Retired NYPD Police Officer interview-Mike Codella

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  • Опубліковано 29 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,8 тис.

  • @ralphiej5580
    @ralphiej5580 2 місяці тому +26

    Mike was a Detective Sergeant in my Squad. A lot I can say, but in short, Mike was great Boss and is a Great Guy! Happy for your success brother.

  • @gopalmtrees128
    @gopalmtrees128 11 місяців тому +66

    Gotta get Mike back on. Such an amazing episode. So humble, honest, real, raw. We want more!

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall 10 місяців тому +7

      Thanks👍

    • @PAND3MONIUM
      @PAND3MONIUM 9 місяців тому +4

      I was just thinking the same thing, you're an awesome guy Mike

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall 9 місяців тому +4

      @PAND3MONIUM thanks, average not awesome 😉

    • @realMaverickBuckley
      @realMaverickBuckley 3 місяці тому +1

      I read his book about 10 years ago. It's still the best non fiction auto biography I've ever read. Desperately trying to get the Audiobook but it's not available in the UK. 😢

  • @Gypsyboy932
    @Gypsyboy932 Рік тому +242

    I (retired in 1999) worked with Mike. Great guy. Lots of fun.

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall Рік тому +22

      Thanks Bob!

    • @sergegainsbourgii1852
      @sergegainsbourgii1852 Рік тому

      Mike was also a predator, a perpetrator & serial criminal: a thief, drug dealer, betrayer of his oath to his office & to the constituents he vowed to serve, he contributed to the chaos & destruction in the communities he was supposed to protect ("throw-away people/communities"), he contributed to the rampant corruption of the institutions in the limelight today. DEA agent Jose Irizarry, now called the most corrupt agent in history (lol), said he first learned the corruption ropes working with the NYPD... by my calculations, in the 80s-90s. I hear NO sense of personal responsibility by any of these ex-cops who were supposed to be public servants.

    • @cliffordparmeter6940
      @cliffordparmeter6940 Рік тому +11

      Mike did a great job .

    • @decapitateallcops3214
      @decapitateallcops3214 Рік тому +3

      Ohhh really dude?

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall Рік тому

      @@decapitateallcops3214 yea dude. Wanna try decapitating me clown?

  • @ravimoonan6044
    @ravimoonan6044 Рік тому +463

    I retired in 2021 as a NYPD officer in special operation division. This guy is legit. He is humble and did not embellished. Seeing what I saw was quite unique. I responded to every major incident that happen in NYC from Cops killed in the line of duty, cops shooting a Perp, terrorist attacks, mass shooting, missing children, elderly, mentally I’ll people. It takes a toll on you. What I saw and did in 21 years most cops would work 100 years and never see it.

    • @sherryfelch750
      @sherryfelch750 Рік тому +30

      Thank you for your service and may God keep you safe… you are loved

    • @juppurulavale13
      @juppurulavale13 Рік тому +11

      Debatable
      Come and visit the Northern Territory, Australia

    • @Selfloathingmisanthrope
      @Selfloathingmisanthrope Рік тому +5

      It's a rough gig

    • @TheTruthBombNY
      @TheTruthBombNY Рік тому +10

      You gotta hear more stories by the dealers . The cops get 2nd hand info but the dealers know what happened before the cops got there. Both sides are interesting. I just posted part of my long story .
      It starts with “I GREW UP IN THE LOWER EAST SIDE AKA ALPHABET CITY. I STARTED IN BARUCH HOUSING ON COLUMBIA STREET THEN MOVED TO“. You should check it out. Who know we probably met before. ✌🏾

    • @jackboyholla4002
      @jackboyholla4002 Рік тому +11

      @@juppurulavale13 you must not know about New York it’s a concrete jungle

  • @lucidkate
    @lucidkate Рік тому +621

    The retired cops always have the best stories. Would love to see more of Mike.

    • @philobetto5106
      @philobetto5106 Рік тому +12

      and potentially the largest skeletons and enough of them a walk-in closet was needed

    • @bobbyr2972
      @bobbyr2972 Рік тому +14

      They see everything, if you think this is crazy watch Theo Von interview retired cop it's very intense

    • @lucidkate
      @lucidkate Рік тому +3

      @@bobbyr2972 Thanks for the suggestion, it was awesome!

    • @pfunkster83
      @pfunkster83 Рік тому +9

      Mike Codella wrote an excellent book I read many years ago. Alphaville: 1988, Crime, Punishment, and the Battle for New York City's Lower East Side.

    • @Gypsyboy932
      @Gypsyboy932 Рік тому

      Mike has his own YT channel for some time. ua-cam.com/users/livebRzxnxxf1vI?feature=share

  • @jeremyreeves8940
    @jeremyreeves8940 8 місяців тому +10

    Most honest and human hearted cop I’ve heard on this show yet. No corruption sensed at all

    • @CommonContentArchive
      @CommonContentArchive 3 місяці тому +1

      The guy's peddling a lot of nonsense, especially about human sacrifices and satanic cults, which is mostly what he does online. If he really believes this stuff, he's incredibly gullible

    • @jeremyreeves8940
      @jeremyreeves8940 3 місяці тому

      @@CommonContentArchive if that’s what he saw…. Who are we to say he’s wrong?

  • @WilliamMoffatt-ru3lt
    @WilliamMoffatt-ru3lt Рік тому +195

    As a retired NYC Firefighter ,who has seen more than one should see, I see you. You were a very good Cop! I appreciate your service and wish you the very best going forward. Thank You fro your Service to my City !!!

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall Рік тому +21

      Thank you William 👍

    • @thenomadrhodes
      @thenomadrhodes Рік тому +4

      Hearing stories from guys like yall make me so glad i came from a small dusty town where the wildest people were drunks drag racing their picks ups and "kid napping" the farmers cow.
      Thank you for being real dudes.

    • @uvcoach42
      @uvcoach42 10 місяців тому +1

      You guys weren’t no slouches either the shit you went through. Thanks for your service.

    • @BigDee33
      @BigDee33 3 місяці тому

      Thanks William for your sacrifice. Enjoy retirement

    • @eriklarson9137
      @eriklarson9137 3 місяці тому

      Is this the new bot behavior? Or do people need validation from strangers this much? I really can't tell.

  • @salsaon2358
    @salsaon2358 Рік тому +75

    His stories about growing up in NYC are absolutely on point. I grew up in Queens, in the 70's and early 80's. It was exactly as he said.

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall Рік тому +3

      👍

    • @SDSOne
      @SDSOne Рік тому +8

      People who now talk about how bad the crime is in NYC have no idea what it used to be. The moral panic and talk about how NYC is some lawless wasteland is a joke. Read about the city in the 70s 80s and early 90s

    • @michaeld.4521
      @michaeld.4521 Рік тому +5

      @@SDSOne We'll be back there soon, well on our way.

    • @SDSOne
      @SDSOne Рік тому

      @@michaeld.4521 not possible. There's cameras everywhere and on everyone. Commiting crime is infinitely more likely to result in arrest. You don't need witnesses like you used to. You don't have neighborhoods that are basically closed off to law enforcement. You can commit crimes but you'll get caught more often than not and more quickly as well. Between cameras, cell phone data, immediate info, apps like citizen etc .... in NYC they can pretty much follow your route from your home to wherever you go if they seek that info. Check out some pictures of the South Bronx in the late 70s

    • @eriklarson9137
      @eriklarson9137 3 місяці тому

      Me too. Except my neighborhood was worse than yours.

  • @emieloo76
    @emieloo76 Рік тому +74

    My dad is a retired detective, but was a patrol officer for years before. He always says that 90% of crime is committed by 10% of people. Seems to be true on every front.
    This was a fantastic episode. One of my favorites thus far! I would love to hear more of his stories!

  • @ericpanissidi6761
    @ericpanissidi6761 8 місяців тому +39

    I worked in San diego County jail for 18 years. Just to pay my child support. I hated it, I was infantry marine so I wasn't soft. Exactly 18 years I imploded. Quit, rock bottom drinking and drugs and hookers and then jail for me. Took 4 years in and out of AA failing. I had to forgive the people that hurt me, and help others. Sounds easy, hardest thing I've ever done. Now poor, but no girls, not much money, but gratitude for once in my life! Peace and God bless you all.

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall 8 місяців тому +4

      🙏stay strong

    • @robertkay9871
      @robertkay9871 Місяць тому

      I was in and out of LA County jail in mid 80's. Very crazy, I know what you went through. Even if I was on the other side. It takes a heavy toll on you.

  • @acon2834
    @acon2834 Рік тому +99

    I could listen to Mike for hours. Please bring him back

  • @ref69
    @ref69 Рік тому +45

    When you're looking for excitement, most of the time you find trouble. Those were my dads words to me before I left to join the army in 1975. I am so glad I listened to him. Great interview sir.....

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall Рік тому +5

      Thank you!

    • @TheCkern100
      @TheCkern100 Рік тому +6

      My mother always said that “trouble usually starts out as fun”​@@mikecodellaupagainstthewall

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall Рік тому +4

      @@TheCkern100 sounds about right🤙

    • @rav9681
      @rav9681 8 днів тому

      Isn’t joining the military putting yourself at the peak of trouble though? Definitely exciting, I guess you didn’t quite heed your old man’s message then

    • @ref69
      @ref69 7 днів тому

      ​@@rav9681I'm doing just fine, retired and enjoying life!!!

  • @kevinhensley4643
    @kevinhensley4643 9 місяців тому +11

    Love hearing these stories from former NYC cops. They were brave gentlemen. Thank you for sharing this video

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall 9 місяців тому

      Thanks for watching 👍

    • @bhe8336
      @bhe8336 3 місяці тому

      Seriously a league of their own. Baltimore cops are also like this.

  • @98pooky
    @98pooky Рік тому +88

    My Uncle is a retired Captain of the NYPD. He’s seen things and experienced things that are unimaginable! 🥹
    Huge respect for the NYPD 💙💙💙
    (He also happens to be my hero! ♥️🫶☀️)

  • @fredflintstone8048
    @fredflintstone8048 Рік тому +352

    I really appreciate this man's testimony regarding mob behavior.. So many will tell stories of a sort of nobility and code of ethics in the mob, glorifying being a part of it. This man tells us about the true character of these psychopaths and that mobsters are NOT people to be looked up to, or put on a pedestal to be admired in any way.

    • @Atticushanlon
      @Atticushanlon Рік тому +1

      Agreed. Every single one of them are pieces of garbage.

    • @Sonofserbia
      @Sonofserbia Рік тому +1

      Those people only give a shit about themselves and money. Nothing else.

    • @MR-nl8xr
      @MR-nl8xr Рік тому +19

      Crazy how an True Honorable Cop is told to stop following a case involving elite people (with their POS kicks & thrills) and the missing persons case of a child.

    • @joemazza1652
      @joemazza1652 Рік тому +3

      Well said, Fred

    • @D-Fens_1632
      @D-Fens_1632 Рік тому +16

      I blame Hollywood for that. The mob movies were very effective at telling stories that humanized mobsters and made them sympathetic antiheroes. And they occasionally glamorized the criminal life, though nowhere near the level of gangster rap.

  • @erikvonerik
    @erikvonerik Рік тому +417

    There needs to be a part two with Mike. Also let’s hear more cop stories please

  • @mattmorrison9379
    @mattmorrison9379 Рік тому +207

    Imagine all the stories this guy has that he hasn't told us.. Thank for sharing Mike

    • @pwlyons759
      @pwlyons759 Рік тому +3

      Grain of salt.

    • @HAMMERHEAD-g3h
      @HAMMERHEAD-g3h Рік тому +3

      Oh yeah. I was a cop for a long time in a busy City and you could write a book on all the stuff you see. Makes you lose faith in society and you become real reclusive where you just want to not be around people.

    • @eriklarson9137
      @eriklarson9137 3 місяці тому +1

      Imagine if his stories aren't even true?

    • @CommonContentArchive
      @CommonContentArchive 3 місяці тому +1

      @@pwlyons759 More than just a grain of salt

  • @jeremyreeves8940
    @jeremyreeves8940 8 місяців тому +8

    How refreshing. A cop with a heart that isn’t corrupt.

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall 8 місяців тому +3

      Thank you ❤

    • @CommonContentArchive
      @CommonContentArchive 3 місяці тому +1

      Different kind of corruption, selling nonsense about Satanic human sacrifice cults on the internet, repeating old worn-out BS conspiracy theories from guys like David Berkowitz. By the way buddy, the Stanford chapel murder was solved by DNA recently, and it was the chapel's security guard who killed Arlis Perry, not a Satanic cult. Surprise, surprise: Burkowitz lied about that, like everything else. Please use some critical thinking skills, for god's sake

    • @creativetalentproductions
      @creativetalentproductions 3 місяці тому +1

      ❤​@@mikecodellaupagainstthewall

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall 3 місяці тому

      @@creativetalentproductions 😉

  • @kellyyork3898
    @kellyyork3898 Рік тому +35

    I think that’s one of the best interviews you’ve done. This policeman absolutely had an angel watching over him. Bless him.

  • @billrankin5899
    @billrankin5899 Рік тому +16

    There's so much online nowadays showing bad cops so it's a welcome change to hear this good cop talk about his experiences. What a good man! All the best to Mike Codella! Thanks, Mark.

  • @gmr7494
    @gmr7494 Рік тому +33

    Superb interview. 80s in NY was no joke at all, and he was right in the thick of it

    • @a.leehilliard4716
      @a.leehilliard4716 Рік тому

      It is worse now. The illegals and their gangs have taken over and the cops do nothing because they have infiltrated all of the precincts.

  • @victorynjesus421
    @victorynjesus421 Рік тому +15

    You should write a book. His stories keep the listener entranced. Mike, thank you for being a good cop. It seems hard to find the good cops these days. I'm grateful God spared your life again and again. You risked you life to better the community. What a tremendous sacrifice. Thank you for your service, Sir

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall Рік тому +3

      Thank You for watching!!

    • @TranscendianIntendor
      @TranscendianIntendor Рік тому +1

      It was probably in 1988 that I and my girlfriend moved into an apartment in the middle of the block on E.11th street. In fact it was New Years and I'd not seen the apartment at night. I felt so threatened that I went out and bought steel scissoring steel bars for the two street facing windows. I'd feel brave for going to ave. B. There was what became a famous" coffee" shop on the corner of B and 10th that ran by Thompkins Sq. Park. That park was a wonderful place the cops would clean up and then it would become a homeless tentville that attracted rats too much for anyone to really tolerate. "You give them an inch and they take a mile." is what would happen in cycles to that park. It was basically divided into the safe for children half and the half where all the tents were. I did rocket launches around Manhattan and the cops wanted to watch so what happened was the goddamned rocket engine blew up on the pad for everyone making me look bad. I'm famous for having bad luck. You simply cannot help but love the City. If you keep your wits about you you can get past how every day there is going to be some terror you have to navigate. But it is a real place with people all around you doing things. Living. Some of us grow up seeking adventure. I don't believe being a cop like that can be done for 20 years. Roman soldiers enlisted for 20 years. There are lots of details of Rome left over. It was the civilization we learned the most from. The Greeks and the Romans. Opium was what they had back then when the doctors would help keep the gladiators able to fight. They were entertainers. Drugs can really help someone entertain you since they can pull away the locks on your mouth and what you will say that is memorable. This cop survived by moving around in the law enforcement entities. I never had a predictable schedule in the City. We were protected that way. We put someone in our apartment for free when we were going to be gone on a movie for 6 weeks. We never saw that young woman again coming back to an immaculate apartment. The TV was broken. I guess she felt guilty for somehow breaking the TV. Brownies was the bar, the bar was part way down the A and at 11th to 10th and then it was 8th and 7th. Chameleon had some great music. Where was it down the street. Seems like it was 4th. My girl insulted Roger Manning who would play his guitar and sing and had a single on the local juke boxes. I don't know what set her off but Roger was a nice guy. I looked him up. We get old. He was doing web design. Mr. Sax played in Brownies. Sean and his wife were breaking up as the place became a music venue not the place I could go for conversations, meeting people.I meant to tell you about Joe Delollio who was a cop but then wanted to be a DP, camera man. I wished I had work for him, but things came apart for me. I learned that you need to be capitalized to handle 2 years. All the disasters seem to be overcome in 2 years.

    • @ThundersMcCoy
      @ThundersMcCoy 4 місяці тому +1

      He did. It's called Alphaville

  • @monroetinker9844
    @monroetinker9844 Рік тому +53

    I was born and raised in those projects and lived in 178 Ave. D also known as the Jacob Riis projects. What he was talking about is very true, and I remember as a child coming home and stepping over people because they were overdosed in the elevator. I subsequently joined EMS and worked for the fire department as a medic for 10 years.

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall Рік тому +6

      Know the building well👍 , thanks for watching.

    • @og_love
      @og_love Рік тому

      bet you do ... pocketed a lot of money from us .@@mikecodellaupagainstthewall

    • @ChrisB10
      @ChrisB10 11 місяців тому

      Crazy ! Do u still live in nyc ?

  • @cherielafleur3137
    @cherielafleur3137 Рік тому +6

    This is a stalwart and genuinely badass man w personal and professional integrity to be admired. Love this guy!

  • @mnol1414
    @mnol1414 Рік тому +7

    Hey Mike-Housing!
    Great to catch this.. I got on in ‘86 and worked up in PSA 6 during the crack epidemic. Got into HIDTA and saw a lot of the same stuff.
    Glad you made it out in one piece.
    Enjoy retirement.. you earned it.

  • @wp1769
    @wp1769 Рік тому +90

    Amazing stories, would love to hear more from Mike. Thank you

  • @AnthonySal
    @AnthonySal Рік тому +83

    I was just commenting on another NYPD episode and they’re all great. A crazy era they worked in and have so many stories. All great story tellers with the same type of personalities which are tremendous! Very old school NYers. Keep these coming!

    • @pineyair6796
      @pineyair6796 Рік тому +5

      Anyone seriously interested in the NYPD should check out "All the Centurions By Robert Leuci". Great inside look on the seedy side of the NYPD and oddly enough has some similarities to Mike's story

    • @russfrancis4220
      @russfrancis4220 10 місяців тому

      If you think that people high up in politics, religion, entertainment, AND POLICE aren't involved in satanism ...
      You can't see the forest through the trees.

  • @Night2RememberEnt
    @Night2RememberEnt Рік тому +26

    Awesome episode here,being a retired NYPD cop myself it's still great to hear how many different stories we have as cops. We all have different crazy stories from patrol and also working during 9-11. God bless the men and woman on the force now.

    • @HAMMERHEAD-g3h
      @HAMMERHEAD-g3h Рік тому +2

      I agree. I also love talking to cops from different areas. I started my career working in the Appalachian mountains as a deputy sheriff and it was a trip. No backup, bad radio Service, got into more fights than I can count. Later went to work for a big city and it was so much different. You could get back up right away, the radios worked pretty good and it was just a entirely different experience. A common phrase in Appalachia was: it's just you and me and they ain't no backup coming. Had a redneck try to take my gun and we got in one hell of a fight. He was on meth and we fought forever. People stood around and watched as we struggled and I was finally able to get him under control. I was so tired I couldn't hardly walk to my vehicle to put him in the back.

  • @ltkreg
    @ltkreg Рік тому +23

    15:36 "... a lot of people in the projects were good people ..." Believe it or not that is 100% factually true.

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall Рік тому +1

      Absolutely 💯 true

    • @raineyj560
      @raineyj560 Рік тому +3

      It's definitely true. Hard working & even those that are in the system ie public assistance are just trying to survive

    • @eriklarson9137
      @eriklarson9137 3 місяці тому

      I didn't believe him, but I believe you random stranger that is probably 12 years old.

    • @robertgarcia-nd7jd
      @robertgarcia-nd7jd 3 місяці тому

      this is fact of life.i get more love from the financially unpowerful ppl of my community as opposed to the elite old & new money folks who could afford to fix the world.i don't blame any human rich or poor for not being able to know how to use money to repair the world's problems.the haves are not at fault for making it in life & maintaining their wealth for themselves,that's just being smart.im sure you gotta love yourself before you can love the world.

  • @kdtrimble
    @kdtrimble Рік тому +29

    99% of us don't know what these guys go through and do for us. Please spread this video as we all need to know! God bless these officers.

  • @bg695
    @bg695 Рік тому +16

    Thanks for your service, Mike. I lived in NYC for 10 years. NYC cops are great people. Love these stories!

  • @scottoleary3726
    @scottoleary3726 Рік тому +19

    This guy seems like the real deal. A guy who really wanted to protect and serve.

  • @pastabatman
    @pastabatman Рік тому +40

    Thank you for showcasing people with purpose and who have made meaningful difference in their life. Please showcase more people like this. The views might be lower but there are many women and men who go beyond their traumas and do well in life.

  • @milkncookiegurl778
    @milkncookiegurl778 Рік тому +66

    I love how he’s just being honest. Great interview as always. 💕

    • @m.e.m.jr.4294
      @m.e.m.jr.4294 Рік тому +1

      No cop is honest. BTW what dose G A stand for?

    • @milkncookiegurl778
      @milkncookiegurl778 Рік тому +1

      @@m.e.m.jr.4294 Point. Just my name.

    • @m.e.m.jr.4294
      @m.e.m.jr.4294 Рік тому

      @@milkncookiegurl778 I do not have time for yt and think we will have good talk so if you like say hi

    • @m.e.m.jr.4294
      @m.e.m.jr.4294 Рік тому

      @@milkncookiegurl778 so

    • @m.e.m.jr.4294
      @m.e.m.jr.4294 Рік тому

      @@milkncookiegurl778 your

  • @aknaj89
    @aknaj89 Рік тому +51

    Mike, you are a great story teller. Thank Mark for sharing this interview with us.

  • @yellowblanka6058
    @yellowblanka6058 Рік тому +21

    As somebody with police in the family and who is disgusted by stories of police corruption and abuse, thank you for representing the good, decent men and women of law enforcement I’ve been acquainted with.

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall Рік тому +1

      Thank you!!

    • @yellowblanka6058
      @yellowblanka6058 Рік тому +2

      @@mikecodellaupagainstthewall You're very welcome sir - we need more officers that understand that "TO PROTECT AND SERVE" is not a suggestion, but a credo.

    • @CommonContentArchive
      @CommonContentArchive 3 місяці тому +1

      I prefer police who take a little privilege here and there to police who spend their time peddling dimwitted "Satanic Panic" gibberish online

  • @northernking4787
    @northernking4787 Рік тому +19

    These police officer interviews are so powerful and important, thank you everyone involved! 🙏🏾❤️

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall Рік тому +2

      Thank you glad you enjoyed it.

    • @MR-nl8xr
      @MR-nl8xr Рік тому +1

      Yea, especially the ones that show elite people get to get away with abominable things.

  • @bretthousman8317
    @bretthousman8317 Рік тому +8

    His demeanor is great. Very straightforward gentleman. And a cop that really did want to make a positive impact on his community and from what it sounds like he did. More of Mr. Codella!

  • @karaconstantine5772
    @karaconstantine5772 Рік тому +11

    Please do more NYPD police officer interviews. This guy is top notch!! Thank you for sharing your story!!

  • @tessdion7211
    @tessdion7211 Рік тому +19

    This man had an angel on his shoulder and one in his pocket. Thank you for your service on the streets. Your the best. God bless.

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall Рік тому +3

      Thank you Tess, and you're right, I did🙏

    • @jimborghini2761
      @jimborghini2761 Рік тому +1

      @@mikecodellaupagainstthewall Mike. Thank God for people like you bro. Enjoy your retirement from the job and God bless, thanks so much for your dedication.

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall Рік тому +1

      @@jimborghini2761 thanks Jim, I appreciate the kind words!

    • @scottgardner4546
      @scottgardner4546 Рік тому

      Like all cops, he also has evil in his heart.

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall Рік тому +3

      @Scott Gardner I love the word ALL. As in all cops. But using that philosophy, ALL individuals that post negative comments are sad and frustrated people in need of sympathy.

  • @TheEverydayShopperReview
    @TheEverydayShopperReview Рік тому +25

    @ Mike, thank you for your service. I grew up in Harlem and in the New York City housing projects and you are absolutely right the drug dealers kept us hostage in those buildings just to let the customers come rolling in. A lot of them didn’t bother us so that we wouldn’t call the cops but they never helped any of us and they scared the shit out of us. I go back to NYC to see family and a new generation much harder and scarier kids scare me more than the dudes that usually just let you pass without trying to mess with people

  • @LK-bz9sk
    @LK-bz9sk Рік тому +8

    Damn. That was one excellent interview. Could listen to Mike speak and tell stories for a few more hours. What a humble man too.

  • @myportal8512
    @myportal8512 Рік тому +36

    What an intense career. Thanks for the story! I love your channel.

  • @michaelkearns8499
    @michaelkearns8499 3 місяці тому +1

    Honest, Real, Stand Up Guy, and a Gentleman. Well done Mike. And the remarks he makes about Berkowitz are very insightful and in my opinion, spot on.

  • @theelvisguy6933
    @theelvisguy6933 Рік тому +7

    I know this , I have the utmost respect for this guy. I wouldn’t want to piss this guy off for nothing. My uncle was a cook county cop , Chicago. They know how to take care of business

  • @baleighmorey1626
    @baleighmorey1626 Рік тому +3

    I really found this guy to be genuine and authentic and I appreciated his honesty and transparency and admitting the things that he had done that were maybe not above board but the reasoning why. I really enjoyed this interview

  • @Herewearenowentertainus
    @Herewearenowentertainus Рік тому +9

    Born & raised in Brooklyn, still live here and am so familiar with everything he is saying.

  • @patriciab825
    @patriciab825 Рік тому +14

    Wow. I can't imagine what kind of inner strength you have to have or develop to come through that and still believe most people are basically good. I believe that too, but I haven't lived the kind of life Mike has. Thank you for your service, Mike Codella.

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall Рік тому +2

      Thank you Patricia.

    • @Trevorjennings679
      @Trevorjennings679 Рік тому

      Hello Patricia, how are you doing today, hope you’re fine and safe from the Virus??

    • @cbeautynblue19
      @cbeautynblue19 Рік тому

      He has an inspiring inner strength. On the other hand, I wonder if he wants the audience to remain hopeful in the goodness in mankind rather than actually believing that most people are good. I would be broken and very guarded after seeing what he's seen firsthand.

  • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
    @mikecodellaupagainstthewall Рік тому +32

    Thank you Mark and your team for the opportunity. Stay Safe!

  • @andresparrow2971
    @andresparrow2971 Рік тому +4

    This was one of the best interviews. It was also great to see someone who wanted to do good and wanted to positively effect his environment as a policeman.

  • @JoeV-nq9ez
    @JoeV-nq9ez Рік тому +22

    A good childhood friend from Ohio went to NYC to be a cop in 1991. A couple years ago he retired from New York City Police Force and moved to Florida still a young man. He just took his own life last year. Was always a happy guy but whatever he saw as a NYC cop changed him

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall Рік тому +3

      So Sad!

    • @tessdion7211
      @tessdion7211 Рік тому +3

      So sorry to read this. RIP brave soul. May God be with your friend.

    • @philjerome9795
      @philjerome9795 Рік тому +5

      Sorry to hear that. I did 30 years on the NYPD and saw fellow officers commit suicide way too often, once is too much. A young officer from Staten Island just took his own life.

    • @JoeV-nq9ez
      @JoeV-nq9ez Рік тому +3

      @@philjerome9795 his name was Dave chicatello

    • @ellensiniscalchi1482
      @ellensiniscalchi1482 Рік тому +2

      Joe, his suicide is more likely a result of clinical depression, rather than his experiences in the NYPD. Cops do have a high rate of suicide-and that's directly related to access to a firearm at a time when one shouldn't have access.

  • @thesufferingpodcast
    @thesufferingpodcast Рік тому +52

    Mike is a great guy with an incredible story

  • @FinnDelMundoTravel
    @FinnDelMundoTravel Рік тому +41

    PLEASE give us a follow up interview for Mike!! His life and stories are bombshells! I would love to know where he was during September 11, and more case stories over his career. 👌

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall Рік тому +23

      My office at the time was 7 WTC. I was in the first building when it came down🙏

    • @FinnDelMundoTravel
      @FinnDelMundoTravel Рік тому +7

      @@mikecodellaupagainstthewall INCREDIBLE!!!! To hear this if you do a follow up would be a privilege. Thank god you survived.

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall Рік тому +12

      @Finn Del Mundo my guardian angel was looking over me that day for sure.

  • @scottvincent4413
    @scottvincent4413 Рік тому +16

    You have to interview more cops especially these guys from the 80’s

  • @superbadasswewant2b
    @superbadasswewant2b Рік тому +5

    I had no.idea, we were going there. The TRUTH is written on his face. Front and center.

  • @felicianofamily1745
    @felicianofamily1745 Рік тому +23

    My daddy was an NYPD Detective Lieutenant Commander- retired after 36 years of dedicated service to the Clty of New York. My grandfather retired as an esteemed NYPD Lieutenant. Thank you sir and to all NYPD officers past and present for protecting our city! ❤🚔🚨👍🏾

  • @VioletJoy
    @VioletJoy Рік тому +59

    This guy is straight out of a movie. The looks, the accent, the stories. I'd love to meet him at a party and hear more stories.

    • @mikecodellaupagainstthewall
      @mikecodellaupagainstthewall Рік тому +8

      Haha maybe one day😉

    • @katherine6698
      @katherine6698 Рік тому

      @@mikecodellaupagainstthewall bee cut

    • @katherine6698
      @katherine6698 Рік тому +1

      😮

    • @VioletJoy
      @VioletJoy Рік тому +1

      @@mikecodellaupagainstthewall 🤩

    • @rubyredd6366
      @rubyredd6366 Рік тому +3

      I strongly believe that first, he's not the partying time and secondly, he more than likely wouldn't want to reminisce about his horrific experiences.
      Mike felt compelled to speak to Mark and followers, to bring awareness about not even a third of what he witnessed! Going Undercover is DANGEROUS, just wearing a uniform is deadly, and as he mentioned, he and his partner had a #contract on their lives and although they were transferred out, soon thereafter, the mob located him.
      In case you didn't notice, Mike's body language speaks volumes about the trauma and nightmares that he endured during his lengthy career, many of these officers continue to live PTSD,
      Mike comes across a solid and forthright humble gentleman that went into this profession to stop getting in trouble as a teen, he thought that becoming a cop he would make a difference, he barely did, why? Because when his superiors gagged him and shut hard core on-going criminal cases, he was advised not to pursue further, which he did, this man's greatest achievement was to retire healthy and alive! I'm highly elated for his commitment and to confirm how corrupted cops, law enforcement, however whatever label we wish to apply! I'm certain that these wicked cults continue to exist! Epstein is a perfect example of the 21st century! Mike we salute you for representing NYC🗽! ✨️✨️✨️✨️✨️✨️✨️✨️✨️🏒

  • @michelefortino3233
    @michelefortino3233 11 місяців тому +3

    So unrecognized are officers/fire fighters who risk their lives for all of us..AMEN.. May God continue to Bless you sir...

  • @kengrimsley4172
    @kengrimsley4172 Рік тому +2

    Mark is the best interviewer ever. I've watched dozens of these stories...always gripping and make you think.

  • @knockonolan
    @knockonolan Рік тому +6

    Thank you Mike for all your devotion and sacrifice thru the years. You're an example for many in our profession. Also, much respect for attaining a black belt under Renzo. I'm a LAPD det/former NYPD MOS and a blue belt under Rener Gracie. Fidelis ad Mortem!

  • @CriticalThinking-ql2hh
    @CriticalThinking-ql2hh Рік тому +6

    I genuinely appreciate Mike for sharing his journey as a cop. The public does not hear what these brave men and women go through during their daily lives. I appreciate his service. :)

  • @raymondpetrovits2336
    @raymondpetrovits2336 Рік тому +21

    Mike has had to absorb all the hate, violence, pain, human treachery. This man has seen things and done things the average person will never experience. Super human being. Interesting life. Thank you Mike. Great interview

  • @tammyhamptonblanco1126
    @tammyhamptonblanco1126 11 місяців тому +4

    I could listen to your stories all day!!

  • @JasonGerald-p3h
    @JasonGerald-p3h Рік тому +11

    Was a rookie officer in the Fighting 9th Precinct in the late 80's. Crack was the major problem although Alphabet City offered heroin, weed. and PCP. Definitely was an "A" house (dangerous). The 9th precinct officers were the greatest. If you could work there, you could work anywhere. It was the start of an incredible career thanks to the many officers that trained me. Retired in 2008 but the Fighting 9th will always be in my heart.

  • @Nebulaaa_V2
    @Nebulaaa_V2 Рік тому +15

    You do an amazing thing getting these awesome and amazing peoples stories out. We appreciate you Mark

  • @lisap4251
    @lisap4251 9 місяців тому +3

    The 1970’s in the City it was wild. I grew up in Greenwich Village that was ran by The Genovese family in the 1980’s my mother moved to 30th and 8th Ave. and I was Shell Shocked, coming from an Italian neighborhood and then moving to a completely different neighborhood. 42 st. 8 th Ave was crazy

  • @Stella.Starlight
    @Stella.Starlight Рік тому +19

    I remember that fearful fews years in NYC (late 70s - early 80s). Many of my college friends ether returned home there after college or moved there to kickstart their careers. I would visit from NH and they would show me around. My friends were always on edge, even during the daytime. I was so happy when things got better. Say what you want about Giuliani, he had a lot to do with those improvements.

  • @joseramirez5185
    @joseramirez5185 Рік тому +4

    Love these NYPD Officer stories! Please keep interviewing these folks. Thank you.

  • @jcollins1305
    @jcollins1305 Рік тому +6

    I had some interaction with NYPD Missing Persons (Morgue Squad) when I was a cop in a different department and they were aces. God bless, and enjoy your retirement, you’ve done God’s work!

  • @Lewis94YouTube
    @Lewis94YouTube Рік тому +13

    I could listen to this guy for hours

  • @yaboilayshay8944
    @yaboilayshay8944 Рік тому +8

    Please get this guy to come back. You could do like a 10 episode on this guy l love his storys

  • @CC-hz1qm
    @CC-hz1qm Рік тому +8

    Here for the accent, the story, everything!

  • @Chertoff88
    @Chertoff88 Рік тому +6

    Thank you for letting this man tell his story

  • @kristeneades8888
    @kristeneades8888 Рік тому +4

    A good portion of people are out for themselves.
    Best interview you have had. Bravo

  • @Liciablyth
    @Liciablyth Рік тому +7

    Thank you Mike for sharing your experience and thank you for your service.

  • @alaintremaine3302
    @alaintremaine3302 Рік тому +4

    Another fine interview with a retired NYC police officer. In this case, I had read Michael Codella and Bruce Bennett's book, Alphaville, quite some time ago. Thanks, Mark.

  • @edamameedamame1202
    @edamameedamame1202 Рік тому +8

    Good guys like Mark makes NY the greatest. Thank you for your service and sharing your stories, looking sharp and fantastic for a retired gentleman 😊😊😊, nice!

  • @mannygrossman
    @mannygrossman Рік тому +19

    Great to see my buddy Mike Codella in this format. Although we disagree on SOS, I have nothing but respect for the guy and he has always had my back. Big ups!

    • @elmertillogrande6893
      @elmertillogrande6893 Рік тому +2

      I just looked at your channel and WOW , what a line up of stories . New Sub here!

    • @xp7575
      @xp7575 Рік тому

      You look like the kinda p3d0 scum that would cover up the truth about the Son of Sam Cult

    • @Qotsarena
      @Qotsarena Рік тому +1

      You always pop up on anything related to SOS. Again, I thought you were done with the case ?

    • @mannygrossman
      @mannygrossman Рік тому

      @@Qotsarena Sorry, who are you again? Because you're acting like your opinion matters when it doesn't.

    • @Qotsarena
      @Qotsarena Рік тому +2

      @@mannygrossman and yours does I take it 😂

  • @johnfish1194
    @johnfish1194 Рік тому +2

    Retired LEO here, thank you for your service Sir. I know exactly what you went through, though I think your hood was rougher than the one i patrolled.

  • @PlutoTheGod
    @PlutoTheGod Рік тому +7

    Finally a NY cop who was an actual cop and doesn’t glorify the mob or have a bunch of mob friends. Half these dudes have come on here and basically admitted to being straight up gangsters with a badge

  • @Coodeville
    @Coodeville Рік тому +8

    Outstanding interview! I was there back then. He speaks the truth

  • @gabrielamendez3104
    @gabrielamendez3104 Рік тому +22

    He is a great story teller and I was so captivated by this episode. The part about the NY elites and the rituals was very crazy to me - especially since NYPD didn’t want them to investigate further suddenly. Who’s to say that these “elites” aren’t paying organizations for silence?

    • @christinelozier3511
      @christinelozier3511 Рік тому +2

      Or threatening them

    • @wokkawicklo
      @wokkawicklo Рік тому

      It's so systemic that the organizations of which you speak are most likely ran by the "people" we're talking about. Just look at Epstein's little black book of people and phone numbers and the flight logs of his plane. All walks of life from presidents to pop stars. Same thing in that case aside from that monster maxwell there have been zero arrests made

    • @chonesiaharris9648
      @chonesiaharris9648 Рік тому

      Or how about some of the cops are Freemason and eastern stars and are apart of it 🤔

  • @TheTruthBombNY
    @TheTruthBombNY Рік тому +5

    I GREW UP IN THE LOWER EAST SIDE AKA ALPHABET CITY. I STARTED IN BARUCH HOUSING ON COLUMBIA STREET THEN MOVED TO CALIFORNIA FOR A YEAR. I WAS HOMLESS IN CALIFORNIA FOR A WHILE BEFORE THIS FAMILY TOOK ME IN. AFTER THAT YEAR I CAME BACK TO MY OLD HOOD IN THE LOWER EAST SIDE. THE BUS RIDE FROM CALIFORNIA WAS 3 Days AND I MUST HAVE BEEN AROUND 15 years OLD THEN.
    I ACTUALLY CONSIDERED COMING ON THIS SHOW TO TELL MY STORY. Anyway I moved to 2nd street between ave A and Ave B. Back then the drugs were way out of hand and we had many people some rich coming from Jersey to buy drugs on my Block. MOST OF THE WHITE PEOPLE WERE FROM THERE.
    I spoke to a guy I made friends with on the street and told him I needed work to survive. I had very little education and didn’t know how to write and getting a legitimate job would have been very difficult in so many ways. Transportation etc.
    Anyway he spoke to his boss the drug dealer and they gave me a job . My job was to stand on the corner and look out for police. He offered me $200 a day to do this plus a 30 minute break and they paid for my lunch meal at the Cuban chinese restaurant on the corner of ave B and 2nd street. Job was not that difficult and before you know it I had nice clothes a bunch of jewelry I used to buy from the junkies that came to sell it to get their next fix . You can buy anything on the streets those days. Jewelry , radios, camcorders which were very popular back then and anything else you can imagine. I even seen moms bring their daughters for sex so that they can get drugs. A lot of the buildings over there had rooms where you could go in and do your drugs indoors instead of the streets and they would provide the water and the stove etc.. moms used to go up there. I didn’t see that part happen but I know that’s what was going on. I was very young at the time but very street smart. Every drug spot had there own name. The drug spot I worked for was called MAD. They were the only ones allowed to sell dope on that block. There was another drug dealer but they sold cocaine WHICH DIDNT CONFLICT with the Heroin spot . The two dealers had a mental understanding about there roles on that block but they were not overly cordial. They both had an understanding that they had to control their customers and not let them get out of hand or cause too much problems that will cause the police to come in and delay sales. I became friends with the cocían dealers also. The guy who ran that operation was named Franco. He had two Brothers that would help him work things and help intimidate others that might try to move in. They drove a black Jeep and everyone knew who they were. I used to do the night shift with him. He had me stand in front of the building not on the corner, like the dope spot and direct human traffic. I used to tell the drug addicts when they could go in the building to cop and when they had to wait for clearance. They were very disciplined because they knew if I had to raise my voice they could get the biggest beat down of their life. I wouldn’t be the one doing the beat down. Someone would come out the building and check them for me. Those guys over there didn’t play. The dope spot made much more money at ten dollars a bag. The coke spot $5 . The dope was sold out of an abandoned building with a back escape route that involved jumping down an 8 foot wall to evade cops when they rushed in. We used to know the cops by there name because they would eventually catch one of us and there names was on the report. There was a duo Danny and I forgot the chubby ones name or if he was Danny and the other person was the name i didn’t remember but they knew each of us when they came. We used to yell bahando (spanish which means coming) when they were approaching block in their unmarked cars but when it was danny and the other guy we would yell the name Bahando!! tThen Danny . Because we knew he knew who we were. Most marked cars would just drive through as if they were on there way somewhere else . But these guys were super active.
    We didn’t hate those cops .They always treated us fairly when they caught us. Many times they woukd catch us and let us go because they couldn’t find the drugs on us. Usually we hid them under a parked car on top of the back tire or in a bag in a garbage bag if we sold outside the hole but usually it’s in what we called the hole ( in the abandoned building). The entrance was an actual hole in the building. Missing bricks. Unlike the coke spot down the block where it was in an actual building where tenants lived. The people who lived on that block were not afraid of those drug dealers. They were nothing like the young drug dealers today. The person who ran them were adults and they did not tolerate any of the drug dealers harassing tenants. If they needed to use one of the apartments to hold their drugs temporarily for the day or long term, they would pay the tenants well to use their apartment. You can get $500 for the day. If long term probably less per day but higher volume so much more money overall. These guys were making thousands and they were very generous. Since the younger dealers were supervised by the older ones you did not have petty nonsense going on. There was one grocery store on the block owned by a very old man and if he came out to complain about the drug addicts hanging out in front of his store waiting to cop, the dealers would apologize and tell the addicts to take a walk until they are allowed to buy. Sometimes there will be an arrest going on down the block that had nothing to do with the drugs on my block but we had to wait until that incident was over before we can send addicts back in the hole to buy again..
    on occasion I woukd be without a shift on my block and woukd have to go to a different block to pick up some money. One time I went to 3rd street between A and B . That block was the next block parallel to the one I worked at mainly. In that one the Drug Dealer Gordo wanted me inside the building which was more riskier for the same pay. There I had to man the entrance door. I would let the tenants in and the drug buyers when they came to the door. Before that day was over Danny and the other cop raided that place. They kicked the door and got in . The dealers that was on the 1st floor ran into one of the tenants apartment they had on the payroll and the cops could not just go into those apartments without a warrant so they were safe. I on the other hand had some drugs on my floor so I thought for sure I was going to be arrested. They held me while they searched in the area I was in . They opened a garbage that was near me and went through the contents one by one. Half way through they picked up a can of soda. The can was not open so they tossed it into another bag and kept looking. After some time they gave up let me go and went away.
    Thankfully i didn’t get arrested that day. The can of soda was really a safe. If you try to screw the top it would come off but they didn’t know that. Inside there was a bundle of dope. A bag of dope is $10 a bundle is ten bags which is a $1,000 worth. A Felony. Back then if you got arrested they would hold you for 3 days and release you with a court date and a court appointed attorney who sole purpose is to make his clients take a pleas deal. Depending on what your position was and how permanent you were your drug dealer will get you a lawyer. Since I was under 18 years of age and 1st offense you was kinda secure of getting out worse case with probation. The good thing about not getting arrested that day is that now I still had the get out of jail card for having a 1st offense which I could cash in later.
    Anyway I stopped working at that 3rd street spot and went back to 2nd street. I hung out with some shady characters back then and could have been killed some of the times I was with them. I’ve been in places where people just came in with guns and started shooting up the place and I ran out and survived. Other times my friends had beef with some kids and asked me to go with them to confront them . This one time that I did not go with them one of them got shot in the ass.
    He lived but I’m happy I did not go that day. I can go on for days about my life story but I will end it here. Maybe I will write a book one day if I can remember everything that happened. I went through a lot. Was placed in a foster home when I was 5 and came out when I was 9. Then things got worse.
    Anyway I survived 40 years later and not long ago I ran into that Gordo drug dealer in the street in the Bronx. Just ran into him in a grocery store. I also stayed in contact with a girlfriend I had back then when I was working for those dealers. She used to watch me from her fire scape when I did the night shift and her mom was sleeping. She’s a correction officer now in the courts on grand concourse.
    Anyway, have a good night. It’s 1am for me right now. ✌🏾

  • @peteschiavoni
    @peteschiavoni Рік тому +6

    Mark I’m really enjoying these police stories. Thanks for doing them.

  • @ethan.wroblewski
    @ethan.wroblewski Рік тому +3

    Thank you for your service officer Mike! You did great, as a aspiring cop, you inspired me even more to pursue it!

  • @morgana9981
    @morgana9981 Рік тому +14

    Great seeing you again Mike. Love your book. Highly recommend!

  • @shonuff718
    @shonuff718 Рік тому +11

    Great interview !! It’s sad that people will hear these stories and still won’t believe how evil the world is

  • @alinaeem27
    @alinaeem27 Рік тому +5

    Look forward to a part 2 and more retired NYPD Cop stories.

  • @mrn13
    @mrn13 Рік тому +2

    Cop stories from the "bad old days" is gold. Thanks!

  • @brunolima7402
    @brunolima7402 Рік тому +11

    More interviews like this one please. Thanks for the video.

  • @chinaiwei
    @chinaiwei Рік тому +2

    Thank you for such a truthful interview that we normally do not see from mainstreams. A lot of reflections and lession learned after watching them.

  • @Jd-eq3ul
    @Jd-eq3ul Рік тому +15

    Hes one cop in NY in a city with thousands of officers , just imagine all the stories each one has .the amount of madness and filth is mind boggling

  • @jakestercake
    @jakestercake Рік тому +5

    Inspiring story. Thank you, Mr Codella, for taking on all that responsibility.

  • @eriklindenhall1529
    @eriklindenhall1529 Рік тому +4

    My favorite interview so far. Great stories. Thanks for your service Mike!

  • @cc.99-b5v
    @cc.99-b5v Рік тому +2

    Appreciate Men with True Hearts ❤ shown up here, helping humanity through life played-back to see the changes needed to be made - TY

  • @hellokitty-nl
    @hellokitty-nl Рік тому +7

    So so so interesting to hear from these people with exceptional lives. Thank you sir and thank you, Mark ‼️

  • @theswede5402
    @theswede5402 Рік тому +2

    Retired cop stories especially from the east coast are some of the best interviews lately here.

  • @msjernice
    @msjernice Рік тому +13

    I'm intrigued, I would like to hear more stories from him 🤗

  • @Didi-tn7ke
    @Didi-tn7ke Рік тому +6

    Wow what a fascinating interview. Its wonderful to hear from honourable individuals like Mike, making a direct difference to their communities and rooting out evil wherever it festers. Thank you Mike. Its a shame you were blocked from busting those cases wide open. Is it possible that people were being protected by your higher ups? We see it so much in the news, with people covering up other people in high places. God bless you.

  • @yukonjack.
    @yukonjack. Рік тому +12

    Mr Codella, Very interesting and amazing stories, I can tell you have a good heart putting your life on the line to make a difference, it seems work can be similar although totally different from a drug rush so many in that world crave, many people that work a job or several tend to get bored just like you transferring to find new opportunities and challenges, I can relate to your stories being close to the same age and I just wanted to say thank you for your service then and for today! The more we can learn about one another the better off this world will be because we need all the help we can get in this current day and age, I don't even have to go into that story I'm sure you can relate! take care my friend you're a stand-up man in a very good way and a true American! 🇺🇸✌️