Dallas SWAT: Full Episode - #12 (Season 1, Episode 12) | A&E

Video Statistics and Information

Video
Captions Word Cloud
Reddit Comments
Captions
<i>(man) Let's go. Let's go.</i> Time to go to work. <i>(man) Coming in. Coming in. Coming in.</i> [rock music] Always ready-- it's what we're designed to do. Let's go! Designed to be. [beeping] Your daddy's got to go to work. [crying] When he talks to you about his daughter, how does he view her? (man) We know you care about your daughter. Come outside so you can see her. Freeze! Police! Some weekend. [rock music] (man) Barricaded suspect, armed and dangerous. (man) Suspect is inside. (man) We're going to hit the ground running. (man) ♪ Adrenaline's running higher. ♪ ♪ Strap the metal to my back. ♪ (man) 30 seconds to the target house. Go! Go! Go! Go! Go! ♪ ♪ Police! Police! [bell rings] In stairs like this, if you know <i>there's a shooter in here,</i> I like owning this stuff before we even get on it. I'm one of the more senior guys at SWAT. I've been on the team for 15 years. Can't see the landing. Can't see the whole landing. Can't see the whole landing. Got the door. (Claggett) In this training, we are using one of our guys as a bad guy. <i>(man) Second level.</i> (Claggett) And we're simulating working a stairwell, which is a perfect ambush point for suspects on us. Who's up there? Come on, guys. (Claggett) We've learned, sometimes the hard way, the last place you want to learn your lessons is in the field. I need one long. I'm taking a left. I need one long. <i>(man) You frickin' cops.</i> <i>Get the hell out of here.</i> <i>I told you I ain't going back to jail.</i> <i>[guns firing]</i> [men whispering] (Claggett) In a situation where you're going into their battlefield, we're going in blind. It's not a good situation to be in, because we don't know the layout of their home. We don't know where their weapons are. Most times, they are armed. That's why we're getting called. That's a dangerous combination for us, and that's why we have to train hard for that battle. Turn around. All right, guys. Let's end it right there. We've got a little short-notice gig for narcotics. <i>(man) We're going to West Dallas.</i> (Claggett) In situations like that, then you have to rely more heavily on your training and work through the problems on the run, basically. <i>(man) See, the knob on the door to the cage</i> <i>looks like it's on the left side.</i> (Claggett) On this particular house, there's a lot of bars on the windows. <i>Is it meshed up too?</i> It looks like it. (Claggett) There's bars and mesh on the front porch. Anytime you have that, we lose the speed element and the surprise element. Once we set that, we'll put back, and, Johnny, you dump the bag. And what we're going to do to get the upper hand on these guys is, we're going to immediately deploy flash-bangs. You get a bright flash, and you get a loud bang, or concussion. And that works to give us that little edge that we need in order to get the jump on these guys. We'll take a strap to the door of the cage on the front porch. (Claggett) This particular one, we're going to use three pulls. We're going to pull two doors and one window. The primary entry is a delta three door. He's guessing right now-- just a guess-- that if we don't make it into the driveway, it won't be long enough to reach. Our pulls in this operation are done in real close-quarters environments, so that's going to be a problem. 25 feet from the street to that door--window. It ain't going to reach. Will this become primary entry point, then, if we don't pop that? <i>(man) Yes, sir, we'll push in behind you guys.</i> (Claggett) My role in this operation is, we're breaching the front door, the front cage. Then we're going to breach the front door and front window inside the cage. If we fail to get the back door pulled off, then our point will be the primary entry point. We'll be the primary entry team on this. Keith, what do you have going on here? Multiple pulls coming off the front of the vehicle. There are two pulls coming off the passenger side <i>and one pull coming off the driver.</i> (Claggett) When we set up a pull, the first thing we look at is obviously our objective. We hook up our strap, and then we hook up the other end to whatever tool we decide to use for the job. This particular one's an easy little fishhook. The straps will be fastened on the bumper for easy deployment. They'll place the hook, step back, leave it. [crashing] Should come off all about the same time if we set our straps up right. This is the Scott McIntire deployment method, which works very well. It's a pretty complicated method, isn't it? <i>Yeah.</i> One bungee cord. A $2 bungee cord and a $400 strap. We're good. (Claggett) Alls it takes in a warrant like this is somebody to be out of position when the pulls are made and catching a piece of steel alongside the head and killing them, a suspect turning aggressive and being in a crossfire situation with other officers-- I mean, there's a whole gamut of things that could go wrong. You know, there's just-- it's a dangerous job. There's no doubt about it. Can we meet on the right-hand side shy of me? I'm going deep, cover the door, <i>and then I'll try and pick up as much window as I can.</i> Yes, sir. <i>(man) There it is, boys.</i> Don't peel us off in the fence, Bubba. <i>(man) Offload!</i> <i>(Claggett) Let's go, guys. Let's go.</i> Stay tight. Stay tight. Stay tight. Stay tight. <i>Set it. Set it. Set it.</i> <i>(man) Police! Don't move!</i> <i>[men yelling]</i> <i>(Claggett) Screen door-- you got breach.</i> <i>Take the window from the outside.</i> <i>(man) Police! Police!</i> Alternate entry! <i>(Claggett) Police!</i> <i>Show your hands! Show your hands!</i> <i>How many other people are in this house?</i> <i>Where's the third one?</i> Don't move. Hang on a second, guys. Mark, hang on just one minute, 'cause we may have a separate room there that we don't know about. Hey, Keith. <i>Sir.</i> Can you guys see this opening here from inside? They made some adjustments to the structure, so there may be a concealed space. Just be careful. Might be a scuttlehold, Bubba. Right now, we're checking to make sure that there is no possible place anybody could hide, especially if they have a gun. <i>(man) Lock it from the inside.</i> <i>Step across. Step across.</i> <i>[men talking]</i> <i>Okay, you're tight there.</i> <i>(man) Let go of it. Let go of it.</i> (Claggett) Steve, you let them punch one just to make sure. (man) Okay, go punch! (Claggett) Oh, you got one back there still? We're walking! Hey, man, we playing a game? We are secure. Narcotics, you can come up. This operation went very well, especially considering the short time that we had to prepare for it. We had a few issues on the side. One of our problems was, the strap that we had wasn't long enough to make it to the back door, so we aborted that. I ran out of strap. It's like a cartoon, getting yanked backward. (Claggett) We were able to get our front door open quickly, 'cause we had the shorter strap, and, obviously, the shorter distance to go. So it was no problem for us. It didn't go as we planned, but that's what contingencies are for. If we can break a door and a window and have them give up on us, mission success. Daddy, I want some garlic bread. All right, baby. It's Memorial Day. I'm just going to spend the day with the kids, just grab a bite to eat. Never have enough time to spend with the kids and the wife. Mama, me and you, we could do that. (Gordon) Where I grew up, it was-- I guess could be considered low-income neighborhood. It was high crime. You did the bread? Yeah. <i>Oh, this is the best bread</i> I ever had. In my job, we see a lot of the bad stuff that's happening around Dallas, and so it's real refreshing to come home to a pretty face every day. [beeping] Your daddy's got to go to work. <i>You sad, Mama?</i> [crying] <i>Oh, come here. Come here.</i> It's okay. It's okay. I know. Bye. Call me. (Gordon) All right. Bye. Looks like we have a barricaded person with a suspect. Allegedly broke into his ex-girlfriend's home, assaulted her. We're not sure if he has any weapons or not. Like, there goes my Memorial Day. I need you to get on the alpha david corner. That's the last patrol officer we need to relieve. This is a dangerous situation. The best thing I can do for my family is just basically handle my job here and get home safe. Daddy's got to go to work. [crying] (Gordon) We have a barricaded person. Broke into his ex-girlfriend's home. We're not sure if he has any weapons or not. It's a dangerous situation. The best thing I can do for my family is handle my job here and get home safe. (Byas) What we have is a suspect here that apparently came to his ex-girlfriend's house. They have a child together. He's not supposed to be there. Patrol got here, I guess, pretty quick. And we're going to double-check a few things. (Gordon) The negotiators right now are trying to get intel on the residents, trying to maybe figure out if the guy's armed, maybe get a floor plan of the house, try to get information from the complainant on this offense. Okay, were you at the house? (man) What ended up happening was, he went to the front door, rear door. She wouldn't let him in either way. And he actually ended up crawling in through a dog door and made it inside the house. [dog barking] The fight started. She tried to call 911. <i>Okay.</i> Does he have any guns in there, <i>anything that could hurt us?</i> This is a gas gun. You'll be our gas person back in the back. Okay. Basically, my role is to secure the perimeter from the C-side, which is the back side. I also have the gas pack in case I have to induce tear gas in the residence. Got everybody in position. Just going to let the command post know that the perimeter's set. And they're going to attempt to contact the suspect inside. (Byas) We understand there's one more phone that is still working, <i>that he didn't rip out.</i> [phone ringing on other end] [click] Hello? <i>You there?</i> This is Jake with the police department. You there? Okay, I don't know if he heard me or not, but the phone disconnected. <i>Okay, the phone just disconnected.</i> [phone ringing on other end] I hadn't seen anything from the suspect or heard anything or seen any movement. Trying the loud hailer from the APC to see if we can get a response out of him. This is the Dallas Police Department SWAT. <i>We have the house completely surrounded.</i> <i>We just want you to come outside</i> <i>and surrender and talk to us.</i> We're not going to go anywhere until you come outside and talk to us. When he talks to you about his daughter, how does he view his daughter? <i>Okay, so it seems like</i> he's a pretty good dad when he is around? One of the important things about getting information from family members and friends is to get anything that we can use to try and work with. Okay, sir. <i>Thank you very much.</i> <i>Bye-bye.</i> (Pippins) We know you care about your daughter. Come outside so you can see her. <i>If we have to come inside,</i> <i>you will not have the opportunity</i> <i>to see your daughter.</i> Let's go ahead and end this so everyone can go on with their lives. We've been lying here a pretty good while. No response from the suspect. I think the entry team is trying to get together and figure out what their next plan of action is going to be. <i>(Pippins) We're not going anywhere</i> <i>until you come outside and talk to us.</i> (Gordon) It complicates things a little bit when a suspect doesn't engage us. We have to escalate a little bit more just to get a rise out of the suspect. Right now, we're getting our throw phone set up. (man) Misty, what would be less lethal? (Vancuren) 6-3, cover. (Byas) We have an option of throwing a phone inside the location and ringing it and, through loud hailing, ask him to answer it. <i>(Pippins) They're giving me</i> <i>a little more time to talk to you,</i> <i>but time is running out.</i> Taking approach with the shield from the APC, taking important cover of that window, drop the throw phone. You can pick up Larry and Freak to supplement your entry team back here. We're moving up using the APC as cover. A team's going to go up and deploy the throw phone in a window on the baker side of the house. (Pippins) <i>Come outside.</i> <i>Keep your hands up.</i> We do not want to harm you. [glass shatters] <i>(man) Yeah, there we go.</i> <i>(man) Yeah, we got it.</i> [phone ringing on other end] <i>In the back bedroom, there is a phone.</i> <i>If you pick it up,</i> you can talk directly to us. <i>We can hear your side of the story</i> <i>so we can end this.</i> Right now, it's a sit-and-wait. We just got to kind of wait and see if he picks up the phone. [phone ringing on other end] <i>[dog barking]</i> Pick up the phone. <i>Time is running out.</i> <i>Things are going to change,</i> and they're going to change fast. We've been here about four hours. They haven't been able to contact the suspect via phone or just by the loud hail, so we, at this point, usually try to escalate, maybe induce tear gas into the location. But we're going to try to stay away from that today, because we have a mother and a daughter that's got to stay there tonight. Y'all ready? We're going to stay on the passenger side of the APC. He's going to back up and drive us over there. (Gordon) I think the entry team is going to slow-search the location. They'll take in one room at a time. It's going to make it more dangerous, because the suspect basically is going to hear us coming. He's not going to have to contend with the chemical agents inside the residence. (Pippins) <i>[dog barking]</i> (Gordon) We have a barricaded person. Broke into his ex-girlfriend's home. Assaulted her. Come outside and surrender. There's been no response from the suspect, <i>no movement at all.</i> [glass shattering] The entry team is going to slow-search the location now. The suspect's going to hear us coming. It's kind of dangerous. Y'all ready? (Pippins) [groans] Hang tight. Hang tight. Hold it. Okay, so I have an attic. How do I get into the attic? The garage. Garage? (Gordon) Now they have to search the attic. Suspect may be hiding there. You ready? (Gordon) Basically, it's real dangerous, 'cause the first thing the suspect sees is your head. He's not here. Clear! (Houston) The mystery has been solved. He's not here. [grunts] I guess he can fit through the dog door. What a way to spend your Sunday. (Gordon) We didn't find anything. Okay, so it's pretty much secure. Searched the attic. Searched the crawl spaces. Did primary, secondary search of the residence. The suspect apparently got out before patrol set up the perimeter, so-- it happens. Some weekend. Happy Memorial Day. (Gordon) It's not disappointing. It's part of the job to be here for four hours and not get a suspect. It's not disappointing or anything, because if you let that disappoint you, you're in for a long career. Complainant got out. She's okay, so we're good. He'll be arrested sooner or later. The system is going to win. It just didn't win today. Hi, guys. How you doing? Fine. Well, good. How you doing? Give me some sugar. (Gordon) Scoot over a little bit. Let Jeffrey sit down. That's your uncle Clifford. He was in a football game or something, doing something. That's your uncle. That's Daddy's brother. Here he is right there. Who? That's your uncle Clifford. Lean back a little bit. Let me turn the page. That may be a playoff game right there. The first time Clifford went to jail, I think he just had graduated high school. That's basically where it started all going wrong from there. <i>That's him right there too.</i> That's when he played basketball. Who's that? That's Uncle Clifford. He started committing other robberies. He started selling drugs. Clifford was basically a one-man crime wave. <i>He was number 12.</i> <i>I used to wear number 12 when I was little too.</i> One day, I came home from college, and they were looking for him. And I told them he was at home, and I took them right to the front door, because he needed-- he needed to go to jail. It wasn't a hard decision for me to make. Sometimes you got to save people from themselves. Larry, where were they at-- or Clifford was playing in, and they needed to win that game so bad, and he got hurt? You remember, he got hurt? That might have been me. Was that you? I was thinking it was Clifford. No, it was me. And when you cried like a baby? Nah, it must be Clifford. [laughter] That must have been Clifford. I think it's very important for my kids to meet Clifford, because they weren't even born when he went to jail. I'm not sure how my kids are going to react. They've never been in a jail or prison or anything. So I'm just a little anxious to see how they're going to react to it. Here, recently, in Dallas, we've had a spike of heroin usage, distribution, things of this sort. So it's our responsibility to get these guys arrested and get them off the streets. Right now, I'm en route to a helicopter unit in order to get some video surveillance of the house that we're going to do a warrant on. Let's go. We're out of here. <i>Vámonos.</i> We're flying over the suspect's house so that we can get views of the left side of the house that we can't get from the ground. (woman) (Taylor) He's got a lot of trees covering, and we can't tell how many windows over there on that left side of the house. (woman) (Taylor) We'll have to improvise and just make the best of it when we get on scene. (Holloway) This case originated from a heroin overdose. We busted the overdose victim's dealer, and we went to his dealer, and now we're at this guy. <i>We have four felony warrants</i> for your main suspect. <i>(Rose) We're going to pull up an APC1 on the front side,</i> have a strap team go to the alpha one window <i>and to the alpha two door.</i> <i>And we'll do a double pull</i> on the window and the front door. <i>(man) Now, you're prying both?</i> No, just prying just the gate. Yeah, that's going to be hard. (Taylor) Yeah, you can't-- <i>and then they got to drop it, cover,</i> and come in on-- somebody's going to have to cover first, cover deep. My main job today will be to breach the fence. I need somebody off of this. And to find a window that will get the team the most protection as they make entry. <i>(Holloway) All right, here's your aerial shots.</i> <i>Andre was obviously a little nervous.</i> <i>To me, it looks like there's a window right here.</i> (Taylor) As of right now, we don't know the exact number of windows on the baker side of the house. And because right now we don't know, what we'll do is we'll go up there. We'll feel it out. We'll see what we need. And then we'll make it-- you know, we'll make it work for us. This window has priority. If you feel like you can protect these guys better here, then do that one. If you feel like, "Hey, that's not a concern," then push past us and go to one of these. <i>You make the decision on whether it's best</i> to go to this window or push to this one. It's up to you. You're going to have to read it once you've breached through this here. Say, "What do we need to do now?" Time to go to work. We're ready, always ready. It's what we're designed to do. Let's go! Designed to be. Right now, I'm trying to think of the timing in my head and how this thing will go down. Try to get a picture of everything that's going to happen. You see your job; you see everybody else's job so that things don't surprise you. <i>(man) Left turn, guys!</i> <i>Hard bump on the curb.</i> <i>Aim right for the hinges on that fence.</i> <i>(man) I got it.</i> (man) Go, go. (man) No windows, no windows, no windows, no windows. This case originated <i>from a heroin overdose.</i> We went to his dealer, and now we're at this guy. (Taylor) We're going to strap the front door and front window. We'll do a double pull on the window and the front door. Let's go! You see your job; you see everybody else's job. You know what the operation is so that things don't surprise you. <i>(man) There it is, guys.</i> <i>(man) Right here.</i> <i>(man) Let's go.</i> <i>(man) Coming up in the lot.</i> <i>(man) We're in the lot.</i> <i>(man) Aim right for the hinges on that fence.</i> <i>(man) Prepare to hit!</i> <i>(man) Door's on the left.</i> <i>Charlie wants a door.</i> [men yelling and glass smashing] <i>(Taylor) No windows, no windows, no windows, no windows.</i> <i>(man) Police, police!</i> <i>(Taylor) Keep coming in. No windows.</i> <i>[men yelling]</i> <i>(man) Police! Get down!</i> <i>Get down!</i> <i>Police!</i> <i>(man) It has not been cleared. It has not been cleared.</i> <i>(Taylor) Didn't see it.</i> <i>Yeah, was this the only window?</i> (man) I think he was in this room. Yeah, he ran to the door, is when the front cage came off and the door flew open. He was standing right there. Yeah. (Taylor) They're still doing the search. I don't know if they got anything. I know we got our suspect, so that was good. It went good. It went good. There was no second window on this side, and we didn't have to breach the gate. We just opened it. So it went smooth. (Cockerill) Good idea to check that and see if it's locked. That was you, Bob. <i>Sometimes you go up there</i> and you're banging on a door, and all you got to do is turn it and open it. <i>Yeah.</i> <i>Were you passing a window</i> <i>when the clubber was breaking it out?</i> Glass flying everywhere. Dude, I looked. I go, "Oh!" (man) All right. This was found in the front closet. He pointed it out to us. We've got wads of money. The reason they wrap it up so much is 'cause this stuff stinks so bad. That's about an ounce of black tar heroin so far. (Taylor) I think that's what the person overdosed on, as to why we came out here on the warrant. So good deal. That's what we're here for. And I ain't smelling it. 247. So we're at Crabb's Prairie? <i>(Donyel) I'm going to visit</i> my uncle Clifford today. Well, right now, we're going down to Huntsville, Eastham Prison. I'm going to take my kids to visit my brother. He sent them several cards and letters. And, basically, they're getting cards and letters from a person they don't know. I think he's going to be excited to see us for the first time. I'm going to tell him about gymnastics, school, and, uh-- <i>(woman) Your dog, Sugar.</i> My dog, Sugar. Where are we going? (Taylor) I spoke to Clifford about bringing the kids down there, and he was real anxious to see them. Every time I've came down there without them, he wanted me to bring them, but I just waited. I was waiting for the right time. Now they're old enough to understand and maybe can digest what they're about to see. (Baker) We have a search warrant for the house of an alleged crack dealer. We're going to go out and do a drive-by and see just what we're up against. Each one of our deployment vehicles is something that's nondescript, that looks like it belongs in the neighborhood that we're driving in. Of course, we're trying to do it a little bit covert. (Rose) It's the third house on the north side. Thanks. One, two, three blocks down. So the fourth block. (Baker) Just give me a head's up on it whenever we start getting close to the house. <i>(Claggett) Johnny, use this big two-story as your reference right now.</i> Start filming on that. That'll give us a cue. <i>(Baker) That big two-story</i> and then the red brick. <i>(Rose) Yeah, that's it right there.</i> That little bitty cracker box house? <i>Yeah, van out front.</i> That's the smallest house I've ever seen. <i>Well, we got that fence down that side.</i> <i>I might not be able to get much.</i> <i>(Rose) They actually come up Elmore?</i> <i>(Baker) Yeah, man, I don't know--</i> I don't know if I got anything. The fence blocked our view of the back of the house, and we really do need to know how many doors and windows are back there. But if we keep driving around this neighborhood, it could alert the suspected dealers that live there that they're being watched. <i>I say we do it again.</i> <i>(Claggett) See if you can stop a little bit before</i> as long as we can't be seen, and we'll see if we can't look up over into the backyard. (man) Yeah. (Claggett) Nice and easy. <i>(Rose)</i> Three windows<i> down on the delta side,</i> <i>all with bars.</i> Caged front. Fortified window. <i>(Rose) Hold up. Hold up. Hold up.</i> Small girl in front. Yup. Is that a female? <i>Okay, the suspect</i> that they made the buys off of is a black female. Corner house. Suspect's a black female. Sells through a burglar bars on the front door. <i>The plan is,</i> the van and APC2 will stop short of that fence. We're going to come from the alpha side. (Baker) Our focus is going to be to try to get into the house quickly. So we're going to pull the front door, and we're going to make an alternate entry point out of a front window. My job is going to be to provide cover on the pull team on the front door. There's the female that was coming out of the front. That's the child. Just walked out, let the bars slam behind her. (Baker) The presence of the child kind of worries us. (Emberlin) Supposedly, a little juvenile running around there, so we're going to try to be real careful about the pull. If the door's open, we're just going to go straight on in. This APC2? Bye. <i>(man) See you later.</i> This neighborhood we're going to, there's an awful lot of drug activity, a few gangs in the area. A lot of marijuana and crack cocaine has been known to be bought out of this neighborhood. <i>(man) All right, boys.</i> Changing up. <i>(man) Everybody out?</i> <i>(man) Stand by.</i> <i>Good?</i> Good! <i>(man) It's this one right here.</i> <i>(man) Should I turn on it?</i> <i>(Claggett) Yeah, Elmore is our next street.</i> <i>(Baker) It's right in front of us, guys.</i> <i>Heads up.</i> <i>Hold on. Come on.</i> Run back. Run back. Run back. (Baker) We're just gathering intelligence on a location. (Rose) Corner house. <i>Our suspect's a black female.</i> <i>Sells through burglar bars on the front door.</i> It's a very small house. <i>(Baker) That's the smallest house I've ever seen.</i> There'll be another team that'll be providing cover in the back of the house. The fence blocked our view on the drive-by, so we're not sure exactly what's back there. (Baker) It's right in front of us, guys. Heads up. (Claggett) There's a car pulling up front. People out front. We're going to have to take down that car in the driveway too. <i>(man) Get down! Get down!</i> <i>(man) Check the door.</i> <i>[glass smashes]</i> Run back. Run back. Run back. <i>Coming in. Coming in. Coming in!</i> <i>Oh, Bob! Back up! Back up!</i> [men yelling] Get down on the ground! Down on the ground! Get your hands off of there! <i>Get down on the ground!</i> <i>(Baker) Get down on the ground! Get your hands off of there!</i> <i>Now! Get in!</i> <i>Pull!</i> <i>(man) Let's go. Go.</i> <i>(man) They're inside, inside.</i> <i>(man) This is it?</i> <i>(man) It's all one room.</i> We're clearing the house. (Baker) As we approached the door and put our tool in the cage, a male on the inside opened the interior door. He started to reach for our tool, and somebody politely told him not to touch that. And he went back inside. We went ahead and pulled it. Look this way and kneel down. Down, all the way down. It's a trust game. I got you. I got you. All the way down. She's out front. She's good. (Baker) There was a female and a male in there, both in their mid 30s. But that Cadillac pulled up, and it had one, two, three, four, five, six people in it. So got real busy out front real fast. Find any dope in there? Yeah, we found some crack, some marijuana. We could tell where they were selling in the back. That back door, they have that little slide. That's the smallest house I think we've ever hit. [laughs] It's tiny. (Bardin) About, what, 200 square feet? (Emberlin) Maybe. (Bardin) Something like that. <i>[dog barking]</i> (Baker) It kind of breaks your heart when you got kids growing up in an environment like this. You got a house in there that doesn't have running water. It truly is a shame. (Gordon) I think the visit went real well. The kids were happy to see him. He was happy to see the kids. <i>Thought my daughter looked like my wife</i> <i>and just--I mean, it went</i> <i>how I thought it would go, really.</i> I thought he'd be pretty happy about it. (Clifford) I've been here a long time. And over the years, I had time to think, ponder mistakes, bad decisions. I can verify that if you do make the wrong decision, then you will pay. (Donyel) He's in jail because he did bad things. (Clifford) As far as my little niece, she's a beautiful girl. She was so cute. She told me, "I love you, Uncle." First time she ever seen me. And broke my heart, right, but... Pssshhhh! (Clifford) Jeffrey, he's a real energetic-type kid. I can see myself at that age, when I was energetic. (Jeffrey) He told me he missed me and, "Be good." (Gordon) I think the lessons that I know Jeffrey can take away is about doing what's right and the consequences of your actions when you don't do what's right. We sat there for a while before he came out, and the kids were just trying to take in the whole scene where all the other inmates talking <i>and the bars closing and locking</i> and the guys walking by chained up. I think it maybe, you know, maybe was an eye-opener for them. (Clifford) Our family have always been close no matter what's done. Once it's done, then the family always comes together. <i>(Donyel) I was happy to see him,</i> and I'm ready to go back. <i>He's taking me to the park</i> when he comes home. Captioning by<font color="#008000"> CaptionMax www.captionmax.com</font>
Info
Channel: A&E
Views: 2,136,662
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: Dallas Swat, Episode 12, AandE, MBR:1, A&E shows, A&E channel, A&E new series, watch Dallas SWAT, Dallas SWAT season 1 episode 12, Dallas SWAT s1 e12, Dallas SWAT s01 e12, Dallas SWAT 1X12, watch Dallas SWAT fullepisode, Dallas SWAT clips, Dallas SWAT season 1, watch Dallas SWAT season 1, Sergeant Eddie, deadly narcotics and arms warrant, new series on a&e, Danielle, Philly, John and Rich, watch dallas swat full episode, watch dallas swat clips, dallas swat season 1 clips
Id: 5_Cb55-4j1c
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 45min 34sec (2734 seconds)
Published: Mon Jan 27 2020
Related Videos
Note
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.