Ex-Cop Forces Officers to Give Up and Leave

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  • Опубликовано: 31 окт 2021
  • Second Channel: / @johnlang6593
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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.
    FAIR USE
    This video falls under fair use protection as it has been manipulated for educational purposes with the addition of commentary. This video is complementary to illustrate the educational value of the information being delivered through the commentary and has inherently changed the value, audience and intention of the original video.
    Original video: • JSO SHERIFF ILLEGALLY ...
    Awakening the Masses’ channel: / @awakeningthemasses8296
    Sources:
    Salinas v. Texas- bit.ly/31nyXF9
    Berkemer v. McCarty- bit.ly/3gcm7B9
    United States v. Arvizu- bit.ly/3yCZL3j
    Alabama v. White- bit.ly/3vTiAOX
    Fla. Stat. § 784.048- bit.ly/3vPwdPf
    Stalking Jury Instructions- bit.ly/3beQsMN
    Fla. Stat. § 493.6101- bit.ly/2ZuvCqv

Комментарии • 11 тыс.

  • @AuditTheAudit
    @AuditTheAudit  2 года назад +1528

    Thank you for taking the time to watch this video. Stick around to the end of the video. It gets more interesting as it goes on!

    • @md.m.8372
      @md.m.8372 2 года назад +15

      Any day!!! Thanks & keep it up!

    • @watema3381
      @watema3381 2 года назад +14

      No, thank _you_ for another amazing production.
      It takes a long time to research the laws involved, and we appreciate your work.

    • @revoltpower9124
      @revoltpower9124 2 года назад +3

      Check your email man!! LOL

    • @beentheredonethat5908
      @beentheredonethat5908 2 года назад +12

      Always do brother, I'm a student of law and constitutional rights. I always enjoy the break down here, I don't always agree but your research is on point and we'll spoken, a great learning experience. I've been here from day one as well, ot is so awesome to see the growth over the years!

    • @RangerJahu
      @RangerJahu 2 года назад +6

      I thought this would be a good place to ask a simple question. I have an amazing interaction with a police officer, very brief only a few minutes, but its audio only. Do you have any interest in this? Its Canadian.

  • @-JonnyBoy-
    @-JonnyBoy- 2 года назад +13389

    The fact she knew he was there the entire time tells you how good of a private investigator he is lol

    • @adcolt54
      @adcolt54 2 года назад +1188

      that's what I was thinking, no much of a PI if your subject IDs you and then hems you up by calling the cops.

    • @robertmoon9756
      @robertmoon9756 2 года назад +522

      This PI sucks at his job

    • @YeeZus001
      @YeeZus001 2 года назад +1318

      I seen this video on another channel and apparently this was like the second or third investigator that got caught by her lol.

    • @originalhgc
      @originalhgc 2 года назад +909

      If he's working for the Church of Scientology, it might be intentional. They sometimes favor what's known as as "noisy investigation," where the subject, and all their neighbors and relatives, know that they are being investigated. It's an intimidation tactic.

    • @thesilentninja9255
      @thesilentninja9255 2 года назад +460

      I take it none of you has ever had counter surveillance training. The one of the only ways to avoid detection by someone who is paying attention to their surroundings is teams of follow cars that switch off periodically. Otherwise just making a few left or right turns will allow the subject to make a following vehicle.

  • @TheBulian1
    @TheBulian1 Год назад +294

    “Am I being suspected of a crime?”
    “Yes. Stalking.”
    👀

    • @LegDayLas
      @LegDayLas Год назад +33

      surprised it took the cops so long to actually say it, and they even backtrack it multiple times and even said "No, I do not have RAS of a crime" That line alone shoots them in the foot, because by their own admission, they don't, therefore they can not testify they do (even though they 100% do)

    • @CommissionerSleer
      @CommissionerSleer 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@LegDayLas I'm pretty sure cops are allowed to lie to suspects during investigations and interrogations (undercover cops need to be able to for example).
      So, how would them telling the supect they did not have RAS prevent them from testifying that they did have RAS (which, as you say, they did)?
      Witness: "I was lying to the suspect your honour"
      Judge: "Fair enough"

    • @LegDayLas
      @LegDayLas 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@CommissionerSleer Because that "lie" hurts their chances to get his ID, and forcing him to provide ID after telling him they have no RAS means a reasonable person would assume the cops do not have RAS, and thus ID is not required.
      Basically, it is coercion to tell him he is not detained, but also make lawful demands (aka under threat of arrest).

    • @CommissionerSleer
      @CommissionerSleer 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@LegDayLas It's not coercion. It's just stupid. But it doesn't prevent them telling a court that they did have RAS, which is the point.

    • @LegDayLas
      @LegDayLas 10 месяцев назад +7

      @@CommissionerSleer If a cop tells you something is not a crime, you do it, and the cop arrests you that is factually coercion.

  • @preachcaleb
    @preachcaleb 7 месяцев назад +17

    I love how ridiculous it is that remaining silent isn't enough to invoke my right to remain silent.

  • @ezekielthedragon7558
    @ezekielthedragon7558 Год назад +435

    The line between legal surveillance and stalking is so fine, it's insane that it is allowed at all.

    • @JesusProtects
      @JesusProtects Год назад +25

      At first sounds reasonable. It's a method to investigate someone with reasonable suspicion of being a criminal without them knowing, the surprise factor could be a great tool. BUT, what if the investigator abuses his position and starts legitimately stalking someone for some nefarious reason? Stealing from them, or taking illegal pictures of them, etc.

    • @bmo14lax
      @bmo14lax 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@JesusProtects I mean that's why you have a camera in your pocket as well, If you notice a stupid investigator like this film everything.

    • @TheAutumnWind_RN4L
      @TheAutumnWind_RN4L 11 месяцев назад +15

      I was recently interviewed by a private investigator because my wife was getting a job that required a certain security clearance. During my interview he let me know that he had already interviewed all of my neighbors and watched the house. On one hand, I was OK because we have nothing to hide. On the other hand, I was a little disturbed because he could've had pictures of me in my backyard in my underwear. How is that legal?

    • @AnthonyBlamthony
      @AnthonyBlamthony 11 месяцев назад +3

      There’s an explanation for that. It’s because they’re the same thing lol

    • @joshb8976
      @joshb8976 9 месяцев назад

      The difference is that stalkers usually try to make contact and have malicious intent. But if you leave your home a lot of expectations to privacy can be kissed goodbye.

  • @RidinDirtyRollinBurnouts
    @RidinDirtyRollinBurnouts 2 года назад +3346

    At the end of the day though, I cannot be mad that the police took a stalking complaint seriously. Imagine if they didn't look into and something happened. They have to do their job here, whether or not they made it difficult.

    • @lilyeetmeister6422
      @lilyeetmeister6422 2 года назад +524

      Absolutely, and the initial officer even said if you're an investigator just tell me and keep on going. Sure there's the risk of having the lady find out but had this prick just complied this would've been over in 2 minutes tops.

    • @rolandfischer931
      @rolandfischer931 2 года назад +229

      Yeah this guy wasn't really helping anyone here

    • @quebecoi1992
      @quebecoi1992 2 года назад +269

      he wanted to make a show and have a video to share on the media...

    • @halfassranch8363
      @halfassranch8363 2 года назад +303

      @@rolandfischer931 yeah he was just being a jerk, what a waste of resources and time. If some creep is following my wife I'd sure appreciate it if a cop would pull him over and ask a few questions. Ffs

    • @darktheories1758
      @darktheories1758 2 года назад +103

      @@lilyeetmeister6422 But there in lies the issue. When everyone just goes along with it to make their lives easier it. It can make cops become accustomed to everyone simply cooperating giving them a false sense of entitlement. It also in some cases causes cops to feel they have the right to overreach because no one else challenges them on the legality. So while I don't think you should intentionally start shit I don't think it's right to just go alone to get along if what the officers are actually doing is a violation against your actual rights. The idea that sense most people don't wish to assert their rights that no one else should is a bit strange. It's just a matter of opinion I guess.

  • @chrism6880
    @chrism6880 2 года назад +3564

    Why is it that ex-cops seem to know citizens' rights, but active cops rarely do? 🤔

    • @vinaypatel8578
      @vinaypatel8578 2 года назад +745

      Probably the reason they're ex-cops.

    • @johnnycigar2061
      @johnnycigar2061 2 года назад +68

      Good point

    • @danwhite4086
      @danwhite4086 2 года назад +317

      Because any decent officer who knows peoples rights abs stands up for them get pushed out of police work because fellow officers don’t like smart, educated and ethical officers in the force with them. Trust me…. I know….

    • @ISurfHawaii
      @ISurfHawaii 2 года назад +58

      Yeah, most police training in the US consists of learning defensive tactics and firearms training. As a generalization there is no formal training on law or the Constitution. Crazy, right?

    • @garretgang8349
      @garretgang8349 2 года назад +39

      Selection Bias.
      People don't post videos of cops who treated them with respect.

  • @rodakitheka662
    @rodakitheka662 Год назад +169

    I nearly cried when he said “you don’t answer questions, you just stalk young ladies.”

    • @freshswagga100
      @freshswagga100 8 месяцев назад +5

      Cop was petty

    • @sinisterthoughts2896
      @sinisterthoughts2896 8 месяцев назад +27

      ​@@freshswagga100and correct in this case. Just because the guy knows his rights doesn't mean he isn't human garbage.

    • @KingStr0ng
      @KingStr0ng 8 месяцев назад +7

      ​@@sinisterthoughts2896Is it innocent until proven guilty, or guilty until proven innocent? You have no proof that the man did anything. Just because she *SAID* that he did something doesn't mean that he did something. She's not automatically right just because she said so.

    • @xxx_epic_sniper_xxx2.021
      @xxx_epic_sniper_xxx2.021 8 месяцев назад +15

      @@KingStr0ng so if your daughter was being followed by a middle aged man you would prefer the cops just let him go about his business he could have easily ended this by providing his card but he would rather make things much more difficult

    • @KingStr0ng
      @KingStr0ng 8 месяцев назад +8

      @@xxx_epic_sniper_xxx2.021 Do you know what innocent until proven guilty means? Just because someone *says* a guy is stalking that does not mean that he's actually stalking.
      People lie.
      Would you like to be thrown in jail for theft or murder just because someone *said* you did it? If your answer is no, then you have no reason to argue further.

  • @johnavernia1026
    @johnavernia1026 Год назад +377

    I mean, to be fair, this is the kind of report they should follow up. If that happen to my sister, my mom, or any of my love ones, I want them to do this. It's really hard to sympathize with the PI if what he did could even cause, law enforcement started to ignore these kind of reports.

    • @ilkyway5854
      @ilkyway5854 Год назад +5

      Exactly!

    • @slow2.0turbo
      @slow2.0turbo Год назад +4

      @@ilkyway5854 idk if you both heard the “Private Investigator” part which it clearly states he could’ve been charged for stalking if he wasn’t a private investigator. He even brings up the code where it allows PI’s to basically stalk they’re subjects.

    • @vivianking4563
      @vivianking4563 Год назад +5

      He just knew his rights, and stuck to them. Is that a first amendment audit now?

    • @rigdigwus
      @rigdigwus Год назад +43

      @@slow2.0turbo but he never said to the police that he is a PI. that’s the fucking point. police doesn’t know if he is a pi or a fucking stalker

    • @carlr458
      @carlr458 11 месяцев назад +19

      ​@@rigdigwus agreed. The officer even said he'd be understanding if he was a PI, but the man refused to state as such.

  • @maxd234
    @maxd234 2 года назад +775

    Clearly Hoffmann doesn’t know the old stay two cars back when tailing rule. He needs the spook-o-meter from GTA SA

    • @eyeamstrongest
      @eyeamstrongest 2 года назад +14

      just me or did tailing missions make you drive even more erratically

    • @jaimeozoria89
      @jaimeozoria89 2 года назад +3

      I’m here lmao 🤣🤣🤣🤣 ooo man I needed this laugh 😆😆😆

    • @_meangreenjersey973
      @_meangreenjersey973 2 года назад +1

      😂😂😂

    • @maddog7999
      @maddog7999 2 года назад

      i know him. i worked with him. he’s one of the best. and he needs ZERO input from you🤣

    • @maddog7999
      @maddog7999 2 года назад

      @@eyeamstrongest you wldnt believe the damage we cause to our vehicles!

  • @KJApexxmedia5511
    @KJApexxmedia5511 2 года назад +2062

    The PI said exercising his rights doesn't mean he's giving them a hard time but then the officer said it does... Wow that explains a lot.....

    • @libmrducks
      @libmrducks 2 года назад +89

      They were clearly flustered didn't know how to handle the situation.

    • @derpman8494
      @derpman8494 2 года назад +93

      Yes the wording was shitty, but he’s being an asshole more than he’s exercising his rights

    • @user-cm9ef4fw7m
      @user-cm9ef4fw7m 2 года назад +50

      @@derpman8494 he deserves an award

    • @wrene2UFcFighter
      @wrene2UFcFighter 2 года назад +120

      @@derpman8494 cops got no right to pull you over unless you broken the law. Cop didn’t see anything and the lady’s complaint was hearsay. Id say he has the right to be an asshole

    • @307living3
      @307living3 2 года назад +67

      @@derpman8494 its not against the law to be a asshole he treated them far better then i would've

  • @richardwoods9102
    @richardwoods9102 7 месяцев назад +4

    If he had admitted that he was a private investigator they would have asked for his credentials, and the vicious circle continues...

  • @jessecota6639
    @jessecota6639 Год назад +302

    He certainly did a great job of knowing and asserting his rights, if only he was as good at surveillance, then encounter would have never happened.

    • @LegDayLas
      @LegDayLas Год назад

      He didn't know them though, the cops were in the right to get his ID. This was RAS of Stalking all day. Are the statements from the female alone enough to arrest him for Stalking? No, but this is irrelevant. Cops don't need PC (what is required to arrest) to demand ID, they need RAS which is a VERY low standard. Cop's didn't know his rights either, so they didn't actually go far enough.

    • @anyadatzaklatszjutub
      @anyadatzaklatszjutub Год назад

      haha

    • @prismpyre7653
      @prismpyre7653 Год назад +1

      wow you think THATS the problem with what he's doing?

    • @Vykcin
      @Vykcin 11 месяцев назад +8

      It’s so funny, but you’re 100% right
      I could be wrong, because there’s no way to know completely, but I think his behavior stemmed from his ego and the fact he got made by a onlooking civilian
      The other thing, though is he might’ve not been investigating and being one of those rights activist so he use the Maroge of a PI following someone to trap them. Regardless, this video is extremely unique because it displays the cops backing down and being OK with the civilian controlling the situation,

    • @wesleystafford8521
      @wesleystafford8521 11 месяцев назад

      BINGO! LOL

  • @Ringmaster78320
    @Ringmaster78320 2 года назад +724

    The best thing about this channel is the constant reference of legal decisions and actual laws and codes.

    • @WorldWalker128
      @WorldWalker128 2 года назад +9

      And it's mostly neutral about it.

    • @krbrown948
      @krbrown948 2 года назад +7

      Yes. Its absolutely unparalleled as far as Ive found.

    • @ShmuckCanuck
      @ShmuckCanuck 2 года назад +3

      I mean it’s not that good at it tho
      Kinda overlooks a main central thing that this dude ; who is driving a vehicle; on a road refuses to identity himself
      And you have to do that everything else aside lol
      But responding to a public complaint is also a valid reason to approach someone on the street lol
      They also told him what they thought he was doing
      Him disagreeing that following a lady isn’t suspicious doesn’t like him as a citizen tell them cop thrrr suspicion isn’t valid
      That’s what judges are for and who he gets to; as a citizen; argue it with them lmao
      And he’s being super uncorperstivr lmao

    • @Sotryn_Fox
      @Sotryn_Fox 2 года назад +2

      @@ShmuckCanuck ATA has gone over identification laws in other videos. In this situation, he did not have to identify himself legally
      And invoking his 5th amendment right is not being uncooperative. It's being knowledgeable of his rights as a citizen.

    • @ShmuckCanuck
      @ShmuckCanuck 2 года назад +1

      @@Sotryn_Fox I didn’t talk about the fifth amendment at all
      I talked about the fact that while you don’t have to identity yourself randomly when walking
      Or driving on private property
      You can be asked to and do have to produce your drivers licence and Insurance if asked if driving on a public road
      They can literally just ask to check that
      I didn’t say anything about the fifth amendment or him being cooperative or not
      Now obviously if he’d wanted the legal leeway a private investigator gets it would’ve presumably behooved him too cooperate and identity himself as such to the police who had no reason to think he was since he wouldn’t even tell them him name let alone that
      And additionally; if someone calls you saying they feel unsafe cause someone has been following them
      That’s a valid reason for police to be like hey why are you following that person
      That’s honestly; kind of one of the major purposes of having police

  • @jlspracher
    @jlspracher Год назад +942

    Hearing an ex cop argue with cops using a lot of the same phrasing made my day. Had to stop myself from laughing at work

    • @dtz1000
      @dtz1000 Год назад

      What a surprise. The ex policeman is also a dickhead.

    • @diesellove
      @diesellove Год назад +3

      🤣🤣

    • @ABCeasyas-yj2ot
      @ABCeasyas-yj2ot Год назад +6

      This guy ruined his own case

    • @crisdeluna9069
      @crisdeluna9069 Год назад +3

      @@ABCeasyas-yj2ot how so 🤔

    • @ABCeasyas-yj2ot
      @ABCeasyas-yj2ot Год назад +14

      @@crisdeluna9069 claims theres no pc for the stop yet none is needed. RS is absolutely accomplished here for the stop and there is absolutely a need/requirement to ID. He should have 100% been arrested here, the alleged victim pointed out his car and its even covered here.
      Just because he filmed, named dropped, and yes as mentioned deliberately withheld info that would dispel all the officers fears doesn’t mean they should have tucked tail and ran.
      Hypothetically with the same info provided in this video with some google search for clarification that’s 100% a justifiable arrest. All that I may further request if I was those cops, is the lady who called to drive past and confirm again.
      This same point is actually covered in this video.
      The cops had RS
      The driver did refuse to ID when required
      The driver was further combative regarding continued refusals
      Due to purposely withholding the info that would quickly quell this situation what case would he have.
      I admittedly don’t know Florida law, but I believe in this the states are the same.
      Stop for RS, arrest for refusal to ID when required.

  • @ricoswartz345
    @ricoswartz345 8 месяцев назад +4

    It was amazing watching the same tone and language police use on citizens be turned around on the deputies. They got owned hard...

  • @xJayhawkFANx
    @xJayhawkFANx Год назад +87

    I actually commend the officers. Taking a stalking threat seriously and, for the most part, act reasonable during the stop. If my wife thought she was being followed I would want the cop to be as thorough as these cops.

    • @Radionut
      @Radionut 7 месяцев назад +7

      I’m sure there’s plenty of police around your area and that will let you lick their boots

    • @xJayhawkFANx
      @xJayhawkFANx 7 месяцев назад +8

      @@Radionut mad lol

    • @pastorofmuppets8834
      @pastorofmuppets8834 7 месяцев назад +5

      Yes, but they needed to let it go when they needed to let it go - or to tell him that he is suspected of stalking which is a crime

    • @pugachevskobra5636
      @pugachevskobra5636 2 месяца назад

      That's bullshit lmfao; they left without determining whether the guy was a stalker or not. If he actually was she would've been shit outta luck dealing with these incompetents cause he was completely free at the end of the encounter. "Ma'am I have good news and bad news; the good news is I talked to the guy stalking you. The bad news is he is completely free to continue stalking or investigating you; I couldn't determine which. You might want to hire a private investigator to see who he is and what he's up to; I have absolutely nothing for you in that regard."

    • @user-gz8st9fe8p
      @user-gz8st9fe8p 2 месяца назад

      Admitting that he's stalking her will not help him.

  • @davich_
    @davich_ 2 года назад +797

    Imagine having to "invoke" your rights, like it's some kind of activated skill and not a passive one.

    • @benninger123
      @benninger123 2 года назад +18

      If your wife was being followed would you not want the cops to check the person out. You can't always go against the police , there definitely are times when police are right.

    • @politicjunkee
      @politicjunkee 2 года назад +62

      @@benninger123 giving up your civil liberties “for sometimes they’re right” is what is wrong with the system.

    • @TheAwesomes2104
      @TheAwesomes2104 2 года назад +27

      @@benninger123 and if it was you going about your daily job, you'd also not want to be stopped, harassed, and denied your rights by police every day.
      We can't say screw everybody's rights just because my wife feels uncomfortable.

    • @r2Kd0ugernaut
      @r2Kd0ugernaut 2 года назад +9

      @@benninger123 if my wife was being followed by an investigator then it means she probably did something wrong, invalid arguement.

    • @user-nr2kb3mw8i
      @user-nr2kb3mw8i 2 года назад +16

      Yeah its crazy how we have the 5th amendment right to remain silent but if we dont verbally say we invoke or plead the 5th it doesnt apply and that silence can be used against us

  • @stoatmuldoon3131
    @stoatmuldoon3131 2 года назад +1654

    "The fact that I'm exercising my rights does not mean I'm not cooperating, sir"
    "Yes it does"
    Well hat pretty much sums up the entire problem doesn't it?

    • @AUTgriesbrei
      @AUTgriesbrei 2 года назад +21

      If he uses his right to not cooperate, he is not cooperating. For his sentence to be right he should have said: "....does in a strictly legal sence and only regarding the required cooperation with a police investigation, not mean I'm not cooperating, sir." or "....does not under all definitions of cooperation mean I'm not cooperating, sir." But in his general use of the english languge his sentence is incorrect.

    • @antiform47
      @antiform47 2 года назад +29

      its like if a a bystander sees a man running off in a direction, then the cops ask the bystander "did you see anyone running away?" and the bystander refuses to speak or cooperate becauase hes not "legally required to". Then later we find that the guy who ran off got away with kidnapping. Just because its the guys right not to give information doesnt mean theyre not uncooperative/an asshole

    • @r0ky_M
      @r0ky_M 2 года назад +6

      @@AUTgriesbrei
      but its not in general use, its applied in the specific context of constitutional law and interaction with LE.

    • @jamescollier3
      @jamescollier3 2 года назад +4

      I'm thinking maybe he wasn't getting paid for this, and to say, "I'm a PI and following her for my job," would have been a lie

    • @AUTgriesbrei
      @AUTgriesbrei 2 года назад +1

      @@r0ky_M It is in general use because there are at least two things going on: An Investigation and a meeting between a citizen and LE.
      In the former context he is not cooperative because he isn't "someone who is being helpful" because he does not give any information.
      In the later context he is cooperative because he is "someone who is being helpful" because he is staying where he is.
      Therefore two contexts exist.

  • @splinter4103
    @splinter4103 Год назад +4

    Now imagine what cops do to people that aren't ex law enforcement and not recording. Corruption run rampant.

  • @Ms.Delphine1204
    @Ms.Delphine1204 11 месяцев назад +123

    He was incredibly hostile and incredulous considering he was actually following this woman.

    • @Chubbybear21
      @Chubbybear21 11 месяцев назад +6

      He’s a PI. They have every right too.

    • @AnthonyBlamthony
      @AnthonyBlamthony 11 месяцев назад +29

      @@Chubbybear21 No duh, you’re missing the point. She’s saying he’s acting as if the cop should’ve magically known he was a PI. He could’ve just told him that and the interaction could’ve gone from 20 minutes to 2. But instead he went the route bad cops do and made it harder than it has to be solely to defend an ego.

    • @AnthonyBlamthony
      @AnthonyBlamthony 11 месяцев назад +20

      @@Chubbybear21 I mean come on, you wouldn’t raise an eyebrow a guy who (as far as you know) is following some woman around Great distances and is visually trying to stay hidden in the night’s darkness? You wouldn’t think anything of that?😂

    • @Ms.Delphine1204
      @Ms.Delphine1204 10 месяцев назад +12

      @@AnthonyBlamthony thank you! That’s exactly the point I was making!

    • @jlo7770
      @jlo7770 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@AnthonyBlamthony visually trying to stay hidden in the nights darkness lol lmao

  • @jamesreese1999
    @jamesreese1999 Год назад +1013

    And as a former PI, I would say that "stalking" is a reasonable, articulable suspicion. He could have dispelled the whole situation by producing his PI license. When I did surveillance, I let the local cops know I was in the area. Easy-peasy, and solves a multitude of potential problems.

    • @davedavidson4548
      @davedavidson4548 Год назад +66

      Yeah the guy is lucky he didn't get arrested for failure to ID. He seems to think that the police have to articulate their reasonable suspicion to him, but they don't. They only have to articulate it to the judge.

    • @Nalianna
      @Nalianna Год назад +30

      @@davedavidson4548 I'd be 100% comfortable in dragging the shitty cops in front of a judge to do that.

    • @connoc5078
      @connoc5078 Год назад

      @@Nalianna The shitty cop is the ex-cop PI in this video.

    • @vikingnoise
      @vikingnoise Год назад +70

      I think this is dead on. The suspected crime was stalking, and his vehicle matched the caller's description. That's sufficient grounds for asking him to produce ID and establish that, as a PI, he wasn't stalking.

    • @Nalianna
      @Nalianna Год назад +20

      @@vikingnoise No worries, wake up a judge, OR articulate your suspicion.
      Neither? No dice.

  • @moneybutter
    @moneybutter Год назад +1197

    Imagine hiring a private investigator to spy on your cheating wife and finding out he’s a first amendment auditor on the side😂😢.

    • @rickwells9929
      @rickwells9929 Год назад +59

      Officers get an A+ and the driver gets an F

    • @chrism1420
      @chrism1420 Год назад +31

      And she saw him right away.

    • @ryans3757
      @ryans3757 Год назад +40

      @@chrism1420 That's not necessarily a bad thing. Sometimes investigators intentionally make their presence known, either to intimidate the subject of the investigation, or to "fool" the subject; investigators sometimes work in teams. In this case, if he had a partner, he makes himself very obvious, and when she busts him, she thinks she's in the clear, and that's when the other guy gets the dirt on her.
      In this case, he wasn't the first PI hired to investigate her, so she was probably already highly vigilant. I'm betting that's why she waited and let him follow her for 2 days; she wasn't concerned for her safety, she knew what was going on, and let him tail her to confirm her suspicions.

    • @johnpopoff7950
      @johnpopoff7950 Год назад +4

      He may have been a cop at one time.

    • @johnpopoff7950
      @johnpopoff7950 Год назад +23

      @@rickwells9929 Wrong way. Turn it around. The cops get an F driver gets an A+

  • @Zerospacedude
    @Zerospacedude Год назад +21

    “You don’t answer questions; you just stalk young ladies” lmao 😂

  • @maxwellspeedwell2585
    @maxwellspeedwell2585 8 месяцев назад +1

    The cops need cameras that cannot be turned-off, and live stream to a 24/7 citizens oversight committee.

  • @RobWill5864
    @RobWill5864 2 года назад +1420

    Shoutout to the lady for even recognizing that someone was following her. Most people are so caught up in their own little world that they wouldn’t even notice someone right behind them, following them everywhere they went.

    • @dwaynemclaren7160
      @dwaynemclaren7160 2 года назад +15

      very true! futz i can follow my wife for half a day and she would have no clue lol

    • @mybad8805
      @mybad8805 2 года назад +19

      @@dwaynemclaren7160 Oh she knows your there, she just doesn't give a, JK. Now try that trick on your soon too be ex wife.

    • @dwaynemclaren7160
      @dwaynemclaren7160 2 года назад +23

      @@mybad8805 WHAT?

    • @Kyle-qj1zf
      @Kyle-qj1zf 2 года назад +52

      Or she was well aware she was being investigated because she did something wrong and is on the lookout. Most normal cops first question is not “Are u an investigator”?

    • @ffwr-109
      @ffwr-109 2 года назад +2

      According to this video nothing can be done about it in reality.

  • @YourSavant
    @YourSavant 2 года назад +2420

    "The fact that I am exercising my rights does not mean I am not cooperating"
    "Yes it does" This is the problem with modern policing.

    • @peoplenewstoday
      @peoplenewstoday 2 года назад +25

      Not True.

    • @YourSavant
      @YourSavant 2 года назад +99

      @@peoplenewstoday How is my statement "not true"?

    • @peoplenewstoday
      @peoplenewstoday 2 года назад +95

      @@YourSavant your correct, the cops are not. Sorry about that.

    • @YourSavant
      @YourSavant 2 года назад +37

      @@peoplenewstoday Ah okay, no worries then.

    • @peoplenewstoday
      @peoplenewstoday 2 года назад +70

      @@YourSavant I don’t erase my mistakes. I just learn. Sorry about that.

  • @codiesdad717
    @codiesdad717 Год назад +5

    The cops should have to go through a yearly “law review” to keep their accreditation.

  • @edwardhickey5185
    @edwardhickey5185 4 месяца назад +3

    That's how to do it. They new he was a a investigator. When they ran his plates

  • @taylorlibby7642
    @taylorlibby7642 2 года назад +648

    He didn't want to admit that he was a P.I. because the deputies would have told the subject of his investigation. I would have definitely called the cops about some shmuck following me around for three days.

    • @user-pd5vo7yy2w
      @user-pd5vo7yy2w 2 года назад +148

      Yes, im on the fence about this one I’m 100% with people invoking their rights but i feel bad for the lady who is scared even though the PI is within his rights.

    • @taylorlibby7642
      @taylorlibby7642 2 года назад +33

      @@user-pd5vo7yy2w Agreed. Same here.

    • @nacoran
      @nacoran 2 года назад +36

      In a stand your ground state following someone around for 3 days...

    • @taylorlibby7642
      @taylorlibby7642 2 года назад +90

      @@user-pd5vo7yy2w What people may not understand is that P.I.'s following people around and constantly taking photos is quite frequently used as an intimidation tactic by a third party. The "Church" of Scientology is infamous for using this to intimidate anyone who questions their practices.

    • @richardflorence3927
      @richardflorence3927 2 года назад +20

      The investigator was ticked off because because he lost his tail on her.... Now this investigation is holding him up and he doesn't want to give up the info in the case that they would inform her. He's stalling but they won't take a hint and let him go so he can catch back up so he got angry.

  • @steevehoyoufat9155
    @steevehoyoufat9155 2 года назад +534

    The sheriff literally said "asserting your rights is suspicious."

    • @r0ky_M
      @r0ky_M 2 года назад +33

      You can blame the general public for that,
      coz too many bend over for LE giving them the sense of entitlement they have.

    • @jamesradcliffe3985
      @jamesradcliffe3985 2 года назад +12

      police do not believe that common citizens should have civil rights. They are smart enough to realize they should not admit that on camera. However they firmly believe in their right to invoke THEIR civil rights.

    • @adimisadimis8621
      @adimisadimis8621 2 года назад +1

      LMFAO

    • @iEssense
      @iEssense 2 года назад +13

      In this particular case, it is though, right or not, it comes off as suspicious. If someone was following me around, i stopped him to ask why, and he refuses to answer, i immediately assume he is following me, but why? Am i in danger? is my family in danger? What is he planning?
      You do have your rights, but seeing this in another scenario, that is fully possible to be happening, if they let this man go without verifying who he is, or if he is following this woman or not, and the next night that woman ends up murdered, because this man was stalking her.
      So while yes, you do have your rights, being of assistance to remove suspicion should be done regardless. Like in the video, if he had simply said "i am a PI, heres proof", the police says "great! youre not doing anything wrong, and that woman isnt in danger, have a nice day." (They even asked him that)
      By refusing to give any information, even though it is "asserting your rights", while it does not mean you are guilty, most definitely makes you come across as suspicious to everyone else, police officer or not.
      So yes, you do not have to say anything, but if you can make everything settle down and go away with basically half a sentence, why wouldnt you? What he did effectively makes everyones job harder and puts people at risk. Taking what that sheriff said out of context to apply elsewhere doesnt help anyone, because that sentence was entirely correct in this case, and valid at that, since this person was indeed following her. But as a PI he had reasons to do so, which he refused to tell the police, of course he didnt have to do so, but why wouldnt you?
      There is a time and place for exercising your rights, and a time and place to be of assistance. If the matter is you, by all means do whatever you want. But if the matter is someone else (like in this case, the woman) you help, to let people know there is no danger. Its that easy.

    • @thesuperb66
      @thesuperb66 2 года назад +3

      Well I think the other reason he may not tell the cops What he's doing because (they don't need to know). he could be investigating one of them for all you know . guy seems good at his job .

  • @stephenunterberg3222
    @stephenunterberg3222 Год назад

    Thank you. This was incredibly informative.

  • @sergioherrera5140
    @sergioherrera5140 Год назад +16

    This could have been avoided if he had answered two questions they asked at the beginning: are you following her? Are you a PI? There was no reason for him, especially being an ex-cop, to extend the detention.

    • @user-gz8st9fe8p
      @user-gz8st9fe8p 2 месяца назад +1

      Answering their questions could have extended the detention and given cause for incarceration.

  • @fuferito
    @fuferito 2 года назад +400

    This is one heck of a way to show off your low key, private investigative skills that aren't supposed to get you noticed by your subject.

    • @worshippers3590
      @worshippers3590 2 года назад +33

      I think that depends on the objective(s) of the investigation. There are times the PI may actually want to be noticed. Because we don't know the objectives, it is hard for us to conclude with absolute certainty

    • @MrOgstyler
      @MrOgstyler 2 года назад +20

      You better go watch some Rockford Files.
      Sometimes they want you to know that they are watching you.

    • @johnwilson6707
      @johnwilson6707 2 года назад +8

      covert or overt LOL

    • @Nathanation88
      @Nathanation88 2 года назад +9

      @@worshippers3590 exactly! For some reason the majority of people seem to think it’s essential for a “good” PI to maintain stealth. Several circumstances exist where it simply isn’t required, so why bother.

    • @alexmayer8943
      @alexmayer8943 2 года назад +2

      Won't get away with that in most Democrat states. They'll jump your a$$ so fast you go back in time!!! Pheweeeeeeee !!!

  • @Slipnslide19
    @Slipnslide19 2 года назад +875

    Guy: "The fact that I'm exercising my rights does not mean I'm not cooperating, sir"
    Cop: "Yes it does"
    🤦‍♂️

    • @yunofun
      @yunofun 2 года назад +36

      I mean technically he is right, it does. Just that you do have a right to not cooperate in certain ways.

    • @I_Am_Warden
      @I_Am_Warden 2 года назад +41

      @@yunofun in any way, shape or form you don't have to answer not a question from law enforcement. Cooperation when it's very not needed towards the oppressors that want to incarcerate you, is not under any circumstance an option. Cops lie and lie alot, that is their job to lie to everyone to gain a conviction.

    • @KrillixKai
      @KrillixKai 2 года назад +9

      @@I_Am_Warden So anyone can stalk anyone and claim they are a PI? Or do PI's need to prove they are a PI?
      How far is a PI allowed to stalk me before I'm allowed to shoot him?

    • @TubeWatcher
      @TubeWatcher 2 года назад +28

      @@KrillixKai You have to prove stalking. It doesnt matter how many times you use the word, it has to be proven. One person's word against another is not proof of anything.

    • @jacksparrow3490
      @jacksparrow3490 2 года назад +8

      @@KrillixKai following someone isnt breaking the law though. Unless they did something directly to you..

  • @dmendez4741
    @dmendez4741 7 месяцев назад +2

    If he'd told the cops he was a PI, they for sure would've given that info to the lady he was investigating

  • @electric8668
    @electric8668 2 года назад +375

    Him stating he was ex law enforcement was key in them leaving him alone.

    • @xdragon2k
      @xdragon2k 2 года назад +13

      So, if I'm caught stalking someone, I can just claim that and I should be on my way? Sweet.

    • @xdragon2k
      @xdragon2k 2 года назад +13

      @Ms. Kitty Katt Apparently I'm doing a bad job at making a snide remark if that was your conclusion of what I'm trying to say.

    • @maveric619
      @maveric619 2 года назад +8

      Invoking the privilege of the thin blue line

    • @TheDeviIDogg
      @TheDeviIDogg 2 года назад +14

      Unless you're in Florida you have to prove it. Put yourself in the ladies shoes, a random stranger following you so you go to the police for help like any sane person who is scared. Now put yourself in the cop's shoes, lady says a man is stalking her and she's scared so you do your job in protecting her. Now the man claims to be ex law enforcement, you want to make sure he actually is and he's not lying because if he is and you let him go and that scared lady becomes a missing lady you made a huge mistake. This is more about figuring out the situation to ensure the safety of someone, not someone's rights

    • @electric8668
      @electric8668 2 года назад +7

      @@TheDeviIDogg And why are they taking the woman's word when she could be a lying Karen?

  • @RangerJahu
    @RangerJahu 2 года назад +420

    God that makes me laugh "Let me go back to the initial question. Were you following her?" Driver - "I don't answer questions" Deputy - "FUCK THIS SHIT IM OUTTY"

    • @DarwinLovesRedHeads
      @DarwinLovesRedHeads 2 года назад

      Kmjmmmmmmjmjmjmj

    • @cwgmusicvideos
      @cwgmusicvideos 2 года назад +33

      Why wouldn’t he just explain why he is creeping around following a woman on her own in a car? It IS suspicious. If it was my daughter I’d boot fuck out of him

    • @wasterangler
      @wasterangler 2 года назад +23

      @@cwgmusicvideos uh huh

    • @madman10340
      @madman10340 2 года назад +25

      @@cwgmusicvideos that’s what I’m saying like the law doesn’t seem right in this video… probable cause should be a women calling the cops telling them your exact vehicle and saying you have been following her for 3 days. You should at least have to prove you’re a PI or at least ID yourself.

    • @cooldaddyslick6869
      @cooldaddyslick6869 2 года назад +7

      @@madman10340 How is giving up his drivers license gonna answer the question about why he's following her though?

  • @RayBetterThanEvilCanival
    @RayBetterThanEvilCanival 9 месяцев назад +1

    Although the PI is within his legal rights to refuse to comply with the officer, I feel like this is a fair stop. If somebody was following me around for days I’d also feel threatened and call the police. He could have just told the officer he’s a PI, such as the officer inquired about, and this could have ended much quicker.

  • @michaelseymour7211
    @michaelseymour7211 9 месяцев назад +1

    The problem with knowing our rights is that we aren't taught our rights.

  • @FinnaBusanut
    @FinnaBusanut 2 года назад +612

    If someone is clearly being followed, I want the cops to investigate.

    • @wolfkin73
      @wolfkin73 2 года назад +30

      It's not against the law to be somewhere.

    • @Shane-un8pe
      @Shane-un8pe 2 года назад

      @@wolfkin73 stalking is illegal. You don't want potential stalking to be investigated? If I followed your mom or your wife around all day, you would be pretty pissed if I just said, "it's not illegal to be somewhere". The policeman has reasonable suspicion to believe the man is a stalker.

    • @wolfkin73
      @wolfkin73 2 года назад +21

      @@Shane-un8pe I want the cops to follow the law. Have you ever had anyone lie about you? Have you ever had anyone acuse you of something your not doing. Cops investigate lots of things that aren't crimes that's why it's an investigation. My wife and mother can take care of themselves perfectly well.

    • @Shane-un8pe
      @Shane-un8pe 2 года назад +78

      @@wolfkin73 and they were following the law by investigating a stalking complaint.

    • @WellnessWizdom
      @WellnessWizdom 2 года назад +5

      "It's not against the law to be somewhere."
      Apparently it is in Florida.

  • @oswaldogarza01
    @oswaldogarza01 2 года назад +715

    Police: "back to my original question"
    Guy; "yes sir?"
    Police: "are you following someone? "
    Guy: "I don't answer questions"
    That was gold! 🤣🤣🤣

    • @Bradzilla88
      @Bradzilla88 2 года назад +8

      I haven't laughed that hard in a long time 🤣🤣🤣. I was not expecting that. I really thought he was just going to say "NO".

    • @chasinggreatness42
      @chasinggreatness42 2 года назад +8

      Mr. Hoffman has been a cop for over 30+ yrs he knows a lot and seen a lot so he's well aware of all the different games and tactics officers try to play. I'm sure sometime during his leo career he's done it and probably learned from it.

    • @slikxs808
      @slikxs808 2 года назад +3

      When one is caught slipping, dodge the question. Among Us 101

    • @Rome__king
      @Rome__king 2 года назад +4

      buddy gave a whole speech and went full circle and instantly back in character with zero hesitation "thought ya had me" lmao i was rolling on the floor

    • @jtjones4081
      @jtjones4081 2 года назад

      "So you're a stalker? Got it." Book em Dano

  • @nicolereadstarot
    @nicolereadstarot Год назад +55

    I get it but also that's scary AF that someone can follow you around and cops can't do anything

    • @malachi-
      @malachi- Год назад +13

      Your life is tracked and sold for profit your whole life online, with great detail.

    • @rhyno9798
      @rhyno9798 Год назад

      The cops could've done something. But black cops are scared of white people. So they let them get away with 💩 that they shouldn't. He did suspect that guy of committing a crime. The guy was being suspicious. Had he snatched him out of his vehicle, he'd a been within his rights. I've seen waaaay too many videos of "suspicious" activities that were nowhere near as suspicious as this, and they were id'd, detained.... somethin... watever

    • @UncomfortableShoes
      @UncomfortableShoes Год назад +5

      Well, in this actual case he had a right to, which he should have explained. In general stalking is a crime, but I’m not sure if it pertains to your home or work. Without a restraining over, just driving on the same public street as someone is hard to enforce. I will say this guy doesn’t seem very good at his job.

    • @nt3xplain
      @nt3xplain Год назад

      No they can do something except in the case of a private investigator

    • @pleasueru
      @pleasueru 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@nt3xplain but what if they don't know they're a private investigator.

  • @hugostiglitz5713
    @hugostiglitz5713 Год назад +3

    " those badges and those guns don't give you the right to violate other peoples rights"...best line

  • @jayteefishing1543
    @jayteefishing1543 2 года назад +356

    The P.I. Said-
    “Just because I’m exercising my rights doesn’t mean I’m being difficult”
    Cop- “yes it does”
    That’s the problem guys. 🤦🏻‍♂️

    • @KrillixKai
      @KrillixKai 2 года назад +6

      I agree, they should have arrested him.

    • @jayteefishing1543
      @jayteefishing1543 2 года назад +26

      Yeah you’re right. We should all just lay down and take the abuse and unconstitutional demands and harassment from police. This is America. Not China. I’ve got some of my best friends who lost their lives fighting for that constitution and the rights of which we have so that we can keep them. It’s not about being difficult or disrespectful to police. It’s about not allowing the government to begin and successfully walk over us when we have rights that were fought for and that people paid the ultimate price for. I’m not into the guys that do this stuff just to antagonize police and the get views. I don’t respect it when it’s not done in the right way. I hate that kinda stuff. But this was done correctly and legally. They couldn’t arrest him. They couldn’t do a damn thing. Which is why they abandoned the stop. If they would have, they would have been fired and costed their department and city a lot of time and money. There’s a fine line that can’t be crossed when doing things like this. I don’t like when that line is crossed or even flirted with. He wasn’t looking for trouble. He wasn’t trying to create contact between the police and himself. He wasn’t doing anything. Just his job. Would it of been easier for him to just say “hey guys I’m a P.I. and that’s why I’m following this car.” Yeah. A lot easier but that’s not the point. He doesn’t have to say anything. That’s his right. He’s probably embarrassed because a good P.I. wouldn’t of been made in the first place lol but that’s besides the point. It’s about rights and being an American and living in America. Too many people give up and lay down. This is how we get the bad cops off the roads. Weed them out. They started this whole “us against them” kinda mentality. Not the people. But besides all that, it all boils down to this….they didn’t arrest him because they couldn’t and they knew it. Not without a lawsuit anyway.

    • @chrisbudesa9355
      @chrisbudesa9355 2 года назад +11

      @@KrillixKai.
      Waste of time.
      Case would have been thrown out.

    • @gammoregan
      @gammoregan 2 года назад +5

      You're misquoting there. It was "...doesn't mean I'm not cooperating," not "...doesn't mean I'm being difficult." And he's wrong. He's within his legal rights to not be cooperative, while he's saying that any form of exercising his rights is being cooperative. It's not, because cooperating means taking action and assisting the police. Instead he is being passive by being silent and not taking positive or negative action. It's not cooperation, it's not obstructing, it's just exercising his rights in a neutral manner.

    • @donaldmack2307
      @donaldmack2307 2 года назад +4

      Use em or lose em.

  • @nealewatson5284
    @nealewatson5284 2 года назад +978

    As a former private detective and having been in a similar situation, the PI could have simply identified himself as a private investigator and dissolved the situation. I was approached by a county officer on a particularly difficult surveillance and I immediately identified myself and he left right away. The PI asked for professional courtesy but showed non on his end.

    • @MC-hs4mf
      @MC-hs4mf 2 года назад +59

      Maybe he was following a cop and didn’t want to let her know for sure a pi was following her.

    • @undignified2843
      @undignified2843 2 года назад +52

      Gonna disagree with you there Neale. This culture needs more men like this PI in the video. Not limp wristed fellas like yourself.

    • @dtester
      @dtester 2 года назад +92

      @@undignified2843 Was it necessary to insult the other guy? It was a pretty good and civil response up to that point.

    • @michaelhuguley1316
      @michaelhuguley1316 2 года назад +29

      Here’s the thing though. If these officers demonstrated the ability to understand and apply policy sure. But time and time again these videos show that they don’t this making responses like this necessary

    • @realitycheck439
      @realitycheck439 2 года назад +2

      Couldn't have said it better.

  • @mr_yoru5834
    @mr_yoru5834 Год назад +6

    The fact that they just gave up is frustrating. I don't think any of the officers said once specifically that they got a call that a person was being followed for days which is harassment which gave them reasonable suspicion. Luckily this dude had no intention to harm anybody, but he was in fact following her and they just let him go without completing their investigation. Personally, I don't care if the PI got his cover blown if someone already noticed he was there for days.

  • @richb1576
    @richb1576 Год назад +14

    They ran his plates and knew who he was and what he was doing before they pulled him over.
    I doubt I would hire this guy as a private investigator if he cannot follow 1 person without being spotted.

    • @charlesmdietz
      @charlesmdietz 4 месяца назад +2

      Any PI worth their salt would have vehicles registered in LLC or other names.

  • @JJ-jt4ji
    @JJ-jt4ji 2 года назад +513

    He's not much of a PI if his subject knows she's being stalked.

    • @uhhidk8093
      @uhhidk8093 2 года назад +58

      Nah, there’s a lot of people that know they’re being followed or watched if they’ve done some shady stuff. Their paranoia actually helps them out in these situations

    • @punktalley
      @punktalley 2 года назад +74

      Sometimes a pi wants their subject to know that they are on to them so another investor can slide in unnoticed when the primary pi isn't seen. They think they are in the clear because they don't see the main pi.

    • @nordicdodson2556
      @nordicdodson2556 2 года назад +9

      @@uhhidk8093 it's called situational awareness...

    • @nofapwizard6011
      @nofapwizard6011 2 года назад +13

      My conclusion is this bittch be DONE cheating!!!

    • @uhhidk8093
      @uhhidk8093 2 года назад +3

      @@nordicdodson2556 yes, I know what situational awareness is. I was breaking it down

  • @flapjackson6077
    @flapjackson6077 2 года назад +1253

    I gotta give the cop the benefit of the doubt. He was trying to protect a citizen from what he believed to be a stalker.
    The PI was in a difficult situation. He has an obligation to his client, and identifying himself could jeopardize his investigation.
    This is a case where there’s no bad guy. The cops were reasonable in their attempt to protect the public, and the PI was reasonable in his refusal to cooperate.
    However, the PI didn’t do himself any favors by challenging the notion of following somebody. While he may be entitled to follow people, failing to ID himself gave the officers every reason to be suspicious.

    • @theradioweyr
      @theradioweyr 2 года назад +35

      This.

    • @idrissboulie
      @idrissboulie 2 года назад +34

      Agreed

    • @paulcooper8818
      @paulcooper8818 2 года назад +24

      If the followed person is involved with a LEO in some way, in that circumstance, the PI may not want to divulge his profession.

    • @bikejunkie9738
      @bikejunkie9738 2 года назад +4

      I’m completely agree

    • @steverogers3931
      @steverogers3931 2 года назад +43

      As the target of the investigation is known to police, admitting to being on an investigation could well violate attorney / client privilege, and I could face civil or criminal penalties for doing so if I were in his place. I will alert LE of an area I am in prior to staking out a location, and if asked what I am doing where the subject of my investigation cannot be determined by LE I will provide credentials. In this case it would very likely be an ethical violation to do so, and most commenters don't do this work and don't grasp this point.

  • @latimer442
    @latimer442 8 месяцев назад +1

    I think the other point would be that they must have RAS that he, specifically, is the subject of their suspicion. Matching the description of a vehicle simply isn't good enough to show that a particular individual inside the vehicle is the same they are looking for. They were trying to establish intent on the roadside.

  • @joeblow5087
    @joeblow5087 8 месяцев назад +1

    Arrest him for suspected stalking.

  • @MeGustaR00sta
    @MeGustaR00sta Год назад +1276

    Okay this is legitimately a situation that should have just been dissolved from the very beginning. It's completely reasonable for an officer to investigate a potential stalker, ESPECIALLY when he acknowledges that he's fine if the guy is just a private investigator.

    • @zatoth13
      @zatoth13 Год назад +126

      He eventually tossed out that he was an ex cop and used that status to gain some sort of privilege from the cops. So, I really am not as sorry for him on this.

    • @troychampion
      @troychampion Год назад +45

      @@zatoth13 he also told the cops that he had 4 cameras on them, that seemed to change their tune rather quickly as well.

    • @arctic_haze
      @arctic_haze Год назад +56

      I like how educated them but I do not think that was necessary. Why didn't he admit he was investigating her which was the first thing he was asked about.

    • @jefferyfitzwater1981
      @jefferyfitzwater1981 Год назад +69

      He wants a fight, for his ego or views. Could of told them what he was doing and been done with it. Should of been cited for fallowing then he would of had to tell them. Total tool

    • @scottchampion
      @scottchampion Год назад +59

      I agree. This guy escalated when the first cop was straight with him.

  • @SenzaTempoCaneCorso
    @SenzaTempoCaneCorso 2 года назад +523

    I am torn on this one... what if he was a stalker? If I was the cop I just would have followed him around as he followed the woman. That way she is safe. He may not like it, but if he isn't going to say anything than I have to be sure he isn't a threat to her.

    • @inimical_deity
      @inimical_deity 2 года назад +67

      if i were her I'd be scared too

    • @albertrodriguez4190
      @albertrodriguez4190 2 года назад +27

      I thought the same thing. Photo of him and run the plate then stake him out.

    • @pvrplrain
      @pvrplrain 2 года назад +24

      They also could have looked up the license plate and I’m sure for a fact a name would have came up and said “private investigator”. So...

    • @BodyweightDem0n
      @BodyweightDem0n 2 года назад +50

      Yeah if this guy is persistently following a woman around, I think that’s a justifiable reason to detain him.

    • @erics8018
      @erics8018 2 года назад +16

      @@BodyweightDem0n but ya can't

  • @JohnDoe-un3xm
    @JohnDoe-un3xm 8 месяцев назад

    the problem is, if he told them "yes I am following her, I am a Private Investigator" he had no guarantee that the officers would not then tell the subject that the person following them was a PI, and most likely assumed they would tell her as much, thus tainting any further investigation. I actually commend his refusal to give that information because he is doing what is best for his client, even if it has the potential to land him in hot water legally.

  • @vaultboya6253
    @vaultboya6253 7 месяцев назад

    Come on, the cop walked up and literally asked if he was a private investigation. Shows how good he is at his job 😂

  • @kaindabadguy
    @kaindabadguy 2 года назад +44

    The cops already knew who he was. They checked his plates and were trying to get him to admit he was working.

    • @jamescollier3
      @jamescollier3 2 года назад

      maybe a ticket for stalking, to show the judge the retainer and contract?

    • @AwesomesMan
      @AwesomesMan 2 года назад

      Why would they do that? Would it be a crime if he was working?

    • @kaindabadguy
      @kaindabadguy 2 года назад +3

      @@AwesomesMan He’s following someone, so from a fear perspective it is understandable why the police would want to resolve the situation. But both sides are in a standoff. He isn’t stalking the person, so they can’t legally stop him. They want to prevent a possible stalking but he’s under no obligation to admit he’s following the person. Odds are though the cops told the individual who he was and what was going on.

    • @kaindabadguy
      @kaindabadguy 2 года назад +1

      @@jamescollier3 Not legal. He would have grounds for a lawsuit.

    • @jamescollier3
      @jamescollier3 2 года назад

      @@kaindabadguy so, a PI can stalk anyone? I think you are wrong

  • @jamesbagnall1
    @jamesbagnall1 Год назад +509

    Remember kids, in order for you to exercise your right to remain silent, you can NOT remain silent. You MUST say you are remaining silent because silence isn't implied as remaining silent. Blows my fucking mind.

    • @thepopeofkeke
      @thepopeofkeke Год назад +13

      A right has to be invoked or laches incurs.

    • @sobrina7754
      @sobrina7754 Год назад +15

      Isn’t that weird? Being silent doesn’t mean you’re invoking your right to be silent.

    • @jamesbagnall1
      @jamesbagnall1 Год назад +44

      @@thepopeofkeke Which is a bullshit legality. All rights should automatically be presumed to be invoked at all times regardless of any circumstance. If not, are they really rights at all, or just special legal privileges, subject to the whims of whatever corruptions a judiciary or legislative mechanism could dream up?

    • @jamesbagnall1
      @jamesbagnall1 Год назад

      @@ramblinwreck384 Devils are bad, m'kay.

    • @Tmanaz480
      @Tmanaz480 Год назад +3

      You have the right to remain silent, however you can't just remain silent.

  • @BigBrotherIsTooBig
    @BigBrotherIsTooBig 7 месяцев назад +1

    Funny how you can't follow someone, but you can pay someone else to do it for you.

  • @BuceGar
    @BuceGar Год назад +1

    Actually the phone call is what gives the officer probable cause to investigate and identify.

  • @szymonrozanski6938
    @szymonrozanski6938 2 года назад +876

    I love the Ex-Cop acting annoyed at everything the other Cop says. Gold. Just shows how much cops are disconnected to normal people after getting the badge and a gun for free use.

    • @madman10340
      @madman10340 2 года назад +59

      Disconnected? Seems like they just wanted to protect a lil lady who was being legally stalked. They at least gave her some space to drive off and not be followed by this dbag.

    • @skyers1987
      @skyers1987 2 года назад +37

      @@madman10340 how is he a dbag if he’s doing his job 🤔

    • @6StimuL84
      @6StimuL84 2 года назад +37

      @@madman10340 Yeah and they committed several felonies doling it, while he committed no crime.....

    • @DapperSapper515
      @DapperSapper515 2 года назад +33

      @@madman10340 he's a dbag for legally doing his job? You clearly didn't watch the video nor do even attempt to do the slightest inkling of your own research, huh? He was legally doing his job and within his rights. But that makes him a dbag? Just another CoP hAtEr... 🤡

    • @DapperSapper515
      @DapperSapper515 2 года назад +1

      @@6StimuL84 literally

  • @hwp69
    @hwp69 2 года назад +131

    One of the first statements out of the officer's mouth early in the video was "if you're investigating that's different," this would lead me to think he already ran the plate and knew who owned the vehicle and that he was liscensed as an investigator.

    • @sharijones7779
      @sharijones7779 2 года назад +20

      The problem with telling them He is investigating licensed professional is that they will in turn tell the complainant and his cover is blown.

    • @StreetDrivenDaily
      @StreetDrivenDaily 2 года назад +6

      Correct.

    • @drdripps6627
      @drdripps6627 2 года назад +56

      @@sharijones7779 his cover is already blown she knew he was following her for a whole day this stop was inevitable

    • @e-curb
      @e-curb 2 года назад +3

      It might be a rental car.

    • @roberthall3458
      @roberthall3458 2 года назад +2

      Or maybe it’s that he looks like a cop

  • @arturoescorcia
    @arturoescorcia 10 месяцев назад +3

    Seems to me they DID have reasonable suspicion to stop him. After all they did mention they were following a report on a person following the young lady and that both the person and vehicle matched his description. And he was indeed following her, there is no way for the officers to know he is a PI because he never disclosed it so there is reasonable suspicion to think he might be actually stalking the woman.

  • @moneymanne
    @moneymanne 8 месяцев назад

    Just say no “im not answering questions” always ends like this

  • @apfelbasket
    @apfelbasket 2 года назад +214

    Someone's choice to not participate in an investigation does NOT make them uncooperative! In fact an Officer can become uncooperative by choosing not to cooperate with a person's rights!

    • @michaelweston2285
      @michaelweston2285 2 года назад +7

      actually, noncooperative is defined as failure or refusal to cooperate. so not cooperating DOES mean you're noncooperative. you just happen to have the right to be noncooperative if you choose.

    • @SuperYxskaft
      @SuperYxskaft 2 года назад +2

      @@michaelweston2285 Yeah, he is uncooperative, which is the point I guess, right, that according to law he does not have to cooperate. The caps statement isnt wrong at all, but if the police said that not cooperating was a crime, that would be a different matter. Dont know why so many people react so strong to this comment from the cop, the man was clearly not cooperative, and thats completely fine.

    • @maveric619
      @maveric619 2 года назад +3

      You don't *have* to cooperate with any law enforcement
      Especially to incriminate yourself

    • @SuperYxskaft
      @SuperYxskaft 2 года назад +1

      @@maveric619 Were not saying he has to cooperate, im even saying in almost all cases you should not, im saying that it still means he not cooperating as in being uncooperative, and thats what the word means.

    • @srcastic8764
      @srcastic8764 2 года назад +1

      Don’t forget though, I’m this case he should have been require to show his ID due to reasonable suspicion. That’s why both parties got a B, because neither of them seemed to understand that he could’ve been arrested for failing to do so. But he did have the right not to answer any other questions and be uncooperative in that regard.

  • @gabrielgonzalez6456
    @gabrielgonzalez6456 2 года назад +619

    As a private investigator in the state of Florida, one has to show identification. It’s part of his license.
    Whether the officers continue afterwards to investigate, the doesn’t have go further in cooperating. With a simple PI badge flick of the wrist, he just wasted 15 min probably more not doing his PI work.

    • @joshuahpowers3110
      @joshuahpowers3110 2 года назад +13

      Exactly. Same in VA

    • @LynxStarAuto
      @LynxStarAuto 2 года назад +127

      It depends on state. Regardless, this guy was an asshole and escalated for no reason other than RUclips views I guess.

    • @jinxxintraffic
      @jinxxintraffic 2 года назад +50

      @@LynxStarAuto Standing by your constitutional right doesnt = esculation

    • @z1107eod
      @z1107eod 2 года назад +98

      @@jinxxintraffic what constitutional right. He did not declare he was a PI as he was required to by law. Until he does, he was stalking. Stalking is PC to pull him over and conduct an investigation. As a former LEO I would have arrested him for stalking and obstruction as soon as he started his “constitutional right”. His rights end when they infringe on someone else’s I.E. the lady he was stalking. Again it was stalking until he provided proof he was a licensed PI doing an investigation.

    • @steverogers3931
      @steverogers3931 2 года назад +15

      I would like to see the statute, as there may be exceptions. In this case as a Private Detective, disclosing that I was working on an investigation would give them the subject of my investigation which is information often protected by attorney / client privilege. I am ethically prohibited in almost all cases to provide such specific information, and could easily lose my license and face criminal and civil penalties. If I am staking someone or some place and they cannot determine the specifics then I would identify myself.

  • @nasapayrollsystem8701
    @nasapayrollsystem8701 5 месяцев назад +1

    That is a good point, in the middle ,
    Because I'm exercising my legal rights does not make me unco-operative...
    That comes up a lot

  • @francishuard5533
    @francishuard5533 Год назад

    Perspective is just that. You have listen to the facts and /or statements within the conversation .

  • @elithegreat6463
    @elithegreat6463 2 года назад +67

    I’m an insurance fraud investigator here In NJ, and a retired Municipal Police Officer. I have encountered such contacts with LE.
    Before a case, I usually check into the local PD to state that I’m in the area, but I never let the PD know “Who” I’m surveying, because it’s against the claimants right to privacy. Also, the PD may know them , and “Drop a Dime” and possibly, hinder the integrity of the investigation.
    In this case, if the investigator told the PD that he was actually following the female, the PD would have most likely told her she was being followed by a private investigator, and that as well, will effect the integrity of his investigation.
    The best course of action to be take should have been to check in with any local PD jurisdiction you happen to be working before you begin the case.

    • @resipsaloquitur5545
      @resipsaloquitur5545 2 года назад +6

      He's the THIRD PI that she spotted so it sounds like an ex worthless pig being bad at his job AGAIN.

    • @lealta1481
      @lealta1481 2 года назад

      Thanks for the info

    • @comedyzone
      @comedyzone 2 года назад

      Agree.

    • @crisrodriguez4676
      @crisrodriguez4676 2 года назад +3

      I respectfully disagree. It's none of their business what you or I are doing in their jurisdiction unless we're breaking the law.

    • @elithegreat6463
      @elithegreat6463 2 года назад +3

      @@crisrodriguez4676
      You need to get off your constitutional high horse.
      If you’re a PI doing an investigation and you don’t check in with the PD , they will show up, and just draw attention to you, and there goes your case.
      Check in, then once concerned citizens call a “Suspicious Vehicle” they know it’s a PI and they won’t go out and bother you.
      So get you head out of your Ass , and think multi dimensional.

  • @dennisd1906
    @dennisd1906 Год назад +382

    I'm genuinely curious, if someone calls the police and suspects they're being followed or whatever......does no one want police to follow up on that and just wish the caller the best of luck? Truly, no sarcasm. Are they not supposed to see if the dude is in fact stalking, following, or whatever?

    • @TheNativeTwo
      @TheNativeTwo Год назад +86

      Yeah guy was kinda dumb… maybe he was trying to exercise some rights, but geez just tell the officer you are a PI, and that’s gonna be the end of it.

    • @teebteeb1268
      @teebteeb1268 Год назад +15

      No they shouldn't show up... following someone and/or driving on public roads isn't a crime.

    • @dennisd1906
      @dennisd1906 Год назад +52

      @@teebteeb1268 I didn't say that was a crime, and you didn't answer the question & you're only trying to use a non-answer to prevent that. But by that line it means unless someone is caught mid-decapitation they cannot be stopped and questioned about it because walking, driving, sitting on the couch, is perfectly legal.

    • @gregkasza1925
      @gregkasza1925 Год назад +12

      No, they are habitual liars. What if it’s not true? They already told multiple lies to him. Now you think he should cooperate? Come on.

    • @gregkasza1925
      @gregkasza1925 Год назад +9

      @@TheNativeTwo that wouldn’t be the end of it. That lady would now have his information.

  • @jeremeyrogers9088
    @jeremeyrogers9088 Год назад +57

    This is one of the few Audit the Audit vids where I think the policemen are absolutely correct to detain and question this man, and the man is being evasive and defensive.

    • @solomon2901
      @solomon2901 9 месяцев назад +6

      Using my God given rights to remain silent isn’t evasive nor is it defensive. If the officers had better training and grasp of the law then the stop would’ve gone on without an issue.

    • @Frivia
      @Frivia 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@solomon2901ok so what if this what your faughter and then this man killed her because he excercised his rivhts. also the audit literally pointed out how they COULD detain him bevause he WAS suspicious for a possible crime. They clearly did have probable cause from a courts pount of view

    • @amyelizabeth9886
      @amyelizabeth9886 9 месяцев назад +3

      yea imagine this dude just got away and then went on to kill someone u know its creepy

    • @user-gz8st9fe8p
      @user-gz8st9fe8p 2 месяца назад +1

      If he's an ex-cop he knows answering the questions will be used against him.

  • @wesleystafford8521
    @wesleystafford8521 11 месяцев назад +45

    I'm always fond of the "auditors" who invoke their right to remain silent - and then talk and talk and talk.
    Given the YT channel this guy has, he thoroughly enjoys doing things like this because it's CONTENT. There was no reason he couldn't have just told them "I'm a P.I." and been on his way. You could say "well he doesnt want the person he's following to KNOW he's a P.I." but that reason doesnt float because he's posting this stuff on YT. He didn't tell them because it help draw out the conversation and gave him the chance to chastise them.
    I usually support people who do things like this, but..........I'm not a big fan of this one.

    • @SolDizZo
      @SolDizZo 11 месяцев назад +2

      Based take

    • @craigstephenson7676
      @craigstephenson7676 7 месяцев назад +2

      If he told the police he was a PI they wouldn't need to tell the person he's following, although she likely already knew.

    • @StoutShako
      @StoutShako 6 месяцев назад

      Agreed. This guy came across as a real POS. Dislike!

    • @PlasticCogLiquid
      @PlasticCogLiquid 4 месяца назад +1

      The right to remain silent doesn't mean you have to sit there in silence. You CAN do that if you want. It means you don't have to give up anything you don't want too and in this case he wanted to educate the cops a little bit.

  • @Finkelfunk
    @Finkelfunk 2 года назад +160

    "The fact I am exercising my rights does not mean I am not cooperating."
    "Yes it does."
    This line of thinking is beyond scary.

    • @illtoxic6
      @illtoxic6 2 года назад +11

      I don't think the officer had ill intention when he said that at all. I think he was merely just saying the guy isn't cooperating because he wouldn't speak. This one looks pretty hard to judge. They're trying to see if he's stalking someone and he wouldn't just simply say no and go on his way. Instead he was being a dick and luring them into an argument to inflate his ego. He should've simply stated he wasn't following the person.

    • @Finkelfunk
      @Finkelfunk 2 года назад +3

      @@illtoxic6 He *could have stated that, but exercising your rights doesn't mean that he was inflating his ego. He has every right to remain silent and as said, if ge said he was a PI then he'd jeopardize what he was set out to do.

    • @ohokcool
      @ohokcool 2 года назад +2

      Being within your rights doesn't necessarily mean you are cooperating. In this case, the officer is referring to the guy not helping his investigation, but the officer doesn't realize that PI helping their investigation could compromise his own investigation and PI can't tell him that because the officers or their department may report it back to the complainant. Things like this are why these rights exist. So technically he wasn't cooperating with their investigation, despite being within his rights. He was however cooperative in stopping his vehicle and engaging in civil discourse with them and that may be the way he meant it when he disagrees with the officer's assessment of his cooperation.

    • @xuto2693
      @xuto2693 2 года назад +1

      @@illtoxic6
      It means exactly what he said. Exercising your rights makes you uncooperative. That is NOT tolerable. Not unless you're pro-police state.

    • @truthiswhat1
      @truthiswhat1 2 года назад +2

      @@xuto2693 I have no love for cops in general but things are very rarely this black and white. this guy was preventing the cops from following up a stalking complaint. remaining silent is his right but you can't pretend that remaining silent didn't directly prevented the cops from finding out if there was a stalker or not. I saw someone else here use this example... If you see a guy running away from the cops and they ask you where the dude went and you legally claim your right to silence you are within your rights.. yet if that guy was running from a murder/kidnaping/ anything bad, your silence would have directly caused the cops to fail because of your refusal to cooperate, even if it was your right to do so. This hypothetical situation is a good example of how remaining silent can be un-cooperative.

  • @Fister_of_Muppets
    @Fister_of_Muppets 2 года назад +278

    I can't help but notice two things:
    1. He is taking his PI job so seriously, he doesn't want to risk/trust the officers by telling them that, so he doesn't.
    2. He's not the stealthiest guy by allowing himself to not only be noticed by the subject for them to call on him in the first place, but also keep the stop going which potentially allows the subject to identify him further and avoid him and his vehicle after that.
    Nobody really won here.

    • @wsvitak
      @wsvitak 2 года назад +7

      Yeah, couldnt agree with you more.

    • @wattienewton5447
      @wattienewton5447 2 года назад +3

      They were following a stalking report your right.
      It was all about his rights, not trying too quickly Get on with The job clearing him keeping The citizens safe.

    • @jameshuhn6924
      @jameshuhn6924 2 года назад +8

      PIs don't confirm whether they are conducting an investigation in case the officer knows the person they are investigating because the officer could confirm to that person that they are being investigated.

    • @stingray4920
      @stingray4920 2 года назад +6

      @@jameshuhn6924
      My thoughts exactly. We all know they would run over there and tell her what he was doing. I commend him for protecting his client.

    • @refillz5281
      @refillz5281 2 года назад +7

      @@jameshuhn6924 Didn't matter, she knew he was following her for 2 days. Apparently she caught 2 other PIs as well. So I'm pretty sure she knew exactly what was going on. She wanted to shake him, she wasn't "scared"

  • @Shadowccaster
    @Shadowccaster 7 месяцев назад +1

    What I find suspicious is that the officers just drop the "are you an investigator?" the moment they start talking to him, It's like they were informed already by the "young lady"

  • @ojay8961
    @ojay8961 Год назад +1

    If he said he was an investigator then the cops would surely tell his perp

  • @johnsmitley6496
    @johnsmitley6496 Год назад +338

    This is the one video where i cant even be mad with the officers. They took a stalking complaint seriously, and tried to obtain information. The guy refused to answer questions and could have easily avoided everything if he would have just said hes a private investigator from the start.

    • @CodeeXD
      @CodeeXD Год назад +29

      Hes a pi telling them could potentially tip her off that she's being investigated. Also it's none of their business

    • @teebteeb1268
      @teebteeb1268 Год назад +27

      "Comply and you'll be fine."
      Ok, guy...

    • @VigorousDomination
      @VigorousDomination Год назад +11

      Sure let me just give up all my rights as a us citizen and give you all the info you may need to arrest me hmmm

    • @fanbat
      @fanbat Год назад +29

      @VigorousDomination does saying "I'm a private investigator amd was hired to investigate her" and getting back to doing your job right away really truly feel like you're giving up all of your rights? I'm all for not answering questions but if it's a situation where I'm pulled over and labeled as a potential creepy stalker, I would rather just tell the cop I'm working and be able to go about my day

    • @gregkasza1925
      @gregkasza1925 Год назад +11

      No, you’re assuming there would be no more questions. They would have many, including his ID. The woman would then have access to it.

  • @scaredofghosts6813
    @scaredofghosts6813 2 года назад +417

    11:59
    Hoffman: "Exercising my rights does not mean im not cooperating"
    Officer: "Yes it does"
    Thats deep on alot of levels and is really sad actually

    • @TTM77
      @TTM77 Год назад +20

      But than it's also legal for cop to lie but not legal for us to lie. That officer said "Yes it does" could be exercising his legal right to lie. LOL Sadly our right is to stay silence and get harass.

    • @leokr4877
      @leokr4877 Год назад +12

      Well, not being cooperative does not mean to do less than you’re required to. You can be not cooperative in the sense of not giving information you’re not required to give

    • @tommyttravelchannel6002
      @tommyttravelchannel6002 Год назад

      Cops are hypocrites. They lie all the time. They never answer questions when charged with a crime. Stop the BS double standards.

    • @stevenbaker436
      @stevenbaker436 Год назад +2

      Rights don't corporate with cops.

    • @adman424
      @adman424 Год назад +3

      Hoffman is an awful investigator if his target had him pinged from the get go. Lol.

  • @sdjslkdjlsskldjslkdjsl8262
    @sdjslkdjlsskldjslkdjsl8262 8 месяцев назад

    on top of misunderstanding the law, the "investigator" was incredibly sus.
    the cops were sassy and clearly didn't like him invoking his rights. "You're enjoying this, aren't you?" etc.
    both deserve a C- or so.

  • @---cr8nw
    @---cr8nw 2 года назад +22

    He stayed way longer than I would have. At 8:06 he asks "Am I free to go?" and the officer responds "At this time." That's where I would have asked them to step back from my car so that I could leave without risking them injury.

    • @cesar2146
      @cesar2146 2 года назад +3

      Life isn’t a movie where you can act out these dumbass scenerios 😂😂 they’ll prolly just start a chase and end up shooting lmao

    • @---cr8nw
      @---cr8nw 2 года назад +3

      @@cesar2146, nonsense. If they say you're free to go, you don't just drive off. You ask them to step back so that you can leave. It's a way to make absolutely certain that you're all on the same page that you're free to go. If they argue the point, you stay put and keep asking "am I free to go".

  • @TheBoyjah
    @TheBoyjah 2 года назад +34

    Why don't these auditors ask the simple question: how will me giving you my ID in any way determine if I am or am not guilty of what you are investigating?

    • @brendancramphorn44
      @brendancramphorn44 2 года назад +1

      No one in throw is an auditor

    • @thesadtitan4241
      @thesadtitan4241 2 года назад +12

      Well, in a case specifically like this, since the officer was responding to a possible stalking call, it would confirm if this guy has warrants or a criminal record that may be worrisome considering what they were called for.

    • @TheBoyjah
      @TheBoyjah 2 года назад

      @@brendancramphorn44 ? I don't understand...

    • @theadventuresofsteve-marco6837
      @theadventuresofsteve-marco6837 2 года назад +3

      Because if its a stalker then they might have a restraining order.

    • @vangler6492
      @vangler6492 2 года назад

      that way if a crime is committed towards the victim a suspect would be able to be properly identified . especially if the victim doesn't have a single clue of whos doing the stalking .

  • @rolfbernserke4735
    @rolfbernserke4735 9 месяцев назад

    Driving with bifocals on should be a misdemeanor

  • @joesphschramm3754
    @joesphschramm3754 7 месяцев назад

    Another great video

  • @eliakimbenishchayil
    @eliakimbenishchayil 2 года назад +166

    He wanted to prove something, so he deliberately did not mention he is an investigator.

    • @stevefitchett6193
      @stevefitchett6193 2 года назад +39

      Clearly proved he can't tail someone without being spotted.

    • @mlee81
      @mlee81 2 года назад +6

      At least two asked him if he was an investigator from the beginning. They had their suspicions from the start. They wanted him to just say he was and then they move on but he pressed them making a point out of them for all to see. Even the old cop stating about him enjoying this knew. They all knew what was going on from early on it was just a power struggle to the end. That's why the officer in the end gave a direct yes or no question knowing the answer and then leaving

    • @LiLBitsDK
      @LiLBitsDK 2 года назад

      @@stevefitchett6193 sometimes it is a benefit they know they are being spotted... but you should already know that ;-)

    • @stevefitchett6193
      @stevefitchett6193 2 года назад +3

      @Jesper Andersen why would I know that jesper? He did a bad job if tailing the woman and made her feel threatened. Stop making excuses and get over it.

    • @LiLBitsDK
      @LiLBitsDK 2 года назад +2

      @@stevefitchett6193 because people can get preassured when they know someone is "on to them" and do stupid stuff

  • @glennallen496
    @glennallen496 2 года назад +87

    12:20 "You don't get to search and search until I say something, or you twist something I say to use it against me!" Definitely an ex-cop. He's hyper-aware of the common dirty tricks cops play.

    • @abgcacy5332
      @abgcacy5332 2 года назад +2

      Facts

    • @jeremyblaylock5487
      @jeremyblaylock5487 2 года назад +2

      Yep, and he has the right to not incriminate himself. Talking to the police doesn’t help you at all. All it can do is hurt you so your best bet is to not answer any of their questions.

  • @vanishingpoint808
    @vanishingpoint808 4 месяца назад +1

    Illegally detaining an innocent member of the public, not understanding the basis of your job = B
    Successfully defending yourself and not proving any information = B
    Your scoring has progressively sided with the cops.

  • @sh1k4t4g4n41
    @sh1k4t4g4n41 11 месяцев назад

    Man so many from FL!!!

  • @Theblackblond
    @Theblackblond 2 года назад +48

    Tell cops you’re an investigator, they go back and tell her. There has to be a better way.

    • @breannap8585
      @breannap8585 2 года назад +27

      There is a better way: do better at tailing people when tailing people is your job.

    • @joshoowa
      @joshoowa 2 года назад +1

      Can’t you just tell them not to tell her you’re an investigator…?

    • @mikeakridge3190
      @mikeakridge3190 2 года назад

      @@breannap8585 she was being followed by multiple PIs which is probably why she was on high alert...

    • @mikeakridge3190
      @mikeakridge3190 2 года назад +1

      @@joshoowa no, they have no duty to conceal anything... from PI or target, which is the same reason he didn’t just assert that he is an investigator. At which time they would have requested he produce paperwork... all these wannabes, say he was being a douche, “just tell them you’re an investigator”, he has no duty to identify if he hasn’t committed a crime, or suspected of about to, it’s simple as First and Fourth amendment protections ...

    • @joshoowa
      @joshoowa 2 года назад

      @@mikeakridge3190 so if he was a stalker he could just keep on stalking?

  • @beckyshell4649
    @beckyshell4649 Год назад +96

    On the flip side, There was a story about a recently divorced woman who had gone out with friends. A man asked to buy her a drink she declined. The man followed her to see where she lived. She saw the man parked by her house multiple times the police said they couldn't do anything because he had not committed a crime. She told her neighbor what was going on and asked him to keep an eye out and see if he could get a plate number or a good car description. The man's whining dog awakened him at 2am he went to let it out. He noticed the neighbor's kitchen light was on and a man was attacking her. He and the man fought but the man got away. The lady went to stay with her parents and traded cars with her sister who lived in a neighboring town and would drive around different streets to be sure she was not followed. A few nights later the neighbor heard his dogs barking, shouting, and screaming downstairs he recognized the intruder's voice. He waited till the screams stopped, his dogs had shredded the man's legs he died shortly later. The neighbor and his dogs didn't get in trouble and he gave the neighbor lady one of their puppies.

    • @dismalthoughts
      @dismalthoughts Год назад +4

      Freedom isn't free. And not just for the oft implied reason of men in uniform dying to defend those freedoms. We all necessarily sacrifice some level of security to retain those freedoms.

    • @jacobsmith4457
      @jacobsmith4457 Год назад +9

      Good doggos, did their jobs like some Champs and I hope they were totally unharmed in the process 🙏

    • @virginiaanndavidson178
      @virginiaanndavidson178 Год назад +4

      Omgosh! If this is true (and I don’t mean to challenge your integrity) then what a win in the end! Justice being served. That guy might have “won a few battles” being a dangerous creep, but he lost the war….and every war has its casualties, and that ended up being him. By no means am I cheering about death, but in this scenario, if someone had so lose their life, I’m very grateful it was him and not her or the neighbour or the dogs!!!
      PS - Dogs are just the best. I have a big one who looks like a muppet and a panda bear mixed together 😊 and he is the sweetest most bouncy angel ever, but his protective instincts over me are on point. Makes me feel so safe.

    • @1malikalik
      @1malikalik Год назад +1

      I call B.S. I Copied and Pasted the aforementioned comment on Google and nothing came up. Bro, stop the White Knight FEAR mongering intended to cast men as predacious.

    • @jamedraa8472
      @jamedraa8472 Год назад +2

      This makes me want a herd of dogs.

  • @PumaFist
    @PumaFist 8 месяцев назад

    He's a PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR. He needs to stay anonymous. Even to the police.

  • @josephwatson3706
    @josephwatson3706 Год назад

    No crime Committed and not pulled over for a traffic violation equals
    NO I.D.

  • @SKYSOLDIER173rd
    @SKYSOLDIER173rd 2 года назад +211

    I love how the officer who initially stoped the PI just leaves and they bring three new officers to intimidate him.

    • @colinglen4505
      @colinglen4505 2 года назад +8

      What if he wasn't a P.I but actually a stalker, how would you feel then?

    • @rogerm3708
      @rogerm3708 2 года назад

      In PUA those cops would be called WhiteKnights. They are M'lady Simps

    • @cmcrisp42
      @cmcrisp42 2 года назад +16

      @@colinglen4505 what if he wasn't anything? And he gave them his information and now he has a stalking charge on his record? We can play the what if games but honestly what does it matter. He was legally stalking someone, so he was within his right to do so.

    • @SKYSOLDIER173rd
      @SKYSOLDIER173rd 2 года назад +8

      @@colinglen4505 there’s no “what if” just do your job correctly and uphold the constitution you swore to protect!

    • @Monorat
      @Monorat 2 года назад

      @@cmcrisp42 how the fuck would they know that? It's just stubbornness, many of these videos I agree with but this one was just stupid. He could have told them he was a PI and nothing else.

  • @bsgordon11
    @bsgordon11 2 года назад +59

    I love that this channel cites case law and educates the public o, their rights. Keep up the great work ATA!

  • @yashuajames1669
    @yashuajames1669 Год назад

    This is one of the best videos on how to contest a terry stop

  • @lapierredave
    @lapierredave Год назад +3

    I would think - hell, I would HOPE - that following someone for over a day would be a crime. I always wondered about what Private I's are allowed to get away with.

  • @ShamelessFNGRL
    @ShamelessFNGRL 2 года назад +49

    NGL, kinda stupid to be following someone in a bright red vehicle. There's a reason Feds prefer black or gray cars that blend into the environment...

    • @anthonyoer4778
      @anthonyoer4778 2 года назад +6

      There are tactics private investigators use. Sometimes they want to be known. To possibly track drop spots, phone calls, if someone violates a restraining order...

    • @TimnParks
      @TimnParks 2 года назад +4

      For a long time red cars were the most likely to be in an accident simply because they were the most commonly colored car.
      Don't think it's true anymore, white or black is probably your best bet now.

    • @---cr8nw
      @---cr8nw 2 года назад

      No doubt. He needs a gold Pontiac Firebird Esprit.

  • @mikebrokeoff8552
    @mikebrokeoff8552 2 года назад +279

    Citizen- “Me expressing my rights cannot be deemed uncooperative.” Officer- “yes it does.” This goes to show you that most officers don’t give a damn about your rights!

    • @michaelweston2285
      @michaelweston2285 2 года назад +5

      the active duty cop is correct. noncooperative is defined as failure or refusal to cooperate. so not cooperating DOES mean you're noncooperative. you just happen to have the right to be noncooperative if you choose.

    • @mikebrokeoff8552
      @mikebrokeoff8552 2 года назад +12

      @@michaelweston2285 asserting your rights is not uncooperative ...it can’t be deemed as such. I say he was cooperating within the laws. He gave them what he was legally suppose to which is nothing. Unless RAS and PC are present which they weren’t. No crime no ID

    • @michaelweston2285
      @michaelweston2285 2 года назад +2

      @@mikebrokeoff8552 Merriam-Webster disagrees with you

    • @zorkman111
      @zorkman111 2 года назад

      @@michaelweston2285 so you're arguing then that we don't have to cooperate with police? Which is it then?

    • @SuperYxskaft
      @SuperYxskaft 2 года назад +1

      But it is uncooperative, thats just a fact, like the definition of the word really. But, the law says he doesnt have to cooperate, so he is doing nothing wrong (and most likely everything correct). But that still doesnt take away that he is not cooperate.

  • @IVIAUII
    @IVIAUII 6 месяцев назад

    He said “ the reason that I’m exercising my rights does not make me not responsive

  • @Chevroletman5
    @Chevroletman5 8 месяцев назад

    And IF he would have told them he was a Private Investigator the police could have told the lady then that could have completely screwed up his investigation.

  • @nonamegame9857
    @nonamegame9857 2 года назад +54

    Did anyone else notice how the attitudes of the deputies changed when he said that he used to be a member of law enforcement?

    • @milescorporosus4058
      @milescorporosus4058 2 года назад +8

      _Total_ shift in tone. Suddenly they were making their case with a peer rather than trying to intimidate a nobody.