Happy to see this. Scott Defoe my brother. Army vet. LAPD swat Superman turned expert witness and biz man. #1 Dad and friend. Incredible!! Andy you beast - stunned upon this but watch and learn from you frequently. USMC 1/1. Thank You Andy
A legend at LAPD, a SME in tactics, uof, leadership and now case debriefs. I worked with Scott at three different divisions. He is a great servant leader.
I spent 26 yrs as a LEO in CA, and especially towards the end of my career I had regular contact with LAPD homicide/sex crime bureau. Phenomenal organization!!! Regularly criticized but unless you’ve been there; then you don’t know. Great and honorable organization. We all have bad apples. Great episode!!!
Phenomenal testimony from Scott. I spent 30 years on the job, and his testimony in this interview was 100% spot on. Great job Andy, keep up the awesome podcasts!!
I never comment on UA-cam videos and I normally just listen in the Google podcast, but I choose to stop by and comment today to say this was an excellent guest. I'm better off after listening to this episode. Thank you
Great video! Phenomenal guest! It’s nice to see someone trying to correct/fix the issues in LE today as well as defend the civilians who were wronged by officers on the job.
I believe the Supreme Court case your guest was referring to was not terry v. Ohio but Tennessee v. Garner . Terry was a case giving you authority to stop and frisk and Garner was shot in the back going over a fence fleeing apprehension by police. Great interview much respect for both of your contributions to our great country. Thx Andy
I like when he said they mentioned they don't want to roll because they have a bad shoulder, etc. Well, if you can’t perform a simple roll, then maybe you don't meet the minimum standards to complete the job. We don't want a Workers Comp claim if you have to roll with a suspect. Great episode. Learned a lot.
Scott and I had near identical careers, just at different agencies right around the same time and very near each other in Southern California. Thankfully I retired and got out but this podcast is great and I can laugh at the memories. Well done!!
As an LAPD copper with 10 years all in patrol, it’s nice to hear some supervision / retired, still have a backbone when it comes to UOF. The issue is (speaking for LA) is mentally ill, “tactical disengagement” (it’s walking away from radio calls) and the contradicting policies and special orders being made, that’s where coppers are getting hurt and in trouble.
Great interview /podcast. I've been in law enforcement for 23 yrs in a large agency and the issue with my profession is the agencies' hierarchy. Especially the ones where the head of the PDs worked thier way up. They know better. Absolutely better training more often and a better way to rotate guys /girls from assignments and shifts (day, night). But, check that box once a year. I enjoyed this very much. Thank you.
I appreciate Andy giving a voice to police in a time where it seems no one wants to listen. Hopefully people will find this and it will help them realize how difficult policing is. I agree wholeheartedly that cops aren’t perfect, we make mistakes and should be held accountable.
This was an awesome podcast as usual. As someone who had an ugly interaction with a leo, my incident pails in comparison to the real life incidents that are discussed here. If anyone is reading this, please reference full auto friday episode 56 question 1. This happened a year ago, and even though I was given the best advice possible, anyone with a badge terrifies me.
This guy actually tells stories though. Mike baker just talks and then at the end of it you're sitting there realizing he didn't actually say anything at all.
First and last time commenting on a podcast. As always, a great conversation (I'm wearing the Cleared Hot Podcast baseball hat now). I want to throw this out there now, Sgt DeFoe clearly knows the difference between Terry v Ohio and Tennessee v Garner, he just misspoke. Any of us could have done that given the fact that we're talking with THE Andy Stumpf! I would also like to thank Mr. Defoe for his service, he sounds like a supervisor I (any of us) would have been honored to work for. Here's the but...(I guess there's always a "but" on UA-cam) I feel like I just listened to a man who is desperately trying to justify what he's done. I admit, I'm torn on this. I do acknowledge and I agree with his underlying claim, that while there are bad cops, the majority of the problem is that there are incompetent cops. I have personally been involved in the firing of a few really bad cops, I've also sat on the sideline and watched how hard it is to get rid of incompetent cops. Yet Sgt DeFoe still makes a LOT of money going after cops. His claim that he doesn't take cases in which cops are being charged with a crime is laudable in one sense because I'm a cop; but doesn't make any sense when he takes cases in which the cops aren't criminally charged but civilly charged. Is one wrong different from the other? A cop is acquitted on a criminal charge but liable for a 1983 violation, that's ok as long as the government pays? Is this in his mind is fair game...and a large pay check that the tax payers front? To claim that he's doing this in order to make departments wake up and understand the need for more training is ridiculous. He knows this, those of us in law enforcement, working now...not retired years ago, know this. Police/Sheriffs departments paying out millions do not make those organizations change ANYTHING. Sgt DeFore knows this, if he doesn't he's either lying or ignorant. I'll let you decide which is worse. Let me say this clearly, I'm just a dumb grunt, I'm in the trenches. I welcome and encourage any counter arguments and discussion. Respectfully, A
Your story is so damn similar to my career in the Military and LEO. The 24/7 of active then retiring from LEO is agonizing Once a Cop, always a Cop. You look at people differently, you notice things that others don’t notice, you sit in a way to always have an “out”. In public you’re a marked man. I’ve never had a listed phone number, my children went to schools out of our district, ect. There’s more gossip and lack of cohesion in LEO than one can possibly believe. SWAT team , master instructor, Sgt grade, all the bells and whistles! I was fortunate to be involved in many “ headline” events during my career. A few murders, captures and stuff above traffic stops. My point, jealously has no boundaries. I reached a point where I asked for help. I was having some difficulties. I’d discovered dozens and dozens of dead people (suicides, murders , beatings, tons of Warrant service. LEO is not as easy as the average person thinks. And PTSD is rampid among our Officers. Thanks for talking about all the eggs that fill the basket
I was on an elevator with this guy who was briefly a member of my current dept. in Riverside. I could tell immediately he was not from Riverside, He had an aura about him kind of like Rick James as told by Dave Chapelle Lol. He wasn't around long enough for me to get to know him. I'm sure he would've been a cool cat to get to know & he's from New England like me.
"If you're overweight ..." I had to LOL at that. Go to Europe for a couple of weeks and just look at the cops in several countries. Then come back and look at our own American cops again. Jesus wept.
I think LEO/1st responder PTSD is invisible to a lot of people because of how far removed from the life experiences of so many people it is. It seems many people go their entire lives never experiencing even one violent life-threatening event themselves, let alone the repeated exposure every week.
You are absolutely correct…fortunately the times are starting to change and PTS awareness is becoming more prominent in the first responder world, or at least in some areas of the country
I agree,I have to wonder if he ever saw Training Day,too(it's a great movie and one of the best movies of Denzel Washington's career-that Oscar he won for it was well-deserved). It's funny that Scott DeFoe mentioned the corrupt police officer,David Mack because Denzel's character, the corrupt LAPD narcotics officer,Alonzo Harris, was reportedly based on Rafael Perez,another corrupt LAPD officer(along with taking some influence from David Mack,too). Speaking of the Rampart scandal,it's interesting,when I think about it,that could make for a good movie or series on on Amazon Prime or HBO(there was a 2011 movie with Woody Harrelson called ''Rampart''-which was about a corrupt cop who is part of the Rampart division of the LAPD but it'd be interesting to see a movie made about the Rampart division that has David Mack and Rafael Perez as characters).
In my agency it’s the guys who the department tried to fire that end up promoted. They are easy to control and are total yes men after. It was really disgusting. The most bitter, jaded dudes suddenly want to enforce every rule and spout the administration line. They went out of their way to screw people over. Administration loved it. Thank god I’m retired and don’t have to see their faces anymore. If you can’t read between the lines I think this dude is full of shit. By his own admission he had 2 uses of force involving a baton and a shooting in a 30 day span. He also said he was in a shit frame of mind and it sure sounds to me like he wasn’t taking shit from anyone. I won’t lose sleep over some knucklehead that most likely had it coming but to now sit and judge other cops is gross to me. That’s just the few he admitted to, how many more grey area uses of force did he have I wonder? But he only testifies at civil cases, how big of him. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not advocating for cops running wild but it sounds to me like he should be the last guy judging anyone. I can assure you in 23 years I never had a complaint or was investigated for any use of force I was involved in. I’m not some manic who ran wild. I was also an emergency response team leader for 20 years. None of my activations resulted in myself or my team being disciplined or lawsuits.
Sounds like projecting to me, asshole or not, dude is in his fifties, got a law degree and worked in law enforcement for 28 years, let him be an expert witness if he wants.
I hear you, man. Thanks for your service! If I'm honest and trying to be fair, I did hear his admission of mistakes as humility. Is he the best person for the job of discerning right and wrong in these situations? I don't know. I was never a police officer. But maybe you and folks like you would be better qualified. Have you ever considered doing something like that? As a civilian I'd like to see less mistakes and also more successful police. It can only help, right?
@@ratta_tat that’s just what he admitted to. I’d have to guess he beat many a suspect down. He’s a self admitted hot head. He was just blessed to have a career in different times and didn’t get a law suit himself. No cell phones, at least at the beginning of his career. It’s a tremendously stressful job mentally and I could never sit in judgment of another. If they were dirty then hell yes I’d give no slack whatsoever. He can be the sell out, I like being able to sleep at night, mostly.
@@Discipline_equals_freedom right, right. I got you. It's a tough thing. I would like qualified, high integrity folks looking at officer involved cases but I appreciate the fact that a lot of quality officers are either too busy or not wanting to sit in judgement. It's a conundrum. Even in my line of work it seems the trouble makers get positions that don't make any sense while the rest of us are too busy to do anything about it. Well, thanks for the feedback. Lots to think about.
@@832KJV oh yeah I definitely watched this one but I just think it would be a great episode if Mike Ritland was on the other side of the table and plus they both have came a long way from then to now
Scott Reitz gets a mention at about 2.19.40, There is a GREAT podcast where he talks to Sam Harris. If you enjoyed this Cleared Hot discussion you will love this one. Its originally from about 4 or 5 years ago. Link below: ua-cam.com/video/l-QgqRi_wFE/v-deo.html Link below to Scott Reitz training LAPD Metro officers back in the day .... ua-cam.com/video/oBqmOHZLEro/v-deo.html
Genuine question, how much to police departments use "hip pocket training"? The units I was in (Army) expected anyone trying to make E-5/E-6 to carry note cards with different types of training on them. If there was down time, we expected them to be grabbing young guys and conducting training. If they were sitting around on their phones killing time......the next time they went to the boards, they were not getting full points, even if they answered all the questions correctly.
@@billmorton6977 the kids seem ok, me not so much. It’s a lot. 26 years gone in the blink of an eye. It almost feels like a dream I had that I can’t quite remember
@@samneedsanap7802 damn girl I'm sorry. I wish there was something that could help. I hope that my few rambling words can give you some encouragement and support
I call bull shit on the 52 taser deployment story. “ they were reloading”. Bull shit. $10 says they were drive-stunning him and he was flailing. No 2 cops have 52 cartridges on scene.
Great guest but I strongly disagree with him about qualified immunity and "the department will have to pay". The department doesn't pay for incompetent or corrupt officers, we taxpayers do.
Great episode! I’ve worked along side Scott in the private sector. Learned a lot and till this day I value his advise and friendship.
Happy to see this. Scott Defoe my brother. Army vet. LAPD swat Superman turned expert witness and biz man. #1 Dad and friend. Incredible!! Andy you beast - stunned upon this but watch and learn from you frequently. USMC 1/1. Thank You Andy
A legend at LAPD, a SME in tactics, uof, leadership and now case debriefs. I worked with Scott at three different divisions. He is a great servant leader.
I spent 26 yrs as a LEO in CA, and especially towards the end of my career I had regular contact with LAPD homicide/sex crime bureau. Phenomenal organization!!! Regularly criticized but unless you’ve been there; then you don’t know. Great and honorable organization. We all have bad apples. Great episode!!!
Phenomenal testimony from Scott. I spent 30 years on the job, and his testimony in this interview was 100% spot on. Great job Andy, keep up the awesome podcasts!!
Just want to say that Andy's been killing it with the guest he's had on the podcast recently. Its been some really interesting episodes lately.
The next time I call 911, I hope this guy comes.
I never comment on UA-cam videos and I normally just listen in the Google podcast, but I choose to stop by and comment today to say this was an excellent guest. I'm better off after listening to this episode. Thank you
Great video! Phenomenal guest! It’s nice to see someone trying to correct/fix the issues in LE today as well as defend the civilians who were wronged by officers on the job.
I believe the Supreme Court case your guest was referring to was not terry v. Ohio but Tennessee v. Garner . Terry was a case giving you authority to stop and frisk and Garner was shot in the back going over a fence fleeing apprehension by police. Great interview much respect for both of your contributions to our great country. Thx Andy
Correct.
I like when he said they mentioned they don't want to roll because they have a bad shoulder, etc. Well, if you can’t perform a simple roll, then maybe you don't meet the minimum standards to complete the job. We don't want a Workers Comp claim if you have to roll with a suspect. Great episode. Learned a lot.
Absolutely Amazing. Mr. Defoe, Thanks for your professionalism and truth. Andy, Great Podcast. Seriously, Great Podcast.
One of the best guests on CH. entertaining and informative.
Scott and I had near identical careers, just at different agencies right around the same time and very near each other in Southern California. Thankfully I retired and got out but this podcast is great and I can laugh at the memories. Well done!!
Great to see you haven't changed Scott. Working with you was a blast on a daily bases. Good luck buddy.
Scott, it's great to see that you are doing well.
This guest was awesome, thanks Andy
Awesome podcast, I could have listened to your conversation with him for another two plus hours!!
Interesting Content by DeFoe, thank you for sharing Andy, DeFoe had clear solutions to a sustainable challenge within the LE community.
As an LAPD copper with 10 years all in patrol, it’s nice to hear some supervision / retired, still have a backbone when it comes to UOF. The issue is (speaking for LA) is mentally ill, “tactical disengagement” (it’s walking away from radio calls) and the contradicting policies and special orders being made, that’s where coppers are getting hurt and in trouble.
11/7/89 Cops by Connally. Scott was our academy class president. Good guy even then.
Such a solid guy and great guest! You guys clicked very well👍
Great interview /podcast. I've been in law enforcement for 23 yrs in a large agency and the issue with my profession is the agencies' hierarchy. Especially the ones where the head of the PDs worked thier way up. They know better. Absolutely better training more often and a better way to rotate guys /girls from assignments and shifts (day, night). But, check that box once a year. I enjoyed this very much. Thank you.
Great interview
Very interesting stuff and much respect to the LEO folks out there, you couldnt pay me enough money to do that job.
The malpractice view was very interesting to me. I hadn't thought of it that way before but it makes sense to me.
I appreciate Andy giving a voice to police in a time where it seems no one wants to listen. Hopefully people will find this and it will help them realize how difficult policing is.
I agree wholeheartedly that cops aren’t perfect, we make mistakes and should be held accountable.
Great guest! Keep up the good work Andy! 🤙🏼
Absolutely fantastic interview! Thank you very much gentlemen. Such good sharing and discussion.
This dude could be Joe Rogan's Mike Baker to Andy LMAO
Great conversation, keep up the good work!
Happy monday guys. Hope your week goes well
Stay safe
This was an awesome podcast as usual. As someone who had an ugly interaction with a leo, my incident pails in comparison to the real life incidents that are discussed here. If anyone is reading this, please reference full auto friday episode 56 question 1. This happened a year ago, and even though I was given the best advice possible, anyone with a badge terrifies me.
This guy really has his resumé memorised in his head.
Andy didn't get a chance to ask questions. Wrong occupation for this guy,
This gentleman has a similar voice and cadence as mike baker. Great stuff, thank you for sharing your experience Scott.
This guy actually tells stories though. Mike baker just talks and then at the end of it you're sitting there realizing he didn't actually say anything at all.
@@calbonar211 haha..you’ve got a point! Baker does it true Agency style.
First and last time commenting on a podcast. As always, a great conversation (I'm wearing the Cleared Hot Podcast baseball hat now). I want to throw this out there now, Sgt DeFoe clearly knows the difference between Terry v Ohio and Tennessee v Garner, he just misspoke. Any of us could have done that given the fact that we're talking with THE Andy Stumpf! I would also like to thank Mr. Defoe for his service, he sounds like a supervisor I (any of us) would have been honored to work for. Here's the but...(I guess there's always a "but" on UA-cam)
I feel like I just listened to a man who is desperately trying to justify what he's done. I admit, I'm torn on this. I do acknowledge and I agree with his underlying claim, that while there are bad cops, the majority of the problem is that there are incompetent cops. I have personally been involved in the firing of a few really bad cops, I've also sat on the sideline and watched how hard it is to get rid of incompetent cops. Yet Sgt DeFoe still makes a LOT of money going after cops. His claim that he doesn't take cases in which cops are being charged with a crime is laudable in one sense because I'm a cop; but doesn't make any sense when he takes cases in which the cops aren't criminally charged but civilly charged. Is one wrong different from the other? A cop is acquitted on a criminal charge but liable for a 1983 violation, that's ok as long as the government pays? Is this in his mind is fair game...and a large pay check that the tax payers front? To claim that he's doing this in order to make departments wake up and understand the need for more training is ridiculous. He knows this, those of us in law enforcement, working now...not retired years ago, know this. Police/Sheriffs departments paying out millions do not make those organizations change ANYTHING. Sgt DeFore knows this, if he doesn't he's either lying or ignorant. I'll let you decide which is worse.
Let me say this clearly, I'm just a dumb grunt, I'm in the trenches. I welcome and encourage any counter arguments and discussion.
Respectfully,
A
I just finished the podcast, and I had not considered your perspective, so thanks for your comment.
Great podcast 👏
Thank you Sirs! Shared.
Awesome episode! Repping the Rancho Cucamonga!
Your story is so damn similar to my career in the Military and LEO. The 24/7 of active then retiring from LEO is agonizing Once a Cop, always a Cop. You look at people differently, you notice things that others don’t notice, you sit in a way to always have an “out”. In public you’re a marked man. I’ve never had a listed phone number, my children went to schools out of our district, ect. There’s more gossip and lack of cohesion in LEO than one can possibly believe. SWAT team , master instructor, Sgt grade, all the bells and whistles! I was fortunate to be involved in many “ headline” events during my career. A few murders, captures and stuff above traffic stops. My point, jealously has no boundaries. I reached a point where I asked for help. I was having some difficulties. I’d discovered dozens and dozens of dead people (suicides, murders , beatings, tons of Warrant service. LEO is not as easy as the average person thinks. And PTSD is rampid among our Officers. Thanks for talking about all the eggs that fill the basket
good show interesring
I was on an elevator with this guy who was briefly a member of my current dept. in Riverside. I could tell immediately he was not from Riverside, He had an aura about him kind of like Rick James as told by Dave Chapelle Lol. He wasn't around long enough for me to get to know him. I'm sure he would've been a cool cat to get to know & he's from New England like me.
Real life Harry Bosche. Excellent podcast.
I got really excited because I only saw “Cleared Hot Defoe” and thought he got William Defoe on
This is better
"If you're overweight ..." I had to LOL at that. Go to Europe for a couple of weeks and just look at the cops in several countries. Then come back and look at our own American cops again. Jesus wept.
I think LEO/1st responder PTSD is invisible to a lot of people because of how far removed from the life experiences of so many people it is. It seems many people go their entire lives never experiencing even one violent life-threatening event themselves, let alone the repeated exposure every week.
You are absolutely correct…fortunately the times are starting to change and PTS awareness is becoming more prominent in the first responder world, or at least in some areas of the country
I wonder if he ever saw "Training Day" with Denzel Washington.? Thank you for your service to the legal system, both sides.
I agree,I have to wonder if he ever saw Training Day,too(it's a great movie and one of the best movies of Denzel Washington's career-that Oscar he won for it was well-deserved).
It's funny that Scott DeFoe mentioned the corrupt police officer,David Mack because Denzel's character,
the corrupt LAPD narcotics officer,Alonzo Harris, was reportedly based on Rafael Perez,another corrupt LAPD officer(along with taking some influence from David Mack,too).
Speaking of the Rampart scandal,it's interesting,when I think about it,that could make for a good movie or series on on Amazon Prime or HBO(there was a 2011 movie with Woody Harrelson called ''Rampart''-which was about a corrupt cop who is part of the Rampart division of the LAPD but it'd be interesting to see a movie made about the Rampart division that has David Mack and Rafael Perez as characters).
Very fine thin blue line.
I listened to just about all I can...these fast talking , slick looking guys dudes are all the same....used car salesmen with a story !
So this is the face behind "we investigated ourselves, and found nothing wrong"
4:30 a.m. podcast? Good.
Jocko? Lol
Have a great week y'all. Stay safe
In my agency it’s the guys who the department tried to fire that end up promoted. They are easy to control and are total yes men after. It was really disgusting. The most bitter, jaded dudes suddenly want to enforce every rule and spout the administration line. They went out of their way to screw people over. Administration loved it. Thank god I’m retired and don’t have to see their faces anymore. If you can’t read between the lines I think this dude is full of shit. By his own admission he had 2 uses of force involving a baton and a shooting in a 30 day span. He also said he was in a shit frame of mind and it sure sounds to me like he wasn’t taking shit from anyone. I won’t lose sleep over some knucklehead that most likely had it coming but to now sit and judge other cops is gross to me. That’s just the few he admitted to, how many more grey area uses of force did he have I wonder? But he only testifies at civil cases, how big of him. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not advocating for cops running wild but it sounds to me like he should be the last guy judging anyone. I can assure you in 23 years I never had a complaint or was investigated for any use of force I was involved in. I’m not some manic who ran wild. I was also an emergency response team leader for 20 years. None of my activations resulted in myself or my team being disciplined or lawsuits.
Sounds like projecting to me, asshole or not, dude is in his fifties, got a law degree and worked in law enforcement for 28 years, let him be an expert witness if he wants.
@@r3fotzirx I’m just calling it like I see it. You do the job hero, then come talk.
I hear you, man. Thanks for your service! If I'm honest and trying to be fair, I did hear his admission of mistakes as humility. Is he the best person for the job of discerning right and wrong in these situations? I don't know. I was never a police officer. But maybe you and folks like you would be better qualified. Have you ever considered doing something like that? As a civilian I'd like to see less mistakes and also more successful police. It can only help, right?
@@ratta_tat that’s just what he admitted to. I’d have to guess he beat many a suspect down. He’s a self admitted hot head. He was just blessed to have a career in different times and didn’t get a law suit himself. No cell phones, at least at the beginning of his career. It’s a tremendously stressful job mentally and I could never sit in judgment of another. If they were dirty then hell yes I’d give no slack whatsoever. He can be the sell out, I like being able to sleep at night, mostly.
@@Discipline_equals_freedom right, right. I got you. It's a tough thing. I would like qualified, high integrity folks looking at officer involved cases but I appreciate the fact that a lot of quality officers are either too busy or not wanting to sit in judgement. It's a conundrum. Even in my line of work it seems the trouble makers get positions that don't make any sense while the rest of us are too busy to do anything about it. Well, thanks for the feedback. Lots to think about.
Great podcast ! Would love to see Mike Ritland on here
Not on Cleared Hot but the two guys are here: ua-cam.com/video/S8qMpEbrQq8/v-deo.html
@@832KJV oh yeah I definitely watched this one but I just think it would be a great episode if Mike Ritland was on the other side of the table and plus they both have came a long way from then to now
Ask him if he has a Tazmanian Devil tattoo -
1:42:53 FACTS!!!! For both LAPD AND LAFD!!!
This is a fucking incredible episode
such a good episode!
Saying there was no "criminal malfeasance" on the part of the officer in the GF case is pretty fucking ridiculous Scott.
Scott Reitz gets a mention at about 2.19.40, There is a GREAT podcast where he talks to Sam Harris. If you enjoyed this Cleared Hot discussion you will love this one. Its originally from about 4 or 5 years ago. Link below:
ua-cam.com/video/l-QgqRi_wFE/v-deo.html
Link below to Scott Reitz training LAPD Metro officers back in the day ....
ua-cam.com/video/oBqmOHZLEro/v-deo.html
Genuine question, how much to police departments use "hip pocket training"? The units I was in (Army) expected anyone trying to make E-5/E-6 to carry note cards with different types of training on them. If there was down time, we expected them to be grabbing young guys and conducting training. If they were sitting around on their phones killing time......the next time they went to the boards, they were not getting full points, even if they answered all the questions correctly.
💪🏻❤️🙏🏻🇺🇸
These next 2 weeks are gonna be bitch. Gonna grind it out. Y’all have a wonderful week!
You got it girl. Be strong. Have a happy birthday in 3 days . The 14th correct?
@@billmorton6977 18th but since that’s also d day around here I think I’m gonna do the weekend before from here on out so I can keep that day for him
@@samneedsanap7802 right on. Keep a day for yourself to. How are the kids doing?
How are you doing?
@@billmorton6977 the kids seem ok, me not so much. It’s a lot. 26 years gone in the blink of an eye. It almost feels like a dream I had that I can’t quite remember
@@samneedsanap7802 damn girl I'm sorry. I wish there was something that could help. I hope that my few rambling words can give you some encouragement and support
Forget it.
I call bull shit on the 52 taser deployment story. “ they were reloading”. Bull shit. $10 says they were drive-stunning him and he was flailing. No 2 cops have 52 cartridges on scene.
Agreed, more like 52 cycles or 52 depressions of the trigger between them.
Lets Go!
so glad i live in oz no one has guns
Woooo!!!
Great guest but I strongly disagree with him about qualified immunity and "the department will have to pay". The department doesn't pay for incompetent or corrupt officers, we taxpayers do.
Fuck yes!!!
Was the TVshow Bosch based of Scott and his career?
The TV show is based on the Michael Connolly series of books. First book written in 1992 so no not based on Scott.
Medicine Man.
Is he related Willem
Too many unexplained abbreviations, tough for me to fully follow the conversation
Is it just me, or does he keep referencing problems he had on the job getting along with others?
Interesting and well spoken, lost all respect for him when he said he doesn't take cases against cops. He's definitely part of the problem
He’s part of the problem BUT he is retained by the plaintiff that is suing the LE agency? STFU
🌠👍
💯☕