Thank you for sharing your experiences and stories, reminding us of the importance of paying closer attention and being more aware of our surroundings!
Great interview! Thanks for sharing your very cool past about Chinatown crimes.These series are a great reminder to take care of yourselves when your going out.
How would that interview go? "Remember when you ran from me? And I caught you in that alley?" "Remember that time you locked me in a holding cell with a transexual Puerto Rican? Like John Leguizamo from To Wong Foo?"
@@chinatowngangstories I am a fan of your channel. I like your dedication to bring two sides of people, gangs and law enforcement. We can see different perspectives. Thank you.
Shirley I hope that you appreciate our efforts to protect the Asian public from the gangs who were very vicious and their only interests were financial.
@@neilmauriello8935Neil, I have watched your previous interviews. We appreciate you are the first to help Chinatown. I came to USA and settled in NYC in 1995 as a grownup. I have no idea about the gang life and police. Back then Chinatown is pretty safe but still hear someone said it used to be dangerous. But I love history from world history to local history. Thank you again ❤and enjoy your happy retirement.
Helen Fang from.aafe and aux police bullied me and waited for me in the hallway of Chinese benevolent for her brother to gorilla smack me. That typical bathroom break bullying that yes, gangster gfs were known to do wasn't just restricted to gangsters gfs practicing it. Chinatown ... it's not a great place to teach integrity even if u have integrity, there's a lot of poison. I was told sun Yat Sen jhs slashed some pretty girls face in the restroom.
Hi, mike, I know you go to Wenzhou, China soon , have a good trip. I want to have a NYPD civilian job, and I took the civil exam already , but I have some questions about it, I would like to e-mail you to ask . I wish I can have your email. btw, I met your friend Terry couple weeks ago , we watched the Volleyball game and we had a great talk that day.
Thank you Mike, I will E-mail you. met Terry was a lucky and a coincidentally, and I think it is very hard to met him again, as you know people all busy. and I didn't ask him for your cellphone number because I thought it was improperly for the first time to ask something like that, but we had a great talk, I said I am your big fan. I told him , Terry, you can let Mike know you met me today, Mike knows who is Tony Fang. haha. Did he mention that?? it is good enough to have this email.
Mike & Mike...... tell everyone about all the free meals at restaurants, the red envelopes, the corner stores that gave you 2 packs of smokes every day, the bars that served you drinks for free.......... I knew a guy who would go to the corner store on his beat, pick up a quart of milk, some lunch meat, cheese, and a loaf of bread. He would always hand the clerk a twenty. The clerk would give him back a ten, 2 fives, and 5 ones in change..... he never counted his change. He just shoved the change in his pocket, and went back to his patrol car with his groceries. These things happen. Is it corruption? Moral turpitude? Misprision of office? Or just normal? It's how you build relationships on the beat. If you didn't have a free meal in that restaurant once a week, the owner would feel insulted. If you didn't accept a cup of coffee, then they think that something's wrong. It's how you get the local merchants to feel closer to you.
That makes no sense. Michael Lau always paid for his coffee and rarely spoke. He stood outside in the harsh sunlight for HOURS like a statue. It didn't look easy.
@@chinatownboy7482 He said "You weren't the shooter" in a joking way. However, notice how he phrase that question? He didn't asked if Mike Moy knew who did the shooting. That may have opened up a different can of worms.
There definitely should be movie based on Mike Lau's experience. Such an influential individual for the Asian community!
Thank you for your service and all of these amazing stories!
My favorite series so far
deputy lau is a righteous man!
Except for the part where a guy got shot 3 times in the back, and it was written up as a suicide.
Thank you for sharing your success and struggles. Thank you making a difference.
This is such an eye opening video! Thank you for the work you do Mike
Thank you for sharing your experiences and stories, reminding us of the importance of paying closer attention and being more aware of our surroundings!
Great interview! Thanks for sharing your very cool past about Chinatown crimes.These series are a great reminder to take care of yourselves when your going out.
Thank you inspector Lau for sharing stories from ur past experience. Is very nice to hear more thing that other people doesn’t know before
This is such an amazing story!!❤️🔥
What an interesting story! Glad that he shared stories from his past experience, hope every time he can share more things that others don't know.
Great communicator. You can visualize the stories in your head.
Great to hear your story, Deputy Inspector Lau. Look forward to hear more shocking stories 🔥
Thanks for sharing your past experiences. Looking forward for more.
Great stories once again, thanks guys!
Awesome interview. I wish there was more parts of this interview to watch. It makes you feel like you're back in that era.
Very interesting to hearing the gangster stories from inspector Lau.
It is interesting to watch the gangster stories from inspector Lau.
can Inspector Lau speak Cantonese? If so, a cantonese session between Inspector Lau and Mr Bighead? Why not?
Great idea!!
How would that interview go?
"Remember when you ran from me? And I caught you in that alley?"
"Remember that time you locked me in a holding cell with a transexual Puerto Rican? Like John Leguizamo from To Wong Foo?"
Great stories, hope there are more coming
I am here again. I am all ears 😂
You must be a fan of Mike Lau 😂
@@chinatowngangstories I am a fan of your channel. I like your dedication to bring two sides of people, gangs and law enforcement. We can see different perspectives. Thank you.
@@shirleychan7494 ❤️
Shirley I hope that you appreciate our efforts to protect the Asian public from the gangs who were very vicious and their only interests were financial.
@@neilmauriello8935Neil, I have watched your previous interviews. We appreciate you are the first to help Chinatown. I came to USA and settled in NYC in 1995 as a grownup. I have no idea about the gang life and police. Back then Chinatown is pretty safe but still hear someone said it used to be dangerous. But I love history from world history to local history. Thank you again ❤and enjoy your happy retirement.
That's one crazy story. Like you said, sht like that stays with you.
This siht cray
Thank you Inspector Lau. 有正義感 Very proud of you. 👍
It is interesting to watch inspector Lau telling the gangster stories .
This is 🔥
Please do not glamorize the gangsters! My girlfriends was playing jump rope in Columbus park and got beat up by the gangster’s girlfriend in the 80’s.
Helen Fang from.aafe and aux police bullied me and waited for me in the hallway of Chinese benevolent for her brother to gorilla smack me. That typical bathroom break bullying that yes, gangster gfs were known to do wasn't just restricted to gangsters gfs practicing it. Chinatown ... it's not a great place to teach integrity even if u have integrity, there's a lot of poison. I was told sun Yat Sen jhs slashed some pretty girls face in the restroom.
Hi, mike, I know you go to Wenzhou, China soon , have a good trip. I want to have a NYPD civilian job, and I took the civil exam already , but I have some questions about it, I would like to e-mail you to ask . I wish I can have your email. btw, I met your friend Terry couple weeks ago , we watched the Volleyball game and we had a great talk that day.
Thank you Mike, I will E-mail you. met Terry was a lucky and a coincidentally, and I think it is very hard to met him again, as you know people all busy. and I didn't ask him for your cellphone number because I thought it was improperly for the first time to ask something like that, but we had a great talk, I said I am your big fan. I told him , Terry, you can let Mike know you met me today, Mike knows who is Tony Fang. haha. Did he mention that?? it is good enough to have this email.
Mike & Mike...... tell everyone about all the free meals at restaurants, the red envelopes, the corner stores that gave you 2 packs of smokes every day, the bars that served you drinks for free.......... I knew a guy who would go to the corner store on his beat, pick up a quart of milk, some lunch meat, cheese, and a loaf of bread. He would always hand the clerk a twenty. The clerk would give him back a ten, 2 fives, and 5 ones in change..... he never counted his change. He just shoved the change in his pocket, and went back to his patrol car with his groceries. These things happen. Is it corruption? Moral turpitude? Misprision of office? Or just normal? It's how you build relationships on the beat. If you didn't have a free meal in that restaurant once a week, the owner would feel insulted. If you didn't accept a cup of coffee, then they think that something's wrong. It's how you get the local merchants to feel closer to you.
That makes no sense. Michael Lau always paid for his coffee and rarely spoke. He stood outside in the harsh sunlight for HOURS like a statue. It didn't look easy.
Officer Mike Lau is telling his stories and not other people stories.
Your criticism makes no sense at all!
Sorry but Mike Lau is not a good cop AT ALL!! That’s my opinion.
If you would, extrapolate what were/are his positives and negatives?
@@lostinthought475 Because at the very end of the segment, he accused Mike Moy of being the Pagoda Theater shooter.
Officer Mike Lau was a great cop !!! It is my opinion .
@@chinatownboy7482 He said "You weren't the shooter" in a joking way. However, notice how he phrase that question? He didn't asked if Mike Moy knew who did the shooting. That may have opened up a different can of worms.
@@ahndeuxyes there is definitely tension and resistance in these interviews.