This predictable, simple cops & robbers show is made watchable by Crawford’s excellent acting and charisma. He plays the plainclothes cop of that era to perfection. I know because I knew such cops.
Well said...and Crawford delivered. I like this show much better than all the excess melodrama of Dragnet with the self righteous jack Webb 9both on and off the screen).
@@BobChippewaI agree he read his lines so fast it was like he just wanted to go home.I read a few times his drinking was real bad and he had numerous accidents the real highway patrol didn't like him representing them.
Broderick Crawford - Get an ambulance, the doctor here right away, this is one kind of a breakdown his insurance didn't cover. Ouch! Thanks for the upload. Good morning! Happy Friday! 2/3/2023 London UK 🇬🇧
" Get a Doctor here right away !" This sounds silly now, but back in 1950's Actual Medical Doctors made house calls and visited sick people at home. They had MD license plates so a cop could identify them and take them to a scene of an accident to help the injured. No, Really, that was how they did things back then. No Insurance check first either, they hoped they'd get paid because people wouldn't stiff a doctor. This was before the accountants pointed out to the MD that he wasn't gonna buy a yacht doing things that way.
A mere yacht? Surely, no self- respecting medic would aspire to less than a superyacht, matching the one owned by any animal doctor worth his/her salt.
Ironically, Broderick Crawford played a doctor on "The Interns", a short-lived medical drama that aired on CBS in the early 70s. Crawford's character was the supervisor to a group of young interns.
"Internet fraud" is simply a new variation on the same old idea of fraud, aka "insurance", "maintenance service", "lottery processing fees", etc. Even "identity theft" is simply a new name for illegal impersonation. The technological means, and the name of the game may be different. But the aim is always the same.
i know im randomly asking but does anybody know a tool to get back into an instagram account..? I somehow forgot my account password. I appreciate any help you can give me
Accomplice Gus was in To Kill A Mockingbird. The father of the girl that made up the story about being attacked. He attacked Atticus Finch kids and was killed by Boo, played by Robert Duvall.
The cafe was at the northwest corner of Agoura and Cornell Roads. You even get a glimpse of Whizin's Restaurant at the beginning. And the gas station next to the martini bar at the very end.
Brod driving a 54 Oldsmobile in this early episode.very rare..as later on it was the fabled 55 Buick century then in later years the dodge and mercury to wrap it up in 59...
A quick glimpse of Lucile Ball at 05:37 as she was removing her sweater. Right after she put the roller skates in the trunk. Then the camera cuts to Ethel.
I used to buy a bottle of soft drink at the store for 7 cents, plus 1 cent deposit back in the late 1950's when this show was made. We kids used to check the vacant lots for the pop bottles. We get 1 or 2 cents each, depending on size. A nickle will buy you a chocolate bar, bubblegum for 1 cent apiece. Even back then the restaurants were still making a killing off of the soft drinks. Good observation for you, good memories for me.
@@Starphot Yup. Mallo Cups for 5 cents. And a Frosty root beer for 10. Walk to the store. Pick up empty bottle litter along the way. Cash in the deposits. And both the above for free. Those were the days. :)
I remember the night Broderick Crawford posted Saturday night live. He just said in an easy chair smoking a cigar drinking taking in the show. They cut to him and he would say oh yeah great it's great.
Any one catch the prophetic dialogue starting from @ 24:25 When 1 crook says looks like we saved the state some $$$ Dan goes thats more to soend on you !!!!!
I was 12 in 1962 in the Bronx. A car made a sharp left up a hill and poured some gas out from the gas tank. Naturally I pulled out a book of matches, held for such an occasion and whoof... 8 foot high flames in the intersection for about thirty seconds. Ha, i remember it like yesterday.!
At 1:29 the camera is at 7141 Darby Avenue, Los Angeles looking north. In the background the small building with the white top and chimney (to the right of the "Anita" building, 18353 Sherman Way) is still there in 2024!
$0.10 in 1950 is equivalent in purchasing power to about $1.25 today, an increase of $1.15 over 73 years. The dollar had an average inflation rate of 3.52% per year between 1950 and today, producing a cumulative price increase of 1,148.30%.
The sound effects for the walking, highway sounds, coin plinking and other sound effects are made by a separate stage called a Foley stage and dubbed into the story. The heavier dime sound is made due to the audio track is also on the 16 mm film and it did not make the finer sounds as well as the 35 mm film played at the movie theaters. The 16 mm soundtrack got better later. 16 mm film movies were used in schools for instruction. No video tape, but the PBS station had training programs during the school days and hours.
@@johnhardman3 Sometimes it is that, sometimes too large or too small loop on the film movie projector and a lot of the times it is CZcams not getting the audio and video in sync.
Masterson you say? Hmmmm .... in the same era, 1958-1961, BAT Masterson caused a lot of trouble and got into a lot of .... well .... coincidence? I don't think so! AND .... two ZIV productions! Open and shut case ... get on it Dan!
A Piano falls off the back of a truck and the crate doesn't even break ? Whoever wrote this script didn't know just how heavy a piano actually is, that crate would have shattered like a eggshell if it fell off the truck like that.
LOL, actually it was the piano to be delivered to the 2016 democrat convention to play god bless America after they removed the American flags from the dumpster after it had been discovered the AMerican flag was absent from the hate filled convention. lets see they were flying the North Korean flag, former Soviet Union flag, Islamic state flag, Mexico flag, Venezuelan flag, you name the communist dictatorship the democrats honored it.
@@sg-yq8pm Nobe ole son he ain´t mentally-ill, but those democrats are I call these god-damned deranged, degenerate pathetic bastards liberalkunts and they are suffering from liberalkuntism, they´ve been indoctrinated thru the main-street-media and we all know that they wouldn´t recognize the truth if it slapped them in the face and stepped on their toes and kicked their arses hard !
They must have had a shortage of paving material all U see is a lot of dirt and dust kicked up from the cars but they are all Clean. Must have had a great pit crew keeping them running and looking good. 🚑🚙🚖🚗🚕🚎🚒🚔🚚🚛🚃🚍🚊🚚🚆🚌🚋🚊...
You never know when it could happen but there'll be bullets flying by the end of every series. And he says get a doctor. Dan Matthews always gets his man or woman. Or Lost child for that matter
25:41 Leslie Goodwins's many other credits included GILLIGAN'S ISLAND (the ghost, the one where Rory Calhoun, who had his own crime fighting western, THE TEXAN near the end of HP's first-run) and many movies.
You can't have the convertible. It's the main car used by 4 out 5 hoods on the show. It;s like a red shirt in Star Trek or a cowboy wearing a white hat.
3:55...Sheez Louise, Masterson's right hand man (Gus) says "we've been too easy on him. A stubborn guy like that needs a lot more than leaky gas tanks and flat tires to convince him", in an attempt to get his boss (Masterson) to "lean on their "pigeon" (Holley) harder, right within easy earshot of their intended victim. Why bother calling their extortion racket "transportation maintenance service"? Only on TV does this happen.
1:22. OOPS! There goes Laurel & Hardy' s "Music Box". LOL! 4:08. Was that a lever on the dashboard before the coming of the push-button transmission on Chrysler products?
+ElCid48 The shifter lever was on the dash on Plymouth products the same time the push button dash control came along with Chryslers. Edsel had the buttons on the steering wheel.
Robert Walton Thank you for the info. My dad's '56 Dodge had the push buttons on the left. I learned how to drive in that car when I was 12 years old, with my dad sitting next to me, of course. I practiced in an empty parking lot on Sunday afternoons, especially how to park between the lines and on curb sides. The first thing to do, he told me, was to press the brake pedal BEFORE starting the engine and then change shifts. As it is today, new cars won't start if you don't press the brakes first. Those were the days! Take care.
@@robertwalton7307 Can you imagine push buttin MANUALS?? (Of course modern day buses have, for their (IMO) inferioir boxed, push buttons of the elctgronic and old schjool 3D type. LIke, of course, a lot here that would be her,e I prefer the old ones (but manual sticks, are de beste!)
No problems with P.T.S. (Post Traumatic Syndrome) for Dan Mathews ! That's for wimps . Get an ambulance for him , and make sure you lock the door on your way out . COOL baby and Dan is the COOLEST .!
"Get an ambulance out here right away!" says Matthews. Then he and the guy he told that to both get back into their vehicle and drive away. Didn't see the guy holding the radio speaker calling for an ambulance, neither did he stick around and wait for it. The crook who was shot was simply left at the cafe door all alone with a bullet wound. Someone should have stayed with him. The other police vehicle had someone stay? Didn't see that for sure either.
That would never happen, nothing worse than a story that is practically impossible to occur. Needed an ending without a shooting that is witnessed by a police squad.
Broderick Crawford had a peculiarly energetic delivery of his lines. He was real good in the movies too.
I always thought he rushed to get a line out cause he couldn't breathe well.
I've seen him in movies and tv shows(It Takes a Thief) where his speach was slower. Not slow but more normal speed.
When he speaks it sounds like a big word. Why does he talk so fast.
I Watched the Credits roll by and I was
reminded that there were NO HOT late 50's style Babes in this ep. BooO...
Not Good!!
2 shows a week he did, you'd be exhausted too.
This predictable, simple cops & robbers show is made watchable by Crawford’s excellent acting and charisma. He plays the plainclothes cop of that era to perfection. I know because I knew such cops.
Well said...and Crawford delivered. I like this show much better than all the excess melodrama of Dragnet with the self righteous jack Webb 9both on and off the screen).
Crawford's acting was terrible. . .he kind of just read his lines, with no feelings, etc.
@@BobChippewaI agree he read his lines so fast it was like he just wanted to go home.I read a few times his drinking was real bad and he had numerous accidents the real highway patrol didn't like him representing them.
Broderick Crawford - Get an ambulance, the doctor here right away, this is one kind of a breakdown his insurance didn't cover. Ouch! Thanks for the upload. Good morning! Happy Friday! 2/3/2023 London UK 🇬🇧
" Get a Doctor here right away !" This sounds silly now, but back in 1950's Actual Medical Doctors made house calls and visited sick people at home. They had MD license plates so a cop could identify them and take them to a scene of an accident to help the injured. No, Really, that was how they did things back then. No Insurance check first either, they hoped they'd get paid because people wouldn't stiff a doctor. This was before the accountants pointed out to the MD that he wasn't gonna buy a yacht doing things that way.
A mere yacht? Surely, no self- respecting medic would aspire to less than a superyacht, matching the one owned by any animal doctor worth his/her salt.
And those MD license plates were great for free parking in restricted zones.
Ironically, Broderick Crawford played a doctor on "The Interns", a short-lived medical drama that aired on CBS in the early 70s. Crawford's character was the supervisor to a group of young interns.
I remember that.
any Real Dr. would have a Super yacht
to take his Mistress's and/or Hookers
on Holiday out to Sea!! Perhaps never
to be seen again!
Excellent show, love watching!😀👍👍
Hawley Transfer is driving a 1949 International Truck.
10 cents for a drink. I just paid $2.15 for a 20 oz Sunkist. Man i live in the wrong era
@Carol Young What about tips?
But at least in this era we don’t need to walk around wearing suits and ties everywhere we go.
@@rd8370
Even the bad guys looked good back then.
Here in 2023 AD, you will pay upwards
of 3.55 $USd, more in Canada or California!!
Well this was the 1950s
"Give me something cold to drink" "Sorry sir, we're out of beer"
Howaboutarootbeer
What part of the refrigerator isn't did you not understand sir?
2150 knew a thing or two about having a drink.
He only took a few sips of the cold drink.
"There are no new crimes in the book. Just new variations on the old ideas and new criminals to try them out."
He forgot about internet fraud!
"Internet fraud" is simply a new variation on the same old idea of fraud, aka "insurance", "maintenance service", "lottery processing fees", etc. Even "identity theft" is simply a new name for illegal impersonation. The technological means, and the name of the game may be different. But the aim is always the same.
Really?
i know im randomly asking but does anybody know a tool to get back into an instagram account..?
I somehow forgot my account password. I appreciate any help you can give me
@Rodrigo Leonardo instablaster :)
I love the classic cars. The fashionably dressed ladies. The way the bad guys often end up getting shot and killed.
Today, such would spark protests and riots on behalf of the bad guys and their families.
Accomplice Gus was in To Kill A Mockingbird. The father of the girl that made up the story about being attacked. He attacked Atticus Finch kids and was killed by Boo, played by Robert Duvall.
Loved this one. haha
At 19:54 it's plain to see Matthews doesn't have the phone to his ear, but behind it. ...Great hearing. :)
Horse Pucky That was probably filmed after Crawford had had his "lunch".
@@philsphan4414 Indeed, His Liquid Lunch.
Cross and double cross, love it. Thank you for uploading.
Today the crime is called extended warranty.
Right. The biggest racket going.
@@Sootaroot
haha... That's true
😁
Broderick enforces game laws on his days off. He is the hardest working chief ever.
great show.
The cafe was at the northwest corner of Agoura and Cornell Roads. You even get a glimpse of Whizin's Restaurant at the beginning. And the gas station next to the martini bar at the very end.
Brod driving a 54 Oldsmobile in this early episode.very rare..as later on it was the fabled 55 Buick century then in later years the dodge and mercury to wrap it up in 59...
Wow! soft drinks for 10 cents and hamburger for 35! Those were the days!
The pay was probably a couple dollars a day.
This was probably an early 1st season episode. Although first aired in late 1955, the Olds is a '54.
Didn't they keep cars for longer than a year in those days ?
Yes it was 1955... the date is given at the end near the finish of the closing titles (in Roman numerals) ..
The show started in 1955, Dan was driving a 1955 Buick So my guess a first season show.
With each passing year those 1955-58 Buick's & Oldsmobile's get bigger & tougher looking through time.
I remember the Dr. Coming to our house in the 60s..
And party lines ...and a little box but the front door for the milkman ...
Not five minutes in, and, "Get me the Highway Patrol!". :)
A quick glimpse of Lucile Ball at 05:37 as she was removing her sweater. Right after she put the roller skates in the trunk. Then the camera cuts to Ethel.
At 10:29 The restaurant owner only asks Dan for 10 cents for the soft drink. That's amazing!
I used to buy a bottle of soft drink at the store for 7 cents, plus 1 cent deposit back in the late 1950's when this show was made. We kids used to check the vacant lots for the pop bottles. We get 1 or 2 cents each, depending on size. A nickle will buy you a chocolate bar, bubblegum for 1 cent apiece. Even back then the restaurants were still making a killing off of the soft drinks. Good observation for you, good memories for me.
@@Starphot Yup. Mallo Cups for 5 cents. And a Frosty root beer for 10. Walk to the store. Pick up empty bottle litter along the way. Cash in the deposits. And both the above for free. Those were the days. :)
that sounded like a quarter not a dime
Anna... Yes, even in 1962 a full size candy bar like Milky Way costs 5¢.!
@Anna Weathers and he didn't even finish it.
The title of this episode had me fooled.
I thought it was about Fire insurance from "A Good Neighbor"
I remember the night Broderick Crawford posted Saturday night live. He just said in an easy chair smoking a cigar drinking taking in the show. They cut to him and he would say oh yeah great it's great.
Hey cool.! This mid fifties series with Broderick Crawford popped up.! for some reason?? I have never seen this show before.
Well fasten your seat belt. If you can keep up with Dan Matthews' fast delivery, you are in for a nostalgia treat.
Had an Oldmobile that looked just like Dan's police car.
Who did.?
"This is one breakdown his insurance DIDN'T cover" hahaha.
Superb episode.
Welcome to the Walnut Cafe. Seating capacity: 2
+D. M. Bell They always use that sett for a Cafe.
Standing room only
andygriffith show
And the only thing on the menu is walnuts.
Leave YOUR blood at the Red Cross, NOT ON the HIGHWAY!
Any one catch the prophetic dialogue starting from @ 24:25
When 1 crook says looks like we saved the state some $$$
Dan goes thats more to soend on you !!!!!
Great shows
"A leaky gas tank can set a highway on fire." ...I hate it when that happens
Asphalt can burn. Concrete can not burn, so Dan is correct.
I was 12 in 1962 in the Bronx. A car made a sharp left up a hill and poured some gas out from the gas tank. Naturally I pulled out a book of matches, held for such an occasion and whoof... 8 foot high flames in the intersection for about thirty seconds. Ha, i remember it like yesterday.!
@@johnrogers9481 So it was you. I always suspected as much.
Mike Webb's [late KIRO 710 AM {1955-2007} Seattle radio host] favorite episode!(His 2007 murder would have made a GREAT HP episode!)
70 years ago and : Do you have a warranty on your car's maintenance?
Telemarketers!
What goes around
Comes around.
At 1:29 the camera is at 7141 Darby Avenue, Los Angeles looking north. In the background the small building with the white top and chimney (to the right of the "Anita" building, 18353 Sherman Way) is still there in 2024!
$0.10 in 1950 is equivalent in purchasing power to about $1.25 today, an increase of $1.15 over 73 years. The dollar had an average inflation rate of 3.52% per year between 1950 and today, producing a cumulative price increase of 1,148.30%.
That was a heavy sounding dime that Matthews put on the counter for the drink.
The sound effects for the walking, highway sounds, coin plinking and other sound effects are made by a separate stage called a Foley stage and dubbed into the story. The heavier dime sound is made due to the audio track is also on the 16 mm film and it did not make the finer sounds as well as the 35 mm film played at the movie theaters. The 16 mm soundtrack got better later. 16 mm film movies were used in schools for instruction. No video tape, but the PBS station had training programs during the school days and hours.
@@Starphot The actor's lips sometimes seem out-of-sync with the sound-track: poor dubbing?
@@johnhardman3 Sometimes it is that, sometimes too large or too small loop on the film movie projector and a lot of the times it is CZcams not getting the audio and video in sync.
Ever think that in the fifties dimes were solid silver and made a different sound than modern alloy coins
Could be a silver dollar!
fridge is broke OK just give me something cold to drink
I think I may have heard of the term protection racket before: at least now I know what it means.
Yeah, it's the fundraising department for the democratic party
@@eatmyskids Not even close, wrong party Bubba!
@@williamjackson5942 he was right willie. Trump 2020
Masterson you say? Hmmmm .... in the same era, 1958-1961, BAT Masterson caused a lot of trouble and got into a lot of .... well .... coincidence? I don't think so! AND .... two ZIV productions! Open and shut case ... get on it Dan!
This was back when doctors didn't have to worry about lawsuits for malpractice.
i've seen the jenkins guy in many other shows over the years. but l couldn't tell you his name if my life depended on it.
Beautiful Chrysler
1955
No roadblocks.
Dan, “Takealookatthismap “. Officer, “What? Dan, “Takealookatthismap!” Officer, “What? Dan, “%@$#&%@!”
My only criticism of this series is that some of the episodes end abruptly and leave questions about the outcome. Otherwise a great program.
Ha, yeah this episode spends so much time with them backing up the car.! Barely shows the shot guy.
Was that the piano being delivered to Laurel and Hardy to tote up those stairs.
A Piano falls off the back of a truck and the crate doesn't even break ? Whoever wrote this script didn't know just how heavy a piano actually is, that crate would have shattered like a eggshell if it fell off the truck like that.
LOL, actually it was the piano to be delivered to the 2016 democrat convention to play god bless America after they removed the American flags from the dumpster after it had been discovered the AMerican flag was absent from the hate filled convention. lets see they were flying the North Korean flag, former Soviet Union flag, Islamic state flag, Mexico flag, Venezuelan flag, you name the communist dictatorship the democrats honored it.
@@sg-yq8pm Hell he is, I think you need to take another look at things.
@@sg-yq8pm Nobe ole son he ain´t mentally-ill, but those democrats are
I call these god-damned deranged, degenerate pathetic bastards
liberalkunts and they are suffering from liberalkuntism, they´ve
been indoctrinated thru the main-street-media and we all know
that they wouldn´t recognize the truth if it slapped them in the
face and stepped on their toes and kicked their arses hard !
@@sg-yq8pm Brainwashed by D J Trump.
They must have had a shortage of paving material all U see is a lot of dirt and dust kicked up from the cars but they are all Clean.
Must have had a great pit crew keeping them running and looking good.
🚑🚙🚖🚗🚕🚎🚒🚔🚚🚛🚃🚍🚊🚚🚆🚌🚋🚊...
Matthew's got an olds in this one.
These classy shows were filmed primarily throughout The San Fernando Valley & Thousand Oaks area + West L.A.
You never know when it could happen but there'll be bullets flying by the end of every series. And he says get a doctor. Dan Matthews always gets his man or woman. Or Lost child for that matter
some may recognize Ralph Manza of the George Peppard Banacek NBC 1972 series.
Leave blood at the Red Cross.
Not on the highway!
The dishwasher looks familiar, I think he was in a lot of 80s and 90s shows
Sounds like Liberty Mutual. Only pay for what you need.
Once again the shift commander leaves a growing cold one in the doorway. For once he didn't call for the lab boys....
1:22-I would put in a nice piano sound effect
25:41 Leslie Goodwins's many other credits included GILLIGAN'S ISLAND (the ghost, the one where Rory Calhoun, who had his own crime fighting western, THE TEXAN near the end of HP's first-run) and many movies.
wtf, at 25:41 there are end credits. Oh, you said these are his credits.! Clever.!
"... obviously, this so-called accident had been planned in advance" -narration announcer guy!
I want that convertible.
There was another of those Chryslers in a different episode that had electric windows.
You can't have the convertible.
It's the main car used by 4 out 5 hoods on the show. It;s like a red shirt in Star Trek or a cowboy wearing a white hat.
walnut Cafe..... when Broaderick is not filming there, the Chipmonks sell hula hoops!
Remember: leave blood for the bedbugs. Not on the highway!!!
walnut Cafe.....
now a national landmark...
Lots of walnut orchards out there.
"We would like a seat in your cafe".
"Ok......., you two, get out so these two can dine."
Seating at the walnut cafe.
Sounds like Dan leaves 25 cents for a dime coke. Big tipper
Dan talking tough to Hadley like he is the bad guy.
3:55...Sheez Louise, Masterson's right hand man (Gus) says "we've been too easy on him. A stubborn guy like that needs a lot more than leaky gas tanks and flat tires to convince him", in an attempt to get his boss (Masterson) to "lean on their "pigeon" (Holley) harder, right within easy earshot of their intended victim. Why bother calling their extortion racket "transportation maintenance service"? Only on TV does this happen.
At 4:04 "Get in will ya Gus?" .. or I'll drive off with you hanging out of the door!
1:22. OOPS! There goes Laurel & Hardy' s "Music Box". LOL!
4:08. Was that a lever on the dashboard before the coming of the push-button transmission on Chrysler products?
+ElCid48 The shifter lever was on the dash on Plymouth products the same time the push button dash control came along with Chryslers. Edsel had the buttons on the steering wheel.
Robert Walton
Thank you for the info.
My dad's '56 Dodge had the push buttons on the left. I learned how to drive in that car when I was 12 years old, with my dad sitting next to me, of course. I practiced in an empty parking lot on Sunday afternoons, especially how to park between the lines and on curb sides. The first thing to do, he told me, was to press the brake pedal BEFORE starting the engine and then change shifts. As it is today, new cars won't start if you don't press the brakes first. Those were the days!
Take care.
+Robert Walton When you would turn the steering wheel of the Edsel it would change gears on it's own.
All 1955 Chrysler products with automatic transmission had the shift lever on the dashboard (it would break away under impact in case of accident)
@@robertwalton7307 Can you imagine push buttin MANUALS?? (Of course modern day buses have, for their (IMO) inferioir boxed, push buttons of the elctgronic and old schjool 3D type. LIke, of course, a lot here that would be her,e I prefer the old ones (but manual sticks, are de beste!)
Crook waiting in car talks trash about the guy and the whole set up about 3 feet away from him
I Thought I was the only one that noticed that.......,almost like a comedy skit Fer chest sakes..........!
THERE is a modern day lesson here on how all this got started with YES EVEN GEICO! State Farm ETC ETC!
FREAKING Geico,, government employees insurance company.! Right.!
Sure we'll protect u, just pay us weekly.
"If this idea's going to be a flop, let's make it a big one."
24:02 "Jenkins" (Ralph Manza) and "Jay Drury" on the Banacek T.V series.
Is that truck a REO? Looks familiar, maybe been in other episodes.
Brod Crawford made this series.
Maybe International
THANK YOU LIKE 598 AUGUST 13 2019
Same diner in three episodes. Gimmie sumtin cold to drink...will ya
The Hawley trucks are International Harvester KB models.
Mr Hawley should have bought some Macks instead of those junk Internationals and he wouldn't have been such an easy mark.
No problems with P.T.S. (Post Traumatic Syndrome) for Dan Mathews ! That's for wimps . Get an ambulance for him , and make sure you lock the door on your way out . COOL baby and Dan is the COOLEST .!
"Get an ambulance out here right away!" says Matthews. Then he and the guy he told that to both get back into their vehicle and drive away. Didn't see the guy holding the radio speaker calling for an ambulance, neither did he stick around and wait for it. The crook who was shot was simply left at the cafe door all alone with a bullet wound. Someone should have stayed with him. The other police vehicle had someone stay? Didn't see that for sure either.
Why did you block the take down scene?
149k views on June 2020
Plot Twist: Gus Montana is Hannah's great grandaddy.
18:18 Crawford doesn't have the receiver to his ear.
Funny!
Oh, I see. TYVM HK K. : )
Don’t fuss. Call Gus
For a Highway Patrol their never on highways, freeways or anything more than dirt roads.
Surely the job of a private investigator rather than the police
4 by 38 cal slugs from point blank range and a doctor is requested why ?... why not the coroner ?
Hot rod Buick!😊
65,322 Views So Far February 19 - 2019.
102,407 views on July 28, 2019.
112,757 on August 17, 2019.! I don't know why this link and for this episode came up on my CZcams feed.?? WHY did the Ai feed out this.?
@@johnrogers9481 Their algorithm is constantly trying to solve what kind of videos you have enough interest in to click the link.
that James Anderson fellow always was a bad guy
That would never happen, nothing worse than a story that is practically impossible to occur. Needed an ending without a shooting that is witnessed by a police squad.
Dutch Montana?
That guy has to be a hood with a name like that
Yep he is guilty by name association profiling LOL
"Dutch Montana" would also be a good name for a Rapper.....
Gus Montana. The guiltiest-sounding name I ever heard.
car insurance in 1957
cost 26.50 a year
car insurance today
cost 750.00
per week.
You must be a very bad driver with a very expensive car.
Not your crappy driving?
@NPCs Can’t Laugh It's high time those aliens insured their flying saucers.
All these shows look as if they were filmed on an overcast day.
police procedure is a little different these days