Unbelievable Tactics Police Actually Use

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  • Опубликовано: 20 ноя 2022
  • Here's why cops touch your taillight, plus more secret tactics police don't want you to know!
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Комментарии • 2 тыс.

  • @charmcitytoe
    @charmcitytoe Год назад +219

    As one who has been on both sides of the badge, I have one piece of advice. If at any point in a potentially negative police interaction, you think it could lead to the loss of your personal freedom. Stick to the 5th and ask for a lawyer. Even if you haven't; and know you haven't done anything wrong. There are moments when the police are your friends and moments when they are not. When they are not, get a professional because they are way better at getting you into a cell than you are at getting out of one. If you hear yourself say, "Do I need a lawyer here?" Then you really do. Nice video! 👍

    • @Mark_Agamotto1313_Smith
      @Mark_Agamotto1313_Smith Год назад +19

      The police are never your friend, they are just someone doing a job. No more, no less. ALWAYS take the 5th.

    • @ginadeam6813
      @ginadeam6813 Год назад +4

      Thank you for your honesty. Much appreciated 🙂

    • @ginadeam6813
      @ginadeam6813 Год назад +10

      @@Mark_Agamotto1313_Smith You hope they're just doing their job. If there crooked, abuse their position...that's a whole other ballgame. Sadly it seems to be more common and getting worse.😳🤯

    • @dillzilla4454
      @dillzilla4454 Год назад +9

      if you are thinking you need a lawyer, you actually needed one yesterday

    • @diablo5138
      @diablo5138 Год назад +15

      All interactions with police can lead to loss of personal freedom. On or off duty

  • @JPriz416
    @JPriz416 Год назад +269

    I was sixteen when this happened. I was playing baseball and the cops stopped the game and told me I was a suspect in a rape case. they put me in the car and took me directly to the victim to be identified was really nervous. She told the cops I wasn't the person who attacked her. They drove me back to the field and no one was there. both teams were at my house stressing out my parents. It's amazing how innocent people can get into trouble.

    • @hagerz
      @hagerz Год назад +4

      Typical guilty until proven innocent tactics by the police. Sonofabitchs!

    • @EdmondDantes_o7
      @EdmondDantes_o7 Год назад +32

      I'm no lawyer or policeman, but they might have had a description of the person, and you somewhat fit the criteria- They wouldn't have dragged you in for no reason, especially since the victim was literally waiting for confirm it- they didn't want anything out of you, I think they simply wanted a confirmation. Again, sorry that happened, but you can't hold everything against the officers, especially if it was a rape case.

    • @JPriz416
      @JPriz416 Год назад +44

      @@EdmondDantes_o7 the description the girl gave fitted about five guys who were playing ball that day. there were two detectives who, use to bust my ball every other day accusing me of things I never did and to this day I don't know why. I've led a pretty non crime life but mistaken Identity is really a scary thing. I was always for the death penalty until all these cases came up proving so many men innocent.

    • @hagerz
      @hagerz Год назад +2

      @Sausage Link key words "somewhat fit the description" when an cop holds someone that cop should be certain they fit the description not somewhat. They have no accountability for there actions so it doesn't make a fuck to them. Your just another criminal to them and treated as such. Just do that worthless sonofabitch that way and it's a big deal. The good thing is technology has caught up to them and they have to answer for there poor decisions.

    • @Mahlak_Mriuani_Anatman
      @Mahlak_Mriuani_Anatman Год назад +11

      Knowing my luck, id be chosen

  • @scottdoesntmatter4409
    @scottdoesntmatter4409 Год назад +25

    I was stopped in North Minneapolis Minnesota once. The cop yelled at me, stole my Swiss Army knife, and accused me repeatedly of trying to buy cocaine. I spent a night in jail, and when I tried to get a public defender, they dropped the charges (really bull ones too).

    • @mham1330
      @mham1330 7 дней назад +1

      I hope that you got your Swiss Army Knife.

    • @tovelsmith5622
      @tovelsmith5622 4 дня назад +1

      I hope you sued for the Unlawful Arrest...

  • @peterkn2
    @peterkn2 Год назад +38

    I remember all the push back from the Police when body cams were going to become standard. Common sense says no one should be above the law

    • @iancampbell6925
      @iancampbell6925 Год назад +6

      Cameras seem to fail at inopportune moments

    • @P_RO_
      @P_RO_ Год назад +4

      @@iancampbell6925 Such as when somehow the power button gets 'accidentally' pushed. "Gosh, I don't know how that happened. I didn't intend that". Since you can't prove otherwise they get away with it.

    • @nightmarerex2035
      @nightmarerex2035 7 месяцев назад

      @@iancampbell6925 becuase the cameras are the spy grid OF the CRIMINALS runing this world? system is NOT broken it is working AS INTENDED.

    • @Snorlaxiian
      @Snorlaxiian Месяц назад +2

      Everyone is on their best behavior when cameras are introduced and as for just turning them off, that is why it's crucial to have multiple cameras going.

    • @mham1330
      @mham1330 7 дней назад +1

      The cops can turn the camera off anytime they like. My roommate was stopped and arrested for alledged D.U.I. he went to court his lawyer asked for the video evidence; Body and Dash Camera footage taken by the cop. The cop and prosecutor refused to turn over the footage. The judge ruled community service for my roommate without the video evidence. Case should had been thrown out.

  • @ArrowMaster_
    @ArrowMaster_ Год назад +262

    The fact that the burglars got caught by lauging at the offiser is so funny😂🤣

  • @munkustrap2
    @munkustrap2 Год назад +21

    In the 80's, when I was in my early 20's, my now ex-husband told me he was going to the grocery store. After some time he called me & told me the car was stolen from the parking lot. Come to find out the idiot got involved with a state police sting & when he reported the car stolen to our town police the staties already had possession of it.
    Some time later I found all this out because he got pulled into the DA's office, with the DA & the state police there. It was explained to him what he got involved in & also told that if he gave up the person who told him about the chop shop they wouldn't charge me. He gave up the person since he didn't want me involved & low & behold the assholes charged me anyway. My charges got completely dismissed, not only did they not have any proof I was involved...I WASN'T involved. Unfortunately before this my name & face were dragged through the mud. Every local newspaper & television station made us their poster children for the entire thing, I'm assuming because we were the only people dressed decently & appropriately for court, when he was the lowest man on that sting totem pole.
    I tell you this loooooong story to recommend you say what I'm going to say (after I tell THEM my loooooong story), if questioned by any police officer, whether innocent or guilty, I WANT A LAWYER.
    They're lying sneaky bastards & I don't trust a one of them in any interrogation!

  • @thenoteverythingchannel
    @thenoteverythingchannel Год назад +110

    Timestamps.
    0:31 Taillight Touch
    2:11 H2-NO!
    3:58 Two-Faced Tactics
    5:29 Lines ‘N’ Lies
    6:45 Doggo-Cop
    8:20 The Oldest Trick
    9:28 Siren Sounds
    10:56 Cryptic Codewords
    12:39 Hidelights
    13:54 Peering Policemen
    15:29 Bird Watching (Not a typo)
    17:05 Track And Chase
    18:20 Lawful Lasso
    19:26 You Just Got Stung!
    20:56 Phoney Phrasing
    21:57 Playing Dumb

    • @intel3
      @intel3 Год назад +4

      Thank you

    • @thesilentone4024
      @thesilentone4024 Год назад +7

      He forgot to add sometimes purposely pisses you off to make you do something so they can arrest you.
      Cops can be dicks 🥲.

    • @CZghost
      @CZghost Год назад +4

      @@thesilentone4024 Purposely pissing you off to make you do something they can arrest you for? Jokes on them. If someone annoys me, I just call them a name and leave. Unless it's illegal to call a cop name for their behaviour, I think I can get away with it.

    • @upaclips9898
      @upaclips9898 Год назад

      they put their finger print on the tail light yall some idiots fr fr

    • @misters2837
      @misters2837 Год назад +1

      @@CZghost NOPE....My father was arrested for calling a cop, an asshole....the charge is disorderly conduct....True Story.

  • @villagelightsmith4375
    @villagelightsmith4375 Год назад +18

    I am now halfway through my 8th decade, and looking at more. I began Life with a lot of trust in authority. Presumptive Authority soon taught me (the hard way) that they were NOT to be trusted. Not being a total fool I learned, not only from the best, but also from the worst of them. Their perfidy, clashing against integrity they didn't understand, began bringing them more and more embarrassment and grief. And I was always watching, learning. Be careful, but remember ... he who lives the most years has the most opportunity for revenge. There are some good cops out there. But the Systems beat the good out of them. Remember, by its very definition, The State is an amoral (careful there!) entity. Given the best framework, poorly defined even by the most noble of its Founders, The State can rise no higher than the corruption that lies within its source. As fine as its songs may be, they only get in the way. Seek Wisdom, and seek Truth in all things. And trust no man.

    • @caatcher
      @caatcher Год назад +3

      I learned a long time ago that you can't trust a cop. Make sure you know your rights.

    • @REGjr
      @REGjr Год назад +2

      Democracy, if we actually had one, wouldn't be the greatest thing anyway for its mandate to impose the will of the many upon the concerns of the few. All governments are inevitably plutocracies to which we submit because of the inevitability of being governed, but no impulse to govern over others arises more for concern for their interests than the advancement or protection of one's own. Artificial constraint to two (fully lobbied) political parties means the election results make a difference to incumbents and the (also fully lobbied) opponent campaigning against them, but politicians get their jobs by winning popularity contests so it's our own ignorance to not realize they'll say anything to win like a beauty pageant contestant. Programs like student loan forgiveness are ridiculous ideas that appeal to voters who won't realize will come out of their very own taxes while they're too focused on getting something for nothing not to let some sleazy politician use them for a vote that advances himself. Polarity is energy's most basic property.... It's no accident that those on the far right conflating personal lawlessness with a love of freedom are every bit as useful to those in whose interest it is to keep them wasting time voting as their counterparts on the far left who conflate their wish to destroy any privilege they can't take for themselves with a love of equality. Turns out calling one a democracy has been the semantic trick most useful to national longevity because the very misnomer falsely suggests that informed dissent within its electorate never rises to a majority. All ideologies create and use fools by reinforcing followers' abandonment of responsibility to think for themselves.
      I remember a Ponzi scheme that happened where I'm from right before I graduated from college. The IRS seized what this woman had bought with the money people thought they'd "nvested" with her and merchants and other business people like a homebuilder she'd spent the money with went and bought back the last round of stuff she'd stiffed them on. Pardon me for noticing but if there were never any legitimate investments then there was never any legitimate income to evade taxes on. A government that serves citizens (rather than regards us as a resource to be managed) would have been concerned with recovering what she'd extorted to return it to the marks who were mostly too humiliated by having fallen for it to stick up for themselves. It's also pretty clear from the way our government treats the ESnowdens and JAssanges that you're very right. Oh and also there's the misrepresentation of wars as much to the public as to the soldiers politicians using those wars for votes exploit in the process. It is the nature of government to invite its own corruption because governing is an inherently corrupt vice. If all governments did not seek to increase their authority and expand their influence then some possibility of a party of less and smaller government might exist, but I don't think an actual party of smaller government legislates reproduction or marriage the way that bunch did. The most useful thing to the lobbies and politicians who work for them is to keep voters (who they regard with contempt as a result of this arrangement) distracted and divided.

  • @MrTwisted003
    @MrTwisted003 Год назад +49

    sneakiest one I've encountered: A cop usually, or most definitely (depending on where you are) needs to have a reason to pull you over or stop you. But, they don't need a real reason. You ask why, they just say, "You matched the description of someone we're looking for." And that's all they need. Happened to me and my friends all the time, and we were different ages, heights, weights, colors, hair lengths and colors, etc. That's when we started to tease them when they did it "What description? A short tall black white guy girl with light dark short long hair? Do they have 2 legs too? Cause you might have got us there."

    • @ainternet_userisnteveryone524
      @ainternet_userisnteveryone524 Год назад +6

      Ah... Such bravery... Nice!

    • @roberrphillips1742
      @roberrphillips1742 Год назад +6

      interesting how they can "match a description" when all they can see is maybe a shirt.
      I have asked for them to call dispatch and have thew description repeated
      if they dont then they are lying about having a description or you matching it

    • @MrTwisted003
      @MrTwisted003 Год назад

      @@roberrphillips1742 I have asked them to prove it before and they wouldn't. Found out later that all they need to say is that they "can't discuss an on-going investigation". Nothing you can argue with that. Ironically cops can lie about anything at anytime, including the court room, where they're not allowed to, yet a judge looks at you like you're on another planet for even suggesting a cop would lie.

    • @roberrphillips1742
      @roberrphillips1742 Год назад +8

      @@MrTwisted003 true about the lying
      myself when stopped and was told "we cant discuss an on going investigation" I replied "then you cant ask me questions about it because I will be able to deduce facts from your questions"
      stymied the cop so bad he got his sergeant to come out and the sergeant was smarter or more willing to listen and after 5 min I walked away

    • @GuapoJhimi
      @GuapoJhimi Год назад

      Bullshit. If the cop is doing that he/she are fools. I’m a vet PO and if they DO arrest you etc, they will have to justify their probable cause. They will have to produce a crime or bolo to justify their actions. That’s stupid. They would just say you violated a traffic code or something that becomes a “he said, she said” confrontation. It’s good you and your friends are obviously so much smarter and clever than the police. I’m sure that particular trait is why you are such a great success today. Lmao.

  • @chrisla2736
    @chrisla2736 Год назад +21

    I have dealt with awesome cops, and some who were " just NOT nice".
    One of the worst experiences I had.
    My apartment building was over 600 feet away from a road block .
    I lived in a complex. I always wear my seat belt.
    I didn't even see the road block , and pulled out, and went IN the way of the roadblock.
    I pull over, just like everyone else.
    He checks the registration, the plates, ( everything is legal and up to date)
    And I HAVE my seat belt ON!
    I DID not put it on when I saw the roadblock.
    He accuses me, of seeing me put my seat belt on , when I saw the roadblock?
    Now mind you, my complex was over 600 feet away, there are NUMEROUS cars in front of me, I wasnt driving a super sports car. ( which they target).
    So I politely said, I had my seatbelts on , when I got in my car, over 600 feet away when I pulled out of the parking lot.
    So now he gets angry, because I am questioning him, and demands my drivers license.
    Clean as a whistle, which makes him more angry.
    He wrote me a ticket, for failure of wearing my seat belt.
    I was FURIOUS!!!!
    But didn't show it.
    So the next day, I explained the entire situation to the DA in a letter, charges dropped, but STILL had to pay court fees?!
    And it NEVER went to court.
    I don't care what anyone says, some cops have quotas.
    That is why some are accusing, innocent people, and safe drivers with undeserved accusations.

    • @CasualBritishCat
      @CasualBritishCat Год назад

      Bro I'm concerned how much time of your life did you spend?

    • @roberrphillips1742
      @roberrphillips1742 Год назад +3

      they got money which is the only concern they have

  • @martinphilip8998
    @martinphilip8998 Год назад +33

    My son came home from history class and shared what he learned from the detective who was their guest speaker. “The police are NOT your friend!”

    • @CharlieTheGamingPlatypus
      @CharlieTheGamingPlatypus Год назад +1

      😢😢 i want to be a police when i grow up

    • @D-M-J
      @D-M-J Год назад +1

      Not always their not

    • @D-M-J
      @D-M-J Год назад +2

      @@CharlieTheGamingPlatypus go for it there's still good/decent police out there not all are awful

    • @martinphilip8998
      @martinphilip8998 Год назад +1

      @@D-M-J I agree. Sometimes they do protect and serve. Sometimes.

    • @D-M-J
      @D-M-J Год назад

      @@martinphilip8998 the sad thing is the awful cops ruin the decent one's reputation because they take over the media mainly

  • @dl200010
    @dl200010 Год назад +17

    With the request to search the vehicle, just make sure you say "I do not consent to any searches." If they search anyways, then just let them. Anything they find in an illegal search is inadmissible in a court of law. So, if they do find something you did or did not know was there, then they cannot use it as evidence unless they had constitutionally legal exception to the warrant requirement.

    • @jameskirk3
      @jameskirk3 Год назад

      Depending on the jurisdiction, most people just get railroaded and the police hide the refusal, and the courts back them up most of the time.
      Slowly but surely, it's getting better. A decade ago, they were still planting drugs and arresting sober people for DUI, just to get their numbers up to get federal funding for their departments.

    • @dl200010
      @dl200010 Год назад +3

      @@jameskirk3 It is still solid recommendations, though. With and without corruption it is still best to voice your non-consent and just let the officers do whatever. Getting physically in the way can get you hurt, charged with "obstruction" (even if the search was illegal), or a funeral for your family to attend.

    • @friendlyneighborhoodmemer18
      @friendlyneighborhoodmemer18 Год назад

      nice now i know how to do drugs without getting catched

    • @dl200010
      @dl200010 Год назад +2

      @@friendlyneighborhoodmemer18 It isn't about doing drugs and not getting caught. It is about your rights to not have to undergo a warrantless search. If you are doing drugs in the car, then the cop will know.

    • @friendlyneighborhoodmemer18
      @friendlyneighborhoodmemer18 Год назад +1

      @@dl200010 it was a joke btw i dont do drugs hell i dont even have a car i only have a bike to get to work.

  • @a2pha
    @a2pha Год назад +42

    I have been pulled over a few times. They don't touch the tail-light, they whack it. Then they come up with an excuse, "Good looking car." Which is odd as I drove a '74 Pinto. My usual reaction was, "You're kidding, right ?"
    He'd nod, "No, it's a fine reliable vehicle." then get to business asking for license and registration.

    • @user-bt8xr5si9y
      @user-bt8xr5si9y Год назад +4

      Not sure if the '74 models are still prone to exploding but they do look very nice.
      I'd probably tell you the same thing and actually mean it lol

    • @cheapbastard990
      @cheapbastard990 Год назад +5

      I had a cop ask "Do you know how fast you were going?" I said "Not fast enough, you caught up with me!" He had a sense of humor and I didn't get a ticket.

    • @jamesslick4790
      @jamesslick4790 Год назад +2

      A '74 Pinto would get my attention, Hell, a '74 ANYTHING would. But I'm a car nut (doesn't matter WHAT KIND) if it's old and in nice shape, I will notice and compliment it. Pinto, 'Cuda or Cadillac!

    • @jamesslick4790
      @jamesslick4790 Год назад +3

      @@user-bt8xr5si9y I'm THAT "weirdo" that thinks the "Mustang II" (Pinto based) was actually a cool looking '70s car. So, Yeah!

    • @user-bt8xr5si9y
      @user-bt8xr5si9y Год назад +3

      @@jamesslick4790 I have to agree. I just really like cars in general it doesn't really matter what type of car as long as I find it cool.
      My favourite cars are Muscle Cars but even an economy box can be cool really no matter if old or new.
      I just enjoy cars.

  • @bladesofglorylawnmaintenan6354
    @bladesofglorylawnmaintenan6354 Год назад +159

    I got in a foot pursuit years ago before I retired.. Once I started getting closer to him I started growling and snarling like a dog.. The suspect heard it and immediately stopped , fell to the ground and begged me to NOT let the dog bite him!! Lol I was laughing so hard I could barely cuff him.. We still joke about it today when we see each other in town.. great memories!!

    • @boboften9952
      @boboften9952 Год назад +10

      " Dog Breath from Hill Street Blues ? "

    • @SkullManager
      @SkullManager Год назад +7

      Impressive…

    • @BeAmazed
      @BeAmazed  Год назад +29

      hahaha, incredible. So the tactic does work!

    • @beagoodhuman473
      @beagoodhuman473 Год назад +14

      Ha! I imagine that’s the sort of memory an officer wants after retiring!
      Btw, love the name - very clever.

    • @Sars_007
      @Sars_007 Год назад +2

      Fun right
      Been der and dat

  • @jonesgang
    @jonesgang Год назад +16

    As far as the police sirens go there is one more that is being used in the USA. It is called the rumbler siren. It has a very low bass tone that can be mixed in with the other sounds. The bass is felt by those in front of the police vehicle getting your attention much quicker.

    • @shauljonah6955
      @shauljonah6955 Год назад +4

      Yeah that's true even ambulance 🚑 have it too. In Canada 🇨🇦. Thanks for bringing this up. 🙏 😀

    • @JohnH20111
      @JohnH20111 Год назад +2

      the one i heard about is the Growler by Whelen

    • @jonesgang
      @jonesgang Год назад +1

      @@JohnH20111 The growler is just another variation of the rumbler, but works the same way injecting low bass tones in with the siren or by itself. The rumbler was developed in 2007 by FSC (Federal Signal Corporation) and the first police vehicles to test the new siren was in NYC, and has been mostly adapted by all law enforcement agencies since.

  • @djdickey
    @djdickey Год назад +27

    You described the range-R's function in exactly the opposite way it works. It pretty much works like any other radar. It beams out a signal and everything it hits sends an amount back to the device. It detects changes between bursts which indicates movement. Moving things don't automatically reflect signals, they block signals from stationary objects differently after they have moved.

    • @DerekDumas
      @DerekDumas Год назад +8

      Aluminum, will foil their plans.

    • @batsoutofhell2252
      @batsoutofhell2252 Год назад +2

      he's gotta spread the misinformation.

    • @guybar64
      @guybar64 Год назад +1

      Lmaooo🤣🤣🤣

  • @Kyleplier
    @Kyleplier Год назад +29

    I already knew the reason for the taillight part. My sister's ex husband was the Denton County Texas Constable. I learned about a lot of cop behavior from him. Hell, one time a driver hit the car me, my sister, and John were in causing me to get showered with broken glass. When John rose up out of the car, the other driver went pale, not because John was in uniform as he was off that day. It's because the way he rose out of the driver's seat had cop written all over it lol. I was around 6 at the time. I also remember what vehicle hit us. It was a blue minivan. I wasn't attentive enough with glass all over me and shaken up by the crash to pay attention to the brand. Only reason why I remember the type and color is because I was looking in the direction the van was coming from moments before impact. Thankfully I was on the other side of the vehicle as if I were on the driver's side of the back seat, I'd probably be dead, as it was that exact spot that was hit.

  • @mollysilverman6803
    @mollysilverman6803 Год назад +17

    How about a cop with bright lights and tailgating when you have cruise control on and are not speeding? Trying to force you to go faster? I had that happen to me here in Deltona. But what I do when being tailgated is set cruise control to one mph below the speed limit.

    • @JCC_1975
      @JCC_1975 Год назад +5

      I've done this. Then I preceded to call 911 and tell them that I was being followed by someone I thought was pretending to be a police officer. Could they send help. The sergeant came out himself. Their not allowed to tailgate and will get into trouble for it. Call 911 on them!

    • @slcRN1971
      @slcRN1971 Год назад +3

      This happened to me once, when I was barely out of my teens. It did frighten me, so after I had pulled over - - he asked why I had sped up (this was back in the 😢1970s) and I told him that since I was traveling alone at night, this had terrified me!! He handed me back my ID and then just left.

    • @caatcher
      @caatcher Год назад +2

      I had cruise control nailed at the speed limit in western Maryland on I-68. It was about two in the morning, no other traffic. A cop started tailgating me, obviously trying to goad me into speeding. I was in the right lane, no other traffic around, so I ignored him. After about ten miles of this, the pig gave up. I noted that it was the end of the month, so he likely had a ticket quota to meet.

    • @1969barnabas
      @1969barnabas Год назад

      A Massachusetts cop did that to me once. I was driving late at night (after 2am) after dropping off an Uber passenger about 20 miles west of Boston. The cop finally turned on his lights after I refused to speed up, just to ask me why I was out driving so late at night. I think he was hoping that I was drunk.
      When I told him that I was an Uber driver, he just let me go. I wasn't doing ANYTHING wrong and he had no reason to pull me over. He just suspected that I was drunk because I was driving after the bars closed at 2am. I had just dropped off a passenger who was REALLY drunk. She took an Uber BECAUSE she was drunk. Duh.
      Another interesting thing... when there is a police check point to catch drunk drivers... when they see the Uber/Lyft decal in your windshield... they just waive you thru the checkpoint. That happened to me multiple times when I was driving the drunks home from the bars in the Boston area.

    • @1969barnabas
      @1969barnabas Год назад

      @@JCC_1975 proceded

  • @bobvedder2451
    @bobvedder2451 Год назад +214

    One thing that irritates me is that cops can lie to you but they get mad when you lie.

    • @c.twentytube
      @c.twentytube Год назад +21

      that's on you tho. u can literally say nothing at all. its usually in ur best interest not to say single word if u actually did do sum thing and want a better chance of getting away with it

    • @spicyirwin5835
      @spicyirwin5835 Год назад +5

      So many lie to them so why or how do thry trust anyone.

    • @kilapersian364
      @kilapersian364 Год назад

      I feel u there... F_____ dem cops

    • @alvinmortimer7536
      @alvinmortimer7536 Год назад +4

      That is why I say listen to them but say nothing. When you say nothing they cannot manipulate, misinterpret or embellish your words.

    • @billycranston5481
      @billycranston5481 Год назад

      That’s why you have to hire the mediator who is a professional liar I mean lawyer. That way they can lie for you since they paid their dues to a place that gave them a license to be a professional liar. Otherwise you can be held liable for the lies you tell which will give you fines that help pay the cops who are paid to lie as well. It’s just the police aren’t directly paid by you to lie to you just through your taxes and fines. Either way the whole system is made by liars protected and gatekept by liars and benefits everyone but you the person it was created to protect which was the biggest lie.

  • @JarofMayonaise
    @JarofMayonaise Год назад +4

    I've been arrested several times with the cops using bogus excuses. I got pulled over for a license plate sticker being out of date, at least that's what they said was the reason they pulled me over. They claimed they smelled weed and asked if they could search my car. I told them no they didn't have permission because they didn't have probable cause. After telling me to sit tight he walked back to his car and came back a few minutes later saying I had a warrant out for my arrest for a 'failure to appear in court', which was total horseshit because I'm 100% sure I never missed a date, and told me to step out of the car because they wanted to search it for drugs. They claimed that since I had a warrant and reasonable suspicion that it negated my rights and they searched my vehicle anyway. I tried to lock my car but they just took my keys and unlocked it. They found a seed and a small stem and booked me for those. They hauled me down to the station and towed my car. Not 2 minutes after arriving at the police station, an older woman cop asked me why I was there and tapped on her computer. She had a confused look on her face and had the office that arrested me come back in and told him I had no such charges of a 'failure to appear' and that I was basically arrested for no reason. They dropped the weed charges and everything else. They uncuffed me and just said I could go. My car was still towed and I had to call someone for a ride home.
    In hindsight I should have sued them or at the least called them out on their bullshit, but I was just happy to be free and didn't follow up on anything. I have or had simple possession charges in the past so I'm assuming the wannabe super cop thought I had drugs and he was about to get a big score, that's why he made up the charges to enable him to search my car. Not surprisingly, that tactic is completely legal and used all the time. You do have rights for the cops not to search your car, unless they think they have probable cause in which legally lets them lie just to search your car. People wonder why I don't like the police and this is just one of the many reasons. It's complete bullshit but what are we going to do? This was before they started using body cams so they were able to get away with much more back then.

  • @AkiraCatt24
    @AkiraCatt24 Год назад +15

    I'm a perfect example of why polygraph results are not admissable in court, &are actually very unreliable. When I was 13, I told my grandparents I was being abused. It was true. But things like that "didn't happen in 'good' families",& instead of having my back, my grandmother picked me up one day to 'take me shopping ',or so I was told. Instead, she drove us to a big highrise downtown, & out of left field, surprised me with a polygraph exam. As if this wasn't upsetting & stressful enough, she told me if I passed, the family was prepared to retain an attorney &go to court or whatever had to be done to put my abuser in jail. BUT, if I didn't pass--my grandfather would disown me. The test was given to me by a MAN,&the questions he asked were formulated BY BOTH OF US, so I knew exactly WHAT was specifically going to be asked, AND what order in which they would come. Here I'll clarify so it's easy to see the harm this test can, did, &does do. The nature of the abuse was physical AND sexual. &I had to go thru all of that ALONE, WITH A STRANGE MAN,who was asking about specific,& intimate details that I had NO CHOICE but to tell him! I WAS 13! The results came back, "inconclusive, saying that my answer had shown deception beginning with BEING ASKED MY NAME! Yup, that's correct. It said I lied about my name!! Well what did anyone expect? I was terrified, upset, stressed out,& I was just a kid! So, thank God, these test results are not allowed as evidence in court!! Many innocent people would be convicted if it ever was!! True story..

    • @jo.s7993
      @jo.s7993 Год назад +3

      That's disgusting! I can't be angry with the man performing the test because that's his job, but your grandparents are another matter. It's hard to confide in somebody that you're being abused, & their reaction & behaviour is another form of abuse in itself. How dare they put you through such an ordeal of not believing you & then having you take a lie detector test. I'm so sorry they treated you in such an appalling way, & do you mind me asking where your parents were while all of this was happening? Obviously You don't have to say if you don't want to.

    • @AkiraCatt24
      @AkiraCatt24 Год назад +1

      @@jo.s7993 my mom died when I was 9,& my dad wasn't in my life between the ages of 6-15. My stepdad was the abuser. &I couldn't agree more about the rest. It's haunted me my whole life. I ended up growing up in foster care cuz no one in my so-called 'family' wanted me.. even though they were all financially well off & could easily have afforded to take me in. My cousins got cars when they turned 16,& college educations paid for. I got to 'age out' of 'the system' when I turned 18,&had no help & very little contact from or with any of them. I tried to maintain a relationship with my grandmother, but even when I was in my 30's, she would still occasionally ask me, "Did that REALLY happen?" &(My personal fave)-"well you MUST HAVE done SOMETHING to encourage him!" *It started when I was 11!! What on earth could an 11 year old possibly do to ENCOURAGE a grown man in his 30's who was supposed to be a father?!? I understand that my grandparents came from Europe,&had old ideals. But I will never understand their actions or attitude about this. &I was a good kid! I was a straight -A student til high school, & I did everything possible to earn their love & approval. But I just never measured up in their eyes..

    • @TAKIZAWAYAMASHITA
      @TAKIZAWAYAMASHITA Год назад +1

      @@jo.s7993 my brother has a similar situation because of a crime he was convicted of a harmless victimless one. The law as condition for his release on parole they make money on nickle diming these ex cons, they make him take these "classes" which he has to pay for out of pocket to some bs pyschiatrist and she has polygraphs as part of the classes so he has to pay 300$ per test and these are not admissiable in court because everyone knows polygraphs are bullshit BUT, if he "fails" too many of the test they can throw him back in jail. and the tester often asks questions that are NOT on the test and he will fail tests despite them knowing the "control" questions are true, like his name would end up as a lie despite them knowing he said his name to them and they can see it on his id but dont abandonded the tests knowing they are faulty. the entire system is bullshit

  • @carlosmaggoowork9743
    @carlosmaggoowork9743 Год назад +43

    Imagine those moms on Maury finding out polygraphs are not 100%

    • @gingerssuck
      @gingerssuck Год назад +1

      That’s the first thing that popped into my head 🤣

    • @GuapoJhimi
      @GuapoJhimi Год назад +2

      I’ve know more than one person who has fooled the polygraph operator. It is the operator who decides whether you are lying or not. The machine does not.

    • @leighanneboles6609
      @leighanneboles6609 Год назад +1

      😆😆😆

    • @P_RO_
      @P_RO_ Год назад +1

      Polygraph operators will not administer it until you sign a "hold harmless" waiver which I refuse to do. I tell them I'll gladly take a polygraph test but they won't find anyone qualified to administer it willing to use it on me. I will not tell them why till the operator hands me the waiver and I refuse to sign it. When they ask why I ask them to let me paint their house at an agreed on price with them signing off that regardless of the results, they must pay me. When they say "That's crazy! Nobody is going to do that!" I say "Then why are you expecting me to do the same thing here?" So I'm not refusing- they are- and that cannot be used against me.

  • @staceysibert1803
    @staceysibert1803 Год назад +32

    We had a Marlin 30.30 rifle missing at a Kmart I started working at. It was already gone before I started but of course there had to be an investigation. When I was being questioned at the police station the cop told me as far as he was concerned I was the one who took it then asked me if I would take a lie detector test I laughed and said no because you just told me you think I did so whether I did it or not doesn't matter because as soon as you ask my heart rate and blood pressure is going to spike and I'd prefer he did his job and find the real criminal. Oh he reason for it being me was because I walked 2 blocks to work so I must need the money. Then he ask what I to say about him having a video tape of me taking it from the security camera, I said you'd be a lying
    P. O. S. because they moved sporting department & the camera didn't cover us. Then I told him the Marlin wasn't in the display case when I started working. When he asked how I knew that I laughed and said I'm from the mountains and a gun nut the first thing I did was check out every gun there, plus if I was going to risk 15yrs prison I would have taken the Winchester moron and either charge me or get off your ass and find the right person. They never talked to me again 🤣

    • @jacquelinesimpson6672
      @jacquelinesimpson6672 Год назад +4

      Great story! Thanks 😊

    • @victorvalens1
      @victorvalens1 Год назад +11

      The following are self incriminating statements you made "I'd prefer he did his job and find the real criminal" hurt his ego and its a diversion statement police see this as guilt, "they moved sporting department & the camera didn't cover us." the fact that you have this information so readily available also is a self incriminating statement to police, "I'm from the mountains and a gun nut" this is oversharing and a nervous statement according to police also gives them a probable cause to believe them all they heard in this statement was "I LOVE GUNS AND WILL DO ANYTHING TO GET THEM", "risk 15yrs prison I would have taken the Winchester moron" you knew the penalty for stealing a gun you knew if he believed your previous statement about being a gun nut you would steal the lesser gun to use this statement to throw them off and you hurt his ego once again. Of course these statements are not enough for a conviction but it is enough for the cop to really lean into you and start falsifying statements and making inaccurate statements to other cops/detectives and before you know it you are in front of a jury with cops coming to the stand with crazy incriminating testimonies that are complete bogus and the jury says guilty! be really careful this is how most innocent people end up in prison RULE 1 DO NOT TALK TO POLICE AND GET A LAWYER!.

    • @tvom8853
      @tvom8853 Год назад +9

      Im all for making them look stupid, but the only problem as the guy above me stated, just gives them incentive to lie and falsify evidence. Happens every day

    • @P_RO_
      @P_RO_ Год назад

      @@tvom8853 You can't make someone look like something they aren't, and most cops are indeed rather stupid.

    • @andreemccaskilll1655
      @andreemccaskilll1655 Год назад

      That's what up 🤣

  • @juliasmith331
    @juliasmith331 Год назад +4

    Simple rules apply here regatding law enforcement: 1) If they don't have a warrant, don't let them in. 2) DO NOT ANSWER ANY QUESTIONS W/O A LAWYER TO ADVISE YOU. 3) Don't assume any gesture they make is out of thoughtfulness or kindness... don't accept any favors or assistance (snacks, water, etc.)

  • @NotbinhVN
    @NotbinhVN Год назад +5

    16:00 this take “birds aren’t real” concept to a whole new level dude

  • @ConnorPugs
    @ConnorPugs Год назад +123

    Imma show them this video and still get arrested 😂

  • @chuckfinley5206
    @chuckfinley5206 Год назад +13

    Was offered a soda. When I finished I folded the can up and stuck it in my pocket. I just have a habit of not tossing cans because I recycle them.

    • @cooldude-ky4ni
      @cooldude-ky4ni Год назад +1

      This is exactly what I've always done when offered a drink, funny enough in holding i didn't have any way of drinking from that tap and i sure wasn't using standard methods... so that cup came in pretty clutch even though the top half was a bit crushed.

    • @P_RO_
      @P_RO_ Год назад

      In the US they can take a DNA swab without your permission upon any felony arrest. If you're declared innocent in that case they have to discard all evidence collected against you except for the DNA record.

    • @chuckfinley5206
      @chuckfinley5206 Год назад

      @@P_RO_ what do you think the reason would be if they take 3 DNA samples on 3 different occasions.

  • @RoarOfWolverine
    @RoarOfWolverine Год назад +1

    Playing dumb was the main premise of a 1970s show called Columbo, perfectly played by actor Peter Faulk. Columbo was actually a brilliant detective, but he dressed in a ratty old trench coat and never seemed to stay on point, often going off on a tangent about his wife having help him with every case and take care of him like he was mentally slow.
    Criminals would always underestimate his ability to put together clues and nail them in the end. He was most famous for always turning back after telling the criminal he was done. He would always catch them off-guard with some question they weren’t prepared for. In the end, the criminal would always discover far too late that they weren’t dealing with a half-wit, but instead a very cunning mind.

  • @ArrowMaster_
    @ArrowMaster_ Год назад +13

    Ty Be Amazed, for posting different videos every time so I can learn a lot of different things

  • @Digitalhunny
    @Digitalhunny Год назад +28

    The SECOND the police read you your rights, "SHUT TF UP! Request your lawyer & don't sign _anything!"_ A lawyer can take anywhere from just a few hours to a few days. (Especially, if you are picked up on a Friday or at night.) Stay strong, say nothing & you _might_ walk away a free person or at the least you haven't given the police the rope to hang you with. Good luck! 🍀

    • @munkustrap2
      @munkustrap2 Год назад +6

      Oh do I vigorously second this. Don't trust a THING they say! See my original comment if you want to know why I feel so strongly about this.

    • @richardblack290
      @richardblack290 Год назад

      @@munkustrap2 AMERICANS NO ALLS LOL

    • @fgreen411
      @fgreen411 Год назад

      Don't even wait to be read your rights. ' I don't consent to searches, I don't answer questions ", that's all you say. And then shut up. SAY NOTHING FURTHER.

    • @emwee6097
      @emwee6097 Год назад +2

      I absolutely echo this. Don't speak a word to anyone except your lawyer. Anything you say to the cops can only make the situation worse.

    • @miken8778
      @miken8778 Год назад

      The cops are payed to burn u. Its their job.
      By staying silent you admit to nothing. In canada ull probably be released within 24hrs. Unless perpetrating violence or serious weapons charges. In which case you probably deserve to be in there.

  • @Rybot9000
    @Rybot9000 Год назад +4

    The police use something called the Reid Technique in combination with lying about evidence to extract confessions. The Reid technique is all about emotionally destabilizing the suspect. They will often say things like "There are two kinds of people that do this sort of thing. Monsters and good people that find themselves in difficult circumstances. Good people are those who admit to what they've done and a court will look more favorably on those who are good people who had a bad day. You don't want people to think you're a monster do you?"
    The technique has been criticized for making innocent people confess to crimes out of fear that the "evidence" the police have will convict them and its a matter of public perception and the weight of punishment. In a state with death penalty this can mean either serving life in prison or being executed. I think we should also really consider that in terms of moral psychology the law is seen as a model. According to Kholberg the law is what most adults base their sense of morality on - with some exception for religious and other convictions. Nevertheless most people progress from viewing their parents as the ultimate moral standard to viewing the collective social standards as their moral benchmark. This means if lying, cheating and manipulating are the social standard then more people will think they are basically okay. Basically its okay to lie, cheat and steal as long as you are doing so for the right reasons such as enforcing the law. Or because you have some other morally superior reason for doing so which is a common post-hoc rationalization for crimes especially among the powerful.

    • @malachi-
      @malachi- Год назад

      Yes, whatever you continuously pull on society, society will react and mirror.... for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.
      But hey, it keeps their market up.
      Any time crime can actually be gotten rid of, LE comes out and lobbies against it, marijuana is a good example.
      That was their bread and butter. $$$

  • @Rogue_Leader
    @Rogue_Leader Год назад +6

    When they say "This is your last chance to get this off your chest. I can't help you unless you talk to us," they are deceiving you. There is no advantage to be gained from telling the police anything. Your innocence or guilt should not be established at the police station: that's for a trial and a court case if it ever gets to that point.
    Do not talk to the police without a brief present. Ever.

    • @MikinessAnalog
      @MikinessAnalog Год назад +1

      Police do not have the authority to "help" you get a lighter punishment as they are not the judge not jury.
      You have the right to remain silent in many nations, and in most of them, your silence can not be used against you.

    • @ingridakerblom7577
      @ingridakerblom7577 8 месяцев назад

      "It's up to prosecutors to decide"

  • @brianmcclenahan617
    @brianmcclenahan617 Год назад +16

    The dirtiest thing a cop could do is always going to be to claim Qualified Immunity.

    • @blazesona12
      @blazesona12 Год назад +2

      facts.... qualified imunity is so bad for the non cops it aint funny

  • @TheCluelessLucent
    @TheCluelessLucent Год назад +3

    love to see more on this subject. maybe 1 thing i can mention when i was out in arizona, the cops had this neat rig on their bumper bars, pops a door open and these arms with thick straps come out. they use them to snare the rear end of a fleeing vehicle, jamming up the axle or tire and it gets better if not riskier, as after the snag theres a strong tether that lets the copcar back off a few feet and wrestle the snared car to keep it from going bonkers. Dont know its name but is 1 heck of a cowboy contraption

  • @rispatha
    @rispatha Год назад +21

    Then you have to corrupt cops that use the tail light touch as a way to transfer drug residue onto a vehicle so they can make a claim that the dog "alerted".

  • @briannewman5614
    @briannewman5614 Год назад +6

    4:30 the " lying" . Yupp, I been through it! It's called fishing.

    • @briannewman5614
      @briannewman5614 Год назад

      Lies from the popo that is. They are fishing for information.
      You didn't see,hear,or do anything, until after your lawyer is present.
      Hell,not to out too much out there but... I've even had tell an official to come back with a warrant if they wanted to search the house for someone. TLDR they didn't bother coming back

  • @09FLTRMM77
    @09FLTRMM77 Год назад +2

    LOL!!!! Happened to me back in the late 1980’s!! I was the first one out of the parking lot at work that night, I headed out to the highway and had planned to beat all my buddies to a party that night. As I was driving, I noticed a car on the side of the highway and slowed down, then I noticed the vehicle had a tail light out and thought there was no way it was a cop, cops don’t have tail lights out! They DO if the have a switch in their car to turn the light out! He had me sit in his cruiser to write me the ticket ( different times back then) and I told him he had a light out, he laughed, flipped a switch on the dash and said it wasn’t out now. Then he went on to tell me how many speeders he’s caught like me, all the while my buddies were speeding by on their way to the party!! I learned my lesson!😡😡

  • @taemien9219
    @taemien9219 Год назад +4

    On the subject of polygraph and interrogation. There's definitely different qualities when it comes to the devices used and the training that goes into using them. When I was in Basic Training for the Army, I was apart of around a 20 soldier detail to help Ft Jackson's Polygraph institute. It was explained to us that we were going to be meeting with law enforcement peeps from various agencies, including NSA, FBI, SBI, State Troopers, and so forth. These guys had 20-30 years in law enforcement and they were being trained on advanced techniques of using the Polygraph and the Interrogation that goes along with it.
    The recruits in the detail were instructed to go in groups of 5 and together commit a 'crime'. Then we would be subjected to polygraph tests and interrogations. We were told that we were helping with the training process and to make it as hard to get the information out of us as we could. And to never confess. Now the interesting thing is, they don't know who committed the 'crime' and those that did, they don't know which part. They had to use their skills, experience, and new training to figure who did what.
    Let me tell you, these polygraph machines are nothing like you see in state or county institutions. And measure alot more than breathing and respiration. In addition the interrogation techniques used go way beyond good cop - bad cop. They utterly break you down, and out of about 20 soldiers I'd say about 90% of them confessed to the fake crime they participated in. If you ever end up in an interrogation from someone who has been through this sort of training, you'll likely going to confess to just about every crime you've ever committed even stuff not related to what they're looking for. And don't think being smart will help you, some of these soldiers had 90+ ASVABs, and were going Signal Corps like I was.
    The gentleman I had the pleasure of aiding with training was a FBI guy, little higher than an agent I believe. Very professional, very nice... until he wasn't. But that was just part of the game we were playing. I was able to make it through without confessing. He was able to identify what I did, but he couldn't nail me down to admit it. And we spent the rest of the session going back and forth. When it was finally done, he smiled, shook my hand, and thanked me for the challenge. Went back to the rest of the pool, ate an MRE and watched movies for the rest of the detail while another bunch went in. Definitely a very interesting day in Basic. What's weird is outside the group of Soldiers I was with, I've not met anyone else who's experienced this or heard of such.

    • @Highland_Moo
      @Highland_Moo Год назад

      We don’t have it here in Scotland - it’s considered total quackery and would never be used by the police.

    • @docgiggles130
      @docgiggles130 9 месяцев назад

      @@Highland_Moo The guy that invented it came out against it's use by the police. He said that there were too many factors involved and should never be used as an investigation tool because the questions themselves can get people to think they are lying when they are not. Few courts in the US will even allow for them to be used as evidence. It should be treated as little more than a party game.

  • @chicken_cranberry
    @chicken_cranberry Год назад +17

    I always thought that the reason why they touch the back of the vehicle they pull over was to leave fingerprints/DNA just in case something bad were to have happen to the officer.

    • @lionguardfan2019
      @lionguardfan2019 Год назад +4

      Well, another thing is some questionable ones could have certain substance on their fingers and then put it on your car via touching... then can get you for the substance.

    • @james-patrickpye8609
      @james-patrickpye8609 Год назад +2

      In the modern wokeness he has to mention it as though there may be dubious purposes as well. Most officers don’t frame people, it’s just not worth the trouble.

    • @judygmcfin
      @judygmcfin Год назад +3

      True, actually.

    • @HookerHeels
      @HookerHeels Год назад

      @@lionguardfan2019 Thats maybe happened like, 1 time in a million years. Gtfo with your wack ass ideas 😂

    • @rosemaryus-ct6151
      @rosemaryus-ct6151 Год назад +2

      there are good and bad people in every profession. good cops are neither responsible for bad cops nor are bad cops representative of good cops. conspiracy theory based on the relatively few bad cops is just stupid.

  • @matalynaustin8319
    @matalynaustin8319 Год назад +8

    The tail light touch is not a tactic, and they don’t do it just for suspicious people. It’s in case they get killed or injured their evidence is on your vehicle.

    • @rosemaryus-ct6151
      @rosemaryus-ct6151 Год назад +1

      YES, THANK YOU. all these stupid stories i've read here... it's just sad there are that many stupid people who believe them.

  • @BionicLemming
    @BionicLemming Год назад +9

    Checking to see if the trunk is locked is pointless, if anyone is in there waiting to ambush, it can be opened from the inside.

    • @peterv1318
      @peterv1318 Год назад +3

      Exactly! And that paper towel thing wouldn’t work ether.

    • @glenn6583
      @glenn6583 Год назад +3

      That person hiding in the trunk stuff is nonsense.

  • @charleslewis6963
    @charleslewis6963 Год назад +113

    Our cops in the the county don’t have to play rude or dumb it all comes naturally the hard part is to play polite and smart especially our sheriffs department

    • @wildwest5436
      @wildwest5436 Год назад +9

      Walk a day in our boots and you'll reconsider your thoughts.

    • @paulp.6399
      @paulp.6399 Год назад

      Brainwashed media tool alert!

    • @malcolmbrewis5582
      @malcolmbrewis5582 Год назад +6

      @@wildwest5436 Most independent thinking Policemen would seem to have been replaced by more unthinking "always obey the STATE even if its wrong" individuals. I can increasingly appreciate why so many principled Police Officers began leaving the Police Service. I have high respect for those who, despite their values of actual Freedom and Liberty, were permitted to remain in the new Police State Service.

    • @laustinspeiss
      @laustinspeiss Год назад +1

      Yeah, the bad guys don’t present a very high bar to beat !
      Maybe it’s something in the water?

    • @thenoteverythingchannel
      @thenoteverythingchannel Год назад

      The the? County? Hmmmmm…

  • @LeviDawgs7744
    @LeviDawgs7744 Год назад +7

    Amazing work @BEAMAZED!! Congratulations on 11 million subscribers and keep up the amazing content!! 👍

  • @BigMikeECV
    @BigMikeECV Год назад +11

    "Do you mind if I search your car?" This innocent sounding request is phrased so that if you respond with "yes" or "no", you have consented to a search. So never answer yes or no, and instead respond with, "I do not consent to any search."

    • @P_RO_
      @P_RO_ Год назад +2

      In the US they can legally look inside your car from any vantage point outside of it, then use anything suspicious they see as a basis to get a warrant for search or arrest. But they are NOT allowed to search from inside the car without a warrant or your permission unless you're being arrested for an instantly jailable offense. Some local cops here are biased against Latinos and 'have their fun' by asking them unload their work trucks completely by the roadside regardless of the weather after conniving them into a search. When nothing illegal is found, the cop drives off leaving the poor slobs to load it all back; the whole process can take an hour if like me they have lots of tools in their truck.

  • @barrydraper
    @barrydraper Год назад +2

    Laws regarding lying to police officers vary depending on the jurisdiction and the specific circumstances involved. Generally, it is considered a crime to make a false statement or provide false information to a law enforcement officer, regardless of whether they are a local police officer, federal officer, or FBI agent.
    In the United States, lying to a federal officer, including an FBI agent, can be a federal crime punishable by fines and imprisonment. 18 U.S.C. § 1001 makes it a crime to knowingly and willfully make any materially false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or representation to any department or agency of the United States, including the FBI.
    However, lying to a local police officer may be charged as a state crime, and the specific penalties and charges may depend on the state law. It is important to note that lying to the police can have serious consequences, and it is generally not recommended to do so under any circumstances.

  • @Dr.Mcstaby
    @Dr.Mcstaby Год назад +64

    Never had cop like this, i used to try to race cops when ever i seen them, they are human to and if you get a laugh out of them or get them to have some fun, you can get out of tickets easier. Also telling the truth when they ask you a question can throw them off sometimes.
    Last time i got pulled over i was doing 75 into a 55 zone but i couldn't see the 55 sign cause i was passing a semi, had to stop to turn at a traffic light and a cop pulled me over came asked me how fast i was going told him "the speedometer said 75 but what did yours say cause ive got bigger rims on the car so my speedometer might be off" , cop got so confused then when he asked where i was going i said to work he asked where i worked i pointed to the warehouse he pulled me over in front of, Then i told him i almost made it to but you got me at the light he laughed and told me there was a 55 sign before the light but i bet you didn't see it gave me a warning, I gave him a fist bump told him to have a nice day and stay safe and went to work. All my coworkers could not believe i got out of that speeding ticket XD
    So far 4 and 0

    • @Goochcast
      @Goochcast Год назад

      White privilege 🤷🏿‍♂️

    • @Toxicity69256
      @Toxicity69256 Год назад

      Nice 👍👍

    • @KingDavid562
      @KingDavid562 Год назад +11

      Cop: Do you know how fast you were going?
      Young black male: 70ish
      Cop: wait right here I'll be right back.....
      Cop: can you step out of the car.
      Cop: You don't have anything illegal on you do you?
      Cop: Any weapons or sharp objects that might poke or stick me?
      Cop: are you on probation or parole?
      Cop: any drugs in the car.
      Cop: who's car is this.
      Cop: ok so when I go and check it's going to say your name?
      Cop: put your hands behind your back I'm placing you under arrest.
      Cop again: quit resisting arrest
      Cop again: I'm going to need some back up.

    • @anonymousxish
      @anonymousxish Год назад +1

      They just opened the highway.On my way home i was doing 100mph.I saw him but he had to turn around.I am now doing 140 mph.
      I hit the brakes at the top of the off ramp.He saw me, I rolled into the garage and realized i still had my foot on the brakes.Pulled my foot off, he rolled by maxed out.
      These situations escalate quickly.I was eating 4 raw eggs in a blender with some honey.

    • @downhomesunset
      @downhomesunset Год назад +3

      I told one cop that I was drying my car off after going to the car wash. It worked!

  • @deredevilgui
    @deredevilgui Год назад +11

    I won't get in trouble. After all, I just sit indoors all day because I don't like going outside due to loving the dark and it's almost always light outside

    • @patrickbrady519
      @patrickbrady519 Год назад

      Yeah. I was saying that to myself last night !

    • @dorianward4909
      @dorianward4909 8 дней назад

      Maybe take vitamin D to replace what you’re not getting from the sun.

  • @shaunmiller7370
    @shaunmiller7370 Год назад +6

    Yes it’s coercive it’s dangerous and if If a civilian did it would be pulled over and asked a lot of awkward questions it’s called entrapment

  • @ramonacain-jackson3153
    @ramonacain-jackson3153 Год назад +11

    I know lying is tempting sometimes, but personally I feel it is far from being the best choice.

    • @boogathon
      @boogathon Год назад

      The best choice is to not say _anything._ Then you're not lying... or incriminating yourself, either.

  • @visroad
    @visroad Год назад +3

    15:53 Our “bird controlled my government” theory is becoming true 😮😮

  • @davidboese5159
    @davidboese5159 Год назад +11

    Around here, the cops go to certain bars and put tape on headlights, so when a car leaves the parking lot, they could pick you up.

  • @ahanson5679
    @ahanson5679 Год назад +18

    Irritates me is how the laws are written that cops can defend themselves but if your unlawfully detained or assaulted by a cop you can't defend yourself which is BS. Citizens have a right to self defense

    • @adenkauffman809
      @adenkauffman809 Год назад +2

      Yes u do ur defense is the 5th amendment there’s many flaws in the law that could be bent to defend yourself just study law and don’t believe 2nd hand information until u can have your own ground to stand on

    • @autisticgirlawareness7420
      @autisticgirlawareness7420 Год назад

      Unless you’re in an unfree country .

    • @adenkauffman809
      @adenkauffman809 Год назад +1

      @@autisticgirlawareness7420 very true yes but he’s making a statement on a free country based off the words “citizens have a right to self defense” he’s used to being able to defend himself as a citizen so there for he is in a free country

    • @P_RO_
      @P_RO_ Год назад

      They don't realize it, but cops in the US are on a course to lose all their protections and liberties to bypass laws applying to private citizens. All that will take in one good case proving systematic abuse of rights at SCOTUS and they're done. The only thing they've got protecting them now is who SCOTUS is comprised of and that will change in time.

  • @skipyoung12
    @skipyoung12 Год назад +11

    The tip about "Don't accept a cup of water" is very useful advice to help criminals avoid detection. Nice job BE AMAZED. I hope you are proud.

    • @David_Bower
      @David_Bower Год назад +10

      And preventing innocent people from having their DNA taken by the police, and stored on a database, without their knowledge, or consent.

    • @theguyisdead
      @theguyisdead Год назад

      @@David_Bower yeah but, it’s not like they’re feeding it to aliens that can only see people who’s dna are in a police database

    • @AFineLineA
      @AFineLineA Год назад +2

      @@David_Bower Totally agreed!!!

    • @ovni2295
      @ovni2295 Год назад +3

      Every single person the police talk to is innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. So technically they're only helping innocent people.

    • @carlmagrath6389
      @carlmagrath6389 Год назад +1

      @@ovni2295 Did you know your own FBI spied on millions of ppl without their knowledge let's not forget the CIA performing illegal experiments on their own citizens, yeh right only helping innocent ppl, you must live in fairyland

  • @L.J.Designs
    @L.J.Designs Год назад +7

    Imagine taking the cup, drink half of the water, use the rest as an ash tray, and finally take it with you.

    • @D-M-J
      @D-M-J Год назад

      Lol?

    • @ricardofierro7041
      @ricardofierro7041 Год назад

      @@D-M-J you can’t take it with you if they put you in jail.

  • @MegaDirtyberty
    @MegaDirtyberty Год назад +12

    My respect for cops totally went out the window when I saw what they were doing to protesters on parliament grounds in New Zealand, you had a cop who had a 14 year old child on the ground doing pressups on his head, cops who dragged a woman out of the crowd by her hair and threw her to the ground, they tackled and dropped an old guy into the gutter (he later died) and they gouged a guys eyes and he received black eyes because of it, it was all caught on video. Then you see what the cops were doing (still are) to the people in Australia. It's also disgusting what is happening to Julian Assange, some "justice" system some countries have....

    • @user-bt8xr5si9y
      @user-bt8xr5si9y Год назад +1

      Agreed but that still doesn't make every cop bad.
      I'm personally not a fan of the whole "I saw some cops do terrible things so out goes all respect for every cop" it just doesn't add up to me.

  • @bradleyogden5688
    @bradleyogden5688 Год назад +4

    My father hated it when I would do my impression of a siren... Back in the day when you could play with your March Boxes on the rear dash of the car.

  • @glennquagmire3258
    @glennquagmire3258 Год назад +40

    Drones with penetrating radar technologies to see into my home or office sure sound like one more way the police shred the 4th amendment to me.

    • @GlockMan70
      @GlockMan70 Год назад

      Till you are being held at gunpoint against your will being robbed and what saves you is the cops check with that device and you nor your family dies. Jus Sayin

    • @desperate4dopamine
      @desperate4dopamine Год назад

      You’d be crying for this tech when a Biden voter kidnaps your child and you can’t find them

    • @malachi-
      @malachi- Год назад +9

      Drones... haha... satellites.... hahaha... you think they really care about Rights?

    • @joefei707
      @joefei707 Год назад

      Drones and radars are expensive, and are limited to a professional handlers. So I wouldn't worry about does unless you're a known terrorist

    • @P_RO_
      @P_RO_ Год назад +2

      @@lylecoglianese1645 I can't condone weapons used that way but I would turn a blind eye to it. The US Supreme Court has long ago ruled that anything which can be seen from a non-private place has no expectations of 4th Amendment protection. The airspace above your home is not private property so they can drone and satellite you all they want as long as they're not breaking any FAA rules.

  • @spiritualjoy721
    @spiritualjoy721 Год назад +22

    While standing outside a medical center waiting for it to open, a bird drone came within a few feet of me-no doubt photographing the line of us elderly people waiting for a medical exam. I guess Big Brother is even more blatant in surveillance.

    • @JesseSauveandfamily
      @JesseSauveandfamily Год назад +2

      Goodbye invasion of privacy, this world is going down the pooper 🤣

    • @JJGeneral1
      @JJGeneral1 Год назад

      @@JesseSauveandfamily um… you mean goodbye expectation of privacy?

  • @DylanIsChillin08
    @DylanIsChillin08 Год назад +4

    13:50 idk sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do

  • @blakegaming2505
    @blakegaming2505 Год назад +7

    always love these types of videos, great work once again

  • @noahengland6593
    @noahengland6593 Год назад +3

    100% true story at 10:30 when he said brace your selves, right after an ad played😂

  • @rdreynoldsbanana
    @rdreynoldsbanana Год назад +16

    I wish you covered the 4th police siren sound the VERY LOW "WOMP BOMP WOMP BOMP" sound. Every time I've heard that one it instills such anxiety in me and I can feel the hell out of the sound. I would guess it's intended for a subduing type effect.

    • @cjkollhoff58
      @cjkollhoff58 Год назад +3

      That one is for the hearing impaired.

    • @alwhalen3488
      @alwhalen3488 Год назад +6

      @@cjkollhoff58 More like useful to get the attention of people in modern sound proof cars.. It's called 'The Rumbler'

    • @GuapoJhimi
      @GuapoJhimi Год назад +3

      No, actually not. It was to differentiate between different types of emergency vehicles. You may be ‘anxious” tor reasons of conscience.

    • @rdreynoldsbanana
      @rdreynoldsbanana Год назад +8

      @@GuapoJhimi actually it is called the rumbler intended to be felt and not heard through the countless distractions and sounds of a city and to alert of an oncoming officer from over a mile away(forward facing sound) and when turned up engages a rapid sound wave variance in wavelengths proven to cause psychological breakdown, especially wavering the vagus nerve's ability of fight OR flight. Which just happens that I have a vagus nerve triggered grand mal seizure disorder and my anxiety is amplified by this already psychologist developed method to lower officer injuries and casualties.
      Not everyone has a reaction from conscience and you should keep your opinionated "factual" type comments to yourself unless you have already educated yourself in such a subject. Otherwise you teach another(or through RUclips could be countless) the same idiocy and cause a perseverance of incorrect knowledge. That is already a massive issue in current society and you shouldn't be contributing via talking out your ass maybe?

    • @mightymystery9204
      @mightymystery9204 Год назад +1

      At one time, an exhaust horn was fitted to emergency vehicles. There is also the pulsator, which makes a shrill, vibratory sound. Many of these are to make up for the lack of compression wave and harmonic vibration, from the old mechanical screamer. Oddly enough, while the old mechanical siren could be heard easily over a mile away, many of the newer sirens deliberately have under a block range for the highest volume, because of sound-pollution concerns, and also to prevent sirens from different sites being confused as one.

  • @mansterlimo1330
    @mansterlimo1330 Год назад +14

    Now you gotta clean your car all the time if a cop pulls you over

  • @Ariel_Waters
    @Ariel_Waters Год назад +3

    I can't help thinking about the first thing a lot of cops say when pulling someone over, "Do you know why I pulled you over/how fast you were going?" I'm sure it works a LOT.

    • @MikinessAnalog
      @MikinessAnalog Год назад +1

      "I am sure you have your reasons or you wouldn't have pulled me over."
      Is a reply I use.

  • @retard_activated
    @retard_activated Год назад

    RUclips placed an ad EXACTLY as you said "Brace yourself" and the ad begins:
    *Hello. I'm Johnny Cash.*
    🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 Could you imagine if that was an actual cop siren? I'd HAVE to stop out of sheer curiosity! 🤣🤣🤣

  • @SeNo_JeKuL91
    @SeNo_JeKuL91 Год назад +7

    Also this is why having dashcams are a must!!

    • @kellynnd5361
      @kellynnd5361 Год назад +1

      a few months ago a dash cam saved our asses and the cop involved told us getting one was a great investment and that it cleared us... which shut my hubby's complaints about me getting one, up. hubby was driving and ran over a young woman(we were going very slow at the time because of near misses already) with both passenger wheels. neither one of us saw her, she was roller blading on a trail, headphones in, ignored her stop sign, we couldn't see her coming because of flora blocking our view, and she tried to stop going down before we looked her way. the video established exactly what happened, that we had less than 3 seconds to react, and she was completely at fault. she was extremely lucky as we had driven over her middle, that it was the compact suv and not our very large ram, all she got was soreness and bruises after going to the hospital... which she refused to go to, we tried to get her to wait for an ambulance or cops etc and instead she rollerbladed back the way she came. we called the cops, reported the accident, gave the video over etc before she called.

    • @SeNo_JeKuL91
      @SeNo_JeKuL91 Год назад +1

      @@kellynnd5361
      oh wow!
      I'm sorry you had to go through that!
      Indeed definitely a good investment!
      Unfortunate situations, much like the one you just told,
      is one of the many reasons it's good to have one!!
      You just never know when having one could save your/or someone else's ass! Lbs

  • @jenniferrydell2733
    @jenniferrydell2733 Год назад +3

    I want a humming bird drone.Imagine what kind of pranks that I could pull on my family.

  • @KingDavid562
    @KingDavid562 Год назад +12

    That last one about the cop going to school and busting a "drug ring" was nothing but straight cap. That cop made those kids go out and find him some drugs in a way similar to being coerced into braking the law. They just thought he was a cool friend and most of these kids were loners who didn't have any friends and they were so excited that one of the "cool kids" had befriended them that when he kept pressuring them to find drugs, and they didn't wanna let down their only "cool friend" they found different drugs that he requested and brought them to him. They didn't make any money from these exchanges so yeah that was straight cap. Come on what kind of "drug operation" don't make any profit??

    • @colt4667
      @colt4667 Год назад +3

      Cap - or crap?

    • @KneazlesKeeper
      @KneazlesKeeper Год назад +4

      Some of them were "Specials Needs"(Developmentally Disabled) Kids. That were easy for a "cool kid" to control.

    • @KingDavid562
      @KingDavid562 Год назад +2

      @@colt4667 both

    • @KingDavid562
      @KingDavid562 Год назад +2

      @@KneazlesKeeper exactly that's why when I heard that last one I was like, "naw, not on my watch, I'm not letting that one by"

    • @KneazlesKeeper
      @KneazlesKeeper Год назад +2

      @@KingDavid562 I am a retired case manager For my State's Developmental Disability Services. So when That hit the news I paied attention.

  • @daveyburgess
    @daveyburgess Год назад

    Sorry if this has already been mentioned, I scrolled a lot and didn't see it:
    The sirens used at 9:49 have 3 different types - 4 if you count the growler mentioned below. They are used by all of the emergency services and the reason that they are different is for safety - an emergency vehicle approaching a stop light will use a siren to demand priority. They pass through and drivers continue as normal. If there are two emergency vehicles, one of them will change to a different siren tone, warning drivers that there is a second emergency vehicle. If it gets to a 3rd emergency tone then there is a major disaster up ahead and probably time to switch to another route!!
    The "growler", mentioned below, is commonly used to tell the driver in front to get the heck out of the way! Much like you would use a car horn, but with the added affect that even people on their cell phones can "feel" it !!

  • @maureenobrien8081
    @maureenobrien8081 Год назад +6

    That hummingbird drone got to me! That's too sneaky. I don't like anything that can look into my house, also!

  • @Flxcytyty
    @Flxcytyty Год назад +5

    Cops are now super sneaky now!

    • @mrkitty777
      @mrkitty777 Год назад

      With xonfession technology to make even Jesus kneel for Satan.

  • @MarkMyWords531
    @MarkMyWords531 Год назад

    -Tail light touch? I’ve been a deputy for 36 years. I was never told to touch a tail light. Push down on the trunk lid were the rear hatch. Yeah they just makes sense to make sure it won’t come open and surprise you.
    -Don’t accept water during an interrogation? It’s not that hard to get a search warrant for a persons DNA. And on top of that that helps locked down the case a little bit more than being shitfy. -Fingerprints? Yeah we can get those off the table or we can book you for investigation get your picture and prints and then let you go for a while.
    -10 codes? Yeah they are still in use. We dropped them for a while and used plain English on the radio. 10 codes aren’t any kind of secret. People listening to the scanner long enough can figure them out. Additionally, we passed them out. And 10 codes vary from agency to agency as much as slang does from region to region and generation to generation.
    -The “burned out headlight trick” yeah they wouldn’t fly with my agency. The first time somebody did it and got caught, by the big boss, everyone would get their asses chewed out.
    If you’re curious as to why law-enforcement officers, do things a certain way in your area? Just ask one. It’ll be great community interaction explaining how the police work. As a matter of fact, in my area, we have what we call the Citizens Academy. Where we show, anyone who wants to come to the class, just about everything discussed in this video.
    -The ability to use a device to “see through walls”, yeah you need a warrant for that. And most agencies don’t have the budget to buy one of those crazy expensive things. Have you priced one to just look in the walls of your own house to find the pipes and electrical wire? Expensive!

  • @HitMxrker
    @HitMxrker Год назад +1

    Pro tip:
    Say “I invoke the fifth” as in the fifth amendment. You don’t have to say anything to the officers unless you are in court. If they pulled you over and you ask for for their name badge number etc, and they won’t tell you why they pulled you over or it isn’t actually something you did, you can simply use the fifth amendment and stay silent.

  • @raymondmartin6737
    @raymondmartin6737 Год назад +8

    I know the "10" codes, but as you stated,
    the variations are around. Also, the Police
    frequencies are now encrypted, so even
    having a digital scanner won't receive them.
    I have been licensed in radio for 60 years.

    • @billparker8954
      @billparker8954 Год назад +1

      I'm listening to cops doing traffic control at a fire right now.

  • @TheSnakehunter
    @TheSnakehunter Год назад +12

    The refusing water part. They can still get your fingerprints on whatever you touch. The table, the doorknob. Even if you accept the cup, just hang onto it or crush it and put it in your pocket. Either way, they'll still get your fingerprints through other means

    • @GuapoJhimi
      @GuapoJhimi Год назад

      Lmao. What a load of shit. You’ve watch too much tv and your brain is mush. Yeah. Float if possible after arrest. That way they can’t get your foot prints. Lmao again.

    • @TheSnakehunter
      @TheSnakehunter Год назад

      @James Roberts you say you were an Officer but you are about as dumb as the Officer who told me high beams don't cause accidents despite Ohio state law saying high beams must be turned off within 500 meters of an oncoming vehicle. Just because you are/were an Officer doesn't mean you know the law in its entirety.

  • @weatherwitchandfelinefamiliars
    @weatherwitchandfelinefamiliars Год назад +7

    I see you've 11 Million subscribers Be Amazed, that's Awesome!! 💖 Blimey though this video was brilliant but also scary. That technology that the police have access to, will one day end up in the hands of criminals and that is terrifying 😔😮

  • @maddmatter2003
    @maddmatter2003 Год назад +3

    My state patrol uncle told me they target "Warrant Wagons" and back in the day they would dirty up 1 headlight.

  • @Lumindeas
    @Lumindeas Год назад +3

    I remember as a kid in the 70's reading one of the Danny Dunn books where they used a dragonfly drone. Camera, microphone, speaker too iirc?
    Life imitates art over a long enough timeline I suppose lol.

  • @P455W0RD__JDM
    @P455W0RD__JDM Год назад +3

    I've always wondered why. Thx for explaining 👍✨

  • @ianbattles7290
    @ianbattles7290 Год назад +8

    *goes outside to wipe all the cop fingerprints off my car*

  • @sfsgaming7831
    @sfsgaming7831 Год назад +1

    10:30 there is one more here in the US, it's called "priority" and it's for calls like panic button activations and major accidents and robberies, and during Pursuits when crossing intersections.

  • @Htrails1952
    @Htrails1952 Год назад +17

    Another aspect of playing dumb, it will sometimes trick the criminal into correcting the information, thus providing more than intended.

    • @GrungeNY
      @GrungeNY Год назад

      They're not really playing... They ARE dumb

    • @philkearny5587
      @philkearny5587 Год назад +4

      Our cops don’t have to “play” dumb.

  • @waynestewart6390
    @waynestewart6390 Год назад +7

    So even if you've done nothing wrong they can frame you

    • @hackman669
      @hackman669 Год назад

      Russian police in a nutshell !!😊

    • @phansternthephreake
      @phansternthephreake 8 месяцев назад

      Police want convictions, not the truth. Solving cases means promotion. They'd frame their own mother.

  • @JorneDeSmedt
    @JorneDeSmedt Год назад +9

    Wow... Turns out the birds-aren't-real people were right.

  • @fido139
    @fido139 Год назад +1

    Excellent. I have yet to see anyone who is totally innocent of some sort of crime dragged into the grilling room.

  • @ohiofarmer5918
    @ohiofarmer5918 Год назад +3

    I had a guy who farmed for me become a suspect of arson burning his own house for insurance money. The scumbag insurance attorney had previously questioned me over the phone and then repeated these questions in a deposition the next day. His big mistake was some sort of stressor question about how I might be part of the arson plot. Then the questions came and I didn't remember a thing.
    I read a book years ago about how ted Kennedy used that tactic in the inquest concerning the girl who drowned in his car. So that lawyer didn't get a thing out of me. BTW,this was a civil trial so the insurance company did not have to pay for the house. The guy was already found not guilty of criminal arson.
    The funniest thing was when he asked if I got any phone calls the day before and I said maybe from my mom or dad, but not sure. He said that he talked to me,but I said I don't remember anyone sounding like his voice at all.

    • @GuapoJhimi
      @GuapoJhimi Год назад +2

      Huh? What?

    • @peterv1318
      @peterv1318 Год назад

      @@GuapoJhimi - LMAO I couldn’t even read it.

  • @WarriorsWay780
    @WarriorsWay780 Год назад +4

    Don’t know if you are going to get this, but another great video! Keep up the good work! Still always will be one of my favorite RUclips channels…

  • @HDFWB
    @HDFWB Год назад +3

    The secret codes as you call them are known as 10 codes.
    They are not for secret messages they were to convey a message like where are you in a short amount of time.
    Truckdrivers have been using them for a long time.
    They are so secret in fact that when I bought a new CB. Radio it had a list of 10 codes with it.
    Also those forums you mentioned are not the most reliable source of information.

  • @ginadeam6813
    @ginadeam6813 Год назад +2

    Can't pick just one-they're all deplorable. Truly appreciate the video. Thank you❣️

  • @tovelsmith5622
    @tovelsmith5622 4 дня назад +1

    7:40 There are cases, where L.E.O.'s have Successfully Faked the barking of a K-9, where suspects surrender, due to a pretty good imitation of the K-9...

  • @deathstroke_0224
    @deathstroke_0224 Год назад +10

    quite a few cops here in the US use the doggo tactic , usually when they're chasing someone on foot, you don't know if the cop got a dog till you look at them so they use it as a way to scare the shit out of you when your running

  • @mytorment
    @mytorment Год назад +16

    In Ireland, a police officer will ask you upon inspection if you'd like to stay there and discuss the matter or would you like to go back to the station, people typically say that they would like to sort it out there and then, you can and will be arrested then for openly resisting (a non existent) arrest, happens all the time 😋😇🫒

    • @mrkitty777
      @mrkitty777 Год назад +7

      In my xountry the police starts with explaining Cardiac Arrest and Braindead as result if you don't confess. Then they start pulling fingernails and push a waterhoose in the back to pumpthe belly to enhance confession, happens all the time. Once confessed in return for no more torture all family members are killed one by one.

    • @mytorment
      @mytorment Год назад +5

      @@mrkitty777 You in Ireland?? They shot me in the face and tried to disembowel me 😅 Your confessions aren't safe without true lordship 🫒😇

    • @mrkitty777
      @mrkitty777 Год назад +3

      @@mytorment Holland almost in Germany, i uploaded a video about it, it also includes autopsy

    • @zazzifizzle
      @zazzifizzle Год назад +7

      *cancels visiting Holland from bucket list 😳

    • @mrkitty777
      @mrkitty777 Год назад

      @@zazzifizzle gays in Holland were systematically exterminated, we have gay memorial now, until 2014 uncertain genders were extarminated, Amsterdam is just a demo, i lost my entire family and am scheduled for lethal injection, we have over 6 euthanasia teams n Holland working day and night to euthanize people like me, but people with my disease are so many...

  • @finallyitsed2191
    @finallyitsed2191 Год назад +11

    I counted them! There were twelve humming bird drones out on my front porch. I figured they were trying to use some kind of penetrating radar to see inside my house but I tricked them. I mixed some super glue with red food coloring and put it in my feeders. When the drones tried to look like real birds, they drank the super glue. Guess what? Bing Bang Boom.. one by one they fell to the ground. I picked each one up and looked into their beaks (that's where they hide the cameras) and told them, "you can't fool me!" I took the whole lot of them right down to the police station and slipped them through the mail slot.

  • @badtimeswithalphys3444
    @badtimeswithalphys3444 Год назад +2

    10:34 honestly i like that last sound

  • @jimstewart2457
    @jimstewart2457 Год назад +5

    I was the same way that a coach would ask me to play but I would always turn them down. But one head coach told me that I was going to play and won’t take no for a answer. So played and got a hit and the crowd went crazy.

    • @hydrolito
      @hydrolito Год назад +2

      Some coaches have contributed to their athlete's death and other times permanent injuries. One even held up kick boxer between rounds that died after a fight. Doctor was there but looked at his phone and not the athlete. Ref should have stopped fight but didn't. Also opponent should have known how much damage he was doing.

    • @leighanneboles6609
      @leighanneboles6609 Год назад

      What's that got to do with the video?

  • @idessaoutlaw
    @idessaoutlaw Год назад +3

    You have the right to remain silent.
    EXERCISE YOUR RIGHT. ⚖️😷👌

  • @pughoneycutt1986
    @pughoneycutt1986 Год назад +2

    I don't know who was responsible, the police, or factory, or an employee at the factory, but in the late 60s and early 70s the mopar police cars had strange headlights. On most cars with 4 lights when you dim them the inner lights go out, but the police cars had the outside lights go out. You could spot them a mile away.

    • @davidpowell3347
      @davidpowell3347 Год назад

      Simply switch the type I and type II seal beams and stretch the proper wire harness connector to the right seal beam? Cross the type I to shine to the opposite side of the car? Military used to do that I think. (Illuminates the sides of the road much better a long way down the road but would be an illegal misaim of the State Inspection laws.

    • @pughoneycutt1986
      @pughoneycutt1986 Год назад

      @@davidpowell3347 I've always known how to do it, I have just always wondered who did it, was it a guy at the factory who hated cops, or did the cops have it done

    • @pughoneycutt1986
      @pughoneycutt1986 Год назад

      @@davidpowell3347 another thing that has occurred to me is maybe that was the start of the headlights blinking when the blue lights were turned on, if outer lights were on and the inside lights were flashing that could cause visual problems ahead, but if the outside lights were flashing and the inside lights were on bright that would provide better view ahead, but who knows?all I know for sure is from Florida to Virginia to Kansas to Texas, and all points in between that is how the mopar police cars were

  • @randomzpro
    @randomzpro Год назад +2

    10:59
    very sneaky there, you're lucky i am fluent in pig latin.

  • @thepiedish903
    @thepiedish903 Год назад +3

    Two things, as far as I know we dont have that third siren here in Kansas USA. But we do have more sneaky cops than what was said here, they will park on the side of the highways in normal vehicles unmarked tinted windows the works. There is no way to tell its a cop until they are coming after you. Its so bad here the saying is "welcome to Johnson County, come on vacation, leave on probation."

    • @user-bt8xr5si9y
      @user-bt8xr5si9y Год назад

      I believe the 3rd one is mostly used for other Emergency Vehicles, possibly Ambulances or something atleast from what I know.

  • @bdaddy355
    @bdaddy355 Год назад +4

    They used to have Police Cars with a control panel to control the lights. On that panel you could turn off any of the lights one by one. Turn off the right headlight by itself, the left one by itself helps when your following someone. Could turn off all the brake lights, or just the right or left. Turn off parking lights one side at a time or both helps to have people speed up behind you because no police car would have a tail light out, or a brake light.. All the lights could be controlled independently of the manufactures wiring.

    • @vicpetrishak7705
      @vicpetrishak7705 Год назад

      All cop cars have hostage lights on their vehicles or a way to verify that they are being held hostage . 12/22

    • @dmreddragon6
      @dmreddragon6 Год назад +1

      I used to be one of those people that thought that cop cars had to be maintained, till I seen a cop car with a headlight out.
      Was also surprised one night to see an old gold Mustang (over 30 yrs old) pull someone over.

    • @malachi-
      @malachi- Год назад +1

      Yes, it's all built in.

    • @ValkyrieofNOLA
      @ValkyrieofNOLA Год назад

      I beg to differ. New Orleans Police cruisers frequently have headlights and taillights out. They’re so busy dealing with violent crime they don’t care about a busted light.
      The ruling by the SCOTUS allowing law enforcement to use deceptive tactics to encourage confessions is unjust and unconstitutional.
      POLYGRAPHS are pseudoscientific quackery. Never consent to one. In any circumstance. Ever. There’s a reason why polygraph “results” are inadmissible in all American criminal courts.