I’ve never understood why the police h*te vigilantes when we do a better job than they do at arresting people.
I mean honestly good people want to do good things but we have to hide from the police to go do those good things, just because they don’t want to go and do it themselves cause they rather eat donuts and drink coffee all day. Not all police, but almost all of them.
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Racist calls cops on a black teen, 280k Lawsuit after false accusations.
They seek a black man they get scared, intimidated and immediately racial profiling him.
He’s right. All the cops are sovereign citizens. And all the judges are so sovereign. And the citizens of each state are sovereign. And each state is sovereign. And the country as a whole the entire United States is sovereign.
It would help if you knew your history
But see the schools didn’t teach you that that’s why you’re wondering aimlessly through life.
But the good news is, it’s never too late to turn the truck around and go the right direction
End of Lesson
His video of the stop and his recorded speed is going to get him off this ticket. Did you notice how he walked away once he called him a liar. Cause I promise you if somebody calls me a liar I’m gonna look at them right in their face and I’m gonna tell them they’re full of shit.
You don’t call me a liar. I wouldn’t have arrested him for calling me a liar, but I wouldn’t have pulled him over if he wasn’t speeding either just to get a ticket in for the day.
This tickets gonna be dismissed he lied🇺🇸
Officer gets upset at man that knows his rights so he packs up his toys and goes to sit in his squad car until another officer gets him to come out and finish the traffic stop.
The driver, identified as Mr. Brewer, is pulled over for a standard nighttime headlight violation. He complies fully with the initial lawful demands—handing over his driver's license and proof of insurance. But once the officer has the necessary paperwork to write a fix-it ticket or a standard citation, the questions start drifting into unlawful territory.
After processing the license, the officer asks Mr. Brewer for his phone number, followed by a request for his Social Security number.
Mr. Brewer correctly draws the line here. While law enforcement can ask for voluntary information, they cannot legally compel a driver to hand over a Social Security number or phone number during a routine traffic infraction. Mr. Brewer stands his ground, stating clearly: "I've given you everything I'm legally required to give you."
The core battle of this stop happens when a backup officer arrives on scene. The original officer had demanded identification from Mr. Brewer’s wife, who was sitting quietly in the passenger seat. The second officer attempts to back his partner up by claiming that because Alabama is a "Stop and Identify" state, they have the right to demand her ID.
This is a massive and common misconception among law enforcement, and Mr. Brewer shuts it down perfectly:
The reason for the stop is a headlights violation. The scope of the officer's traffic investigation stops at the driver.
Under Fourth Amendment precedent, a passenger in a vehicle is not the operator and cannot be forced to identify themselves unless officers have reasonable, articulable suspicion that the passenger specifically has committed, is committing, or is about to commit a crime. Simply riding in a car with a headlight violation does not strip you of your right to privacy.
Knowing that Mr. Brewer knows the law, is well-aware that refusing to sign a ticket can result in an arrest, but that signing it means the stop is legally concluded, the officers realize they have zero leverage. With the citation signed and no legal grounds to prolong the detention or force the passenger to comply, the officers back down and send them on their way.
Knowing your rights isn't about being difficult—it's about keeping the system accountable.
A former Buckeye police officer is headed to trial on two counts of aggravated assault after supervisors described the force as excessive and unnecessary against people who were handcuffed and in custody, including a pregnant woman.