This guy shouldn’t be allowed within 1000 feet of a school and be required to notify everyone in a 1 mile radius.
@tomeauburnАй бұрын
They will promote
@chipdiesel9788Ай бұрын
It is but cops don't get charged
@jeffjames4064Ай бұрын
Of all the porn on the net he has to risk his job for a second hand photo? He's got officer material written all over.
@HariSeldon913Ай бұрын
Officer is the lowest rank for police. You probably meant 'command'.
@eddiee2371Ай бұрын
I agree, but thinking he’s risking his job is about unlikely as a politician going to jail. He'll probably be assigned to desk duty.
@dragons_redАй бұрын
People's thirsts override their reason. That's what religion is based on dealing with.
@barelyasurvivor1257Ай бұрын
Hell he is the new Republican Senator for sure
@joshmonusАй бұрын
Actually wouldn't this be considered a first hand photo?
@michaelccopelandsr7120Ай бұрын
And cops wonder why no one trusts or respects them, anymore.
@tendogman8222Ай бұрын
Exactly
@didamnesia3575Ай бұрын
They do not wonder. They were not bullied. They are lifelong bullies
@taylorpatterson100Ай бұрын
As a police officer I don’t wonder. Stuff like this makes me disappointed and sick.
@Ricky-k5hАй бұрын
The Supreme Court ruled the police have no duty to protect or serve citizens
@darrell3643Ай бұрын
I believe that there are a lot of bad cops as well as good cops. The problem is who is who.
@williezar2231Ай бұрын
I'm shocked the FBI connected the victim but am thankful they did. She had a right to know.
@crjcrj8443Ай бұрын
They had to if they were going to charge the officer with a crime. They needed her to tell them she did not give permission
@azrobbins01Ай бұрын
I wondered about that as well. I am not sure I would want to know. Did they have an obligation to track her down and tell her, or were they just looking for a witness to secure their case against the officer?
@crjcrj8443Ай бұрын
@@azrobbins01 a witness but they also have to talk to her to see if she was a victim more than just taking a picture of a picture
@azrobbins01Ай бұрын
@@crjcrj8443 I guess that true. They wouldn't know that he did not have her permission unless they asked her.
@piotrberman6363Ай бұрын
FBI could even trace the face in their data base, lots of stuff is collected "just in case".
@chrisc6015Ай бұрын
Only $25,000. Doesn’t seem like enough to me
@tony_25or6to4Ай бұрын
Might be what a lawyer said they could get and that such a low amount would be settled quickly.
@Catman_CMАй бұрын
It's actually probably a minimum required award to get into the specific court circuit that their lawyer thinks will give them the best chance to win. "Circuit" may be the wrong word. Anyway, other lawyer KZbinrs occassionally mention that the initial filing starts with a lower "at least $X" just to get it to the court level they want. The actual award being sought may be much higher
@mathewfullerton8577Ай бұрын
It's known as the jurisdictional amount. Under a certain amount it is dropped to a lower court, such as small claims, which has a cap on damages.
@Catman_CMАй бұрын
@@mathewfullerton8577 There we go, that's what I was referring to. Thanks for this!
@MadMeaveАй бұрын
Sounds like alot for a photo.
@L337f33tАй бұрын
There is an absolute OCEAN of free adult content on the internet. And this genius decides to do this? How thirsty can you get!
@admiraladama5877Ай бұрын
I suspect it’s less about the photo and more about the power of having those photos of a person he knows/met. Which is worse, if true, because that’s a mindset you find with sexual predators
@roadcalm3303Ай бұрын
@@admiraladama5877 BINGO!
@Tonygarry78Ай бұрын
Cops aren't smart.
@andrewh7868Ай бұрын
@@admiraladama5877 Exactly. There's a difference between "saw some attractive rando doing XYZ" and, "saw this specific person who would refuse to let me see such things but I saw them anyway".
@midnightrambler8866Ай бұрын
He's a creep. He's done this before. 😊
@michaelccopelandsr7120Ай бұрын
What's worse is these tyrants still have the audacity to call themselves the good guys.
@hugoh.9694Ай бұрын
Narcissists will always gaslight you and keep telling you about their heroism. They will turn an innocent man into a "criminal" just to use them in their narrative to try to convince you how much you need them. Even if it takes violating that man's constitutional rights. The police department press releases abd constant COPaganda from the media seeks to do the sane thing. Every political elite benefiting from the status quouo does the same. That includes judges, lawyers, prosecutors and (generally) the wealthy.
@snaplashАй бұрын
They're not. Civil asset forfieture has turned them all into armed robbers.
@ianbattles7290Ай бұрын
Most cops are worse than the "criminals" they arrest.
@RkbmommaАй бұрын
Moral of the story is to have paper copies in your glove box and to NEVER present your phone to a cop. Period.
@ErideahАй бұрын
Fairly strong guess that this cop (hopefully former cop) had a tendency of stopping pretty ladies and taking their phones, and that's how the FBI eventually got involved
@PositiveOnly-dm3rxАй бұрын
most of the department I would guess if he was sharing them with them.
@AbNomal621Ай бұрын
Define “pretty” but likely he likely had a disproportionate number of stops of women.
@donsolosАй бұрын
Trading pictures like pokemon cards. So quick to abuse their power
@hermesten1000Ай бұрын
Well former at that dept, but no doubt moved on to a different department.
@todayslist37737Ай бұрын
Other women spoke out after this hit the local news.
@steveladner4346Ай бұрын
Self proclaimed heroes never cease to amaze me.
@MrFixItGaАй бұрын
Cops aren't even in the top 10 most dangerous jobs. 🙄 The fact that people refuse to accept that 99% of cops and military are never in any real danger is annoying.
@christoner2666Ай бұрын
Tell your mom hi
@steveladner4346Ай бұрын
@@christoner2666 Go polish your badge and call yourself a hero.
@christoner2666Ай бұрын
@@steveladner4346 you're so cool
@didamnesia3575Ай бұрын
@christoner2666 guys like you need hrt to match the levels of a typical office worker
@turbo-brianАй бұрын
$25K is probably the most undersized damages I've seen anyone sue for. The violation of privacy, abuse of power, and damage to respect for this town's LEOs is egregious.
@lukeskywalker2116Ай бұрын
He should be banned from law enforcement forever and jailed on a felony so he can never carry again.
@july8xxАй бұрын
He should be charged as a sex offender.
@SuperS05Ай бұрын
@@july8xxyou'll have to get a new law passed to do that.
@RationalGaze216Ай бұрын
I hope you're right, but it's more likely he'll get a slap on the wrist & transferred to a different department. Problematic cops get shuffled around like problematic priests.
@AbNomal621Ай бұрын
Well if the cop is properly charged and convicted of a sex crime - said cop won’t be able work in enforcement again.
@jpnewman1688Ай бұрын
@@SuperS05yup.. Let's keep VOTING then BEG your masters for CHANGE.. 😂😂😂
@peachesrambo4037Ай бұрын
Why does this surprises anyone
@onradioactivewavesАй бұрын
Same reason as to why you asked this question
@tendogman8222Ай бұрын
It doesn’t
@hugoh.9694Ай бұрын
Nor at all. I know of a girl who bribed an officer in his back seat with all sorts of favors. She got off without a single citation. Kentucky for anyone wondering.
@onradioactivewavesАй бұрын
@@hugoh.9694 at least the cop wasn't suffering from premature traffic citation
@jssamp4442Ай бұрын
Because it was actually investigated.
@richwightman3044Ай бұрын
NEVER hand your phone to anyone in government.
@jimh4375Ай бұрын
That's easy to say but when they show up with a gun it's hard to prevent, you can however refuse to unlock it.
@pureluck8767Ай бұрын
Facts
@zed639Ай бұрын
Never hand them anything. Go back to paper documents.
@chris54494Ай бұрын
tail light out is a bs excuse police in Missouri use to pull over women. its happened several times to my wife and daughter but when they got home i checked and the lights were working just fine.
@KivlorАй бұрын
It's a bs excuse to pull over everyone. I'm a dude, and I've been pulled over for both tail lights and "license plate lights out" countless times. Interestingly, if you say "I just changed those last week, do you mind showing me where they're out?" the officer tends to get really mad lol
@roflchopter11Ай бұрын
Escalate it as much as possible within the law. File a complaint with the department. File a criminal complaint with the county. Call the US attorney and file a federal civil rights criminal complaint.
@MetqaАй бұрын
@@Kivlor It behooves me to tell a positive story about a cop and the "light out" excuse. Coming back into my town after travelling, an officer did stop me and said my license light was out. I told him my dash did not indicate any lights being out and from his view through my window, he saw no indicators of lights being out. So, instead of a ticket, he gave me a written warning telling me to get the car checked, because he was unable to see my license even walking up to the car, and he said to "show this warning to anyone who pulls you over on your way home tonight, so they don't give you another citation". Turns out, my light was not out, but got blocked by leaf debris that had washed or blown in from the storm that had come through. I scraped the leaves out, and it was as bright as ever.
@colinwallace5286Ай бұрын
I guess you should check the lights on your vehicle occasionally. I see vehicles with lights out all the time. It’s seen as “trivial”, yet not so trivial that the average lazy car owner can keep it maintained. Good way to avoid getting stopped, I guess.🤷🏻♂️
@roflchopter11Ай бұрын
@@colinwallace5286 That would be the solution if the light were actually out. This is about cops lying. I have personally been stopped in this way and was issued a fraudulent citation. I regret not escalating it as described.
@samueledward5078Ай бұрын
A Missouri State Trooper just got charged with 6 felonies for doing the same thing down in Sikeston Missouri.
@wingatebarraclough3553Ай бұрын
Somehow unsurprising.
@wingatebarraclough3553Ай бұрын
Coincidentally, the bully in high school who stole my gloves with his gang backing him up and a vicious smirk on his face, went on to become a deputy sheriff. Last I knew of him he was making quite a reputation among the female community college students as a creepy, leering, harasser. Obviously, not all cops.. but there seems to a heck of an attraction of those types of people to that type of job
@joshmonusАй бұрын
Charged and convicted are two totally different things when it comes to police.
@frozencanary4522Ай бұрын
I'm very curious to hear what the FBI was investigating and what they found.
@goingagainstthegrainАй бұрын
💯
@travislupumАй бұрын
The law enforcement in this country has no idea what's investigating them and what is being created to combat them legally in the beautiful system they created and are about to thrown into
@thiawroaneАй бұрын
keep paper, NEVER give your phone to a cop!
@lonebikeroftheapocalypse9527Ай бұрын
With the apps it's really easy to request physical cards for proof of insurance.
@GeorgeVCohea-dw7ouАй бұрын
The average person does not know nor care.
@chrissauter7501Ай бұрын
Such blatant violationS of the 4th Amendment
@solandri69Ай бұрын
Until there are penalties for the person doing the violation (instead of fines paid for by the citizens), these violations will continue.
@nicktheslayer95Ай бұрын
I found an article stating more women have come forward, including at least one minor. This guy is screwed.
@My-Pal-HalАй бұрын
Sure seems to be A Lot of just a Few Bad Apples. And oranges, and peaches, and pears, and obviously a few Bananas 😳 .... no low is to low
@ShreddingFinnАй бұрын
So how many women were victimized before he was caught? I'd bet the farm this isn't the first time
@james1787Ай бұрын
If he has pictures of others in his phone that he victimized the same way, it's very easy for them to track them all down. His pictures will have a timestamp and most likely a gps location recorded in the pictures data he took. Simply match that up to who he had stopped at those times - now you have dash cam footage, timestamped vehicle stops, body camera footage.. etc. If there were any other photos in his phone of the same thing he did to others, they'll find them and tack on additional charges.
@stepheneddington1667Ай бұрын
This is one of the reasons that using paper proof of insurance and drivers license should be the only way to prove them. If you have to unlock your digital device and hand it to an officer, then they can use that as 'consent to search'
@JamesJamersonIsAGodАй бұрын
Right? It was annoying when they stopped mailing insurance cards, but ah okay well I’ll just print one. These days it’s been probably 3 years since I’ve had a device that’s even compatible with the ancient printer I have and the insurance cards expire every 6 months, it gets annoying to remember to print it. I was pulled over about 2 months ago for the first time in 15 years and that was my first thought “crap I do NOT want to show this guy my unlocked phone” even though it’d be way more boring this this lady’s. Oddly enough he had zero interest in my insurance card or even my paper registration, I asked and he said “I have it all already”. When he printed the ticket he did in fact have all of my information. I was also 1,000+ miles from my state of registration and license, so there must be some sort of widespread shared database at this point. Small town cop too, not a Trooper or large municipality…
@Thomas-fr8nxАй бұрын
Same thing MSP Proctor did with Karen Read's phone. What is it with cops getting ahold of women's phones?
@GeorgeWashingtonLaserMusketАй бұрын
Never, ever turn your phone over to the police. Always encrypt your phone. Never use biometrics. Always use a strong password. Do not use cloud backup services that you cannot control, meaning do not use iCloud.
@runetube10Ай бұрын
@@GeorgeWashingtonLaserMusketwrong wrong wrong you should always use biometrics and you should turn them off if you suspect you’re in danger of having your phone taken. All you have to do is press your power button 5 times to disable biometrics and require your passcode. It’s not that hard.
@rockyroad7345Ай бұрын
@@GeorgeWashingtonLaserMusket*Never store nude photos on your phone*
@robertlewis1965Ай бұрын
@@rockyroad7345 Unless you are Hunter Biden !
@hugoh.9694Ай бұрын
@@rockyroad7345Nude photos are not the only thing on your phone police can use to manipulate you or hem you up. Just about ANYTHING they find can be used to concoct the narrative they wish to justify whatever it is they want to do to you.
@writerconsideredАй бұрын
Back in the day. This is what made Polaroid cameras so popular. The picture quality wasn't that good but you kept possession of the photos so unwanted eyes at the photo store would never see them.
@judyjohnson9610Ай бұрын
That's all good until you have an ex who threatens to show those pics to his buddies
@emilyfeagin2673Ай бұрын
They still make them
@gillgetter3004Ай бұрын
Had my fishing license on phone because I just bought it away from a printer. A DNR officer happened to be checking licenses and I brought mine up on phone and handed it to him, he said no you hold it so I can see it. This was Michigan 👍
@benpeters1940Ай бұрын
Should be more than $25,000.00!
@sporty196071Ай бұрын
Many years ago, my little brother worked at the Fotomat booth the ones in the middle of the mall parking lot. It was a boring job at times so he would look at the photos. I would st by to bs with him and he would show me some pictures of cool cars. Every now and then he would find some pics of some hot girls, he was showing me some one day of some girls and I told him that's not a girl, after that he never looked again it was such a shock to him.
@bf-696Ай бұрын
Never give cops anything. Volunteer nothing.
@DarkForce2024Ай бұрын
If your operating a motor vehicle, you are required to provide a valid driver's license, registration, and insurance if the cop asks. You don't have to answer questions, but you DO have to provide those three things, it's not voluntary, you agreed to it when you got your driver's license. But I agree with others, give them the paper version.
@joshmonusАй бұрын
This is the kind of crap that happens when citizens allow themselves to be ruled over by a police state.
@fractalzoomgogglesАй бұрын
For ppl who say "if you're not doing anything wrong you have nothing to worry about"
@JasonW.Ай бұрын
It appears very apparent, and appropriate, that the photo was needed by the cop to deeply investigate the taillight problem. She should be happy the cop didn't civil assest forfeiture her entire picture collection.
@url7292Ай бұрын
$25,000 seems extremely low.
@azuth11Ай бұрын
The American People desperately wish for the police to raise their standards, but the police are having a hard time finding a long enough shovel.
@Ricky-k5hАй бұрын
Sadly American's have become complacent cowards who think complaining about government tyranny and Corruption will actually stop the Tyranny and Corruption lmao
@me8042Ай бұрын
They do set the bar pretty low. A study said that if police departments followed their psyc evals, that they would destroy 75% of the applications. ‘Nuff said.
@ianbattles7290Ай бұрын
Cops are sovereign citizens who think they don't have to follow the same rules as the rest of society.
@pureluck8767Ай бұрын
It’s getting bad
@SuperAmericanSamАй бұрын
This is exactly why I have my insurance printed at all times. Do they really wonder why we hate them so much?
@tarrantwolfАй бұрын
Which ones scarier to consider from the cop, his lack of self-control over his basic drives or his willingness to violate his oaths and peoples rights?
@LJHowardPhotoАй бұрын
My insurance company, bank, and others keep asking me to switch to 'paperless'. They like to cite all kinds of benefits that mostly benefit themselves. This story is the reason I refuse to go paperless. I wonder what else that cop was stealing off people's phones? Bank and credit card numbers, passwords ... That few minutes he had the phone is plenty of time to offload every bit of data it contained onto a memory stick in order to sift through it later at his leisure.
@edwardtowle1563Ай бұрын
Not to mention the more things you do via digital, the better chance you have of being hacked. Then the bank doesn't want anything to do with you
@drivebywire9962Ай бұрын
Of course if you live in an area that the USPS doesn't care about doing their job, you have a decision to make.
@nadasurf9009Ай бұрын
" SHARED WITH OTHER PEOPLE " ... I WONDER HOW MANY OF THOSE OTHER PEOPLE ARE LICENSED PEACE OFFICERS OR POLICE OFFICERS? SOUNDS LIKE THAT DEPARTMENT HAS AN ISSUE OF TAKING PEOPLE'S PHONES AND THEN PICTURES OFF OF THEM AND SHOWING THEM AROUND TO THEIR BUDDIES. OTHER PEOPLE. I LOVE HOW THEY JUST IGNORE THE FACT THAT IT'S MOST LIKELY OTHER OFFICERS
@mrsmiley631Ай бұрын
"Share with nearby device".
@shamusosullivan5650Ай бұрын
Only 25 k? Illegal search and seizure, abuse of authority, obviously I don’t know the law. What rose would you charge this cop with in this scenario?
@brademerick9181Ай бұрын
25 million , a zero was missing
@paddle_shiftАй бұрын
Rose?
@alannitcher5001Ай бұрын
A sex crime.
@iPodTouch4Life20Ай бұрын
@@brademerick9181if a zero was missing it would be 250,000. Do you mean 2 zeroes?
@joepalmer1594Ай бұрын
Simple trace back on the photo with the timestamp. Almost all officers call in all vehicle stops to their dispatch. They'll give tag, description, and location before ever contacting the driver. That info is recorded in the department computer system. Failing that, if the officer runs a tag or DL either thru their dispatch or on the in-car MDT, that inquiry is also timestamped and retained in the department computers. If the FBI is investigating something, all those records will be examined.
@cheeto4493Ай бұрын
possible bodycam or dashcam from the timestamp as well.
@jamesfischer8667Ай бұрын
Thank goodness for qualified immunity. It clearly is so important to have around.
@tarrantwolfАй бұрын
Yeah, this doesn't fall under that. His official duty doesn't include stealing pics off people's phones.
@bartsanders1553Ай бұрын
@@tarrantwolf He was "gathering evidence" for a "potential crime." Whoops, it was his crime!
@Anonsense-w5gАй бұрын
@@tarrantwolfBut you need a case where the police were specifically told in court that they can’t do it.
@tarrantwolfАй бұрын
@@Anonsense-w5g there has been such cases, illegal searches, already covered, stealing from citizens, already covered. Illegal searches and stealing from citizens, already covered.
@ygrittesnow1701Ай бұрын
@@Anonsense-w5g Think an exception was written in recently that if the act is so egregious that an officer should have known their actions were illegal.
@BiggerfootАй бұрын
Bro this is beyond fucked and illegal, I would sue you for your whole life if I was that lady.
@mikeshoults4155Ай бұрын
It's a sex crime.
@nickwinnАй бұрын
@@mikeshoults4155is not a sex crime
@joshmonusАй бұрын
Qualified immunity says otherwise.
@johnstapler5956Ай бұрын
Typical cop move. Perverted and corrupt.
@kirkmorrison6131Ай бұрын
This cop should be prosecuted for a sex crime.
@nickwinnАй бұрын
This wasn't a sex crime though, at most this is an invasion of privacy and illegal search and seizure.
@mattmccollum6103Ай бұрын
Wow that is a terrible idea, there is no sex crime.
@tomcede6428Ай бұрын
Watch the cops will get rewarded with additional paid vacation - they call it paid administrative leave.
@noahhastings6145Ай бұрын
Put him on the list
@timb7775Ай бұрын
OMG, that cop belongs in prison. He sounds like a predator and should never be trusted again.
@xolltarАй бұрын
What type of person desires to have authority over others? The type that should never hold a servents position. 😂
@DanielJohnson-ps4xvАй бұрын
I prefer having a paper copy in my car. Occasionally someone else might drive my car. Or maybe the phone charger cord goes bad on a long trip.
@wayneamerican1708Ай бұрын
It's quite evident, cops in America have no shame. All day , every day, we hear about their crap
@davidrobertson4332Ай бұрын
I hear virtually all politicians say the “few bad apples” phrase and yet I say there only a “few good apples” at best. The conduct of these police officers should not surprise anyone.
@mountaindewherbertАй бұрын
The phrase is "a few good apples spoil the bunch" on account of the gas they release as they rot, causing them all to rot faster. People use the phrase the exact opposite way than it's intended lol
@ianbattles7290Ай бұрын
Yeah, you really have to wonder why any officer would feel comfortable risking their career and reputation for something like this. Is it because there is a culture of zero accountability...or is he just an idiot?
@Br0nto5aurusАй бұрын
They always say the first 3 words, but never finish the phrase. It's "a few bad apples SPOILS THE BUNCH". So when politicians or police departments say, "it's just a few bad apples", the appropriate response is, "so you're admitting your entire police department is rotten throughout, because those bad apples have spoiled the bunch."
@mrsmiley631Ай бұрын
Instead of issuing a ticket he rubbed one out.
@midnightrambler8866Ай бұрын
Exactly.
@travismccloskey9733Ай бұрын
Ejaculation vesus citation?
@KyleSSamuelsonАй бұрын
I constantly watch your channel for 2 reasons, great content and zero ads
@surlyogre1476Ай бұрын
... that, and Jennifer's quip at the end...
@climber950Ай бұрын
Well, on her license plate, it does say it’s the “show me” state. Guess the officer really took it to heart.
@thepax2621Ай бұрын
They always manage to hit new lows 🙄
@captainjimolchsАй бұрын
Very young, I heard on TV Dobie Gillis say "Maynard, you've hit a new high in lows".
@thorin693Ай бұрын
This is why you carry a Physical copy and Do Not give anyone your device's.
@charlesjames1442Ай бұрын
Every organization that offers someone control or authority over a vulnerable group of people is a target for sadists. Sadists get very good at disguising themselves as caring and trusteorthy. They have to or they can't approach their victims.
@MadMeaveАй бұрын
Sounds like the democrat party!
@chiseldrockАй бұрын
We used to have a phone in the office, now we have an office in our phone!
@thomasmathews7421Ай бұрын
They should be suing for $25,000,00.00 for illegal search and seizure violation.
@JebusHypocristosXАй бұрын
The problem is that those judgements should come from the police unions pension fund not from us taxpayers.
@donmedford2563Ай бұрын
@@JebusHypocristosX Good point. I had not thought of that.
@GeorgeWashingtonLaserMusketАй бұрын
@@JebusHypocristosX I think it should come from the individual police officers insurance. Doctors have to get insured for malpractice, I bet if we compare lawsuits against police vs doctors police are sued more often.
@ygrittesnow1701Ай бұрын
@@JebusHypocristosX I guess I am a bit dubious as to the whole sue the pension deal. No one sues someone with expectation of it coming out of their 401k retirement. Usual us lowly minions have a judgement issued against us that is paid directly or through wage garnishment now.
@rcc737Ай бұрын
@@JebusHypocristosX I agree.....your post reminds me of a common saying from Malcom in the Middle. "You may thank the cadet after I leave."
@Fireguy97Ай бұрын
If this case manages to get in front of a judge I'd really like to know if the cop will attempt to claim qualified immunity.
@godlyfrogАй бұрын
You know he will. "Your honor, there is no prior case law that indicates that this was a violation of her rights."
@mikesenesouk531Ай бұрын
And now the FBI agents have her picture and is sharing it with other agents and they'll have to be investigated.
@timcanterbury9738Ай бұрын
"One Hour Photo" - Robin Williams
@eveishard2334Ай бұрын
Digital licenses/registrations are being pushed because it's a way around their inability to force you to unlock your phone with a passcode.
@trikstari7687Ай бұрын
Digital currency and digital ID should be made optional only by law. Central Bank digital currency is nothing but a slave collar.
@the_omg3242Ай бұрын
When that's forced it's time to buy a crappy phone just for that and don't keep anything else on it.
@the_lost_navigatorАй бұрын
What about that Paramedic who assaulted unconscious victim(s!) in the Ambulance on way to Hospital - and he took videos of them? Sick World.
@zmarkoАй бұрын
$25k in damages?? That's it?? Should be 100x as much!!
@JimLambierАй бұрын
Where I live, that's low enough that it could still be held in small claims court. By the time her lawyer takes a cut, what will be left?
@johnperry5960Ай бұрын
Should be suing for a whole lot more than that
@admiraladama5877Ай бұрын
Some possible ways they found here: 1. He did at least log an entry during the stop 2. It was recent enough that there was footage from the cars cam 3. More creepy, he also took a photo of her drivers license with her name & address as part of a trophy to go along with the photos
@julianachandler2975Ай бұрын
Disgusting breach of privacy. Who knows what else he’s stolen from phones.
@editguy666Ай бұрын
What idiot would hand their unlocked phone to a cop?
@bradleysmith2021Ай бұрын
Can't read it? Here, write down the policy number. I'll read it to you.
@eastwind319Ай бұрын
She didn't hand it to him, he took it out of her hand saying that he couldn't read it.
@terripebsworth9623Ай бұрын
Why anybody takes compromising photos or video with their phone is beyond me. NOTHING stored on your phone is private. Period.
@timdowney6721Ай бұрын
Well, this is anything but a surprise.
@JohnMcClain-p9tАй бұрын
When I was a teen in the early seventies, I was a member of a bicycle club and met a man who was a photography buff. He developed several pictures of my bike and shared some of his own bikes. That's the last time I had good reason to trust someone with my photos. I would not take revealing photos on my phone because it's rather obvious once such things get out there is little control possible at all. I carry a paper copy of my registration and license because you can't trust anyone you don't know well, and often not even close friends. That was crazy!
@ourtexasfamilyvideos62Ай бұрын
Don't ever hand your phone to a cop. If you use biometric thumb print info to unlock your phone. Stop that.
@michaelnoble2432Ай бұрын
Why would anyone in their right mind take pictures like that, even for their spouse?
@davidhoward4715Ай бұрын
So the cop is innocent?
@michaelnoble2432Ай бұрын
@@davidhoward4715 of course not.
@JebusHypocristosXАй бұрын
She is lucky he didn't do worse to her using his authority to force her.
@valarianne2284Ай бұрын
We had one of those in my area back in the 80s. I was immune due to 2 things: I was a bartender in a bar he liked and my Grandparents were HIGHLY respected in that town. And yes, I dropped my Grandpa's name to get out of tickets for "stuff I didn't feel like doing" - as in having my car overdue for inspection. Because I was a bit of a brat back then. This "officer" would hang out by the clubs and if he saw a pretty young lady leave he would follow her, pull her over and offer her a choice. Get a DWI or give it up. The girls were terrified they might cross his path. He actually did pull me over one night, but it was just to ask why I wasn't working (I think I had mid terms the next day and was headed to a classmates to cram) and who WAS working. He liked to stop in at closing (3AM here) and sit for a couple hours. While we waited. And waited. And waited - we just worked all night and wanted to go HOME! This was the place everyone stopped at the end of the night - so from 11PM to 2:45 they were 3 deep at the bar with 3 bartenders running our tails off and no clean glassware so we had to do that by hand. No time to put it through the machines. We were TIRED! But we really didn't have a choice. Some nights my boss used to turn off almost all the lights and we would clean up in near darkness trying to avoid having him stop by to "visit". Jerk was completely clueless. He thought we WANTED to hang out with him - as if it were some great privilege. Most of us just wanted to go home with our respective boyfriend/girlfriend and pass out from sheer exhaustion. That jerk literally held us captive until the sun came up many nights. What an a**hole.
@aaroneverett296Ай бұрын
On another note, you always answer the questions I'm asking myself. That's why I watch your videos.
@nowaywithyoueveragaiАй бұрын
Did I grow up in a lie thinking cops used to be very decent folks?
@hewhohasnoidentity4377Ай бұрын
Law enforcement maintained a great public image until cellular phones, smart phones, body cameras and social media gave the public the ability to document and share what really happens. Think back to the Rodney King beating. Those officers were all very comfortable in what they were doing. That was not the first time. Think of how often police reports don't match the video. In the history of policing, up until recently nobody would question the integrity of an officer. If it was in the report courts and juries considered it fact. The abuse on the streets is finally getting attention and accountability. The next step is the jails and prisons. These power hungry psychopaths have limited supervision due to staffing shortages and are surrounded by people who society ignores. I'm sure the abuse is rampant.
@valarianne2284Ай бұрын
Yes and no. When I was a teenager (this is Vietnam era) in a very small, hick town we had mostly very good officers. They were your neighbors. Or your parents' former classmates. This was a small town where people all knew each other. And their parents knew each other. We had teachers that taught 3 generations of families. People married the boy or girl next door and stayed put. The chief of police lived around the corner and played golf with my Dad. If you got pulled over and it was obvious you'd been drinking you were told to park it and walk home. Unless you were female - then you'd get a ride. Because young lady walking by herself middle of the night - dangerous. As long as you were polite and respectful you got treated polite and respectful. If a cop went bad - and it happened - they were usually "encouraged" to retire early. All charges in whatever case were dropped. Never even went to court. We had one cop - we called him "John Law" because he was so rigid - after a couple decades trying to catch youngsters smoking weed (we would just disappear into the woods - we hung out in the woods and knew all the trails even with no moon) he got caught planting pot on some kids. They were kids who didn't indulge. He had a major freak out and a nervous breakdown. He was "retired" and all charges were dropped. That was then. Over the years I've seen my little town deteriorate so badly it's scary. The first time I watched a cop lie in court I was shocked. Now we have these young, smarta** thugs who address seniors by their first name. No "miss", "ma'am", "mister", or "sir". I didn't survive all these years to have some punk whose daddy wasn't even born when I was running around town address me by my given name. I EARNED the right to be called Ma'am, or Mrs. and I'll be damned if I tolerate being addressed any other way by some brat young enough to be my grandson. Depending on how old you are, while there were always some bad apples, in general officers took their oaths much more seriously - and this is only my experience, keep in mind. I have definitely seen things get worse over the years. I will say this - at least in my area there are still some decent young men who are officers. One helped me change a fuse in my car at night as I was having trouble seeing. When my car finally died about a month ago 3 different officers in 2 local towns drove me because they saw me walking after dark. One officer even called his supervisor to get permission to cross into another town. NOT ONE asked for ID. They were all concerned for my safety walking by the highway (which really isn't much of a highway - it's only 2 lanes in some spots) after dark. When I told them my car broke down they all said hop in I'll drive you. When I questioned one he told me it was his job to SERVE the public. Polite, respectful, and doing their jobs. Everything an officer should be! Kind of gives you hope! I don't think we were brought up on lies - I think there have been too many changes that attract the wrong type of person to the job. And then keeps them in the job by not punishing them severely when they do wrong. Police officers should be held to a higher standard - and if they go bad they should suffer twice the punishment. I would love to see the days when "police officer" meant an exemplary, honorable gentleman, return. My best friend's father was an officer - he was a good man and a good officer. Bad apples need to become the exception, not the norm. And good cops need to stand up when bad cops do bad things. And one more thing - I'm sorry girls but I have yet to see ONE of you behave decently. You're worse than the boys! And I'm female! If you girls are becoming officers to prove something - please go home and learn how to behave like a LADY. We don't need you out there trying to show how you're just as tough as the bad boys. We don't need either the bad boys or you. Go back to desk jobs. Or meter maids. Nothing is quite as distasteful as watching some of these young lady officers act like Imelda Marcos, harassing the peasantry for some perceived crime, like "you were at the gas station an abnormal amount of time". Seriously! You prove every day how unsuited you are to work as an LEO!
@captainjimolchsАй бұрын
@@valarianne2284 About those from out of town?
@RichardWhileyАй бұрын
Used to be????????
@teramedia7333Ай бұрын
Could you imagine if she had been only 17 at the time? The paperwork would have consumed a forest.
@AlexandriPatrisАй бұрын
How did they find her? To quote Nicolas Cage in The Rock, "It's the FBI."
@bartsanders1553Ай бұрын
"Carla _was_ the prom queen."
@DKNguyen3.1415Ай бұрын
@@bartsanders1553 Green smoke! I got green smoke!"
@dcpp5574Ай бұрын
Police can not go through ANYONE'S phone without a warrant !
@XenobearsАй бұрын
Aren’t there laws against the distribution of explicit materials featuring a specific person without that person’s consent or knowledge?
@demonpride1975Ай бұрын
i think any officer that got a copy of that picture, and didn't instantly report that officer, should be fired, and charged with sexual harassment.
@scottmcshannon6821Ай бұрын
25,000 it should be multi millions!!!
@GhostDrummerАй бұрын
As a former sheriff deputy, I cannot believe the amount of people who don’t ask for an attorney when being questioned, or those who blindly hand over their phones when stopped by LE. Print out any documents you’ll need to give to LE when stopped. Blindly handing over your phone to anyone is stupid, let alone to LE.
@3rdeyeaudit205Ай бұрын
That cop violated the 4th amendment..
@MadMeaveАй бұрын
Not really. She gave him her phone like an idiot. She is partially to blame.
@roycsinclairАй бұрын
Also back in those film developing days (1970s) a friend of mine also worked where they developed photos (professional photo developing company) and while they didn't make "extra prints" they did share those photos with their coworkers because one step of photo processing is for them to look at the photos to ensure they did get made properly.
@k9o3wАй бұрын
Oh look. Another reason to distrust cops. What a surprise.
@7-tenАй бұрын
Police are just people. There's nothing special about them. There's no reason to trust them.
@RobertSzaszАй бұрын
The one time i was stopped for having a tail light out it magically fixed itself by the time I walked back to take a look.
@gindaburraАй бұрын
"Can you store your licence in your bank app so we can take a looksee?" There was no intention to help people secure their identity. It's a warrantless access.
@ChrisHendrickson82Ай бұрын
It's great when your town makes the news. It's even better when you aren't surprised.
@skn9895Ай бұрын
Why anyone would take and keep nude photos of themselves on their phone, is beyond me...
@hugoh.9694Ай бұрын
It's NOT "beyond" thousands... if not MILLIONS. That why the story is the officer stealing the photo and not anything else. There are FAR more people who can relate to the victim. Plus... if the cop can steal that from your phone, they can snoop and steal anything else too. THAT (I belive) is what captivates most of us to the story.
@meisteckhartАй бұрын
I used to work in a photo lab when I was a teenager. When I processed photos like that (most commonly bachelor parties) I used to have to notify the manager as they were concerned about legal ramifications with a minor seeing sexual material. They would flag it and would tell the customer when they picked up to not bring explicit photos to that lab. I never printed extras for myself, the machine tracked how many prints I made and I had to log what I printed and put any errors that were reprinted in a separate bin. If my numbers didn’t add up, like my cash drawer, I had to have an explanation. Maybe others weren’t that strict, but they took customer privacy and their balance sheet very seriously.
@googleuser3110Ай бұрын
Face recognition software can easily find her. You know the software they have is better than what is available to the public.
@jeffsmith350Ай бұрын
Officer should have been arrested!
@garysgarage.2841Ай бұрын
If there's one thing we definitely know happened during this investigation is that something definitely popped up
@valarianne2284Ай бұрын
😂😅😂
@PiscesMoon2YouАй бұрын
All you have to do is touch one phone to another and download everything on the other phone. That ability needs to be turned off.
@909LewserАй бұрын
FBI probably found her on Facebook like everyone else