LPL - "This is a lock from a prison." Me - My god he finally broke out of a prison. LPL - "Here's another lock from a different prison." Me - HE CAN'T BE HELD!!
@@scootergeorge9576 I tell you what, even though he's in a completely different country from me, and it probably turns out he specialises in shipping insurance law, I'd still want him as my defence lawyer if I found myself in the dock!
Oh look it’s the joke. The same joke. They always make the same joke! Gonna name it “The Same Joke!” Hahaha. It’s funny every time. All 1300+ times. Slays me each and every time. Ha ha!🤡😐
"im not going to go into how to improvise a lockpick in a prison setting for obvious reasons" *he knows how to improvise a lockpick in a prison setting holy shit*
Obtaining a few paper clips or hair pins is cake. A shank/shiv not so easy. However that shiv could be transformed into an entire set of lock picks, given a large sum of time and knowledge which point is obvious. I'd prefer picks from wire and also a weapon if I were a criminal. It's almost humorous that the most intelligent never get nabbed and don't need to ever employ such skills for escape. That's the real point.
"This is the Lockpicking Inmate and what i have for you today is just a quick Video on Prison Locks. I will have to keep it short because I hear Sirens and Dogs barking."
I've worked in several prisons throughout Missouri. This type of lock is fairly outdated and to my knowledge hasn't been used since The Walls was shut down in 2010. Our keys are much larger and typically are only used for food ports and some interior gates/doors. Doors to individual cells, yards and buildings are controlled electronically from a number of control points, so even having the key wouldn't get you very far. That's not to say keys weren't misplaced or the control officers hadn't rolled the wrong doors for the wrong people. Also on at least one instance a fairly intelligent inmate made a working copy of a key from a melted food tray and visual memory. If you really want to escape, all you'd have to do is wait for the power to die and all the doors to pop. Fun times.
If the power goes down, wouldn't the doors stay closed because there is nothing left to open them or are the locks not working anymore because of no power?
Jordan Phoenix it would make sense if the doors all opened when the power goes out in case of an emergency Like if a fire takes out the control room, turning the power off, and continues to spread, you don’t want all the prisoners stuck in non-unlockable cells
@@jordanphoenix1255 Sorry for the late response. When the power fails the locking mechanisms on the doors are rendered inactive. It's a built-in safety feature against natural disasters as we were located on a major fault line and also had a history of flash floods and tornadoes. Our solution to this was to nicely ask the inmates to return to their cells and secure their doors with handcuffs going from the door handle to a hard point on the wall. The gates of the sally port and the door to the administrative building, the only two exits of the prison, remain locked during a power outage and have to be keyed from the inside.
Also work MODOC. These type, though a different brand, of locks are present in a couple of facilities in my region for interior doors, like to break rooms and such. Also, our cells locks with big keys, but can be popped remotely by the control officer. Probably the same massive keys you're talking about. So, we don't have the power outage problem, since the locks just, you know, stay locked.
"This is the Lockpicking Lawyer, and today I'm outside of Area 51 to see if we can get inside. I've got this rake, and we're just gonna, yup, there we go, found the aliens"
@@Azathoth43 Everyone knows its empty. All the gold was sold off a long time ago. It took 4 years (2013 to 2017) to give Germany back 374t of its gold, supposedly from Fort Knox. 4 years, from Fort Knox - yeah, right. In an interview in 2017, Russian economist Vladimir Katasonov, a professor at the International Finance Department at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations, told Sputnik Radio that the U.S. had not been ready to give the bullion back. The professor suggested Germany's gold bars had been disposed of at the United States’ own discretion. "There are a lot of signs that the gold was not physically present in the New York vaults when Germany called it back. Of course, the U.S. began to return it to Germany but there is one interesting detail. When you leave your suitcase in the luggage storage, you expect to get back the same suitcase. But Germany took the wrong 'suitcase,'" Katasonov told Radio Sputnik. According to the economist, the gold bars that Bundesbank repatriated have different labels. He suggested that the U.S. might have replaced the German bullion with different gold bars bought from the market.
This is why all personal items are removed from prisoners: if the prisoner is LPL and he has his lock picking set, that is not a prison anymore, its a youtube content supply.
After a small ad break, all the locks are gone and dismantled in small trays near each door. The judge is utterly confused and adds LPL as a bounty. LPL however is long gone and is picking the door of a magnet train.
@@ivan_pozdeev_u sure Also he's picking the door of one so it doesn't matter about it being commercial. You'll have to let me know if there's anywhere else he could be because I don't know these things
Lol. I remember playing Splinter Cell Double Agent and escaping the prison by picking locks, thinking "Wow, there's no way they're this fast and easy to pick. This game is unrealistic!"
@@applemacosx1 True dat, but it fairly accurately portrays the concept of lockpicking, at least as far as accuracy needs to go in a video game while still being fun and a game. That said, it'd be neat to see LockPickingLawyer do a special on lockpicking in video games and rate how accurate it is, lol.
your government privatized the jails... therefore your tax dollars are going straight into the pockets of the rich guys... that's the way with privatization. lower the quality, raise the price and socialize the losses. Good luck.
Yeah that’s true Privatized Prisons Are the worst thing that has happen to the poor and Minorities seems like something that needs to be abolished as soon as possible I would do it but I am already in my pajamas~
Mostly to politicians, occasionally to companies to make prison locks. They go with the highest bidder, so I think this company also makes cookies and delivers laundry.
Me: "So you have been in prison...?" LPL: "Yes." Me: "What brought you there?" LPL: "A paperclip." Me: "They threw you into jail for a paperclip?" LPL: "No, you misunderstood...I broke *into* prison with a paperclip. So I could break out again."
This just proves the comment from a while back ago: Imagine you are a guard putting LPL in prison, and the moment you close the door and lock it you hear: "A click on one, nothing out of two, three is binding"
LORDBEAST 32 Nope. Steel doors with a thick wire reinforced window in the middle so we can look in, check on them and conduct counts. Weakness is the Officers. If they aren’t doing their jobs , locks and strike plates can be tampered with , to bypass .
Ha, that's funny. If you pick your lawyer's lock, he won't help you get out of jail. So, kids, do not lie to or pick the locks of your lawyer. Do not pretend to be innocent to your lawyer, unless you are truly innocent. It defeats your lawyer's ability to get you off, if you lie to him or her. They need to understand the lies you told to the cops without having to suss out the lies you told to them, your lawyers. I worked as a private investigator for a number of years and saw the disasters caused by lying to your own lawyer and or the investigator you hired to help you build a case for yourself or against the person you want to blame.
The last thing a marked inmate hears when the lights go out: "We're going to use bottom of the keyway tension with this bit of tuna can and will be using a standard plastic spoon hook in twenty-five thousandths."
Wonderful design, making the key so large. It means prisoners improvising picking tools by filing down objects (like a toothbrush handle to make a tension bar) don't have to do so much filing.
I'm genuinely curious as to why they are so big! Is the idea that the keys are harder to hide? Is the idea that the lock will be more durable? The mind boggles!
@@bradley3549 Maybe it's to make a warder carrying all those *big* keys seem more intimidating. Oh, and wrap your fist around a bunch of them and you have a weighted fist for beating prisoners.
The manager of the WalMart broke his master key. He came to me in automotive, where I cut customer keys, to see if I could cut a new key from the pieces and I was successful. I noticed that the cuts were very deep and all the same depth. Just to see if I could, I hand cut a key blank until it was just a straight piece of metal at what I estimated would be the correct depth. It worked just as if it had bitting.
walmartdog1142 That’s a common occurrence in multi-tiered mastering systems that are planned by inexperienced locksmiths who use a different pin for mastering of different tiers. Computer-designed master key systems are more common now, and they’re usually better.
What Walmart doesn't have a Hillman automatic key cutting machine? It'd be either the Axxess "Key Cutter" or the newer Hillman branded "Keykrafter" touch screen unit. Neither particularly like glued together keys and neither would allow a custom cut. Unless you took a file to a key blank, neither machine would really work.
@@poiiihy Problem is the Walmart machines don't let you hand cut keys. You slide a key in and the machine automagically traces along the key. There's no manual cutting functions, it's all automated.
All jokes and irony aside, the increased size does have potential benefits. Big locks with big strike plates are harder to break. Big locks mean big keys so harder to smuggle as contraband
Actually, if you did it right, multiple shear lines could make things harder to pick. The trick is that all the pins have to set on the *same* sheerline in order for it to unlock.
@@Keldor314 Without undercutting, serrations, spools, T pins, or other security features making the job tougher, master keying will always make opening a lock that can be bumped or raked more vulnerable and give two equally valid positions for set. It's mechanical, it doesn't care whether the shear line you're at is created by the bitting for the master or the lower privilege key. Master keying will always create double the viable number of lock positions that open a given lock for each key pin that is made up of more than one part. If you have a one-position master, it's twice. Two, 4 times. Three, 8 times. Four, 16 times. Five, 32 times. It's basic math. You still have to be thinking you can pick the lock and have a tool, but it increases your odds of picking.
Teaches thousands of people how to pick locks. 'I am not gonna go into how picks might be improvised in prison, for obvious reasons.' But you already taught me how to steal stuff and break into places, so technically you bring me into prison and now you refuse to get me out?!
I remember hearing a story once (I don't know if it's true, and I could be misremembering some of the details) where supposedly a prison gave all its prisoners a handbook with a picture of a key on it. As it turned out, the key that was chosen to model for the image was the prison's master key, so an industrious prisoner managed to get his hands on a key blank and file it down to match the image, and escaped because he was able to make himself a master key.
I suppose those locks are more designed for extreme use over absolute security. Hence the absolute size, lack of security pins, and ball bearings. Perhaps the lack of pick resistance is mitigated by installing these locks such that inmates are always on the other side of the keyhole when the door is locked.
Yep, the thing is that in most cases anymore those doors are solid so your never getting to the keyway so these kinds of locks are ideal since they stand up better. Even on the older style bar ones are generally designed so you can't easily get to the keyway. I mean sure a really experienced lockpicker might be able to do it with the bar style doors but your still doing it blind with limited mobility, only a really skilled lockpicker could do that.
@@MaethorDerien The main issue I see is that they can be raked open. If they had to be picked more traditionally I could see it posing a much larger challenge. But you dont really need to see what you're doing to just rake it open with an improvised tool. I mean, ultimately, in most prisons, it wouldnt help alllll that much anyways. But its still a design flaw that woudl probably be best to avoid given how low skill Raking is, and the fact it doesnt require any crazy fancy tools, easy to improvise.
This is everyone's life that finds these videos. About .01% of his viewers are actually interested in picking locks, the rest are captivated by his voice and ability to make videos that are straight to the point with no ads for Raid.
0:53 funny you should mention this, I once attacked a lock by obtaining the operating key and filed it down. However as you mentioned some section was cut too low on the operating key. My solution was to use electronics solder on the area I needed built up. I made a big ugly blob of solder and carefully hand filed without breaking the delicate bond between the key and the solder. It worked well on ACE and Abloy type keys as well.
How do CO’s keep lock smiths behind bars, I mean it’s just a matter of time till you hear “click out of 2... 4 starts binding...” all the sudden you have the whole prison running after you.
CO's usually aren't armed. Besides pepper spray. Also, bar-style doors went out with the old west. We use nice, thick, solid chunks of steel these days.
Khaisz I was surprised when I put my rake into those free cheap gun locks and it was the perfect bitting. Didn’t even have to rake. It was the key. But for a prison lock this is really surprising. I’ve have master locks take more raking to open!
so the way in movies where they just go like whup de doo picked a lock in 1 second isnt as inaccurate as i though you just need a bad enough lock apparently
The stacked pins you see here are the crux of it. That results in there being more than one position on each bit of the key that can allow the cylinder to turn. Make one of those positions consistent across a set of locks, while the other varies, and you've got it.
Look at the ones that have 3 pins. That allows for two different positions to be used for each position. The tiny pin in the middle of the two larger ones is used to make the master key combinations.
Your front door can be locked without a key? That's a pretty serious design flaw. Where I live, everyone uses deadbolts for door locking mechanisms, spring bolts are only ever connected to a handle, not to a lock.
@@TobiasLindh If you don't count European Russia as Europe -- only once, and wasn't interested in studying locks. I do remember though that there wasn't anything unusual about our hotel room door -- in partucular, we definitely didn't have to watch out not to accidentally close it lest we be locked out outside.
@@ivan_pozdeev_u There are many different variants with hotel rooms, but most of the ones I've seen also lock the rooms door without a key. Especially the ones that are controlled by a card. The spring bolt is connected to the handle, but front doors don't have a handle on the outside. You still have to use the key to set the deadbolt, but you when you forgot your key inside and closed the door, you can't get in anymore.
Dude I can’t thank you enough for this. I just successfully broke out of prison because of this video and wanted to show my gratitude. I watched this video before going to prison and then swallowed the required tools to pick these locks. I was in prison for life without parol and now I’m out. If that doesn’t get you to subscribe, I don’t know what will.
Also, most of the time, locking picking isn’t a worry. The main concern is inmates stuffing the locks with various items to jam them, effectively making the lock useless
I know realize how LPL took 1st place in the Lock Picking Competition, no other competitors bothered showing up when they found out LPL was a participant!
I’ve said this before, but I, for home security reasons, really want a video on GOOD locks. That way I can know which lock to buy. Of course, I could also go by the, “LPL took 30 seconds to pick it open so it must be a good lock” ideologically, but ideally, a video on good locks would be great!
Funfact: In Germany it's LEGAL to break out of a prison, but if you get caught, you 1. Get the rest of your time in jail plus 2. The additional jail time/fines for every crime you did while breaking out So if you find a way to get out of prison without making an other crime and you stay out and clean for 5 year's there will be a high chance that they will stop looking for you
Almost as high a percentage as the amount of people in American prisons who have been there for way too long based on the severity of their crimes. Especially when compared to the rich bastards who spent no time in prison for far worse crimes, simply because they are rich.
Having been in prison for about 20 years, it's my experience that most prisoners don't mess with locks. The guards don't like that. Get caught tampering with locks and you'll get a transfer to someplace you don't want to go. And as for padlocks that are used in prison they welded a tube over the keyway about an inch and a half to two inches long. The key had to be modified to fit. It makes it virtually impossible to pick. (I said virtually, LPL.)
Just stay clear of the dozen serial murderers and you'd honestly be fine. People just want to get out and restart their lives. Not cause a lot more problems for themselves.
The college dorms I lived in back in the 80s didn't follow the rule of master keying. I easily made a master from a copy of my room key with a chainsaw sharpening file.
Your so awesome taking the time to show us all the inside of all your locks, I can’t imagine the time it takes to reassemble the pins and springs the proper way
I work in a prison and we have similar locks to these. Firstly, it's important to note that a cell door does not have a keyhole on the inside. So even if we were to hand them a key, there would be no way to insert the key into the lock. This goes for any door where you are going "outwards". Imagine the prison as a layercake and to move from say a unit to a corridor you wouldn't be able to use a key, but if you were going "in" then you could. In terms of these kind of locks, the model shown here is an older model and newer ones encompass a pin rotational aspect which appears to be an effort to resist raking. It appears to be a similar method to a medico lock. Additionally, when the lock is installed in the correct housing there is a weight aspect placed on the core which is an attempt to stop improvised keys being made from objects such as wood, glass, paper or whatever. The force needed to actually turn the key would cause most materials to easily break which leads up to another point. That being the keys are intentionally big for two reasons - if you were to lose it, it's going to be much easier to find and if a prisoner was to actually get hold of a piece of metal large enough, it would either be found during electronic searching or manual searches and the time required to fashion the key is far greater.
This is the best lawyer in the world. Even when he loses a trial he managed to get his clients out of prison...
This... This is actually a pretty smart move.
Can't agree more than this time
Is he actually a lawyer
@@me-it9jn yes he is
He specialises in getting locks out of jail
A lawyer teaching people how to get out of prison. Typical
In Brazil, low ranking lawyers are known as _"porta de cadeia"_ (jail door).
@@DinnerForkTongue haha i like that
He's just securing his job!
Help them get out and then even more work helping them either stay out or go back! What a brilliant business model!
I think if you look into this channel the guy is a locksmith not a guy trying to help fools out of prison.
Hire this lawyer whenever you need one. He's the only one who can guarantee to get you out of prison by any means necessary.
😂
Elie Obeid he may not win your case, but he will guarantee your freedom.
That's a dad joke
Nat1ve I’m a dad.
*ANY* *MEANS* *NECESSARY*
LPL: Breaks out of jail
Warden: wtf
LPL: Once again a inexcusable design flaw
he be the type of person to escape prison, steal a lock, come back and put it on his cell
Turns out all you need to do is stuff the latch hole in the doorframe with toilet paper. The lock just never engages in the first place.
that 'Warden: wtf' really got me, good one.
Lol
I'll do it again so you can that it's not a fluke
LPL - "This is a lock from a prison."
Me - My god he finally broke out of a prison.
LPL - "Here's another lock from a different prison."
Me - HE CAN'T BE HELD!!
Moose Milk how has he not put a heart on this comment
LPL to-do list
Lock pick prison locks✅
Win a competition ✅
Be the next Houdini (no sepsis)❌
Roast several companies ✅
Probably not even the SCP Foundation can contain him.
ixfd64 SCP CLASS: KETER
obviously not with these concerningly sub-par locks.
When he pulls out the wave rake, you know they dun goofed.
Your pfp brings back bad memories. I couldn't sleep at all when I saw that episode
@@duskmoonlight8705 what is it from?
It's been a while since I've seen anyone say "dun goofed". It made me think of that dad and chuckle.
@@duskmoonlight8705 you're not perfect
@@tiffany.nichole9530 noooooooooooo
*LPL goes to prison*
*1 day later*
"This is the LPL and what I have for you today is 4 more prison locks..."
😂😂😂 That’s next level trolling on the DOC.
"This particular lock is used by the prison governor on the drinks cabinet in his private office..."
@@lockpickinglawyer - If you represent yourself, do you have a fool for a client? ; )
That's it for today, I'll see you guys on the next visit's day 😃
@@scootergeorge9576 I tell you what, even though he's in a completely different country from me, and it probably turns out he specialises in shipping insurance law, I'd still want him as my defence lawyer if I found myself in the dock!
Imagine being a prison guard at night and hearing someone down a hall saying "nice click out of two, small click out of three, four is binding..."
Me: locks door while leaving my keys in the house
Me: “No!!!!”
Also me: ”My time has come.”
@Will Wallace at that point, just hide a key under the doormat
VIBaJ 16 yes do that and also give me your address for no reason at all
Oh look it’s the joke. The same joke. They always make the same joke! Gonna name it “The Same Joke!” Hahaha. It’s funny every time. All 1300+ times. Slays me each and every time. Ha ha!🤡😐
@@evelbill1439 Hear that?... Oh wait I thought someone might've asked for a moment, nvm.
"im not going to go into how to improvise a lockpick in a prison setting for obvious reasons"
*he knows how to improvise a lockpick in a prison setting holy shit*
If they have the access to anything metal, they'll always find a way to reshape it either to shank someone or to bust a couple locks.
i can break out of prison but you can’t
Considering how often he can open a lock with little more than a bit of chopped up drink can...
@@mac1991seth not even metal you could mae this tool out of a tooth brush
Favorite comment ever.
"Hey, what are you watching there?"
"It's a lawyer, officer! That's allowed, isn't it?"
"Yeah. Getting yourself some advice?"
"Yes."
Thats hilarious😂😂😂👌👌👌so underrated
This is gold.
i was just in county and they had these
@@danisyx5804 was this video instrumental in you saying "was in county"? 🤣
"Let's see how fast we can get this open" *Pulls out a rake* Oh boy here we go.
The rake is lpl's version of the grim reapers scythe.
Just one step short of "let's take this to the workshop" ;D
Or god forbid a comb.
Remember the one time he friggin used a zip tie?
Oh shit, here we go again
2:38 "I can lock this up because I have the keys..."
Yeah like it really matters lol
😂😂😂 Yeah, in retrospect that was a bit silly.
LockPickingLawyer The key is useless when you’re around. 😂
@@virgilremus1184 he *IS* the key
Totalingearth 4 true XD
To get the full prison break experience, you should pick these locks with toothbrushes and shivs.
@@ChrisG0 kept safe up someone's ass for an extended period
You could probably pick a master lock with an uncooked ramen noodle.
... or a wire coathanger, in this case. That keyway looks like it's been in general population for a while, huh?
@@puyu8621 edit: cooked ramen noodle
Obtaining a few paper clips or hair pins is cake. A shank/shiv not so easy. However that shiv could be transformed into an entire set of lock picks, given a large sum of time and knowledge which point is obvious. I'd prefer picks from wire and also a weapon if I were a criminal. It's almost humorous that the most intelligent never get nabbed and don't need to ever employ such skills for escape. That's the real point.
"This is the Lockpicking Inmate and what i have for you today is just a quick Video on Prison Locks. I will have to keep it short because I hear Sirens and Dogs barking."
They wouldn't be barking yet. He hasn't opened the lock. Give it 5 seconds, then they'll start.
@@KadRSP He might already be working on a perimeter gate. Not necessarily his cell^^
I lost it at 🔐 picking inmate
I've worked in several prisons throughout Missouri. This type of lock is fairly outdated and to my knowledge hasn't been used since The Walls was shut down in 2010. Our keys are much larger and typically are only used for food ports and some interior gates/doors. Doors to individual cells, yards and buildings are controlled electronically from a number of control points, so even having the key wouldn't get you very far. That's not to say keys weren't misplaced or the control officers hadn't rolled the wrong doors for the wrong people. Also on at least one instance a fairly intelligent inmate made a working copy of a key from a melted food tray and visual memory. If you really want to escape, all you'd have to do is wait for the power to die and all the doors to pop. Fun times.
If the power goes down, wouldn't the doors stay closed because there is nothing left to open them or are the locks not working anymore because of no power?
Jordan Phoenix it would make sense if the doors all opened when the power goes out in case of an emergency
Like if a fire takes out the control room, turning the power off, and continues to spread, you don’t want all the prisoners stuck in non-unlockable cells
@@jordanphoenix1255 Sorry for the late response. When the power fails the locking mechanisms on the doors are rendered inactive. It's a built-in safety feature against natural disasters as we were located on a major fault line and also had a history of flash floods and tornadoes.
Our solution to this was to nicely ask the inmates to return to their cells and secure their doors with handcuffs going from the door handle to a hard point on the wall. The gates of the sally port and the door to the administrative building, the only two exits of the prison, remain locked during a power outage and have to be keyed from the inside.
@@chrisash7948 I have no problem with it if it's late, thanks for the answer
Also work MODOC. These type, though a different brand, of locks are present in a couple of facilities in my region for interior doors, like to break rooms and such. Also, our cells locks with big keys, but can be popped remotely by the control officer. Probably the same massive keys you're talking about. So, we don't have the power outage problem, since the locks just, you know, stay locked.
"This is the Lockpicking Lawyer, and today I'm outside of Area 51 to see if we can get inside. I've got this rake, and we're just gonna, yup, there we go, found the aliens"
This is the lpl and today I have to escape MIB headquarters....
Ino You don't need a rake. You just need some wood that is used to make pantry doors.
😂 the raid was yesterday
@@RK-yg7ne You say that as if there actually was a raid.
Binding in 1, alien in 2, nice click out of 3
*Connects to Prison wifi
*
*This video has been blocked in your location*
Prison WiFi?
@@jaystarr6571 yeh man you aint never been in prison before? been in and out so much my phone automatically connects
LOL!
No Prison WiFi here, in fact they use blockers to stop any connections of any kind.
Proxy server
For your 1000th lock pick can you pick your way into Fort Knox?
There will be no video for obvious reasons, but it takes 13.6 seconds on average. With improvised rakes made out of ice cream sticks.
@@u.v.s.5583 For one lock or all of them?
@@ArkamasRoss yes
Can't show it's empty.
@@Azathoth43 Everyone knows its empty. All the gold was sold off a long time ago. It took 4 years (2013 to 2017) to give Germany back 374t of its gold, supposedly from Fort Knox. 4 years, from Fort Knox - yeah, right. In an interview in 2017, Russian economist Vladimir Katasonov, a professor at the International Finance Department at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations, told Sputnik Radio that the U.S. had not been ready to give the bullion back. The professor suggested Germany's gold bars had been disposed of at the United States’ own discretion.
"There are a lot of signs that the gold was not physically present in the New York vaults when Germany called it back. Of course, the U.S. began to return it to Germany but there is one interesting detail. When you leave your suitcase in the luggage storage, you expect to get back the same suitcase. But Germany took the wrong 'suitcase,'" Katasonov told Radio Sputnik. According to the economist, the gold bars that Bundesbank repatriated have different labels. He suggested that the U.S. might have replaced the German bullion with different gold bars bought from the market.
This is why all personal items are removed from prisoners: if the prisoner is LPL and he has his lock picking set, that is not a prison anymore, its a youtube content supply.
Just for 7 minutes tho.
they literally improvise anything they see.
Judge "we are going to lock you up and throw away the key."
LPL "What's a key?"
Mrs. LPL smuggles in a small bit of an aluminum can.
LPL: The security in this place is absolutely inexcusable, now watch as I...
After a small ad break, all the locks are gone and dismantled in small trays near each door. The judge is utterly confused and adds LPL as a bounty. LPL however is long gone and is picking the door of a magnet train.
@@Ro_Gaming "Magnet train"? You imply, he's already in China by then?
(China is the only current user of a commercial maglev line)
@@ivan_pozdeev_u sure
Also he's picking the door of one so it doesn't matter about it being commercial. You'll have to let me know if there's anywhere else he could be because I don't know these things
@ Thanks.
Lol. I remember playing Splinter Cell Double Agent and escaping the prison by picking locks, thinking "Wow, there's no way they're this fast and easy to pick. This game is unrealistic!"
tbh picking in the SC series is a lot slower than IRL
@@applemacosx1 True dat, but it fairly accurately portrays the concept of lockpicking, at least as far as accuracy needs to go in a video game while still being fun and a game. That said, it'd be neat to see LockPickingLawyer do a special on lockpicking in video games and rate how accurate it is, lol.
@@ScrambledAndBenedict what about in dungeons and dragons
@@Nachiebree and we take out our dice. A low roll on dice 1, 2 is a 20.
@@Nachiebree Or Skyrim..... 😂
I see my tax dollars are going to quality products.
your government privatized the jails... therefore your tax dollars are going straight into the pockets of the rich guys... that's the way with privatization. lower the quality, raise the price and socialize the losses. Good luck.
Yeah that’s true
Privatized Prisons
Are the worst thing that has happen to the poor and Minorities seems like something that needs to be abolished as soon as possible
I would do it but I am already in my pajamas~
@@mrfluffytailthethird do it tomorrow after breakfast.
Mostly to politicians, occasionally to companies to make prison locks. They go with the highest bidder, so I think this company also makes cookies and delivers laundry.
Stfu
I volunteer with the local PD, so now you have me checking all their locks and telling them what needs to be improved. Thanks.
Start with the patrol rifle locks in the cruisers!
@@lockpickinglawyer I bet the break room cabinet full of donuts has an abloy though.
Me: "So you have been in prison...?"
LPL: "Yes."
Me: "What brought you there?"
LPL: "A paperclip."
Me: "They threw you into jail for a paperclip?"
LPL: "No, you misunderstood...I broke *into* prison with a paperclip. So I could break out again."
nice one
@Edie Blackwell Hey look, the word "underrated" was actually used correctly this time.
@@imveryangryitsnotbutter maybe not, the most underrated comment is probably only known to the person who wrote it
Probably how he got the locks...
This just proves the comment from a while back ago:
Imagine you are a guard putting LPL in prison, and the moment you close the door and lock it you hear: "A click on one, nothing out of two, three is binding"
or rake, instantly clicked
You close the door, lock it, turn around and it's instantly opened behind you.
There’s no key way inside a cell.
@@jeffreyroot6300 could he do it from the outside?
LORDBEAST 32 Nope. Steel doors with a thick wire reinforced window in the middle so we can look in, check on them and conduct counts. Weakness is the Officers. If they aren’t doing their jobs , locks and strike plates can be tampered with , to bypass .
You can pick your lawyer, and you can pick your lock, but you cant pick your lawyers lock.
Hmmm, makes sense.
Or your lawyer's nose
Ha, that's funny. If you pick your lawyer's lock, he won't help you get out of jail.
So, kids, do not lie to or pick the locks of your lawyer.
Do not pretend to be innocent to your lawyer, unless you are truly innocent. It defeats your lawyer's ability to get you off, if you lie to him or her. They need to understand the lies you told to the cops without having to suss out the lies you told to them, your lawyers.
I worked as a private investigator for a number of years and saw the disasters caused by lying to your own lawyer and or the investigator you hired to help you build a case for yourself or against the person you want to blame.
This statement's even funnier when you know the original saying it's based off of.
However if you pick the right lawyer, he can pick any lock you please.
The last thing a marked inmate hears when the lights go out: "We're going to use bottom of the keyway tension with this bit of tuna can and will be using a standard plastic spoon hook in twenty-five thousandths."
You deserve a reply, he you go, you fantastic legend
Lmao
I can't get it for some reason but I assume it is sex related or killing related
@@mr.randomgamer888 nope
@@superyeah4ever2 then I shall kindly fuck off and wait till I am older
This video is LPL sayin
"I cannot be contained, trust me they've tried"
The subtle flex.
"This is the LockPickingLawyer, and today we're going to pick this lock with a cigarette and a bar of soap"
Must be a masterlock
Hobo Edition™
Imagine being a prison guard and hearing "This is the lockpicking lawyer" coming from one of the cells
Wonderful design, making the key so large. It means prisoners improvising picking tools by filing down objects (like a toothbrush handle to make a tension bar) don't have to do so much filing.
I'm genuinely curious as to why they are so big! Is the idea that the keys are harder to hide? Is the idea that the lock will be more durable? The mind boggles!
@@bradley3549, the keys are harder to accidentally snap off in the lock due to rough handling in an emergency.
@@bradley3549
Maybe it's to make a warder carrying all those *big* keys seem more intimidating.
Oh, and wrap your fist around a bunch of them and you have a weighted fist for beating prisoners.
@@bradley3549 yes
@@bdf2718 he'd just beat those dead beat losers with a club
youre helping me get into jail and out of it! thank you lockpickinglawyer!
LockPickingLawyer, a full-service TH-cam channel.
Be careful with the soap!
@@RXYannick 😂
@@RXYannick Good ol' fashioned rape joke, dudes getting raped is hilarious.
@@purekeynoob yos
The manager of the WalMart broke his master key. He came to me in automotive, where I cut customer keys, to see if I could cut a new key from the pieces and I was successful. I noticed that the cuts were very deep and all the same depth. Just to see if I could, I hand cut a key blank until it was just a straight piece of metal at what I estimated would be the correct depth. It worked just as if it had bitting.
walmartdog1142 That’s a common occurrence in multi-tiered mastering systems that are planned by inexperienced locksmiths who use a different pin for mastering of different tiers. Computer-designed master key systems are more common now, and they’re usually better.
What Walmart doesn't have a Hillman automatic key cutting machine? It'd be either the Axxess "Key Cutter" or the newer Hillman branded "Keykrafter" touch screen unit. Neither particularly like glued together keys and neither would allow a custom cut. Unless you took a file to a key blank, neither machine would really work.
Compgeke he said he cut it by hand
@@poiiihy Problem is the Walmart machines don't let you hand cut keys. You slide a key in and the machine automagically traces along the key. There's no manual cutting functions, it's all automated.
@@compgeke But there there is a tool section right on the next aisle where they have files.
Watched this while in prison, finally I got out. Massive thanks .
Welcome back to society. I guess you learned an honorable trait in your time there? Like.. let's say lock smithing?
I would hire you on the spot! :)
"My lawyer made this video, so can I watch it unmonitored?"
"Yeah, okay."
“oh a 7 minute video, these prison locks must be hard to pick...”
Welcome to discount prison quality locks. What was implemented before electronic locks became standard
@ironcheflee I was thinking the same thing lol! LPL has got skillz!
@@Smokecall Now all you need to open them is a magnet.
@smokecall this is the LPL and today we are going to open and electric lock 2 mins later uses a little peace of paper
@@Smokecall he could probably still pick the electronic locks with a lockpic
Perfect, I'll keep this in mind...for future reference ofcourse
When you check-in to the Greybar hotel they always forget to hand you the key.
@@TheSmurfboard - They don't even give you a "cell phone."
@@scootergeorge9576 lol!
Yeah, for a friend. Right?
Well, if the lock is larger, than it certainly HAS to be better... Right?
If it was a little larger, the inmates would escape though the keyhole.
That's the American way!
Any jail I've worked at either had remote electric locks or locks needing brass keys about 2 " wide, over 4" long and about 1/8 " thick.
They are large (Keyes) so they are harder to hide (think palming for the older huge Keyes and rectal for these) ouch!
All jokes and irony aside, the increased size does have potential benefits. Big locks with big strike plates are harder to break. Big locks mean big keys so harder to smuggle as contraband
I would watch a TH-cam original show of the lock picking lawyer being put in crazy situations and having to get out of them.
Same here.
Yeah.
LPL should do a show or two with Mr beast with your idea
“I can lock these up because I have the keys”
Says the guy that just opened it up with no key in like 3 seconds
That's a beefy lock. Having more than one shear line makes them easier to rake open or pick. Great video!
🤬
@@lifeuncovered6188 why are you like this
Actually, if you did it right, multiple shear lines could make things harder to pick. The trick is that all the pins have to set on the *same* sheerline in order for it to unlock.
@@Keldor314 Better prison locks!
but how?
@@Keldor314 Without undercutting, serrations, spools, T pins, or other security features making the job tougher, master keying will always make opening a lock that can be bumped or raked more vulnerable and give two equally valid positions for set. It's mechanical, it doesn't care whether the shear line you're at is created by the bitting for the master or the lower privilege key. Master keying will always create double the viable number of lock positions that open a given lock for each key pin that is made up of more than one part. If you have a one-position master, it's twice. Two, 4 times. Three, 8 times. Four, 16 times. Five, 32 times. It's basic math. You still have to be thinking you can pick the lock and have a tool, but it increases your odds of picking.
And this is kids how you get out of prison: you need a good lawyer-a good lock picking lawyer is even better.
lol..
Hah u meant and this kids...
I get anxiety thinking about putting it back together.
He never shows that... I think the language used while fiddling it back together would trigger the TH-cam algorithms into a hissy fit.
It's always easier to take stuff apart than it is to put it together. Call it entropy.
Teaches thousands of people how to pick locks.
'I am not gonna go into how picks might be improvised in prison, for obvious reasons.'
But you already taught me how to steal stuff and break into places, so technically you bring me into prison and now you refuse to get me out?!
I mean, he actually taught you how to defend from these attacks.
It's not his fault if you reverse engineered it 😂
less you pay him
he is a lawyer after all
@@HECKproductions oh, I think you just found out his money making scheme!
LPL: I'm gonna pick this in seconds...
*Picks it in less than a second*
LPL: GDDMNT, NOT AGAIN!
Isaías Ríos it only took one punch.....
LPL doesn’t use that kind of language. More like “gosh-darn it”.. And that’s pushing it.
Real Saitama moment
@@JimmyB643 I feel like even that's too much, it's more like "Well that's unfortunate, it appears I've underestimated my own abilities once again."
I remember hearing a story once (I don't know if it's true, and I could be misremembering some of the details) where supposedly a prison gave all its prisoners a handbook with a picture of a key on it. As it turned out, the key that was chosen to model for the image was the prison's master key, so an industrious prisoner managed to get his hands on a key blank and file it down to match the image, and escaped because he was able to make himself a master key.
Turns out its true! Its also not the only case of a prisoner recreating the master key, so that’s disconcerting.
I suppose those locks are more designed for extreme use over absolute security. Hence the absolute size, lack of security pins, and ball bearings.
Perhaps the lack of pick resistance is mitigated by installing these locks such that inmates are always on the other side of the keyhole when the door is locked.
Yep, the thing is that in most cases anymore those doors are solid so your never getting to the keyway so these kinds of locks are ideal since they stand up better. Even on the older style bar ones are generally designed so you can't easily get to the keyway. I mean sure a really experienced lockpicker might be able to do it with the bar style doors but your still doing it blind with limited mobility, only a really skilled lockpicker could do that.
@@MaethorDerien The main issue I see is that they can be raked open. If they had to be picked more traditionally I could see it posing a much larger challenge. But you dont really need to see what you're doing to just rake it open with an improvised tool.
I mean, ultimately, in most prisons, it wouldnt help alllll that much anyways. But its still a design flaw that woudl probably be best to avoid given how low skill Raking is, and the fact it doesnt require any crazy fancy tools, easy to improvise.
I don't know why I've been watching your videos. There's no rhyme or reason. But I'm not stopping now!
Same
This is everyone's life that finds these videos. About .01% of his viewers are actually interested in picking locks, the rest are captivated by his voice and ability to make videos that are straight to the point with no ads for Raid.
Imagine you’re sitting inside the prison armory and you hear “A click on 2, nothing on 3”
Me: Oh this will take while! 7:00 minute video! LPL: *opens lock in 5 seconds*
"Before we get too picky..." Oh, we have puns this morning, do we? :D
He said picking. Not picky.
@@one7decimal2eight my tinnitus disagrees, but that doesn't mean you're wrong.
Before we get to _picking_
0:53 funny you should mention this, I once attacked a lock by obtaining the operating key and filed it down. However as you mentioned some section was cut too low on the operating key. My solution was to use electronics solder on the area I needed built up. I made a big ugly blob of solder and carefully hand filed without breaking the delicate bond between the key and the solder. It worked well on ACE and Abloy type keys as well.
How do CO’s keep lock smiths behind bars, I mean it’s just a matter of time till you hear “click out of 2... 4 starts binding...” all the sudden you have the whole prison running after you.
Because the gaurds are armed.
Guns go pew-pew. Prison guards can use this to their advantage
And I think 7 years for an escape conviction may have something to do with it as well.
CO's usually aren't armed. Besides pepper spray. Also, bar-style doors went out with the old west. We use nice, thick, solid chunks of steel these days.
@@sterilyte and electronic door locks for the cells...
It's been 1 year today since I escaped prison. . . Thank you for making this video!
Thank you so much! After years of being in prison, I finally ESCAPED!
when LPL pulls out the wave rake I know the lock is coming open in record time
No putting the Lock Picking Lawyer in jail!
"Wow, that was pretty quick"
>Puts the rake in and the locks open before you even barely started raking.
Khaisz I was surprised when I put my rake into those free cheap gun locks and it was the perfect bitting. Didn’t even have to rake. It was the key. But for a prison lock this is really surprising. I’ve have master locks take more raking to open!
so the way in movies where they just go like whup de doo picked a lock in 1 second isnt as inaccurate as i though
you just need a bad enough lock apparently
i dunno why but the sudden ferocity with which he jiggles the rake made me laugh so hard. there's something weirdly comical about it
I like how he just jams the thing in and shakes it around while talking in a professional voice
YT: LPL
ME: watches
ME LATER :no prison can hold me.
Make a video about how master key works. Please?
The stacked pins you see here are the crux of it. That results in there being more than one position on each bit of the key that can allow the cylinder to turn. Make one of those positions consistent across a set of locks, while the other varies, and you've got it.
You can find quite solid explanation @ unitedlocksmith.net/blog/how-master-key-systems-work
Deviant Ollam's talk called "Mastering Master Keys" is a good introduction to the subject.
Didn't he just did in this video? I thought it was pretty clear.
Look at the ones that have 3 pins. That allows for two different positions to be used for each position. The tiny pin in the middle of the two larger ones is used to make the master key combinations.
As a totally non prisoner person, this is a very useful video. Thank you.
prisoner: "what are you doing? come on, we need to get out!"
LPL: "wait, i'm just taking this lock for my video"
Me: locks door while leaving my keys in the house
Me: “No!!!!”
Also me: *”My time has come.”*
Your front door can be locked without a key? That's a pretty serious design flaw.
Where I live, everyone uses deadbolts for door locking mechanisms, spring bolts are only ever connected to a handle, not to a lock.
@@ivan_pozdeev_u Have you ever been to Europe? Almost every front door here locks without a key.
@@TobiasLindh If you don't count European Russia as Europe -- only once, and wasn't interested in studying locks. I do remember though that there wasn't anything unusual about our hotel room door -- in partucular, we definitely didn't have to watch out not to accidentally close it lest we be locked out outside.
@@ivan_pozdeev_u There are many different variants with hotel rooms, but most of the ones I've seen also lock the rooms door without a key. Especially the ones that are controlled by a card.
The spring bolt is connected to the handle, but front doors don't have a handle on the outside. You still have to use the key to set the deadbolt, but you when you forgot your key inside and closed the door, you can't get in anymore.
The LockPickingLawyer:
"Either way you're going free."
We need him for the Area 51 raid
Dude I can’t thank you enough for this. I just successfully broke out of prison because of this video and wanted to show my gratitude. I watched this video before going to prison and then swallowed the required tools to pick these locks. I was in prison for life without parol and now I’m out. If that doesn’t get you to subscribe, I don’t know what will.
“Well that was pretty quick let’s do that one more time” dude really be having fun picking locks all the time!
So the next time they send me up the river I'll ask my girlfriend to send me a cake with a wave rake inside instead of a sawblade!
2:50 why break out when you can just call a lockpickinglawyer. get it?
"Wow that was quick." When even the Lock picking Lawyer is surprised.
LPL "this is the LPL and today I'm going to show you how to break out of Alcatraz in 2 seconds"
When he disassembled the lock, he didn't sound like a lawyer, he sounded like a professional surgeon
Also, most of the time, locking picking isn’t a worry. The main concern is inmates stuffing the locks with various items to jam them, effectively making the lock useless
That explains the size. Lot harder to jam.
2:17 it's at this point that a loud groan can be heard from prison library computer rooms worldwide.
Congrats Adam, you beat masterlock! Not sure if that's an accomplishment you want to hang on your wall though
LPL: *Walks over to prison guard after picking one of their locks*
Prison guard: How did you get out?
LPL: Well you see...
Ex-cons watching how easy these locks are to pick after serving their full sentence: 👁👄👁
The guards and the camera operator are still there, lad.
The local prison called. They want to know where all the inmates have gone.
I know realize how LPL took 1st place in the Lock Picking Competition, no other competitors bothered showing up when they found out LPL was a participant!
Bosnian Bill?
"Catch Me If You Can"
[[[caught]]]
"Hold Me If You Can"
*In other news*
The number of prison escapes have suddenly skyrocketed.
*Back to you John*
All prison wardens in the USA: Aw maaan, do you realize I have to change my locks on ALL the doors now?
I’ve said this before, but I, for home security reasons, really want a video on GOOD locks. That way I can know which lock to buy. Of course, I could also go by the, “LPL took 30 seconds to pick it open so it must be a good lock” ideologically, but ideally, a video on good locks would be great!
Just weld the door shut :)
Now THAT was a unique lock, and the video was a treat! Thanks!
Imagine you're a warden patrolling the cells and you hear: T H I S I S T H E L O C K P I C K I N G L A W E R
"Click out of one, two is binding, little tension on three"
Funfact:
In Germany it's LEGAL to break out of a prison, but if you get caught, you
1. Get the rest of your time in jail plus
2. The additional jail time/fines for every crime you did while breaking out
So if you find a way to get out of prison without making an other crime and you stay out and clean for 5 year's there will be a high chance that they will stop looking for you
Cant believe you can take out a lock like this with a rake attack
"And I can lock this up because I do have the keys" yeah mate. Like you didn't just pick that in less than a second? This man doesn't need a key ever.
you've reached the next level LPL - keeping a lock together with your fingers while picking it - WTF dude.!!!
Ummm ... that is very common on the locksmith work bench. It is not what those in the trade find impressive.
@cat the weird cat OK memer
9/10 Prisoners found this Video very helpfull
Almost as high a percentage as the amount of people in American prisons who have been there for way too long based on the severity of their crimes.
Especially when compared to the rich bastards who spent no time in prison for far worse crimes, simply because they are rich.
11/10 guards disliked this video
Having been in prison for about 20 years, it's my experience that most prisoners don't mess with locks. The guards don't like that. Get caught tampering with locks and you'll get a transfer to someplace you don't want to go. And as for padlocks that are used in prison they welded a tube over the keyway about an inch and a half to two inches long. The key had to be modified to fit. It makes it virtually impossible to pick. (I said virtually, LPL.)
The bitting on those keys is horrible for a high security lock
Good thing those aren't the locks used on the prison I volunteer in.
Just stay clear of the dozen serial murderers and you'd honestly be fine. People just want to get out and restart their lives. Not cause a lot more problems for themselves.
The college dorms I lived in back in the 80s didn't follow the rule of master keying. I easily made a master from a copy of my room key with a chainsaw sharpening file.
Why?
@@coen555 To see if I could. The reason we're not all still living in caves.
@@John_Ridley That's a good enough reason for me.
@@John_Ridley Pretentious wanker alert.
I initially read this as "I made a master key from my room key with a chainsaw" and I was confused.
Inmates gonna see this video and all of a sudden prison breaks rise by 60%
Your so awesome taking the time to show us all the inside of all your locks, I can’t imagine the time it takes to reassemble the pins and springs the proper way
I work in a prison and we have similar locks to these.
Firstly, it's important to note that a cell door does not have a keyhole on the inside. So even if we were to hand them a key, there would be no way to insert the key into the lock. This goes for any door where you are going "outwards". Imagine the prison as a layercake and to move from say a unit to a corridor you wouldn't be able to use a key, but if you were going "in" then you could.
In terms of these kind of locks, the model shown here is an older model and newer ones encompass a pin rotational aspect which appears to be an effort to resist raking. It appears to be a similar method to a medico lock. Additionally, when the lock is installed in the correct housing there is a weight aspect placed on the core which is an attempt to stop improvised keys being made from objects such as wood, glass, paper or whatever. The force needed to actually turn the key would cause most materials to easily break which leads up to another point. That being the keys are intentionally big for two reasons - if you were to lose it, it's going to be much easier to find and if a prisoner was to actually get hold of a piece of metal large enough, it would either be found during electronic searching or manual searches and the time required to fashion the key is far greater.