Imagine how much stuff like this went down before bodycams became the norm. They've only been in use for around a decade and even with then, we still have stuff like this.
Australia is one of the worst places for police abuse, they are basically untouchable. you have no chance in court if you go against them, they are corrupt and ignorant. The poor aboriginals receive the worst of this,
@lawrencefrost9063 “The worst will condemn the least WORSE.” “Worst” by nature implies something that is the most worse so if something isn’t as bad then it’s inherently worse, not the worst.
Then the one that does get caught, basically is gonna get off on a technicality. Infuriating. There is no deterrent for bad cops to not engage in illicit activities. They are protected by the statuon, then the union, finally the government itself
If a body cam is turned off during a traffic stop or other interaction with someone and they are arrested for something not caught on camera, the case should immediately be dismissed for lack of evidence. every case this guy has been involved in where body cam footage wasn't available should be overturned or thrown out
Anyone outside law enforcement would have received a harsher punishment. The system, even when they do convict cops, have a hard time maximizing their punishment.
Wonder if any of those victims spent more time in prison, lost access to their kids, etc. How much may have been spent on their defense. Every crime should default to 2x penalties for anyone who commits those crimes while wearing a badge.
This goes way beyond the lives he destroyed directly with his false arrests. He compromised public faith in that department making it more difficult to establish strong ties with the community and effectively do their job. The accountability must be severe.
they actually have a "welcome" for their friends ... guys when the first get in don't have anything and usually haven't eaten since the night before... the guys take care of their friends ..BUT, .the guys with no friends and first time in better not take anything from anyone or they'll be paying big later on...
Zachary most likely wanted to be promoted to narcotics, because of the "potential money," (not overtime), being able to skim cash, property, and drugs off of drug raids.
And easy sex, protection coercion sex. He was already have been found in be a multiple partner adulterer. Probably his main motive for wanting to be in narcotics.
Never take a plea deal if you're innocent. There's no proof with any of these cases, and yet the court system will pressure you into taking a plea deal with threats of harsh punishment and intimidation.
Outlawing medicine in a "free country" is even older. There shouldn't be 23 year old's rooting through people`s underwear for substances in the first place. Even the non criminal cops are overstepping human rights, our constitution, and common sense. It doesn't even work, it just exacerbates the issue and costs 8 times more.
Yep you’re absolutely right. I’m from the nearby county of Brevard and Sheriff Wayne Ivey refuses to have them as well, even though Soooo many arrests are made here everyday. I’ve dealt with so many police as well as sheriffs who abuse their power, attempt to do illegal searches of vehicles and pulling vehicles over for absolutely no reason in hopes of intimidating and finding “something”. It’s disgustingly ridiculous and outrageous.
So ridiculous. The only reason not to have cameras is to cover up unprofessional behavior. It’s no different than not having voter ID, so you can cheat at elections, duh. The of extremes of both sides of the aisle are more similar than different lol.
@@saraha5847Police said Deputies are completely different, funded differently and your council members are who oks funding, not the Sheriff or Chief. Take your complaints there and follow the money up.
One very important detail you left out was that it was courthouse rumors that led to him being investigated by an assistant DA. When she uncovered Zach's crimes the DA aejt after the Assistant DA fir in his own words "meddling with the past" The assistant DA was forced to find work another line of work
This reminds me of when I was eight and my twelve year old sister would take a big bite out of a cookie then put the rest of the cookie on my nightstand then tell my mom that I was a cookie thief and HERE is the evidence! I got her back at her wedding when on her bridal picture photo montage she showed during the reception, I added some pictures my mom took of her potty training. Take that, Ursula. No one frames Sergei for a cookie caper and gets away Scot free! Her husband nicknames her Pampers now. Oof. 😂
People underestimate just how life destroying a charge can be, not even a conviction, just the charge. Instant job loss, crippling bail conditions, huge legal costs. The idea of 'innocent until proven guilty' is utter nonsense, you may not wear the full punishment yet, but you certainly do not get treated like you are innocent.
There is a pattern present in which people who escape consequences for initial crimes go on to perpetrate even more serious future crimes. So, who benefits from that?
What is your point exactly, that people who may have committed a crime in the past should be charged with a crime they didn't commit? You have a solid resume for becoming a communist party member with that type of thinking
Dr Grange, the sweet, summer child, is seemingly unaware of the obvious fact that drug dogs are routinely used to falsely "alert" to enable a search, whenever drivers refuse...
@@SecretMarsupial It's not impossible. It's just a matter of giving the dog a cue to sit, or easier still, simply lie and claim the dog alerted when it didn't. Please don't tell me it's impossible for a cop to lie.
@@SecretMarsupialI’m assuming you’re showing your mastery of sarcasm, sir? As a side note, I remember once watching a cop’s body cam show a K9 handler cuing his dog to alert on a suspect’s passenger door. The cop with the body cam was a rookie. The other veteran cop present knew to turn his back moments prior, and his body cam didn’t catch it.
It DOES happen a lot. And the reason it happens a lot is because cops cover for each other's corruption. If you have respect for cops then it's because you have some form of Stockholm Syndrome.
Battery life is insufficient to have them on through a whole shift. That's why they are on standby & activated when required. There is a 30 second back capture (video only) to cover the fact that sometimes something happened immediately prior to the officer being able to activate the device. Also, as with all electronic devices that get a lot of use, they do malfunction sometimes. & this can sometimes only become apparent at the end of the shift when docking the device to upload the footage & recharge the battery. Not defending this guy in any way, he was convicted of the crimes & I think he is scum, but it's also important to understand how Police bodycam works (& sometimes doesn't) if making suggestions on how it should be used.
@paullavoie5542 The units are signed out and in electronically using a base station at the police station. The base station is connected to the Police computer system & it not only charges, it assigns the camera to the officer & also uploads the data at the end of the shift. The ones I used read the officers palm print to ensure it was properly assigned in and out to the correct officer. There is no such thing as a car charger for a Police bodyworn camera, at least not the type I used, they can only be charged at the official base station And if there were car chargers, please explain how a car charger could be used whilst the camera is being worn and is "on all the time" as you said previously? Are Police supposed to have an extension lead going from the vehicle to their bodyworn camera, perhaps?
@paullavoie5542 A phone isn't required to be docked to a base unit that issues it to a user based upon their palm print when signed out & signed in for accountability purposes. Where the base unit also acts as the charger. Police bodyworn videos are not the kind of equipment that can be charged from a cigarette lighter. They are accountable items. They have to remain attached to the officer for the duration of their shift. It would have to be a bloody long charger cord. Also much Police work is done on foot, not in vehicles. & I suppose you'd have the Canadian mounties plug a cord into a horses rear end to keep their bodyworn camera charged? Imagine if the wrong camera got swapped over in the field & ended up on the wrong officer. You simply don't know what you are talking about!
Studies in the US show that body cameras tend to support the police more than the public bc there are so many accusations of corrupt cops that are thwarted by the video evidence. Activists are actually trying to now limit the unfettered use of cameras for this reason. In the US there are over 1.3M cops, it's not surprising that a few bad ones slip out and of course are lapped up by the one-sided political press. That proportion should always be part of the discussion seeing how important trust of the police is to the public. In this case the guy should have been booted permanently for the very first offense.
A few bad ones? where were the good ones at, for Daniel Shaver, Kelly Thomas, Jonny Wheatcroft, James Boyd, Nurse Wubbles and on and on. Just admit the blue line is a cover for gang activety.
@ when 2 guys had a gun in my face downtown under the L tracks Cpd showed up and saved my ass. Maybe in the suburbs you read about this stuff or see it on TV. I LIVE IT
Lack of respect for the rules. That's a big one. Perhaps due to never having a hard life or being considerate of who he was hurting including his family ties Hard to understand why someone would torpedo opportunities given them, otherwise.
I have absolutely no idea why cops are permitted to have "oopsies" with regard to their body cams. Cops should be held responsible for lapses in their body cams' function whether said lapse is their fault or not; make it an extremely strict policy that failure to capture body cam footage is an offense subject to severe punishment, up to and including firing for repeat incidents, and I imagine we'll have far fewer "malfunctions" in the force. It doesn't matter if it's intentional; a failure to maintain one's body cam in working order, to notice when it's not working, or to properly turn it on is all on the cop. They have literally no purpose if they aren't on and recording for the entirety of the interaction. How is any cop allowed to get away with "accidentally" not capturing footage when they're supposed to?
I take the dog alerting with a massive grain of salt. A dog wants to please its owner. They have also been shown to alert to US currency unconnected to any illegal activity.
@tanikokishimoto1604 Considering the abuse it's getting that may be better off as something they just have to deal with or they need to radio in to base and have someone else turn it off
They can only record for a few hours between charging and docking to upload the videos. It would be impossible to constantly record everything over the course of a 10- or 12- hour shift. It would also be incredibly unpopular with everyone for very good reasons. How would you like all of your private conversations with a friend, spouse, loved one or supervisor to be video and audio recorded and subject to public release after a freedom of information act request? The cameras are supposed to be on whenever they might capture anything of investigative value. They shouldn't be on when you're in the bathroom or sitting in your patrol car or office having a private phone conversation with your wife or your doctor.
Body cameras should be turned on and off by a key at the station and not at the officers discretion. The camera should have a function to highlight sections of footage for easier review but not have the option to not record. What is the point of surveillance that is only applied at the will of the surveilled party? Can i choose to turn off the security cameras at the bank? Maybe ring doorbell cameras should have a switch on the outside of the door as well
I sure hope whoever was arrested for drug offenses by him had their charges dropped. There’s no way to know if any of the offenses actually happened so all should be exonerated.
Oh I guess not because he wasn’t charged for nine counts. Or maybe there wasn’t enough proof & those nine still got off? I just wouldn’t trust a single drug arrest made by him even if his body camera was on the whole time.
At this point: people in any such positions of authority should have their life under constant scrutiny. Regardless if it's a city department or a rural township. I wonder, did any of his victims get restitution?
Funny how camera technology, including body and dashboard cameras, are extremely pervasive throughout the world, and yet somehow there are neither laws nor even, apparently, departmental police regulations that require things like the discovery of illegal items in the car or home of a person to be recorded. Sure, the Jacksonville County Sheriff's Department had a policy stating that body cams were supposed to be turned on at the beginning of traffic stops, but the failure to comply with this policy obviously didn't invalidate the "evidence" found even when the camera wasn't working, nor was there any administrative punishment for the dirty cop who wasn't complying with the policy. To put it simply, it would be very, very easy for police departments everywhere to require that their officers record everything of consequence that they do, particularly when whatever they're doing could have legal implications. Amazon delivery drivers take a photo of every package they leave on my front porch, for example. And yet at least some police departments expect the public should take the word of a single officer in matters that can ruin people's lives. The good old "trust me, bro, I'm the police" routine. Maybe theres a reason that public esteem and trust for cops is at an all-time low, which is a damn shame--the majority of them are honest, ans all of them are underpaid for doing a dangerous, difficult job. But the good ones need to stop with the "blue wall of silence" bullshit and embrace vigorous efforts not just to weed out the dirty cops, but also the bullies, the lazy ones, and the incompetent ones too. Because one bad apple, &c.
Imagine how many lives he ruined. Many of those people will never get their original jobs back. People are truly vile.
not people, cops
Yeah, it's like you got a 10 year gap on your resume.
It happened to me a few times. Luckily I know a few words.
" Supervisor, lawyer"
@@MrCophtrDo you believe there aren’t any vile people in the world?
Some people are vile. Some cops are vile.
and he gets out of prison early!
Imagine how much stuff like this went down before bodycams became the norm. They've only been in use for around a decade and even with then, we still have stuff like this.
12:45 Australia started siding with the accused when police body cams failed. Suddenly, the failure rate of body cams dropped by more than 92%
Australia is one of the worst places for police abuse, they are basically untouchable. you have no chance in court if you go against them, they are corrupt and ignorant. The poor aboriginals receive the worst of this,
Body cam malfunction means the cop is trying to hide something, otherwise there would be no malfunction.
Wow! Perfect proof and also sad. The exact proof is that police can’t be trusted!
Imagine how many dont get caught
The worst will condemn the least worst
@lawrencefrost9063
“The worst will condemn the least WORSE.” “Worst” by nature implies something that is the most worse so if something isn’t as bad then it’s inherently worse, not the worst.
Imagine how many "good" cops, who don't violate peoples rights, knew about this guy's activities and didn't report him.
@@JohnSmith-yi2uj Oh dear.....
Then the one that does get caught, basically is gonna get off on a technicality. Infuriating. There is no deterrent for bad cops to not engage in illicit activities. They are protected by the statuon, then the union, finally the government itself
He should go to prison forever.
...or Hell....
@@1FairyGothMother
From him unto whom much is given, much is to be expected.
He might. By not surviving the sentence.
@@robertgantry2118 why not both?
straight to gen pop
Nobody wondered why his "drug find" rate was 250%?
They probably encouraged
I'm sure they realized their lil' cash cow had more finds in a weekend than the entire department does all year.
Capitalism encourages corruption while maintaining a blind eye in pursuit of profit & fast results.
It's clear that somebody did.
The police department that hired him after they knew he was fired from another police department should get arrested too.
Like Sonia Massey's case.
But he was allowed to resign...
If a body cam is turned off during a traffic stop or other interaction with someone and they are arrested for something not caught on camera, the case should immediately be dismissed for lack of evidence. every case this guy has been involved in where body cam footage wasn't available should be overturned or thrown out
Future Farmers of America probably didn’t think this is what he had in mind with his interest in planting.
🤣🤣🤣🤣
ahhahaha, well done
Planting balony.......😸
BA-ZING!
BAHAHAHAHA!
Once is happenstance, twice is coincidence, three times is enemy action - James Bond.
I think it was what James Bond was told by Auric Goldfinger
I believe in coincidences, but I don't trust coincidences - Elim Garak (For all my fellow Star Trek fans).
That cop should spend 50yrs in prison
Oh man I followed this case from the beginning. If he's not a psychopath he's close to it. What are monster.
The fact that a number of completely innocent people plead guilty at court shows just how difficult the system can be to negotiate, and expensive.
Anyone outside law enforcement would have received a harsher punishment. The system, even when they do convict cops, have a hard time maximizing their punishment.
at least they are one of the most hated in prison
Not really. We sadly just have weak judges all the way around, regardless of the defendants' occupations.
Dr. Grande's jokes are the best! Love his delivery!
yep... i bet he's laughing in his brain ... and i wonder how many takes he has to do to keep a straight face the whole time
I would agree with Dr. Grande. No body cam no crime took place.
Goof grief, imagine what mayhem would have ensued if he had made it to the narcotics division
Wonder if any of those victims spent more time in prison, lost access to their kids, etc. How much may have been spent on their defense.
Every crime should default to 2x penalties for anyone who commits those crimes while wearing a badge.
I grew up with a sheriff as a father. My dad was a dirty cop, he has gone to a very hot place and can no longer harm anyone.
This goes way beyond the lives he destroyed directly with his false arrests. He compromised public faith in that department making it more difficult to establish strong ties with the community and effectively do their job.
The accountability must be severe.
I agree, too bad our corrupt just*us system does not.
This cop is a awful person.
So were the married women who slept with him
He went to our church and taught our kids Sunday school. This has been eerie to see
What's the reaction been like inside your church community?
It's a good reminder renee that often the more prolific the piety, the more questionable the motivations.
Why do women sleep with men like this?
What's crazy is that he was 26 when he got caught but dude looks 46 😳
No! What's crazy is the amount of women (some of whom were married) who let him get ''romantic' with them
Florida, and no sunscreen. You should see the roofers.
😂😂😂 just saw that as i read this, godamn, that aint the sun, thats lifstyle and potato genetics
"Cell warming party" That's a new phrase that will live rent free in my head.
they actually have a "welcome" for their friends ... guys when the first get in don't have anything and usually haven't eaten since the night before... the guys take care of their friends ..BUT, .the guys with no friends and first time in better not take anything from anyone or they'll be paying big later on...
@@superman9772 Oh. That actually makes a lot of sense. I was thinking about something *less* welcoming, lol
He was born to run for public office. Put him in a suit and give him free air time.
CEO perhaps
Guy started having issues on day one....this brings his family in law enforcement into question.
that's a good question... had to learn it somewhere
Zachary most likely wanted to be promoted to narcotics, because of the "potential money," (not overtime), being able to skim cash, property, and drugs off of drug raids.
And easy sex, protection coercion sex. He was already have been found in be a multiple partner adulterer. Probably his main motive for wanting to be in narcotics.
Never take a plea deal if you're innocent. There's no proof with any of these cases, and yet the court system will pressure you into taking a plea deal with threats of harsh punishment and intimidation.
Making the dog alert by a trained trick to get a reason to search is the oldest trick in the book.
Outlawing medicine in a "free country" is even older. There shouldn't be 23 year old's rooting through people`s underwear for substances in the first place. Even the non criminal cops are overstepping human rights, our constitution, and common sense. It doesn't even work, it just exacerbates the issue and costs 8 times more.
That explains some things around here.
Why don't people trust the police? I don't get it.
LOL
Neither *shrug shoulders*
And there are still departments with zero bodycameras. According to sheriff Grady its too expensive.
Yep you’re absolutely right. I’m from the nearby county of Brevard and Sheriff Wayne Ivey refuses to have them as well, even though Soooo many arrests are made here everyday. I’ve dealt with so many police as well as sheriffs who abuse their power, attempt to do illegal searches of vehicles and pulling vehicles over for absolutely no reason in hopes of intimidating and finding “something”. It’s disgustingly ridiculous and outrageous.
So ridiculous. The only reason not to have cameras is to cover up unprofessional behavior. It’s no different than not having voter ID, so you can cheat at elections, duh. The of extremes of both sides of the aisle are more similar than different lol.
@@saraha5847Police said Deputies are completely different, funded differently and your council members are who oks funding, not the Sheriff or Chief. Take your complaints there and follow the money up.
He means the lawsuits would be too expensive.
@saraha5847 thanks for the info. Greetings from Europe!
Nobody should be surprised by this. It happens more than people think.
One very important detail you left out was that it was courthouse rumors that led to him being investigated by an assistant DA. When she uncovered Zach's crimes the DA aejt after the Assistant DA fir in his own words "meddling with the past" The assistant DA was forced to find work another line of work
This is what hurts good, honest police.
Both of them!
It's hellish when we can't even trust law enforcement.
We entered hell then somewhere around the late 1800s, at least in the south.
@@EcoVintageArtGifts So true. And now we can't trust the FBI.
He should get life in prison.
I just love your sense of humor, Dr. Grande!!
I appreciate your analysis on this case.
*The welcome basket contained substanndard gifts" ... yet another wry gem from Dr. G 😂❤
God jul på er alla in Scandinavia ❤
God Jul du med ❤
Merry Christmas across the Atlantic!
He should have got 25 years. Out in 18 if he was a good boy in prison. Police academy's should teach about this type of abuse.
Three times is a pattern. He’s guilty.
He is guilty as heck!! The part that really chaps my hide is his folksy demeanor, all the while planting evidence.
Hearing Doc say 'baggie' & shank is gangsta 😅
Liberty County has been a real dangerous place due to sheriffs dept irregularities for decades.
"I do not give you consent to search."
I remember this like it was yesterday! Dude is insane! 🤬
This reminds me of when I was eight and my twelve year old sister would take a big bite out of a cookie then put the rest of the cookie on my nightstand then tell my mom that I was a cookie thief and HERE is the evidence!
I got her back at her wedding when on her bridal picture photo montage she showed during the reception, I added some pictures my mom took of her potty training.
Take that, Ursula. No one frames Sergei for a cookie caper and gets away Scot free! Her husband nicknames her Pampers now. Oof. 😂
GG
Who takes pics of kids potty training...
Chicks......
People underestimate just how life destroying a charge can be, not even a conviction, just the charge. Instant job loss, crippling bail conditions, huge legal costs. The idea of 'innocent until proven guilty' is utter nonsense, you may not wear the full punishment yet, but you certainly do not get treated like you are innocent.
There is a pattern present in which people who escape consequences for initial crimes go on to perpetrate even more serious future crimes. So, who benefits from that?
What is your point exactly, that people who may have committed a crime in the past should be charged with a crime they didn't commit? You have a solid resume for becoming a communist party member with that type of thinking
"whoops Crack"
"whoops weed"
"whoops opiods"
"whoops weapons"
Whoops you're fired bro.
You mean, whoops take some paid week off to reflect on your mistakes.
@Stichting_NoFa-p yeah spoke too soon smh
Even with all this, they would still hire him at the next district over.
@bluedistortions which is ridiculous but ridiculous
Whoop there it is
Dr Grange, the sweet, summer child, is seemingly unaware of the obvious fact that drug dogs are routinely used to falsely "alert" to enable a search, whenever drivers refuse...
Drug dogs are every bit as legit as bite-mark analysis.
This is nonsense. Its impossible to get a dog to respond to a cue.
@@SecretMarsupial It's not impossible. It's just a matter of giving the dog a cue to sit, or easier still, simply lie and claim the dog alerted when it didn't. Please don't tell me it's impossible for a cop to lie.
@@SecretMarsupialso it is impossible to train a dog to respond to a cue but it is possible to train them to sniff drugs??
@@SecretMarsupialI’m assuming you’re showing your mastery of sarcasm, sir?
As a side note, I remember once watching a cop’s body cam show a K9 handler cuing his dog to alert on a suspect’s passenger door. The cop with the body cam was a rookie. The other veteran cop present knew to turn his back moments prior, and his body cam didn’t catch it.
Stunned that any cop, prosecutor, judge, or jury would support a guy who planted evidence even once.
They then give him a lighter sentence! Where's the logic in that?
What a delightful POS. I imagine this happens a lot. However, still have deepest respect for most LEOs. Merry Christmas Dr G.
It DOES happen a lot. And the reason it happens a lot is because cops cover for each other's corruption. If you have respect for cops then it's because you have some form of Stockholm Syndrome.
The camera's shouldn't have a turn off button; if we don't need privacy why should they.
Battery life is insufficient to have them on through a whole shift. That's why they are on standby & activated when required. There is a 30 second back capture (video only) to cover the fact that sometimes something happened immediately prior to the officer being able to activate the device. Also, as with all electronic devices that get a lot of use, they do malfunction sometimes. & this can sometimes only become apparent at the end of the shift when docking the device to upload the footage & recharge the battery. Not defending this guy in any way, he was convicted of the crimes & I think he is scum, but it's also important to understand how Police bodycam works (& sometimes doesn't) if making suggestions on how it should be used.
@realsatoshihashimoto there are car chargers.
@paullavoie5542 The units are signed out and in electronically using a base station at the police station. The base station is connected to the Police computer system & it not only charges, it assigns the camera to the officer & also uploads the data at the end of the shift. The ones I used read the officers palm print to ensure it was properly assigned in and out to the correct officer. There is no such thing as a car charger for a Police bodyworn camera, at least not the type I used, they can only be charged at the official base station
And if there were car chargers, please explain how a car charger could be used whilst the camera is being worn and is "on all the time" as you said previously? Are Police supposed to have an extension lead going from the vehicle to their bodyworn camera, perhaps?
@realsatoshihashimoto how can a phone be charged while using it.
@paullavoie5542 A phone isn't required to be docked to a base unit that issues it to a user based upon their palm print when signed out & signed in for accountability purposes. Where the base unit also acts as the charger. Police bodyworn videos are not the kind of equipment that can be charged from a cigarette lighter. They are accountable items. They have to remain attached to the officer for the duration of their shift. It would have to be a bloody long charger cord. Also much Police work is done on foot, not in vehicles. & I suppose you'd have the Canadian mounties plug a cord into a horses rear end to keep their bodyworn camera charged? Imagine if the wrong camera got swapped over in the field & ended up on the wrong officer. You simply don't know what you are talking about!
Dr. Grande, I've been wanting you to do psycho cop analysis. You have a lot to offer there.
I love your sense of humor. Thank you for doing this.
Law enforcement attracts a lot of psychopaths who couldn't care less about the harm they cause. His behavior is not surprising.
There is no real justice
3:43 "26 yr old??? Sheeeeeeeeeesh"
That kid is not aging well. He must eat a horrible diet.
The anti-Ralph Macchio.
@someguy7424 lol
Studies in the US show that body cameras tend to support the police more than the public bc there are so many accusations of corrupt cops that are thwarted by the video evidence. Activists are actually trying to now limit the unfettered use of cameras for this reason. In the US there are over 1.3M cops, it's not surprising that a few bad ones slip out and of course are lapped up by the one-sided political press. That proportion should always be part of the discussion seeing how important trust of the police is to the public. In this case the guy should have been booted permanently for the very first offense.
A few bad ones? where were the good ones at, for Daniel Shaver, Kelly Thomas, Jonny Wheatcroft, James Boyd, Nurse Wubbles and on and on. Just admit the blue line is a cover for gang activety.
True, R tards are now saying that the use of body cams is racist.
@@michaeldose2041 congratulations, 5 out of 1.3 million still counts as a few. It’s hard for the unwashed masses to grasp the meaning of numbers.
@ when 2 guys had a gun in my face downtown under the L tracks Cpd showed up and saved my ass. Maybe in the suburbs you read about this stuff or see it on TV. I LIVE IT
I like dry humor, Dr Grande is drier than the Mojave.
The bit about how welcome cops are in prison really got to me 😂
the software already exists to automate recording and prevent manual disabling by officer so it should be used
Get it Dr. Grande! Love the content.
Happy Winter Solstice, Dr. Grande. Excellent
He was only 26???? He looks 46
And...... married women slept with him. WTF!
Probably bribed or browbeaten.
Having a dog *alert" can be bogus. They can be trained to alert on a subtle xue from the cop
Lack of respect for the rules. That's a big one. Perhaps due to never having a hard life or being considerate of who he was hurting including his family ties Hard to understand why someone would torpedo opportunities given them, otherwise.
Absolutely hilarious thanks to your narration. I needed this. Thanks Doc!
Yet another reason you probably shouldn’t consent to searches.
I’m not in law enforcement but if I was I’d never abuse the power and privilege of wearing the badge , like I don’t abuse the store associate name tag
They should check all of his detection in both police agencies
Happy Holidays!🎄🌟🇮🇱❤️🙏🤩Sending LOVE❤️❤️❤️🎄
He'll literally become a cop again when he's freed...
The good Doctor Grande consistently exhibits a healthy skepticism of law enforcement. Including pseudoscientific polygraph tests.
One man 70 crimes
I have absolutely no idea why cops are permitted to have "oopsies" with regard to their body cams. Cops should be held responsible for lapses in their body cams' function whether said lapse is their fault or not; make it an extremely strict policy that failure to capture body cam footage is an offense subject to severe punishment, up to and including firing for repeat incidents, and I imagine we'll have far fewer "malfunctions" in the force. It doesn't matter if it's intentional; a failure to maintain one's body cam in working order, to notice when it's not working, or to properly turn it on is all on the cop.
They have literally no purpose if they aren't on and recording for the entirety of the interaction. How is any cop allowed to get away with "accidentally" not capturing footage when they're supposed to?
I take the dog alerting with a massive grain of salt. A dog wants to please its owner. They have also been shown to alert to US currency unconnected to any illegal activity.
@Dr.ToddGrande I hope you are well and wishing you and your family a Merry Christmas / Happy Holidays! 💫💫
Why do they have any control over their body camera at all
Well, i can see the purpose of turning them off when using the facilities.
@tanikokishimoto1604 Considering the abuse it's getting that may be better off as something they just have to deal with or they need to radio in to base and have someone else turn it off
They can only record for a few hours between charging and docking to upload the videos. It would be impossible to constantly record everything over the course of a 10- or 12- hour shift. It would also be incredibly unpopular with everyone for very good reasons. How would you like all of your private conversations with a friend, spouse, loved one or supervisor to be video and audio recorded and subject to public release after a freedom of information act request? The cameras are supposed to be on whenever they might capture anything of investigative value. They shouldn't be on when you're in the bathroom or sitting in your patrol car or office having a private phone conversation with your wife or your doctor.
@skyhawk_4526 When you're publicly funded and on the clock there is no privacy
Like someone once put it 'Some people are just born as idiots'.
Dr Grande has THE BEST collection of shirts EVER.
(My fav is the flowers on white background. Very Nelson Mandela! 🇿🇦 )
Excellent analysis as always 👍❤
This stuff goes on so frequently, you'd almost think the "good apples" don't actually care about stopping the "few bad apples" from abusing the badge.
Always appreciate your opinion Dr. Grande.
Body cameras should be turned on and off by a key at the station and not at the officers discretion. The camera should have a function to highlight sections of footage for easier review but not have the option to not record. What is the point of surveillance that is only applied at the will of the surveilled party? Can i choose to turn off the security cameras at the bank? Maybe ring doorbell cameras should have a switch on the outside of the door as well
I sure hope whoever was arrested for drug offenses by him had their charges dropped. There’s no way to know if any of the offenses actually happened so all should be exonerated.
Oh I guess not because he wasn’t charged for nine counts. Or maybe there wasn’t enough proof & those nine still got off? I just wouldn’t trust a single drug arrest made by him even if his body camera was on the whole time.
Even if his body camera was on the whole time it can’t be proved if he had the drugs easily accessible so that it’s not obvious he planted the drugs.
The truly surprising thing is that the department noticed the anomalies, investigated, and then did something about it.
Just watched Trial 4 on Netflix. This is commonplace, unfortunately.
Great choice! Great analysis! I hope you do more like this. Cops are a great topic, especially in the south.
I am happy investigators found their were issues with his camera.
Wow 😮 he got away with most of it!!! Diabolical evil!
Hearin😂 Dr Grande say "shank" is freaking hilarious 😂
3:45 Twenty six years old? The guy looks to be in his 40’s
At this point: people in any such positions of authority should have their life under constant scrutiny. Regardless if it's a city department or a rural township. I wonder, did any of his victims get restitution?
This is so common in DR and officers have no camera.😑
This is why you never give the police consent to search...EVER
He certainly isn’t much to look at.
Thank you Dr Grande for covering this human garbage 😢😮
Funny how camera technology, including body and dashboard cameras, are extremely pervasive throughout the world, and yet somehow there are neither laws nor even, apparently, departmental police regulations that require things like the discovery of illegal items in the car or home of a person to be recorded. Sure, the Jacksonville County Sheriff's Department had a policy stating that body cams were supposed to be turned on at the beginning of traffic stops, but the failure to comply with this policy obviously didn't invalidate the "evidence" found even when the camera wasn't working, nor was there any administrative punishment for the dirty cop who wasn't complying with the policy. To put it simply, it would be very, very easy for police departments everywhere to require that their officers record everything of consequence that they do, particularly when whatever they're doing could have legal implications. Amazon delivery drivers take a photo of every package they leave on my front porch, for example. And yet at least some police departments expect the public should take the word of a single officer in matters that can ruin people's lives. The good old "trust me, bro, I'm the police" routine. Maybe theres a reason that public esteem and trust for cops is at an all-time low, which is a damn shame--the majority of them are honest, ans all of them are underpaid for doing a dangerous, difficult job. But the good ones need to stop with the "blue wall of silence" bullshit and embrace vigorous efforts not just to weed out the dirty cops, but also the bullies, the lazy ones, and the incompetent ones too. Because one bad apple, &c.
Dr Grande, please analyze the case of Dmitriy Demskiy. He murdered his 1 year old son yesterday. It happened in Sacramento CA