She Got A DUI WITHOUT Driving!
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- čas přidán 13. 08. 2023
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Welcome to Audit the Audit, where we sort out the who and what and the right and wrong of police interactions. Help us grow and educate more citizens and officers on the proper officer interaction conduct by liking this video and/or subscribing.
This video is for educational purposes and is in no way intended to provoke, incite, or shock the viewer. This video was created to educate citizens on constitutionally protected activities and emphasize the importance that legal action plays in constitutional activism.
Bear in mind that the facts presented in my videos are not indicative of my personal opinion, and I do not always agree with the outcome, people, or judgements of any interaction. My videos should not be construed as legal advice, they are merely a presentation of facts as I understand them.
FAIR USE
This video falls under fair use protection as it has been manipulated for educational purposes with the addition of commentary. This video is complementary to illustrate the educational value of the information being delivered through the commentary and has inherently changed the value, audience and intention of the original video.
Original video: • DUI without driving? S...
Behind the Mugshot’s channel: / @behindthemugshot
Sources:
Fl. Stat. § 316.193- bit.ly/3s34Pzv
Fl. Stat. § 322.2616- bit.ly/3s31OPB
FL Standard Jury Instructions (28.1 Driving Under the Influence)- bit.ly/3OtKFpw
State v. Fitzgerald- bit.ly/3s402ha
Griffin v. State- bit.ly/45i7off
State v. Taylor- bit.ly/3Qv7VpP
NHTSA: Standardized Field Sobriety Test Instructor Guide- bit.ly/3Azp7SF
NHTSA: Standardized Field Sobriety Test Refresher Instructor Guide- bit.ly/3dKR7d6
Carroll v. United States- bit.ly/3o387gt
Minnesota v. Dickerson- bit.ly/3s5wGz2
United States v. Lightsey- bit.ly/44ZsEXd
United States v. Gant- bit.ly/45dlf77
After you hear "Can we still get her for...?", You know the intent of this cop. What a disgrace
I would have pos but I get your sentiment.
Agreed. There is a big difference in thinking between CAN I arrest her, compared to SHOULD I arrest her. Plus the "get her," this is all so sad.
Exactly! It’s disgusting
Exactly, I was thinking the exact same thing. They were going to do whatever it took to find a reason to arrest her.
Arresting people shouldn't be taken as some kind of scoring system where you get more points the more arrests you make. Police officers shouldn't be looking for every excuse and loophole they can think of in order to get more arrests. They are approaching policing completely wrong.
She did learn a valuable lesson here, NEVER TALK TO POLICE.
NOTHING you say to a cop (pos) will help you, never talk, never answer, never agree to ANYTHING.
100% they weren’t doing anything wrong just suspicion and suspicion isn’t a crime
If not driving, don't sit in driving seat,or put keys in car. Florida laws are broad.,and ridiculous on DUI
@@carlmorgan8452even if you are in your car with the keys in it can land you inti a dui
That's a mall cop basically. University police aren't shit.
The cop should have advised the girls to get an Uber, waited for the car, watched the girls to get into the Uber and moved on looking for someone dangerous to the community. The female cop is shameful
The girl states that an Uber is how she got to her vehicle from the house party; so why didn't she have the Uber driver take her home? Intoxicated individuals generally don't make sound/safe decisions. It's honestly 50/50 if she would have "chance'd" it and drove home. I do believe the police had every right to arrest, although maybe a public intoxication charge or calling a friend and waiting would have been more "community oriented". I would much rather someone sober up in a drunk tank than possibly kill/hurt someone else or themselves getting home from a night of drinking.
So arrest people for what they might do? What about leaning on your car while drunk? Or walking by it?
Yeah it s free too , well there is not evidence of her driving. But it s clear enough evidence of cops asking what they can get them for 🤔
Why to risk while looking for someone dangerous when you can just catch anybody for that they just are able to do something illegal.
Training is not designed to help people get to safety.
She was completely transparent and respectful. This is not justice.
good example why you don't talk to cops, they don't care they just want arrests
Absolutely
She has learned a valuable lesson, many cops are scum and truth means nothing to them.
So say nothing
It is justice, how about not drinking underaged. She was an idiot, she certainly isn't intelligent.
@@th34st dont generalize the good ones with the scummy ones.
there are good ones who just let you go free and stuff if it wasn't that serious.
And sometimes they understand what you're going thru.
@@NicoLas-xy3ew I'd like to believe that's true, but the overwhelming evidence I've seen is to the contrary.
Indeed, in this very case, the cop was clearly interested in arresting the student more than anything else. That was her Prime Objective. "Can we still get her for DUI?" she asks.
Despite the familiar phrase that used to be be painted on many police cars, cops are not interested in protecting and serving; their only interest is in detaining and arresting.
And that's a shame. It is not in society's interests to turn every encounter into an adversarial process.
But that's what cops do, and therefore it is the reason why lawyers correctly advise everyone to invoke their 5th amendment rights and refuse to answer any questions. And in suspected DUI situations, to refuse to perform field sobriety tests, which are subjective and unreliable.
Great job protecting the community by arresting people who made the smart choice.
That’s why I’m so pissed about this damn case/law. How are you gonna be smart and get arrested
Yeah, very smart choice. Sit in the driver's seat with the break lights on and the keys in the ignition drunk AF and underage. What a brilliant young lady.
I don't actually understand how in the world people aren't in favor of the cops on this one. She's underage and drunk, and literally all she has to do is put the car in reverse and start driving. This is standard DUI law pretty much everywhere. "All cops bad herp derp" without paying attention to what's going on sets our cause back, because they think we're just crying wolf during the actual bad interactions.
@@crazzluz1702mostly because we've seen abuses left and right from cops without consequences. So they have become the enemy. Was she driving? No. Fuck that cop, and fuck her word. Plus, let's see her do the roadside monkey dance. That shit is designed to get sober people to fail.
@@crazzluz1702brother, what should she have done? This is still America, she probably has little money and was just trying to be as safe as possible. You saying all she had to do is put it in reverse, is bs because she didn’t do it. Anything can happen, but what did happen was her sitting peacefully when an officer approached her for no reason
Nah it's pretty dumb to sit in the car while you're drunk. You can still.get a DUI 😅
When they lady cop goes to her partner and asks "can we still get 'em for DUI?" she reveals her true intention of looking for any excuse to arrest someone. She's a predator with a badge.
Anyone wearing a badge is by definition a predator.
@@joshl6275 No, you don't judge people based on appearance. That's called stereotyping, and it's as bad as racism. Shame on you. Didn't anyone ever teach you what happens when you assume?
@@AntithesisDCLXVIkeep licking the boot if you like it, but don't force people to do it if they don't want to. ACAB
That's what I was thinking when she said that. Like you're just looking for reasons to arrest people and make their lives hell for no reason.
They all are.
The only message this sends is that it's better to risk driving drunk than to be responsible. Good job hero, thanks for the service and protection.
Well I think the main point is to avoid being in a vehicle at all. However, under the pretense of the situation if you have no other option but to enter your car to stay warm/safe, then you are better off drunk driving home. So I think we need to be realistic about this so people take our point seriously.
Any way for the police department to get money out of people
Only the poor and workers have this problem , it's targeted and that's called oppression !
Who does bail and fines hurt? Not the rich.
Combine that with police only solving 2% of major crime and you're just looking at people stealing from citizens .
The bootlicking is shameful ...@@ObamanableSnowman
It's a shity law but it is the law. So many people think I'll sleep it of in my car then wake up and think screw this and just drive h drunk. It's easy to avoid though. You need to "loose your keys" and not sit in the driver's seat if you want to sleep in the car. Or be on private property. And if you have a learner driver driving the full licence holder has to be sober to.
@@RandomRants525 I know a guy that was in the back seat of his car THAT HAD BROKEN DOWN SO IT WAS INOPERABLE and still got a DUI because he decided to drink some beer after the car quit running. Cops force people to keep driving drunk.
But remember one important thing. If you are ever on a jury and a case like this , you can vote " not guilty" and reject the idea that a DUI is possible when a person is simply sitting in a car. You're not a robot and not a rubber stamp for the sometimes questionable, judicial system. There is the letter of the law, and there is the spirit of the law. I find it outrageous that anyone can be convinced of a DUI while sitting in a car. And remember, that DUI stays with you for LIFE.
100%. decision is always yours and you dont have to explain it
Only problem with that is with DUI there is no jury, a judge makes the decision and they are in on the scam to get as much money as possible out of drivers. If you wanted to fight it you'd spend a fortune on a lawyer with no guaranty that you'd get off.
@@manstersrYou always have a right to a Jury when it comes to criminal charges. You just might have to demand one.
Jury Nullification needs to be used more in this country in cases of unjust laws.
Girl: “I have been drinking.” Cop: “I have suspicions that you have been drinking.” 🤯
The fact the cop says “can we still get them” shows their central goal isn’t to protect & serve… it’s to get people for whatever they can.
The young lady was so respectful as well considering most people her age these days. These cops are as trash as it gets.
If you poke them enough they’ll tell you they’re going to get you on something haha
it is never protect and serve, that is not their duty as per the constitution. that is a courtesy extended to the public to maintain peace between law enforcement and citizens.
Well yeah... that's why most offenses cost money... Cops exist to make money for the state
If the law enforcement officer didn't know and had to ask it's fair to say that an average citizen cannot be expected to know the laws at this point
The willingness to destroy someone's life is mind blowing
Just POS cops who will have some karma come their way
It not the willingness, it’s the eagerness that’s scary. The cop was fishing for a DUI at all cost
these cops deserve the worst punishment possible. who knows what else she accuses people off.
sir did u rape a child?
dude: the fuck man hell no
cop: eventually u will. turn around sir. i need to cuff you for raping a kid.
@@miciso666 I agree. And just like with pedophiles. If we gave cops harsher punishments. We would have less bad cops
DUI is bot a destroyed life, But i get it. I dont like cops at all since they are a bunch of sociopaths
It's absolutely disgusting how they get together and conspire to ruin the life of a person who obviously did the responsible thing and stayed in place to sober up, instead of driving.
Lol this is nothing I had a cop detain me and search me 20 times because he's senile friend told him I'm a bad guy...
He would stop and search me every time he saw me.
I ended up moving to another city
Indeed, this is why so many law-abiding citizens hate cops.
This is a great example of someone who handles her alcohol extremely well! Good on her. Her only "offense" was respectfully agreeing to do what the officers asked her to do. Shame on the officers.
Thanks for recognizing our children that take responsibility for their actions. "I drank and didn't want to drive" "You're under arrest." Jesus...
Yep, cops are looking for easy arrest, because it's too hard to get real criminals that burn down cities.
Long story short this isn't a law, for a person intoxicated relaxing in their vehicle on but not going anywhere isn't a dui how I know this happened to a friend of mine few years back. Friend fell asleep with his car on and he was pulled over by cops and out of the blue the officer stated you cannot get a dui while sitting parked in a vehicle whilst its on
@@eaturmeatornopuddin...in that jurisdiction. I can totally understand why Florida has this law. They are a spring break destination. One of the impacts of being drunk is poor decision making, which could turn "sitting" into "driving" very quickly. The law is the law, and she has already broken several of them: underage drinking, fake ID, etc.
She was underage and broke the law and was held accountable. Bet if it was a male, people wouldn't care.
How do u know she had a fake ID?
It’s unfortunate that if she drove home intoxicated, there would be a lower chance of her getting in legal trouble.
And if she got caught the exact same amount of legal trouble
@@byronanderson6393 Yup!
Reckless driving.
@@UkrainianPaulie Is completely and utterly irrelevant to both the video and the comment thread? Since DUI and reckless driving are two separate offences. They are not mutually exclusive.
Or she couldve drove home and crashed.. i know it seems like getting arrested is the worst outcome but sometimes you never, to be fair shes 19 and drinking while sitting in her car with ability to drive..forget the law even a parent wouldnt bw ok with that
The correct thing to do here would be to give those two women a ride home. That would be serving the community.
I lost it when the cop said “we’re not searching” while actively searching the vehicle for what they thought was drugs.
The cop acting like she’s so kind for finding out how long the jail SHE SHOULDNT BE IN will hold her
1) Was honest with the police.
2) Decided not to drive while impaired.
3) Complied with sobriety tests.
4) Was polite and cordial the entire time.
Police: "We've got ourselves a hardened criminal here, better arrest her."
I thought that was her list of mistakes....
Ere on the side of caution. She should have just stayed with the passenger at their house overnight. Whether it was her intent to just sit and chill, FL already determined her guilt while being in the driver's seat and intoxicated.
@@Ereaes oh stuff it. this is ridiculous. stop simping for a police state that punishes decisions that are SMART and NOT HARMFUL.
And this is why you don't talk to the police, don't answer questions, don't consent to searches or to sobriety tests.
@moaber even though she was being honest and the car didn't move...right.
Let's take a group of young adults, teenagers, who are not causing a disturbance, and taking proactive steps to be safe and responsible, and punish them for that action.
What a time to be alive.
That's in any era my friend, there’s never a perfect time to be alive.
$5 says there will never be a perfect time to be alive. People are just awful.@@paranomalycreaxionz
I don’t necessarily think it’s responsible for a 19 year old to be drunk out in public. When the legal drinking age is 21…
@@JomitheelfThey’re in the car that’s not moving, they were sleeping 💀
@@Jomitheelfkids are gonna drink might aswell be safe while they donit
This the most articulate, aware, calm, cooperative dui young lady I’ve ever seen ..
My buddy got dropped off almost blackout drunk by so called ‘friends’ at his car in an empty parking lot. Bro passed out in the vehicle and cops arrested him for owi. Turns out that he didn’t even had the keys with him and was lucky that he left the car unlocked. Ruined his jr and senior days of high school.
She makes the right choice and is punished for it? No wonder there is a disconnect between police and citizens. smh.
The right choice would’ve been not to drink and break the law in the first place.
@@j0epark1I think you must be stupid because you've missed the part where she didn't break the goddamn law
@j0epark1 oh no, she drank then didnt drive,call the cops
@@j0epark1 There is no problem with drinking. And she did the smart right choice in choosing not to endanger anyone by not driving. I understand the law is the law but it's a stupid law and should be changed.
@@j0epark1Drinking is not illegal and sitting in a parked car (even when drunk) should not be illegal, too. Context matters. This basically means if you're drunk you can't be near your car. Just idiotic.
She was so kind, honest, understanding, and compliant. Truly a menace to society.
Totally a menace to society. Glad these so-called law enforcement officers are taking crime right off the streets,
Honest? LOL.
Why the hell would you have to call an Uber to take you to your car after a party? Her story is to cover up the fact that she drove to the parking lot.
Meanwhile other kids are smash n’ grabbing without consequences
@@BlueCollaredGrit sad yet very true
She was also underage, drunk, was using a fake ID and was behind the wheel of a car. Just because she's a woman doesn't mean she gets to ignore the law.
“Can you still get them for…”
This is the culture and mindset. Not to protect, not to reform, but to “get them.”
Great way to further the disconnect between police and citizens. Bravo.
So, she could’ve saved money on the Uber, actually drove while intoxicated, and had the same result? Wow! Thanks for saving the world officers!
You make a good point. To be completely honest, whilst I don’t condone driving while intoxicated at the illegal blood alcohol level, if she did that after she had to deal with this, I wouldn’t blame her.
Alternatively their Uber could have taken them back to one of their houses and they could have slept it off and collected the car the next day.... Oh wait, they couldn't do that cos despite being 19 they were illegal to drink and would have got reamed by their parents for drinking at a party so they went to a car park instead and technically did a mild crime. Cops were horrendous and it ended in a mess. Wrong all round.
Police officers have discretionary powers to make judgement calls. She (the cop) could've had the girl call an uber, family, or friends to pick her up & leave it at that. But no, she'd rather destroy her life with this overzealous crap.
And then they wonder why so many ppl hate them
I call them domestic terrorists.
I’m the only one that doesn’t buy that there was an Uber. I would’ve been calm but upset that I’m getting arrested if I didn’t drive. They were respectful cause they were lying.
The lesson here is: Never be fair to police because they won't be to you.
Lesson here is
1) Uber home instead of to your car
2) Dont get caught drinking under the age (saying "dont drink under age" is not realistic)
She was a smart kid, but tried to cut a corner of ubering to her car and sleeping it off instead of home to save a dollar.
Always invoke 5th, refuse all tests, ask for lawyer. Don't talk... not even to tell them your name. Don't even talk to confirm that you even exist. Your only legal requirement is to produce ID when you are being arrested or pulled over for citation... depending on the laws of your state... but no talking... Say nothing other than to ask if you are free to go or that you invoke your 5th rights or asking for a lawyer. Talking to the police cannot, and I do mean CANNOT help you.
"Anything you say can and will be used against you."
It makes a Lawyers job easier to fight for you if you say NOTHING!
@@Deeppurp what's wrong with sleeping in your car if you feel that you cannot continue?
@Pawelandbajer nothing he's just a bootlicker who can't help but defend cops
@@Deeppurpher father probably would have beat and assaulted her if he caught her drunk. Florida people are sick
when i was in school, my High School law teacher said that sitting in your car while
intoxicated with access to the keys, is still a DUI. youd have to be out of reach of keys or the drivers seat
In New York State the idea was if keys are in the ignition you are operating the vehicle.
My mom has 2 DWIs where she wasn’t driving. I was BOTH times. Each time we went to court and I was a witness they kicked me out of the courtroom for “suspicious activity” she now has felony warrants and we aren’t going back
it’s crazy that they ruined her life for making the right decision to not drive
It's about low hanging fruit that's why they don't show up while guns are being fired.
They're fascists. This kind of behavior isn't some surprise from pigs, it's the expected behavior
I don’t agree with what the cops did, but they hardly “ruined her life”.
@@Ron898 She won't be able to lie when she's asked if she's ever been arrested. And she won't be hired because she was arrested. Or she can choose to be terminated for lying about it. But no her life's not ruined.
@@somewhatinformed1208 one mustn't tell lies.
Glad to see we are teaching our children that doing the right thing is wrong.....
Underage drinking is still illegal 😂 not sure what the right thing you claim is.
@@chrisangus1725 making the concious choice to not drive while intoxicated. Charging her for undalerage drinking is absolutly warrented, but a DUI charge for making the choice to NOT drive will probably do more harm than good.
@@finalbladecrisis given the fact that the car lights were on and it's safe to say that the keys were in the ignition. Making her in control of the vehicle while intoxicated thus is why she gets a DUI and just because someone says they took an Uber doesn't mean they actually did. Also why on earth would you take an Uber just to hop in your car and turn it on? Nothing lines up nor does it make any sense.
@@chrisangus1725so i guess she should have drove drunk and endard people rather that sit in a warm car staying safe. The cop wanted over time pure and simple. The cop could have given her a warning and told her to call an uber to take them home or waited for them to fuck up and drive. Instead she chose to be a drity ass cop rather then sho the same respect this girl gave her. What did this girl learn? She learen to never be honset to cops agian.
@@pugpug4430 a DUI is not just for driving this is clearly stated on the law books. I don't see where you are misunderstanding or not understanding it. It is also in control of the vehicle. The keys are in the ignition and she's in control of the vehicle because she's in the driver seat. It's clear as day in black and white in the law book.
Wow, doing the right thing and get charged. Thank you for protecting her by throwing her in jail for doing the right thing.
I never understand people saying
" Sir & Thank You " to criminals with badges.
They deserve no respect.
Thank you officers for ruining a honest 19 year old girl life after making a responsible decision of not driving. I feel a lot safer knowing you guys are keeping us safe. Nice to know our tax money goes to these resources. 🎉👏🐷
The key was in the ignition and the tail lights were on. She was underaged driving. The law is the way it is because there is no way to verify that she wasn't about to drive, so they set the line at being in the driver's seat with the keys, which she was.
Now, that said, there are a couple things I would have liked to see the cops check. First, put you hand on the hood to see if it's warm. That checks to see if she has already been driving. Next, ask her if she is willing to show her Uber account info. If she and her friend had already been sitting there a while her claim that they were not planning on driving is a bit better...
But here is the thing... a lot of drunk people might sit and wait until they felt safe to drive, but a lot of drunk people would still decide to drive well before they are safe to drive.
@@nacoranImagine getting sentenced for murder because you COULD have stabbed me with the knife in the kitchen. Dumbest shit ever, being sentenced for something you never did but COULD do.
@@nacoranfuture hypothetical crimes
@@nacoranmight as well make it illegal to be drunk. A drunk guy might get in a car and drive, no proof e would not. So stupid
That wasn’t her first DUI
“Can you still get ‘em?”
What an absolute scumbag.
I have a daughter about her age I’d be proud of her if I watched her in this video. Good kid, took an Uber, grabbed a non alcoholic drink and stayed put while feeling the alcohol. Teach them not to speak to the police and remaining silent isn’t dishonesty.
Nope you don't sit behind the wheel of a car. Bad move
@@birdistheword1327she's not driving
@@JetstreamTheSexSam doesn't have to be. DUI laws are pretty clear about that
@@birdistheword1327 nope, she has to be driving or attempting to drive. Just being in the driver's seat does not constitute DUI
@@JetstreamTheSexSam just having the keys with you in the car in some states is enough for a DUI.
This is the reason why cops are in the social situation that they are. Way to protect and serve.
Happened to me when my ex and I got into an argument, I wanted to just get away from her, we were both drinking, I sat in my car thinking and trying to get some sleep so I could sober up. Cops pulled up because she called them, they charged me with a dui, even though the key wasnt even in the ignition. They argued in court that I must have been driving as I had my keys on me, it didnt stick but what did was "intent" because I took the keys off the table, I them because I wasnt getting locked out of my own apartment. I had no intentions of driving. After a year and a half, well over 10 grand, lost my apartment, lost my car, lost jobs/contracts and a susbstantial amount of money while not being able to drive, and lost my ex wife, I got it reduced to a "careless driving". I grumbled in court about it when I took the plea, but I was tapped, I had nothing left to keep going. 4 years later things are better but it still leaves a huge impact on my life my insurance is high, some companies wont hire me, Im still trying to recover things I had before all this. I feel broken down and beaten by the system
Hang in there, brother. Keep building and winning, it'll get better.
@@matthewaukeman until it happens again.
Considering that she likely wouldn't have gotten a DUI if she had actually just driven home, these officers are actually making the roads more dangerous by effectively encouraging you to just drive home in this scenario.
This is what I was thinking....police teach people the "wrong" things from their actions....next time, this girl may just drive intoxicated instead... because of this bad interaction. I missed a court date once for a traffic ticket....I called and asked how to fix this mistake I made....they told me to just come in to the police station and I could get a new court date issued.....I showed up and was immediately arrested ...having to post a $200 bond to get out of the jail.....Tried to do the "right thing" and got screwed over....lesson learned....I now never trust police.
@@billtate6962A traffic ticket? What was the ticket for?
@@realflyyrealeyesit’s kind of irrelevant. If you don’t pay a 10 over speeding ticket you get a bench warrant issued.
ive been in her situation , what i was told is to just throw your keys in the back seat or in the trunk and you should be saved
Yep. That’ll teach her to think twice about thinking twice about driving home drunk.
“Can you still get ‘em?” - what an insight in to the mentality of the police. They are not here to serve you, they are here to “get you”.
Yeah they say they don't have a quota.. okay.. then why would you use that type of language
Exactly 💯
I once got a ticket for "running a stop sign" (rolling stop, reached 0mph at an empty intersection in broad daylight)
The kicker was that he added "reckless driving in unsafe conditions" which is hilarious, because it was a perfectly clear day with absolutely no bad conditions. That part of the ticket was thrown out... but it was the definition of "what ALL can we get this guy with?" - really protecting [the city budget] and serving [tickets].
@@reprovedcandy I got a ticket for running a stop sign. I came to a complete stop but my front wheels were over the white line by a couple inches so he said I technically ran it.
@@mybuttsbeenwiped666 classic cop move
Unreal...I was in a similar circumstance...I was at a work party at a local bar...The boss ordered some shots for us to celebrate the good year that we had...When I got back to my car I realized that I was not OK to drive, so I decided to sleep it off...It was below freezing, so I had the engine on for heat but the car was in park. I woke up to cops tapping on my window. They in all rights could have given me a DUI, but they realized that I was doing the right thing by not being on the road...Now these girls were taught the opposite lesson...it's better to try to drive drunk rather than get caught in the parking lot...
The fact that the female officer asks if they can still get her on a DUI charge tells you all you need to know about how she does her job; dirty and without compassion or common sense. Just what we need more of in our LEO’s.
truuuuuth, disgusting behavior...
its a dui
@@teknizzle420 Yeah, she was totally DRIVING under the influence and definitely totally deserved that DUI (DRIVING under the influence) charge on her record. For sure. Definitely. Absolutely. Idiot
The most important job requirement of being a cop: Must be a nitpicking prick.
That's the whole legal system when you accept punishment for a victimless crime
The biggest issue with this is, next time she might just decide to drive home while drunk because she feels she can’t just sit in the car
Not really. She specifically chose not to drive anywhere. A car is a safe place to go sleep if you don't live there and have nowhere to go.
This was a smart, safer, choice.
are you stupid? The original comment agrees what she was doing was safe and smart, what they are saying is that them doing something safe and smart ended up them getting in trouble - so next time they won't sober up but will drive off.... yes you really as stupid as these cops. wow @@OviWanKeno9i
@@OviWanKeno9iyes she was trying to be responsible. The op is simply stating because she was trying to be responsible and was arrested for it next time se may just decide to drive home and endanger innocent people, simply because of this experience.
@@asimhussain8716 and still got a dui anyway... she is shivering because its cold so the car was likley running to keep the heat on... let it be a lesson to every1... just drive the car home drunk...
Yea less of a chance to get another dui if I just drive 20mins home instead of sleeping in the car for a few hours.
When I used drink heavily I would sometimes sleep in my truck. I always put the truck key
in a magnetic key box under the truck. I'm not entirely clear on the state of the law on that, but the one time a cop awakened me he laughed and walked away once I told him where the key was.
4:46 Tech here, the key typically doesnt have to be in the ignition for the brake lights to illuminate. Similiar to the horn, typically it will function will the key out of rhe ignition.
This officer is the definition of the problem between society and police
No that would be violent, murdering and rapist criminals. You'll understand, when you get older.
@@pep590Cops pestering people that have committed a nothing crime while not arresting real criminals is why many citizens don't trust cops. Did you not read the original comment?
@@pep590 your ego is crazy
@@pep590 look, boot licker, you clearly missed the part of what I said that makes perfect sense to anyone with a functioning brain. The part where I pointed out that this girl did everything right and that she's NOT a raping, theiving, murderous criminal. The part where I was pointing out that this sort of completely unnecessary arrest is what makes people not trust the police. They'll make an arrest like this and then let a serial shoplifter go. Not chase a car fleeing from the scene of a crime. Let a someone assault another person and not get involved.
Deep throatng the boot for no reason other than to deep throat the boot really makes you look like an idiot. 🤡
She drove drunk to her current location.
Lesson the kids have learned: go ahead and drive home so you don’t go to jail...
Only a bunch of douchebags would have arrested this girl for DUI. It’s a shame she even gave them the time of day.
I once knew a guy who used to be a cop and he told me there are two types of people who become cops 1. assholes and 2. people who were picked on or bullied in highschool and want retribution on society.
Honestly, that's my takeaway from this too. Driving home drunk seems like the better option.
I've been woken up and arrested 3 times for sleeping in my truck after a 6 pack or more, in a private parking lot.
@@buxe4042luckily I was never caught. I used to keep a blanket and a pillow behind my seat, would pull it out and climb into the bed of my truck and pass out in the bars parking lot.
Yep atleast u have a legit reason to arrest at that point smh might as well drive
Not if the keys are outside the vehicle. If you have been drinking and you want to stay in the vehicle, leave keys on tire outside the vehicle .or under a bumper .
In colorado its if the keys are within 50ft of the vehical. I work for an interlock company, and had a dude who got a dui sitting on the trunk of his car waiting for an uber. The uber showed up as he was getting placed in cuffs. Case got thrown out but he still had to do dui classes and get and interlock for 2yrs
If it is cold or too hot .u need heat or a/c. Easy targets.
love how the seat is fully reclined and her knees were up on the steering wheel when they walked up so they were not in control is an argument that can be made
I love how it takes 20 cops to arrest a 19yo girl. These clowns truly have nothing better to do.
@jsmesavery9584 Yes,and on the other side of town drunks everywhere people getting robbed but they are all here with this young harmless girl feeling big...I dont drink at all and had my 6 year old son in back seat sleeping under his blanket, i left out to go pick my husband up from the bar to keep a drunk off the rd...I parked a d before he came out 4 different time an officer pulled behind me...one wanted to know who i was hiding in my back seat...I said my 6 year old son...the next officer ask how much i had to drink, the other pulked up and said my tags didnt match my car but hes not gonna tow me cause its cold and i had my son...few mins later 10 men in black jumped out of the tree line and surrounded my car like a bunch of fools...I was doing nothing and they got me for nothing just harassing me...meanwhile at least 6 different people drove off drunk off there ass with no problem, they were to worried about me, the only sober one on the lot...I said alot to each and everyone of them but i dont wanna write a book for u to read on here😂😂😂...LE are out of control everywhere!!!!
They are just waiting for her to defend her rights so they can pin her to the ground.
That's the new way don't you know! It's a result of them being overstaffed abd seriously I learned this statistically there has been a decrease in serious crime so they spend their time harassing and arresting innocent citizens for petty misdemeanors. Oh abd btw they only resolve 5% of serious crime investigations. Nit an impressive track record. It's become blatantly obvious too b many cops show up to a simple traffic stop
You not just imagining things. These officers don't have enough work ie; crimes to solve.
This is what happens in small Towns, when nothing else is going on.
Cant stop real criminals but preys on college kids, she needs to be fired
bro worse needs to happen but i cant say what else ill get slapped by retarded owners.
I wouldn't go that far. It was a jack-ass thing to do, for sure but the cop was within legal rights to do as she did. I imagine there must be a course that would benefit her though. Like there are courses for de-escalation for cops that make matters worse, something similar but that applies to what she did. Maybe something that teaches cops to apply the laws in the spirit they were given because this young lady was clearly not an intended target for this law.
The real problem, in my opinion is the law. Some sort of proof that the person had driven, or was intending to drive while under influence should also be necessary at the very least.
NO WONDER THE LAW ENFORCEMENT COMMUNITY IS HATED BY SO MANY.
It’s safer. Real criminals are dangerous.
@@alex86firethe break lights were on. That’s proof that she was in control. She should’ve taken an Uber home and the next day come back for her car.
man this is pretty much what happened to me, got drunk at a bar and they took my keys, started walking home and the cops still found a way to give me a dui.
5:06 I wonder how the law handles the newer cars with push buttons. With those cars the fob being in the car is about the same as a key in the ignition. I’m always interested in how the law has to change to keep up with technology.
I feel so safe now that this dangerous criminal has been arrested.
The criminal still arresting people
The joke is that they are being sarcastic.
Police work at its finest!
Oh yeah she's totally innocent. I always Uber to my car to take a totally innocent nap after a rough night of drinking.
@@s0d4c4n I mean yeah... she didn't do anything so yeah.
All her life she's been taught that police are the good guys and that they are there to help her. Now she knows better.
Sad….but true 😢
learn the hard way.
Not every cop is a bad guy or an idiot. I’m neither……..
She should teach this lesson to others so everyone can be better prepared.
@@douglasfoley2060 It's an evil job. You signed up to do this to people. And you do. Just because someone told you it's a "job" doesn't absolve you of your crimes against mankind. You don't get to sign up for a corrupt domestic army, agree to ruin lives over plants and petty tickets, and then claim "but I'm not a bad guy just cause I get paid by the bad guys". Yeah, you're a bad guy. Maybe not all cops are full blown idiots, but I've yet to meet one who wasn't. And I'm being completely sincere I've yet to meet a cop who fit the standard for average intelligence. I don't think it's the law or anything, just seems to be the way it goes.
I love how the cops talk about still getting her. What pieces of trash.
Ive never seen that first test go for that long. The problem is eventually even a sober person will lose their balance. Some people have problems with stability in general. My mom wouldnt ever pass a field sobriety test simply because her ankle is so fucked from repeated trauma and her nerves are dead in her foot sending random pains through it
"Can you still get them?" These "cops" are predators and should be treated as such.
Most likely the Highschool bully now with backing of the government. Great system you guys have over there 👍
Earning the hate!
😂😂😂
She broke the law
@@Kingbuddah93lol you clown, imagine actually believing that NOT driving a vehicle while intoxicated is a crime. The crime itself has "driving" right in its name
It saddens me that police would attempt to ruin this girl's life when she did what she really thought was right.
She's a druggy though
Officer discretion was not used... sadly... now this young lady has a permanent stain on her record which could affect her future job prospects...
Cmon you should know they do t care about you or your life or anything about you. They the Nazis of the USA
😂😂😂 it was 100% the right thing to do. Just don't put the keys in the ignition.
Yup this arrest is sad and unnecessary.
"Can you still get them?"
I think that says it all really.
If she’s sitting behind the wheel without, the keys in the ignition. she cannot be charged with DUI. That’s coming from a New Zealand police officer. If you have them in your ignition then yes you can be done for DUI.
Remember people no matter how honest you are with cops. Your ARREST is their PROMOTION.
Promotion?!.
I don't answer questions
the problem is you need to give people incentive to do their jobs this applies to every type of work. When they arrest an actual criminal the bonus they earn is deserved it should just be more regulated what arrest gives what reward or a punishment like taking away from salary when these corrupted arrests are made but that will never happen.
17:19 This channel does good work, but on this one, he dropped the ball on the most important part of the video. I don't fault him for not knowing because he is not a police officer. I work in this field, and it is true that we do have discretion on traffic stops but not on felony traffic stops and DUI. If the defendant is going through a DUI investigation and is over .08, you must make the arrest. It sucks that the defendant did not know the law that you can't be in actual physical control of a motor vehicle while intoxicated plus, she told the officer that she had been drinking tonight, which made the officer have to take action (remember she is recording) so if the defendant was let go and did drive, got into a crash, and killed someone or herself then the department could be civilly liable and the officer could be civilly and criminally liable. So I believe the grade should be an A+. The officers did a great job. They explained everything to the defendant and treated both parties with respect. I hope this helps everyone understand a bit more. Great work all in all though ATA
@@dondon-kw5zxCould have just arrested her for underage drinking instead of a DUI… it would still result in the same thing.
Like what happens to people who live in their cars do you arrest them for DUI too? (This is a genuine question I’m not trying to take a disrespectful tone or anything)
Imagine not being allowed to wait in your car till you are sober to drive safely.
Bro, it's already worse. Cops have been camping at bars waiting for people to Uber home, then they pull the Uber over and get them for public intoxication once they get down the street. There's also some dogshit law in Oklahoma or somewhere that says "public intoxication" is intoxication within plain view of the public which includes views from public roads. So some guy was arrested for public intoxication on his own property because he was visible from the adjacent residential street grilling in his backyard and drinking beer.
There's no winning. System's broken, not worth fixing it. Dismantle it and leave it for the crows.
Imagine if the 19 year old wasn’t being truthful and drove away after they left and killed a family. Then what kid?
@@Fullsendfilosophy Imagine there is a possibility of getting hit by a car when crossing the road, you're never going to cross the road? We can all play the "what if" game with everything, that's not how the world works. You want to get arrested when walking in a store because someone thinks you might steal something?
@@Fullsendfilosophyimagine if 💩 had wings or if Martians attacked. Then what kid?
@@rtjames Laws are made for a reason. I’m not a kid. I make more money than you. Keeping flipping Patties.
I was given a DUI in Utah years ago & I was a passenger in the vehicle with no FST! The driver & I were then allowed to drive home.
That’ll be the last time she’s honest with a cop. Starting that great relationship with law enforcement early
thats the last time she gets behind a drivers seat while drunk you mean
@KeepingitReal4 no we mean that's the last time they try and sleep it off. And instead drove drunk home
@@KeepingitReal4yeah, she’ll drive home next time to avoid this situation
@@KeepingitReal4nope
@@KeepingitReal4 nah pretty sure they meant what they said
Parents...please teach your children that the police are not their friends. Honesty with the police does not help you.
The police are the enemy of the people. Once someone becomes a police officer, he or she immediately becomes an enemy of the people. Stand up to police tyranny!
That's a blanket statement which says all police are bad. It's total BS.
I remember being told when I was young "police only arrest bad people" so, if this girl was told roughly the same thing I can understand why this girl talked too much to the officers because to her, she's not a criminal so why wouldn't she, it's sad that she learnt the hard way that police arent talking to you for anything other than looking for a crime
But dishonesty will make your police interaction much worse
Exactly. At best the cops are the guys with guns that you call when someone else is a threat to life, limb or property (in that order).
I saw so many comments saying her parents "raised her right". Well, they didn't raise her well enough to not underage drink and they didn't raise her well enough to use the fourth, fifth, and sixth amendment.
I do not consent to any search, be quiet, and ask for a lawyer.
Growing up in Manitoba I was taught if you need to sleep it off, put your keys on your back tire.
No way of getting you for any chance of driving without being in possession of the keys.
Front tyre better they in your line of site more lol
Great way to hamper the education and future success of what seems to be a very nice and smart citizen.
Under these laws you could be drinking in the comfort of your own home, forget something in your vehicle, go out to get it with no intention of operating said vehicle and still be at risk of a DUI charge if the cops happened to notice and investigate. It's ridiculous.
The wording is ambiguous enough that standing on your porch with your keys in your pocket could be argued as intent to operate or some such bullshit.
You could literally be drinking & working under your car with the keys in the ignition to play music and get a dui. 🥴
I know a cop who was off duty and got hit with this same situation. Outside his own apartment and went outside to his car to smoke. It was a cold night in Colorado so he had the engine running for warmth. He has been drinking inside and got a DUI.
These laws of the US lol crazy
It’s Floriduh. 🤷🏻♀️
She learned a very valuable, lifelong lesson. Never talk to the police, never trust the police, and never under any circumstances ever admit the truth to the police.
well, under some circumstances you should admit the truth to police. my idiot frat forced me in a car with a blackout drunk "board member" and he crashed and then made me switch seats and lie to police to say I was driving. In that case and that case only, telling the truth was the right option - trust me, that shit ruined my life for a long while.
Exactly right.
I have to say it depends. While I wouldn’t trust of cop, I was at a house party the other night and two cops came by for a noise complaint. We live in South FL and the building was smoke free so we were smoking and drinking at 2am in front of the building when those two cops from the noise complaint came back because of another complaint. My cousin, whose home it was, tells us “it’s cool, I’ve already spoke with them.” I’m here low key panicking but happy that my joint had just expired. Him on the other hand chats with the cops for a bit as they say they can’t hear any noise and the woman is making false reports, then he continues his convo with the group and starts hitting his joint right in front of the cops. They didn’t give a fk.
Here you can also get a DUI if you are drunk behind the wheel.
Everyone here know that if you are drunk and want to sleep it out in a car, you NEVER get into the drivers seat, sitting in any seat but the drivers seat will be fine.
Oh and if the car is cold and you need to heat it, you are allowed to start it, but never from the drivers seat.
My brother was asleep in his car in the parking lot of a bar. While cops were cruising the parking lot they saw him, woke him, and after talking to him for a few minutes they arrested him for DUI. His lawyer not only got the officers reprimanded, but he also got my brother $60K for false arrest because the car was off, they never actually saw him driving the car, and they didn't offer him a field sobriety test. In our state, if the car is off, the engine is cold, you're asleep, and the car is parked on private property they cannot arrest you for DUI.
In my state (not Florida), it is a criminal violation to operate or "be in actual physical control" of a motor vehicle while intoxicated (the same as described in the video). In a different example somewhat analogous to the law prohibiting merely even being "in control" of a vehicle, it is also a criminal violation to possess a firearm while intoxicated. However, there are many factors that a prosecutors (or a jury) consider when determining whether a person is in control of a motor vehicle (noting that whether a person is intoxicated is a different consideration). Some of the factors are: whether the intoxicated person is in the driver's seat (sleeping in the back of a van, likely not really in control versus quickly jumped into the back seat from the driver's seat once police were spotted and the car is still running, that leans more toward in control); whether the vehicle is turned on and running, whether the keys are in the ignition switch (for vehicles with key-operated ignition systems), etc. None of the individual factors are determinative, which means even if one of the factors (such as being in the driver's seat) is observed, that alone doesn't necessarily mean the driver is in control of the motor vehicle.
The thing about drunk driving or even being "in control" of a motor vehicle while intoxicated, is that over and over and over again, it is demonstrated every week in every court which handles DUIs that intoxicated people often make foolish decisions. A person who has passed out at the wheel while at a traffic light in a running car for the last 30 minutes when police roll up is DUI. Even if police don't actually have any proof the intoxicated person drove the vehicle, it is still DUI. The danger is that if an intoxicated person passes out or is even stopped and wide awake, even if they've pulled into a parking lot or off to the side of the road, is that the person IS intoxicated still and in control of the vehicle (if that is truly the case). One of the foolish things an intoxicated person may easily choose to do, even though the person might not do so if not intoxicated (often based upon their view only while drunk that they're not that intoxicated), is to decide to drive the vehicle that they're in, or to resume driving drunk. A passed out person may awaken and decide to drive, which is all too easy because if, for instance, they're in the driver's seat of a running vehicle, all they need to do is put the vehicle into drive and go. On many occasions, if police did not intervene, intoxicated people found by police "in control" of a vehicle would have begun driving or resumed driving despite being too intoxicated to drive (i.e. intoxicated period).
Way too many people have died due to drunk driving. It SHOULD be taken seriously without undue leniency. However, without having watched all the video, regarding the person who was sitting in the driver's seat in the video here, if her story (which seems plausible) could really be confirmed or is to be believed, then the fact that they got into a parked car at the driver's home and it was obviously their last destination for the night, they at least responsibly took an Uber there, the vehicle was in a private parking spot at the driver's residence where it would very likely remain (versus being in a McDonald's parking spot where there would perhaps be a higher likelihood that the vehicle may be driven to another location absent police intervention), she was busy on her phone and socializing with her friend and clearly not getting ready to drive, it seems to me the officer certainly had reason to conclude that the person encountered was not "in actual physical control" of the vehicle, whether or not the person encountered in the driver's seat may technically have been in control of the vehicle. It is a legal determination, not a determination based merely upon factual technicalities. The officer here may or may not have understood this last point.
This girl is so conscientious and polite AND she did the right thing. No way did she deserve treatment like this, but sadly, some cops really are jerks.
Jerks? The Impact they have on people life are deviating... They are worst than Jerks.
It's the law
Wow, cops are cold and so is this channel for giving the cops a B-.
And emphasis on some, alot are actually decent - unfortunately we only document the bad ones 90% of the time
@@coreyadams1982no its not
So the moral of the story is it’s better to drive home drunk and improve chances of getting away with it. Excellent work law enforcement. In Maryland you don’t even have to have the car running to get a dui for sitting there.
This is an even funnier statement when you remember that Uber can decline services if you look too drunk too xD American Justice at its finest.
the legal key, is to not be in the driver's seat. so if drunk and using car to rest sleep be in a passenger seat
but most people dont know this, a failure of the education system and government
@@CptMastawell to be fair, uber drivers are random, contracted people who are almost always driving their own vehicles. They have the right to decline service to anyone they want, and a severely drunk person might not be who you want in your car.
I think a better example for your point would be that being drunk on public transportation could be public intoxication.
The best way is never to talk to the police.
@@idministertake the keys out and put somewhere
This happened to me when I lived in Colorado 12 years ago it was mind boggling!!! I had the keys in my purse in the trunk while waiting for a cab
Question here:
With most modern cars using proximity key fobs, you can’t put them on the front tire or in the trunk like many comments are suggesting since they would still be in range to start the vehicle. Even if my friend has my keys while they’re in the car, couldn’t it be used against me that since they were in range that I had intent to drive under the influence?
Seems like the cop was set on ruining this young lady's life.
Their cops. The fact that you believe they would is astounding.
@@krane15lol really? You sound absurdly naive
@@krane15you're incredibly naive if you believe otherwise
@@krane15they’re. Also you don’t watch many videos on this channel do you
“can we still get her even if she didnt drive?”
Excellent work cops. You've taught these 2 girls to just go ahead and drive then because if they had they would've been long gone by the time you showed up since you LITERALLY PROVED EITHER WAY YOURE GETTING A DUI. Unbelievable.
Or.. she could have Ubered home. There's no excuse for this stupidity, and there's certainly no excuse for yours.
That's what I was thinking. I'm 40 years old and this stop tells me to may as well drive off and go home cause I'll be home and safe and not sitting in the car where I could still get arrested.
@@billbombshiggy9254 Absolute facts. you CAN be arrested for a DUI in your own driveway though, my friend has been lol. That's such BS, if you make it all the way home you should be good lol.
THIS. Punishing someone for doing the right thing is so wrong. I hope these police are able to sleep comfortably knowing they did this.
@@thenerdnetwork It happens ALL the time though. "No good deed goes unpunished" they say.
Exactly the Same shit happened to me except car was definitely off and I was asleep sobering up. Refused breathalyzer because I knew I’d fail. Arrested, car towed, took the blood test at jail and was below the legal limit. So charges were knocked down but still got the 2points on my license that stopped me from getting jobs. Conclusion : DONT admit to Anything, just get in the back seat. They are literally” trying to get you on whatever they can”.
Yeah they can be assholes like that my buddy got a DWI when he was sleeping in the backseat of his car but he started his car with the remote car starter because it was 2° below zero so he was literally sleeping in the backseat with the car running everything was locked the keys weren't even in the ignition they were in the back seat in the floor with him and they still gave this kid a DWI
Gotta love when a cop literally admits that they are just out to "get" people. This is why answering a cop's questions NEVER helps you out, and only helps them to get you.
Yea the cops decided she was going to jail before she ever got out of the car. By agreeing to the biased tests you do nothing but hurt your attorneys chances to get you out of trouble. Never agree to anything voluntary that will incriminate you.
been noticing this vernacular quite often with police now. they’re all about cops vs people and not cops and people vs criminals
NEVER EVER! Welll said.
i’ve noticed that a lot lately
Officer's having it out for responsible citizens all for the sake of reaching that arrest quota.
Chose not to drive after drinking ✅
Was honest from the very beginning ✅
Remained respectful and compliant ✅
"Got her" anyway ✅
Wow, cops are cold and so is this channel for giving the cops a B-.
According to laws police did everything right.
Bootlickers will defend it anyway
You can’t blame police for this one. It’s this dumb system of policing for profit why this happened. They hand out arrest quotas for the cops to follow and write these vague laws giving the officers the ability to do this. The people we should be made at are the law makers and the police departments who want the officers arresting as many people as possible. Including a law abiding citizen like this girl.
Only dumb sheep follow laws, I bet some people like nazi Germany was okay because they were follow laws/orders. Sick people in this world.
I got my 1 & only DUI in Michigan for the same thing! I wasn't driving & no keys in the ignition, I was waiting to sober up when they rolled up behind me...came out @ .09 & they arrested me. It was BS but still convicted.
My parents who were officers always told me to put my keys in the trunk and sleep in the backseat if I was drunk and only had my car. Hard to say that you are in control of the vehicle if the keys are nowhere near me.
If my kid decided to sit in her car safely instead of driving I would be beyond proud of her. I hate that the cop arrested her for that absolute BS
At least in this case, the girl was drinking under 21, so she would've gotten in trouble no matter what for her actions. There have been cases where people simply felt drowsy while driving and pulled over to get some rest and were arrested for, um, something or other. 🤷 🤦
It's still against the law so the arrest is warranted
@@DirtdigginDumbassthe law is crazy
@@nickmalone3143 no it's not. They could at any moment attempt to operate while impaired. Then what if she hits and kills someone? There are ways around this law but she chose to sit in the driver's seat probably with keys within reach. Lesson was taught the hard way
@@DirtdigginDumbassby your logic just arrest anybody drinking cause they could get impaired and decide to drive. At any moment theh could decide to operate while impaired. Then what if they hit and kill somebody.
Your logic doesn’t apply here: the person was fairly Cognizant to realize they shouldn’t drive.
First mistake was talking to the officer when you're legally parked and not committing a crime. There is no circumstance where an officer can't make it even worse.
I hate how you should it’s somehow in your best interest to not talk to the people that are supposed protect and serve the community. Like you think they would give positive feedback with good communication, fucking ACAB
If I recall officers have no jurisdiction on private parking areas. This was an apartment type parking lot. So street policing does not work here.
The most important free advice you will ever get from a lawyer. But some people can't remain silent to save their lives.
@@1014pLooks like it was campus police on a campus parking lot I think. Not sure what the legality is there.
If they would have kept the windows up and quiet there would have been no evidence of alcohol at all, unless the officer get plain site of the cans.
I got pulled over at around 11:30PM for running a red light after the turn lane did not get a turn light for 3 cycles. Got pulled over they did the eye test then the hold the foot test passed both. Then the cop made me walk the line and told me 9 steps forward 9 steps back and go until I say stop. When up and back then half way up again and he stops me and is like What are you doing? I look at him and say you told to go until you said stop. Luckily his back up was there and agreed that he did say that so I was let go. Now I will never help a cop. Damn you're getting jumped on the side of the road LOL not my job.
Yeah I think that whoever made that test should be charged with deliberately targeting individuals with equilibrium issues because I literally can't do that.
I literally actively almost fall all the time when I'm just walking normally and have to put my hands out to brace myself.
What's worse is they actively tell you to walk in a way that most people don't usually walk so they're actively telling you to alter your normal walking pattern in a way that you're not normal and not used to walking in just so that they can end up trying to screw you over because you have balance issues
This girl was brought up right and just doing what college kids do. I support her 100%.
The moment right after first contact where the female officer goes to talk to her partner and confirm the law empowers her to still charge her with a DUI -- That is the moment this officer knew she was crossing beyond what is morally right and instead just pushing for more numbers to make her career look better.
Yet another video with proof of why you never talk to the police. They had zero evidence they were driving their vehicle and this was a consensual encounter. The police had no info so all those girls had to do was sit there and be quite. Police never have your best interests in mind and just want to throw you in a cage so never, ever talk to them.
@@HumanPerson_final Yep. 🐷
FTP
Girl got rekt according to law. Respect to police!
Imagine a society that teaches our young to always tell the truth and a legal system that punishes them for doing so.
It took me way too long to learn this lesson. But I did Make sure to teach my children not to talk to police.
this is the retarded world we live in
That's the beauty of for profit prison systems. You get to systematically confine whatever group you want (mostly poor's and minorities), there's nothing they can do about it, and you'll be applauded for "keeping the streets safe" while your inhumane incarceration's center doesn't even meet basic human living conditions.
The first statement is not true for the most part. I suggest that the majority of Americans would discourage not expressing your 5th amendment rights.
@@Acer11818i am pretty sure most people will try to either tell the truth or say something to try to explain whats going on. If it was so common for people to take the 5th, we wouldnt have so many people trying to hammer home dont talk to police. People have always been taught to be polite and tell the truth just like the girl in the video.
I don't answer questions is how your reply to any questions they ask you're not obligated to answer anything without an attorney present for questioning
I've said it many times to never talk to cops because they twist the situations 99.9% of the time to boost their ego and the video proves it. I mean the cop couldn't even figure out what to charge the driver with... UNBELIEVABLE!!
What they say, "I want to keep my community safe."
What they mean, "I want to turn bullying into a career."
Raises and promotions are based on arrests and convictions, we else should we expect.
I mean I knew the outcome when I read the title, but when I even saw the pic of the lady cop I was like, "Uh oh." You can tell she was taking out being bullied in HS by pretty girls like her, on her and her friend.
They’re campus cops. This is pretty much what they do.
I believe a lot of them genuinely want to keep their community safe its just that 1 percent that ruins it for all of them
@@timbowalk14 It's much more than that I'm afraid. Bottom line is cops need to be paid more, WAY more. Then the quality of applicant will go up. It's extremely simple.
This girl is emotionally mature, didn’t crack or cry, stayed mature and respectful, this girl is GOLD, great parents raised this girl. Hope she gets the best in Life, she deserves it!
She still got punished by law enforcement
Seem like, law enforcement don’t care if you are nice or not because, they always on power trips.
Yeah. With DUI arrest on her record, she might have hard time getting certain jobs.
I had a DUI 25 years ago, and it still follows me.
"To serve and protect" my assets. More like "To fill the quota and ruin people's lives"
Yeah, they just forgot to tell her to keep her mouth shut.
Last I checked, it's a crime for 19 year olds to drink alcohol.
An emotionally mature girl means a submissive girl who doesn't question how unethical the cops are...? And complies unquestioningly? Nah bro.
This terrifies me so much. I physically could never pass a FST because of my disabilities. I wonder if police depts such as these have any provisions for my situation.
when i did this at her age i would always make sure to toss my keys in the trunk.
3 times I've been threatened with DUI for NOT driving drunk.
1st. In a sleeping bag, asleep in back of SUV.
2nd. Sleeping in the bed of a pickup truck.
3rd. Walking a bicycle down the sidewalk.
Each time I just kept repeating, "I've learned my lesson, I'll just drive drunk next time."
If the penalty for driving is the same as not driving, might as well take your chances.
Wtf lmaooo the bike one is especially crazy
How bout don't get drunk
@@TheRedHorseman1208what a saint you are
Cops are truly self absorbed criminals, aren't they?
@@TheRedHorseman1208Oh it's you! The only human being alive who has never made a mistake, is completely flawless, and in all ways perfect. Share with us your wisdom in how you've achieved such perfection that you, and only you, are above all criticism and judgement.
She went to college and learned a very important lesson. Never talk to the police.
She didn't learn that. Nobody taught her until she watches this video
Now she can drop out because she isn’t getting a decent job for a long time after this :)
@@timbcodes Lol. She'll get it expunged from her record after she takes her classes and community work. Even if she didn't, it's not like the shit jobs she'll be working during school wouldn't hire her for that. Furthermore, her DUI was not a felony, so she doesn't need to mention it on any applications that asks if they are a felon
@@ev25zvya she just won’t be able to get a license for 5 years or so and even after her insurance will be 2-3x regular cost. Now in this case she could probably get a court to press a faster expunge and purge from record. I hope she does take quick legal action to get this cleared or he screwed on the above marks for a minute.
@@ziowar2176 Lol @ 5 years. It's a 6 month license suspension in FL for a minor charged with DUI, but yeah, daddy will have to pay higher insurance premiums for a few years. Sounds like she got a deal and didn't lose her license but will have to use an interlock device for a year
"Emotional damages, distress, assault and battery, unlawful arrest, unlawful detention, fourth amendment violation, fifth amendment violation. YOU WILL STAND DOWN OFFICER OR YOU WILL FACE FELONY CRIMINAL CHARGES."
What was the legal reason for the first contact? It’s is unreasonable for them to contact her! It is not illegal to sit in your car. They had no probable cause.
She sure learned her lesson, better to just drive off under the influence than to try and do the right thing only to be punished for it.
god bless the boys in blue
That’s the lesson I learned when a friend got a DUI for essentially the same thing.
Yep, don’t do the right thing.
No good deed goes unpunished. By cops
Total disgrace, punishing a young person for making a decision not to put her and other people’s life in danger. Sadly she’d probably been better off just driving off and heading home.
The CDC publishes numbers on how many miles drunk drivers drive based on the 0.08 threshold and how many accidents or arrests they get involved with. The risk is very low to an individual driver, especially one this close to the threshold who is aware of their impairment. It is almost certain she would have made it home safely had she driven home. Last time I crunched the numbers it was like, she could have driven home every weekend at this level of impairment for 150 years before getting in an accident or being arrested. Sober drivers don't do much better than that.
Instead, she conspicuously parked with her lights on in a parking lot for an extended period of time, attracting the attention of the police, and now will suffer these negative consequences.
I have a relative who was a cop while I was growing up. I liked to party a lot back then so I asked him, how do you avoid getting arrested? His reply, just don't attract attention to yourself. Do what everyone else is doing. Sober people don't just sit or sleep in their cars in college campus parking lots for extended periods of time in the middle of the night.
A sober person would have gotten in their car and driven home. There's definitely an argument to make that this is what she should have done.
Yes, I know it's a public safety issue. But in the interest of self-preservation, it would have been her best option.
@@norezenable "Last time I crunched the numbers it was like, she could have driven home every weekend at this level of impairment for 150 years before getting in an accident or being arrested. Sober drivers don't do much better than that." Gonna need to see the math on that one. Over THAT long a period, I'm pretty sure even a sober driver would be likely to get in an accident. 150 years is a long time to go without making a significant mistake.
@@notjohn439 I did similar analysis for a few years in a row for another country and results were similar. Up to 0.5 promile there were no differences and if I remember correctly, I've got the threshold for 0.8 or something around it and it was actually lower than sober drivers. It went straight up with much higher numbers. Even better is that the number of drivers caught on DUI that did not cause any accident is only fraction of all DUI drivers as those were never caught, it's mainly based on the extrapolation of the average breath alcohol content per driver on random road checks (they can stop you without any reason there, so they often do such tests, check if you DUI and off you go). I was investigating it because in Poland the legal limit is 0.2 and there is some dispute about it. The sobriety field tests from US would not work in Poland as the legal limit is so low, you can't figure out someone is DUI without breath or blood tests. That's why I was following those stats to see if it makes any sense. It does not. Somewhere around 0.5-0.8 is the actual threshold at which drivers start to be less capable but at the same time this is the range in which you are still in very good mental condition and you mainly feel physical affects. This means that most drivers that DUI around the 0.8 limit are perfectly aware that they are not in their best shape and are much more careful, drive slower, make less risky maneuvers and generally drive on much safer routes, usually just home.
The common source of confusion is that you could split DUI into at least 3 categories. The worst one are drivers that are completely out of their mind, they are very easy to notice on the road, their incapability is obvious and are dangerous in the traffic. The best one are those, who have fairly low alcohol level and despite driving under influence, they are aware of this and they take it easy to safely get home. According to local law I probably fell under this category numerous times driving around 0.3-0.4. At this point I don't have any physical effects, so I can only rely on knowing that I've been drinking, I would have no trouble passing field tests and yet if I've been drinking even a little, I'm more careful than usual. Just a common sense if you know you may not be in your best shape, even if you don't feel it. The rest are people routinely driving after drinking what's considered legal in US. Those generally have the same accident rates as sober people.
It's worth to mention one more thing that is quite important here. Worse drivers are much less likely to drive after drinking, they are often more scared or more aware of their abilities and they simply avoid driving whenever they are not in their best condition. This means that the average driving skill and experience in drivers after alcohol is often higher than the average driver, they have more experience and skill, so they are more willing to drive even if there is some risk of being impaired by alcohol. Up to some level it's fine as their skills and awareness is enough to cover for the alcohol influence, the real problem are those, who simply overestimate their skill either because of their ego or simple stupidity.
I don't know if this girl would be fine driving as it all depends on her mental state and skills. She was also tired, it makes things much worse than just an alcohol. Believe me, I did a few trips that were too long and I'm not doing it ever again, it would be safer to get half a bottle of vodka than driving when you start to microsleep.
She was 19, drunk, and in the drivers seat of a motor vehicle, for all the officers knew she just passed out while attempting to drive home, she could’ve just called an Uber again, she said one dropped her off but no she didn’t, she made a bad choice and got in trouble, at any point she could’ve started that vehicle then drove and harmed someone, officers did their job simple as that, hopefully it thought her a lesson, I lost my best friend when an 18 year old drunk driver hit him head on after crossing double yellows, this happened our senior year, we were supposed to start college together, and all that was taken from him, because someone else made a bad decision! These past 5 years haven’t been the same without you brother, rest easy Dominic I hope you saved a spot in the afterlife for me🥲
@@boblouis972she wasn't driving