The sad part is i was only 99% sure it was a joke prior to seeing that part of the video. But as soon as it started, the tone and everything made me start giggling. and before anyone gets mad. Kids as young as 5 have been ACTUALLY arrested and one who was like 8-9 was arrested for a DRAWING in school and expelled... so sometimes i'm skeptical. sue me.
My guess is that she was probably slowly freaking out about the strange man she didn't know standing over her and when she burst into tears was just a comedic accident.
@@ginorfita4367parole is an English word It is like when you’re in custody or jail and someone like interviews you ig and if you answer with like good words they’ll shorten your sentence
@@salty._.wat3rwell thats a loan word- its a french word used in the english language. Ketchup is a chinese word, safari is arabic, tsunami and tycoon are japanese. Cannibal is a native american word. Other loanwords are hamburger since it comes from hamburg, tapas, pizza, umbrella, noodle comes from german nudel. Weiner is alo german. Ballet, deja vu, illusion, angst, kindergarten, drama, logic, nemesis, espresso, duo, lava, tornado are all loanwords.
@@ethyr I was pulled over one day with my kids in the back seat. The cop explained that I was speeding. I might’ve had a few of tears and quivering lip. But I explained, “My daddy had just given me the car, and the steering wheel is blocking my view of the speed thingy! I can’t see how fast I’m going!” The cop looked at my steering wheel, flicked something and raised the steering wheel! “Oh! Wow! You fixed it! I can see the speed thing now!! This is so awesome!! How did you fix it? Can you show me?”, I asked in excitement. “Certainly, ma’am!”, the officer affirmed, “Just push this lever and move the steering wheel!” “Can I try it?”, I asked “Certainly! Hold that lever and adjust the wheel as you hold it down”, he replied. “Like this?”, I asked for confirmation. “Yes,” he replied, “now adjust the wheel.” I was moving the steering wheel up and down, expressing my extremely happy gratitude, then raised the wheel, set it and smiled at him. He said, “Drive safe, Ma’am!” and returned to his car. I lowered the steering wheel back to my comfort level and drove off. HOWEVER, I did watch my speed more closely, after that encounter, because safety on the road is important.
That Dad guy. Great guy. He messed up once in his lifetime. He stands there showing respect. What a great gesture. This is why we should treat each other respectful and friendly.
i'd say great mom. the black one that said, "i don't want him [her son] dragged through the system." she probably knows about the revolving door that father just sent his child through.
Putting her in jail would just make her more into a criminal. And show that her father doesn't want her is how she's gonna take it. The only reason he put her in jail is because he knew he was too shitty of a parent to be able to get her under control. Fear is not an effective motivator for children or people in general. She's also gonna have a record in her life. She'll be ruined. She's not gonna be able to get a good job. She's not gonna be able to get into college. No business is gonna trust her. And jail is just gonna harden her.
@@420inmysystem69 Juvenile record makes your point meaningless. The records would be sealed or expunged after turning 18 or a time after. So no, No one would know and most businesses don't care about a case that isn't even available anymore because it usually means it was nothing. Also, the kid is going out of her way to steal vehicles with her father telling her she could go to prison, most likely having told her about him going to jail already. She has no care or remorse for the actions, only upset shes getting punished. Also, she isnt going to jail if you watch the video, her father said he wasnt going to have someone who steals his vehicle that could be used to jump states in his house. If you would, youre a moron, its like keeping your addict child from rehab and leaving them in a house full of their addiction. Youre just asking for them to do it again, but maybe worse this time because the last wasnt so bad.
@@nickxcaliber7991why do you guys bring negativity into everything?? nobody cares about the race of a child, stop trying to make this silly situation negative by bringing up racism.
Oh shut the hell up. How can't you not see a bigger picture here. Teach a lesson that's okay, getting them a criminal record almost sounding excited that they'll go to jail, you can't just throw your kid under the bus like that.
@@DouglasH777So all the other (channel sponsored) content where police are violating the rights of innocent minors because they MIGHT commit a future crime make your “soul feel good” too? American law enforcement is THE epitome of hypocrisy….and our collective stupidity tolerates the endless rights violations….so nothing ever really improves or evolves. Just more generic law enforcement volatile stupidity. It’s OK, though….as long as there’s a clip of a rando cop amusing a toddler (AKA “future police victim”). Pathetic.
@@juicebox464Juvenile records generally don't. If you're going to catch a charge you definitely want to do it before the age of 18 and preferably before 16. Edit - I mean preferably NEVER but...😅
It's exactly what the problem is. If you own a gun, and you are responsible about gun safety, you would have already drilled those gun fundamentals into the child's head. That child should have been embarrassed and should have felt guilty about his actions knowing that his parents would have been furious about it, but instead, he acted like he didn't do anything wrong, and mom defended him. The way your child responds in this situation is a direct reflection of what you taught them about gun safety and the seriousness of their actions and words involving guns. I have taught my son this and because I know that I have taught this well, I would have sent my son to the wolves because he knew better. I would have used this moment to say, "I taught you better, and that what you did, you did KNOWING that it was wrong. This is your consequences, and you will face them." How can we keep the 2nd amendment strong if we aren't responsible enough to pass the knowledge on to our children? My solution is, take the rights away from the parents of the kids like this IF they defend their kids making these types of threats online. Those parents aren't responsible gun owners if their kids think that it is ok to make these kinds of threats. The deciding factor is that the parents ignore the severity of the threats and defend their kids' actions as "normal". Thats NOT a responsible gun owner and these threats aren't normal and shouldn't be considered as such. You are the problem. You should have your rights stripped, NOT the responsible gun owners who would never accept this behavior.
As a 15 year old myself those threats should be taken seriously. It will be regretted that actions weren’t taken in place previously to prevent any case which a shooting has been backed up by a previous said threat.
while this is part true they should really look into the school because i more then promise theres more going on im sure things happen to him there which also is a massive cause to these as well and unfortunately they ALWAYS dont look into the school until after its to late its disappointing
@@jonbird6566 Yeah but kids will say shit like this still. You really think most those kids on there don't know for a fact how much trouble they'd be in if their parents heard that shit? Kids will swear playing video games knowing they'd be punished if their parents heard them. I mean, I remember kids made random comments like that when I was in school, they're literally pushing boundaries to be "edgy", and kids push the boundaries of the rules all the time. I get the idea of not knowing who the next real shooter is, but we don't arrest someone for threat of an assault if they say "I swear the next guy to bug me is going to get socked in the face!" or something similar because we understand that isn't a comment made seriously. Maybe some crazy dude means it, and we arrest him when he does it, most people it's all talk. There's also a serious conversation on what exactly we're going to arrest over. If a kid has vent art or a poem showing or describing how much he wishes he could shoot up his bullies, will that be taken as a threat? Even though that's a known form of venting? I just don't agree with this idea. It's kind of a "sacrificing freedom for security" issue. I get stamping down on these will increase the odds we'll stop the next mass shooter, but in the process we end up arresting god knows how many kids who were just talking shit in the process. If we take everything people say seriously we'd end up arresting a lot more people for nonsense. I don't mind as much a policy like this where maybe someone with legal authority "arrests" a kid and once in the car talks to him about how serious this is while his partner explains to the parent the child isn't actually being arrested and they're just doing a "scared straight" kind of thing. This will also allow parents ot know they need to keep their firearms more secure than usual so the child doesn't acquire them. But I am not sure I'm in support for actual arrests over words.
@@heavennunya809 As far as I know, credible threats of violence are not protected speech, in the US at least, so I don't believe this falls into sacrificing freedom for security. Where the level of credibility comes in is a point of debate, but it's generally safe to say that the feds are slow on the uptake, so if the investigation has made it to the point of an arrest, it's likely for a good reason (not always, but it's pretty uncommon for the feds to arbitrarily arrest a 15 year old suburban kid, specifically because of how bad the optics are). Generally, saying things like "i wanna kill all my bullies" is fine, especially in art (see Pumped Up Kicks, etc.), but saying "i'm going to bring my dad's gun to school and kill at least 7 people" is not, and really shouldn't be acceptable. If that's acceptable, I'm unsure where the line of calling something a valid threat is to be drawn; is it after the kid has started shooting? Remembering that feds are slow, so it's not like they'd be watching for this kid to buy a gun (not that he could legally anyway) and then swoop in like some sting operation.
That poor father. My heart breaks for him. Having to see your daughter going down the same path you did has to be the most terrifying thing. Bless them both. I hope they’re well
@@Tuco_Salamanca3so he just turns his back on her so she has more trouble and problems coming to her than needed even if its temporary i get the dads point but its still not the right way
@@LiaManila-un7pflearn in tough way I have customer tell me his story he didn’t have a dad growing up his dad In jail when he was a kid now he have kid of his own he doesn’t want the same path his dad is in he spend time with his kids when they’re little now & teach them not to catch any trouble I tell him when his kids grow up go middle and high school check their friends because friends can lead into something’s parents don’t know
@jessy7796 it would be hypocritical if the father was still doing shit and going to jail. But as he said, he turned his life around and raised his daughter, making sure he never did stupid stuff like in his younger years. If he said she should never do any wrong in her entire life then he would be a hypocrite. But all he said is own up to what you did and pay the price and improve yourself.
Not kidding I am 11 my friend turned 3 (was his birthday) he had the same toy car but as a jeep mf drove it over my (he got it when he was 2 but still driving like a F1 driver)
those two kids in the third clip are out of control - no license, no seatbelts, and _speeding??_ talk about usual suspects! these animals have no regard for anybody, and the weak DA and judges are just letting them loose on the streets. pathetic!
that officer with that 3yr.... i've ALWAYS thought that we should have 2 officers who's soul purpose is to not only uphold the law, but ultimately serve the community in ways just like he did. if police regularly did that we would have a genuine communion since we wouldn't have the fear of speaking up.
we have something similar to this at my high school and i believe at other local ones as well. we have two main officers who walk around in uniform and one casual officer who’s job is to make the kids comfortable with the police. everyone loves him and he talks to everyone. of course the officers in uniform are nice too, but the casual officer is there to help the students understand that the cops aren’t there to hurt them. i think it’s a really good idea to help students to not fear the police!
that was the point of foot patrolling back in the day. the officers would typically be in a comercial area, go into businesses, and generally build up a rapport with the people of the area.
I respect parents who refuse to coddle their kids after they commited crime, and have them learn their lesson. There are many parents who would defend the terrible actions of their kids which sets up a terrible example for them and would one day screw them over in the future.
i think people are missing the big picture in the comments. why not teach them not to commit crime by punishing them and teach them to plead the fifth? if we all start being fine with letting these cops negotiate with the parents to send our kids to jail, it won't be long before they're negotiating with your kids to send you to jail.
What are you talking about? There's like 99.9% chance that was just a shitpost, so how could he be convicted of a crime if there's only a 0.1% chance that it was a threat? Are they not supposed to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt?
@@skitidet4302 Not anymore. Our "justice" system convicts innocent people based on nothing but allegations all the time now. How many rape cases get overturned because the accuser lied? How many people are set free after it comes out the cops & prosecutors & even judges conspired to put an innocent person in prison?
The one with the girls who stole the truck really ticks me off. One of the girls was on probation. How in the hell was that not a violation!? Plus, the government tells us crime is going down, but it is only because they don't charge people who they catch doing crimes even if they look for them in the first place.
Congratulations, you have made it this far as one of the many people who has an oversimplified belief of what is going on out there and clearly has no clue what is going on. The officer pointed out to the Father that while he stated he wanted to press charges, it was going to be at the call of a department that is specifically assigned to review underage violations and determine an appropriate course of action. Being lenient or merciful is not "criminal". The girl on probation was not getting away scots free either. Her paroll officer was going to be informed of the event, which still puts heat on her. As an outside source looking in your are given limited, very limited, details about the events. Which is why we have people trained and schooled in how to handle the law rather than leaving it up to random commenters on the internet who think they know better when they do not. Chances are, if the department approved the charges, that girl was going to be arrested, sent to jail, and her life was going to become worse than hell. That is not something you just point at someone and go "yep, guilty, lets ruin their life more". The law, in cases like this where it is petty theft or lightweight crimes, will usually make a show of force to put the fear of god in someone but then give them the opportunity to take an easier way out. That way out is not scots free. What happened is still on record. If she did something again it would come up that she was given a break in this case. Everything is taken into account. Everything. Had it been something like murder, threaten to murder, unlawful possession of weaponry, etc. There would be no debate. But the choice to charge her in this case and not was probably going to be the defining choice if she gets to even have a chance to have a reasonably better life. Now, if it all worked out, she will have realized how bad things could have gotten for her and stopped taking part in risking her future like that. Or, she does something again and I would bet third time is a strike out. You can't just take a kid, call them guilty, throw them in jail, and call it a day. They are not adults. And this isn't just a conversation about age. As teens our bodies are still developing. Hormones are out of wack. That alone can make someone do some dumb shit in the heat of the moment. Being older I can look back and laugh at myself for similar situations, thankfully nothing that got me legally in trouble but not the point. Kids have a higher chance of coming around and acknowledging their mistakes than adults do. Which is why they are more easily given breaks. Not all will, but that has to be their choice and we do not, under any circumstances, have the right to make that choice for them. All we can do, which has been done by the law, is set boundaries and limits before the punishments start to really crack down.
@@christopherpoet458 brother and christ they just got done breaking his windows as well then they steal the mans truck id be pissed if they didnt charge my daughter too man i mean where is the justice for my property, she is lucky she gets to go to foster care acting like this. just because its petty crime dousnt mean it dousnt serously fuck over this father.
@@christopherpoet458 Yeah the father gave me red flags when he started listing off she should be grateful because he feed and housed her. I'm like sir that is the bare minimum and if you were not doing that you would be charged for child neglect. Makes me wonder how he is at home wanting the child treated as if they did a violent crime, and if this was her fucked up way to get back at the dad by stealing and breaking his truck. Plus even violent charges have a right to be trialed and not sent directly to jail, even if caught red handed.
@@lizzyisbored9882 50/50, but I see why you would or might be concerned. My concern was that he was not hesitating with his language and that is also 50/50 because I know I curse like a sailor if im emotionally charged. So, possibly. But he isn't being invalid in his points. I am willing to bet there is more going on here than what meets the eye. Sounded to me like the rest of her family did not want her which implies her behavior has had past problems. So he could be the saving grace family that choose to give her a place when no one else would. Or he could be what you suggested and there could have been other motives. I haven't dug into this case to fish out the details if any were given to say much but I give it a 50/50 potential on her at home situation not being good. But given what we do know, this probably never saw a judge in a court room. And given her reaction when she found out he did not want her back home... I am willing to bet she is more of the problem child and not him. That look in her face after she digested what she was told was one hell of a look of shame. Based on the video and behaviors, I am betting while they were "charged" with theft of a moter vehicle, I am willing to see this as them having taken the car on the assumption he would be fine with it if they didn't mess up the car. As for why they ran from the cops, well, dumb kids to dumb things. I don't think it was an "oh no we stole the car" thing and was more of a "get tf away because one of then was on paroll. I dont get the impression was to actually "steal" the car. The law be the law i know. Thems the rules and on a technicality it is theft. But I don't get the impression that was the intent of whatever BS they were getting into.
that lady who kept saying "what are you trying to process?" was this close to getting me to throw my whole computer out the window. THEY'RE TRYING TO FIGURE IT OUT, "you dont know who's it is" THAT IS WHY IT'S IN THE PROCESS??????
@@helenrandolph1760 Mate, respectfully, she was probably also in shock. Her behavior from prior to that moment suggests that this is possibly her son's first offence, which would then suggest that as far as she was concerned, the world just flattened and everything she knew about her kid was just brought up into question in the back of her head. She is, as far as I can tell, trying to grasp that her son got even remotely involved in this situation and that is no small thing. Some people are better, quicker even, at processing those emotions. Some people are not. That repetitive "I don't understand" behavior is quite normal for people who are under shock. Their brain is not registering logically. It is like writing a program to tell a computer to solve a math equation and you intentionally leave out a number and all you get is spammed with error messages.
Dude, she was in shock. You could see each new detail was terrifying to her. You don't know what you'd do til you're in that situation. Kids have their own minds, and parents can get caught off guard.
@@moimeself1088 Right, thanks for thinking :) Of course the mother wasn't prepared for such news and at that time couldn't comprehend what was happening or why. This was a quite normal human reaction. Maybe some watched too many "karen" videos and expected a worse reaction and were disappointed? That's why cops need a lot of patience and empathy. They get such situations all the time.
@@helenrandolph1760 not sure if she's ignorant or in shock of hearing those news, hell, if that was my kid, i would be furious and in shock too, hearing there's guns, underaged girls and alcohol involved.
for the officer that "pulled over" the little electric car and had a little fun, thats an amazing cop openning to the public and howing a good side. not saying the other cops are bad exsamples, all of them did there job and did then in a non over violent way for the situation, i just liked that once cop.
@@claymationgloves3662 fair. I do agree, there are times where it's deserved. But it was really really sas that that father abandoned his daughter so easily. I know this doesn't justify her actions, but there are a lot of kids out there who steal their parents cars when they were really young, so sad he just... Gave up on her...
I was brought home in cuffs once as a wee baby teenager. My mom laughed so hard when she seen me. Made fun of me and joked hard with the cops about me. Im still to this day an angel.
I grew up around the corner from a police station, as in my bus in high school was moreso across the street from it. there were also woods over there as well. One time getting off the bus it, my bus was surrounded by cops because somebody ran into the woods... I think if the cops werent interested in the criminal potentially getting on the bus then half my bus would been arrested. had to get a ride home from a cop for my safety my mother wanted to murder me until the cop explained that I didnt do anything wrong.
9/10 times, when a parent says "this is not how I raised him" in reality, that is exactly how they raised him Locking a teenager in a room for months will only exacerbate the issues beyond anything you could imagine
The third clip reminds me of when I was about 5 years old. We were visiting my grandpa who was in ICU at a VA hospital. I was sitting in the waiting room with my grandmother and was bored and acting a fool. An MP in full uniform happened to walk by and my grandma said "boy, you better behave or that officer will straighten you out". The officer happened to overhear her, and did the quickest 180 I'd ever seen anybody do. Walked up to me, got down on one knee at my eye level about 2 inches from my face and with the most stern military voice complete with knife hand said "son, do you want me to take you to the brig right now? Because we will go if you dont mind what she says". I immediately started bawling and his drill sergeant persona dissappeared as he started laughing and looked at my grandma and said, "I'm sorry, i didn't mean to make him cry. Y'all have a good day". I straightened my ass up for the rest of the day lol.
Yeah, but we don't know this kid at all. The most we have to go on, are the evidence, and his mom attesting to his character. I've said some pretty whacky things in the past, and I was prolly wasn't much younger than him, if at all. Video says "This mother's excuses for her son behavior were a clear indication of why HE turned out that way." What way did he turn out??
That's not lots all mothers have this natural instinct to protect their kids wrong or right in the 17th century there was a mother that cared for her son knowing he hated her with every part of his heart he was a killer and a pretty big train robber in Mexico when police were chasing him she'd wash his clothes feed him and he'd beat her and leave you know how she died? He killed her she did not fight back she let him kill her that is a mother's nature to protect and love unconditionally
Evidently it's dark humor but a teen doesn't know every statute that exists in the law, especially when play a game. She isn't blind just because she believes the arrest is unwarranted
Stupid take, 15 year old did nothing wrong from the looks of it... You literally fight and kill people in games but threatening someone is going too far ??? Next time someone makes a your mom insult should their door get kicked in ? Threats made in a virtual space during war games or other violent genres are commonplace and not actionable, they should not be treated the same as a death threat in real life the circumstances are not comprable...
@@LordDarshdan Are you fr comparing a your mom insult and a mass shooting threat? I agree that people in games say and type tons of shit that will never happen, but like the officer says, no one has any clue whether or not that threat will actually be taken seriously, so they have to treat it like it is.
@@hydrashok2691 Like I said your killing people and committing numerous crimes in video games constantly... You cannot equate words said in a virtual environment where your constantly involved in violent actions to something said in real life... If he's playing COD or GTA how do you know its a mass shooting threat and not him doing call outs or trash talking ? How do you know if he has any way to act out any of what he says ? Seems dangerous to allow people to be arrested for saying words you don't like or are threatened by in a virtual environment when you can just leave a lobby, block the person or report them... If there is any real evidence of his actions then do what must be done but an exert out of context while in a video game is not enough to be treated as a real criminal let alone a federal crime...
The kids in the toy car had me smiling the whole time. Hopefully they didn't miss their court date, don't want them ending up doing hard time on the playground. 😆. Good to see some fun stuff.
@@HunterHare I know, I am just impressed they actually put in the effort for that after the fact and it wasn't just something said on scene and forgotten about.
I can understand a teenage boy, playing a video game, screwing around with his friends and, in a moment of dark humor, made a threat to murder his classmates. I can also understand the FBI agent listening to the audio of these online chatrooms, having seen too many kids get murdered because a random video or audio recording got overlooked, slam the panic button and send the county sheriffs to pick him up.
@@big.muscles.ohyeah That said, I would want to see the chat logs before he made that comment, might add context to the threat and help determine if it was a serious threat or a joke.
@@dhgmrz17 Youre right. and maybe someone else in chat thougt he was serious and reported it? But even if a joke i don't thik doing real life treaths is not okay. Specially not terrorism.
Freedom of speech. Yet these guys are watching and listening 24/7 to us and kids, charging them left n right. Thank god for the alphabet boys and patriot act am I right
@@marcJoel Freedom of speech doesn't protect people making threats of terrorism, just like how it's illegal to yell "fire" in a crowded space for no reason. It's crazy how people like you will go on about the first amendment, without knowing what it says or how it works.
@@travisking9895 bro was playing a video game in a chat room that had nothing to do with his school. trying to equate this with shouting fire in a building full of people is idiotic.
Brother don’t believe that bullshit.. he’s a addict to either drugs or achocol he doesn’t do crime anymore to make money but he hurts his family my dad was just like this😂same way he spoke to the police when we acted out like he was a changed man cause he didn’t rob any one for the last 10yrs
@@RacoonT.V Finally someone with a sense that dude is weird it almost felt like he was excited as that was an excuse to get rid of the kid. Sure you want to teach them a lesson that's okay. But to get them criminal record and literally abandon them I find that weird as hell.
His daughter had to go to foster care just because of a stupid action, they deserve discipline but he does not deserve respect for abandoning his children
Tell me you don't know how the law works without telling me... I get it, really. It would often be nice if things can be just black and white good is good and wrong is wrong. The fact is reality does not revolve around that dissolution and the idea you have in your head is no where near reality either. You might "here" a story or two from time to time about someone who works for the government "escaping" a crime, but that does not mean it happens 100% of the time as you just suggested. Those are just one story you here, and when it comes to social media, nothing is ever straight forward. Society will paint their victim and paint there villain however they like, regardless of the ruling of the law and the media posted will always be cut, manipulated, and altered to fit that agenda. There are public records regarding the details of arrests and convictions. Statics are harder to come by because that sort of fine tuned data is not something that is actively tracked or sought after. But plenty of people either working for the Government or even Wealthy have gone down and been arrested for violations. And they are not the only ones who can get away with crimes either. For instance, nearly 340,000 cases of homicide and non-negligent manslaughter remained unsolved from 1965 to 2022. And the criminals who got away with them could be anyone, rich or poor, government employee or not.
@@christopherpoet458 defend it harder pls. even if its not 100% of the time cops get away with crimes and end up only being sued and that only hurts tax payers so umm please explain how cops learn any kind of consequence if they get a slap on the wrist everytime because the real problem is the fish rotting from the head the justice system from the top down it stinks of corruption
I have a 14 yr old son. He plays video games. He talks smack with people on those video games. If the cops showed up at my house telling me he made a statement like that first teenager… TAKE HIM! We will deal with the process whatever that looks like, court, therapy, whatever other interventions. Because that’s NOT ok! It’s not ok that he thought to say that. It’s not ok even if he truly said it as a joke. That mom is insane for trying to blow off a statement like that! No freaking way!
I play games, people say it all the time as jokes its dark humour and it is how it is now not saying it makes it okay, but its also not as serious as it could seem most the time.
Quite true! In games, sometimes you will say it's for example in shooters a bit suspicious when you go through a school with weapons in the game, and people will get a good laugh, thats just the humor now. But actually writing it like he did in the video so it's in no way viewable as a joke is in no way funny or "just a joke"
The dad who said take them to jail 👏👏 we need more parenting like this! Kids get away with to much because we allow it. That’s a lesson learner right there. It’s what my mum did to me to. I messed up that was on me and I owned what I did growing up. Kids now always got someone to blame!
@@sierrabird2460 I seen that as if she was just to released back to him then she’d still be round the same people. So to help her would be better off if she went else where so she has a chance of getting away from those people. 🤔 either way he came across as a dad who’s at his wits end. He could have left her when she was a baby with her mother but didn’t because she was in danger. Letting go could have been his last resort to make her see sense. Sort of cruel to be kind moment.
@@corvonics6383 He wouldn't have needed to make this decision if she'd shown the slightest hint of responsibility and respect for authority. When you have someone hard at work for you and you steal their car, you get what you get.
It would be funny if you stepped in as a joke to be the kids attorney. Lol. Nah. That would be taking it too far but in my grown up mind it was funnier having a second adult in on the joke.
I’m pretty sure that when they were talking to the mum it did look like they were living in poor conditions so it could be poverty that drive people to live these kinds of life. It’s pretty sad.
@@DeputyFish they didnt say it was. this said it could possibly be. and unfortunately, according to statisitics, it is the case to drive the family up the walls and cause misdirection. but being poor or homeless doesnt make you a criminal.
@@DeputyFish Mate, the statement made above is built on an observation of the conditions seen in the video. Deductive reasoning. Yes, "attention seeking" can be a motivational factor, but so can being poor. It is not saying they are mutually exclusive and to be quite frank, the person above never once stated that it was. No one is in the wrong here, but it would be more polite to have chimed in the comment as a "this is also a possibility but I understand where your suspicion comes from" and call it a day. You have not presented any reason for anyone else who sees this to assume you know more of the situation than the previous comment, which does not make your comment any more believable than the previous.
@@neptaim2795 again its not. breaking the law for food is one thing. they are literally just breaking the law for fun. thats being a bad person nothing to do with being poor
The dad with the stolen truck: kudos to the parents that wanted to hold their kids accountable!!! Too bad more parents don’t hold their kids accountable.
He put her in foster care that isn't holding her responsible for her actions, that's him getting rid of her because he can't do his job as a parent correctly.
Holding her accountable by giving up on her, placing her into custody of CPS, and foster care. Too bad more people just don't choose to not have children.
@12:41 it's clear to me where the disrupting teens behaviour come from. Mum can't even comprehend that breakig into a house illegal. She immediately starts talking bullshit, and playing victim.
The lady crying about her son making online mass shooting threats like he didn’t do anything wrong is CRAZY. If I were that kid I’d be RELIEVED the cops were taking me away, leaving me with my parents woulda been much MUCH worse 😬😬😬 I’m 36 and I’d still be grounded.
but he literally didn't do anything wrong. he talked shit in a fucking video game... that's called freedom of speech and if you actually listened to what kind of talk goes on in games among friends then you would realize that these kinds of threats happen all the time. you do fucking realize this is the kind of shit that china and north korea would do not what a free first world country would do.
@@morgajoka838 people have literally done the exact same shit and actually committed to it. The police and the FBI can't read their damn minds. That line of thinking is how that shit keeps happening.
Adore how that cop writing those darn child hooligans tickets was just making stuff up on the fly. I love goofy improv like that. Never take life, your job or yourself too seriously, a key rule of thumb!
For the second? Well, yes, he might seem like a "bad father" but he had to make a difficult decision so that his daughter and friends would understand and not continue down that path.
@@GhostG717 He's a garbage father rather than dealing with the mental issues his kid is going through he tosses her in jail. Where she will likely keep going further down into more criminal behavior. America parents are the worst. And it's no wonder you have the worst kids in the world. With them type of parents. The founding fathers would be against you people. Your more USSR than American.
that isnt what care looks like. Care would look like a father daughter talk to settle the issue... not an overly emotional manchild trying to ruin his kids life. He can give her a piece of his mind with out putting a permanent charge on her record. I for one am glad she didn't get charged. Locking people up is not always the best solution. sometimes people just need to be talked to. He is erasing himself as a father figure in her life which in the long term will make things worse for her. She already doesnt have a mom from what I understand. Having no parents to parent you is going to be a life full of hardship. Like seriously, he can be a hard ass on her and discipline her without screwing her over. the dude is manic. Sometimes a little compassion goes a long way.
@theinternationallanguagees9213 nah it seems like the dad tried many times to set her straight and having her get in trouble just might be good for her. Having a parent die isn't much of an excuse, I didn't go break laws when my dad died of cancer.
no it don't.... you just need to grow some fucking balls. kids talk shit all the time it ain't that serious. you do fucking realise you are against freedom of speech here. you are saying he should be punished for what he said. that's against freedom of speech and against the fucking HUMAN RIGHTS LAWS. how can people be so fucking dumb and ignorant? you are to blame for all the wars and all the evil in the world. it's people like you who crash the economy and bring corruption in to society with your sheeple mind.
10:00 Thats a good small town cop, and thats community policing. If more cops would be like this guy, it would go a long way. Actually, all the cops are pretty solid in this video. The cop telling the girl she's gonna be put in foster care was a legitimately heavy conversation to have, and he reacted like a human should... with empathy
@@Cm38271 Nah, even the 1st one, at least from the footage in the video, seem like how you actually WANT the police to conduct themselves. Obviously we didn't get a deep dive on any of the subjects, & there could be additional context
the cops giving tickets to the lil kids was adorable 😭 but for the other scenes: just bcuz they were raise good doesn’t mean they dont do stuff like this, just bcuz they are your kid, doesn’t mean they are all innocent, every criminal had a parent too
I mean there are also some kids who are just that spoiled. Almost 60 to 70% of the time it's on the guardian but in this case there are some kids who need to be humbled.
Parents (especially those who work) have less time with kids than school and social media does. Not to void the parents of responsibility, just to acknowledge that external factors can significantly affect these things.
@@Rippersauc3no kid needs "to be humbled", most people just lack basic human decency and understanding to give a child a chance. My mother worked as a teacher and she knew how to make the worst bully a good kid... It's just a question of whether you want to give yourself a trouble of LEARNING how to communicate with a troublesome child. Most parents only think about themselves and how some kids are too entitled to, when in reality they're the ones causing the kids to act up. I'd say only 5% of kids are really the exception, but they usually have some mental issues (sociopathy and etc), but even sociopaths could be adjusted to live in a society
@@tedgerahedronoh stop! He’s been reported to the police by someone else who didn’t take it as a joke! The police have to take it seriously ….there are far too many school shootings these days for them to not step in
8:22 I had a cop joke around with me like that as a kid. 16 kids arrested for a party. People are so over the top now a days. You fight you go to jail. "What am I doing wrong". You clearly don't understand law if you think fighting isn't doing something wrong.
13:56 "all of them were trespassing and some were committing burglary and they were doing drugs and probably were going to try to have underage sex 'cause we caught them with a bunch of condoms but hopefully we broke it up before that happened and some of them had guns and some are serious felons that they were hanging out with you know so they were making really good life choices" got me rolling
The cop pulling over the toy car was so wholesome, absolutely hilarious
Definitely thats a good cop right there
I was really hoping before it came to that one, that it wasn't serious haha. Glad it was wholesome.
frrr like awww
The sad part is i was only 99% sure it was a joke prior to seeing that part of the video. But as soon as it started, the tone and everything made me start giggling.
and before anyone gets mad. Kids as young as 5 have been ACTUALLY arrested and one who was like 8-9 was arrested for a DRAWING in school and expelled... so sometimes i'm skeptical. sue me.
Very cute.
I'm surprised the 3 year old knew what a speeding ticket was.
Now that was the officer playing with a child.
Must be a repeat offender D:
surprised he knew what a battery was
@@SMcCaskill Nope, it's AMERICA, in the police state even 3 yo can be arrested.
My guess is that she was probably slowly freaking out about the strange man she didn't know standing over her and when she burst into tears was just a comedic accident.
Mad respect for Mr. Chavez for not only holding his daughter and her friends accountable for their actions but owning up to his own past actions.
he did 10 years in the pen mfk he already owned up to his past
Absolutely
He was actually rehabilitated.
Bro he put his daughter un foster care..
@@wolfmantroy6601 prison doesn't rehabilitate
How DARE they go 0.01 miles over the speed limit!?!?! This generation doesn’t know how to behave! They get 5 years in prison no parole!!!!!
did you say no parole?,are you italian? perche anch'io sono sconvolto
@@ginorfita4367parole is an English word
It is like when you’re in custody or jail and someone like interviews you ig and if you answer with like good words they’ll shorten your sentence
(and parole it's a french word hehe)
@@salty._.wat3rwell thats a loan word- its a french word used in the english language. Ketchup is a chinese word, safari is arabic, tsunami and tycoon are japanese.
Cannibal is a native american word.
Other loanwords are hamburger since it comes from hamburg, tapas, pizza, umbrella, noodle comes from german nudel. Weiner is alo german.
Ballet, deja vu, illusion, angst, kindergarten, drama, logic, nemesis, espresso, duo, lava, tornado are all loanwords.
@@tikimillie ye I forgot to mention that too 😅
Thanks anyway!
That kid learned fast! “Maybe if I cry, he won’t write a ticket!” Works every time! 🤣
How did she know what a speeding ticket was 😂
@@iamnotamused4664 Female intuition
hope she doesn't try that when she's older! 😂
@@iamnotamused4664who doesn’t know that?
@@ethyr I was pulled over one day with my kids in the back seat.
The cop explained that I was speeding. I might’ve had a few of tears and quivering lip. But I explained, “My daddy had just given me the car, and the steering wheel is blocking my view of the speed thingy! I can’t see how fast I’m going!”
The cop looked at my steering wheel, flicked something and raised the steering wheel!
“Oh! Wow! You fixed it! I can see the speed thing now!! This is so awesome!! How did you fix it? Can you show me?”, I asked in excitement.
“Certainly, ma’am!”, the officer affirmed, “Just push this lever and move the steering wheel!”
“Can I try it?”, I asked
“Certainly! Hold that lever and adjust the wheel as you hold it down”, he replied.
“Like this?”, I asked for confirmation.
“Yes,” he replied, “now adjust the wheel.”
I was moving the steering wheel up and down, expressing my extremely happy gratitude, then raised the wheel, set it and smiled at him.
He said, “Drive safe, Ma’am!” and returned to his car.
I lowered the steering wheel back to my comfort level and drove off.
HOWEVER, I did watch my speed more closely, after that encounter, because safety on the road is important.
That Dad guy.
Great guy. He messed up once in his lifetime.
He stands there showing respect. What a great gesture. This is why we should treat each other respectful and friendly.
i'd say great mom. the black one that said, "i don't want him [her son] dragged through the system." she probably knows about the revolving door that father just sent his child through.
Putting her in jail would just make her more into a criminal. And show that her father doesn't want her is how she's gonna take it. The only reason he put her in jail is because he knew he was too shitty of a parent to be able to get her under control. Fear is not an effective motivator for children or people in general. She's also gonna have a record in her life. She'll be ruined. She's not gonna be able to get a good job. She's not gonna be able to get into college. No business is gonna trust her. And jail is just gonna harden her.
@@420inmysystem69 tough. she can cry about it tho
@@420inmysystem69she shouldn’t have stolen a car she can cry about it in jail
@@420inmysystem69 Juvenile record makes your point meaningless. The records would be sealed or expunged after turning 18 or a time after. So no, No one would know and most businesses don't care about a case that isn't even available anymore because it usually means it was nothing. Also, the kid is going out of her way to steal vehicles with her father telling her she could go to prison, most likely having told her about him going to jail already. She has no care or remorse for the actions, only upset shes getting punished. Also, she isnt going to jail if you watch the video, her father said he wasnt going to have someone who steals his vehicle that could be used to jump states in his house. If you would, youre a moron, its like keeping your addict child from rehab and leaving them in a house full of their addiction. Youre just asking for them to do it again, but maybe worse this time because the last wasnt so bad.
That mother who had let their child drive a car at 0.01 miles an hour over the speed limit should have taught them better, glad that ended peacefully.
And aiding and abetting as her youngest daughter runs off from the scene of the crime. Charge the mom too
First thing she should have taught the little law breaker is to never drive without a seat belt. He should be lucky the charges weren't more serious.
and you just KNOW the prosecutor and judge probably dismissed the charges, and now we have these animals loose on the streets!
We know if they had a different skin color she would have been dropped
@@nickxcaliber7991why do you guys bring negativity into everything?? nobody cares about the race of a child, stop trying to make this silly situation negative by bringing up racism.
The father was pure gold stating that there should be consequenses for every bad action. W Father!
Oh shut the hell up. How can't you not see a bigger picture here. Teach a lesson that's okay, getting them a criminal record almost sounding excited that they'll go to jail, you can't just throw your kid under the bus like that.
Did you not watch the part where he abandoned his child over that
@@hiweirdbot Yeah now I changed my mind
@@hiweirdbothe wants to use the prison system to punish her. But it sounds unusual for him to not take her back if there’s no prison time.
@Alexander.alhaidairy raised by a bad parent
the little kids in the car was so wholesome and cute w officer for playing around with those kids
It was very sweet how he stopped to play with the children and show them how their work is done.
Good chance the little boy grows up to respect police and maybe even become one of
It was so precious! ❤❤
It's the whole reason why I even wanted to watch it with everything going on in the world to see this makes my soul feel good
@@DouglasH777So all the other (channel sponsored) content where police are violating the rights of innocent minors because they MIGHT commit a future crime make your “soul feel good” too?
American law enforcement is THE epitome of hypocrisy….and our collective stupidity tolerates the endless rights violations….so nothing ever really improves or evolves. Just more generic law enforcement volatile stupidity. It’s OK, though….as long as there’s a clip of a rando cop amusing a toddler (AKA “future police victim”).
Pathetic.
Poor dad 😢 he seems worried his daughter is going to end up on the same path he once was.
Mad respect for that dad. She wants to repeatedly act like a criminal, she can have the result of being a criminal!
He's speeding up the process by insisting on sending her into foster care. Where she will be abused & put on the fast track to prison.
I think the dad should have found another way cause when she grows up she's going to have a record and make everything worse for her
@@juicebox464Juvenile records generally don't. If you're going to catch a charge you definitely want to do it before the age of 18 and preferably before 16.
Edit - I mean preferably NEVER but...😅
How could he allow them to get criminal records?
I can’t sleep at night knowing that three year old and his sister are still out there
underrated comment 🤣
Solo true
Soo*
A couple of career criminals in the making. Turned those waterworks on real quick. /s
@@Younomefromyou know you can edit the comment idiot
The 3 yr old must have a criminal record knowing what these offenses are. Glad the officers are taking the necessary actions!
don't some kids at that age cry just because something looks scary or sounds scary. I think this might just be the case
@@jonaskarlsson5901
Joke✈️ your brain
Bro when the officer came and asked for proof on insurance I couldn’t stop laughing that moment was so wholesome
I was surprised they didn't fill the toddler with hot lead for "resisting".
@@Peyote1312stfu kid…. You’ve got a lot of learning to do
@@Peyote1312 moving 2 tons worth of steel at high speed is resisting,bub get that shit out of here
“It’s just a romantic car!”
Sure it's "wholesome" now Let's see how you feel in 20 years or so.
The 15 year old boy’s mom is exactly the problem with mass shootings. The parents don’t think the “little boy” would do something like that.
It's exactly what the problem is. If you own a gun, and you are responsible about gun safety, you would have already drilled those gun fundamentals into the child's head. That child should have been embarrassed and should have felt guilty about his actions knowing that his parents would have been furious about it, but instead, he acted like he didn't do anything wrong, and mom defended him. The way your child responds in this situation is a direct reflection of what you taught them about gun safety and the seriousness of their actions and words involving guns. I have taught my son this and because I know that I have taught this well, I would have sent my son to the wolves because he knew better. I would have used this moment to say, "I taught you better, and that what you did, you did KNOWING that it was wrong. This is your consequences, and you will face them." How can we keep the 2nd amendment strong if we aren't responsible enough to pass the knowledge on to our children?
My solution is, take the rights away from the parents of the kids like this IF they defend their kids making these types of threats online. Those parents aren't responsible gun owners if their kids think that it is ok to make these kinds of threats. The deciding factor is that the parents ignore the severity of the threats and defend their kids' actions as "normal". Thats NOT a responsible gun owner and these threats aren't normal and shouldn't be considered as such. You are the problem. You should have your rights stripped, NOT the responsible gun owners who would never accept this behavior.
As a 15 year old myself those threats should be taken seriously. It will be regretted that actions weren’t taken in place previously to prevent any case which a shooting has been backed up by a previous said threat.
while this is part true they should really look into the school because i more then promise theres more going on im sure things happen to him there which also is a massive cause to these as well and unfortunately they ALWAYS dont look into the school until after its to late its disappointing
@@jonbird6566 Yeah but kids will say shit like this still. You really think most those kids on there don't know for a fact how much trouble they'd be in if their parents heard that shit? Kids will swear playing video games knowing they'd be punished if their parents heard them.
I mean, I remember kids made random comments like that when I was in school, they're literally pushing boundaries to be "edgy", and kids push the boundaries of the rules all the time. I get the idea of not knowing who the next real shooter is, but we don't arrest someone for threat of an assault if they say "I swear the next guy to bug me is going to get socked in the face!" or something similar because we understand that isn't a comment made seriously. Maybe some crazy dude means it, and we arrest him when he does it, most people it's all talk. There's also a serious conversation on what exactly we're going to arrest over. If a kid has vent art or a poem showing or describing how much he wishes he could shoot up his bullies, will that be taken as a threat? Even though that's a known form of venting?
I just don't agree with this idea. It's kind of a "sacrificing freedom for security" issue. I get stamping down on these will increase the odds we'll stop the next mass shooter, but in the process we end up arresting god knows how many kids who were just talking shit in the process. If we take everything people say seriously we'd end up arresting a lot more people for nonsense.
I don't mind as much a policy like this where maybe someone with legal authority "arrests" a kid and once in the car talks to him about how serious this is while his partner explains to the parent the child isn't actually being arrested and they're just doing a "scared straight" kind of thing. This will also allow parents ot know they need to keep their firearms more secure than usual so the child doesn't acquire them. But I am not sure I'm in support for actual arrests over words.
@@heavennunya809 As far as I know, credible threats of violence are not protected speech, in the US at least, so I don't believe this falls into sacrificing freedom for security. Where the level of credibility comes in is a point of debate, but it's generally safe to say that the feds are slow on the uptake, so if the investigation has made it to the point of an arrest, it's likely for a good reason (not always, but it's pretty uncommon for the feds to arbitrarily arrest a 15 year old suburban kid, specifically because of how bad the optics are). Generally, saying things like "i wanna kill all my bullies" is fine, especially in art (see Pumped Up Kicks, etc.), but saying "i'm going to bring my dad's gun to school and kill at least 7 people" is not, and really shouldn't be acceptable. If that's acceptable, I'm unsure where the line of calling something a valid threat is to be drawn; is it after the kid has started shooting? Remembering that feds are slow, so it's not like they'd be watching for this kid to buy a gun (not that he could legally anyway) and then swoop in like some sting operation.
That poor father. My heart breaks for him. Having to see your daughter going down the same path you did has to be the most terrifying thing. Bless them both. I hope they’re well
and hypocritical as hell. how is he judging when he wasn’t the best example to begin with?
@@jessy7796because he knows how it ends up?
@@Tuco_Salamanca3so he just turns his back on her so she has more trouble and problems coming to her than needed even if its temporary i get the dads point but its still not the right way
@@LiaManila-un7pflearn in tough way I have customer tell me his story he didn’t have a dad growing up his dad In jail when he was a kid now he have kid of his own he doesn’t want the same path his dad is in he spend time with his kids when they’re little now & teach them not to catch any trouble I tell him when his kids grow up go middle and high school check their friends because friends can lead into something’s parents don’t know
@jessy7796 it would be hypocritical if the father was still doing shit and going to jail. But as he said, he turned his life around and raised his daughter, making sure he never did stupid stuff like in his younger years.
If he said she should never do any wrong in her entire life then he would be a hypocrite. But all he said is own up to what you did and pay the price and improve yourself.
the third one is absolutely disgusting.
That 3 y/o needs to be arrested
wtf bro,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
Hahahaha...yeah he does 😂
yeah.. 2.5 mph on a suburban street?! insane! someone could have gotten seriously injured
@@officialc00lkidd exactly, she shouldn’t get away with it, she could’ve hitten someone.
Not kidding I am 11 my friend turned 3 (was his birthday) he had the same toy car but as a jeep mf drove it over my (he got it when he was 2 but still driving like a F1 driver)
those two kids in the third clip are out of control - no license, no seatbelts, and _speeding??_ talk about usual suspects! these animals have no regard for anybody, and the weak DA and judges are just letting them loose on the streets. pathetic!
It’s unacceptable!
😂😂😂
🗣 🍋IT'S... UNACCEPTABLE!!!!@@pumbaplays396
careful with that kin of comment..while your joking you may fill the head of 0 iq ppl to think of it as serious :S(some of them have cops job)
Omg, I thought this was legit for a second 😂😭
A man who takes his responsibility for his own stupid actions instead of blaming other is a man who’s learned the hard way but the right way.
that officer with that 3yr....
i've ALWAYS thought that we should have 2 officers who's soul purpose is to not only uphold the law, but ultimately serve the community in ways just like he did. if police regularly did that we would have a genuine communion since we wouldn't have the fear of speaking up.
That’s a great idea. May be unrealistic for the U.S with a shortage of officers but we can hope for a future like that
we have something similar to this at my high school and i believe at other local ones as well. we have two main officers who walk around in uniform and one casual officer who’s job is to make the kids comfortable with the police. everyone loves him and he talks to everyone. of course the officers in uniform are nice too, but the casual officer is there to help the students understand that the cops aren’t there to hurt them. i think it’s a really good idea to help students to not fear the police!
@@ozzy_z THIS ^^^
More of this
that was the point of foot patrolling back in the day. the officers would typically be in a comercial area, go into businesses, and generally build up a rapport with the people of the area.
That interaction made my day. The boy has a great story for the rest of his life.
The cop was lucky the kid didn't pulled an 9mm out of the glovebox... for that 0.01 speed limit ticket :))
They broke the speeding limit they got 5 mins in timeout
Fr 🤣
yeahg i wouldve
a 0.09mm
"She's so grounded dude" had me cracking up
i had to google translate it
too far
Fr fr
@@nakomtsuu8433 what did did it say
@@nakomtsuu84333:25
When mom chirped in: “and leaving the scene of a crime!” Hahahaha! 😂
she’s straight up snitching!
The officer with the kids in the toy car was so wholesome 🥹 that child will remember that interaction for many years to come.
What is wrong with ur profile💀
@@MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMPPPPPPits a bot
@@luminousHTnot all pfps of women with a bra on are "bots"
@@MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMPPPPPPit's just a woman??? 💀
@@luminousHThow do u know
The kid with a toy car getting pulled up by a police officer is the best clip it’s adorable 🥰 8:32 it’s just a romantic car!
so funny hahaha
I respect parents who refuse to coddle their kids after they commited crime, and have them learn their lesson.
There are many parents who would defend the terrible actions of their kids which sets up a terrible example for them and would one day screw them over in the future.
i think people are missing the big picture in the comments. why not teach them not to commit crime by punishing them and teach them to plead the fifth? if we all start being fine with letting these cops negotiate with the parents to send our kids to jail, it won't be long before they're negotiating with your kids to send you to jail.
@@tedgerahedron we did, it was called discipline. Kids lack these nowadays and fucking suck ass
What are you talking about? There's like 99.9% chance that was just a shitpost, so how could he be convicted of a crime if there's only a 0.1% chance that it was a threat? Are they not supposed to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt?
Kinda like the lady sticking up for her kid for breaking into a house
@@skitidet4302 Not anymore. Our "justice" system convicts innocent people based on nothing but allegations all the time now. How many rape cases get overturned because the accuser lied? How many people are set free after it comes out the cops & prosecutors & even judges conspired to put an innocent person in prison?
The one with the girls who stole the truck really ticks me off. One of the girls was on probation. How in the hell was that not a violation!? Plus, the government tells us crime is going down, but it is only because they don't charge people who they catch doing crimes even if they look for them in the first place.
If they get arrested they get charged and have to go to court. Stealing stuff isnt a life sentence either is assault.
Congratulations, you have made it this far as one of the many people who has an oversimplified belief of what is going on out there and clearly has no clue what is going on.
The officer pointed out to the Father that while he stated he wanted to press charges, it was going to be at the call of a department that is specifically assigned to review underage violations and determine an appropriate course of action.
Being lenient or merciful is not "criminal". The girl on probation was not getting away scots free either. Her paroll officer was going to be informed of the event, which still puts heat on her. As an outside source looking in your are given limited, very limited, details about the events. Which is why we have people trained and schooled in how to handle the law rather than leaving it up to random commenters on the internet who think they know better when they do not.
Chances are, if the department approved the charges, that girl was going to be arrested, sent to jail, and her life was going to become worse than hell. That is not something you just point at someone and go "yep, guilty, lets ruin their life more". The law, in cases like this where it is petty theft or lightweight crimes, will usually make a show of force to put the fear of god in someone but then give them the opportunity to take an easier way out. That way out is not scots free. What happened is still on record. If she did something again it would come up that she was given a break in this case. Everything is taken into account. Everything.
Had it been something like murder, threaten to murder, unlawful possession of weaponry, etc. There would be no debate.
But the choice to charge her in this case and not was probably going to be the defining choice if she gets to even have a chance to have a reasonably better life. Now, if it all worked out, she will have realized how bad things could have gotten for her and stopped taking part in risking her future like that. Or, she does something again and I would bet third time is a strike out. You can't just take a kid, call them guilty, throw them in jail, and call it a day. They are not adults. And this isn't just a conversation about age. As teens our bodies are still developing. Hormones are out of wack. That alone can make someone do some dumb shit in the heat of the moment. Being older I can look back and laugh at myself for similar situations, thankfully nothing that got me legally in trouble but not the point.
Kids have a higher chance of coming around and acknowledging their mistakes than adults do. Which is why they are more easily given breaks. Not all will, but that has to be their choice and we do not, under any circumstances, have the right to make that choice for them. All we can do, which has been done by the law, is set boundaries and limits before the punishments start to really crack down.
@@christopherpoet458 brother and christ they just got done breaking his windows as well then they steal the mans truck id be pissed if they didnt charge my daughter too man i mean where is the justice for my property, she is lucky she gets to go to foster care acting like this. just because its petty crime dousnt mean it dousnt serously fuck over this father.
@@christopherpoet458 Yeah the father gave me red flags when he started listing off she should be grateful because he feed and housed her. I'm like sir that is the bare minimum and if you were not doing that you would be charged for child neglect. Makes me wonder how he is at home wanting the child treated as if they did a violent crime, and if this was her fucked up way to get back at the dad by stealing and breaking his truck. Plus even violent charges have a right to be trialed and not sent directly to jail, even if caught red handed.
@@lizzyisbored9882 50/50, but I see why you would or might be concerned. My concern was that he was not hesitating with his language and that is also 50/50 because I know I curse like a sailor if im emotionally charged.
So, possibly. But he isn't being invalid in his points. I am willing to bet there is more going on here than what meets the eye. Sounded to me like the rest of her family did not want her which implies her behavior has had past problems. So he could be the saving grace family that choose to give her a place when no one else would. Or he could be what you suggested and there could have been other motives.
I haven't dug into this case to fish out the details if any were given to say much but I give it a 50/50 potential on her at home situation not being good. But given what we do know, this probably never saw a judge in a court room. And given her reaction when she found out he did not want her back home... I am willing to bet she is more of the problem child and not him. That look in her face after she digested what she was told was one hell of a look of shame.
Based on the video and behaviors, I am betting while they were "charged" with theft of a moter vehicle, I am willing to see this as them having taken the car on the assumption he would be fine with it if they didn't mess up the car. As for why they ran from the cops, well, dumb kids to dumb things. I don't think it was an "oh no we stole the car" thing and was more of a "get tf away because one of then was on paroll.
I dont get the impression was to actually "steal" the car. The law be the law i know. Thems the rules and on a technicality it is theft. But I don't get the impression that was the intent of whatever BS they were getting into.
that lady who kept saying "what are you trying to process?" was this close to getting me to throw my whole computer out the window. THEY'RE TRYING TO FIGURE IT OUT, "you dont know who's it is" THAT IS WHY IT'S IN THE PROCESS??????
You can tell she's ignorant and in a few years she will be wondering why her baby is dead or in jail. She will need to take a hard look in the mirror.
@@helenrandolph1760 Mate, respectfully, she was probably also in shock. Her behavior from prior to that moment suggests that this is possibly her son's first offence, which would then suggest that as far as she was concerned, the world just flattened and everything she knew about her kid was just brought up into question in the back of her head. She is, as far as I can tell, trying to grasp that her son got even remotely involved in this situation and that is no small thing. Some people are better, quicker even, at processing those emotions. Some people are not. That repetitive "I don't understand" behavior is quite normal for people who are under shock. Their brain is not registering logically. It is like writing a program to tell a computer to solve a math equation and you intentionally leave out a number and all you get is spammed with error messages.
Dude, she was in shock. You could see each new detail was terrifying to her. You don't know what you'd do til you're in that situation. Kids have their own minds, and parents can get caught off guard.
@@moimeself1088 Right, thanks for thinking :) Of course the mother wasn't prepared for such news and at that time couldn't comprehend what was happening or why. This was a quite normal human reaction. Maybe some watched too many "karen" videos and expected a worse reaction and were disappointed? That's why cops need a lot of patience and empathy. They get such situations all the time.
@@helenrandolph1760 not sure if she's ignorant or in shock of hearing those news, hell, if that was my kid, i would be furious and in shock too, hearing there's guns, underaged girls and alcohol involved.
Rest in peace ever one who died in a school shooting:(
yep… we can’t just stop now can we…
Yes😢
🫡
"Yes he's fifteen but he's still a little boy"
Parents who say this make me worry sometimes...
they're part of the problem
He’s a child
@@highatyt he's 100% not a little boy though
@@highatytNo. That's an adult
@@highatythe is a teen
for the officer that "pulled over" the little electric car and had a little fun, thats an amazing cop openning to the public and howing a good side. not saying the other cops are bad exsamples, all of them did there job and did then in a non over violent way for the situation, i just liked that once cop.
“Oh she’s so grounded, dude”💀
🎉
😂😂
A grounding is weak as hell dawg. Shoulda pulled out the ol' belt one last time for that one 💀🙏
If my kids was on probation.... they'd already be grounded. Js
@@claymationgloves3662 fair. I do agree, there are times where it's deserved. But it was really really sas that that father abandoned his daughter so easily. I know this doesn't justify her actions, but there are a lot of kids out there who steal their parents cars when they were really young, so sad he just... Gave up on her...
I love how you added a nice, wholesome video in the middle to js take a break from all that drama! That was hilarious and so sooo cute.
The cop pulling over the toy car It literally felt so wholesome
I kind of wish he would have asked “do you have anything illegal in the car?” 🤣🤣🤣
he was just playing with the kid?
seeing the things usakistani cops do, i thought he was serious.
@@sabin97you’re such a goober bro
He shot the kid at the end
It was soooo cute ngl
10:17 "In this case things were all fun and games" 😄
"However things were far more serious in the next case" 😐
Fr!!!😂
True, I immediately switched faces and took my laugh tears off
my smile quietly faded.
I was brought home in cuffs once as a wee baby teenager. My mom laughed so hard when she seen me. Made fun of me and joked hard with the cops about me. Im still to this day an angel.
cant say handcuffs and a cell did much to me. police officer already had my id card so i even said to him why would i run you know my name and adress.
@@hijlkecornelisboorsma1058how old were you
@@roxanne9200 13 years old when that happened
I grew up around the corner from a police station, as in my bus in high school was moreso across the street from it. there were also woods over there as well. One time getting off the bus it, my bus was surrounded by cops because somebody ran into the woods... I think if the cops werent interested in the criminal potentially getting on the bus then half my bus would been arrested. had to get a ride home from a cop for my safety my mother wanted to murder me until the cop explained that I didnt do anything wrong.
@@hijlkecornelisboorsma1058what happened?
9/10 times, when a parent says "this is not how I raised him" in reality, that is exactly how they raised him
Locking a teenager in a room for months will only exacerbate the issues beyond anything you could imagine
the moms spin move into the "wow!" was great
✨ *iconic* ✨
The two kids speeding without seatbelts on are so cute 🤭
And the officer was being silly. It was such a wholesome clip
No license plate either...
This cop with the small kids needs a raise, we need more like these cops in the world
The third clip reminds me of when I was about 5 years old. We were visiting my grandpa who was in ICU at a VA hospital. I was sitting in the waiting room with my grandmother and was bored and acting a fool. An MP in full uniform happened to walk by and my grandma said "boy, you better behave or that officer will straighten you out". The officer happened to overhear her, and did the quickest 180 I'd ever seen anybody do. Walked up to me, got down on one knee at my eye level about 2 inches from my face and with the most stern military voice complete with knife hand said "son, do you want me to take you to the brig right now? Because we will go if you dont mind what she says". I immediately started bawling and his drill sergeant persona dissappeared as he started laughing and looked at my grandma and said, "I'm sorry, i didn't mean to make him cry. Y'all have a good day".
I straightened my ass up for the rest of the day lol.
Mama needs to stop babying her 15 year old son.
i thought dude maybe was drunk driving or got stealing... then found out oh he was planning a mass shooting (like wtf?) but agreed mama needs to stop
Yeah, but we don't know this kid at all. The most we have to go on, are the evidence, and his mom attesting to his character. I've said some pretty whacky things in the past, and I was prolly wasn't much younger than him, if at all. Video says "This mother's excuses for her son behavior were a clear indication of why HE turned out that way." What way did he turn out??
I'm edging to her bbs
He’s a child for gods sake,moms still say "you’re my baby" no matter what their son is.He’s 15,he’s still a kid,he isn’t a adult.
@@안녕하세요-r2g2r i agree
Fifteen years old is old enough to know better!!! Lots of mothers have blinders on when it comes to how their children act.
That's not lots all mothers have this natural instinct to protect their kids wrong or right in the 17th century there was a mother that cared for her son knowing he hated her with every part of his heart he was a killer and a pretty big train robber in Mexico when police were chasing him she'd wash his clothes feed him and he'd beat her and leave you know how she died? He killed her she did not fight back she let him kill her that is a mother's nature to protect and love unconditionally
Evidently it's dark humor but a teen doesn't know every statute that exists in the law, especially when play a game. She isn't blind just because she believes the arrest is unwarranted
Stupid take, 15 year old did nothing wrong from the looks of it... You literally fight and kill people in games but threatening someone is going too far ??? Next time someone makes a your mom insult should their door get kicked in ? Threats made in a virtual space during war games or other violent genres are commonplace and not actionable, they should not be treated the same as a death threat in real life the circumstances are not comprable...
@@LordDarshdan Are you fr comparing a your mom insult and a mass shooting threat? I agree that people in games say and type tons of shit that will never happen, but like the officer says, no one has any clue whether or not that threat will actually be taken seriously, so they have to treat it like it is.
@@hydrashok2691 Like I said your killing people and committing numerous crimes in video games constantly... You cannot equate words said in a virtual environment where your constantly involved in violent actions to something said in real life... If he's playing COD or GTA how do you know its a mass shooting threat and not him doing call outs or trash talking ? How do you know if he has any way to act out any of what he says ? Seems dangerous to allow people to be arrested for saying words you don't like or are threatened by in a virtual environment when you can just leave a lobby, block the person or report them... If there is any real evidence of his actions then do what must be done but an exert out of context while in a video game is not enough to be treated as a real criminal let alone a federal crime...
The kids in the toy car had me smiling the whole time. Hopefully they didn't miss their court date, don't want them ending up doing hard time on the playground. 😆. Good to see some fun stuff.
The kids in the house parents are clueless.
"What for????? Did he have it in his hands???"
He doesn't NEED to.
Literally green shirt lady is so fucking slow. Asking every wrong question
3:00
The fact that the boy is just chill and waiting patiently while his mother cries her ass off.
hilarious
Being chill BECAUSE mommy is defending him 😂😂😂😂 no one making that kind of threat is actually chill.
@@captainobvious6070its not a threat he obviously said it *jokingly*
The 3 year old wasn’t clickbait, yet it was. 😂😂😂
if it was clickbait it baited you into watching what you expected to watch 😭
damn they even got the kid who let his intrusive thoughts win and opened the door😭
Yeah, because it’s a crime
No that’s what happened after that viral video!
@@HunterHare I know, I am just impressed they actually put in the effort for that after the fact and it wasn't just something said on scene and forgotten about.
@@AMonstHer it doesn't actually show him opening the door😢
They caught him so easily because he posted a reply online admitting he was the one who opened the door, along with a 'lol'
i love how cops just play around with kids when they are patrolling :D
I can understand a teenage boy, playing a video game, screwing around with his friends and, in a moment of dark humor, made a threat to murder his classmates.
I can also understand the FBI agent listening to the audio of these online chatrooms, having seen too many kids get murdered because a random video or audio recording got overlooked, slam the panic button and send the county sheriffs to pick him up.
@@big.muscles.ohyeah That said, I would want to see the chat logs before he made that comment, might add context to the threat and help determine if it was a serious threat or a joke.
@@dhgmrz17 Youre right. and maybe someone else in chat thougt he was serious and reported it?
But even if a joke i don't thik doing real life treaths is not okay. Specially not terrorism.
Freedom of speech. Yet these guys are watching and listening 24/7 to us and kids, charging them left n right. Thank god for the alphabet boys and patriot act am I right
@@marcJoel Freedom of speech doesn't protect people making threats of terrorism, just like how it's illegal to yell "fire" in a crowded space for no reason. It's crazy how people like you will go on about the first amendment, without knowing what it says or how it works.
@@travisking9895 bro was playing a video game in a chat room that had nothing to do with his school. trying to equate this with shouting fire in a building full of people is idiotic.
That 2nd one broke my heart. He was part of the system learned his lesson and made a way out. I respect that
Brother don’t believe that bullshit.. he’s a addict to either drugs or achocol he doesn’t do crime anymore to make money but he hurts his family my dad was just like this😂same way he spoke to the police when we acted out like he was a changed man cause he didn’t rob any one for the last 10yrs
@@RacoonT.V Finally someone with a sense that dude is weird it almost felt like he was excited as that was an excuse to get rid of the kid. Sure you want to teach them a lesson that's okay. But to get them criminal record and literally abandon them I find that weird as hell.
His daughter had to go to foster care just because of a stupid action, they deserve discipline but he does not deserve respect for abandoning his children
@@RacoonT.V exactly like why is it ok for him to fuck up and be in jail for 10 years but this situation with his daughter is unacceptable? Please.
@@yourlocalofficechair7953he did his time already. who knows when or what happened
“The law makes no exceptions.”
Except when you work for the government.
Or are wealthy and connected
or when you don't get caught
Tell me you don't know how the law works without telling me...
I get it, really. It would often be nice if things can be just black and white good is good and wrong is wrong. The fact is reality does not revolve around that dissolution and the idea you have in your head is no where near reality either. You might "here" a story or two from time to time about someone who works for the government "escaping" a crime, but that does not mean it happens 100% of the time as you just suggested. Those are just one story you here, and when it comes to social media, nothing is ever straight forward. Society will paint their victim and paint there villain however they like, regardless of the ruling of the law and the media posted will always be cut, manipulated, and altered to fit that agenda.
There are public records regarding the details of arrests and convictions. Statics are harder to come by because that sort of fine tuned data is not something that is actively tracked or sought after. But plenty of people either working for the Government or even Wealthy have gone down and been arrested for violations. And they are not the only ones who can get away with crimes either. For instance, nearly 340,000 cases of homicide and non-negligent manslaughter remained unsolved from 1965 to 2022. And the criminals who got away with them could be anyone, rich or poor, government employee or not.
@@christopherpoet458 defend it harder pls. even if its not 100% of the time cops get away with crimes and end up only being sued and that only hurts tax payers so umm please explain how cops learn any kind of consequence if they get a slap on the wrist everytime because the real problem is the fish rotting from the head the justice system from the top down it stinks of corruption
@@christopherpoet458 tell me about chat gpt works
I have a 14 yr old son. He plays video games. He talks smack with people on those video games. If the cops showed up at my house telling me he made a statement like that first teenager… TAKE HIM! We will deal with the process whatever that looks like, court, therapy, whatever other interventions. Because that’s NOT ok! It’s not ok that he thought to say that. It’s not ok even if he truly said it as a joke. That mom is insane for trying to blow off a statement like that! No freaking way!
I play games, people say it all the time as jokes
its dark humour and it is how it is now not saying it makes it okay, but its also not as serious as it could seem most the time.
Quite true! In games, sometimes you will say it's for example in shooters a bit suspicious when you go through a school with weapons in the game, and people will get a good laugh, thats just the humor now. But actually writing it like he did in the video so it's in no way viewable as a joke is in no way funny or "just a joke"
That fact that the mum threw the second kid under the bus for running from the scene! Terrible parenting! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Lol yeah, that's how this works 😂
Parents aren't supposed to coddle you when you break the law lol.
Great parenting. Hold your kids accountable then they won't do stupid shit bc their mommy and daddy didn't bail them out.
I like how they put a wholesome story in the middle then
NEWS FLASH 16 KIDS GOT ARRESTED FOR THIS ONE
yeah I had a feeling smth fucked was coming when they had a random wholesome video in it 😭
The dad who said take them to jail 👏👏 we need more parenting like this! Kids get away with to much because we allow it. That’s a lesson learner right there. It’s what my mum did to me to. I messed up that was on me and I owned what I did growing up. Kids now always got someone to blame!
See that part is fine. But that he'd rather send her to foster care than get her mental help is a problem.
@@sierrabird2460 I seen that as if she was just to released back to him then she’d still be round the same people. So to help her would be better off if she went else where so she has a chance of getting away from those people. 🤔 either way he came across as a dad who’s at his wits end. He could have left her when she was a baby with her mother but didn’t because she was in danger. Letting go could have been his last resort to make her see sense. Sort of cruel to be kind moment.
@@Patchandbluebellthestaffiesexactly
@@Patchandbluebellthestaffies yeah get away from those ppl just to get placed with ppl who are in foster homes or prison. what a better alternative...
@@corvonics6383 He wouldn't have needed to make this decision if she'd shown the slightest hint of responsibility and respect for authority. When you have someone hard at work for you and you steal their car, you get what you get.
The toy car one was so wholesome, that police officer was great❤
Bro if the officer wasnt joking and i would walking down the street
I would become the lawyer for that kid
It would be funny if you stepped in as a joke to be the kids attorney. Lol. Nah. That would be taking it too far but in my grown up mind it was funnier having a second adult in on the joke.
@@Gshkent Yeah its very much just funny if some random adult steps up and is like "I'm going to counterplay this". probably make the cops day really.
@YuckFouTubeX you are the greatest person you can be and people love you for it!
@YuckFouTubeX Live long and prosper!
14 years old and already in probation??? 😮😮😮 What kind of life these people living in???
I’m pretty sure that when they were talking to the mum it did look like they were living in poor conditions so it could be poverty that drive people to live these kinds of life. It’s pretty sad.
@@zoefano7818 nope. its wanting attention.
being poor. and breaking laws, are not mutually exclusive.
@@DeputyFish they didnt say it was. this said it could possibly be. and unfortunately, according to statisitics, it is the case to drive the family up the walls and cause misdirection. but being poor or homeless doesnt make you a criminal.
@@DeputyFish Mate, the statement made above is built on an observation of the conditions seen in the video. Deductive reasoning.
Yes, "attention seeking" can be a motivational factor, but so can being poor. It is not saying they are mutually exclusive and to be quite frank, the person above never once stated that it was. No one is in the wrong here, but it would be more polite to have chimed in the comment as a "this is also a possibility but I understand where your suspicion comes from" and call it a day. You have not presented any reason for anyone else who sees this to assume you know more of the situation than the previous comment, which does not make your comment any more believable than the previous.
@@neptaim2795 again its not.
breaking the law for food is one thing.
they are literally just breaking the law for fun. thats being a bad person nothing to do with being poor
I love that mom who went "Oh, she's so grounded, dude."
She would be grounded till she moved out.
the "I don't have any eughghhghghghghghghh" was hilarious
The dad with the stolen truck: kudos to the parents that wanted to hold their kids accountable!!! Too bad more parents don’t hold their kids accountable.
He put her in foster care that isn't holding her responsible for her actions, that's him getting rid of her because he can't do his job as a parent correctly.
Holding her accountable by giving up on her, placing her into custody of CPS, and foster care. Too bad more people just don't choose to not have children.
@12:41 it's clear to me where the disrupting teens behaviour come from. Mum can't even comprehend that breakig into a house illegal. She immediately starts talking bullshit, and playing victim.
I think she's genuinely surprised and disappointed with her son.
It also kind of sounded like she was slurring her speech a bit. Could've been the camera; I noticed it had a weird blurry affect too.
@@kaitheguy7832 Either she was still sleeping, or something else. She clearly didn't have all her mind present.
The lady crying about her son making online mass shooting threats like he didn’t do anything wrong is CRAZY. If I were that kid I’d be RELIEVED the cops were taking me away, leaving me with my parents woulda been much MUCH worse 😬😬😬 I’m 36 and I’d still be grounded.
It's a joke. Call of duty players are literally bombing eachother with illegal war weapons and you cry over a school shooter joke?
Yeah she is in the right.
@@morgajoka838 I'm on the same page as you,some guys would be executed for the things they said on COD or halo back in the day.
but he literally didn't do anything wrong. he talked shit in a fucking video game... that's called freedom of speech and if you actually listened to what kind of talk goes on in games among friends then you would realize that these kinds of threats happen all the time. you do fucking realize this is the kind of shit that china and north korea would do not what a free first world country would do.
@@morgajoka838 people have literally done the exact same shit and actually committed to it. The police and the FBI can't read their damn minds. That line of thinking is how that shit keeps happening.
Last kid was like nah I’m out 😂 but he still got caught how is bro finna run away with the cuffs on 😭😭🙏🙏
Adore how that cop writing those darn child hooligans tickets was just making stuff up on the fly. I love goofy improv like that. Never take life, your job or yourself too seriously, a key rule of thumb!
I loved the way the cops played with the kids in their toy car! It was such a beautiful experience!
Love the interaction between the officer and the kid in the battery car. Gave me quite the chuckle.
The toy car was manufactured without seat belts. That kid can beat the seat belt ticket easy.
I love how the police was joking with the kids that restored my faith in humanity ❤️
That power wheel interaction was so wholesome and funny good on him.
4:07 This man is just a real one
on the last clip i love the back of the officers car where suspects are placed. "Nugs Not Drugs" 🤣
I have so much respect for this dad
For the second? Well, yes, he might seem like a "bad father" but he had to make a difficult decision so that his daughter and friends would understand and not continue down that path.
@@GhostG717 He's a garbage father rather than dealing with the mental issues his kid is going through he tosses her in jail. Where she will likely keep going further down into more criminal behavior. America parents are the worst. And it's no wonder you have the worst kids in the world. With them type of parents. The founding fathers would be against you people. Your more USSR than American.
@@GhostG717 Yes. The second father, whose vehicle was taken by the girls (one of which, was his daughter). I don't see him as a "bad father"
@@sapiophile545 yea
The dad who abandoned his daughter and had her sent away to foster care?
The cop having fun with the little ones is very wholesome ❤️
that girl should consider herself lucky to have a dad that cares about her so much.
Right
No he didnt even what her
Is the father has some irresistible charisma or what? Why everyone is congratulating him for basically throwing a kid under a bus and abandoning them.
that isnt what care looks like. Care would look like a father daughter talk to settle the issue... not an overly emotional manchild trying to ruin his kids life. He can give her a piece of his mind with out putting a permanent charge on her record. I for one am glad she didn't get charged. Locking people up is not always the best solution. sometimes people just need to be talked to. He is erasing himself as a father figure in her life which in the long term will make things worse for her. She already doesnt have a mom from what I understand. Having no parents to parent you is going to be a life full of hardship. Like seriously, he can be a hard ass on her and discipline her without screwing her over. the dude is manic. Sometimes a little compassion goes a long way.
@theinternationallanguagees9213 nah it seems like the dad tried many times to set her straight and having her get in trouble just might be good for her. Having a parent die isn't much of an excuse, I didn't go break laws when my dad died of cancer.
the guy that pulled over the toy car is so wholesome, absolute legend😂😂❤❤
Loved the first one. The kid made a serious threat. It needs to be addressed.
no it don't.... you just need to grow some fucking balls. kids talk shit all the time it ain't that serious. you do fucking realise you are against freedom of speech here. you are saying he should be punished for what he said. that's against freedom of speech and against the fucking HUMAN RIGHTS LAWS. how can people be so fucking dumb and ignorant? you are to blame for all the wars and all the evil in the world. it's people like you who crash the economy and bring corruption in to society with your sheeple mind.
I do like the kid was well behaved and respected authority. Learned a lesson about what is and isn't allowed in shit talking online.
10:00
Thats a good small town cop, and thats community policing. If more cops would be like this guy, it would go a long way. Actually, all the cops are pretty solid in this video. The cop telling the girl she's gonna be put in foster care was a legitimately heavy conversation to have, and he reacted like a human should... with empathy
I wouldn't say the first two are good but the rest are fine
@@Cm38271 Nah, even the 1st one, at least from the footage in the video, seem like how you actually WANT the police to conduct themselves. Obviously we didn't get a deep dive on any of the subjects, & there could be additional context
“He’s just a little boy” she seems like she always makes excuses for him. Mass murd3r is not a joke.
did you type a 3 so that the youtube algorithm wouldn't auto delete your comment? 😂
the cops giving tickets to the lil kids was adorable 😭
but for the other scenes:
just bcuz they were raise good doesn’t mean they dont do stuff like this, just bcuz they are your kid, doesn’t mean they are all innocent, every criminal had a parent too
Mr. Chavez, PREACH ON ABOUT Parenting!!!!!! 😃😃😃😃😃😃
Its nice to watch a sad video and in the middle i get to smile for a bit, people are more humane then the internet may show.
“Did he got alcohol in his hands?” Jeeze.
You can tell she's ignorant and in a few years she will be wondering why her baby is dead or in jail. She will need to take a hard look in the mirror
@@helenrandolph1760 it'll be on the news with her saying, "he ain't never did nuffin'"
If that first cop had heard the pre-game lobbies of 2008-2012 he would want to arrest every 13 year old he saw.
“He’s a little boy, he didn’t do anything wrong” 😂😂😂
A home is an example where a kid learns from wrong to right. A parent fails if they can’t set an example for there kids
I mean there are also some kids who are just that spoiled. Almost 60 to 70% of the time it's on the guardian but in this case there are some kids who need to be humbled.
Rebellious teens gonna rebel
Parents (especially those who work) have less time with kids than school and social media does. Not to void the parents of responsibility, just to acknowledge that external factors can significantly affect these things.
@@Rippersauc3no kid needs "to be humbled", most people just lack basic human decency and understanding to give a child a chance. My mother worked as a teacher and she knew how to make the worst bully a good kid... It's just a question of whether you want to give yourself a trouble of LEARNING how to communicate with a troublesome child. Most parents only think about themselves and how some kids are too entitled to, when in reality they're the ones causing the kids to act up.
I'd say only 5% of kids are really the exception, but they usually have some mental issues (sociopathy and etc), but even sociopaths could be adjusted to live in a society
Man I love seeing officers interact positively with their community. That 3 year old traffic stop is so nice
How my smile faded after the cops we're having fun with the kids LOL
The officer and the 3 year old was the most beautiful, adorably hilarious thing I’ve seen in a while! ❤️
"It's just a game! Kids say stuff like that all the time!"
No they don't, lady. They don't threaten to cause mass shootings.
but do we know what he actually said? sry if i don't just trust the cop, but I've seen too much.
@@tedgerahedron dude the officer quite literally just read out the chat log of the kid saying it. You're delusional.
i missed it. I'm not delusional. relax man. it's a long video@@Jeice1010
@@Jeice1010 i missed it. why would that make me delusional? it's a simple question.
@@tedgerahedronoh stop! He’s been reported to the police by someone else who didn’t take it as a joke! The police have to take it seriously ….there are far too many school shootings these days for them to not step in
The mom regarding the busted house party was high af.
I've been scrolling looking for a comment about her. YES! She was definitely slurring her speech
Maaaaan either that or she slow af
That video game threat sounds like something that I would do because it is stupidly specific and it's funny, I would've taken that as a joke for sure
Real if I get sent to jail it’s gonna be because of some dark joke I’d make
8:22 I had a cop joke around with me like that as a kid.
16 kids arrested for a party.
People are so over the top now a days. You fight you go to jail. "What am I doing wrong". You clearly don't understand law if you think fighting isn't doing something wrong.
really really enjoyed that mid-way break with the wholesome video.
These kinds of videos should do that more often
Omg the cop pulling over the kids was so wholesome, bless the little one for getting panicked x
Tf?
@@Skyisabaddiebtch ??
13:56 "all of them were trespassing and some were committing burglary and they were doing drugs and probably were going to try to have underage sex 'cause we caught them with a bunch of condoms but hopefully we broke it up before that happened and some of them had guns and some are serious felons that they were hanging out with you know so they were making really good life choices" got me rolling
6:30 I'm from India and I have never seen such a respectful Policeman even in my country.
Guy who went to prison sounds exactly like guys who were in prison too long
lol moves and acts like one too
Its funny how they said “GET YOUR A$$ DOWN NOW” to girls
"...and some of them were serious felons that they were hanging out with, you know, so they were making really good life choices"
love this guy