When I slept on the street for a few nights in Chicago, I'll never forget this: I was starving and I wasnt able to busk up any money that day and this old addict with a bum leg and a cataract over one eye asked me how my day went. After I told him it didnt go well and I was real hungry he said, "hol up, wait here a sec" and he came back about 5 minutes later with a backpack full of day old sandwiches and soup from a local shop. He gave me half of his food, despite my protest. He told me "We aint got no one else out here. We have to look out for each other" That changed my entire world that day.
Yep, for each annoying, agressive or ungrateful bum there's one with a golden heart and iron personality. They're just like everybody else. There's shitbags and beautiful people - it's just that these guys usually don't have their appearence speaking in their favor if they've been on the streets for too long.
“he viewed me as his only friend in the world and then i broke that trust” bro that’s some heavy shit i wouldn’t be able to live wit myself no more after that
@Jason Prendergast imagine having *this* level of conviction based entirely on stereotype profiling of what *you* believe to be the *look* of a crack head. But yeah, I bet he had to hit it occasionally to legitimize himself
@Jason Prendergast but you just literally confirmed what I said? You’re projecting your experience of what you stereotype the “look” of a crackhead is. Ty for confirming
@Jason Prendergast I’m just going to leave this here. “Stereotype: a widely held but fixed and oversimplified image or idea of a particular type of person or thing” Do better.
Commenting on the "enjoy the cruelty" comment....he mentioned that he enjoyed the work and was interested by the manipulation and lying as an intellectual exercise. I would say, addiction is a full time job where lying and manipulation take center stage. What I find interesting is that he enjoyed those aspects without the potential reward of getting high being the end result of those actions. The lying and manipulation will eventually begin to wane on the addict. If not while using, definitely after getting clean. In the throws of addiction the chaos is part of the high and the whole experience. The getting away with something aspect of it. This guy is not so unlike an addict in some regard. Similar actions for a different reward. Shooting dope without a needle. Sounds like it did begin to wane on him, however. It's people with backgrounds like this guy's who should be making drug policy...not politicians.
I'm 8+ years Sober & Sane, it took 19x in jail before I was put into a drug program! They treated my addiction & MENTAL ILLNESS. It was brutal and took 2yrs to finally be stable enough to start living again, BUT everyone deserves treatment. Addicts are human, they're mothers, fathers, children, friends ect... I'm still in therapy today. My life matters. Addicts need psychological treatment also, we have to retrain our brains to think clearly before we can live sober! Jail does NOT help.
Yes unfortunately I've been in and out 19 times. Only 8 arrests with new charges. but I'd get bail and miss my court date, so I'd get picked up and sent back to jail, just to get bailed out again! So I've have tons of bench warrants that would keep sending me back. I'd be in jail for 24hours to 7months at a time. So not 19 long sentences, but 19x back and forth SMH
@@kodirome3859 If you have been selling heroin to someone that claims to be a user for months and they refuse to do heroin, then they obviously aren't a user. Offer a junkie 5 quid worth of heroin for free if they take it in front of you and the will ALL say "yes". That is how addiction works, lol.
Technically, he preyed on the weak, to get access to the people hidden in the back, that were preying on a lot more weak people in a lot worse ways. Trying to get the people who are behind it, is not really "preying on the weak". He used them to do what he thought was for the better of everyone. They did it because it was better for themselves. There's enough to dislike about cops, but calling them more selfish than the drug-dealers that prey on people each day is a bit far away from reality.
@@liquidminds I've seen the devastation left behind after undercover police ops. Low level no bodies literally getting their lives ruined because they "helped out" an undercover pig. Listen to the latter half of this video - the cop even admits that all his work was fruitless. The war on drugs as it stands is not fit for purpose and it continually punishes the weak and vulnerable. The changes he proposes at the end are the same echoed by drug treatment services across the globe. Don't kid yourself about the current war on drugs" model. Top dogs remain untouched.
@@catalyzerr he basically used those people as rungs on his career ladder. I think this tells us all we need to know about law enforcement's view of vulnerable people. They see them as fair game, disposable currency, once they use drugs.
Absolutely agree with everything he has to say. Decriminalize, regulate, and focus on harm reduction rather than criminalization. People who's drug use controls their lives should be put into treatment rather than jail - it costs less to the tax payers, and it's more effective at reducing drug use. Portugal already has this model, and it reduced their nationwide addiction rates significantly And without an illegal market anymore, The drug cartels would crumble. It would reduce crime, reduce drug use, save lives, give back bodily autonomy to the people, and cost less taxes. There are no down sides.
Switzerland was the first country to try this approach. There was an incredible drug problem in the 90'. Nowadays you really have to go searching to find human relics of that time. Switzerland and Portugal have shown that it can be done. There is an effective and better way to handle this problem once and for all.
Democrats are cunts: Unless you're putting everyone of them in jail for life, continuing to jail them & not treat them makes absolutely no sense @ all. However, they know the majority of people feel the way you do. So they keep jailing them & releasing them because they know they will go right back to using. As long as they're using, the cycle will continue. They want the cycle to continue because the Gov. really don't want or can't afford for crime to go down much. They want to control it so they can play with people's minds when they reduce crime by the very small % they feel will make a difference in individual's minds like yours, but not enough to affect America's economy.. If you really take the time & do your research, you will come to understand how crime is America's cash cow.!! There are very few careers where crime hasn't had a hand in making sure that career continues to grow. If you cut crime too much, it will affect America's economy. Crime creates jobs, jobs generate taxes, taxes is revenue, revenue is distributed to elected officials. .!!
I have no idea how you came to that conclusion. The guy clearly has a huge conscience, and he said that his greatest strength was his empathy. He lied and manipulated people as part of his job, not for personal gain. A sociopath would lie instinctively and only to benefit themselves. Sociopaths are often described as hot-headed, this guy is the exact opposite of that. He wasn't impulsive, he didn't break rules, and he was very good at getting on with others. He made long term plans, something sociopaths struggle to do. He had a strong sense of self-preservation, again, not something that a sociopath would have. I literally cannot think of a worse job for a sociopath than an undercover police officer.
@@1815matt well, he did mention enjoying manipulating people and the intellectual exercise of maintaining a lie. this would at least be some machiavellian tendencies in place.
you can tell he regrets a lot and is very sorry for his actions, he was nearly crying talking about how he befriended a loner then betrayed him and made him go crazy
I can’t even say how much I appreciate a finally honest and open video, even if it’s a truth people are uncomfortable hearing. No one wants to say they enjoy manipulating people and breaking someone’s complete trust for fear of how others will react immediately in this cancel culture world, but it’s comforting to know that honesty and speaking the truth without being immediately criticized might not be dead after all.
I'm with you on that. He explained probably the thoughts and actions of a great number of policemen, and showed how poorly managed their relationship with drug crime really is just because he let go of trying to make it seem like he was right and truly just laid it out bare. There was no excuse for his actions, simply just him explaining his feelings and where he came to be and what he thinks now that it's all over. Although It's sad to hear about this and know so many others do exactly what he's done with little to no remorse.
He is so right about helping addicts reduce. Most addicts I've met would love to quit but can't see how they're going to get there especially if they've spent all their money, no longer have a place to live, have abused the trust of their family and friends, cant get help from anyone, only have other drug users as friends. People don't realize how physically hard it is to quit opiates. Withdrawal symptoms really change the way you think.
God how could he bear doing that to people. Absolutely destroying their lives like that person who was in suicide watch because he had lost his only friend. Imagine trying to build any sort of relationship after that
What I really liked.. is how he was so brutally honest about enjoying lying and manipulating people. It'd be easy to fake empathy there and say you did feel bad to show you have a heart. But he clearly did not. Honestly the dude might be a sociopath, seeing how he did so well with lying and manipulation and all. Found a career he could excel at. Just my take on it ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Kevin Mathewson take it from me, it comes from a lack of shame and a sense of self righteousness. He doesn’t care if you judge. He didn’t even fully answer the question about remorse or feeling bad.
I agree that he is not ashamed. I don't think he is self-righteous. If he were, he would describe the people he put away in harsher terms. He portrays them in a sympathetic light.
Disá Rabberi Not fucking true at all. Did you not hear him talking about the guy who ended up on suicide watch, he understands it was because of his actions and is showing empathy. And you can’t conclusively judge this guys character on this short video that’s probably edited down to the most interesting things he had to say. It’s also noteworthy that most people get some enjoyment from lying and manipulating, most of the time it’s relatively harmless but this guy had to find a way to enjoy his difficult work and I’m not at all surprised that’s an area of his work he enjoyed, it’s both dangerous and exciting.
Same. Imagine befriending someone and trusting them with all your heart, only to find out later that they betrayed you (especially because they’re a cop and all that was fake) 😭
UK police at least cannot use that tactic of entrapment. I always found it pretty crazy how US cops can go out and pose as dealers selling single deals to random strangers or pose as prostitutes and the evidence be admissible. Entrapment laws are a good thing in a society so the cops can't do things like that.
@@Stigstigster In the US, cases have been thrown out due to entrapment since the early 1900s. Undercover cops are used to go after suppliers, not buyers.
Democrats are cunts Your logic makes no sense. Vehicular accidents would go up how? People who use illegal drugs can still get high and drive. Also people who take prescribed drugs can get affected to a point where they cause an accident. Drunk driving and texting while driving is statistically the higher cause of car accidents and/or vehicular homicide. You should stop getting your information and logic from social media.
That’s movie stuff, read the DOJ guidelines on undercover work. Doing drugs or committing or allowing crime in your presence is a termination or could result in charges yourself.
Man, drugs have a hand and influence everywhere in our society. No borders or boundaries. It’s a temptation that you can either choose to avoid or not, but they’re always gonna be there.
I've seen the generosity among vulnerable drug addicts, it's startling when you first see it if you've never been in those situations. I couldn't have done what he has, it's hideous, but I agree with him about legalising drugs and the racism.
@@janelle009 Well, here's to hoping he is in fact a paid actor because I believe the implication he's implying is a possible revenge killing(even though the odds of it are low) should they see this, and they won't care if he's retired or not.
@@janelle009 Retired or not. A pissed off person, specially an ex con can literally find anyone if they are mad enough & try hard enough. Dude has balls to do this.
? Who are the witnesses? What bonding are you talking about? Are you saying vice talking to these cops is cruel? Or that the cop manipulating the civies is cruel?
He knew he was manipulating criminals. Imagine you were undercover and had to manipulate people who had murdered a relative to find out about who did it, one step at a time. Little victories for justice.
Damn these first 10 seconds made me want to watch it more. Crazy how people from the inside exposing stuff that the people on the outside been curious about/had a hunch about for years. Change leads to progress & we need worldly change. 🙏🌍
This really seems like a guy who deserves an hour or more to tell his story and make his points. I saw that the video was over and thought "well shit . . . "
I also did this for a couple years of my Police Career. Going back in uniform was absolutely painful, and little else interested me as much as playing the game of buying dope.
God bless this man who has changed his views and ways and has laid down such compassionate wisdom all law enforcement and politicians need to listen to.
People really need to listen to this man, he could change so much with truth and experience and it would be a shame to waste him when he could help so many.
Like that System of a Down song said: "All research in successful drug policies shows that treatment should be increased...and law enforcement decreased, while abolishing mandatory minimum sentencing." It's state was one of the first two in the US to legalize weed and it's made life so much better for a ton of people!
I like how as soon as he spends time in the game, he's left with no ignorance towards users and the kind of regulations that should be in place. There was a point in my life when I was addicted to heroin. Years before that I was a youth/worship leader who studied discipleship. Absolutely anybody can get caught up in the evil of this world. Its time we show compassion, understanding and take steps forward. Every life is full of potential and is of value. Minus child predators.
cant believe the total lack of remorse he showed for the guy who said he was his only friend.... I understand what that man was doing was illegal but it seems like he got there because of addiction and constant emotional manipulation. I hope he gets the help he needs in prison and can get out one day
4:41 Oh my Goodness It's refreshing to hear a smart person with a reasonable thoughtful effective mindset on this topic. Give heroin to people that are dependent on it. England used to do heroin maintenance back in the day actually. But yeah, people on heroin can get what they need to live a fairly normal comfortable life. The quality is known so dangerous additives and dealdly substances adultrated in street drugs won't be a problem. ANd mainly, the economic side. People won't steal and do crimes to obtain money to obtain heroin through the black market, where dealers are greedy and making fortunes solely based on risk they take on. Cut them and cartels out of the equation entirely! No more rampant theft for junkies to get their fix and money not rewarding spoiled criminals.
When I was in highschool I knew 2 idiots that got busted and wore wires on eachother at the same time . From what I recall someone telling me is the police laughed at them.
This guy just confirmed EVERYTHING I think about drug policy and policing. And look what he thinks the rational answer is! (Because it is) ... slow regulated moving away from the drugs while getting people's lives together, while simultaneously taking the financial incentive away from the cartels. Obviously! It is just amazing to watch it confirmed. The longer you work with real people - the closer a policeman gets to this opinion (often, not always, i know). Just incredible. I'm so glad to see this put out there. Good questions and incredibly honest answers! Wow. I'm just blown away by this.
I have so much respect for him, the part at the end where he admitted that his work had absolutely no impact on the drugs whatsoever, and in fact ruined so many lives, i wish cops in the States would have this ideoligy, and they wonder why people hate the fucking cops, we love firefighters but we despise the cops, why do you think that is?
I'M a recovering DRUG ADDICT. What he's suggesting as real solutions is absolutely spot on. If you've never been on this side of it, it's hard for you to understand. My God, reform drug policy is spot on.
I remember when a policeman visited our primary school and he said the same about selling controlled substances in say boots, and take the market from organised crime
Harm reduction is cheaper, more effective and doesn't ruin the lives of the people/families affected by crime and drugs. Lots of countries are now stepping in the right direction and legalizing marijuna.
I could never harm someone nor inflict bad into their existance,hearing how he played that guy who had nobody makes my heart hurt,the system truly needs to help these people instead of how it's done
शक्तिमान It's not, example weed: You have this plant and you want to consume it because you like the effects government says no why? because government says no
"I changed people's lives around and not for the better". How can u say that? Did u not stall the drugs and maybe those people got help? A lot of people won't stop until they face court and jail time. Thank u for being an advocate for harm reduction. Day one abstinence doesn't work. Less than five percent are sober for a year. Jail isn't the answer. Abstinence isn't. A harness reduction program helped me stay sober over 4 years now. I was in that program 3 years. Changed my life. Only problem is it cost over five grand a year???
most drug users drink alcohol, some just smoke weed, and a tiny little group of people have a real problem with hard drugs. help them, don't put them in jail.
You're right, controlled programs are what addicts need, but this is way easier if we legalize drugs. An alcoholic can go to a rehab clinic and get it done, a heroin addict could technically do the same but, since heroin is illegal, they had to enter a criminal environment, getting out of that environment on your own, while being dependent on a drug is nearly impossible. Especially since drug users face prosecution in some places which stops them from getting outside help.
Neil Woods books on drugs are some of the best books on British drugs culture about, i was able to ask my mum about what went on at Wigan casino after reading his books, i learned even more about what went on
When I slept on the street for a few nights in Chicago, I'll never forget this: I was starving and I wasnt able to busk up any money that day and this old addict with a bum leg and a cataract over one eye asked me how my day went. After I told him it didnt go well and I was real hungry he said, "hol up, wait here a sec" and he came back about 5 minutes later with a backpack full of day old sandwiches and soup from a local shop. He gave me half of his food, despite my protest. He told me "We aint got no one else out here. We have to look out for each other"
That changed my entire world that day.
Thanks for sharing that, dude. I needed that today.
People on the streets with the least to give have been some of the kindest, most generous people I have ever met.
That's so heartwarming, thank you :)
You’re Stronger Than You Think. Keep Going. God Bless ♥️♥️
Yep, for each annoying, agressive or ungrateful bum there's one with a golden heart and iron personality. They're just like everybody else. There's shitbags and beautiful people - it's just that these guys usually don't have their appearence speaking in their favor if they've been on the streets for too long.
“he viewed me as his only friend in the world and then i broke that trust” bro that’s some heavy shit i wouldn’t be able to live wit myself no more after that
Ant facts bruh
That made me not like this guy. He's just locking away the small guys, thats not fixing the issue!
Yeah, especially knowing he was trying to commit suicide over the deception.
@@coliedeekenzo This is exactly why he quit his job in the end
I wish he haven't said that!!!.....
How did you become a cop?
I looked like a crack head according to my colleagues
Nice guy doing his job ... if an under cover cop was around me .. it would have to be woody 🤦♂️🤔👍
😂😂😂😂
@Jason Prendergast imagine having *this* level of conviction based entirely on stereotype profiling of what *you* believe to be the *look* of a crack head. But yeah, I bet he had to hit it occasionally to legitimize himself
@Jason Prendergast but you just literally confirmed what I said? You’re projecting your experience of what you stereotype the “look” of a crackhead is. Ty for confirming
@Jason Prendergast I’m just going to leave this here. “Stereotype: a widely held but fixed and oversimplified image or idea of a particular type of person or thing”
Do better.
"I just made the lives of the vulnerable more unbearable". That's the first and likely last time that I will hear a police officer recognize that.
Many cops admit it. That's not the problem. The problem is they continue to do it even knowing how cruel they are. They enjoy the cruelty.
Why he is no longer an officer most likely
You know there’s a difference from a cop and a undercover cop? There’s a difference of what they do.
Commenting on the "enjoy the cruelty" comment....he mentioned that he enjoyed the work and was interested by the manipulation and lying as an intellectual exercise. I would say, addiction is a full time job where lying and manipulation take center stage. What I find interesting is that he enjoyed those aspects without the potential reward of getting high being the end result of those actions. The lying and manipulation will eventually begin to wane on the addict. If not while using, definitely after getting clean. In the throws of addiction the chaos is part of the high and the whole experience. The getting away with something aspect of it. This guy is not so unlike an addict in some regard. Similar actions for a different reward. Shooting dope without a needle. Sounds like it did begin to wane on him, however. It's people with backgrounds like this guy's who should be making drug policy...not politicians.
@@finitesound its not necessarily cruelty, its ego
I'm 8+ years Sober & Sane, it took 19x in jail before I was put into a drug program! They treated my addiction & MENTAL ILLNESS. It was brutal and took 2yrs to finally be stable enough to start living again, BUT everyone deserves treatment. Addicts are human, they're mothers, fathers, children, friends ect... I'm still in therapy today. My life matters.
Addicts need psychological treatment also, we have to retrain our brains to think clearly before we can live sober! Jail does NOT help.
Good job proud of you!
19 times?
Yes unfortunately I've been in and out 19 times. Only 8 arrests with new charges. but I'd get bail and miss my court date, so I'd get picked up and sent back to jail, just to get bailed out again! So I've have tons of bench warrants that would keep sending me back. I'd be in jail for 24hours to 7months at a time. So not 19 long sentences, but 19x back and forth SMH
👏👏👏
Congratulations 🙏 it’s never easy to get out of the hole but it’s always worth it
You know at some point while undercover he did MDMA to not blow his cover and he thought "wtf is this illegal?"
DJiMMa I know they sometimes have to do it to keep there cover. These guys are very clever.
You'd be shot in the head if you refused gotta stay in character at all times
Shane Ryan Who in the world would ever shoot someone for refusing to do a drug lmao. Many drug dealers don’t even do the drugs themselves lol
@@kodirome3859 If you have been selling heroin to someone that claims to be a user for months and they refuse to do heroin, then they obviously aren't a user. Offer a junkie 5 quid worth of heroin for free if they take it in front of you and the will ALL say "yes". That is how addiction works, lol.
@@liam9214 lmfao dude has a book that says he did crack
"My colleague disguised himself as a bag of cocaine and was consumed by the suspect. It was his last day on the job"
Tragic!
M Allsorts u funny barstad
priceless bro ha ha ha damn.
Do you write for the Boosh?
I peed a little
Hahaha lol.
Wow very open and honest guy especially how he preyed upon the weak like that
Technically, he preyed on the weak, to get access to the people hidden in the back, that were preying on a lot more weak people in a lot worse ways.
Trying to get the people who are behind it, is not really "preying on the weak". He used them to do what he thought was for the better of everyone. They did it because it was better for themselves. There's enough to dislike about cops, but calling them more selfish than the drug-dealers that prey on people each day is a bit far away from reality.
@@liquidminds Very well said
@@liquidminds I've seen the devastation left behind after undercover police ops. Low level no bodies literally getting their lives ruined because they "helped out" an undercover pig.
Listen to the latter half of this video - the cop even admits that all his work was fruitless. The war on drugs as it stands is not fit for purpose and it continually punishes the weak and vulnerable. The changes he proposes at the end are the same echoed by drug treatment services across the globe.
Don't kid yourself about the current war on drugs" model. Top dogs remain untouched.
@@tintintb1980 dont get into it then
@@flamemojis One of the most ignorant comments I've read in while. Congrats.
"I quickly found that the most vulnerable people were the one's who I could use first."
@@catalyzerr he basically used those people as rungs on his career ladder. I think this tells us all we need to know about law enforcement's view of vulnerable people. They see them as fair game, disposable currency, once they use drugs.
ua-cam.com/video/mWFtOmQ9dKA/v-deo.html
Wow! Great interview.
Erstaunlich, dass es wirklich überall praktisch die selbe Sache ist.
Du bist auch überall
Du auch hier ? Wow
Ja und er hat auch so recht. Man hört es von allen Seiten, überall : Ändert die Drogenpolitik.
OPEN MIND And
Absolutely agree with everything he has to say.
Decriminalize, regulate, and focus on harm reduction rather than criminalization.
People who's drug use controls their lives should be put into treatment rather than jail -
it costs less to the tax payers, and it's more effective at reducing drug use.
Portugal already has this model, and it reduced their nationwide addiction rates significantly
And without an illegal market anymore,
The drug cartels would crumble.
It would reduce crime, reduce drug use, save lives, give back bodily autonomy to the people, and cost less taxes. There are no down sides.
Danielle Spargo It’s common fucking sense and the only way forward. But the government is too corrupt. They don’t care.
Democrats are cunts No one is listening to you, dipshit. We hear you, but no one is listening.
Switzerland was the first country to try this approach. There was an incredible drug problem in the 90'. Nowadays you really have to go searching to find human relics of that time. Switzerland and Portugal have shown that it can be done. There is an effective and better way to handle this problem once and for all.
Democrats are cunts: Unless you're putting everyone of them in jail for life, continuing to jail them & not treat them makes absolutely no sense @ all. However, they know the majority of people feel the way you do. So they keep jailing them & releasing them because they know they will go right back to using. As long as they're using, the cycle will continue. They want the cycle to continue because the Gov. really don't want or can't afford for crime to go down much. They want to control it so they can play with people's minds when they reduce crime by the very small % they feel will make a difference in individual's minds like yours, but not enough to affect America's economy.. If you really take the time & do your research, you will come to understand how crime is America's cash cow.!! There are very few careers where crime hasn't had a hand in making sure that career continues to grow. If you cut crime too much, it will affect America's economy. Crime creates jobs, jobs generate taxes, taxes is revenue, revenue is distributed to elected officials. .!!
You agree with everything he said for the first 10 seconds. smh
It’s rare but vice can still whip out good videos
Waynimations this is a re-upload it was a old video few years back
Most is left wing propaganda.
@@LilWhitePrivileged VOTE 4 BRETT KAVANAUGH THE MAFIA BRIGHTON BEACH BROOKLYN NY DA DARK sign the hacker
😩
Weird how frequently I see comments like this on Vice videos. Almost like Vice actually makes consistently quality content or something.
Hearing him talk about it, it sounds like you have to have some sociopatic tendencies to really be effective undercover.
I have no idea how you came to that conclusion. The guy clearly has a huge conscience, and he said that his greatest strength was his empathy. He lied and manipulated people as part of his job, not for personal gain. A sociopath would lie instinctively and only to benefit themselves. Sociopaths are often described as hot-headed, this guy is the exact opposite of that. He wasn't impulsive, he didn't break rules, and he was very good at getting on with others. He made long term plans, something sociopaths struggle to do. He had a strong sense of self-preservation, again, not something that a sociopath would have.
I literally cannot think of a worse job for a sociopath than an undercover police officer.
@@1815matt what would be the best job for a sociopath?
@@erikaserikas8239 a boxer
@@erikaserikas8239 Human Resources Manager
@@1815matt well, he did mention enjoying manipulating people and the intellectual exercise of maintaining a lie. this would at least be some machiavellian tendencies in place.
you can tell he regrets a lot and is very sorry for his actions, he was nearly crying talking about how he befriended a loner then betrayed him and made him go crazy
Hes the fucking devil
I can’t tell he regrets it at all. Did I miss something? Him simply recounting it is all I saw. Sounded like a sociopath
I feel so bad about the dude who put trust on him.all he wanted was a friend and got backstabbed and that’s how a lot of people are these days
Particularly so called 'work colleagues' !
“I just made the lives of the vulnerable more unbearable.”
REAL 😵
He sounds like a well read, educated version of Karl Pilkington.
Hahahaha.
Maybe it's Mr Dilkington
So true, ah Northerners😊
Graham??
It ain’t right it sounds about white
He's really smart
And dangerous
kof2002kof many undercovers are sociopaths. It’s their line of work.
@@JaredG6 yup
I can’t even say how much I appreciate a finally honest and open video, even if it’s a truth people are uncomfortable hearing. No one wants to say they enjoy manipulating people and breaking someone’s complete trust for fear of how others will react immediately in this cancel culture world, but it’s comforting to know that honesty and speaking the truth without being immediately criticized might not be dead after all.
Check out Michael Franzese talking to Joe Pistone aka Donnie Brasco
I'm with you on that. He explained probably the thoughts and actions of a great number of policemen, and showed how poorly managed their relationship with drug crime really is just because he let go of trying to make it seem like he was right and truly just laid it out bare. There was no excuse for his actions, simply just him explaining his feelings and where he came to be and what he thinks now that it's all over. Although It's sad to hear about this and know so many others do exactly what he's done with little to no remorse.
He is so right about helping addicts reduce. Most addicts I've met would love to quit but can't see how they're going to get there especially if they've spent all their money, no longer have a place to live, have abused the trust of their family and friends, cant get help from anyone, only have other drug users as friends. People don't realize how physically hard it is to quit opiates. Withdrawal symptoms really change the way you think.
God how could he bear doing that to people. Absolutely destroying their lives like that person who was in suicide watch because he had lost his only friend. Imagine trying to build any sort of relationship after that
What I really liked.. is how he was so brutally honest about enjoying lying and manipulating people. It'd be easy to fake empathy there and say you did feel bad to show you have a heart. But he clearly did not. Honestly the dude might be a sociopath, seeing how he did so well with lying and manipulation and all. Found a career he could excel at.
Just my take on it ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I think he does feel bad, he's just not asking for forgiveness. He's letting us judge him.
Kevin Mathewson take it from me, it comes from a lack of shame and a sense of self righteousness. He doesn’t care if you judge. He didn’t even fully answer the question about remorse or feeling bad.
I agree that he is not ashamed. I don't think he is self-righteous. If he were, he would describe the people he put away in harsher terms. He portrays them in a sympathetic light.
Kevin Mathewson you don’t get it. He doesn’t care about the people he puts away. A total disregard for people in general actually.
Disá Rabberi Not fucking true at all. Did you not hear him talking about the guy who ended up on suicide watch, he understands it was because of his actions and is showing empathy. And you can’t conclusively judge this guys character on this short video that’s probably edited down to the most interesting things he had to say. It’s also noteworthy that most people get some enjoyment from lying and manipulating, most of the time it’s relatively harmless but this guy had to find a way to enjoy his difficult work and I’m not at all surprised that’s an area of his work he enjoyed, it’s both dangerous and exciting.
He is a smart boi. Many people can’t accept what this man just said, regulation is the key to crime reduction and harm reduction.
His only friend in the world... that hit me in a way I wasn’t expecting.
Same. Imagine befriending someone and trusting them with all your heart, only to find out later that they betrayed you (especially because they’re a cop and all that was fake) 😭
“Chasing the Scream” is a fantastic book that explores exactly what he’s talking about, as well as the origins of the war on drugs in the US.
There is only one time that I saw marijuana ruin someones life, it was right after the police sold him some.
UK police at least cannot use that tactic of entrapment. I always found it pretty crazy how US cops can go out and pose as dealers selling single deals to random strangers or pose as prostitutes and the evidence be admissible. Entrapment laws are a good thing in a society so the cops can't do things like that.
@@Stigstigster In the US, cases have been thrown out due to entrapment since the early 1900s. Undercover cops are used to go after suppliers, not buyers.
I love you for this comment.
He talks it right. Leagalise it all and crime will drop by shit loads and the prison population will drop by 75%
And they make too much money off it
Profit would also drop by 75%. Sadly, that idea is considered utopian because money is valued more than human life.
Democrats are cunts Your logic makes no sense. Vehicular accidents would go up how? People who use illegal drugs can still get high and drive. Also people who take prescribed drugs can get affected to a point where they cause an accident. Drunk driving and texting while driving is statistically the higher cause of car accidents and/or vehicular homicide.
You should stop getting your information and logic from social media.
@Democrats are cunts It wont. Look at The Netherlands. They are closing prisons.
Democrats are cunts Sadly your feelings aren't supported by fact. Countries that already legalized drugs showed that it works.
You can feel the sadness this man has experienced as an officer.
you get to be a criminal and a junkie, break all of the laws, have all of the fun, with zero legal consequences..... sounds rough
And fat paycheck
And also risk getting caught and dead in an alley if you mess up
Idk what the hell they do in the police department anyway
That’s movie stuff, read the DOJ guidelines on undercover work. Doing drugs or committing or allowing crime in your presence is a termination or could result in charges yourself.
@@liam9214 I dont see how a narc could work undercover w/o allowing/ doing your aforementioned things. I don't think they'd last long.
Man, drugs have a hand and influence everywhere in our society. No borders or boundaries. It’s a temptation that you can either choose to avoid or not, but they’re always gonna be there.
Perfect interview, a great perspective with a genuine person.
This man just made his life a whole lot harder.
Yeah but majority of these things are just made up like everything else really ain't they
@@antigov5275 yeah, i dont believe in the government.
@@imranitos2704 Like Santa Claus?
@@mosley3485 haha definately
Power and authority is hell of a drug.
Yes it is.
I've seen the generosity among vulnerable drug addicts, it's startling when you first see it if you've never been in those situations. I couldn't have done what he has, it's hideous, but I agree with him about legalising drugs and the racism.
Drug Dealers: “Legalisation? Nah I want it to stay illegal so I can make P”
Government: “Let’s not change a thing”
thank god the inmates and ex-cons don't have internet vice.
Mad Hadder Oh I’m sure most do. Even McDonalds has free WiFi lol
He’s obviously retired or he wouldn’t be sharing any of this. That or paid actor type
@@janelle009 Well, here's to hoping he is in fact a paid actor because I believe the implication he's implying is a possible
revenge killing(even though the odds of it are low) should they see this, and they won't care if he's retired or not.
CB if you do the smallest amount of research yoy will find that he is NOT an actor and that is actually him.
@@janelle009 Retired or not. A pissed off person, specially an ex con can literally find anyone if they are mad enough & try hard enough. Dude has balls to do this.
Wow this man needs to write a book. That story about the guy on suicide watch was heartbreaking
Sounds like the kind of job that could make a man go mad over time for making so much new friends and then just give them in
First day of undercover cop: buys cocaine*
My brain: YOU HAVE BECOME THE THING YOU SWORE TO DESTROY.
That was excellent! Thank you Vice for doing these! Love the war on drugs series too.
heartbreaking 😢💔when he says “he thought 💭 i was his only true friend” that is so sad.
Yeah he's honest now i think he realized at that moment that he is not a good person
This bonding with witnesses is cruel to be honest..
?
Who are the witnesses? What bonding are you talking about? Are you saying vice talking to these cops is cruel? Or that the cop manipulating the civies is cruel?
"I enjoyed manipulating people." That's the mindset of the custodian's of morality in our society.
We live in a society
it really is
Don’t be weak and you won’t be manipulated
He was out to manipulate criminals involved in the drug trade.
He knew he was manipulating criminals. Imagine you were undercover and had to manipulate people who had murdered a relative to find out about who did it, one step at a time. Little victories for justice.
Damn these first 10 seconds made me want to watch it more. Crazy how people from the inside exposing stuff that the people on the outside been curious about/had a hunch about for years. Change leads to progress & we need worldly change. 🙏🌍
this has to be the worst job. building relationships with people, and then sending them to jail
Finally something good again *vice*
U don't enjoy the white racist guilt content?
because this is a reupload with a different title and different editing
This really seems like a guy who deserves an hour or more to tell his story and make his points. I saw that the video was over and thought "well shit . . . "
Excellent content love these kind of intriguing vids
Amaizing video! I learned so much. He explains the drug problem very well and the possible solutions. Keep these videos coming, they are great! ❤️😍👏
I also did this for a couple years of my Police Career. Going back in uniform was absolutely painful, and little else interested me as much as playing the game of buying dope.
This bloke knows exactly what he's talking about.respect.
First decent vice post in a while
From an ex drug dealer & convicted criminal, everything this man said is 100% on point. No argument.
One of the best interviews I've ever seen
Refreshing levels of honesty from a police officer
Welcome back to a new episode of: why is this in my recommended? Quarantine edition
I was a heroin addict for years, and people didn't ever just sport others out when they were sick. It was every man for himself. Period.
Key thing here "when they were sick". The girl who gave him some just got high. People are very nice when high sometimes
Someone watching this video- Hey, he looks familiar!
God bless this man who has changed his views and ways and has laid down such compassionate wisdom all law enforcement and politicians need to listen to.
People really need to listen to this man, he could change so much with truth and experience and it would be a shame to waste him when he could help so many.
I was skeptical at first but this guy has the master plan
This guy is a legend, to be that honest, that accurate and unbiased about what you did. Incredible.
Man that would hurt my soul doing undercover work
I respect his honesty
Like that System of a Down song said: "All research in successful drug policies shows that treatment should be increased...and law enforcement decreased, while abolishing mandatory minimum sentencing."
It's state was one of the first two in the US to legalize weed and it's made life so much better for a ton of people!
Coz it's 187 on an undercover coooop 😀
💀🔫🤣🤣🤣
❤
I agree 100% with what he said about changing the drug laws. If we can make it safe and take money out of the cartels pockets it's a win win
Guys a trend setter with the man bun in what can only be a guess of the mid 90s
I like how as soon as he spends time in the game, he's left with no ignorance towards users and the kind of regulations that should be in place. There was a point in my life when I was addicted to heroin. Years before that I was a youth/worship leader who studied discipleship. Absolutely anybody can get caught up in the evil of this world. Its time we show compassion, understanding and take steps forward. Every life is full of potential and is of value. Minus child predators.
1:37 bro what kind of anime series did this man come from? No we should be questioning his plot armor.
cant believe the total lack of remorse he showed for the guy who said he was his only friend.... I understand what that man was doing was illegal but it seems like he got there because of addiction and constant emotional manipulation. I hope he gets the help he needs in prison and can get out one day
Lol I love how he’s wearing a windbreaker in the pic classic
I agree 💯and that comes from a heroin addict of 24 years clean today and hopefully every day forward
Well done 😁
4:41 Oh my Goodness It's refreshing to hear a smart person with a reasonable thoughtful effective mindset on this topic. Give heroin to people that are dependent on it. England used to do heroin maintenance back in the day actually. But yeah, people on heroin can get what they need to live a fairly normal comfortable life. The quality is known so dangerous additives and dealdly substances adultrated in street drugs won't be a problem. ANd mainly, the economic side. People won't steal and do crimes to obtain money to obtain heroin through the black market, where dealers are greedy and making fortunes solely based on risk they take on. Cut them and cartels out of the equation entirely! No more rampant theft for junkies to get their fix and money not rewarding spoiled criminals.
This man seems very intelligent and his honesty on the subject is commendable.
Is it possible for 2 undercovers to buy drugs from eachother
When I was in highschool I knew 2 idiots that got busted and wore wires on eachother at the same time . From what I recall someone telling me is the police laughed at them.
Hes so correct with the whole prison thing, I remember being in jail a few times and leaving with a habit.
He's absolutely right all it does is hurt people little people people struggling prison isn't the place for an addict
This guy has an incredibly nuanced view on drug abuse. Great job Vice!
This guy just confirmed EVERYTHING I think about drug policy and policing. And look what he thinks the rational answer is! (Because it is) ... slow regulated moving away from the drugs while getting people's lives together, while simultaneously taking the financial incentive away from the cartels. Obviously! It is just amazing to watch it confirmed. The longer you work with real people - the closer a policeman gets to this opinion (often, not always, i know). Just incredible. I'm so glad to see this put out there. Good questions and incredibly honest answers! Wow. I'm just blown away by this.
He’s got some guts to do that job, I’d get caught if I did that, I’d trip up on my words and answer to my real name 😂
How can someone do such a job...
I have so much respect for him, the part at the end where he admitted that his work had absolutely no impact on the drugs whatsoever, and in fact ruined so many lives, i wish cops in the States would have this ideoligy, and they wonder why people hate the fucking cops, we love firefighters but we despise the cops, why do you think that is?
What a legend. Has enough balls to pull off undercover policing, and comes off as really intelligent. Good segment!
I'M a recovering DRUG ADDICT. What he's suggesting as real solutions is absolutely spot on. If you've never been on this side of it, it's hard for you to understand. My God, reform drug policy is spot on.
“You have to play a different version of yourself”.
I remember when a policeman visited our primary school and he said the same about selling controlled substances in say boots, and take the market from organised crime
This the guy from the True Geordie podcast??
Yep, same guy. Very interesting story tbh.
No
Divonis Macenas pretty sure it is you Spaz
No this one is his twin sister
Hasan Tolan lmao
This man speaks total sense so obviously he will never be listened to by the government
Harm reduction is cheaper, more effective and doesn't ruin the lives of the people/families affected by crime and drugs. Lots of countries are now stepping in the right direction and legalizing marijuna.
I could never harm someone nor inflict bad into their existance,hearing how he played that guy who had nobody makes my heart hurt,the system truly needs to help these people instead of how it's done
yup this guy has some heavy karma for what he has done. Seems to genuinely regret it though.
Someone telling someone else what they can and can't consume is totally and completely archaic.
Thats an arogantly gross simplification of the matter.
Stay in school kids.
शक्तिमान It's not, example weed:
You have this plant and you want to consume it because you like the effects
government says no
why?
because government says no
Exactly, No more war on Drugs!!
It’s funny when a police officer understand the streets and actually shows empathy to the users
Great video again vice
"6,29 min of explanation why everyone hates the police"
"I changed people's lives around and not for the better". How can u say that? Did u not stall the drugs and maybe those people got help? A lot of people won't stop until they face court and jail time. Thank u for being an advocate for harm reduction. Day one abstinence doesn't work. Less than five percent are sober for a year. Jail isn't the answer. Abstinence isn't. A harness reduction program helped me stay sober over 4 years now. I was in that program 3 years. Changed my life. Only problem is it cost over five grand a year???
most drug users drink alcohol, some just smoke weed, and a tiny little group of people have a real problem with hard drugs. help them, don't put them in jail.
You're right, controlled programs are what addicts need, but this is way easier if we legalize drugs. An alcoholic can go to a rehab clinic and get it done, a heroin addict could technically do the same but, since heroin is illegal, they had to enter a criminal environment, getting out of that environment on your own, while being dependent on a drug is nearly impossible. Especially since drug users face prosecution in some places which stops them from getting outside help.
Where’d you find this guy? Some back alley in London?
Clearly not as his accent is from the Midlands.
Neil Woods books on drugs are some of the best books on British drugs culture about, i was able to ask my mum about what went on at Wigan casino after reading his books, i learned even more about what went on
An outright phenomenon! A cop that discovered their humanity.