• 4 months ago
These are times police officers got arrested for being racist.
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Transcript
00:00Evil and racist cops have always been around, going around abusing their power on minority groups.
00:05He saw this, and he wanted to make a problem.
00:07But what happens when these racist cops get caught in the act?
00:10I'm on the same side as you!
00:12No you aren't!
00:12Here are three examples of when racist cops are caught,
00:15starting with the shocking case of Kyle Erickson, who tried to frame a black suspect.
00:22It's a little bit of weed.
00:23On the 13th of March 2018,
00:25Officer Kyle Erickson and his partner pulled over Jason Serrano and his friend for an apparent broken taillight.
00:32However, this stop ended up getting seriously out of hand when a cop tried to plant evidence.
00:37The car smells like marijuana, so we're gonna check it. All right?
00:40Then that's it. I gotta make sure everything's good with your end. Just get the taillight fixed.
00:44If there's nothing in the car, you'll be good to go. All right?
00:46Immediately the cops claim they can smell marijuana in the car and say that they're gonna have to search it.
00:52Usually a civilian has the right to refuse a search,
00:54but if the cops have probable cause to believe a suspect has committed a crime,
00:59they can bypass that right and search their property without consent.
01:03Smelling weed on the property technically counts as probable cause, and because it's impossible to dispute while looking at body cam footage,
01:09it's often used as a way for corrupt cops to easily begin a search without the suspect's permission or a warrant.
01:16We need to check the car, so I need you to hop out.
01:18All right, I'm getting out. Relax.
01:22I don't have nothing on me.
01:24Hang on.
01:28I don't have nothing in my jacket. I'm not.
01:30Okay, well, he's gonna check it.
01:32I don't have nothing. No, no.
01:34Relax. This situation is about to escalate for no reason.
01:36No, because I didn't do nothing.
01:38It was in the car.
01:40No, this is on me. It's my possession.
01:42Come on.
01:44Relax. Relax.
01:48Yo, relax.
01:50Put the jacket down right now.
01:52Cuff him up.
01:54For the rest of the body cam footage, Jason is left on the ground, handcuffed, and visibly in pain from the takedown.
01:58It took almost 20 minutes for an ambulance to arrive.
02:02It's unclear in the body cam footage, but with how much pain Jason is in,
02:06it's obvious that an unnecessary amount of force was used to take him down.
02:10So for the cops, this is just where the story begins,
02:14and you can see the exact moment reality sets in for them.
02:18I'm searching the rest of the car.
02:20Actually, I'll let you check. Here.
02:22There's a flashlight. I'll stay with him.
02:26The officers are fully aware that they've hurt Jason,
02:28and if their car turns up empty,
02:30all they've done is searched a car without a warrant,
02:32and used excessive force to unlawfully detain a civilian.
02:36However, if they do find something illegal,
02:38then all of that should magically go away,
02:40as Jason and the driver go from civilians to criminals,
02:44and they're just helping bring them to justice.
02:46At this point, it's not necessarily just about race.
02:48They're trying to save themselves after making a violent mistake.
02:52Obviously, this is horribly corrupt,
02:54but nevertheless, the stakes are high for the cops.
02:56Their jobs are on the line, and they have to find something.
03:00She has the proper documentation for the plates.
03:02Temporary registration's valid.
03:04Just ran her permit only.
03:06He doesn't have a driver's license.
03:08Yeah, that's pretty much it.
03:10Just see if my partner's found anything yet.
03:13Yeah, that's pretty much it.
03:14Just see if my partner's found anything yet.
03:26Nothing.
03:27After searching the entire vehicle for about five minutes,
03:30the cops turn up nothing,
03:31and they both start to seem more and more agitated.
03:35But here's where things start to take a dark and shady turn.
03:38When the officers fail to turn up anything,
03:41they decide to get a little creative.
03:44I see nothing.
03:46It's alright.
03:47You know what I mean?
03:48Yeah.
03:56Just a little bit of weed.
03:57Without even trying to hide it from his camera,
04:00the detective places a small butt of marijuana in the cupholder of the vehicle,
04:04where he's already checked multiple times.
04:06The way the officer does this without even trying to hide it
04:09implies that he's almost certain that this will never come back to haunt them,
04:13and even suggests that this might not be his first time doing it either.
04:17In fact, the way the cops have been talking to each other the entire time
04:21indicates that this might just be a regular step in their process.
04:27You good?
04:28Yeah.
04:30All of a sudden, the cops have a case against Jason.
04:33During the stop, they smelled marijuana in the car.
04:36Jason became combative after they asked to search it,
04:38so they took him down and searched the car,
04:40where they found not only a small piece in the cupholder,
04:43but even flakes in his jacket.
04:45This is the story that Jason was taken to trial over,
04:48and he was charged with marijuana possession,
04:51resisting arrest,
04:52and obstructing governmental administration.
04:54It took over two years for this body cam footage to emerge,
04:58and only then would Jason's charges be dropped.
05:01Predictably, no charges were brought against the officers,
05:04but it did raise an important question.
05:07What else has been caught on these cameras that's being hidden from us?
05:10This is why some people feel it's important to record
05:13their interactions with police themselves,
05:15just like this black police graduate did
05:17when he was confronted by these two officers
05:19blatantly racially profiling him.
05:24Can we see some ID?
05:25No, what for?
05:26I just asked you.
05:27What's your probable cause to ask me for ID?
05:29It does not have a handicap placard.
05:31Read the plate, man.
05:33You don't even know what you're talking about.
05:35D.V.
05:36That's Disabled Veteran Plate.
05:37We can park in handicapped spots.
05:39Let me see some ID, please.
05:40No.
05:41The man recording is a graduate of the nearby police academy,
05:44and was wearing full gear and uniform,
05:47including his duty belt with a loaded weapon.
05:49Because he's police academy certified,
05:51he's completely within his right to wear the gear,
05:54but the officers aren't buying it.
05:56So the graduate tells them to run his name through T.C.O.L.,
05:59an agency that, amongst other things,
06:01keeps track of every police officer in Texas.
06:04If the graduate is clear to wear his gear,
06:06T.C.O.L. will prove it.
06:08Run it.
06:09Run it.
06:10Call T.C.O.L.
06:11You have no justification of probable cause to run up on me.
06:16Yeah.
06:17Yeah.
06:18Why?
06:19Why?
06:20Why?
06:21Are you detaining me?
06:22I don't want you to get in my car.
06:23No, no.
06:24Then my question is, are you detaining me?
06:25I don't know what's going on.
06:26Okay, so then don't tell me where to go.
06:27He's not too smart.
06:28Because first of all, I mean, first of all,
06:31even you know if I have disabled veteran plate,
06:34I can park in a handicapped spot.
06:36Even you know that.
06:37They just changed that.
06:38No, no, no.
06:39They didn't just change that.
06:40It's been that way.
06:41The problem the officers had was that the graduate
06:43was parking in a handicapped spot without displaying a parking permit.
06:46But his car has a disabled veteran plate,
06:49a license plate given to many Army veterans
06:51who've made a bodily sacrifice during their active duty.
06:54Owning the plate lets you park in handicapped spots without a permit.
06:57This is fairly common knowledge across America,
07:00especially for cops.
07:02But it seems that these officers forgot about it here,
07:05and the graduate thinks he knows why.
07:07He just saw this, and he saw this,
07:10and he wanted to make a problem.
07:12That's your reputation there, Joshua.
07:14Come on, man.
07:15Yes, it is.
07:16How many black officers you got?
07:18One.
07:19One.
07:20Yeah, we only have one right now.
07:22One, right, one.
07:24I know, I know.
07:25And you barely, you barely, barely let him in.
07:29It's difficult to disagree with the graduate.
07:31They had absolutely no reason to stop the graduate and demand his ID.
07:35Maybe a new recruit could forget about the veteran plates,
07:38but this man is actually a police captain
07:40and has many years of police service under his belt,
07:43evidently in a department with next to no black representation.
07:47Eventually, the officers return to tell him he's free to go,
07:50but the graduate isn't leaving before saying one last thing.
07:53You know, you're feeling small now, aren't you?
07:55No, not really.
07:58You should have run up on people.
07:59You have no probable cause.
08:01If you wanted to follow me and run my plates, you could have done that.
08:03You didn't talk to anybody?
08:04Well, I don't have to talk to you.
08:06I don't have to talk to you.
08:07That's right.
08:08I already told you that.
08:09Waste my time and you.
08:11You're supposed to be a captain,
08:13and you don't know disabled plates have a right to park in a parking spot.
08:18And you're violating people's rights,
08:20running up on them without probable cause.
08:22I'm in a uniform doing the same thing for you for free.
08:27So what?
08:28I don't care what he thinks.
08:30I'm a graduate, and I have TCO certification.
08:33I have TCO certification.
08:35Yes, I do.
08:36That's what you checked in.
08:37Says who?
08:38My certification doesn't say expired.
08:40You wanted to be expired because you see brown skin.
08:43So take a walk.
08:44Walk of shame, Captain.
08:46Don't ever you run up on me again.
08:48Do you understand?
08:49And learn the law, and you better have probable cause
08:52before you run up on somebody in uniform.
08:55You don't have no reasonable suspicion
08:57because I'm on the same side as you.
08:59No, you aren't.
09:00I'm a graduate of the police academy.
09:02Okay?
09:03Just like you years ago,
09:04you probably couldn't even fathom this.
09:06Right now.
09:07You go.
09:08You get going.
09:09Getting into fights with other uniformed police officers
09:11definitely isn't the best look for a police captain,
09:14especially after racially profiling that very same officer.
09:18And because the graduate was filming the entire thing himself,
09:21he was able to show the city manager
09:23and that very same afternoon,
09:25it was revealed that the captain was no longer working for the police department.
09:29Unfortunately, though,
09:30it's extremely rare for cops to actually be reprimanded
09:33after behavior like this,
09:35as is obvious in the case of Montre Little.
09:37In this case, the cop not only lied and threatened Montre,
09:41but he even cost the city $75,000
09:43and still got away with no punishments.
09:46On July 15th, 2018,
09:48Montre and his friend were pulled over by the police.
09:51The stop started out normal,
09:53but quickly evolved into a perfect display
09:55of how cops will try to force you into a false confession
09:58through corruption,
09:59and in this case,
10:00racism.
10:01What's going on, guys?
10:05Is this your car?
10:08Okay.
10:09Did something break down?
10:11Yes, sir.
10:12You guys just came from over at the park, right?
10:15That's it?
10:16Is this your car?
10:22How do you start it?
10:29At first, this may seem like a harmless question,
10:32but asking the driver, Montre Little,
10:34how to start the car
10:35essentially implies that the cop thinks he stole it.
10:38If Montre was unfamiliar with the vehicle,
10:40he would have likely struggled to remember how to start it.
10:43And if he fumbled around a little before remembering,
10:45it could imply he was under the influence.
10:48But Montre kept his composure
10:50and passes this first test totally fine.
10:53The cop, however, still isn't impressed
10:55and decides to take things further
10:57by tricking Montre into giving his property over.
11:00So it's your car, though?
11:01Did they give you a fob or something?
11:04Did they give you a key fob or something?
11:06Yes, sir.
11:07Like, what does it do?
11:09You see, this lets you know that it's...
11:13Okay.
11:14Do you have any weapons on you or in the car?
11:16No, officer.
11:17Okay, can I be honest with you?
11:19It smells like marijuana in the car
11:20and I can see shake on the ground.
11:22Your buddy's giving me the idea that maybe he's got a gun.
11:25You know what I mean?
11:26Like, that's what I think.
11:27How?
11:28I don't know, just the way...
11:29I mean, just the way you're holding yourself, man.
11:31Like, that's why I'm...
11:32That's why we're nervous, man.
11:33That's it.
11:34Not only did the officer mislead Montre
11:36into giving the keys over,
11:37but he's also suddenly decided
11:39he can smell marijuana in the vehicle
11:41and based purely on a hunch
11:42that the passenger is hiding a weapon.
11:44Both of these things, especially the marijuana smell,
11:47are often used as a reason to search the vehicle,
11:50bypassing the need for consent by the property owner.
11:53The speed and order in which the officer works here
11:55is extremely suspicious.
11:57Confiscating the keys without even mentioning it
11:59implies that he already decided
12:01he was going to search the vehicle
12:03and that he was trying to make Montre feel helpless
12:05or even threatened.
12:07Emotions you can clearly see on his face
12:09as they're stolen from him.
12:11Go ahead and step out, Montre.
12:13I just told you.
12:14Yep, I just told you why.
12:16Three times.
12:17Do you want me to recap again?
12:18I mean, I told you I'm a cop.
12:20Face the car when you step out.
12:21Face the car when you step out.
12:22Face the car when you step out.
12:23Don't flex. Don't flex.
12:24I don't know what you're doing, man,
12:25but you need to knock that off.
12:26Stop pulling on your arms.
12:28What's going on, dude?
12:29What are you trying to...
12:30What are you doing, dude?
12:31Officer, I'm not doing nothing to you.
12:33Well, you're making me think
12:34something funny is going on, man.
12:36Okay, so slide over.
12:37I mean, your heart is thumping, dude.
12:39Like, you're beating.
12:40Officer, don't. Don't. Please.
12:42Everything the cop has done and said so far
12:45is textbook in terms of corruption.
12:47This is obviously a serious event for Montre,
12:49but the cop is deliberately trying to be
12:51lighthearted and jovial about the whole thing,
12:54using words such as funny and silly
12:56to purposefully seem condescending.
12:58He also mentions that Montre's heart is beating fast
13:01and that he seems nervous,
13:03another classic observation that appears
13:05time and time again in these cases.
13:08Think back to the stop of Marion Humphrey,
13:10whose truck was searched for the sole reason
13:12that he seemed nervous.
13:14Innocent civilians such as Montre
13:15will always feel anxious or even angry
13:17in this situation,
13:19and it's an easy observation for cops to make
13:21to detain them and obtain probable cause,
13:24which is exactly what the cop did.
13:37The search uncovered nothing illegal
13:39in Montre's car,
13:40but the cop kept him in the back
13:42of his patrol vehicle.
13:43This is where things start to get really shady.
14:14You didn't find no marijuana.
14:16I'm not charging you with marijuana.
14:18If you want me to be real with you,
14:21I want you to be real with me for a second.
14:23Did I make that up?
14:24I believe so, officer.
14:25Okay, so you want me to just write you the ticket
14:27for the stuff that I have to write you tickets for.
14:29If you think that I'm lying,
14:30then we'll go to court and we'll talk about it then.
14:33Or do you want to just be real with me
14:35and I'll be real with you?
14:36Wow, officer.
14:38Montre is being aggressively backed into a corner.
14:41The cop obviously knows that he's done something wrong.
14:43He's only trying to get Montre to forget about it
14:46and move past it without further incident.
14:49When he doesn't, the cop threatens him
14:51by saying he'll write up the ticket
14:53and he'll have to take it to court
14:54where it'll essentially be Montre versus the world.
14:57It's also important to remember
14:59that cops are allowed to lie
15:01and use deceptive tactics to extract a confession.
15:04If Montre had told him that he didn't make up the smell,
15:07then in a weird, twisted way,
15:09he essentially just admitted to possessing illegal drugs.
15:12Luckily, Montre maintained his story
15:15and was reluctantly let go by the cops.
15:17Just days later, Montre sued the city
15:20and after a year of fighting,
15:22reached a settlement of $75,000
15:24based on an unlawful traffic stop and warrantless search.
15:28The cop was removed from patrol duty
15:30but not fired despite leading
15:32one of the most callous displays of corruption
15:34ever caught on camera.
15:36But the police are extremely good
15:38at one-upping themselves when it comes to corruption.
15:41Take for example the time when two Californian cops
15:44essentially kidnapped a man eating lunch in his own car.
16:08Firstly, the suspect's name, Jamal Williams, does everything right.
16:27He tells the cops he's not answering any questions
16:30until he has a lawyer.
16:32Unfortunately for him, though,
16:34the cops aren't having any of it
16:36If a felony matches the description of a suspect,
16:39that technically gives them the right to detain him
16:41while they investigate further.
16:43What's interesting is that the only description the cops had
16:46was that it was a black male,
16:48wearing all black in his early 20s.
16:50Possibly a red t-shirt underneath.
16:52Jamal is 40 years old,
16:54wearing a red hoodie and grey sweatpants.
16:56It's also incredibly hard to punish cops
16:58for detaining someone that doesn't match that description
17:01as they could just say they thought he did.
17:03In general, this system is very lackluster,
17:06but it shouldn't necessarily harm or bother Jamal.
17:09Not unless the cops do this.
17:34Call your supervisor.
17:36Call your supervisor.
17:38Call your supervisor.
17:40Call your supervisor.
17:42Call your supervisor.
17:44Stop, dude.
17:46Call your supervisor.
17:48Call your supervisor.
17:50I'm gonna chase you, dude.
17:52Call your supervisor.
17:54Call your supervisor.
17:56Yeah, call your supervisor.
17:58I got him.
18:00Give me your hand.
18:02Don't touch me.
18:04I don't give you consent to touch me.
18:06Handcuff him.
18:08Initially, Jamal showed no signs of aggression
18:10and no signs of resisting.
18:13He was just trying to open his phone
18:15to record the interaction for his own safety.
18:17Nevertheless, the cop immediately said
18:19he's being aggressive
18:21as Jamal was willingly stepping out of the car.
18:23Step out of the car, please.
18:25He's being aggressive.
18:27This obviously frustrated Jamal
18:29and he later admitted from then
18:31that he did try and stay inside the vehicle.
18:33But the amount of force the cops used from here on
18:35was completely unwarranted.
18:37One cop even pulled a taser
18:39and threatened to use it on Jamal
18:41despite him posing no actual threat.
18:43Jamal is then handcuffed
18:45and kept face down on the tarmac
18:47while multiple other patrol vehicles
18:49arrive at the scene.
18:51For a man guilty of nothing other than eating his lunch,
18:53that sure is a lot of cops.
18:55If we take these off, are you gonna cause a Ferrari
18:57to kick any windows out or anything like that?
18:59I don't want to answer questions.
19:01You can leave them on, man.
19:03That's fine.
19:05Can we just stand him up and get him to a car
19:07or just leave him here until fire season will make it easy?
19:09He doesn't want to walk.
19:11He doesn't want to answer questions.
19:13Is your first name Jamal?
19:15That's who the card reads.
19:17I don't give you consent to go in my car
19:19and check my car.
19:21I don't give you consent
19:23to check my car.
19:25You're violating my Fourth Amendment
19:28So, I think we should move forward
19:30and try to at least get him in the backseat.
19:32Yeah, that's fine.
19:34Why are you guys kidnapped?
19:36I can't talk to you until you help me out.
19:38Tell me why am I being kidnapped.
19:40Once they move in, we'll figure that out.
19:42Can I find a car?
19:44We'll talk when he gets here.
19:46At this point,
19:48there are over a dozen cops at the scene
19:50and Jamal is fully restrained
19:52in both handcuffs and leg wraps.
19:54He's also already been cleared
19:56to not be the suspect,
19:58yet he's still taken to the patrol car,
20:00fully restrained, and put in the backseat.
20:02It's also important to note
20:04that the cops were able to identify
20:06and clear Jamal by running his plates,
20:08something they could have done in secret
20:10before even approaching him.
20:12The worst part is that even after all of this,
20:14Jamal still wasn't free.
20:16He was cleared of the burglary charge,
20:18but he was instead hit with
20:20a felony charge of resisting arrest
20:22and taken to jail.
20:24Jamal later filed a formal complaint
20:26with the LA Sheriff's Department,
20:28but just as another example of how corrupt
20:30this system is, they were allowed
20:32to investigate themselves,
20:34and as you'd expect, they found no evidence
20:36of any wrongdoing.
20:38Months later, Jamal filed a civil rights lawsuit
20:40against the arresting officers.
20:42Unfortunately though, the story
20:44remains much the same.
20:46The officers were investigated by a police lieutenant
20:48and after analyzing the body cam footage,
20:50it was concluded that Jamal's actions
20:52turned the interaction confrontational
20:54and that the arresting officers were courteous
20:56throughout the entire event.
20:58Jamal's charges were dropped,
21:00but no charges were brought against either of the cops.

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