Not condoning what she did. But just remember, folks, when people like you and me (and her) do something like this, we go to jail for 50 years. But when Congress, the banks, Wall Street and bureaucratic authoritarians do it, it's called good fiscal policy.
2 black males named A and Cheese is never a good thing. It was obvious actually considering the stupidity of this crime and how she would have never gotten away with it. Of course she’s with 2 black males. Probably drug dealers who offered her drugs if she attempted this stupid scam
That's the problem, she doesn't care. Shes crying because she got caught. She's just as low as they are, its what they do instead of getting real jobs like the rest of us.
Umm but she was stealing from individual's personal account. They had a copy of that person's ID and she looked somewhat passable as the actual individual (especially with the mask for "covid") so she would try and withdraw the money using their account. I'm not sure what you're talking about, banks and financial institutions deal with people's personal finances, not government funds. So basically, what I am referring to if you still are unable to comprehend is that she was not stealing from the government but was stealing from other people such as your own mother maybe for example.
Exactly it will help her in court too. Always give the police way more information than they need. The best way to beat a case. Trust me. I've gotten off everytime when admitting everything right on camera.
Because they really think they are helping their case. They don't understand is that there is nothing they can say to the cops that will help their case. The cops are not gonna feel sorry for you because you did it for your kids.
I think most guilty people know they are pretty much caught by the time the are the focus of a police investigation and being read their Miranda rights. My guess is that they figure: 1. 100% chance I will be charged and likely found guilty if I just ask for a lawyer, and the arrest-trial process starts 2. 1-5% chance I can talk my way out of this, or get lesser charges by cooperating or showing remorse, so 95% chance I am caught And so they take Option 2.
@@Itried20takennames The irony is that it's the opposite. A lot of times the police know but lack the evidence to convict and rely heavily on things the accused themselves said. And asking for a lawyer can't be used as evidence of wrong doing.
@@Itried20takennames Well, if that's how they think, it's totally illogical. Why would there be a 100% chance you'd be charged and found guilty if you ask for a lawyer? The cops have nothing to do with whether you're charged - that's the court system, the district attorney. But if you're at the point where you're being read your Miranda rights, the "arrest-trial process" has already begun. You're not going to "talk your way out of this" once you're in an interrogation room. The cops have one goal: to gather evidence against you, which they will pass on to the DA, who will decide whether or not to charge you with a crime. If you have a lawyer with you, the lawyer will help protect you against incriminating yourself. If you have to negotiate a plea bargain, a lawyer will help you get the optimal one for you. The idea that asking for a lawyer will make you look guilty, so it's better for you if you don't have one, is completely moronic.
Crazy with the amount of technology and cameras today that people will really try to walk into a bank with a 30k check and cash it. The level of stupidity never ceases to amaze me
"A" and another guy from New York planned it, but probably hadn't taken into account that someone might ask her birthday, and she probably hadn't even looked at the birthday of the person on the card and must have known that she was caught when they asked her.
When I was 20 I went to apply for a credit card with capital one. They denied me and told me I had an outstanding balance from 2008. In 2008, i was 15. I asked for more details, and some how, my identity was stolen and used to open 2 credit cards. I asked then why they would even issue a card to a 15 year old. When I was 14, I had gotten my state ID, and with there being proof that I was born in 1992, they could not deny that at the time the account was opened, I would've been 15. No one had any answers. It was taken off my credit, but to this day, I'm 32 years old and Capital One is the only bank that outright refuses to do any business with me. Didn't ruin ny life, but it did make things complicated. I have seen stories where people lost everything
You also have the right to have an attorney present that will be provided to you if you cannot afford it. This right you should always exercise, the police are not on your side. Ever.
I once worked at a place that processed payroll checks for various companies. One of our delivery guys stole a 20K check and tried cashing it at a convenience store in the middle of the night. They told him they didn't have enough cash available, but would call the manager to bring in the money. This mental giant calmly waited while they called the police who came and arrested him. 😂😂
This officer should be on a fast track to detective if he isn't already. Great job letting her explain the whole process while not pressuring her or cornering her into answers. The information gathered not only made for a solid case, but a further investigation into the rest of the operation. Bravo.
@@SirenaSpades I did not notice the stripes, but upon re-watching, the two chevron officer is the one interviewing the suspect. The three chevron (possibly detective) is making a phone call during that time. So my comment stands.
@@juslmart wasn’t necessarily cause the officer. She was very forth coming and not resisting, being difficult or with holding anything. Cooperating with law enforcement makes all the difference in the world. No one’s realizes this anymore.
This hits close to home for me. I went to a car dealership and filled out a credit app, the salesman that I was working with, took my social and date of birth, opened up three credit card accounts, and obtained my bank account information. He was caught at Navy Federal trying to buy a cashiers check, claiming he had lost his ID at a concert lol. Turns out, he and girlfriend had been defrauding other dealership customers by photocopying their credit applications. I’m glad to have worked it out with the credit card companies, and had the information removed from my credit report. People should really try and just get a freaking job and not steal peoples hard earned money!
When it comes to credit fraud that’s fucked up but this woman wasn’t doing that she was essentially trying to scam the bank and at that point who cares, if someone drains my account yeah it’s annoying but I know the bank has to give it back so I’m not losing shit besides half an hour on the phone and honestly the banks deserve to be scammed.
Committing check fraud is stupidity these days. I can’t even cash a $500 check that is clearly mine at a store nowadays due to extreme anti fraud measures.
What people don’t understand is that once you try to deposit a large check for $5,000 from another person under your name it’s immediately flagged as a red flag. Now if you deposit let’s say a friends check on your account for $150 under your name it might not get noticed by the banks security systems but if you somehow stole it from your friend you bet your ass his bank will alert your bank about a fraud.
It's because checks can be faked easier than anything else. That's why. Also, stores are not banks, therefore they're not FDIC insured against this crap. So, stores can make their own rules to protect themselves. Try a bank.
Had my identity stolen in Miami years ago in 2013 when thugs stuck a blade to my throat and snatched my purse. Lost all my money out of bank after they wiped out my account amongst other things.....
@@nathanvanderpool1175 in california all you gotta do is give them your license registration and insurance if asked thats it. You can legally deny any conversation at all. 8/10 times they’ll just get annoyed and let you go
@@nathanvanderpool1175 even if you are innocent ur better off not saying anything .. u can only give them somthing to use against you .. ur innocent until they can prove otherwise
Which is insured by the bank for fraud and would get every penny back. Not condoning fraud but I’d rather people steal from bank accounts where banks make billions and can afford to reimburse, then stab someone for a wallet or purse.
@@troymcallister8400 You just tried to correct someone's grammar and you can't even write a grammatically correct sentence? Oh, and a period goes at the end of your "sentence" fragment.
@@MeridithQueenOfSpades My message (the correction, which, btw, was not for you) wasn’t ever intended to exist as a full, grammatically sound sentence. It stands alone and serves its own purpose. Kind of like how “Go.” or “Move.” or “Sit.” can stand alone as a complete sentence, with the understood “You”, but I’m getting off-track: Their combination of “would” and “of” WERE intended to mean a particular part of their sentence (and were egregiously incorrect), leaving it open to appropriate correction/criticism, certainly much more than my dictation. Intention and purpose are key and valid points to observe in debates or situations such as this, so in short, think before you speak
What a kind dude. I wish more people saw this side of law enforcement too. As a former addict, this kind of compassionate treatment is a priceless kindness. He didn't mock or condescend to her.
Oh contraire! Her limbic system is beginning a free fall as we speak and watch this. Her heart rate is uncontrollable and it's only downhill from here.
I hate those identity thieves, my wife got a call early this year from a Florida Chase branch, someone is trying to cash out money from her bank account, and we live in Texas. At that moment, my wife received over 2000 text messages, I think this is a way for them to block us from viewing alert messages. Luckily, that branch manager called my wife and didn’t approve that transfer or cash out. But we have to create a new account, get new drivers license, etc… tons of headaches
@Misanthropic Toadstool Lol obviously it's not a real person sending one text per second or even fraction of a second. Sending 2000 texts is clearly well beyond normal means, and is automated. Which is also how these criminals steal identities. Some get lucky and you give them too much info for them to sleuth over your identity, but most are using scripts and other tools to sniff out data breaches for compromised accounts that either aren't aware they're compromised or don't know how to secure their info otherwise. Thus someone who runs junk to sniff out those trails can easily also push a text bot. I could set up a text bot right now, it's extremely basic with how lax most carriers are with clearly botted messages (and in fact Verizon/ATT/TMobile are currently being sued for how lax they've been on this). As for the data sniffers, they're everywhere if you know where to look. This lady doesn't seem savvy enough, she has to have someone else getting the actual data for her (maybe her son) but it isn't really that complex either. It's just being a piece of shit enough to dig until you find the real ones.
The officer was unprofessional. Holding up Chase for half an hour during business hours for all other customers because of a single scammer... They could have easily detained and carried out this probing in the back of the car. Instead they used a bank branch as their interrogation room.
When people like her get caught, and they spill their guts and tell the officers everything, i think they might be tired of lying to every single person in their lives. I think people like her need to do the time, but then there should be help on the other side, to help them get back to becoming a productive member of society. Just my 2 cents.
"Back to being productive members of society". I'd be willing to bet most of these people have no skills and have never been productive members of society. They need to be broken down and rebuilt much like basic training. However, it's not possible because people have civil rights and are not to be subjected to anything like that without consent. Not saying that civil rights are a bad thing, just that people might turn out better if there was a program like that they could opt into
I assumed people tend to want to spill everything to the officer so the officer will let them go. Better to keep quiet and hire a lawyer. In this case maybe not even that would help much though
@@Turntspazzin Hi I’m detec-ahem I mean I’m Mr. Jones. Can you tell me the full details of your adventurous tale? Names, dates, details please. Thank you.
@@Turntspazzin hopefully you decide to become a productive member of society.... But with a screen name like yours.... It's highly unlikely! Looking for Fast money turns into the same story every single time.
Props to her for checking her e-mail and paying attention! I worked as a personal banker and it was a Struggle to read all the nonsense they sent you every day We had fraudsters try to walk in every week, but usually super easy to spot
I got arrested 23 years ago for petty theft I was so desperate being a single mama n ex husband never help me with child support 😢 but man I learned my lesson walking out of the store with hand cuffs . Never again Thank you lord Jesus Christ for a second chance ! People live n learn I pray she gets out n becomes a better person . God help her 🙏
It’s been said a few times in here but this officer is good. His questioning was great. Clear, logical and sets up for follow up questions. Great job officer.
Also immediately realized that she was the fall guy, and used critical time to get information that would cover more ground. Props, also compassionate and realized that most small level crimes are committed by people in a state of desperation. thankful for officers with their heads on their shoulders, and not between their cheeks.
His questions were to incriminate herself. To make the case stick. She admitted her guilt. So no it wasn't good. Good cop and bad cop are the games they place to get evidence without working for it
So much respect for police questioning here, pertinent inquiries without stressing out subject. Non judgemental, objective info gathering with some empathy to boot. Good on ya mate.
Only bc she's not of color. I recently saw a middle aged African - American was thrown to the ground, placed in cuffs, and got a knee in his back with no warning/conversation at all.. Cashing his work check from his account.
Dude, that's just how they get information. They judge the heck out of you, and honestly rightfully so. This woman is a thief who didn't expect to get caught.
She could’ve gotten less sentencing if she just shut up the cop set her up hardd she started agreeing with him when that happens it’s over. they using all of that evidence against her in court 😂
I guess I just don't understand how this scam works. Like, do they already know someone has an account at that bank? Did they get an account # then make an ID with the account holders name? Is this part of data breaches ? How do they know there is enough money in the account to fullfill the request?!? So many questions!
@@LiL.Pixxie unfortunately there’s a black market where people can buy bank logins, debit card details, ssn pretty much any info that’s been leaked on the web through a data breach
I've written hundreds of Suspicious Activity Reports on check fraud for a bank. I only ever really saw the act in the form of data. It's really, really interesting to see LE actually interact with a fraudster in action.
we used to do mandatory SAR for transactions over certain $$ amounts when i worked customer service at a grocery store. typically these reports are filed (at least where i worked) for Western Union money transfers and printed money orders, as well as check cashing. of course we couldnt cash out thousands of $$ but if anyone was trying to send money over a certain amount it was mandatory SAR
And to think, the government/police are about to start putting homeless people in jail for being homeless, when the communities are being paid to keep them homeless!!!!
Yet ppl continue to put the same corrupt, multimillionaire politicians back in office and vilify those wanting to change the status quo in Washington DC. No wonder Politicians -who work for Wall Street and the banks- continue to do what they do. Wel keep electing the people protecting them.
There was no reason in the beginning to arrest her, so the police do not need to read her the Miranda rights. During the investigation time frame, no rights are required to be read. Only at the point when a law enforcement officer has determined that an actual crime has been committed, and a person has been determined to be the suspected offender, then reading the Miranda rights becomes necessary in order to arrest them for a specific legal offense. At that point, the suspected offender may choose to give information to law enforcement officers to complete their report and possibly identify other persons involved in the crime. It's important to remember that police officers can question ANYONE on any matter without reading Miranda rights UP UNTIL a CRIME is determined to have been committed. Once the crime is identified, and there is a person who is determined to be the suspect in the crime, then police will state to that suspect that they are under arrest for that specified crime and THEN their Miranda rights are read to them.
I don't think I've ever, ever been so nervous that I've forgotten my birthdate. I was partially incapacitated at the scene of a car accident and I was still able to recite my birthdate to the paramedics on scene, and I was way more psychologically disrupted than this woman.
I forget mine all the time, not so much the date but if someone asks how old I am, it takes me a while to calculate it. But that's all because I haven't celebrated my birthday since I was a young child.
As a bank teller I’d seen my fair share of fraud. Even though I do think some bank policies are crazy I hate people like this because they put us at risk of getting fired when we are the ones working hard to support our family.
Totally can relate. I lost both my teller positions to customer fraud , first at BofA and last working for Chase. But what pissed me off even more was that in both cases my manager signed off on the transaction which should have cleared me , and in both cases I was thrown under the bus just so they could save their arses. Not cool.
@@Darvineb86 omg! So sorry to hear that. I used to work for BoA after only 1 year, I quit. I wasn’t going to put up with the (pardon my french) pos assistant manager. I know for a fact they will 100% throw anybody else under the bus just to save themselves. Hopefully you moved on to better and bigger things 🤗
3 benefits of a body cam: 1) Protects police officers from false accusations. 2) Protects suspects/population from police abuse. 3) Provides us with satisfying videos of dumb criminals getting caught red handed.
I had no idea things like this were happening until I saw a video like this a few days ago. But honestly, it does not surprise me that drug dealers drive drug addicts around trying to fraud people‘s bank accounts.
My bestfriends Mother works in a bank. She said this scam is very common. They get these check books & ID's from stolen vehicles or houses. They'll get drug addicts "Mule" to do this dirty work.. If they find checks, They'll send "Mules" in, Use the account & routing numbers to get the information of the people who belong to that account, Most common way is to deposit like 5 bucks so they get a receipt back with the available balance on the account. I'm unsure of how all of it works but she said this scam is rarely successful & 99% of the time, It's normally black criminals who get the addicts "Mules" to this. When police arrive. The criminals in the car will just leave before the mule can point them out. They do this at car dealerships too.. Send Mules in to get people approved for a car with stolen information.. when the Mule leaves with the car, They get paid & the criminals takes the vehicle & does whatever with it.. Most cases, They scam more people. Find a way to print a fake title & sell it under cash only so it can't be traced back to the criminal. By time the victim of the scam finds out the vehicle is stolen, Its to late.
Same!! Like it’s surprising but not… they take advantage of drug addicts and will have them fraudulently cash a check for $30,000 and give them $100 since they’re probably too old to pimp out. Either way, it’s always an older white parson AND they put them new (cheap) clothes to make them look like “presentable older folk.” In addition to nabbing the scapegoats, I hope law enforcement is able to track down the scum bags that are actually making a racket off of this.
This cop can easily read her mail. He’s really good at having discernment of what to ask. He seems like a gentle and fair cop. I hope this lady’s life gets turned around.
6:18 nothing worse than knowing you just flushed yourself down the toilet and probably getting jail time.. and then hear "the free people" in the background joking and laughing about normal life stuff.
I am always curious if things would have played out any different had "Brenda" not decided to confess ALL her sins to the officers and just said "Lawyer" and nothing else. I'm not condoning her actions of course but just wondering what the case against her would have looked like without that full admissible confession she uttered.
@@sidda7085 doubt it.. With the fake Id's alone she would have sat in the cooler for months.. Her cooperation probably went all the way up the ladder to the judge. He/She most likely took that into consideration before sentencing and she's lrob Indigent therefore she'd be assigned a public defender and AT BEST would have accepted a plea deal to a lesser charge.
She would have gotten an attorney from the Public Defenders office. He/she would tell her to not cooperate and do their best to get a bond set so she could walk while legal process takes forever. The attorney would get whatever information the subject had to be used to negotiate the minimal possible charges and sentence. Both the States Attorney's and Public Defenders Office will negotiate a plea arrangement because neither officer wants exert the effort for a trial. IMO, the end result would not be too much different. Welcome to the Judicial System in 2022...... 😎👍✌
No I always ask myself why people sit there and dump everything to the cops. Where if they just shut up and only let their lawyer talk, things often can go a much different way. The cops will take everything she said, and then run down all the lists of charges they can hit her with. Where if she just talks to her lawyer, he can actively form a defense for her and have her hit with only 1 or 2 charges. None of this makes anything she did right. But seriously people. you have 0 obligation to talk to police for any reason. Even if it's to just "Help them". Most times innocent people have been charged because they have come forward with informaiton. They "Helped" their friend in some way, and then are charged with aiding and abiding. NEVER talk to cops with out a lawyer.
"When's your date of birth" is usually a pretty easy question to answer, even if you're flustered. I am guessing the red flags were quietly flying in that officer's head at that point.
She is so stupid. She could’ve so easily kept her mouth shut after being caught then struck a plea deal and gotten immunity(or a far lesser sentence) for snitching on the rest of them at a later date. Instead she did it for free and is gonna spend a very long time in prison
@@HypeHubUA-cam I was going to say, if she got 1 year and did 3 months I'd be surprised. It usually takes dozens of charges and multiple convictions before they get sent away.
Going to law school this video was so painful to watch she did everything you shouldn’t her defense attorney is gonna have a nightmare trying to defend her when she admits this shit on camera 😭😂😂
If you are actually committing a crime and get caught surely you should be honest. Maybe this could be a turning point in her life to start a new path making better decisions and live a crime free life and not live with the stress she has now. She could also get sober and clean if she really wanted to and live a great life. I really wish her the best.
@@heathercloete7450 "...surely you should be honest." As every lawyer will tell you, just dont talk to the police without your attourney present. Honest or not, you can *only* make it worse for you. You can *never* make it better.
@@heathercloete7450 yea buddy your fried the turning point now that she was honest and confessed everything is probably 2 decades in prison depending on the total amount her crew has stolen lol that’s not how the justice system works just because she says she will be better from now on doesn’t mean shit…
When I was in college I remember students with fake IDs were warned to memorize the date of their fake birthdays because the bouncers were known to ask since a lot of students wouldn't even bother to pay attention to this detail.
birthdays and home addresses lol -- every time a friend of mine had one i would grab it and ask and 100% of the time they would fail to know the home address, sometimes not even know the city haha
I can confirm lol it's always the address. I got one when I was 20, first time using it I went into a liquor store and the guy asked what my birthday was and I said it perfectly without pause but he asked what my address was next and let's just say I wasn't as smooth with that one and $150 quickly went down the drain.
@@brandonbellino8896 really the address should be easy to blow off. I had an ID for a while with my dad's address on it after I moved out and I couldn't remember that. Had a cop ask and I just told him I moved and didn't remember my last address.
@@brahtrumpwonbigly7309 NY Id’s have something on them that makes it hard to fake I guess or something along those lines, so mine was from a different state so couldn’t use any addresses I actually knew lol so it was set up for failure from the jump.
@@TheTrouserPuppetsOfficial There was nothing wrong about that info? It wouldn't have stopped her from getting into trouble but you never are obligated to give police information. Just stay quiet. It's your right and your silence cannot be held against you, but talking can incriminate you farther. It seems you're the one that needs education.
So glad they caught them! I watch these because folks have stolen from me. I am blown away at how brazen these cells of thieves are with other peoples identities! I support policing which handles them in this way. Great job
@@mikemhoon true...especially as banks spread that info and pics of the offender to other branches REAL QUICK now. This is a bad scam as you need to hit branches very from each other and you need new info each time. You can't use the same account, so new ID new check. its stupid really. but that's why the real scammer sent her in to do it.
As someone who has cashed fraudulent checks and been punished with many felonies I can tell you drugs definitely played a part in mine. In my right mind I would have never
“I was going to stop this weekend because I was afraid this was going to happen.” Oh no! Shame on those cops for not giving her until the weekend to stop her bad habit! Justice for Brenda!
I respect the honesty and her coming completely clean. Once the drug stuff was brought up, it was clear she felt a lot of shame. I hope she finds help, and gets clean. Totally not condoning her actions, she should be held fully accountable. But yeah that does hit differently.
How do you know she felt shame? Can you read minds? I say it looks clear that she's sad that she got caught because she knows she's going to jail instead of getting high. Don't feel sorry for junkies, sweetie. That's how they play you. That's a grown woman in that video, not some kid. She's had a lifetime of gaming.
Imagine someone showing up to your bank or any bank branch and telling the teller THAT'S you... but that person is using your identity. That's the most scariest part of all. This is someone identity... a real person.
And when the check eventually comes back as fraudulent, The lady that had her identity stolen gets a warrant out for her arrest. Then the next time she gets pulled over they say they have to take you in. Just horrible
@@josephfrechette9916 If the bank truly gets suckered, and falls for something like this, well, no KIDDING that they believe it was the original owner of the account that did it. The bank WILL realize their error once it is brought to light, and will have NO choice but to eat it and correct their mistake. That's why there's cameras, audio recordings, fingerprints on papers, and signatures ledt on documents. There's PLENTY of evidence to review, and that will tell the truth, once the original account holder realizes that they are missing a large chunk of money. Part of being vigilant is also on the behalf of the account holder, to monitor their balance statements that are sent to them once a month, look for errors, and report any immediately to the bank.
Credit to the officer, yes he walked her down the road of conviction after she agreed to talk to him after he gave her Miranda rights warning that she waived. He was respectful and compassionate in the manner in which he dealt with her. Yes everything she said led/will lead to her eventual conviction, but he never talked down to her and treated her like a human being. I think she was in need of getting caught to stop running from the life she was living, and only through the experience and care of this officer, they helped each other.
Will you go to heaven when you die? Have you lied, stolen, used God’s name in vain, or lusted (which Jesus said was adultery, Mt. 5:28)? If so, God sees you a liar, Thief, blasphemer, and adulterer at heart. If you die in your sins, you will end up in a terrible placed called hell. But there’s good news Though we broke God’s law, Jesus paid the fine by dying on the cross: God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have everlasting life.(Jn 3:16) then Jesus rose from the dead and was seen by others (it’s not a fairytale). He fulfilled all the prophecy of the promised savior. Please repent, today and Trust Jesus, and God will forgive you and grant you gift of eternal life. (Eph 2:8,9). Then to show your gratitude, read the Bible daily and obey it ❤️ ua-cam.com/video/ChWiZ3iXWwM/v-deo.html
Uh... Except for the whole "I assume you do this because youre a drug addict" prejudice he approached her with. There was nothing remotely respectful about that. He did his job of convincing her to fuck her life up even more, Im not sure how that can be seen as kind either.
I used to be a security guard in a back a few years ago and we had a similar experience. While the customer was with the employee, the manager told me that the police are on their way, and she told me to take the plate number on the car parked in front with the driver. As soon as the cops arrived, the car left, but i had the plate number that I gave the cops after they arrested his accomplis inside the bank
I wish I was a cop. I'd be so tempted to say "You're Sarah Tyler?! Omg, we've been looking for you on that homicide case for over a year! I'm so getting promoted for this!"
"Time served" does not mean "no time in jail". It means she had already spent so much time in jail that her sentence was completed by the time the trial finished.
@@armadilllo it absolutely is. If the judge and everyone involved in her case agreed to it then yes it's enough. Do the crime you do the time. No more! I am all for prosecuting criminals but only for the things you have evidence for and give them the right amount of time that fits what you charge them with.
If these are even remotely elaborate schemes, A and Cheese are not at the top of the pyramid. They are just a step up from Brenda. Nobody knows the names and locations of the people at the top running this show. That way they can't get pinched. There are multiple levels of pawns that will take the rap.
Many times they really don't tho. When u know you are dealing with a druggie that might get caught and talk, why would u tell them anything other than A? I've known a lot of shady ppl that go by street names. And it works. When the crackhead gets caught with the crack u just sold him, so u want him to be able to say thats Robert Johnson and know where u live? No u go by Meechie and all they know about u is they met u thru friend of friend or outside liquor store and have the number to a prepaid phone u carry. Cops could prob figure it out if they REALLY want to, like if its murder or something big like this, but many times they won't even follow up on lil stuff.
Lying, and "living the life" goes hand and hand with drug addiction. Once your daily focus is on getting your next "fix," anything goes and everyone else/everything else is secondary, including your own self esteem. So, being arrested was likely the best thing to happen to Brenda that day. She gets mandatory "supervision," time to sober up, time to think about her life, and hope-fully... the therapy she obviously needs.
I did fifteen days in a concrete room with no clothes, no bed, no toilet paper... knocked an opiate addiction right out of me and I've never looked back.
Talking to the police is the only sure fire way of guaranteeing a conviction for yourself. I say this as someone who works as a non-sworn LE employee, they make it easy.
I was a jury foreman on a very similar case. She is going to walk on the attempted fraud charge. The legal basis is she didn’t complete the transaction because of the police stepping in and she will argue that she could have stopped at any point until the cash transfer was completed so she didn’t really do anything. Sorry kids, the law is on her side. Police should have waited until it was done and she stepped outside the bank.
She might do the old technicality walk on Florida state bank fraud charges but still have conspiracy to defraud and attempt to defraud an FDIC member bank federal charges to face with her black accomplice. Personally, I’m sorry a death sentence isn’t on the table, or at least life without parole. Enough of these shitnozzles causing grief and destruction of peoples’ lives and life savings.
Not condoning what she did. But just remember, folks, when people like you and me (and her) do something like this, we go to jail for 50 years. But when Congress, the banks, Wall Street and bureaucratic authoritarians do it, it's called good fiscal policy.
If you're not a criminal than you wouldn't do it in the first place.
@@alexn3574 you must be slow
Pretty sure check fraud is 3 years max & most people usually get less if they have no previous record. 😂 lol 50 years
@@bvndgxdchxpo8331
Lmao a bit hyperbolic. But still!
You sound poor
Tell me you're guilty without telling me you're guilty. Starts crying when asked birthday
😆...totally..
Some women get teary eyed when stating birth year….me having 4 sister have confirmed lol
Exactly!💯💯
It was a very traumatic day for her. All the screaming, blood, her head being compressed and the getting slapped by a man in a mask.
I often forget my age, but not my actual birthdate.
As a victim of identity theft, I have zero tolerance or sympathy for these thieves.
Agree 100%. Turns your whole life upside down.
Wait until you learn about how the income tax works.
I’m so sorry! Getting my identity stolen is one of my biggest fears 😢
Identity theft is brutal, costs innocent people millions.
Bury these leeches.
yes! if it's ever happened to you, it is brutal.
They’ll probably get probation
Costs credit scores, home and car loans etc.
You know you’ve made a wrong turn in life when you have people with the names of A and Cheese driving you to a bank to try to scam money from them.
2 black males named A and Cheese is never a good thing. It was obvious actually considering the stupidity of this crime and how she would have never gotten away with it. Of course she’s with 2 black males. Probably drug dealers who offered her drugs if she attempted this stupid scam
🤣🤣😂😁🤦♂️
Lmao!!
That's the problem, she doesn't care. Shes crying because she got caught. She's just as low as they are, its what they do instead of getting real jobs like the rest of us.
@@ninjarider84 amen!! She's crying because she got caught and she wants sympathy. She doesn't care.
How dare this lady steal American dollars! Only the American government is allowed to do that! 😡
Haha
Wasnt the first subway opened in 1965
@@Gavin-hh4dn that’s what “they” want you to think.
Umm but she was stealing from individual's personal account. They had a copy of that person's ID and she looked somewhat passable as the actual individual (especially with the mask for "covid") so she would try and withdraw the money using their account. I'm not sure what you're talking about, banks and financial institutions deal with people's personal finances, not government funds. So basically, what I am referring to if you still are unable to comprehend is that she was not stealing from the government but was stealing from other people such as your own mother maybe for example.
Wrong. Illegal aliens coming over the border also get a free pass to steal our money.
Kudos to her for just telling the truth right away and making this video 10 minutes instead of 2 hours
🤣🤣🤣
Nah cuz then JCS would cover it
Let's just keep it to a singular kudo. She still committed fraud for $30k.
@@ExSpoonmanwell she attempted to 😂
Exactly it will help her in court too. Always give the police way more information than they need. The best way to beat a case. Trust me. I've gotten off everytime when admitting everything right on camera.
Had my identity stolen before, put her under the jail! She could’ve ruined someone’s life
You did right.
I will never get over how many people get told, "hey, we could give you a free lawyer to consult with before we interrogate you," and just ignore it.
Because they really think they are helping their case. They don't understand is that there is nothing they can say to the cops that will help their case. The cops are not gonna feel sorry for you because you did it for your kids.
I think most guilty people know they are pretty much caught by the time the are the focus of a police investigation and being read their Miranda rights. My guess is that they figure:
1. 100% chance I will be charged and likely found guilty if I just ask for a lawyer, and the arrest-trial process starts
2. 1-5% chance I can talk my way out of this, or get lesser charges by cooperating or showing remorse, so 95% chance I am caught
And so they take Option 2.
@@Itried20takennames The irony is that it's the opposite. A lot of times the police know but lack the evidence to convict and rely heavily on things the accused themselves said. And asking for a lawyer can't be used as evidence of wrong doing.
@@Itried20takennames Well, if that's how they think, it's totally illogical. Why would there be a 100% chance you'd be charged and found guilty if you ask for a lawyer? The cops have nothing to do with whether you're charged - that's the court system, the district attorney. But if you're at the point where you're being read your Miranda rights, the "arrest-trial process" has already begun. You're not going to "talk your way out of this" once you're in an interrogation room. The cops have one goal: to gather evidence against you, which they will pass on to the DA, who will decide whether or not to charge you with a crime. If you have a lawyer with you, the lawyer will help protect you against incriminating yourself. If you have to negotiate a plea bargain, a lawyer will help you get the optimal one for you. The idea that asking for a lawyer will make you look guilty, so it's better for you if you don't have one, is completely moronic.
never talk to the police
Crazy with the amount of technology and cameras today that people will really try to walk into a bank with a 30k check and cash it. The level of stupidity never ceases to amaze me
And the fact that anything over 10k is reported to the IRS... Amounts over is always flagged as suspicious through banks.
@@HiddenMemorina not necessarily suspicious, but in need of further explanation & investigation.
Straight stupid lol
This woman is in her fifties and, likely due to her addict lifestyle, is totally unaware of current technology. Clueless - a perfect mule.
Just like scam calls about a car warranty or internet deal ,,they just have to get 1 person to make money.
Apparently when she was planning this, the importance of knowing her birth date didn't cross her mind.
Def wasn't planned at all.
Def wasn't planned at all.
There isn't much planning, according to her "A" gives her a fake ID and she just picks up scraps to get her opioids
"A" and another guy from New York planned it, but probably hadn't taken into account that someone might ask her birthday, and she probably hadn't even looked at the birthday of the person on the card and must have known that she was caught when they asked her.
Right? I had a coworker’s ID when I was 20 to get into the bars and I knew her birth day address everything on that ID by heart lol
Fraud is no joke. It ruins people's lives......
Agreed. I have zero sympathy for these criminals.
When I was 20 I went to apply for a credit card with capital one. They denied me and told me I had an outstanding balance from 2008. In 2008, i was 15. I asked for more details, and some how, my identity was stolen and used to open 2 credit cards. I asked then why they would even issue a card to a 15 year old. When I was 14, I had gotten my state ID, and with there being proof that I was born in 1992, they could not deny that at the time the account was opened, I would've been 15. No one had any answers. It was taken off my credit, but to this day, I'm 32 years old and Capital One is the only bank that outright refuses to do any business with me.
Didn't ruin ny life, but it did make things complicated. I have seen stories where people lost everything
Well than you shouldn't be doing it 💯
@@delilahlozano1882then*
I understand a couple of people have committed suicide. F these people!
LAWYER. Holy Jesus. She's spilling her whole operation without even getting arrested.
She spilled it after she was read her rights. Fully admissible.
@@ChinchillaisGod She's fully stupid for spilling everything.
Yep. Stupidity man. People think it helps them. Just gives the DA a open and shut case.
She was read her rights before saying anything.
🤣🤣
Remember kids YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO REMAIN SILENT this lady is literally spilling it
Lol right
You also have the right to have an attorney present that will be provided to you if you cannot afford it. This right you should always exercise, the police are not on your side. Ever.
@@eladmir wish they were when I was committing fraud too, f'd up world we're living in
US citizens must also identify themselves when asked for identification by a police officer. Of course, when you have a fake ID, well...
@@eladmir , it's not their job to be on your side. Their job is investigate crime and make arrests. She has committed fraud. End of story.
Forget bank fraud, your life has taken a seriously wrong turn when u find yourself driving around with 2 guys named ‘A’ and ‘Cheese’
What two guys bud, she is probably driving around in a rental or one of her relatives. She looks healthy to be a meth or skeet head.
😂😂😂😂😂😂
almost word for word lol
Hell yeah!!!!
I once worked at a place that processed payroll checks for various companies. One of our delivery guys stole a 20K check and tried cashing it at a convenience store in the middle of the night. They told him they didn't have enough cash available, but would call the manager to bring in the money. This mental giant calmly waited while they called the police who came and arrested him. 😂😂
dudes IQ so high I can't even begin to understand
Mental Giant!!!! 😂😅😂😅😂😅 I'm stealing that! Haha
wow....he had a IQ so high only a dog could hear it
😂😂😂
This is freaking gold😅😅
Great story!!!😂
This officer should be on a fast track to detective if he isn't already. Great job letting her explain the whole process while not pressuring her or cornering her into answers. The information gathered not only made for a solid case, but a further investigation into the rest of the operation. Bravo.
Yes very good police work from this officer.
I find it a bit odd that he didnt shoot her.
thought that was policy
I guess you didn't see the stripes when he walked up.
@@SirenaSpades I did not notice the stripes, but upon re-watching, the two chevron officer is the one interviewing the suspect. The three chevron (possibly detective) is making a phone call during that time. So my comment stands.
@@juslmart wasn’t necessarily cause the officer. She was very forth coming and not resisting, being difficult or with holding anything. Cooperating with law enforcement makes all the difference in the world. No one’s realizes this anymore.
The officer asking the question should be a detective he was on top of it during the interaction. Great questioning. 👍🏼
Wow 2k likes. Thanks everyone!
@TRUMP LOST GET OVER IT! I didn't know that but thank you.
True
@TRUMP LOST GET OVER IT! you should never answer questions, especially from the police.
@@harrytoms90 Everyone wants to bash the police but they are the first one you call when something goes wrong..
Shut your mouth and don't answer questions. She just talked herself into a conviction on camera. Unless they offer deal for her to testify.
All the people feeling sorry for her is CRAZY. She was trying to steal $30,000 from someone. Crazy!!!
Yeah but banks are insured for fraud and give any money stolen back
Fuck it I would too
Yeah people are trash
@@Cpt.Toasty you can’t seriously think that’s a legitimate reason to steal??! That’s ludicrous and simple minded
It’s funny how stealing is so bad yet the govt , and corporations steal from us everyday, even the banks ! Times are tough. People are desperate..
I know whenever someone asks me my birthday. I think about it for two minutes and then start to sob
Same!
Happens a lot after 50.
Youre not a pathetic pos
@@rcrawford42stop projecting gramps
@@rcrawford42 You beat me to it!
This hits close to home for me. I went to a car dealership and filled out a credit app, the salesman that I was working with, took my social and date of birth, opened up three credit card accounts, and obtained my bank account information. He was caught at Navy Federal trying to buy a cashiers check, claiming he had lost his ID at a concert lol. Turns out, he and girlfriend had been defrauding other dealership customers by photocopying their credit applications. I’m glad to have worked it out with the credit card companies, and had the information removed from my credit report.
People should really try and just get a freaking job and not steal peoples hard earned money!
He’d be dead if that was me.
Dude as a car salesman that is disgusting. Sorry that happened to you.
When it comes to credit fraud that’s fucked up but this woman wasn’t doing that she was essentially trying to scam the bank and at that point who cares, if someone drains my account yeah it’s annoying but I know the bank has to give it back so I’m not losing shit besides half an hour on the phone and honestly the banks deserve to be scammed.
It’s Satans minions
@Denise Karpuszka she’ll never be arrested because the cops don’t care about theft anymore let alone pedophiles roaming free.
If a bank teller/worker ever tells you to 'wait here please' you should just leave lol.
Word!!!!
Why? You guilty of something?
Right? Imma bounce
Tanner knows his 💩
As if that would work. They've already got you on camera, running is just going to piss the cops off.
Committing check fraud is stupidity these days. I can’t even cash a $500 check that is clearly mine at a store nowadays due to extreme anti fraud measures.
It's so irritating. Honest people have to jump through hoops because of clowns like this being snakes.
Exactly
What people don’t understand is that once you try to deposit a large check for $5,000 from another person under your name it’s immediately flagged as a red flag. Now if you deposit let’s say a friends check on your account for $150 under your name it might not get noticed by the banks security systems but if you somehow stole it from your friend you bet your ass his bank will alert your bank about a fraud.
It's because checks can be faked easier than anything else. That's why. Also, stores are not banks, therefore they're not FDIC insured against this crap. So, stores can make their own rules to protect themselves. Try a bank.
Yea nah, their are still ways lol
I've been victim of people like her who stole my identity and tried to open up bank accounts under my name
Had my identity stolen in Miami years ago in 2013 when thugs stuck a blade to my throat and snatched my purse. Lost all my money out of bank after they wiped out my account amongst other things.....
@@theresacoringgray6885 sorry it happened to you as well
Freeze your credit reports.
Good, bad or indifferent, never talk to the police without a lawyer.
Period
What if they pull you over lol
@@nathanvanderpool1175 Say as little as possible obviously...
Omerta
@@nathanvanderpool1175 in california all you gotta do is give them your license registration and insurance if asked thats it. You can legally deny any conversation at all. 8/10 times they’ll just get annoyed and let you go
@@nathanvanderpool1175 even if you are innocent ur better off not saying anything .. u can only give them somthing to use against you .. ur innocent until they can prove otherwise
He got her with the old what’s your birthday tactic 😂😂😂😂
She was speechless, which made it hilarious.
Gets them every time😂
Oy! When's your birthday?
"22nd of February."
What year?
"Every year!"
Get out!
@@Pills161good reference
Damn, she gave up all that information without even making a deal for it.
@@SunnyBoy88844 obviously 🙄
@@SunnyBoy88844 literally everyone knows this but most people will still talk because they panic
@@Yo-po8jt They think they’ll walk away scot free if they blame someone else.
Looking 65 and not knowing your own birthday is a heavy red flag!
This woman is not to be felt sorry for.....The person they were stealing from had no idea how close they were to losing 30,000 grand
Which is insured by the bank for fraud and would get every penny back. Not condoning fraud but I’d rather people steal from bank accounts where banks make billions and can afford to reimburse, then stab someone for a wallet or purse.
They would of got it back eventually like all cases of fraud. But it would of taken ages.
@@johnscott4493*HAVE…would HAVE and would HAVE
@@troymcallister8400 You just tried to correct someone's grammar and you can't even write a grammatically correct sentence? Oh, and a period goes at the end of your "sentence" fragment.
@@MeridithQueenOfSpades My message (the correction, which, btw, was not for you) wasn’t ever intended to exist as a full, grammatically sound sentence. It stands alone and serves its own purpose. Kind of like how “Go.” or “Move.” or “Sit.” can stand alone as a complete sentence, with the understood “You”, but I’m getting off-track: Their combination of “would” and “of” WERE intended to mean a particular part of their sentence (and were egregiously incorrect), leaving it open to appropriate correction/criticism, certainly much more than my dictation. Intention and purpose are key and valid points to observe in debates or situations such as this, so in short, think before you speak
What a kind dude. I wish more people saw this side of law enforcement too. As a former addict, this kind of compassionate treatment is a priceless kindness. He didn't mock or condescend to her.
Plenty of people like her see this side of law enforcement. If only people unlike her were treated the same.
@@NaptownClassic I agree!!
Congrats on beating addiction!! That takes a ton of strength and integrity.
🥳 congratulations you made the world a better place
He gathered information in a nice way that would be used against her. LOL…
As soon as the police approached her she knew that the jig was up and her heart literally stopped beating!
WoW,thank you for all the likes everybody!
Oh contraire! Her limbic system is beginning a free fall as we speak and watch this. Her heart rate is uncontrollable and it's only downhill from here.
LMAOOOOOO
Hahaha damn
Her heart ‘Literally’ stopped beating huh
JIG
Anyone who has been a victim I feel for you and these scumbags need to go to jail for years.
I hate those identity thieves, my wife got a call early this year from a Florida Chase branch, someone is trying to cash out money from her bank account, and we live in Texas. At that moment, my wife received over 2000 text messages, I think this is a way for them to block us from viewing alert messages. Luckily, that branch manager called my wife and didn’t approve that transfer or cash out. But we have to create a new account, get new drivers license, etc… tons of headaches
@Misanthropic Toadstool yes, the messages kept coming in. I may said it unclear, not same time, but one by one constantly.
@Misanthropic Toadstool Lol obviously it's not a real person sending one text per second or even fraction of a second. Sending 2000 texts is clearly well beyond normal means, and is automated. Which is also how these criminals steal identities. Some get lucky and you give them too much info for them to sleuth over your identity, but most are using scripts and other tools to sniff out data breaches for compromised accounts that either aren't aware they're compromised or don't know how to secure their info otherwise. Thus someone who runs junk to sniff out those trails can easily also push a text bot. I could set up a text bot right now, it's extremely basic with how lax most carriers are with clearly botted messages (and in fact Verizon/ATT/TMobile are currently being sued for how lax they've been on this). As for the data sniffers, they're everywhere if you know where to look. This lady doesn't seem savvy enough, she has to have someone else getting the actual data for her (maybe her son) but it isn't really that complex either. It's just being a piece of shit enough to dig until you find the real ones.
How did this even happen? Did ur social security get leaked or something like that
@@cabbagememes2852 my wife is one of the Asian victims in Texas whose DL identities were stolen.
@@liwang9469 ohh I see, I hope you guys were able to get a solution and change all your accounts and added more security on them
“Are you upset because I ask you your date of birth ?” 😂
She’s upset because she fixing to have to give favors on D-block whenever she wants a bag of chips.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
😂😂
😂😂😂😂😂
She was a fountain of knowledge. Hats off to the officer who managed to get so much intel out of her like that.
Usually those as gullible and simple minded as her with such a low IQ on top of it usually tend to be sooner or later rather intentional or not 😂
He was so patient with her! I would have been like "YOU KNOW DANG WELL THATS NOT YOUR ID YOU B****!" lol
okay fed supporter
Dude is a professional who seems to have seen years of low level dirtbag nonsense. He feeds her questions because he knows the answers.
The officer was unprofessional. Holding up Chase for half an hour during business hours for all other customers because of a single scammer... They could have easily detained and carried out this probing in the back of the car. Instead they used a bank branch as their interrogation room.
I hope he’s a detective now because he asked really good questions.
When people like her get caught, and they spill their guts and tell the officers everything, i think they might be tired of lying to every single person in their lives. I think people like her need to do the time, but then there should be help on the other side, to help them get back to becoming a productive member of society. Just my 2 cents.
Liars brain matter is different, there are studies on this. Liars cannot change.
"Back to being productive members of society". I'd be willing to bet most of these people have no skills and have never been productive members of society. They need to be broken down and rebuilt much like basic training. However, it's not possible because people have civil rights and are not to be subjected to anything like that without consent. Not saying that civil rights are a bad thing, just that people might turn out better if there was a program like that they could opt into
Sang like a bird🤦♂️
@@erict3728 It could be voluntary, with oversight to make sure there is no abuse happening.
I assumed people tend to want to spill everything to the officer so the officer will let them go. Better to keep quiet and hire a lawyer. In this case maybe not even that would help much though
Organized crime . One guy prints the documents , other guy drives them around , and this lady does the transaction .
Rip I’m on an 85k bond for that & on 24/7 house arrest
@@Turntspazzin yup it’s that simple to. It don’t have to be a mafia or gang thing
And someone else gets the account info
@@Turntspazzin Hi I’m detec-ahem I mean I’m Mr. Jones. Can you tell me the full details of your adventurous tale? Names, dates, details please. Thank you.
@@Turntspazzin hopefully you decide to become a productive member of society.... But with a screen name like yours.... It's highly unlikely! Looking for Fast money turns into the same story every single time.
Props to her for checking her e-mail and paying attention! I worked as a personal banker and it was a Struggle to read all the nonsense they sent you every day
We had fraudsters try to walk in every week, but usually super easy to spot
How were they easy to spot?
@@jarrod1687 haha nice try man👍🏼
Promotion time
Thank you for your part in spotting Frauds. Agree, anything above $5 a WD or Deposit I get alerts from all my accts
I get alerts for anything over/under $0.00.
I got arrested 23 years ago for petty theft I was so desperate being a single mama n ex husband never help me with child support 😢 but man I learned my lesson walking out of the store with hand cuffs . Never again Thank you lord Jesus Christ for a second chance ! People live n learn I pray she gets out n becomes a better person . God help her 🙏
God bless you❤
@@Sunkissedmiami Thank you May the lord Jesus Christ our Father also bless you n your family 🙏🥰
she needs go prison if you break law need go jail
@@johnthomas6255 oh ya I agree n this is huge !!!! She n he will definitely face prison n fraud
Amen!
When you struggle to remember your date of birth we all know you’re guilty.
Facts
Then you'd be surprised
I sometimes, somehow say the wrong day of the month by 4 days off, it rolls of the tongue better that way. But I at least know my month and year 😅
@@hicknopunk for me its my own last name that i keep misspelling. At least once a month i just "pause" mentally and double check on my own ID .
the correct answer was: its in my ID
It’s been said a few times in here but this officer is good. His questioning was great. Clear, logical and sets up for follow up questions. Great job officer.
Also immediately realized that she was the fall guy, and used critical time to get information that would cover more ground.
Props, also compassionate and realized that most small level crimes are committed by people in a state of desperation.
thankful for officers with their heads on their shoulders, and not between their cheeks.
None if wich holds up in court, since his questions were all leading, but yeah.
His questions were to incriminate herself. To make the case stick. She admitted her guilt. So no it wasn't good. Good cop and bad cop are the games they place to get evidence without working for it
Oh yeah good cop for being nice that’s why we’re where we’re at because of people like you the way you think!
@@brocklesner5306 All of it will hold up in court.
So much respect for police questioning here, pertinent inquiries without stressing out subject. Non judgemental, objective info gathering with some empathy to boot. Good on ya mate.
Only bc she's not of color. I recently saw a middle aged African - American was thrown to the ground, placed in cuffs, and got a knee in his back with no warning/conversation at all.. Cashing his work check from his account.
Dude, that's just how they get information. They judge the heck out of you, and honestly rightfully so. This woman is a thief who didn't expect to get caught.
Are you… Australian.
It's solely to get the person to incriminate themselves. It's a play.
She could’ve gotten less sentencing if she just shut up the cop set her up hardd she started agreeing with him when that happens it’s over. they using all of that evidence against her in court 😂
I have to say I admire her honesty. Especially with her struggling with drugs. I hope she gets help and gets clean, lives a long happy life.
Would you be saying the same thing if she stole 30k from you?
@@Master-xl9mswe all know certain races and genders are granted sympathy.
Somebody was dangerously close to losing $30,000. Thankfully, some people are just not cut out for crime. Do not feel sorry for these people.
I guess I just don't understand how this scam works. Like, do they already know someone has an account at that bank? Did they get an account # then make an ID with the account holders name? Is this part of data breaches ? How do they know there is enough money in the account to fullfill the request?!? So many questions!
@@LiL.Pixxie unfortunately there’s a black market where people can buy bank logins, debit card details, ssn pretty much any info that’s been leaked on the web through a data breach
Most likely stolen info they bought off the dark web
I've written hundreds of Suspicious Activity Reports on check fraud for a bank. I only ever really saw the act in the form of data. It's really, really interesting to see LE actually interact with a fraudster in action.
what job did you have where you had to write so many?!
What was your job?
@@theneatomisquito5046 I was a compliance analyst.
@@Wasserkaktus what dose that mean
we used to do mandatory SAR for transactions over certain $$ amounts when i worked customer service at a grocery store. typically these reports are filed (at least where i worked) for Western Union money transfers and printed money orders, as well as check cashing. of course we couldnt cash out thousands of $$ but if anyone was trying to send money over a certain amount it was mandatory SAR
I wish our banks and government entities were held to the same standards and punishments!
Me, too. I also wish we were acquainted. I love your eyes.
And to think, the government/police are about to start putting homeless people in jail for being homeless, when the communities are being paid to keep them homeless!!!!
Yet ppl continue to put the same corrupt, multimillionaire politicians back in office and vilify those wanting to change the status quo in Washington DC. No wonder Politicians -who work for Wall Street and the banks- continue to do what they do. Wel keep electing the people protecting them.
You wouldn’t believe how often this happens. I work for a bank and this doesn’t surprise me in the slightest.
what happenes if this people are not caught?like if she wasnt caught bank would be 30k short
@@SunnyGoga believe it or not, banks are swindled all the time. They just don’t advertise it.
J.P. Morgan has worked with criminal organizations. It’s a joke they are a bank.
This has been happening since checks were invented.
Wow
She gave up everybody! 🤦🏾 She knew exactly what she was doing trying to cash a fake $30,000 Check.
You have the right to remain silent, unless you just want to confess everything
There was no reason in the beginning to arrest her, so the police do not need to read her the Miranda rights. During the investigation time frame, no rights are required to be read. Only at the point when a law enforcement officer has determined that an actual crime has been committed, and a person has been determined to be the suspected offender, then reading the Miranda rights becomes necessary in order to arrest them for a specific legal offense. At that point, the suspected offender may choose to give information to law enforcement officers to complete their report and possibly identify other persons involved in the crime. It's important to remember that police officers can question ANYONE on any matter without reading Miranda rights UP UNTIL a CRIME is determined to have been committed. Once the crime is identified, and there is a person who is determined to be the suspect in the crime, then police will state to that suspect that they are under arrest for that specified crime and THEN their Miranda rights are read to them.
Let the truth come out.She seems to have a few morals.
@@savvycat101She has a previous warrant. Not from this.
Excellent interaction by the very professional officer. We need more like him
I don't think I've ever, ever been so nervous that I've forgotten my birthdate. I was partially incapacitated at the scene of a car accident and I was still able to recite my birthdate to the paramedics on scene, and I was way more psychologically disrupted than this woman.
happened to me on a very bad acid trip
It wasn’t her own birthday she couldn’t remember, it’s the person she was posing as
@NewWesternFront Glad you're not doing drugs anymore.
I forget mine all the time, not so much the date but if someone asks how old I am, it takes me a while to calculate it. But that's all because I haven't celebrated my birthday since I was a young child.
The only thing I forget is age. I don't celebrate my birthdays so that's probably why 🤣
Dude her ride dipped as soon as they seen the police walk into the bank 🥴😆😆
As a bank teller I’d seen my fair share of fraud. Even though I do think some bank policies are crazy I hate people like this because they put us at risk of getting fired when we are the ones working hard to support our family.
Totally can relate. I lost both my teller positions to customer fraud , first at BofA and last working for Chase. But what pissed me off even more was that in both cases my manager signed off on the transaction which should have cleared me , and in both cases I was thrown under the bus just so they could save their arses. Not cool.
@Repent and believe in Jesus Christ ok thanks i will hug jesus
Why didn't you just refuse the check rather than call the police and making it even worse? Now your name is also on that report
@@Darvineb86 omg! So sorry to hear that. I used to work for BoA after only 1 year,
I quit. I wasn’t going to put up with the (pardon my french) pos assistant manager. I know for a fact they will 100% throw anybody else under the bus just to save themselves. Hopefully you moved on to better and bigger things 🤗
Blame the fucking employer lmao 😂 unless you actually were being careless with peoples money, then well deserved
And this is the problem!!!! They get away with it! They should force her to spend 2 to 5 years in rehab
I love when someone says “please don’t do this” when they commit a crime/get caught.
“What ma’am? Don’t do this? Oh ok then. You’re free to go.”
😂
😂
Like let me open the door for yah on your way out lol
How do boots taste, soyboy?
Best comment award😂😂😂
This cop's interrogation technique was on point. Very direct and simply knew what was going on. I wouldn't be surprised if he makes it to detective.
3 benefits of a body cam:
1) Protects police officers from false accusations.
2) Protects suspects/population from police abuse.
3) Provides us with satisfying videos of dumb criminals getting caught red handed.
I had no idea things like this were happening until I saw a video like this a few days ago. But honestly, it does not surprise me that drug dealers drive drug addicts around trying to fraud people‘s bank accounts.
My bestfriends Mother works in a bank. She said this scam is very common. They get these check books & ID's from stolen vehicles or houses. They'll get drug addicts "Mule" to do this dirty work..
If they find checks, They'll send "Mules" in, Use the account & routing numbers to get the information of the people who belong to that account, Most common way is to deposit like 5 bucks so they get a receipt back with the available balance on the account. I'm unsure of how all of it works but she said this scam is rarely successful & 99% of the time, It's normally black criminals who get the addicts "Mules" to this. When police arrive. The criminals in the car will just leave before the mule can point them out. They do this at car dealerships too..
Send Mules in to get people approved for a car with stolen information.. when the Mule leaves with the car, They get paid & the criminals takes the vehicle & does whatever with it..
Most cases, They scam more people. Find a way to print a fake title & sell it under cash only so it can't be traced back to the criminal. By time the victim of the scam finds out the vehicle is stolen, Its to late.
Try ? They are everyday .. it’s weird
Same!! Like it’s surprising but not… they take advantage of drug addicts and will have them fraudulently cash a check for $30,000 and give them $100 since they’re probably too old to pimp out. Either way, it’s always an older white parson AND they put them new (cheap) clothes to make them look like “presentable older folk.” In addition to nabbing the scapegoats, I hope law enforcement is able to track down the scum bags that are actually making a racket off of this.
This cop can easily read her mail. He’s really good at having discernment of what to ask. He seems like a gentle and fair cop. I hope this lady’s life gets turned around.
6:18 nothing worse than knowing you just flushed yourself down the toilet and probably getting jail time.. and then hear "the free people" in the background joking and laughing about normal life stuff.
Life is so much easier when not committing fraud of some kind.
@@brahtrumpwonbigly7309 pff no doubt!! Funny how that works
😂😂😂🤝
"I wish I was them right now"
I am always curious if things would have played out any different had "Brenda" not decided to confess ALL her sins to the officers and just said "Lawyer" and nothing else. I'm not condoning her actions of course but just wondering what the case against her would have looked like without that full admissible confession she uttered.
It would have looked like her being a free woman
@@sidda7085 doubt it.. With the fake Id's alone she would have sat in the cooler for months.. Her cooperation probably went all the way up the ladder to the judge. He/She most likely took that into consideration before sentencing and she's lrob Indigent therefore she'd be assigned a public defender and AT BEST would have accepted a plea deal to a lesser charge.
She would have gotten an attorney from the Public Defenders office. He/she would tell her to not cooperate and do their best to get a bond set so she could walk while legal process takes forever. The attorney would get whatever information the subject had to be used to negotiate the minimal possible charges and sentence. Both the States Attorney's and Public Defenders Office will negotiate a plea arrangement because neither officer wants exert the effort for a trial. IMO, the end result would not be too much different. Welcome to the Judicial System in 2022...... 😎👍✌
She should have kept quiet and gotten a lawyer. Everything she told them could have been used by her attorney for leniency.
No I always ask myself why people sit there and dump everything to the cops. Where if they just shut up and only let their lawyer talk, things often can go a much different way. The cops will take everything she said, and then run down all the lists of charges they can hit her with. Where if she just talks to her lawyer, he can actively form a defense for her and have her hit with only 1 or 2 charges. None of this makes anything she did right. But seriously people. you have 0 obligation to talk to police for any reason. Even if it's to just "Help them". Most times innocent people have been charged because they have come forward with informaiton. They "Helped" their friend in some way, and then are charged with aiding and abiding. NEVER talk to cops with out a lawyer.
"When's your date of birth" is usually a pretty easy question to answer, even if you're flustered. I am guessing the red flags were quietly flying in that officer's head at that point.
She is so stupid. She could’ve so easily kept her mouth shut after being caught then struck a plea deal and gotten immunity(or a far lesser sentence) for snitching on the rest of them at a later date. Instead she did it for free and is gonna spend a very long time in prison
Yeah well don't expect too much from an addict running scams with the homeboys.
@@mattb6646 great point💀
She spent no time in jail apparently
@@HypeHubUA-cam I was going to say, if she got 1 year and did 3 months I'd be surprised. It usually takes dozens of charges and multiple convictions before they get sent away.
She’s likely not gonna do any time in prison for that lol
The moment she played the "it's them. I'm a victim who just asked for cash" I rolled my eyes outta my head
They think they look and act right. The confidence is baffling, one bank after another.
Some actually do pull it off tho
If this didnt work, they wouldnt do this... Obviously there is a weak spot in the system.
Lol 😂
She need to be throw in jail for plenty of years 😡
How'd she think she was going to pull that off?!?! $30,000?!!!!! 🤦🏻♀️
She didn’t think . She wants drugs
Seriously!!
my niggas do this all the time it’s 2022.
Because she's White. That's why A and Cheese sent her into the bank and stayed in the car.
@@THEHITWONDER pmo how
When the fake name You use Carries a Warrent ...LMAO
*Warrant
@@jumpinjojo if you’re gonna be picky: *you *carries *warrant
@@challengersrt5397 Spelling, grammar, and punctuation are important.
@@jumpinjojo go ask Zuckerberger for a job He needs Fact checkers.
@@challengersrt5397 are You a groomer and a teacher ?
Going to law school this video was so painful to watch she did everything you shouldn’t her defense attorney is gonna have a nightmare trying to defend her when she admits this shit on camera 😭😂😂
not even saul goodman can help her now
It's sad most us citizens don't know their rights
If you are actually committing a crime and get caught surely you should be honest. Maybe this could be a turning point in her life to start a new path making better decisions and live a crime free life and not live with the stress she has now. She could also get sober and clean if she really wanted to and live a great life. I really wish her the best.
@@heathercloete7450 "...surely you should be honest."
As every lawyer will tell you, just dont talk to the police without your attourney present. Honest or not, you can *only* make it worse for you. You can *never* make it better.
@@heathercloete7450 yea buddy your fried the turning point now that she was honest and confessed everything is probably 2 decades in prison depending on the total amount her crew has stolen lol that’s not how the justice system works just because she says she will be better from now on doesn’t mean shit…
This officer is very thorough & did his & the detectives job!!
When I was in college I remember students with fake IDs were warned to memorize the date of their fake birthdays because the bouncers were known to ask since a lot of students wouldn't even bother to pay attention to this detail.
birthdays and home addresses lol -- every time a friend of mine had one i would grab it and ask and 100% of the time they would fail to know the home address, sometimes not even know the city haha
I can confirm lol it's always the address. I got one when I was 20, first time using it I went into a liquor store and the guy asked what my birthday was and I said it perfectly without pause but he asked what my address was next and let's just say I wasn't as smooth with that one and $150 quickly went down the drain.
@@brandonbellino8896 really the address should be easy to blow off. I had an ID for a while with my dad's address on it after I moved out and I couldn't remember that. Had a cop ask and I just told him I moved and didn't remember my last address.
@@brahtrumpwonbigly7309 NY Id’s have something on them that makes it hard to fake I guess or something along those lines, so mine was from a different state so couldn’t use any addresses I actually knew lol so it was set up for failure from the jump.
Some bouncers will even ask females their astrology sign(bc it will be different from their actual birthday) and they will get flustered lol
All she needs to do is to remain silent and ask for attorney.
yeah $he$ done no. they already know $he guilty
You're right
Never speak to police
@@TheTrouserPuppetsOfficial There was nothing wrong about that info? It wouldn't have stopped her from getting into trouble but you never are obligated to give police information. Just stay quiet. It's your right and your silence cannot be held against you, but talking can incriminate you farther. It seems you're the one that needs education.
Exactly
Mad props to the cop tho. He came off as very kind and non judgemental. He did a good job.
So glad they caught them! I watch these because folks have stolen from me. I am blown away at how brazen these cells of thieves are with other peoples identities! I support policing which handles them in this way. Great job
She should've refused to talk to the cop, she gave herself so many more charges it's insane!
Story of pretty much every police encounter. You should almost never talk to the cops.
Miranda rights exist for a reason, no idea why she got so chatty.
Or not be a criminal.
@@Soul-Clutch-Man a lot of times scammers like this have such an inflated ego that they feel that can talk themselves out of any situation
@@mg1342mg that's to hard
Folded quickly under minimal questioning
Most of em do
Thankfully
I'm starting to think we may have problems in the American educational system.
You should’ve started to think that long time ago
This is a very old scam! I’m surprised anyone even tries it anymore! 🤷♂️
@@mikemhoon true...especially as banks spread that info and pics of the offender to other branches REAL QUICK now. This is a bad scam as you need to hit branches very from each other and you need new info each time. You can't use the same account, so new ID new check. its stupid really. but that's why the real scammer sent her in to do it.
And a OBESITY problem too. So many issues
@@TheGoonSquadd not really she’s just dumb you can take out 2500 easy
As someone who has cashed fraudulent checks and been punished with many felonies I can tell you drugs definitely played a part in mine. In my right mind I would have never
I got caught trying to withdraw 60 dollars from my brothers checking account. I was such a crack head.
Glad you have overcome
“I was going to stop this weekend because I was afraid this was going to happen.” Oh no! Shame on those cops for not giving her until the weekend to stop her bad habit! Justice for Brenda!
Please tell me you're joking
@@DylanFarstveet bro it’s sarcasm
😂😂😂 hilarious
@@DylanFarstveet LMAOOO ITS SARCASM DE
@@Londonśhifä 😂😂😂😂
I respect the honesty and her coming completely clean. Once the drug stuff was brought up, it was clear she felt a lot of shame. I hope she finds help, and gets clean. Totally not condoning her actions, she should be held fully accountable. But yeah that does hit differently.
ya totally respectable being scum and trying to steal 30k
@@mikec5400 Is that what I said?
you can still have empathy. people commonly forgot that these people they pass judgement on are their own brothers and sisters.@@mikec5400
U think cops care? He’s asking all that to build a case
How do you know she felt shame? Can you read minds? I say it looks clear that she's sad that she got caught because she knows she's going to jail instead of getting high. Don't feel sorry for junkies, sweetie. That's how they play you. That's a grown woman in that video, not some kid. She's had a lifetime of gaming.
I am super impressed with the line of questions this cop came up with. Make this man a detective!
Relax
I love that the Queen Patti Labelle was singing I knew you were waiting in the background!
It was Aretha Franklin and George Michael
Imagine someone showing up to your bank or any bank branch and telling the teller THAT'S you... but that person is using your identity. That's the most scariest part of all. This is someone identity... a real person.
And when the check eventually comes back as fraudulent, The lady that had her identity stolen gets a warrant out for her arrest. Then the next time she gets pulled over they say they have to take you in. Just horrible
Sadly in a lot of cases the bank screws up and still blames it on the victim.
@@scottcol23 that wouldn’t happen. The person, who’s account it is.. would claim fraud. The bank would do an investigation, and cover it.
@@josephfrechette9916 not true
@@josephfrechette9916 If the bank truly gets suckered, and falls for something like this, well, no KIDDING that they believe it was the original owner of the account that did it. The bank WILL realize their error once it is brought to light, and will have NO choice but to eat it and correct their mistake. That's why there's cameras, audio recordings, fingerprints on papers, and signatures ledt on documents. There's PLENTY of evidence to review, and that will tell the truth, once the original account holder realizes that they are missing a large chunk of money. Part of being vigilant is also on the behalf of the account holder, to monitor their balance statements that are sent to them once a month, look for errors, and report any immediately to the bank.
Credit to the officer, yes he walked her down the road of conviction after she agreed to talk to him after he gave her Miranda rights warning that she waived. He was respectful and compassionate in the manner in which he dealt with her. Yes everything she said led/will lead to her eventual conviction, but he never talked down to her and treated her like a human being. I think she was in need of getting caught to stop running from the life she was living, and only through the experience and care of this officer, they helped each other.
I agree. I felt like he was trying to help her the whole time.
Will you go to heaven when you die? Have you lied, stolen, used God’s name in vain, or lusted (which Jesus said was adultery, Mt. 5:28)? If so, God sees you a liar, Thief, blasphemer, and adulterer at heart. If you die in your sins, you will end up in a terrible placed called hell. But there’s good news Though we broke God’s law, Jesus paid the fine by dying on the cross: God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have everlasting life.(Jn 3:16) then Jesus rose from the dead and was seen by others (it’s not a fairytale). He fulfilled all the prophecy of the promised savior. Please repent, today and Trust Jesus, and God will forgive you and grant you gift of eternal life. (Eph 2:8,9). Then to show your gratitude, read the Bible daily and obey it ❤️
ua-cam.com/video/ChWiZ3iXWwM/v-deo.html
Uh... Except for the whole "I assume you do this because youre a drug addict" prejudice he approached her with. There was nothing remotely respectful about that.
He did his job of convincing her to fuck her life up even more, Im not sure how that can be seen as kind either.
Something about having a grown adult friend named "cheese" probably isn't your friend
But he’s black, sooooo
Who gives a sh&t
@@bmac6841 exactly and black lives matter !
I do admire her honesty. She’s clearly struggling 😢 drugs turn humans into monsters 😢
Shut up
I used to be a security guard in a back a few years ago and we had a similar experience. While the customer was with the employee, the manager told me that the police are on their way, and she told me to take the plate number on the car parked in front with the driver. As soon as the cops arrived, the car left, but i had the plate number that I gave the cops after they arrested his accomplis inside the bank
Well done, have a biscuit 😂
I guess you thought they were gonna give you a raise? 🤦🏾♂️
in whose back?
Your knees must hurt from being under the desk a lot
accomplis
This girl just closed her own case in a fracture of a second. Insane.
It’s fraction of a second, as in less than one second.
It probably wasn’t her own
I hate when my seconds fracture
@@I_am_a_cat_ that's the absolute worst
@@jackstraw5527 😮💨😂
I wish I was a cop. I'd be so tempted to say "You're Sarah Tyler?! Omg, we've been looking for you on that homicide case for over a year! I'm so getting promoted for this!"
Snitching & she didn’t even reach the interrogation room😂🤣
"Time served" does not mean "no time in jail". It means she had already spent so much time in jail that her sentence was completed by the time the trial finished.
which is not enough!
@@armadilllo bro shut up
@@armadilllo it absolutely is. If the judge and everyone involved in her case agreed to it then yes it's enough. Do the crime you do the time. No more! I am all for prosecuting criminals but only for the things you have evidence for and give them the right amount of time that fits what you charge them with.
No shit
@@CSAccetura No it's not enough she got easy for being a mother if she had no kids would have been much longer.
lol she says "Cheese" is the mastermind
Cheese was the middleman, Pickle was at the top.
Or from the movie, "Gone Baby Gone" with Casey Affleck. The big Haitian drug dealer was Cheese!!!
If these are even remotely elaborate schemes, A and Cheese are not at the top of the pyramid. They are just a step up from Brenda. Nobody knows the names and locations of the people at the top running this show. That way they can't get pinched. There are multiple levels of pawns that will take the rap.
i love how criminals never know the friends name smh
Snitches get stitches
She said the friend's name at the end.... It was "cheese" 😂😂😂😂😂😂
A 😆😆😆
Or suddenly forget when they where born
Many times they really don't tho. When u know you are dealing with a druggie that might get caught and talk, why would u tell them anything other than A? I've known a lot of shady ppl that go by street names. And it works. When the crackhead gets caught with the crack u just sold him, so u want him to be able to say thats Robert Johnson and know where u live? No u go by Meechie and all they know about u is they met u thru friend of friend or outside liquor store and have the number to a prepaid phone u carry. Cops could prob figure it out if they REALLY want to, like if its murder or something big like this, but many times they won't even follow up on lil stuff.
I'm from NY, the A & Cheese gang is notorious up here.
“What’s your birthday?”
“Uhhhh. Isn’t it right there on the ID?” 😂
Its a tactic and exactly what got her caught. She didn't know the DOB on the ID. Criminals are not very smart and too many people are liars.
Lying, and "living the life" goes hand and hand with drug addiction. Once your daily focus is on getting your next "fix," anything goes and everyone else/everything else is secondary, including your own self esteem. So, being arrested was likely the best thing to happen to Brenda that day. She gets mandatory "supervision," time to sober up, time to think about her life, and hope-fully... the therapy she obviously needs.
she's going to hate it. trick is to just do pot.
The best thing to happen to Brenda that day? I guarantee you this just made her more desperate.
@@stephenbrand5661 For real, the justice system in the US isn’t about reformation
They do not help addicts in jail. People die from withdrawal in prison from not having proper medical care.
I did fifteen days in a concrete room with no clothes, no bed, no toilet paper... knocked an opiate addiction right out of me and I've never looked back.
Talking to the police is the only sure fire way of guaranteeing a conviction for yourself. I say this as someone who works as a non-sworn LE employee, they make it easy.
I never talk one sentence
this cop basically baited her into everything and put words in her mouth. gave her a whole ass story she never had lmao
@@user-ke3ty7mr8r baited? She's a scammer...lol...
I was a jury foreman on a very similar case. She is going to walk on the attempted fraud charge. The legal basis is she didn’t complete the transaction because of the police stepping in and she will argue that she could have stopped at any point until the cash transfer was completed so she didn’t really do anything. Sorry kids, the law is on her side. Police should have waited until it was done and she stepped outside the bank.
She might do the old technicality walk on Florida state bank fraud charges but still have conspiracy to defraud and attempt to defraud an FDIC member bank federal charges to face with her black accomplice. Personally, I’m sorry a death sentence isn’t on the table, or at least life without parole. Enough of these shitnozzles causing grief and destruction of peoples’ lives and life savings.
You don’t cash a check into a bank account. You deposit it. Cashing means you get CASH.
Semantics