Officer Arrests Senior Citizen For Alleged DUI
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- Опубликовано: 27 ноя 2019
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Welcome to Audit The Audit, where we sort out the who and what and the right and wrong of police interactions. Help us grow and educate more citizens and officers on the proper officer interaction conduct by liking this video and/or subscribing.
This video is for educational purposes and is in no way intended to provoke, incite, or shock the viewer. This video was created to educate citizens on constitutionally protected activities and emphasize the importance that legal action plays in constitutional activism.
Bear in mind that the facts presented in my videos are not indicative of my personal opinion, and I do not always agree with the outcome, people, or judgements of any interaction. My videos should not be construed as legal advice, they are merely a presentation of facts as I understand them.
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Sources:
NHTSA guidelines:
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Florida statutes:
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PEW research:
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DUI articles:
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What grade would you have given?
Happy Thanksgiving! Please keep your comments cordial and reasonable. Comments that involve inciting violence or threats will be removed.
Smart
Happy thanksgiving. Usually I am very critical of the police but in this case, I thought the officer in question did a perfectly adequate job. The elderly women certainly gave me the impression she was in no state to be allowed to drive. The son started with his treats quite soon into the interaction and I thought the officer handled that quite well.
The choice to release the elderly woman to the son I also think is perfectly reasonable and during the whole interaction with mother and son, I thought the officer was as respectful and patient as could reasonably be expected. I find no fault in his actions and demeanor so I would give an A.
If the elderly woman indeed was neither chemically or physically impaired than she seemed extremely intentionally uncooperative.
@@daviddevries8242 I'm with you all the way.
@@daviddevries8242 Seems to be a language barrier too.. Her English was not very good.. He took that as being uncooperative... She is an 80 year old stroke victim.. No way she going to pass any of their tests...
I don't doubt the gentleman's story about being threatened with arrest for trying to file a complaint. It's not unusual for a citizen that attempts that to end up getting charged with ridiculous things like disturbing the peace, disorderly conduct, trespassing, public intoxication etc. Those charges could be dismissed later but the citizen will still have to post bail, hire an attorney and the incident will likely generate a record of arrest which can make it difficult to work in certain fields 💰👎
As a physician, I can state that most people in their 80’s couldn’t pass a field sobriety test.
So, let's make them all presidents!
Then they shouldn't be driving 🤷🏼♀️
@@wvrjl 😂😂😂😂😂😂
Yeah, everyone over 65 has to do those stupid fall risk screens. 90% of them don't pass the heel to toe tests.
Without the victim's car there, he really couldn't accuse her of having hit it. That must've been scary for her to have a cop pull up and start making demands and accusations. I'm surprised she wasn't crying. When an old person says they're tired, you don't demand them to submit to physically challenging tests.
My elderly mother locked her keys in her car at the mall. The police were called. The doors were not locked and never were. They recognized her “impairment”. The cop drove her home and called us. We got to her house and found the fully equipped young cop sitting next to my mothers bed in a rocking chair waiting for us to relieve him. We asked him what can we do? She obviously should no longer be driving. He said he would take care of it. He filed the paperwork and that was her last day driving.
THAT is a good cop. Unfortunately, most good cops don't remain in the police force. They're too disgusted by the average cop.
I'm sorry that your mom is now reliant on others to get around. Its independence and freedom that is something people don't want to give up. And I can't blame them.
I hope she's doing okay and I know it can't be easy to be the one to tell her that she can't drive anymore. Probably heartbreaking.
Bewell ❤️
😅
😅
Yes. But this son has no intention of stopping her from driving. So, hopefully she doesn't kill someone the next time she gets wonky.
I was once arrested for failing a field sobriety test when i was parked at a rest area on my way home from work. Once i was taken to the station and administered the intoxilizer i blew a 0.0. At which time the cop finally listened to me when i said i was severly dehydrated, dizzy, and confussed because i had been working a 12 hour shift in 110 degree weather all day. When i started feeling dizzy i pulled over and parked after 10 to 30 minutes is when i encountered a sheriff. I was released, to go pay a towing and storage fee for my car. Field sobriety is used as a weapon more often than people think.
Absolutely!
So they still made you pay for towing and storage fees? That is so wrong.
Yes, and there was absolutely nothing I could do about it. Like i said they use stuff like this as a weapon against us. It recently happened to a friend's dad in the same town when he criticized the police chief in a town meeting.
This is unconscionable, the level of disrespect for elders in America is ridiculous! Leave this poor elderly woman alone!!! The way he's talking to her is just unnecessary! Speak in a gentle voice to the elderly. There's no need to speak in such an intimidating way! I mean would you talk to your grandmother like that?!!! And she clearly didn't need to be threatened by saying she was going to be cuffed and taken to jail. I mean c'mon people! Cuffed?!!! Just ridiculous! If an older person says "I'm tired"... let them sit down for a moment to collect themselves and then begin again! That officer has no heart. She is clearly stressed. What is wrong with these people?!!!
No heart at all.
Agreed... many of our elders are treated poorly and no longer seen as having any value because they are "old". Even the age at which someone is deemed old and over. Is it 50, 55, 65, 80...years-old? Many, not all, but many have so much they can teach us. Living history books!!
This poor woman told him at the beginning that she had, had surgery on both her hips and had a balance issue...which was why she was leaning on her car for support. He seemlybfogot or just wasn't listening. This cop is an a-hole. He accuses her of playing games with him. Don't resist. He accuses her of trying to kick him. He accused her of refusing to participate with the test she was asked to perform. Instead of taking her age into account...he goes right to her being "drunk." The son didn't say that he knew for a fact that her medicine was causing an impairment. He now thinks that maybe it is the medicine. The doctor's office staff should have called the son...not straight to the police in this case. The officer could have called her son too. The charges aganist her were for going to be for being drunk. I agree that the officers need training and refresher courses in dealing with "elder policing" Seriously, they work where a large section of the population is elderly. Also, as demonstrated here a population of people that grew up in other countries and with different culture and social norms.
Yeah, I know...they are here now and need to adapt to the United States culture and norms. There may be some that won't, but for those that do..adapting, especially older folks, may take a longer time period than it would be for younger generations.
Having her examined by EMS would make more sense than a field sobriety test.
And removal of the driver's license until it is proven that she is capable of operation of a vehicle.
@Shane Hollis Which is exactly the questions the officer asked to determined her sobriety.
You would think.
Definitely a medical issue.
that sounds not expensive at all
Imagine how pissed off your grandma would be if you tried to give her a field sobriety test and expect her to pass it with flying colors 😂
This guy is an idiot. Someday he may be old, if someone doesn't do away with him.
Did they fire this idiot
I agree with your statement at that age they are probably NOT ever gonna pass 100%.
@@suckitdx okay? so leave this comment section. You Just commented the most useless information
@@dannyruiz2011😂😂😂
So a doctor’s office called the police when one of their elderly patients was acting strangely? Seems like a MEDICAL issue to me!? 🤯
For once I think this officer handle things as he should not knowing if she had a medical condition or not it was his duty to make sure she was okay and other people were safe out on the road but thank God her son showed up and things worked out for the better I hope this woman gets the help that she needs but she definitely should not be driving and kudos to the police officer😅❤
😮why didn’t her doctor’s office step in? You would think that they would know if she was impaired or acting erratically because of a medical issue. They could have called someone to come pick her up. That’s irresponsible and weird to let her just leave like that.
@kimhayden4822 but we don't know if they tried to stop her. Chances are they told her not to drive but she refused. The Dr's office is not authorized to restrain her from leaving if she insists. They did the right thing by calling the police to step in to assess her.
@@drizzter1374 that could be true. They might have tried to stop her.
My mom has advanced dementia. When she first started showing signs she would’ve behaved very similar to this ☹️
Then shame on people who let her drive
I'm surprised that once her son said she had a stroke that was never considered as a possible source of the impairment. It seems clear to me that her driver's license should be revoked. But she does not belong in a cell.
Yeah I think our legal system needs a 3rd option here. A way for police to take her license but release her until a court or DMV can evaluate her ability to drive. I do agree the officer was correct in wanting to get her off the street tho. We give the elderly way too much latitude in driving
@@Travisrogers87 well said
She can drive RETARD AFTER SHE RECOVERS FROM STROKE ...OMG...
@@Travisrogers87 A law to have common sense and respect in dealing with the elderly is a sad day
@@Travisrogers87 The sad thing is that they have that, but there's way too much incentive to arrest and imprison.
I give the Doctors office an F for not holding her and calling her son to come and pick her up to possibly take her to the ER. She could have been having a medical condition. Also the doctor can take away her license as well by sending a letter to the state DMV. If anything the son should go after the doctor for medical neglect and find her a new doctor.
💯
Very salient points. If she was that confused, when she left, might not she have been having a stroke?
Even if someone is impaired I don't think you can physically hold them in a place against their will. That's false imprisonment. Unless you can show me a law or statute that says you can do that, probably not a smart idea. I'm not talking about the morality, I think morally that would be a smart thing. But morals and the law don't always perfectly overlap
@@richardpowell4281you don't have to hold her against her will though. The Dr could have easily just taken an extra long time getting her appointment wrapped up and then bam the son is there and can take it from there. She would have no idea that he was holding her there. He could have easily gone and looked at her emergency contact info that all Drs offices ask and have on file in order to get her son or a different family members phone number. It would be whomever she put as an emergency contact.
If the Dr can be implicated, then so can the son. She lives with him, so he knows her condition and that she should not drive. She struck a vehicle and couldn't even put it in park, yet got away scot free
My 74 year old mother, never had a ticket in her life, had 2 accidents in one day from dementia. I had to take her keys away. It was a hard and sad day.
I thought field sobriety tests weren't given to anyone over 65 and you can refuse for that reason. Several other cop shows have mentioned that
My grandmother, who I considered my very best friend, ended go with dementia. My mom and uncle didn’t want to have to be the ones to take her driving Privileges away, so I had to do it, I was in my early 20’s at the time. But it was terrifying knowing she could hurt herself or someone else. Anytime she needed to go somewhere I made sure I went with her, and “begged” her to let me drive: I told her I needed her input on if I was a good driver or not. This way it wasn’t a fight, and she didn’t know her driving privileges were taken away. She also got to “rate my driving” which gave her a sense of control over the situation. I miss my granny so much 😢
As I'm reading through the comments it hits me, how many of us have similar stories, and how little consideration is given to our elderly, your story warmed yet broke my heart. I fully believe that there comes a point in most people's lives when driving is a job better passed to someone more capable, a realization I'm dealing with now, after recently spending a few weeks with my Dad for the first time, post Covid. Although he's not that old (72) and is an extremely well - educated and intelligent man with no signs of slowing intellectually, several years of untreated AFIB, seems to have somehow damaged his ability to concentrate and react while driving. For example, slowing to 60kms/hr (limit 110kms/hr)on the highway simply because he saw a car approaching to merge into his lane, or getting sidetracked by a pedestrian and almost running a red light.
My point, you took an incredibly brave position with your Grandmother, when those responsible were unable to make the decision, and your method of turning your outings into a mutually gratifying experience is something you should share with great pride, those memories with her, and receiving your regular driving reports, will be a fond memory and funny story you can cherish for a lifetime. Thank you for sharing it with us, I hope that I am able to approach this transition with my Dad, with half the class you had at such a young age!
@@steeveejee4647 same exact situation with me.
My gma (mom) even said the same to me
Nice approach
Yeah with my mother someone had to be with her 24/7. Anything thing dangerous you could think of she would do it. Like turning on the stove and forgetting how to use a lighter and spending 3 min with the gas running. She wanted to help but everything she did was terrifying.
@@quietinspirationcreations3448 yes until it happening to you do you hear form others going through or had done it.
She’s old, confused and feeble. She shouldn’t be driving because of that, but I don’t believe she was intoxicated!
Before big pharma came into every household many elderly drove. This should become a poster for driving licences, especially now that psychotropic drug's are repurposed for everything, pain, depression.
AGREE
Coraleigh May-Dewitt I’m aware that legal RX count for intoxication, but I don’t believe that is the situation here.
Coraleigh May-Dewitt blood pressure meds doesn’t cause people to not be allowed to drive. The cops jumped on it when he was trying to prevent the next stroke in jail. The fact that she had a stroke before proved the fst was unreliable because brain injuries cause the same failure while completely sober and able to drive
She's never had a ticket or been on an accident. That Trumps "old and feeble."
"Have you had any alcohol today?"
"Never!!"
Heart breaking. An elderly woman saying shes tired and the cop saying "they dont care"
I noticed that too. What a cold hearted thing to say. Some people were taught to show their elders some respect, some clearly weren’t. Sad.
Too tired to complete field sobriety test means way too tired to drive. I don’t care if she’s too tired either, I care that she’s prevented from endangering others.
If she's tired she shouldn't be driving either though
But for real- who cares that some old woman is tired? She acted like that was a valid excuse for not doing the field sobriety tests. Sorry, but that’s not how it works. Plus her son is a POS, threatening a police officer that was just doing his job.
@@pinnsvein Right, but there are other ways to deal with that. Throwing an 80 year old lady in handcuffs and in jail because she's too dazed by her medicine to drive is just barbaric.
You could have put the cuffs on her in front . out of respect . the woman didn't pose any threat to you . She's 80 .
come on it's a power thing had to dominate her
This cop is an idiot.
this cop is motherless
Didn't need cuffs at all
@@nic.h Agreed .
As a normal person. I can tell that there is a language disconnection.
everyone can tell
@badinstincts common sense isn't common there's days
Ganeration language disconnection
I do think the police did well by not letting her go though
@@jbroberts8807- Even if police determine that a driver is not under the influence of any chemical, but may be sick, may have suffered a stroke, is sleepy, they have authority to detain the person until a friend or relative can come drive them home, pick them up, remove the vehicle or park it in a safe place until it can be retrieved - with permission of any concerned private property owner or tenant.
Something that wasn't mentioned was that the research also stated when it came to field sobriety test.
Also stated that people over a certain age that the accuracy falls off greatly and should not be preformed on senior citizens
God bless him for defending his elderly mother.
“My fingers hurt.”
“Well now your back is going to hurt cause you just pulled landscaping duty.”
Hell yea. Great movie. No one gets it cuz if they did they would of gave you a thumbs up
😂😂😂😂
This is an absolute classic i spit my tea out laughing so hard !! Great comment!
Happy Gilmore 🤣🤣🤣😂😂😂
Haha, best comment!
The handcuffs were important. Imagine that 80 year old lady taking off.
It was clear at 5 minutes into this video, when she got out of the car with her handbag - she was nothing but trouble. Thank goodness Officer Asshole was there to protect the public.
@@sheri4673 Not really...
I am pro cops... but handcuffing an old lady without having the evidence that she is not allowed to drive is purely tyrany...
@@sheri4673 Indeed.... my apologies!!! My brain is not functioning properly today....
Well, most of the days as far as I aware....
@esther fisher hitting the car wasn't really the issue, they were concerned about her ability to be able to drive safely. Allowing her to drive in an impaired state is a danger to herself and others. The handcuffs were completely unnecessary and what annoyed me most about this interaction, he could have simply got her to sit in the back of the squad car it's not like she was a flight or fight risk
@esther fisher I think that the officer had reasonable suspicion to consider that she may have been under some form of influence and initially opting to perform the field test was not really unreasonable. Her age alone shouldn't excuse her if she was not in a state to drive, especially given her denial of being on any medication and the multiple reports of concern that had been raised. So until the family member turned up he didn't really have another option. I'm not clear what lead the family member to turn up, but think the final outcome of her being released into his care was the right call. As I said my main fault with the officer was the use of restraints for an older more fragile member of society who had shown no threatening behavior and is obviously not a risk. I have an elderly mother who still drives, but is not 100% stable on her feet these days, she goes out of her way to make sure she uses her hands for balance as she has had a couple of falls previously and the consequences of a fall at that age can be fairly major.
They should’ve called in a DRE, that’s what I am. It’s a certified expert in non-alcohol related intoxication and would’ve made the call. Also, SFSTs are ineligible for people over the age of 65. They’re disqualified for this very reason. Tbh, I think you gave this officer a higher grade than he deserves…I’d never treat someone of that age in that manner ever. It was very disrespectful imo. The whole situation was bad for everyone.
How is a Digital Rectal Exam going to possibly help this woman in this situation? I mean, if they needed your help, it would have been before she left the doctors office and not when she was already driving the car. Of course they wouldn't call you at that point, it would be silly. And violate her privacy to boot.
"You don't care?", the old lady asked her incredulously...
Indeed.
This cop asking “why you standing that way”... bruh she 70 ( 80 my bad lol)
Nich Hollywood Like she hasn’t been through enough bs in her lifetime. Smh. He’s treating her as if she’s a young girl
Fuel Nation 💯
80*
I only got just shy of 50 years on my hips and knees.. shoe moves better than me
..punk ass kid she/him cop... treated that lady like she some common ass thug
This is america
Glad they cuffed her. Granny probably would've done a double backflip over the cops head and snapped a neck or two with her elite ninja skills otherwise.
Grandma was America's most wanted senior edition...
Cuffing is standard procedure for everyone upon arrest.
@@TomBrooklyn well it shouldn't be .she is an 80 year old lady who has suffered a stroke and had hip surgery .what threat did she pose to him or herself? He humiliated her I felt shame for him to behave this way, awful people skills.lets face it she wasn't going to attack him or run away she could barely walk.
I felt the same way. Here in Colorado the police often exercise discretion to cuff a person in the front rather than in the back based on how combative the person is. Age is also a consideration. With age comes stiffness and being cuffed in the rear is difficult. And of course, the level of the threat is a consideration. He must have felt she did have elite ninja skills. The cop is a jerk. He should hope he never gets this old otherwise he might just find out how hard it is.
@@farleyxwilbur655 Yes at the very least at the front as she was not showing any violent tendencies as this would put her at less risk of being harmed. However I believe he handcuffed her just because he did not have enough patience with an elderly person. Not an admirable reason.
She also doesn’t sound like English was her first language. So some of her confusion and frustration could be because of that as well.
What boggles my mind is that this woman has a hx of stroke/TIA and EMS wasn't contacted for this interaction. Slurred speech, cognative impairment, and her hx with having a stroke alone would have me calling for a medical eval straight away.
He said that he's tired of these games. So is the American public.
Yeah the public SHOULD be tired of ppl who can't even put a car in park to fukn drive
Yes, I’m tired of old drivers killing innocent people also😂
@@PHELTHY49plus20this👍🏻
@@ploppill34 yeah i am so sick and tired of that also, even tho she didn't hurt anyone, and the person who drove the other car didn't stick around.
@@PHELTHY49plus20 - I think she actually knew what she was doing there.
The Policeman or her son should have called the Paramedics to take her to the hospital for further evaluation. She was acting like she was disorientated.
Sadly when you only teach an officer to see drug/alcohol impairment, they only see drug/alcohol impairment. I had a very disoriented elderly man park in our fire dept lot around 2am. Clearly he was unable to drive and we had to call law enforcement. The deputy who arrived was also a paramedic. He was the most professional deputy who could’ve responded. Not once did he do any sort of drug/alcohol tests. He tried contacting the wife and other family members. He wound up driving the man to a local hotel and arranged for the son the pick up the man in the AM. Not all cops are able to rise above basic training and common sense.
Seems like a lack of empathy for this woman, the paramedics would have been a better solution
Bubbe is a nice lady, but she should not be driving. Her son should have manned up and stopped letting her drive.
She was on her way to the doctor, they should have let her son drive her there
@@climber950 The poor woman was scared.
Wow, the son got his wish from the cops and he still went and tried to sue
I'm guess the lawyers he talked to yelled at him for wasting their time. And if he's so worried about her way didn't he drive her?
Underrated comment, they hate you because you speak the truth.
DUI test in the rest of the world: "please blow into this tube"
DUI in the US: "sort this pack of cards blindfolded and then execute three somersaults with handcuffs now or you go to jail"
Seeing these clowns forcing drivers to perform circus tricks with no regard to their physical abilities or making judgment about their understanding of the silly instructions given in a language that is not their native language, all while making condescending and uncalled comments really emphasizes the inefficiency of the police in such cases.
Imagine if this guy ever walks into a nursing home. "All these people are drunk and disorderly!".
That dumb ass cop would have smelled alcohol on her breath had she been drunk. That blue turd of a cop needs to be put into prison.
@@grandpied the cop never said she was drunk though there's a difference between dui and drunk dui doesn't mean alcohol
@@simoncohen4264 She was old, just because she couldn't sing and dance, doesn't mean she was dui.
@@grandpied she failed a dui test slurred he words and didn't follow basic commands the cop has every right to arrest her until the investigation is over and charge her with dui and no even if she is 80 you don't get away with driving went you can't
@@grandpied she wasn't asked to sing and dance she was asked to park the car very simple follow a own my 92 year grandpa can do that and walk in a straight line my grandpa can do that as well she also lied to the cops saying she doesn't take meds I don't care if your 18 or 80 you don't get let free of a dui
My father-in-law had a stroke and wrecked his truck. He was somewhat incoherent when the cops arrived. But there were no sobriety tests- they took him to the hospital to have doctors check him out. He had no physical injuries but he didn’t smell like booze so they got him the help he needed- not a jail cell. And they called my wife to let us know what happened.
Yes, that's proper.
What a dumb cop. Robot. Common sense should have kicked in before giving her a sobriety test that he didn't ask her if she was willing to do. He just started instructing her to do those movements.
I was riding shotgun with a 85 year old driver, scariest shit I have ever done. I was literally thinking of what to do in case he just dies behind the wheel.
My grandmother turned 90 a few weeks ago. She's broken both hips, multiple back surgeries, heart surger AND trouble breathing. She won't use cane or walker and mall walks with my aunt 2x a week. She's used to have a few beers smoked a little bit for a short time during her 20's she watches what she eats (well, my MOM watches what she eats. Grandma's only bad habit is sweets. 😂) and the only pain meds she's ever taken is Vicodin and she follows her doctor's instructions to a T. My grandma still has her license and in her entire life she'd been pulled over once and it was for a no seatbelt ticket. That lady had more excuses than a dozen donuts. And her son acted like a jackass. I get it, nobody wants their mom in jail but she/they kept on lying and coming up with excuse after excuse. Those officers weren't falling for her crap and I'm betting the ONLY reason they let her go was because the 2 of em' were such a huge pain in the ass their Chief probably figured it would be easier on everyone involved if her son just took her butt home. And the scary part of it is..... She's probably still driving as we speak, mabey even in a town near you! "Phew!" This was a long one but that was really interesting to me because of all their excuses. If you made it this far 🤣🤣🤣 thank you for reading and letting me vent. Everyone stay healthy and safe!! ~Bong 😉😁
Sorry about the typos 😅! 6 AM here and haven't had coffee yet. 🥴🥱
I could be stone cold sober and fail these tests..lol.
I could be drunk and ace the tests. Been tipsy never full on drunk but i think my European biology would kick into high gear. Also her name is “Natalia” (Наталия) and her beautiful thick accent is a dead give away that there may be a slight translation delay.
I just said this to my 15 year old daughter the other day. I am Clumsy have no hand eye feet coordination. I think I’d be able to look at something without moving my head but who knows! The thought of getting tested gives me so much anxiety and I don’t drink!
You don't have to submit to the tests, for this exact reason. Any evidence they gather can and will be used AGAINST YOU, it will not be used FOR YOU.
Never submit to field sobriety tests.
There isn't really a pass or fail, It's just a procedure that the city attorney or prosecutor requires to or prefers to have completed to charge with DUI. It just allows the officer to say that they performed their "tests" to determine that they're intoxicated. It doesn't matter how you do, if you're taking the test you are going to jail. You could be absolutely sober and you are going to "fail" the "test". It's best to not participate in the tests and refuse a breathalyzer. They will have zero evidence of any intoxication and it will most often be dropped in court, or never charged after a few days. You will lose your license for a year, but you will save $10,000 and a lot of time, you are going to be suspended for 90 days anyways.
@@Walter_E_Kurtz Never take field sobriety tests. they’re designed to make you look drunk, even if you’re sober.
I'm 56 and there is no way in the world that I could pass that test
SHOULD,nt HAVE TO, iF YOU JUST DONT DRINK N DRIVE,
There was another video of a woman who was slurring her words and wasn't coherent. The cops suspected she was having a medical emergency. And it turned out she was having a stroke. They could have made things worse by wasting time having her go through field sobriety tests. But by sending her straight to the hospital she got the care she needed. I do agree more training needs to be done to separate medical issues vs. sobriety.
The officer was awfully short and unnecessarily aggressive with her
As a stroke survivor, illnesses such as UTIs can cause the symptoms of the stroke to get worse. So if she had any impairment from her stroke, a simple infection could cause cognitive difficulties.
An elderly disabled relative of ours would get mentally spacey when he had a UTI. It was generally the first symptom.
Eww
Yes very much true but you are asking too much for a simple cop. He may or may not be an educated cop and that is the chance departments take hiring someone with limited education or learning abilities and you give them authority over us
@@IamSCS it's usually my 1st symptom too. Believe it or not, this can happen with anyone. Idk why it isn't common knowledge. I guess people don't want to talk about it but it's kinda vital information.
@@gavinschulte3017 think it's gross all you want just remember the information.
Officers could also be trained on recognizing medical issues with elderly or call EMS; someone who’s diabetic can appear “drunk.”
Wow you have it all figured out don’t you! Impaired is impaired she could have easily went to jail for this. Educate yourself before you make ignorant come Chloe
That would lower their arrest rate
My mom is this age... can drive but does have balance issues (can walk, but not like this sobriety test)
It doesn't really matter whether the issue is from age or drunkenness though, if it impairs their thought process, it can cause crashes. And whether it was due to age or any other reason, the crash isn't any less dangerous.
With all this said, the balance test isn't a good test for driving as you can drive competently without being able to balance, and elderly can struggle to walk etc. The reason I'd be worried about her is because of the pen test, if she couldn't even focus on the pen, how is she meant to focus on the pedestrian crossing the road, and if she isn't able to follow commands around parking the car, it's unlikely she has the reaction speed / dexterity to stop the vehicle before a crash.
I think the best option would've been to take her home in the cop car, suspend her license in a way where she needs to do another test to show she is still capable of driving but can still get it back. This would help the son to feel secure because she isn't being imprisoned for being old (and potentially risking her own life), and it would help the cops because she isn't a risk on the road. (For all we know, she could've driven off after they left when the son bent to whatever she said.)
@@drumsticknuggets5123 I can see your point, it's a problem that the sobriety tests are ineffective for testing people with balancing problems. Since being unable to balance isn't a problem when driving (obviously), the test should be outside of these conditions to check for more real signs like the inability to understand and react to simple / medium scenarios and the ability to focus on what's occurring.
The problem is that the woman in this video has clearly shown in both the communication beforehand that she was probably a hazard on the road as she didn't seem aware of what the officer was saying to her and wasn't able to focus on the pen test. This is all the officer had to go on, so it was definitely the right call to get her off the road.
I also don't think releasing her to the son is a good idea because he seems to "suck up" to his mother and he might let her drive as soon as the police leave. This could cause a crash because (I don't think) she was fit to drive from what the video showed.
In my opinion, the best solution would be to take her home (not to the police station), suspend her license until she has another driving test to check if she's still fit to drive (As this brings a more expert view on her current fitness instead of a policeman / son who has a less complete view). This both protects the mother from health risks in the police station and being overstressed causing potential health problems AND it reduces the danger on the road as we aren't letting a person who appears to be unfit to continue driving around.
Like the disastrous and unconstitutional "War On Drugs", cops should have nothing to do with medical problems. Tell me, cop, what is your "medical" opinion of this lady?
It's amazing to me how most people here are not appalled at the cruelty and disrespect given by the 🐷
Elderly woman “I’m tired.” Officer: “I don’t care.” Zesty lil punk probably talks to his own grandmother like that
ZESTY
I’ve failed a field sobriety test before despite being sober. I have a terrible balance, my eyes are sensitive to the light, among other things. I requested a breathalyzer and was let go. The field sobriety test needs to be…reworked to say the least.
I agree... I PASSED a field sobriety test and STILL got arrested and put in jail for FIVE DAYS (got pulled over on a Saturday night and Monday was a federal holiday, so Saturday, Sunday and Monday "didn't count") I was released Thursday night, and left with a $1,000 bill to get my car out of an impound lot... I almost lost my job, my car, and my place of living. Why? Because the officer said I was "slurring my speech."
I've seen a college football player. Active. Was told he had failed. When he was sober. Designed to fail for sure. Better off just to refure them. Every cop that gets stopped for DUI always refuses them. From what I've seen
Never take field sobriety tests. That is not what you agreed to when you signed to get your driver's license.
Yep, I passed one with flying colors even though I was impaired. No guarantee
Me too. I was a traveling nurse in another state in the dead of winter when I became quite ill with a kidney infection. On my way to Walmart to pick up my prescriptions, I was stopped by an officer. As a wounded Veteran, I had surgery on my left foot which prevents me from balancing properly. Due to my infection, I also was sweating & looked 'sick'. Just a perfect storm of circumstances. I failed the sobriety test because I couldn't balance properly and was taken to the police station. Later, a DRE officer examined me and asked me what was going on. I showed him my prescriptions, explained my service-connected injuries, and passed his exam with flying colors. He left the room and I could hear him screaming at the officer who pulled me over. To this day I can't stand that guy who arrested me. Thankfully, the charges were dismissed, too! I would NEVER go to that state for another assignment. Never again.
Him: "What's your name?"
Her: "Natasha."
Him: "Okay, Natalia."
Am I the only one who noticed this?
Maybe he's the one under the influence
These people are obviously Russian or from another Slavic country, in which case Natasha and Natalia are the same name - Natasha being the familiar version of the name.
I mean if a driver makes one mistake she goes to jail this guy makes a mistake and it's oh no big deal
@@alexdel-valle4503 no
He clearly says Natasha back to her
I also give the officer in charge an A plus, he called for further assistance and the department should have submitted paperwork for the woman to be medically evaluated to determine if she was medically capable of driving
I think the cops should have sent her to the hospital immediately. There are several medical conditions that can cause her behavior that can seek up without warning.
Elderly people should always be cuffed in the front. I’m 55 and I can’t bend my arms backwards because of arthritis. This is a horrible maltreatment of the elderly!
How the hell have they not called EMS by now. This is insane. She's 80.
EMS for what? Driving under the influence? Age is irrelevant, you don't get a free pass because your old! ZERO tolerance for driving under the influence.
She could have easily lost her balance hit her head on the pavement a died. The guy was a bastard. The woman clearly stated she does not drink. Apparently she understands English better than the turd in blue uniform.
What she doesn’t need EMS
@@grandpied Just because she said she doesn't drink doesn't mean she doesn't (good sentence, no?...there's a song in there somewhere). The cop did the important thing...he got her off the road. And he did another smart thing...he called his supervisor. I give him a B+. I give the son a D for threatening the cop.
@@joemarshall4226 There is a song there somewhere. The cop didn't smell alcohol on her breath. He had no right to take her off the road. Both he and his supervisor get a big fat F, and the son earned an honorable A+, for displaying self restraint above and beyond duty. I hope he sues the pants off of the city.
Imagine witnessing a crash and calling the cops but not telling the person their car was hit💀
That becomes the cop's job. Most people can tell, when they get to their vehicle, can tell their car was hit.
@@OmniscientWarrior Most people don't walk around their car looking for damage every time they get in it, which is what you'd have to do.
Where's the witness, and the damaged property?
Wade Hoover exactly. And even if the person drove off without knowing they got hit. Why wouldn’t the person that called the cops, inform the victim their car was hit
Likwid: that doesn't matter as the cop finished with that investigation and moved to the next one.
Constitutionly, she has a right to face her accuser which she couldn't do if they weren't present.
The accuser was someone besides the alleged victim. Probably some Karen saw damage on her car and assumed she hit someone that day.
@@josephfrechette9916 This is what I wondered, too, given the apparent lack of physical evidence. And had she just hit another car with that light, the damage would probably be on the driver's side, where the owner would most likely notice it before driving away. Someone saw two cars with minor damage and an elderly person, and decided they were ace sleuths.
"I've got an elderly woman here. Request for back up."
Hillarious. Thank you.
Witness.
She has a cane, shes holding it tight with her right hand, should I pull my gun to make sure that she drops it? *Supervisor Yes make sure she removes the deadly stick that can take care of a unit of police officers that are armed with 9mm guns, we are sending a SWAT team right now.
@@theMyouknow 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@theMyouknow She removed her dentures................shots fired, shots fired!!!!!
This was too painful to watch.
She's 80 years old for goodness sake!
Your age doesn't exempt you from following laws though.
My dad was killed by an elderly driver. If she's starting to become impaired she needs to have her license taken.
@@ehoffart529 I agree 100%. What I meant by saying "she's 80 years old " is she is not strong enough to be standing around.
Here in the UK we don't subscribe to sobriety tests, we would be breathalysed. Following on from that, a blood test would be required. In this instance doing both of these would have given clarity, eliminated confusion and to any discomfort.
In my very humble opinion, I would suggest that from the age of 75 years (and then every 5 years) people ought to have to take a road test. Failure to pass or to agree to have the test would result in being disqualified.
I say this because the older generation, of which I am near, have slower reflexes, appear to take more medications and can, sometimes, drive dangerously.
I would be happy to re-sit my driving test. It would instil confidence to other road users and satisfy my own questions as to whether I am safe to drive.
I am so very, very sorry for your dad and your family. Nobody should have to suffer the way you all have.
SoCalKook that’s absolutely true but to handcuff her is a little over the top.
To do blood tests, a person has to be taken into custody. Blood (and urine) tests typically do not come back the same day. She ws not actually suspected of being drunk, so what would a Breathalyzer have clarified?
It's odd that they go on the report with no evidence
How is possible to believe in a random "witness"???
"Her speech is slurred and she is slow to respond" that tends to happen when you're 80 years old
For real. Just another moron cop.
That's not true, lot of people don't act like that at 80 that's a stereotype kid
@@m42037 mental faculties decrease as you get older. That’s also a fact. The degree varies, and when it starts changes, but your mental abilities surely lessen as you age. Gramps.
@@mikea5923 Not everyone at 80 is senile jerkoff, and I'm Gen X far from grow tf up
@@m42037 who said they were? Work on your reading comprehension perhaps. It’s clearly lacking. Also, it’s funny you can call someone kid, but get all butthurt at being called gramps. If you live in a glass dummy house you probably shouldn’t throw stones. If you do, remember that special helmet you wear.
"im not gonna play this game anymore"
it wasn't a game to her..
This happened to my 44 year old friend who had a fender bender and told the cop she didn't know what happened. She got the letter from DMV to be evaluated by a doctor. Cost her several thousand dollars and nearly a year of tests before she got her license back. This lady won't be legally driving anymore I can guarantee that.
Once the son said she had medical issues i would have had sent her to a hospital for an evaluation.
“Do you have trouble standing ma’am?” Yea buddy she’s 80 years old
Then maybe she shouldn't be driving
@@notanybetter5264 Exactly.
80 or 85
@@notanybetter5264 correct! If she’s not capable of understanding clear and simple directions from an officer, she should not be driving. Period
Then she shouldn’t be driving
The officer gets an F for attempting to put his clipboard on the lady's car hood.
Its cause he's on drugs.
Its called a white privilege high.
Same thing I noticed!!!
@@Brandon_Johnson04 haha love that
@@Brandon_Johnson04 Yikes. You've drank the kool aid.
Clip-side down, too.
The way that young officer treated the Older Lady is Unacceptable. He needs training or maybe just needs to get a New Job with the Same Police department But nothing higher than Janitor
You gotta love a cop who follows “what’s her situation” with “I don’t care”
That's because he was fishing. Didn't give any shitz other than building a case.
@@brianchristopher8843 Right so he let her go.
“Don’t resist” says the cop to an 80 year old lady in handcuffs.
Real Tough guy he is
He's a POS. Wait until his mommabecomes like that
In Tennessee, the number 1 enemy of the poor who is elderly isn't dementia or hypertension it wears a blue uniform and is deadly,
I read "don't resist" as he was trying to make sure the cuffs were not uncomfortable and she wouldn't be hurt. There was no indication he was threatening or trying to overpower her.
@@enderdelphiki dont resist is FUCKING INDICATIVE of him having to overpower her. Otherwise it would go unsaid, yes?
So being an elderly stroke survivor is now illegal?
I would never pass thr sobriety test. I have poor balance, poor hearing. She looks to old to walk the line.
She just under the influence of old age. If anything, that’s the reason we should be concerned about her driving but I don’t believe she’s DUI
some drugs taken can cause the effects of a DUI, for example, sleeping medication can cause Burning or tingling in the hands, arms, feet, or legs
Changes in appetite
Constipation
Diarrhea
Difficulty keeping balance
Dizziness
Daytime drowsiness
Dry mouth or throat
Gas
Headache
Heartburn
Impairment the next day
Mental slowing or problems with attention or memory
Stomach pain or tenderness
Uncontrollable shaking of a part of the body
Unusual dreams
Weakness
also if you have an allergic reaction this can happen Blurred vision or any other problems with your sight
Chest pain
Difficulty breathing or swallowing
Feeling that the throat is closing
Hives
Hoarseness
Itching
Nausea
Pounding heartbeat
Rash
Shortness of breath
Swelling of the eyes, face, lips, tongue, or throat
Vomiting
Blood pressure meds are notorious for causing confusion.
You were not there and thus cannot know her condition nor did you examine her as you obviously are not a physician. What you believe has no bearing on anything and you are unclear in your understanding of what "DUI" means.
The officer here could easily have written her up on DWAI and also confiscated her drivers license if she lived in the state I reside. She then would have to appear in court later and also would have to post bail to be released from custody. Her son was very insolent and irresponsible and the officer was patient in the situation. I am not a fan of police and one bad cop on a force makes all others look bad, the "blue wall of silence" we hear about is a weakness and criminal.
Do you think she was driving with ability impaired? Would you have ridden in her car that day or allowed your child to ride in her vehicle at the time depicted here? Her ability to drive a 2 ton vehicle was impaired as was her ability to comprehend what she was being told or to speak with cognitive thought.
The poll on public understanding police work is low and by design. Society is fed propaganda about police work which is not dangerous and police have immunities that keeps them from prosecution for crimes you would do hard time for. I live in a city of a half million people. In 160 years 13 officers have died on shift, 6 of those were not from crime but accidents of their own fault, 6 were committed by criminals and one was an officer shot to death and no suspects were ever known or found so the truth will never be known. How many loggers die each year? Construction workers? How much do they make a year and do they get benefits? Police make about $100,000 a year, have ALL benefits and early retirement with partial pay and keep benefits for life. They can pursue another career without losing their police pension and still collect Social Security as well. You have heard them say "low pay police work" but that is just propaganda. Oh yeah, they get overtime as well plus are rarely challenged while testifying in court which they refer to as "testilying".
@@cravinbob Blood Pressure meds can cause confusion, her son was being a dick, and like the cop said, although I hate to say it he was right, "Why are you letting her drive?" She certainly looked confused, and she's 80 years old. Cop was being a dick with the "Don't resist!" BS.
@@settheshallow8913 Totally. Is that how cops are taught to treat elderly folks? Since when was it ok to treat everyone a dangerous criminal? Handcuffs?
"So you don't know that you got into an accident?" Thats an objectionable question. The question presumes the subject.
Exactly. I didn’t at any time see any evidence an accident occurred that day.
It is a made-up title from the 4 graders that run the city!
That's linguistic entrapment. You either answer "yes" and thereby admit you were in an accident. Or you answer "no" thereby admitting you're so impaired that you didn't notice. Either way, you're screwed. It's the equivalent of the "Do you still beat your wife?" question.
Nice observation, that's an achievement Agent.
She cannot be trusted alone and has an aide but she can drive perfectly smh her son is delusional. Just because she’s been driving fine her whole life doesn’t mean she can continue to drive. Her son threatening them was ridiculous, but the officers were ridiculous arresting her!
What worries me is that she might have started driving again after she was released
Cop observing, thinking.., "Is this really necessary?"
@Yes Sir! .. If a toddler is in the street, that's a parental issue.
@Yes Sir! .. With all due respect, look at the likes on my comment. And then.., there's you. I think that sums it up. Any further engagement will be considered harassment, according to RUclips's standards. Have a wonderful day.
✌
@@PBLongfoot Which likes? So far I count zero.
@@johanbruijnooge6818.. The 59 shown above. ^^^
@Jack Hack .. Agreed.
Poor grandma you can easily tell she didn't understand the instructions and English isn't her first language and she's old
Cop is a prick. What would he do if his mother or grandmother was treated like that? He's a piece of shit. An order following robot-puppet with no morals.
She didn't understand because she was as impaired as a drunk at four times the legal blood alcohol content.
THEN SHE SHOULDN'T HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSE!
@@hoosierhyperwatch5884 I don't want her on the road jeopardizing the safety of others. She is unfit for operating a vehicle.
If she can't understand the instructions, she shouldn't be driving.
If I could be arrested for accidentally going for the wrong place to change to park, I would have been arrested multiple times after I got my new car. That's not a great indicator of impairment, it's a better indicator of an unfamiliar car or muscle memory from previous vehicles.
Honestly this officer wasn’t listening. Obviously it was more of a language barrier. I understood what she was explaining ,she did explained perfectly that 6 months ago she was hit,prior. Elderly have impairment speaking at times when nervous, this female cop kept going in more circles it’s extremely obvious this cop doesn’t have any experience w/elderly. I worked with elderly professionally for over 20 yrs. Seems like they are taking the “call” that it’s beyond obvious theirs no damage to neither car. This was definitely token way outta line .
In this particular case, the YOUNG Officer could have well served this citizen and himself by calling medical to evaluate the PATIENT as a skilled prudent officer would. As a trained officer in DUI investigation, this should have been evident that this was not a typically presented DUI and could have in fact been a life threatening event.
I completely agree. He was a total dick, she obviously had something going on and medical would have been a better call. Likely the same outcome too - she'd be off the road, but with the added benefit of better publicity for himself and his department. I mean come on, show people that you care about them.
She told him otherwise.
@@bevintx5440 how so?
Should the officer call medial attention for every impaired driver, or just nice old white ladies?
Bill Cook naw, he should just arrest everyone and not use any common sense.
I was given a field sobriety after I dodged a large animal and went off the road and into a ditch partly filled with mosquitoes. I hadn’t had a drink in probably over a month, so that wasn’t the issue. However, the trooper “smelled something” and I got the test. I’m over 60 now. The test wasn’t easy (yes, it’s hell getting old). He stopped it part way through and said I was fine. The smell, it turned out, was bug spray.
As far as this incident, there’s little doubt that the deputy was going to take the elderly driver to the slammer until his supervisor, a cooler head, said to send her home with her son.
The initial reason for the stop turned out to be bogus. No crime was committed. So what happened after was questionable. Granted, the elderly woman needed a medical evaluation, not jail.
From what I've seen and experienced myself, many, many cops are liars. They say that they smell alcohol anytime they think a person would have been drinking. They did that with a twenty-year- old athlete who didn't drink at all. He used that as an excuse, as well as a bunch of other lies that weren't true like fumbling with his registration. That one's on this channel. Then when he blew 0.0, the cop switched to saying that he could be on drugs. Well the smell of alcohol is quite different from the smell of any drug. I have personally experienced cops lying for their own benefit. We've also seen it many times on this channel.
Fruit of the poisonous tree?
I’m 31 and I can’t pass it so I understand
She's safe to drive but she's not safe from abusive police in her community !
I wish my grandmother had been pulled over before they finally took away her license. She had dementia and my family had contacted the DMV to have her reevaluated. My grandmother refused to be retested and continued driving until the assisted living facility my grandfather was at contacted the police. She became belligerent and her license was taken away and she was forcibly committed. If anything, I pity the police who had to deal with her. My grandmother was a danger to both herself and others on the road. In this case, it was a big sense of relief to the family. I have no sympathy for the son. He knew his mother should not be driving yet did nothing to stop it. I would have given the police officer a B+ and the son a D-. I am not at all surprised no lawyer will take the case.
"Ma'am, are you ok? Do you need any help? Is there anyone from your family we can call? We are just concerned about your well being" - That would be the way to go in this interaction. But hell no! This sociopath put an old lady in handcuffs......
You seem to forget that the police were called due to a car accident she was alleged to be involved in. Followed by Doctor's Staff noting her seemingly "drunk" behavior and expressed concern. The Officer is far from a sociopath and was justified in everything he did. I could give a fuck about compassion for anyone driving under the influence be they 16, 47 or 99. Don't care if they have illnesses or close to death. I don't care, especially that the son is pissed and scared. He specifically that she lives with him because she needs looking after, yet he lets her drive. Bullshit!!
Exactly!!!!
@@cup_cuppy_cuppers5817 Amazing logic! Guilty until proven innocent right?!?! I couldn't care less if the Staff thought she was "drunk". Anyone can call the Police and make any claim. The Police is supposed to be neutral. To interact with the public in a respectfull manner. (I am pro Police! I am just against dumb and psycopath cops).
Was she driving under the influence?!?! Can you please answer me that? If she has a valid driver's license and hasn't committed any crime, she is allowed to drive. There is no arguments agains that.
Now, you can ask yourself if she is still able to do so. And that's where the police should've been a bit more careful in this interaction.
But hey, you seem to be a smart fella, so, what do I know.....
@@nadominhoca in the state of florida merely being behind the wheel with access to the keys can land you a DUI. You could drop the keys outside the door, lay back and take a nap and STILL get a DUI. Why? Cause you have access to the keys.
@@cup_cuppy_cuppers5817 No the Drs office should have called her family they dropped the ball then the rent a cop didn't call her family the idiot cop never called her family and explained to them her medicine or medical contion she should not be driving because they probably didn't realize it. The officers job protect and serve. He should have protected her and the public not allowing her to drive and calling her family not freaking arresting her its called discernment and not being a freaking robot. Arrest and charge is all he could think.
She's clearly a threat that could potentially harm those two officers. Good thing they cuffed her. ROFL
She was clearly a threat and could potentially harm the public. If someone is placed under arrest, the officers MUST cuff them, it's not a choice. The mistake is not calling EMS for the woman. Another mistake is the son allowing her to drive about town.
@@jeffsmith825 You're wrong.
If someone is not safe to drive a car, that person indeed is a threat to everyone in that same road. It doesn’t need an intent to hurt, just slow reflexes or blurred vision.
@@Jiepers if only there was a way for her to get a ride home...
@@GreatLordJason you mean that son? To who officers released that lady to?
It is glaringly obvious set that 80 year old woman is not drunk. And just because she leaned on her car does not mean she can't stand up, she keeps telling him she's tired. He's a jerk and he's just harassing her at this point but arresting her is absolutely freaking ridiculous.
It’s not obvious. Elderly people drink too. I would’ve assumed medical emergency but alcohol could’ve been a factor.
For anyone who has questions about the safety of their parents, or their own driving, there are driving instructors in most larger cities who focus on geriatric driving and driving after stroke or brain injury. Its pricey but worth the piece of mind if you arent sure.
My dad lived in a small town, where i had grown up. One of my high school classmates was the town marshal. I didnt want to be the one to take away dads keys. I asked my friend. I was told not to worry, as everyone in town knew dads truck by sight, and just made sure to stay clear. Face palm. I stole dads keys and substituted a look alike for his truck key. Every time he decided to drive, i told him that we had to send to ford for a new key, and it was in the mail.
He did the pen test like 5 times. It's clear that she speaks how old people do AND she has a heavy accent. Context matters.
@Yes Sir! Allegedly.
@Yes Sir! Well I'm sorry that you want to live in a world where officers abuse their powers because THEY think she's unfit to drive, but most of the rest of us do not.
@Yes Sir! You've missed my point entirely.
Of course if she is unfit to drive she shouldn't be driving. However, it isn't the officers duty to judge whether or not she is fit to drive in general, but to determine whether he reasonably believes that she is a danger to herself or others at that point in time. "Hitting something last week, and maybe hitting something today (we're not sure because there's no evidence or witnesses), but she's old and difficult to communicate with" is not sufficient evidence of that. She would need to undergo a medical evaluation in order to determine if she is fit to drive. She did, and she passed.
Running the same sobriety test over and over again accomplishes nothing, but it proves that the officer WANTED to find a reason to arrest her. It's a very common and underhanded tactic. If you're fine with having the police hassle you because they want something, more power to you, but we're fighting hard right this very second to combat this type of "vigilant" policing. Especially the kind where trying to file official complaints results in threats of arrest.
She can't even put her car in park bro. She was obviosly impaired and can't drive. Age isn't an excuse.
@@Figgy20000 Dude lmao she doesn’t seem to speak good English so that’s one good reason, another is if hypothetically she isn’t intoxicated she is being harassed and falsely detained for committing zero crimes. I’d not listen to the officer either. Followed up on the case, turns out her drug screening cane up negative for everything including alocohol, so she wasn’t intoxicated. When my great grandmother was on chemo she behaves not too differently from the senior in this video.
4:43 "The vehicle that you hit" Dude decided she was guilty before even beginning to conduct a proper investigation
Yes that annoyed me so much!
Yeah, the guy was all over the place stating "facts" when many of those words should've had "allegedly", "according to witness" etc. near them
Exactly and no victim
Good thing they cuffed such a dangerous threat. Seems more like frustration and anger than neutralizing a threat.
Young people have no experience for what it's like to be old. The Police scratch the bonnet of this woman's car with the metal of their file... totally disrespectful
🤣🤣🤣”I have good lawyers, and they can sue you out of everything you have”
*1 minute later*
“He is currently having trouble finding legal representation” ☠️
"I have good lawyers! They don't take my cases... or answer my phone calls... But they are very good!"
Not to mention “are you ready to face?! To face the judges?!”
This fucking idiot needs to calm the hell down and learn to control his mommy.
@@joshh535 its easy to keep calm when its not your mother, maybe havin piss for blood helps you, but man, this clown of an officer was wrong
@@joshh535 what the hell! Like you wouldn't be mad some pig handcuffed your mom like this. Control these cops!
@@markhudson6137 Maybe start with controling yourself.
If an arrest is the answer of the law in the US for driving under the influence of too much alcohol, drugs or medicals, then the police don't really have a choice but to arrest her, especially since her son wasn't there at that point.
From what I've seen that woman was a threat for the public in her car - and it's not likely to assume that it was different before the cops arrived.
As much I usually criticize the police, in this case I have to defend them.
Yeah, other laws - for example here in Germany you get only fined and your drivers license revoked - are better. But the police officers don't make the laws.
And they had every right to arrest not only that woman, but her son as well for threatening the officers do their job.
Cop: "Who is the president?"
Woman: "Putin"
lol. i heard Putin Trump.
Maybe she misheard the question.
Who does the president answer to?
@@cerebrumexcrement You may have heard that but it's been proved otherwise. well the accusations have been proven false.
☺☺☺☺☺☺☺😂😂😂😂😂😂
@Rodolfo Benza Even if they meant the US Putin is pretty much the president since trump is his bitch.
I am a retired health care professional, and I've watched this video twice. The officer was professional, and competent throughout this interaction. This elderly woman was not fit to be driving that day, and she should have been prevented from doing so, at least, until further evaluation, and follow up was done. An evaluation of her license was definitely warranted! She was rather coy, and was attempting to opt herself out of an important assessment; her behavior was quite concerning. The actions of her son were absolutely deplorable! She can "perfectly drive" (yet he ultimately admitted she was not safe to drive), and his threats were unacceptable, and so disgusting! God forgive she kills someone! Without follow up, and a major decision on whether she still should retain a valid license, this is a very dangerous situation, for her, and for everyone else on the road with her! She does not deserve 'a pass', just, because of her age! I definitely do not agree with the narrator's opinion, and/or 'grades' on, and for the officer, the stopped driver, or her son! A potential accident, or tragedy waiting to happen is scary, especially, because it was definitely preventable, Sherrey
The children often have trouble taking charge when their parents are too old to drive. I remember they never took grandma Renee's car keys away until she drove into a hardware store. She was very upset and hurt about not being allowed to drive too.
@@stevieme8642 It's definitely a very difficult decision for family to make the decision to actually take keys from a parent, for sure. That's why I always recommend the family quietly work with the parent's doctor to start the process (by making the alert about the parent's inability to drive); through the doctor, the assessment, and subsequent relinquishment of the license is then directed to the province or state, Sherrey
Shut up Karen.
I would've demanded the "damaged vehicle" return to the scene immediately
24:36
"...her speech is slurred"
MFer shes 80 and English is NOT her primary language, that you are instantly aware of upon contact. Wow...
I would say most of her "non-compliance" is due to her trying to comply and agree with the officer, but the language barrier got in the way.
When her was asking "have you been in an accident today?". She was hearing "have you ever been in an accident?"
That's why she kept answering " No, never, not for 43 years!".
I am glad he ultimately made the right call and didn't take her to jail.
@@carlydavis6196 The cop only let her go home with her son, after he was told to do so by his Sargent when he called in for advise.
The cop was too stupid.
This isn't a language issue. She hit a parked car. Her speech is slow and she appears drunk.
Yes ...Bad Cop work..! They should have brought a linguist..! She is 80 ..At 55 I cant see the pen movement and I dont drink..! ! Blah ..Blah ..!
Surprised the SWAT team wasn't called in.
She's not black.
They should have called Rambo !
@@mikewil7571 stop with the freaking race card! your part of the problem with this kind of rhetoric...no better than the officer onscene
Lol if she was black they would’ve arrested them when they started walking away or when they looked away.
They were saying the exact same thing. Both the police officer and the son wanted the license taken away and the mother to be medically evaluated. Too bad they couldn’t communicate 😢
They just want to punish her for the sake of punishing. Putting her in jail isn’t going to do any good. They need to get her help.
She won’t be hurting people in jail.
This one is a tough case. 1. You have older woman who may have been impaired due to mental illness (such as dementia), medication impairment, etc - which all indicates she shouldn’t be driving. 2. Without any written documentation (such as a written warning) this could possibly occur again which will make it harder to revoke her license if there another incident 3. I would assume the son is the caretaker, but my question is if he is aware of the danger she would be on the road- why let her have access to a vehicle?
He threatening the cop with taking everything he has in a situation that he is the one on the wrong surely did not help. Dumb as hell.
@@categoricamente1753 he wasn't in the wrong
My mother has been a danger to the public when she drives for as long as I’ve been alive. I’ve tried to keep her from driving, but she is extremely hard headed. Her doctors prescribe her too many benzodiazepines when she is a drug addict. I’ve threatened her doctors to try and keep them from prescribing them. Even without the drugs, she is a horrible driver. It’s a nightmare. You have no idea how difficult a mother can be. However, if I had custody of my mom, I wouldn’t let her drive. It’s only a matter of time before a video of her ends up on one of these channels.
He probably wants to stop her from driving but legally can't. Having a car is pretty freeing and as a grown person losing that would be devastating. I've had those talks with older parents and because they're my elder, refuse to listen to me. This is mostly on the cops for not calling an EMT to help them determine what is going on.
@@benjaminasmus3980 If he really needed to, he could request her license to be revoked by providing medical documentation stating she is unfit to drive a motor vehicle. If he going to be her personal care taker, then he should be providing alternate means of transportation. There are programs that transport the elderly to doctor appointments, stores, etc (most of these programs won’t cost anything, unless you want to hire personal transportation). I can understand not wanting to over step certain boundaries, but a care taker does have legal responsibilities to care for them (such as monitoring medication and providing mobility needs).
My mother was acting the same way one time, she didn't drink, she was septic. The cop should probably figure out that if someone is older the way she is, there may be another problem, it doesn't mean she's drinking.
Afraid her son would give her the give the keys back. But her doctor should also tell her. The cop asked her about any medical information and she said she had none. That is how impaired she was. No driving!
The son get an F with his threats. How does he get a B-???
There are a large number of senior citizens living in Florida and it's turning into one big nursing home and highways are the hallways. I can see where conducting a field sobriety test in Florida would be a nightmare. She appears to be unfit to drive but her son was there to take her home. She needs to be evaluated to see if she should even have a driver's license.
That's reasonable. Taking her to jail and cuffing her arms behind her back wasn't.
@@wvrjl I doubt this woman was jailed. The handcuffs were likely used to try, and scare her to not drive until the paperwork was summitted to assess, and subsequently take her license away (for both Mom, and son!). The denial, and arrogance were significant, Sherrey
most people 80 and above are not fit to drive but they are all over the place driving . when u are that old u got nothin left to lose anyway .
This is the first DWI for a senior in Florida that I have seen. Most I have seen are young 20 year olds
@@bc5001 well they actually ended up letting her go with her son so technically she was not arrested and booked on a dui .