Fully believe anyone meant to uphold the justice system should be held to a higher standard than the average citizen
@_nob0dy_2975 ай бұрын
Agreed
@83gemm5 ай бұрын
Yep, and yet in a lot of cases, the reverse ends up being true because they play the system from the inside and there’s a long standing protection from other officers. I truly hope that’s changing now. A couple of small towns over from me, a teacher lost her job because someone posted a picture on social media of her holding a red cup at a bbq. Mind you, could’ve been ice tea and she’s an adult on the weekend anyway, but it’s not like she was doing a keg stand. Meanwhile, it’s an open secret that our local cops are on the take for drug trade, beat their wives, and our politicians were found to be running child sex trafficking with police knowledge. So, yeah.
@ZeroKami865 ай бұрын
I absolutely agree. While I support discretion for use with civilians, it should *not* be allowed for law enforcement or government officials, etc. And punishments for such crimes should be *more* severe than it is for first-time civilian offenders. And there should be protections in place for wrongful terminations for the officers actually adhering to their duties by arresting fellow officers.
@dillongage3 ай бұрын
The worst part is that this is part of it. Theyre SUPPOSED to be held to a higher standard. They just.... arent always.
@dillongage3 ай бұрын
@@83gemm god damn. I have had the exact opposite experience with small town police. The bigest complaint I have with my local police is that many, MANY of them are very clearly too out of shape to properly enforce the law when neccessary. That's rapidly changing though. Lots of new hires in their 20s with a much better sense of modern times as well as you know... being able to run at a decent speed.
@mmm12176 ай бұрын
I think I know why I like this narrator. I love when he chimes in with his own thoughts and opinions on a story when he has them, about how it made him feel, or trying to be fair to the aggrieved side when the situation is minor/the reaction was over the top, that sort of thing. It gives an extra perspective and helps humanize the story and the narrator, too.
@IsaacDoctorKleiner6 ай бұрын
The other guy makes these corny jokes that just… piss me off
@Briethecheese136 ай бұрын
I also prefer this narrator because it's slightly easier to hear. And, consistency is nice
@w0lfie..x-.x6 ай бұрын
I like him because like you said he puts input in and he shows a lot of emotion(you can tell when he’s sad/pissed) and he knows when to not joke and when to joke; he’s also a lot more personal and relatable imo (one video he mentioned his religion and idk he feels more like a person)
@mmm12176 ай бұрын
@@w0lfie..x-.x That's a good way to sum it up, I think.
@aussiejubes6 ай бұрын
He's often wishy washy with his thoughts though, to the point he shouldn't have bothered. Stuff that sounds like "they were bad. Well not all bad. I mean people who go through that are traumatised & not everyone deserves to be labelled bad. But also, I mean, come on, that's bad what they did. But so was what the other person did..." ugh. He tries so hard to be PC & pre-empt all the little idiots who comment just to be negative & in the end wastes everyone's time with his fence straddling & backpedalling.
@AcousticTelevisions6 ай бұрын
"I didn't wanna handcuff him in front of his son" nah fuck that. He's violent and dangerous, his kid has seen enough. Teach his kid it's not okay.
@TheGrumpyHobo6 ай бұрын
Even if cops DO arrest cops, it seems in almost every single one of these stories the punishment was nonexistent or minimal. Probation or loss of job rather than imprisonment. That makes my blood boil. They should be held to a higher standard, not lower.
@BussyBoyBonanza4 ай бұрын
It's because in a majority of those cases, the individual responsible is not in fact the one being tried. It's the state. So the charges aren't made toward the individual police officer but the police department. They are trying themselves. So it's very much an, "We've investigated ourselves and found that we did nothing wrong." situation.
@Jartran724 ай бұрын
They should be held to the same standard. And I believe you are not familiar with the legal system. Most white first offenders barely get any punishment. It is repeat offenders or people who go to trial who get the big years. However a couple of these also made my blood boil. The mayor and police chief ones especially.
@Wumboo20004 ай бұрын
What adds to the crazy too, is half of them will just become a cop at a new station in a different county/jurisdiction state and continue to do what they do
@dillongage3 ай бұрын
@@Wumboo2000 that absolutely is wrong (morally not factually). Disgusting that they can get away with that. I understand why cops have qualified immunity in SOME instances. If a cop accidentally breaks something while searching a house/car, the police department should be held responsible, not the individual cop. But when it comes to active, aggressive crimes that would get a civilian a few weeks in jail atleast, the officers should face the exact same consequences, as well as additional fines. Look at lawyers. Lawyers can be fined for violating codes of ethics. Thats not even a law and they still get penalized. Why dont police have to pay ethics violations fines? Any and every crime they commit, wether its simple speeding (without due cause) or something more serious, should all result in monetary fines on top of normal charges.
@Scarlattomachiatto3 ай бұрын
And it's funny how the ones who do report/arrest the bad cop usually face worse consequences for "snitching".
@lermajerms6 ай бұрын
Mr. UnderSparked Narrator, sir, if you see this, just know that we all love you. Your role on this channel has affected our lives on this site, and we are all grateful for it. Love you, sir.
@BgChf-dg5lv6 ай бұрын
That last one was about Stephanie Lazarus. She murdered her love rival, Sherri Rasmussen. Stephanie bit her in the struggle and left dna.
@mangos28885 ай бұрын
JCS criminal psychology video has my favorite on her
@Badartist8886 ай бұрын
In Aztec society the higher up you were the harsher the punishment. I think its a good idea. I'd like to see something like a multiplier added in our society to those involved in the legal system. Lawyers (sworn to uphold the law) x2 Police (enforce the law) x3 Judges (oversee guilt and innocence) x4 Politicians (write the laws) x5 You could also do something about making punishments more serious but it would be harder to write and enforce. Still something that is a fine for a citizen is jail (short term) for a politician, judge, or cop could also work.
@FIRING_BLIND5 ай бұрын
Ehhh judges should get the same as police. Bench trials aren't that common iirc, so in a jury trial, the judge is only in control of making sure the courtroom follows the rules, determining what evidence is/isn't allowed, ruling on objections, and sometimes sentencing
@Jivvi4 ай бұрын
@@FIRING_BLIND almost always sentencing. Even when a jury decides the verdict, most of the time it's the judge that decides the sentence.
@IamayMizono6 ай бұрын
The cop who gets busted for drugs, gets clean then becomes a small town cop would make an interesting movie if done right.
@himwhoisnottobenamed54276 ай бұрын
I’m feeling a kind of Walking Tall/Bad Lieutenant kind of vibe.
@fangirl30865 ай бұрын
This is just Officer Hopper from Stranger Things
@111smd6 ай бұрын
Narrator it is not that no cops get charged it is the fact that even with overwhelming evidence they still get "No wrong doing was found." or minimal sentence (6 months for what a normal citizen would get 10 years) plus the fact that any cop that knows about what is going on is either to afraid to speak up or unwilling because of the thin blue line if the cop is respected by other cops this is why i think cops who do not say anything when they know another cop is breaking the law should be given the same punishment ass well because cops know that they are breaking the law they should automatically receive the max sentence for any crime they are convicted of, yes even if the max sentence is death
@paigeseliger8366 ай бұрын
Not wanting to cuff someone in front of their kids who were most likely present when that parent used violence against their other parent is.... an odd choice. He doesn't need protection from their judgement, they literally need protection FROM HIM. THAT'S WHY HE'S BEING ARRESTED. Let their last memory of their abusive dad be him being taken in handcuffs, let them experience the justice side of things and not just the crime! They deserve to be freed of any illusion that he was justified. He deserves to be left without the respect of his children, for hurting or threatening to hurt their mom.
@kiarasimone1232 ай бұрын
Definitely not an odd choice. Plenty of officers don’t want to arrest a parent in front of their kid.
@paigeseliger8362 ай бұрын
@@kiarasimone123 I could understand if they had done some crime related to money, not this.
@MysticSpira6 ай бұрын
He's ONE PERSON, you guys! A person who needs help in getting out our beloved videos at the high rate and quality we've grown accustomed to. And, as any person deserves, HE NEEDS A BREAK SOMETIMES! I bet you Mr. Undersparked was meticulous in hiring a new voice actor, ensuring they were equally up to snuff. Yet the comments read like the new guy's a screeching chalkboard! Both of their voices are enjoyable and their personalities unique. [Apologies for the edit, accidentally posted before finished 🙈]
@etherraichu6 ай бұрын
Are people really complaining about that? That's really silly.
@Cabbage1056 ай бұрын
Narrator is back from being grounded!
@UnderSparked6 ай бұрын
he keeps saying something about being obligated to bathroom breaks, idk what this "bathroom breaks" thing is but he's about to be grounded again.
@Eli-yo9qq6 ай бұрын
@@UnderSparked about to call OSHA
@idkwhatimdoing14596 ай бұрын
HES BACK LESSGOO THANK YOU!!
@Fade_NB6 ай бұрын
There’s 2 narrators now
@johnconway44666 ай бұрын
I've seen the video of what transpired in story 33. The cops daughter accused the deceased male of SA. During the altercation the cop's daughter yells that her father is a police officer, and the grandmother of the male proceeded to say she didn't care, in a very condescending and mocking tone, causing the cop (who I assume was off duty at the time) to become enraged and pull his service weapon, ultimately shooting and taking the lives of the male and his grandmother.
@Anna-pj8gw6 ай бұрын
Makes more sense
@christinesinclair69386 ай бұрын
The sherriff's department had to arrest my hometown's police TWICE (for drugs and corruption) fifty years ago and thirty years ago.
@anonymoususer1886 ай бұрын
57:07 Six months!? That's disgusting. If it hadn't been a police officer, that probably would've been at least a decade or maybe even two. The blatant favoritism is awful.
@TheOmegaXicor5 ай бұрын
Yea but wtf, the MAYOR'S daughter and he gets six months, I expected he wouldn't make it to the jail or had an accident on the day of his release.
@thaloblue5 ай бұрын
That story is proof of ACAB.
@boing76796 ай бұрын
finally a reddit channel with long videos and a real narrator, not an AI. Thanks!
@jesarablack16616 ай бұрын
cop wording on one of the stories how things just passively and mysteriously Happened to people as they were arrested (his glasses got broken and cut up his face, for example). No, it didn't just happen, one of the arresting officers, bashed his face so badly that they shattered his glasses (frames break Way easier than the glass, if the glass breaks extreme force was being used).
@unknowngamer374155 ай бұрын
With how strong glasses are made now that's a lot of force.
@rottingmangos82576 ай бұрын
(9:40) Eleanor Neale made a video on this case! The cop got arrested due to a bite mark on his exs body matching his teeth and a few years later he got out because of DNA on her work coat then re-arrested when a different judge decided that it wasn’t enough evidence for him to not guilty. I sadly can’t find the exact video about it but i remember i fell asleep earlier this week listening to it he’s still rotting
@chloesibilla81995 ай бұрын
We cannot run a government banking on a few good cops doing the right thing and being accountable. This whole structure needs to be rethought.
@zephyrrain78316 ай бұрын
I was listening to this and it reminded me of the time an officer in my hometown got 23 female inmates pregnant in the span of his 30+ year career and when it all actually came to light and was proven to be him, it was his BIL (cop in the same county and best man at his wedding) who arrested him IN the police station. It was, of course, kept as hush hush as possible but I was friends with the entire police force so I got *all* the details. Gotta love small town drama. 🙄
@MossyCat01016 ай бұрын
I lost faith in cops when I learned how the people who dropped out of the worst highschools(one of which I went to) for drug abuse, smoking on school property or abuse of other students/teachers go straight to the local police academy, mainly because they don't get enough people willingly, so the bar is really really low.
@kristhebrownie6 ай бұрын
Anyone whose job it is to enforce the law should be held to a higher standard.
@animal_gal_adventures98856 ай бұрын
56:30 my heart breaks for this girl. Was she doing something incredibly stupid by speeding x2 over the limit. Yes 100%. Did she deserve anything she had to suffer through!? Absolutely positively not! God to think how traumatizing that must be for her. The fact that she got bullied out of school AT 16 for something out of her control is horrible. I hope her and her child are stable and somewhere safe. Meanwhile I hope that cop rots in hell and loses all that he loves. (Like people leaving him and shit)
@jaredcrabb6 ай бұрын
Dont forget get screwed by child support.
@animal_gal_adventures98856 ай бұрын
@@jaredcrabb oh 100% there's no way he's pay for anything
@jaredcrabb6 ай бұрын
@@animal_gal_adventures9885 I mean him getting screwed by having tons of child support, but yeah, doubtful hed actually pay it.
@selenalulamoon11676 ай бұрын
I'm still confused how the guy only got 6 months??? Like her dad was THE MAYOR. I'm not one for political corruption but... shouldn't the guy have more sway???
@PikaPilot6 ай бұрын
@selenalulamoon1167 in many parts of the US, the chief of police/sheriff tends to have more political sway than the mayor
@charleswilliamvillareal16176 ай бұрын
HE'S BACK
@Eli-yo9qq6 ай бұрын
lets GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
@Fade_NB6 ай бұрын
There’s two narrators now
@RedHeadForester6 ай бұрын
I had to pause and breathe during that one right near the end... Makes me so sad and enraged when I hear about things like that happening.
@FractalParadox6 ай бұрын
13:20 100% chance, that guy just wanted the job handling evidence so he could _expand his collection._ I mean, if you are a creep, this is your dream job. being paid to look at CSAM. and legally being able to watch it. if you are a normal person, though, that's one of the worst jobs ever. I hope they are at least properly compensated. I couldn't do it. also also, it might just be that he wasn't able to get rid of evidence because the window for those kinds of things is intentionally small. you don't want the suspect to be able to erase anything if possible, so the warrant is usually served as a complete surprise and the search begins immediately. though it sounds like the material wasn't even encrypted, so yeah, bad tech.
@vernaclevinger57166 ай бұрын
More police get away than are arrested and the sentences are pitifully light. The type of man that wants to be a cop and have power over others can easily become abusive.
@The-Do-It-All-Badger5 ай бұрын
They can! And the ones who never abuse that power tend to get fucked. My dad was a CO down in Georgia for ten years and he did his job perfectly, because he was a good ol' Tennessee redneck who was raised to really *believe* in the system. And the system fucked him like a red headed stepchild. Only reason he's even alive is his own honesty and no-nonsense these-are-the-rules-everyone-including-us-cops-follows-them attitude got him the respect of the people he was "babysitting" in the lockup. His fellow COs abandoned him on the floor, dead of night, almost three times a year for eight years straight because he reported fellow COs for breaking rules and ended up fucking over a lot of jail smuggling rings. And the prisoners, suddenly aware that only one cop was on the floor and all their cells were mysteriously unlocked, never once rushed him. The few inmates that wanted to were actively held back from doing so by other inmates. Turns out that protecting people from gang rapes, shankings, and various other breeds of violence- and not abusing your own power- ,makes people want to keep you around so you can keep stopping those things from happening.
@Wrestlingswannn6 ай бұрын
Amazing Video as always dude. Keep up the great work
@stevedavis57045 ай бұрын
The authorities can arrest you ten years after you commit murder because there is no statute of limitations on murder. When I was living in Nebraska there was a guy who got arrested and jailed for a murder that he did forty five years before. Somebody who had been a witness told about what happened while on his death bed and it gave the authorities enough information to reopen the case.
@iloveoklahoma65925 ай бұрын
The last story was about Stephanie Lazarus if I am not mistaken. It was actually 25 years later when detectives arrested her. She murdered her ex boyfriend’s wife because she was jealous. She had left very little evidence behind and DNA was in its infancy so that was really not an option. It wasn’t until 25 years later that they were able to test the evidence and it came back to Stephanie. The really crazy thing? She had risen up the ranks and was a Detective. She did get life behind bars.
@NithinJune5 ай бұрын
48:19 I mean he was a victim of Police Brutality 💀 Like actual textbook brutality.
@PolarBailey2 ай бұрын
Yeah I kinda get it tho
@einaleMelanie6 ай бұрын
Story 31: so the other cops were trying to drive home drunk and he stopped them? Suuuuch a bad guy!
@thomasschulz21674 ай бұрын
Trick is, the stops were dubious in the first place. Being present at an establishment does not automatically give rise to drinking and an individual beat cop does not have the authority to establish a DUI checkpoint. It also sounds like he pulled folks over before they had driven far enough to give indications that the driver was drunk. From the story it sounds like this guy intended to be an asshole from the get go. And thus because he pulled that stunt, no other officer was willing to work with him. Once that happens he gets told to lighten up, or leave. In a lot of cases an officer that strictly throws the book at everything is detrimental to the force and citizenry. Think how you'd react if you got ticketed or arrested for standing to long outside of a store (loitering), or pulled over and ticketed for some obscure infraction that hasn't been enforced ever. Were folks drinking yes. Should the ones that were over the limit have driven? No. Doesn't mean the officers actions were not going to cause issues later. I also wonder how many of the tickets got thrown out due to the stops technically being illegal.
@StephanieHuerta-zz9ez6 ай бұрын
The story of the 16 yo being SAd by the road.... ugh. My tummy hurts now.
@creative_4ever6 ай бұрын
I found your channel a few days ago, and I can't stop listening to the stories you narrate + your commentary... 🌈 thank you from the bottom of my heart! 💙😊
@mmm12176 ай бұрын
46:50 Is anyone else, like, horrified at the second half of Story 43? Don't get me wrong, what the drunk guy said was horrible and that sort of thing should get you years if not life. But cops should still be subject to the same laws, if not outright held to a higher standard for being the ones who are supposed to enforce said laws. In that story, we have an officer admitting to collaborating with another on agreeing to not say anything, be prepared to not say anything, and have a judge actively denying someone the right to a fair trial. If I have any respect for anyone in that story, it's the cop that did the beating, because while he was (understandably) upset at having his family threatened he also came clean about it. I still think he was absolutely wrong for doing the beating, but he also seems to be the only person in that story with a moral compass. I suppose the more chilling thing is that I can easily imagine a much more benign or even fake incident (a DWB or looking poor in a rich area, for example), and having the same outcome happen.
@lalamyne6 ай бұрын
Agreed, it was so creepy. I would have avoided the story completely because the OP seems so content with himself? Imagine if it was just a random homeless person saying those things and that's how he would get treated. This could have been a person with mental health problems, saying those things. Someone having a breakdown. Could have been any of us. Cops shouldn't do these kind of things, they're not above law, they're not punishers and they should only do their job. I'm sure it's hard, I'm sure it would have been so enraging to hear those things... But again, that WAS police brutality and they both should have gotten fired. The judge? Disgusting and disturbing as well.
@anonymoususer1886 ай бұрын
Yeah. That whole story was chilling for me. First, op was willing to lie for his partner to cover up police brutality which is blatant corruption. Then, when the partner actually admits to it, the judge took his side and immediately handed down a guilty verdict without giving the defense any opportunity to respond. Don't get me wrong, the defendant said some awful stuff, but that doesn't mean he didn't have a right to a fair trial. Instead, he got an absolute mockery of how a trial is supposed work. I hope this story is made up by someone who has no understanding of how the justice system actually works because the very idea that this might have actually happened is horrifying.
@GiordanDiodato6 ай бұрын
Given that the guy literally threatened his family...
@GiordanDiodato6 ай бұрын
@@anonymoususer188so you wouldn't defend your family. Gotcha
@GiordanDiodato6 ай бұрын
@@lalamyneyou don't threaten other people and get away with it
@StormTheSquid6 ай бұрын
48:22 Look. I get it. Suspect was threatening innocents. Whatever. But he was already restrained, and actively on the way to the jail. Just because he was a violent, twisted mfer doesn't give either of those two the right to do this. Both of them should be fired and made to never work in law enforcement again. Disgusting.
@HallucinatingHedgehogs6 ай бұрын
The judge is just as bad as well. There was no trial, no evidence presented. He was denied a fair and speedy trial, it’s one of the core things we’re entitled to. Don’t get me wrong that suspect was heinous and deserves to rot in jail. But none of us are above the law, we can’t/shouldn’t be able to take justice into our own hands like that without repercussions. This is how you open the door to fascism.
@unknowngamer374155 ай бұрын
I think it's also important to know that the police think he was a violent individual which may not be the case. ( Quite frankly minor crimes often incentivize pleading guilty because the time you spend in jail are waiting for the trial can exceed the maximum sentence)
@sophiacm06 ай бұрын
if both narrators are gonna be posting can you maybe add something in the titles that distinguishes? your videos are my comfort videos and it’s almost jarring to hear another voice i don’t expect ahah
@hey-im-kat6 ай бұрын
Same xD
@dogouchu43566 ай бұрын
Yes
@christianfournier63566 ай бұрын
I agree. I think it’s the same reason we are comforted by hearing a familiar voice on the radio. The same voice for years and years. And it’s never the same when they retire. I value this narrator. And I don’t want another!
@Keksemann6666 ай бұрын
Would be cool if the new narrator would get another color and the image was in the Thumbnail.
@cobrakyng42006 ай бұрын
So true. I had to double check to see if I had the right channel. Maybe a different avatar or something
@JebbyMan6 ай бұрын
I'm a police officer, I didn't arrest another cop, but I did arrest an ex-probation officer after he was involved in a domestic violence incident. I knew his kids from a previous occupation of mine, was real awkward when they identified me.
@WestonNey30006 ай бұрын
Our king has returned!
@Fade_NB6 ай бұрын
There’s 2 narrators now, get used to it
@dominiquesedillo48586 ай бұрын
They shouldn't be allowed to keep their pensions, that's just ridiculous. Taxpayers paying for the crimes they do on the job.
@insaneartist63833 ай бұрын
Don’t forget with all the DV cases in this video, 40% of police spouses and families experience dv, and that’s just what is reported. It’s likely higher
@Darktiekoo6 ай бұрын
When I was an Military cop, I had to arrest a friend of mine for falling asleep on post. They posted her on her own, during a white out snowstorm, at the end of a road. She tried to stay awake by standing outside her vehicle, walking around it till she lost feeling in her fingers. She got back in her truck to warm back up and fell asleep. Our shared supervisor called me from the other side of the base to arrest her. While relieving her of her weapon and gear. I asked her if she had her handcuff key on her cause I couldn't find it on her. She told no, she forgot it in her room. Later that day My supervisor called my back to the Leo desk to serve me paperwork for not having a handcuff key on me and asking my friend for hers.... I carried 3 keys on me everyday 1 on my car keys 1 tied to my duty belt And 1 on my dogtags She then tried to confiscate 2 of my keys, to which I refused because I personally bought them.
@afib49686 ай бұрын
Story 43 is so bogus. It is the exact reason this thread was started. Corruption is all well and good when we can justify it. If a civilian had physically attacked someone for verbal abuse, they would have faced worse but for a law enforcement officer it is justified because they are law enforcement.
@lmaChroma6 ай бұрын
Glad I'm not the only one who thought so. He beat that man plain and simple, op was willing to go along with it, and the judge punished the victim knowing exactly what happened. That's fucked up even if the victim was saying all that
@rde35866 ай бұрын
Womp Womp
@Ap0llo.e326 ай бұрын
@@rde3586 ong oh noooo person with a history of inappropriate behavior and access to the person he’s threatenings location got some justice? Big womp womp I would’ve done the same thing
@johnlynch13536 ай бұрын
What the criminal did was not verbal abuse it was a credible threat against innocent civilians and a minor by someone with a history of violent criminal behavior. All because he wanted to inflict distress against someone just doing their job. Don’t get me wrong I think he went to far but even if he was a civilian in stead of a cop I doubt most jury’s would be to hard on him.
@HallucinatingHedgehogs6 ай бұрын
@@johnlynch1353 I agree that it’s a criminal threat, I agree that any body cam footage/testimony should be used to press any other relevant charges, I also agree that the officer should face reduced charges or punishment based on the context. But none of that happened. The situation is a cop brutalized and assaulted a perpetrator. Not only that his partner willingly turned a blind eye to the LITERAL crime being committed by his partner. I get not stopping his partner or letting him get a couple of extra hits in, but to not intervene at all and not put any of this down in a report is honestly mind blowing. Even worse the judge only hears the officers testimony and doesn’t perform a fair trial. Which is insane since habeas corpus and the right to a fair and speedy trial are some of the hallmarks of our legal system that supposedly makes it superior to other countries. Hell it sounds like they didn’t even get to opening statements before he sentenced him. All of this is EXTREMELY illegal and a gross miscarriage of justice. That’s the real issue here. We can’t pick and choose when it’s okay or not to ignore the law, if we do in these situations that’s how you have corruption run rampant. Remember the laws are only as good as their enforcement. If they aren’t enforced or are enforced based on the whims of the judge or officer then they might as well not exist.
@dillongage3 ай бұрын
Story 16: this is very true, and they also help you more. I used to work overnights at a gas station where all the cops hungout waiting for calls. (Small town). Over time I got to know them really well, and started bringing fresh donuts to them on my walk home. Fast forward a year after I quit working there. I was walking down the street, when this old Karen started screaming at me, saying I woke her up everymorning shining a light in her window (i walked to work at 4am so I had a headlamp on). She was freaking out calling the police, telling me she "knew" I was stealing and was going to report me. I just stood there and waited. The look on her face was absolutely priceless when the officer showed up, greeted me by name, and asked "arent you supposed to be at work by now?" (It was 5:15 by this point) Needless to say, the nice officer reamed her a new a-hole and told her "close your god d@mn curtains before you go to bed". Worked out well for me though. I got a free ride to work from the same officer every morning for the next 3 months until I found a job closer to home with better hours. The cops in my area are genuinely saints. During our fourth of July parade this year, the cops "supervising" the parade spent the whole time getting chased in circles by little kids. They had filled all their gear bags with candy and locked all their gear in their cruisers. Probably not the best or safest choice for a cop to leave his gear behind, but the community absolutely loved watching these guys get tackled by 5 year olds. best part was all the adults on the sidelines yelling "STOP RESISTING. STOP RESISTING. COMPLY." 😂😂 By the time the kids had cleaned them out of candy they both looked like they had just been trampled by a stampede of buffalo.
@zzzleepyhead91015 ай бұрын
The story of the mother and daughter and the withdrawn complaint about the cash was absolutely horrific.
@dillongage3 ай бұрын
Story 14: again, a good one. The cop had every right to charge them with assault and public intoxication, but he knew it was just some guys out having fun meaning no harm. So he put them somewhere they could sleep it off without causing harm, and all was well. Good cop right there.
@IOSARBX6 ай бұрын
UnderSparked, Yay! I liked this video so much, it made me smile!
@Fade_NB6 ай бұрын
Seen a couple comments about “this narrator being back” Y’all there’s two now if you weren’t caught up
@phantom_ranger68143 ай бұрын
that first story is the first time i've heard NCIS outside of the shows.
@Kylie_Conley6 ай бұрын
Yay! New update, Love the videos keep up the awesome work
@TLk365 ай бұрын
The story about the guy who was going round giving tickets to everybody might be my favourite story ever like why are you doing it to your wife 😂😂😂
@alexgomez5945 ай бұрын
You are amazing that youre willing to give a quick warning for speed. Everyone speeds, and most of the time they are still quite safe, but will get pulled over because of a quota or a bad day. Obviously excessive speeds can be dangerous and need addressing but most are harmless and i like that you arent fishing for tickets
@pennies154 ай бұрын
"bodycams that cant be turned off" THAT should be the Default
@RaceTillDawn2 ай бұрын
“Its the one and only time I’ve been arrested and it was by a fellow cop” me 😐 who else would be arresting you if not a cop?
@FIRING_BLIND5 ай бұрын
19:25 yep sexual coercion is assault! Even legally, it is classified as such. And yes, someone not taking no for an answer and asking till you say yes IS coercion. Just a reminder to fellow victims that it's ok to admit what happened to us. It's brave.
@Disatiere6 ай бұрын
My man literally out here admitting to assisting in brutalizing someone in their custody over threats as if that makes it justified
@lmaChroma6 ай бұрын
There is no good guy in that story, not op, not the partner, and certainly not the judge or anyone who witnessed that
@Disatiere6 ай бұрын
@@lmaChroma Yeah it was a wild ride, especially right after "not all cops are bad i dont get why we get such bad wrap, people should lighten up" "yeah so we brutalized a guy we arrested for mouthing off in the cruiser and we are justified"
@Gabriel-oq8gs5 ай бұрын
@@DisatiereBased on the story, the guy had a history and was fully capable of making good on his threats. Honestly, in that situation, the cop had more self-control than I probably would have. Does that make what he did right? No. Is what he did understandable, however? Definitely.
@Disatiere5 ай бұрын
@@Gabriel-oq8gs So what you're saying is it's wild that he is out here broadcasting this as if he was justified.
@lsixty302 ай бұрын
The thin blue line refers to how little police there are to keep society together , the blue wall of silence is the term for cops taking care of other shady cops.
@Whitewizardofwater4 ай бұрын
*HOLY FLUFF,* that one about the guy threatening the cop's wife and child. Like... At face value, neat. But that's.... I suppose this is a hot take, but if we take that with even a small grain of salt, that's an extrajudicial beating, followed by *zero* investigation, blatant corruption on the part of the judge (kudos to the officer who confessed, though), and an utter travesty of justice. Like, those cops *should* probably have been let off, but not like that at all. They should maaaybe have gotten some punishment, heavily mitigated by temporary insanity, maybe a governor's pardon, but not by way of corruption, holy fudge. "Nobody crossed that judge," my *word.*
@MissCaraMint20 күн бұрын
This reminds me about my grandad. He was a colonel in the army. He never made it to general despite his competence. The fact that he once reported a senior officer for sexual harassment when he witnessed said inappropriate behavior probably had nothing whatsoever to do with that. He was a good man. I miss him.
@mikukurisaki34135 ай бұрын
Detective story: not just rank and coercion... but also subterfuge (voluntarily withholding information in order to get something "more" or "extra" in this case)
@blackoutninja47936 ай бұрын
4:10 a cop can actually speed as much as they need to in the pursuit of a suspect. they cannot however use this defense to escape charges of speeding if 1. they are not in the pursuit of a suspect (he was not, so he is still guilty) or 2. they have lights/siren installed but do not use them (no description, so i cannot know if he had them installed)
@hyperbola06 ай бұрын
not sure on 2. state patrol was tailing someone who fled down the next exit, the cop didn't turn on lights siren or EVP until the car ran a red and killed 5 kids. not even an investigation.
@blackoutninja47936 ай бұрын
@@hyperbola0 was the cop speeding? and was he caught in person
@smaetor6 ай бұрын
LETSS GOOO THE GOAT IS BACKKKK
@NithinJune5 ай бұрын
49:10 ????? this makes no sense at all. either it’s made up or a rediculous abuse of power
@dillongage3 ай бұрын
Story 13: see, I liked that. They didnt throw the book at her. They realized she had some underlying mental health issues to cause her to act that way, so they allowed her to escape punishment on the condition that she seeks help for her mental health. Thats what it means to be a cop. Thats what it means to protect and serve.
@weareallbornmad4105 ай бұрын
Yeah, but you can still see them getting away with almost no punishment in many of these stories. The fact that almost all expected to be protected by the fellow cop says something. And in several cases they _were_ protected by the "good ol' boys" system. So as nice as it is to hear that sometimes people are held accountable - this confirms what we all already knew.
@toffiie6 ай бұрын
HE'S BACK! i missed you narrator :D
@wolfiebunnyshopofficial3923Ай бұрын
"I'm busy with paperwork, don't hear or see a thing. Man, glad we saved that kitten..."
@AsobiMedio4 ай бұрын
Faith in cops...Remains the same. Can't go much lower than rock bottom.
@Sensansenkai6 ай бұрын
Uhhh 43 is still super fucked up?? That IS police brutality even if it’s arguably justified. Like wtf the writer tells the story like it’s something to be proud of.
@tatkkyo99116 ай бұрын
Eh it's kinda messed but I can't say I wouldn't do worse if my kid was threatened. You never hurt kids or threatened too. Nothing to be proud of but unstandable
@lalamyne6 ай бұрын
Definitely police brutality. This could have happened to anyone saying those things, a homeless guy, a drunk, someone with mental health problems or having a breakdown. I'm not saying it's pleasant or easy to maintain their composure, but they're disgusting and that's just police brutality. The judge as well, so gross.
@leileyaravencroft6 ай бұрын
Was it police brutality? Absolutely. Could those threats come from anyone? Of course. But I think you guys are missing a key factor. He absolutely would have done the things he had said as he already had a record. Not too mention, I don't know whether you have had the misfortune of being a baby abused in awful ways, unfortunately I have. It does serious damage to someone psychologically. I understand that you are probably thinking that if we let one cop do such things, it's a gross violation to his rights. Well, as much as people love to remember those rights, your rights end when they impede on the rights of another. He threatened and was fully capable of doing what he threatened and he went into gross detail. There are just some lines you do not cross. Going into graphic detail about assault of a child? That would be one of those things.
@lalamyne6 ай бұрын
@@leileyaravencroft and the correct punishment for those crossing "those lines" is being brutalised and locked up thanks to a couple of pigs and a corrupt judge? Can you seriously say those actions made any difference? If so, for whom? The drunk guy being a disgusting human just talking shit or the guys thinking they did him justice? I wonder what they could be justified to do next. I think those are lines being crossed as well.
@Sensansenkai6 ай бұрын
@@leileyaravencroft well what they could have done is report the threats he made when they brought him in so he’d be less likely to get bail, and probably get additional charges on threats of violence. I get the gut reaction to want to protect your family, but as a police officer part of the job is knowing it’s not okay to beat up a handcuffed person because they’re mouthing off.
@iguessimacenow6 ай бұрын
YES THIS NARRATOR IS SO MUCH BETTERRRRRRRRRRRRRR❤❤❤❤❤❤
@Jtran2245 ай бұрын
"Cops don't protect their own as often as people say" Couple stories later is a story about a guy ALLEGEDLY threatening a cops family, gets brutalized by said cop while his partner turns a blind eye, cop admits it to the judge and is given the an attaboy.
@SomeGuynamedOtto6 ай бұрын
UnderSparked narrator you're the best narrator for any story it so calm yet it makes me focus on that story i listen to those stories everyday
@zombie_gamer21225 ай бұрын
24:09 what did you expect, to be arrested by a chef?
@scarletonyx850729 күн бұрын
I did a double take at that! 😂
@dinoblacklane16406 ай бұрын
Story 31 sounds like they wanted to bad mouth the guy that was doing his job Like he ticketed a bunch of DUI He sounds like a cop that was ACTUALLY following the law correctly, and yet it's made out like he's the bad guy?
@HallucinatingHedgehogs6 ай бұрын
Yea that part made me raise an eyebrow. Was it an asshole thing to do and premeditated 100%. But if people are blowing over the limit, they’re over the limit. The fact no one was arrested tells me they got off leniently. Now the rest of the stuff he did is just being an ass.
@kylejohns22886 ай бұрын
We need legislation imparting a duty to enforce for government officials where they are required by law to enforce the law in cases of felony conduct. No discretion no plea deals no leniency. If found guilty the maximum possible sentence for the crime. And a requirement for cops to retain misconduct/malpractice insurance and that be what covers lawsuits not the government
@BOnYTB6 ай бұрын
Also I’d recommend putting this stuff on podcast platforms. It’s pretty easy to put it on all of them, people subscribe there and get it in their feed. Especially the 30-40+ min ones. Just don’t go crazy w the ads. In a 40 min narration maybe one in the beginning, one in the middle, and one at the end? Ppl can skip the beginning and end ones pretty easily, and if the companies paying for the ads don’t care that’s perfect. Then one in the middle is fine, 60-90 seconds or whatever. Thx!
@Moon_x_sun6 ай бұрын
Spotify would be good :)
@Crocodile28736 ай бұрын
Story 41: yes, that’s exactly what he thought because that how it works with most cops
@HimitsuYami3 ай бұрын
Story 50 has me pissed
@ReyRtz6 ай бұрын
Questions what the hell happened to the undercover la prison guy
@IL_Bgentyl6 ай бұрын
With almost everything as humans we, “protect our own” which can cause issues.
@daniellebenfield956 ай бұрын
But I thought cops were such great people!!
@dianecheney41416 ай бұрын
Cops getting arrested for DUIs was very common where I used to live so instead of providing services to help with the alcoholism the sherif ordered all of his cops to get drunk in a different county or at home. I guess it was the cheapest option
@AzureVoltic3 ай бұрын
Only 6 months probably because age of consent is 16 in that state or wherever it was.
@Marten_Zeug6 ай бұрын
When I fail my current career choice, I will maybe become a lawyer/judge for cases including police officers.
@RochScoot5076 ай бұрын
43: glad to see justice being served. Was it lawful? No. Was it the right thing to do? Yup.
@nannettebenedetto91985 ай бұрын
That last case… it was before DNA was used the way it is today. She snuck in a window, murdered the ex’s new wife and left through that window. She later became a detective for something like fine arts thefts… they called her in to ask her help on a case she would have had expertise in and arrested her.
@juanf53912 ай бұрын
I was an MP now a history teacher in South Texas. What scares the most are the ideas of what crooked cops/sheriffs could of or did get away with in the early to mid 20th century. The idea that this was a time before dash cams and the height of nepotism before the FBI was knee deep in cleaning up corruption in the South. Any of us could of been pulled over, shot, and never be found. I can only imagine the levels of sexual assault that were never reported or taken seriously because it was “your word against theirs” mentality.
@bagelbites4668Ай бұрын
vintageddd
@dillongage3 ай бұрын
I genuinely think cops try to keep it quiet when they arrest other cops. In their heads, they probably think seeing cops get arrested makes them look bad, so they hide it, so then we only here about the real bad cases when they DONT get arrested. And admittedly it does make them look a little bad, but, I think it will benefit everyone if they own up to it and admit theyre people too. The more transparent they are the more people trust them. Theyre not infalible paragons of justice, no matter how much we wish they were. Also in the current era, with peoples view on cops, seeing them get arrested is exactly what everyone wants.
@spinarack115 ай бұрын
Story 50: Yeah, that's qualified. imunity is for ya. The most abused thing in the system that shouldn't exist with half the stories I've heard. It's bad. Another issue is when they do self investigations and find nothing wrong.
@tonyrobles11982 ай бұрын
33:06 no no, we call that being a father.
@chloesibilla81995 ай бұрын
These guys are getting like 4 years for a 13 or more year offense
@jonathanwilliams10655 ай бұрын
There’s nothing worse than a corrupt cop
@fayehyuga52595 ай бұрын
Hearing corruption like this makes me yearn for our species extinction.
@meganbrown8563 ай бұрын
😂 the cop who ticketed everyone, including his wife!! He was def an NPC that went rogue 😆
@andreasul26086 ай бұрын
There is only 1 effective way to deal with power tripping people that thinks they are above the law. In the case of the ticket you ask them. "Do you think yourself so important, above and beyond that even when you have broken the law, you're supposed to get away from the consequences?" If they answer no, well good for you. If they answer yes, proceed to ask them the reasoning behind it and if anyone else that wasn't him, would they also be excempt from a ticket or is it spesifically just him.
@allison49765 ай бұрын
If that cop was honest and said he was drunk and thought about a stupid joke, had genuine remorse, and paid for the kids new teeth, he still would’ve gotten punished but not life ruined. Like yea it’s stupid but he didn’t own up to his actions and shut his mouth except to say it’s fine I’m a cop and running away. In no way defused that situation or have an ounce of compassion. Kid probably had to pay thousands of dollars for fake teeth and he was being a good kid visiting his grandparents 😢
@jeffchandler62856 ай бұрын
That last was certainly a Lazarus being risen from the dead by the cold case squad 🤭.
@maggieluan39476 ай бұрын
Story 7 reminds me of a true crime case I listened to a while back
@gdragonlord7494 ай бұрын
As a vet, the rank pulling frustrates me to no end. Happened in boot camp when an e6 wanted to wnter the building without showing his ID which is required in all buildings because boot camp. It happened again when I was on a ship which you also have to show you badge when leaving (probably as a way to prevent people from leaving without it by mistake). E7 gave me such a hard time. Last two times it happened was when I was gate duty temptature watch for COVID. A chief (semior chief I later found out) wanted to go through the gate without his mask saying it was at his desk and juat drove off. Also had another e6 do something similar and was even more of an ass when interacting. Don't back down from assholes.