there were any quick facts I could pick up on and move on to something else. However, this was so well presented, it had my attention the entire video. I'll bet this guy's closing arguments in a trial are convincing as hell. This guy is sharp. Definitely someone you'd want representing you if you needed counsel.
This happened to me. I was in a car accident where I made a left turn with the arrow. The officer said he has witnesses saying there was no green arrow, and then tried to get me to agree. Instead I said: “Why don’t you just check the traffic camera?” That shut him up.
I still remember being on probation over a decade ago, and i had to do a program called ⭐️ project, the people incharge tried to get me to say how our addictions and our lies are what get us into the class. I didnt have a drug problem nor did i lie to get there. they said everybody lies. I told them, “im not a cop, i dont need to lie”
These are all great lessons. I’ve learned a lot of them while watching interrogation videos. I’ll never talk to police without legal representation now.
Simple; As soon as they want to bring you in for a chat insist on a Lawyer. Ends all chatting as they give you the evil eye but be careful of the one who seems understanding to your predicament, never chat with them.
Maybe get the children an attorney before you interview them. That’s why we have to teach our children to never talk to cops or answer their questions. Say you want an attorney and your parents
I used to teach first aid and CPR to police recruits, and on the very first day of class, they learned this thing called "uniform presence." In other words, use the uniform first to intimidate citizens. So, knowing that, half the battle is won against thugs.
This is why I believe there is not true justice in the US court system, it is all about how you can get the results that you are looking for, depending how you play the laws game in your favor and that's why the lawyer exists. How good a lawyer is, depends on how well knows the laws. How many laws they know and understand, more cards you will have in your court game. You are already guilty until you prove the opposite. The best word is the one you don't say. Guilty or Innocent, get a lawyer even before you say hello.
I have a case that is the opposite of this. A guy shot at my children and I while fishing in a public body of water. He admitted to shooting at 11:30 at night and said he was shooting at snakes. We had video of the guy threatening to shoot again, if we got any closer. He was friends with the cops. For a year, the cops said they lost the report and then it showed up. They never once questioned us, said they investigated the case and found no evidence despite the admission and the video of his threats. They are hoping I go away. I have posted this on Facebook and the guy does not refute the suggestion. That is an admission of guilt. I need some help filing against this police department
I have a friend who got arrested(and later released) for simply refusing to consent to a vehicle search during a traffic stop for driving 30 in a 25 zone. It's atrocious.
@@thomasryan2679 You're right. The whole thing was some BS intimidation tactic by the cop. No clearly articulated reason, just a request to search, a refusal, and the officer saying "well then you're under arrest for suspicion of DUI". No field sobriety test. Took him to the station, breathalyzer showed 0.0 so he was released.
If you say “I want to talk to my lawyer.” That is suppose to end the interrogation. You have the right to remain silent. You should immediately ask to speak to your lawyer. In addition, you should make a time stamped videotape where you express the fact that you will never willingly talk to a fellow inmate. Lastly, walk a good path and avoid all of this.
Google wallet in 4 states (including mine) allows you to store your ID (license). When you hand over an unlocked device to a cop, they no longer need a warrant. Apple or Google. Never use this. Insurance or vehicle registration should be handed over in paper form too.
It’s simple. Don’t talk to the police for any reason whatsoever. I’ve been questioned in a serious assault with a deadly weapon case and flat out told the cops they wouldn’t have me in for questioning if they had anything on me. Now…I tripped over the table and fell over the chair a few times but I was let go after 6 hours of being detained.
The mean thing : don't let them to build any kind of evidence against you.The common law system is 'accusatory'.The justice has to proof you are guilty and not you,you aren't.Always keep in mind what this keen lawyer says.
Love this channel …. Ty for taking your time out to teach. Speaking for myself I’m so thankful for defense attorneys. I know how important you guys are and I’m almost positive by the way that you’re speaking you don’t need RUclips money lol. You seam to be doing this very selflessly and I’m here ready to learn, thank you.
The simple fact that anyone thought the police were actuality there to help you to begin with is wild within itself. The best way to sit a cop down is to say nothing at all. Meaning who cares how loud they are getting with you. If they had the evidence they needed y'all wouldn't be talking to begin with. Few are there to do the right thing. Many are just there for a pay check and pension.
Another one I hear a lot is "you don't need to invoke your 5th Amendment unless you've been read the Miranda Rights." This IS NOT TRUE. Any encounter with police, investigators, deputies, etc., you absolutely can invoke your right to remain silent. You have NO obligation to aid in their investigation. However, if you choose to remain silent, you do have to verbalize your intention to do so. The only person that can compell you to answer a question is a judge. Also, "stop and ID states," you're not obligated to answer anything more than your name IF you have committed, you are committing, or you're about to commit a crime. Traffic infractions shoukd be met with window placed at a level you're comfortable with, produce needed documents, and admit to NOTHING. Iften, police will engage in conversation to A) gather as much information as they can to further investigate you. For instance, "where are you coming from/ going?" Any answer is to extend that stop as long as they can to possibly find more infractions to investigate. B) anything you say, WILL be used against you. This means even WITHOUT Miranda Rights, they can ask investigatory questions and if you answer them, they WILL be noted and used against you. C) Tactics to smell inside the car or the drivers breath. The more you talk, the more they are listening, observing, smelling, and gathering any piece of evidence. Hand your documents over, invoke your 5th, don't volunteer anything, keep as calm as possible, and record EVERYTHING. If they screw up, fight it in court, not on the side of the highway. If questioning goes beyond the sinple traffic infraction, ask for an attorney. Questioning stops once you invoke your 6th Amendment. Hiw does a fish get caught? It opens its mouth.
"you don't need to invoke your 5th Amendment unless you've been read the Miranda Rights"... I have NEVER EVER heard that, and I suspect your cop hating buddies are the only one's who YOU'VE herd it from. There are enough true complaints about cops. Also, you do NOT need to verbalize that you don't wish to remain silent, you just have to remain silent. Verbalizing it simply means the cops must cease any pertinent questioning.
The number of people who say "Just comply" on Facebook is frightening. They will argue that if a cop asks for ID when you have done nothing wrong, just show them your ID and you can be on your way quicker, or that if a cop wants to search your car you should let them, nothing to hide and all that crap. I try to tell them that it's about your rights and sometimes I ask if they'd be more comfortable in 1930s Germany......"Show me your papers!"
As a former MP and federal law enforcement officer… on a traffic stop give license, insurance and registration… don’t answer any questions other than to confirm id… get your ticket and fight in court… when they come to your door don’t open it without a warrant, if detained or arrested claim your 4th and 5th amendment rights and shut up and call your lawyer…. The more you say the worse it gets because we all have egos and they get everyone in deep crap
Why are such professional liars held up as the pillars of society. If that was my job I'd get sick of myself trying to swindle people into jail. Absolutely disgusting
A friend of mine, his father was driving a tractor trailer. A New Jersey State trooper pulled him over, thinking he was driving drunk. Somehow that trooper knew the guy was going into diabetic shock, and rushed him to the ER. The doctors said that he would have been dead within two hours. So getting pulled over is not always a bad deal.
DO NOT lock your phone with biometrics. Cops will claim your face or fingerprints are public like a license plate (I've seen it). Lock with a pattern that's hard to explain to them.
"Hard to explain to them" is irrelevant; you can't be forced to testify, or specifically to divulge codes, combinations, or passwords, etc. that are stored in your mind.
My phone lock is the birthday of a long-distant ex whose identity the police would never guess. Don't use your children's birthday, your significant other's birthday, or -- Creator forbid -- your **OWN** birthday!
In regards to @ 1:30 - I was arrested and I lied to the cops about something that may have been in my blood stream. Of course they held me, got a warrant and took me to the hospital to get a blood sample. Upon coming back positive of this substance, the prosecuting attorney was very upset that "I lied right to the officers" about my blood test coming back positive and charged me with a "high court misdemeanor." That was his entire beef it seemed like so I would say that there is certainly some correlation between law enforcement and the prosecutor.
Best not to respond..a denial could be construed as you lying to the police, which is a crime.. Better to not answer questions. Asset your right to be silent
maybe i'm not understanding it correctly but #8 in louisiana is tricky due to the way our "resisting arrest" law is written. in it's current form, it has nothing to do with resisting and everything to do with distracting an officer. if an officer sees, smells, hears or knows of your presence, you are automatically guilty of distracting them from their duties which somehow falls under resisting arrest for who knows why. also under LA law you don't need to have committed any other legal offense to be arrested for resisting arrest.
state of Georgia here. At a routine traffic stop, if he starts the "so where you coming from", "where are you going" crap can i shut this down with a simple "I invoke my 5th amendment right to not answer questions and 6th amendment right to have a lawyer present when youre questioning me". his radar will probably light up and maybe arrest you cause he figures "you must be guilty of something" but is that worse than talking yourself into a "confession" youre fighting uphill in court
I am a retired teacher. Never been in trouble. As average as you can get. When I was about 30 years old police arrested me, took me down for questioning, and said they had an eye witness and my license plate proving I hit and ran a little boy. I had never been in that part of town, but they wanted a confession, or the judge would throw the book at me. All lies. Turns out they were questioning several people who owned green Ford pickups. One big fishing expedition.
The laws and rights allowed in Canada may not be as specific as the Constitutional amendments mentioned but the tactics used by the police up here are basically the same. Thanks for your excellent analysis of the sneaky and manipulative routines that "law enforcement" uses to "solve" their cases.💪🏻 ... btw ... new subscriber 👍🏻
9:58 I’m currently confused, in a recently viewed video you say the police is in their right to force me to unlock my phone by putting my finger on a reader or by holding the phone to my face because I don’t have to share information in my mind for them to access the phone, why the change on this video?
🔥😎Ooooh i like you! Finally! Lawyers understanding that we’re all in this together. If we allow a mob to dominate us, you’re next! Great job explaining this to us “common folk”. Many of us need this info! Glad to see the word is spreading where lawyers are adding their input! 🔥👏😎 I’ve been trying… but without that diploma, most seem to only cater to, it’s hard to get people to see what I’ve known for over a decade. Thank you for sharing! 🔥
Back when I ran Building and Code Enforcement Depts we used to get warrants frequently and I would think it would be helpful to touch on details like “Forced Entry” and also how z Code enforcement case is against the property not the people so the civil rights issues shift a little but so do the restrictions.
I told an inspector in Danville calif, that showed up on a complaint , that I wasn't authorized to allow them on the property, that if they gave me their card I guaranteed the homeowner would contact them in 24 hrs... It worked I think because to get a warrant they would have to tell the judge that and what I said was reasonable.
There are only three things you should say to the police:
1) I don't answer questions
2) I do not consent to any searches or seizures
3) I want a lawyer
I would order them as:
1) I invoke my 6th amendment right to my lawyer
2) I do not consent to any searches or seizures
3) On my lawyer's advice I invoke my 5th amendment rights
4) Stay silent until lawyer is present!
@@DarthRagnarok343 What does number 1 practically mean please?
@@jacques42 Generally speaking, it means you have the very best rights money can buy. Just ask any lawyer about their hourly rate.
@@DarthRagnarok343 3 is very important. It has been ruled that remaining silent without verbally invoking your 5th amendment right to remain silent can be used against you. Sad but true.
No there’s only one thing you should ever say “I’m invoking my fifth amendment right to remain silent” then do just that!
I was once arrested for 23 hours years ago for a crime an officer I know later told me the victim staged. Anyway, the investigating officer told me they had fingerprints. I replied, "oh so you already know my brother, and I weren't involved?" The officer asked "what do you mean?" I said "well my brother is in the army, so his fingerprints are on file. My mom does a daycare, and any adult in the household has to pass live scan, so mine are on file from that as soon as I turned 18. If you actually have fingerprints, you already know they aren't ours." So I have experienced the fingerprint lie personally.
@@TaylerKnox I mean they released me pending further investigation, and I never had anything come of it until I tried to get a background check years later. It came up as never being closed, and I had to get a letter from the DA's office. That conversation included deputy DA "I don't know, it looks pretty violent based on the records." Me "okay when is the statute of limitations up on it?" Her "three years ago." Me "okay so there's no way you could prosecute anyone for it?" Her "absolutely no way." Me "then why don't you just write the letter saying that I was never charged with anything, and you won't be pursuing it?" Her "I don't know." Me "fine I want to talk to _____(DA's name)." DA comes to the phone and I explain the entire conversation. He tells me he'll send the letter immediately, and will address her incompetence. She was not working there much longer according to one of the other deputy DAs that I actually knew.
And then you immediately stopped talking, correct? The longer you try to outsmart the police, the more likely you'll screw up and let them get you on something. Especially if you're purposely trying to make them mad at you.
@@jatbatman Now I know you're a pathological liar. "I will address her incompetence" LMAO And then the DA invited you to the office to present you a medal, right? And everyone there started clapping.
There is no way in hell that you were told anything about internal matters. Another typical internet loser who lies for meaningless thumbs.
@@B3Band I mean the only crime committed was insurance fraud and staging a crime. Oh and later harassment by an officer, but that last one eventually cost him his badge when he did a completely messed up accident report a few years later giving me written proof. They had absolutely nothing on me, because the crime didn't even exist.
It's really very simple,...when a cop speaks to you,...he is fishing for incriminating evidence to charge you with a crime,...any crime,...no matter how innocent the conversation may appear,...they are on a fishing expedition.
Simple solution,...ignore them,...like they are not even there,...and nothing was said at all.
Another solution I have used, is I have told them,... " I have no want, need or desire to have a consensual conversation or any other conversation with you. "
I have had them persist,...I ignored them. In all probability they will get PISSED OFF,...and act out in an unprofessional manner.
Wether you are guilty or innocent, NOTHING you say will ever help you, only hurt you.
it's literally in the words "anything you say can and will be used against you." there is absolutely nothing about how anything you say can help you .
"Some things you say can and will be used against you, but the other stuff you say will be used to hurt our own case and help you instead"
Says no cop ever.
I was once accused of breaking and entering and property damage. The police questioned me and insisted that they had evidence and I should talk. I told them that if they had evidence, they didn't need me to talk to them and told them that was all I had to say. After about 2h of them pressing me and me being silent, they simply let me go.
If they have evidence, nothing you say will make your case better. If they don't really have evidence, they will let you go.
My favorite line to use is, If you have all this evidence against me, I'd be in a cell by now. If you had anything, what do you need me for?
I watched a video where the cops told a guy they had video of the crime, he just said awesome, let's see it and it will prove I didn't do it. No video was provided.
That was a voluntary detainment. You were FREE to go anytime you wanted, and free to ask for a lawyer.
I had almost the same happen to me.
"The witness said they saw you doing XXX, how can you explain that."
"I can't. I didn't do that, so I can't explain how they got that wrong."
They expected someone to try to explain how, either to explain how someone else got it wrong, or to explain "their side" because they did it.
A 2 hour interview where I cooperated fully and said nothing. I didn't tell them what they wanted to hear, but didn't tell them anything they can use against me. So case closed. Also, the fun thing with police is when they look in the wrong place, they stop looking in the right places.
Nice tip brother! Well said!
Why did you sit in the room for two hours? Sitting there puts you at risk. Just get up and leave.
I was a cop for over 24 years, retired as a police Chief. Listen to this fellow, he knows what is going on. Never ever talk with the police, it is not in your best interest.
How many lives did you ruin? How many people did you violate (kidnap and put in a cage) without REAL probable cause? How many times have you violated your oath? There is a special place in hell for cops.
So you’re a terrorist?
You were a cop for over 24 years? How much "over"? 11 months? 11 years? Hee hee hee ha ha.
HOW DID YOU HELP THE CIVILIANS IN WRONGFUL DEATHS & ARREST IN YOUR TENURE AS A COP / CHIEF WHATS YOUR TRACK RECORD?
I'm sure your troops violated rights and you backed them
Always remember:
“Everything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law.” It doesn’t matter whether the cop actually says the words, or whether you’re arrested or not.
Everything you say can and WILL be used against you. And note that they say “used against you”. They don’t say “used to find the truth”… or “used to achieve Justice”, or “used to help you”.
There is NOTHING you can say to a cop that will help you. Period. They tell you this straight out.
and you can invoke your 5th Amendment right at any time, you don't need to wait until you've been arrested and the cop is reading you your Miranda Rights.
I hate the way cops do things. I had a choking type incident and passed out while driving at 70mph. I went though a guard rail an then into a ravine and hit a tree head on. I get out of my truck all dazed... guess someone that saw it on the highway called 911. I was walking up the hill on my own power and from probably 30ft a way a cop says "I smell alcohol, how much have you had to drink". I didn't say anything because EMT's where there. The cop is trying to make me take a breathalyzer when I couldn't breath good. EMT guy told the cop "We are taking him". I ended up going to our local hospital then transferred to UPMC trauma unit. Had 10 broken ribs, punctured lung, and punctured spleen. The cop just wanted a checkmark on his record... he didn't try to help me at all. And yes I was SOBER.
TRUE STORY: Years ago, before cell phones, there was a nice looking, vintage pick up travelling in front of me on a 4-lave divided highway through Steger's Curve - a notorious, long, sweeping curve on a hill known for accidents. Suddenly something under the front end of it broke, sending it hurtling into a ditch on the right side of the road, where it flipped end over end once and barrel rolled twice, before landing right back on the wheels, facing the right direction on the apron of the highway and looking not much worse than before the accident. However, the teenaged driver was flung through the open window and sent hurtling 25 feet into the air, landing unconscious right on the yellow line dividing the two lanes. It was all I could do to get stopped before killing him. Since it was happened a blind curve at night, I gave my friend a flashlight, and he ran back to warn oncoming cars while I positioned my truck between him and traffic, and did what I could to try and help. He was laying face down on the cold asphalt, had blood trickling from his mouth and both ears, and was making gurgling sounds. I threw my coat over him and sent a passing car to call 911 at the next phone booth. Luckily, a nurse happened along, and was also doing what she could to help. After maybe 30 minutes without change, and with the faint sound of an oncoming siren in the distance, the kid suddenly showed the first sign of improvement when he let out a pitiful groan, and with all his strength, lifted himself to a seated position, opened his eyes, and began to look around with a confused gaze through two dilated pupils in eyeballs that were bloody red instead of white. Throughout the entire ordeal, there had been no signs at all of alcohol or drugs, and we would certainly have known if there was. To everyone's relief, a county deputy pulled up 2 or 3 minutes later and saved the day - NOPE! He gets out of the patrol car with a hateful scowl, walks over, starts screaming at everyone and threatening to arrest us, and yelling at us to clear the scene. He then walks over to the boy, tells him to, "GET UP!!!", and starts kicking him when he doesn't instantly react. The poor flabbergasted nurse said, "PLEASE LEAVE HIM ALONE! He is seriously injured, and you're going to kill him!" The cop then spun towards her with a look of pure evil in his eyes, grabs his handcuffs, and reminds her that HE is in charge, and doesn't need her or any of us meddling in his affairs, and that if we weren't in our cars and driving away in 1 minute, we were all going to jail. Less than a minute later, when I drove past to leave, the cop had thrown the boy over the trunk of his patrol car with his arms pulled backwards and pushed up over his head, and he was kicking his legs apart to search him - and this was after jerking him to a standing position by his hair! I was about 18 at the time, and just didn't want any trouble with the law, but I instantly lost about 90% of the respect I had once had for law enforcement. There was no social media at the time, but 45 years later, I still wonder what happened to the boy and kick myself for not getting involved and coming forward with my story.
That happened in Alabama, didn't it?
@@brianleeper5737 Yep, about 5 or 6 miles north of Huntsville on 231. Almost the same exact thing happened to me about 15 years later too, just west of Huntsville. Only the scene was much, much worse, with a car upside down and the engine racing with fuel spilling. It was smoking and threatening to blow up with an unconscious man inside. There were also about 4 people scattered down the road with TERRIBLE injuries, and there was even a semi-conscious baby laying in a ditch. Again it happened right in front of me, and there was nobody but me to do anything to help. This time I was older and wiser, and quickly told the power-tripping, roid-raging, bass terd cop that showed up to pi ss off.
The cops around here are something else.
@@ralphcantrell3214 There are definitely some dramatic variations in the competence and professionalism of cops from area to area....and you can see this on RUclips videos.
@@brianleeper5737 Those are among the worst 3 or 4, but unfortunately, I happen to have been unlucky enough to be at the wrong place at the wrong time to have inadvertently become involved in several rare and tragic events, including a random, high profile murder, up close and personal, for which the perp is now serving life without parole. Again, it had nothing at all to do with me. I was just passing by, and didn't know anyone involved. I'm just an average person, working, supporting a family, and going through life minding my own business. And for some unknown reason, God has placed me in the immediate vicinity of these crazy predicaments over and over. I have witnessed enough hardcore tragedy to send some folks over the edge, and therefore probably do have more experience with unusual, hectic and stressful matters of life and death that involve the police than do most other "Average Joes". I have lots of stories to tell too, but I usually just keep these to myself. Randyreigel's story is what prompted me to relive some of it now.
I know their job is tough, and dangerous, and I have certainly seen it first hand. I know they need absolute authority to do their jobs, and I usually back the boys in blue, but sometimes one is just wrong, and might need to be exposed. These days I would just stand back and film the unreasonable BS and share it with the world.
Police are hilarious, I was robbed and assaulted outside a 7/11 and when the police took my statement the detective said he thought I might have been robbed for drugs and if I did it was okay to tell him because it would be like any other robbery. I was absolutely dumbfounded.
Wow I would have wanted to press charges on him !!
SHOULD HAVE TOLD THAT LYING CRIMINAL TO F OFF
Cop probably meant you were being robbed for cash or items he can sell for cash so the dope head robber can support his drug habit. Addicted dope heads get desperate enough to rob. If what you say is true then it was an asshole cop trying to incriminate you then give him reasonable suspension to search you and possibly your vehicle.
They love to demonize victims and then they wonder why everyone thinks they are scum
They seem to look for any reason to victimize citizens. Their entire goal is to arrest you and keep the money wheel turning.
The fact that they can lie and are trained to lie plus they have no legal requirement to protect and serve = lack of honor.
Dishonorable people, dishonorable training, dishonorable tactics.
The real job of policing is to enforce the law, and all that protect and server bullshit is just public relations attempt. I don't really think you can criticize them for trying to use effective tactics for gathering evidence from suspects it helps the main objective of law enforcement.
Do save your anger for when they unlawfully violate people's rights though
I don’t remember ever being " trained” to lie during my LE career.
@@BillMeyer-l4q
Lying is second nature for humans when they want something and know they can get away with lying to get what they want. It’s just human nature.
And people still think they're the good guys.
The reality is, law enforcement serves the politicians, not the people. The politicians are supposed to serve the people but we all know they serve themselves, and the government by extension, first.
This video should be mandatory viewing for so many people.
My dad taught me: "Water's wet- The sky is blue- And cops lie"
A cop friend taught me: "Admit nothing -Deny everything -Make them prove it in court "
Well, rather than deny, just call a lawyer.
Sorry to tell you this but water isn’t wet, it makes other things wet. No problems with the rest of what you said.
8m😮
"Deny everything" is bad advice. "Say nothing" is the correct advice.
@@B3Band : Thank you for setting him straight! 😎👍
I retired as a Chief of Police after 44 years... this attorney is good. Excellent video 😊
So how do you help change police brutality now that you are retired?
@ClarityDetermination I worked in audits to show and bring attention to it in several jurisdictions.
You can see on my channel, and I do additional things behind the scenes.
Good cops give me tips very regularly, and I run with it.
So they don't have to worry about backstabbing by bad cops.
I turn over my information to people I know that loath bad cops and I sit back and watch.
I hope I explained it to your satisfaction.
I did it on the job my entire career as well. I disaplined cops and fired them and made it next to impossible to hire them again as a cop.
But I would say I run an 85 to 97% excellent outcome.
God-bless you.
Don't talk to cops....
It turns out bad for you
Record all cop and governments interactions...
@DCJNewsMedia I'm sure after your review you saw no wrong doing.. blue lives bullshit..
What about state wide racism and indefinite containment up to the psychiatric ward evaluation with forced medications until suspect confesses or says something incriminating near agent without uniform? (unrelated, but there is theory some mass shooters were on psychiatric medication "cocktails".) Tried recording government doctor refusing to treat me and inviting national security agent(s) to the room for some reason and got RUclips video recommendations of a silly person filming government workers even before publishing video of government worker double standards.
Then the agencies started to stalk me, like uploading files to my PC or taking control of my phone or erasing google review comment about a police station in a region which prides itself of mass people executions that they have access to home electronics.
It is so demoralizing, especially officers stalking part when you can't defend even from assaults because bullies run to their friends at agencies telling either it is they that are bullied or just blatantly showing off their power.
And press is usually busy collaborating with officers to make fake Fast and Furious or Murder stories. I know that by news telling every day that a house has burned down and some people were killed but if you see such houses in reality and in news they usually show same or a couple of burned houses, the same footage of same burned houses day after day after day instead of footage of a new house every day.
UN basically says we need to wait for social change of mentality, which is partially true but it will take how long? 100? 200 years for positive shift to occur in government thinking?
@@DCJNewsMedia
Your honesty is truly appreciated!! At the same 'X' it is truly sad to hear that so many OTHER chiefs w/ NO integrity allow such, things 2 happen.
If I could ask you 2 questions they would be: 1) If cops know it's a 'no-no' to make-up false 'laws' or situations, to gain an arrest...then Y do it? 2) Do cops receive extra 'brownie points' or incentives back a5 the station house IF, they boost their numbers of arrests out on the streets?
In other words what's in it for them if they know it is wrong?
Don't play their game. Don't even sit down in the Interrogation room. Say, "I want an Attorney. Am I under arrest or free to go?" If they were going to arrest you, they knew before you showed up.
Exactly, and the police will piss and moan and threaten you when you ask for an attorney. It is a constitutional right, the 6th amendment, just like the 5th. When you invoke any of your rights, they get belligerent.
don't go to the cop house in the first place. you don't have to unless you're arrested.
@@greenflagracing7067Absolutely never go to the police station for a voluntary interview. As soon as that request occurs, contact an attorney and have them run interference.
@@chuckiemeister cops hate people who know their rights. what does that tell you about the character of the cops?
@@douglasscovil3447 Yes, right on target. Very sad....
About 9 years ago, I was living in my apartment when 5 police started banging on my door. They accused me of beating up a woman. When I told them I was living alone, the officer in the lead asked me if they could come in and search. He said they would be coming in one way or another, so I consented. It turns out they were at the wrong apartment, and nothing bad happened to me in the end. But still, I should have told them I do not consent. Things could've gone badly for me, and I was just sleeping.
Cops should never be allowed to come into anyones home. No matter what.
1st mistake was answering the door.
The idiots here are more worried about a man in a red sports car with a gopro than any criminal. Theyre about to have half a department fired. My friends are not someone to mess with. You can call them OUT OF THIS WORLD
What are you blathering about?????@@TheKidneyAndTheStone
now thats just idiotic@@TheKidneyAndTheStone
Former Police Officer here, and that part about "empathize with you to get a confession" made me laugh out loud. I knew a detective who used the same routine every single time and it worked like fishing with dynamite. He sit back in his chair, cross his legs like he was getting comfortable, put his glasses down and say, "look, I don't want to overreact about this thing." ... And they would open up EVERY. SINGLE. TIME.
What other tactics did you and your cops use that was not in this video?
#1 Dont talk to the police
#2 Remain silent with the police
#3 Dont discuss anything with the police
#4 Dont admit anything to police
#5 See rules 1-4
Also remember ALL PHONE CALLS ARE RECORDED WHILE INCARCERATED!!!
Salinas vs Tex Supreme Court case . You have to say out right " I invoke the 5th ammendment to remain silent
You can't just shut up or say nothing you have to say 5thh ammendment I remain silent
Sayit immediately and say it again when you are read your Miranda rights
My source is YT channel Delet Lawz
I've talked to the police but I turn it around. I ask staties which barracks they work from then if they mostly came from the military and so forth. Getting info from me is a lot harder. Where you coming from? A jobsite. Where you going? to get some food, you know a good place? What jobsite? not important.
I find it odd that a cop can lie during an interrogation, but the suspect cannot.
cops are sovereign.
Everyone can lie. Just don't lie in court.
Odd and unacceptable.
Don’t need to lie, just don’t talk. Simple
I find it odd that anybody still finds the police honorable
Stand up for, and exercise your rights. Otherwise, we all lose them.
When and who decided the police can lie to people when questioning a subject? This should be brought to an end.
Frazier v. Cupp 1969
@@murphyrod4839yep...
Just as a point of reference that the other poster noted as he pointed out the supreme court decision. Police and law enforcement fought this all the way to the supreme court.
@@murphyrod4839 And we call ourselves a Republic with liberty & Justice for all? With shit like this we look like a third world country.
Time for a fundamental change to our government. Vote Libertarian, then amend, amend, amend! Put the pigs in their place.
My long time friend was a defense attorney.He told me in no uncertain terms if you are ever questioned keep you mouth shut. Nothing you can say will help you. I’ve never needed to use that advice but I know it’s the best advice.
Shut your mouth AFTER you tell them you are taking the 5th and will not answer any questions. Just remaining silent does not automatically guarantee your rights.
40 years ago, I was falsely charged with a pretty serious crime involving children.
The first complaint was to CPS, which was quickly closed
The second complaint was to the local police and I was charged.
When I went to the police station, I immediately firmly stated that "I am not talking." They did not even try talking to me.
I found an attorney. He immediately subpoenaed the records from both agencies.
The two sets of records looked like there were for two totally different cases.
Meantime, I passed an independent polygraph first time.
All the focus was on the complainant's inconsistent and conflicting statements
Nobody heard or even cared about my story.
The case was dismissed in chambers before I got there for the first hearing.
Great to hear, but polygraphs are bunk science and inadmissible as evidence in court (in the US at least for the latter, they're BS all over the world still).
I moved into a town, on Friday, and on Sunday, was walking into a local bar. I'm talking to a woman on the way in, and I tell her I just moved there, and where I lived. She accused me of being a predator, and she ran in to tell everyone I was a prediator. I turned around and walked away. Within a year, I heard she accused someone else, and the town offered to just put him on the list, and not give them any time, so, they took that deal. The man cut trees for a living. If I'd have known earlier, I would have testified in his defense. It's weird, that law enforcement lets crazy people give them statements, and they go with it, It ruined him. It even damaged his tree business.
this happened maybe 30 years ago in California. guy's arrested for some child abuse crime. this was when child abuse was big in the national press. front page news in the Orange County Register. the guy's public image was wrecked. fired from his job, etc. weeks later the DA declines to prosecute for lack of evidence. that wouldn't be news and his life would still be wrecked. the DA moves to dismiss the case, the guy objects, the trial judge gets it: he won't let the government dismiss and forces a trial and ultimately a not guilty jury verdict. front page news in the Orange County Register.
I’ve also heard to never take a lie detector test. They are used by police to try to convince you that you lied and to “confess”. A private test would be a different thing, but as a rule, those tests are not accurate.
Nobody cares about an independent polygraph. If it were a police polygraph, the first thing your attorney would do is get it thrown out.
Don't put yourself in situations where you can be perceived as a pedo, and nobody will perceive you as a pedo.
I had a police officer walk up to my car while sitting in a bank parking lot. I had given my Grandma a ride and was waiting for her with the engine running. The officer said so many people were calling and saying I was suspicious. Only 3 people had come out of the bank while I was there, and one dude that was hanging around in the parking lot who took off when I explained to the cop what I was doing there. The cop wanted my ID and I gave it to him and told him that he had better have a good reason for asking for it. The cop would only say that I was "suspicious". By then I was surrounded by police cars. When something like this happens to you, you are so shocked that your mind is spinning trying to comprehend what is happening and why. By then Grandma had exited the bank and saw all of the police surrounding my car, It was so comical seeing her waving her cane in the air and yelling at the cops "What is going on here"! He was only helping me out!... I could not help bursting out laughing at the scene and the cop as he sheepishly gave me back my ID. About a week later I called the bank and and talked to the manager to find out who called the police on me. It turned out that she remembered the dude in the parking lot because he was the one acting so suspiciously that the bank tellers were uneasy with him around. This occurred around the time that the "If You See Something Say Something" commercials were playing on rhe Walmart video screens by the checkout registers.
You got played. Suspicious is not reason to demand ID. Correct answer is "No" Hope you learnt from that. "what crime do you suspect me of officer? Get a supervisor"
So the officers didn't even make sure they spoke to the correct person. Wow.
About 20 years ago I had police show up at my house and said that had a warrant for a kid that was at my house visiting my son , there was 5 cars one drove into my back yard and right on tpo of our septic tank and broke the lid , they had a have it towed out. But they came into my house with guns out and pointed at my kids and wife and push me aside and said that they will shot anyone who moves , never got to see a warrant or have the chance to ask for it .
In today's world with cameras that would not happen or it would but there would be a lawsuit afterwards.
I found out some time later they did not have a warrant only a call saying that this kid was there and the caller thought that this kid was the one who broke into his house, and in the end he was not the one , but he was so beaten up by the police at the time and was so incredibly afraid of them he said he did it even though he had not , it took a long time to prove that he did not do it and cost a lot, so please listen to this man because police will do anything they want to if they believe that they will get away with it,
Learn how to protect your home and family from cops and police officers who just don't care about anyone but themselves.
I had a police detective call me on a false allegation from my ex so I just sent my lawyer and they ended up finding out that she lied. I also had a office steal my recorder and use it against me even when I told him he couldn’t have it and he stole it anyways. I went after him until he went to jail and got fired for it because I would let give up on it.
That's f'king awesome! I've never heard of a cop going to jail for breaking the law on the job.
The fact that they can lie to you just shows you that they are there to work against you and are NEVER your friend.
First thing I say to a police officer is, "you can lie so I don't believe a word you say ". Then I stay quiet, and just smile.
I’ve said the same thing. Told the cop he doesn’t have an ounce of integrity in his entire body if he makes his living doing a job that teaches him to lie.
Good idea.
Wow such a badass.
You admit you're dumb enough to actually open your mouth, though. And then sit there and make them upset with you so they will now go out of their way to get the upper hand by any means necessary. Bravo.
And there we have it,---- never upset a demigod cop,because they retaliate. What a wonderful system,no wonder they are the way they are.....
Very well done. The advice about interrogation and questioning is vitally important. They are skilled at getting a response from a subject. No matter how innocuous the question, be aware their questions are meant to give an indication whether an individual meets their objective. You cannot talk your way out of an arrest, but you sure can talk your way into one.
If we expect everyone is a lier (and most are) then the world will be easier to navigate. Most of what your stating is the Reid technique
1. Never talk to police other than "am I under arrest or am I free to go"
2. If arrested ask for a lawyer and request your 5th amendment right.
This will make your lawyers job alot easier and stop the interigation.
Thanks for the content
Thank you for being on our side .Please help represent our auditors who are out there everyday fighting for our rights and exposing these oath breakers .
We love the Law. We have Officers in City, State & Federal going back 120 years. I was moving, was needing money for the move, and not wanting to sell to the public, went to a gun dealer in Vancouver Washington. Firearm was purchsed new from a gun dealer. The employee was an off duty Clark County Reserve Deputy. He stated: You have a illegal firearm". Shocked, I recovered and said Bull Shite, and he threatened to arrest me. I said " do it". The off duty blinked, and the owner of the shop intervened, and purchased my firearm. The off duty was a psyche case, and was trying to intimidate me to sbandon the firearm. It didn't work!
Excellent video. So many Americans are ignorant of their rights. I am trying to learn all I can and share it with family and friends. The cops are getting away with a lot these days, and it’s also extending into the judicial system. The judges seem to be somewhat ignorant also. Don’t know how that’s possible, but it’s happening. Also, we need to end qualified immunity.
The whole system is rigged, it’s all about Money
The commerce system is a legal fiction and in order for a living man or a living woman to participate in it, we have to consent to it. Then once that happens we get tricked thru dog-Latin the language of the dead ledger. The codes and statutes of the for profit corporation vs the U.S. Constitution which allows for voluntary servitude. It’s all a scam thru paper tiger.
I’m sure it was a lot worse before citizens were able to record them thanks to cell technology.
In many places, you don't need to graduate law school and pass the bar exam to be a judge. I could be a judge after attending the Judge Judy School of Law. The judge in the Jack Ruby trial ( he shot Oswald who had previously shot Pres Kennedy) was not a lawyer and from the book I read a very bad judge.
Christopher Houser will teach you
As someone who has never been in trouble, I always thought I had nothing to fear by being honest. Thanks to videos like this and JCS I now now that I do not want to talk... not even as a witness that saw someone else do something.
"Take a page from their book, but never, ever help them." - George Carlin, on talking to the police.
I think it is helpful to look up the distance law and always try to record someone getting pulled over. That is how we can help.
This information and comprehensive education should exist in public schools so that everyone is well educated on the law.
It was until right wing conservatives infiltrated school boards and manipulated curriculum. An ignorant society is easy to control. They no longer fully teach the Constitution and people have no idea about their rights.
Will never happen. Teachers are licensed agents of the State. They would risk their livelihood.
Excellent video! Thank You for standing up against the incessant abuses of the law by law enforcement.
(1) Never talk to the cops, (2) even if you are not a Biker never call the cops (3) Never talk to the cops. Last but not least (5) NEVER talk to the police.
See the video, "Don't talk to the police" However, you should tell them you are asserting your right to remain silent.
That way they can't use your silence as anything but what it is.
Yes.
What's number four?
Ans.: Never forget the other four.
@@kittyhawk7060
Sorry I have been really sick. I still haven’t recovered. I went septic trying to be a tough guy, didn’t want to go to the hospital now I’m paying for it. I may not recover completely ever.
@@UnitedArmsOrganization A good shit might help. (LOL. JK) Hope you get better.
These things need to be taught in school. No average person is going to know about these tactics. Most people are either going to trust the police, or be intimidated by them. People need to know their constitutional rights and how and when to apply them. Good info.
It has gotten to the point that anyone in police custody needs to have attorney with them during questioning. This should be automatic without being required to be asked for by a defendant.
What questioning?
@@stevek8829 certainly if they are in an interview room at the police station. Maybe anytime they are in custody. Perhaps if you are not free to go; they have to have an attorney present to ask any questions. We need to train people to say “I don’t answer questions” when dealing with the police.
It's always been that way. It's not new.
There are not enough lawyers in the country for that to be realistic.
@@wmason1961 I do see your point. Certainly we cannot have lawyers running around everywhere police are. We could have lawyers at the police station.
Years ago, in the late 90s I was still fairly new in the trucking industry. I was stopped by a DOT officer and told that I was suspected of hit and run at a grocery warehouse, only problem was I pull a flatbed and was never at a grocery warehouse, I was loaded with steel beams 😂. I politely told him that I don't talk to cops. I ended up handcuffed and choked with a baton, because I hurt his ego. Another cop showed up and pointed out to him that I was a flatbed loaded with steel, why tf and how tf would I ever be allowed into a grocery warehouse and checked in by security. The aggressive cop says "the report states blue peterbilt and he has some damage to the bumper". The other cop pointed out that the report clearly stated "the blue peterbilt backed a trailer into a private vehicle, the truck did not hit the car".
The second officer uncuffed me, asked if I needed medical. Then he told me that I most definitely intimidated the first cop being 6'8" 360lbs 😂 and he had a Napoleon issue 😂
You should have filed charges for assault. Napoleon probably did this to other men too.
See the video, "Don't talk to the police" However, you should tell them you are asserting your right to remain silent.
That way they can't use your silence as anything but what it is.
Why do you have to verbalize it?
Because cops aren't the brightest bulbs.
@jasondyrkacz8270 A Supreme court case have established that you have to verbalize the 5th ammendment to remain silent . I that was explan and thr court case was udentifurd on the Delectz Laws channel
Salinas v Texas (2013) @@RobertBee-fs8hv
@@jasondyrkacz8270 Berghuis v. Thompkins, US Supreme Court decision
This is an excellent show. Most cops are bullies with a badge. Thank you for the program.
Wouldn't it be interesting to have a full recording/transcript of your state's LEO training from start to finish. This would expose the lies and acts being taught the new Police Academy applicants.
There is more than one.
probably available under a freedom of information/public records act request. or a lot of it is already online.
I initially didn't intend to watch the whole video when I saw it was 15 minutes long. I just wanted to see if there were any quick facts I could pick up on and move on to something else. However, this was so well presented, it had my attention the entire video. I'll bet this guy's closing arguments in a trial are convincing as hell. This guy is sharp. Definitely someone you'd want representing you if you needed counsel.
This happened to me. I was in a car accident where I made a left turn with the arrow. The officer said he has witnesses saying there was no green arrow, and then tried to get me to agree. Instead I said: “Why don’t you just check the traffic camera?” That shut him up.
I still remember being on probation over a decade ago, and i had to do a program called ⭐️ project, the people incharge tried to get me to say how our addictions and our lies are what get us into the class. I didnt have a drug problem nor did i lie to get there. they said everybody lies. I told them, “im not a cop, i dont need to lie”
Did God say in the 10 commandments thou shalt not lie unless your a cop?... No he did not.
The law doesn’t care about morality.
@@cameltotem8074 Gods law does & His is the only law that matters.
you're probably a lousy poker player. .
God would know the difference between your and you're
@@B3BandHence why this person is not God, and did not claim to be. They may not know the laws of grammar, but they do know a more important law.
Now that we are clearly a police state this is great information.
These are all great lessons. I’ve learned a lot of them while watching interrogation videos. I’ll never talk to police without legal representation now.
Simple; As soon as they want to bring you in for a chat insist on a Lawyer. Ends all chatting as they give you the evil eye but be careful of the one who seems understanding to your predicament, never chat with them.
don't voluntarily "go in for a chat." Simple.
Arkansas has passed a law that cops are no longer allowed to lie to minors.
Awe....They are such sweethearts.
That's all fine and good, but how about those of us who don't work in the mine?
Maybe get the children an attorney before you interview them. That’s why we have to teach our children to never talk to cops or answer their questions. Say you want an attorney and your parents
Got to look this one up.
I can’t find the Arkansas law that makes it illegal for cops to lie.
The US Supreme Court has ruled that cops can lie in order to obtain a confession.
Thanks for Keeping Us Infomed !
I used to teach first aid and CPR to police recruits, and on the very first day of class, they learned this thing called "uniform presence." In other words, use the uniform first to intimidate citizens. So, knowing that, half the battle is won against thugs.
Wow. Do you have documents they used to train?
@@ClarityDetermination sure state documents are foia in the state of Texas
This is why I believe there is not true justice in the US court system, it is all about how you can get the results that you are looking for, depending how you play the laws game in your favor and that's why the lawyer exists. How good a lawyer is, depends on how well knows the laws. How many laws they know and understand, more cards you will have in your court game. You are already guilty until you prove the opposite. The best word is the one you don't say. Guilty or Innocent, get a lawyer even before you say hello.
in a courtroom, procedure is just as important as knowing the law. this is why you need a lawyer when you're facing charges.
The best argument wins
It win in the Supreme Court
It wins in traffic court
I have a case that is the opposite of this. A guy shot at my children and I while fishing in a public body of water. He admitted to shooting at 11:30 at night and said he was shooting at snakes. We had video of the guy threatening to shoot again, if we got any closer. He was friends with the cops. For a year, the cops said they lost the report and then it showed up. They never once questioned us, said they investigated the case and found no evidence despite the admission and the video of his threats. They are hoping I go away. I have posted this on Facebook and the guy does not refute the suggestion. That is an admission of guilt. I need some help filing against this police department
I have a friend who got arrested(and later released) for simply refusing to consent to a vehicle search during a traffic stop for driving 30 in a 25 zone. It's atrocious.
BS!
@@thomasryan2679 You're right. The whole thing was some BS intimidation tactic by the cop. No clearly articulated reason, just a request to search, a refusal, and the officer saying "well then you're under arrest for suspicion of DUI". No field sobriety test. Took him to the station, breathalyzer showed 0.0 so he was released.
Cops hated it when their egos get hurt 😭
Terrorists can’t outsmart ya if ya don’t talk to them, and always always always use that smart phone camera as a sword and a shield.
Thank you for what schools and parents should’ve taught me 20 years ago
If you say “I want to talk to my lawyer.” That is suppose to end the interrogation. You have the right to remain silent. You should immediately ask to speak to your lawyer. In addition, you should make a time stamped videotape where you express the fact that you will never willingly talk to a fellow inmate. Lastly, walk a good path and avoid all of this.
Google wallet in 4 states (including mine) allows you to store your ID (license). When you hand over an unlocked device to a cop, they no longer need a warrant. Apple or Google. Never use this.
Insurance or vehicle registration should be handed over in paper form too.
It’s simple. Don’t talk to the police for any reason whatsoever. I’ve been questioned in a serious assault with a deadly weapon case and flat out told the cops they wouldn’t have me in for questioning if they had anything on me. Now…I tripped over the table and fell over the chair a few times but I was let go after 6 hours of being detained.
Six hours???
The mean thing : don't let them to build any kind of evidence against you.The common law system is 'accusatory'.The justice has to proof you are guilty and not you,you aren't.Always keep in mind what this
keen lawyer says.
The fact that the police can lie to a person kind of says it all about the police and our legal system.
Love this channel …. Ty for taking your time out to teach. Speaking for myself I’m so thankful for defense attorneys. I know how important you guys are and I’m almost positive by the way that you’re speaking you don’t need RUclips money lol. You seam to be doing this very selflessly and I’m here ready to learn, thank you.
“I don’t answer questions. I don’t answer questions. I don’t answer questions.”
The simple fact that anyone thought the police were actuality there to help you to begin with is wild within itself. The best way to sit a cop down is to say nothing at all. Meaning who cares how loud they are getting with you. If they had the evidence they needed y'all wouldn't be talking to begin with. Few are there to do the right thing. Many are just there for a pay check and pension.
Another one I hear a lot is "you don't need to invoke your 5th Amendment unless you've been read the Miranda Rights." This IS NOT TRUE. Any encounter with police, investigators, deputies, etc., you absolutely can invoke your right to remain silent. You have NO obligation to aid in their investigation. However, if you choose to remain silent, you do have to verbalize your intention to do so. The only person that can compell you to answer a question is a judge. Also, "stop and ID states," you're not obligated to answer anything more than your name IF you have committed, you are committing, or you're about to commit a crime. Traffic infractions shoukd be met with window placed at a level you're comfortable with, produce needed documents, and admit to NOTHING. Iften, police will engage in conversation to A) gather as much information as they can to further investigate you. For instance, "where are you coming from/ going?" Any answer is to extend that stop as long as they can to possibly find more infractions to investigate. B) anything you say, WILL be used against you. This means even WITHOUT Miranda Rights, they can ask investigatory questions and if you answer them, they WILL be noted and used against you. C) Tactics to smell inside the car or the drivers breath. The more you talk, the more they are listening, observing, smelling, and gathering any piece of evidence. Hand your documents over, invoke your 5th, don't volunteer anything, keep as calm as possible, and record EVERYTHING. If they screw up, fight it in court, not on the side of the highway. If questioning goes beyond the sinple traffic infraction, ask for an attorney. Questioning stops once you invoke your 6th Amendment. Hiw does a fish get caught? It opens its mouth.
"you don't need to invoke your 5th Amendment unless you've been read the Miranda Rights"... I have NEVER EVER heard that, and I suspect your cop hating buddies are the only one's who YOU'VE herd it from. There are enough true complaints about cops. Also, you do NOT need to verbalize that you don't wish to remain silent, you just have to remain silent. Verbalizing it simply means the cops must cease any pertinent questioning.
Thank you for sharing your information. I trust your understanding of the law !
Essentially, you need to protect yourself from the folks that you pay to protect you.
It's fucking bizarre they people STILL think the police are there to protect them from anything.
Even if you have a written signed deal with the prosecutor, the judge can still reject it
The number of people who say "Just comply" on Facebook is frightening. They will argue that if a cop asks for ID when you have done nothing wrong, just show them your ID and you can be on your way quicker, or that if a cop wants to search your car you should let them, nothing to hide and all that crap. I try to tell them that it's about your rights and sometimes I ask if they'd be more comfortable in 1930s Germany......"Show me your papers!"
As a former MP and federal law enforcement officer… on a traffic stop give license, insurance and registration… don’t answer any questions other than to confirm id… get your ticket and fight in court… when they come to your door don’t open it without a warrant, if detained or arrested claim your 4th and 5th amendment rights and shut up and call your lawyer…. The more you say the worse it gets because we all have egos and they get everyone in deep crap
Why are such professional liars held up as the pillars of society. If that was my job I'd get sick of myself trying to swindle people into jail. Absolutely disgusting
A friend of mine, his father was driving a tractor trailer. A New Jersey State trooper pulled him over, thinking he was driving drunk. Somehow that trooper knew the guy was going into diabetic shock, and rushed him to the ER. The doctors said that he would have been dead within two hours. So getting pulled over is not always a bad deal.
DO NOT lock your phone with biometrics. Cops will claim your face or fingerprints are public like a license plate (I've seen it). Lock with a pattern that's hard to explain to them.
"Hard to explain to them" is irrelevant; you can't be forced to testify, or specifically to divulge codes, combinations, or passwords, etc. that are stored in your mind.
My phone lock is the birthday of a long-distant ex whose identity the police would never guess. Don't use your children's birthday, your significant other's birthday, or -- Creator forbid -- your **OWN** birthday!
They cant force you to incriminate yourself. If true that was some corrupt-ass shit he pulled out.
💯💯💯
💯💯💯
"I'll stop the recording so we can talk." All that means is they can write/say whatever they want, tell them to turn it back on immediately
In regards to @ 1:30 - I was arrested and I lied to the cops about something that may have been in my blood stream. Of course they held me, got a warrant and took me to the hospital to get a blood sample. Upon coming back positive of this substance, the prosecuting attorney was very upset that "I lied right to the officers" about my blood test coming back positive and charged me with a "high court misdemeanor." That was his entire beef it seemed like so I would say that there is certainly some correlation between law enforcement and the prosecutor.
Cops, prosecutors and judges are all in bed together
Next time, say nothing except to demand a lawyer
It's not paranoia if they are really out to get you.
All have a right to remain silent, but few have the ABILITY to do so.
This is a great video. I found it very educational. Thank you :)
All of this information is pure gold.
Advice from a former girlfriend that was a detective. “Deny everything, demand proof and an attorney!”
Best not to respond..a denial could be construed as you lying to the police, which is a crime.. Better to not answer questions. Asset your right to be silent
To this day it scares me to deal with them
I live in TEXAS and have this law firm in my speed dial....
Hope you can afford them !
The fact that cops can legally lie is enough to convince me not to talk to them.
Pure gold.
Thank you!
Good information. I appreciate you sharing your experience and knowledge.
My pleasure!
I've been accused of "smelling like weed" *at a point in my life when I could prove that I had not touched weed for several years.*
maybe i'm not understanding it correctly but #8 in louisiana is tricky due to the way our "resisting arrest" law is written. in it's current form, it has nothing to do with resisting and everything to do with distracting an officer. if an officer sees, smells, hears or knows of your presence, you are automatically guilty of distracting them from their duties which somehow falls under resisting arrest for who knows why. also under LA law you don't need to have committed any other legal offense to be arrested for resisting arrest.
Louisiana is a horrible state I’ll never step foot in their again
Both examples seem unconstitutional. Have they been legally tested? How old are those laws?
state of Georgia here. At a routine traffic stop, if he starts the "so where you coming from", "where are you going" crap can i shut this down with a simple "I invoke my 5th amendment right to not answer questions and 6th amendment right to have a lawyer present when youre questioning me". his radar will probably light up and maybe arrest you cause he figures "you must be guilty of something" but is that worse than talking yourself into a "confession" youre fighting uphill in court
YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO REMAIN SILENT! Remember that above all else.
Attorney up always. Tell the police have a good day and remain Silent. Always Attorney up
Well Done! Thanks
Thanks for watching!
I am a retired teacher. Never been in trouble. As average as you can get. When I was about 30 years old police arrested me, took me down for questioning, and said they had an eye witness and my license plate proving I hit and ran a little boy. I had never been in that part of town, but they wanted a confession, or the judge would throw the book at me. All lies. Turns out they were questioning several people who owned green Ford pickups. One big fishing expedition.
People need to understand that if they had all of the evidence that they say they do, it's a lie if they haven't already arrested you.
Appreciate the advice. Almost sounds like it’s best to never drive or answer door again!
The laws and rights allowed in Canada may not be as specific as the Constitutional amendments mentioned but the tactics used by the police up here are basically the same. Thanks for your excellent analysis of the sneaky and manipulative routines that "law enforcement" uses to "solve" their cases.💪🏻 ... btw ... new subscriber 👍🏻
Thank-you for posting this. I fell for some of this stuff that lead to the first time I went to jail. They are really good at this stuff
9:58 I’m currently confused, in a recently viewed video you say the police is in their right to force me to unlock my phone by putting my finger on a reader or by holding the phone to my face because I don’t have to share information in my mind for them to access the phone, why the change on this video?
My answer is, “I’m not saying sh!t till my attorney gets here, pig.”
🔥😎Ooooh i like you! Finally! Lawyers understanding that we’re all in this together. If we allow a mob to dominate us, you’re next! Great job explaining this to us “common folk”. Many of us need this info! Glad to see the word is spreading where lawyers are adding their input! 🔥👏😎
I’ve been trying… but without that diploma, most seem to only cater to, it’s hard to get people to see what I’ve known for over a decade. Thank you for sharing! 🔥
Thanks, Hampton Law.... for teaching criminals how to get away with crime.
Back when I ran Building and Code Enforcement Depts we used to get warrants frequently and I would think it would be helpful to touch on details like “Forced Entry” and also how z Code enforcement case is against the property not the people so the civil rights issues shift a little but so do the restrictions.
I told an inspector in Danville calif, that showed up on a complaint , that I wasn't authorized to allow them on the property, that if they gave me their card I guaranteed the homeowner would contact them in 24 hrs... It worked I think because to get a warrant they would have to tell the judge that and what I said was reasonable.