[THEME MUSIC] MAN: I'm not a citizen, man. I'm a Jamaican,
man, and I'm just trying to make it in
this country, man. I might even get
deported for this. [MUSIC - INNER CIRCLE, "BAD
BOYS"] (SINGING) Bad boys. What you want, what you want. What you gonna do. When the sheriff John
Brown come for you. OFFICER 1: About
3:00 in the morning, I saw a Dodge Challenger parked
on the other side of the park. I was unable to
see into the car. That'll indicate that the
tint is under the legal limit. So it caught my
interest and I just wanted to see what
they were up to. Hey, do you know if
your tint is legal? MAN: I have no idea. OFFICER 1: You have idea? OK. Do you know anyone that in that
mobile home park over there? Are you picking somebody
up or are you dropping-- MAN: I picked her up. That's my friend Megan. OFFICER 1: OK, hi. I was just making sure. I just saw you driving through
there so I just didn't know. MAN: I just picked her up. OFFICER 1: OK, no problem. MAN: Just hanging out. OFFICER 1: Good deal. You have your license
and registration on you? He provided me with a passport
which was his real name. So when I ran his license,
it came back as suspended, which we see quite often. But the suspension itself
was for obtaining a license by fraud. Which I've been doing this job
for 5 and 1/2 years and that's something I've never seen. And he was on probation
for a drug violation. All right. What I'll have you do stand
at the back of the car with this other deputy for me. All right. Megan, is there gonna be
anything in this car I need to know about? MEGAN: No, there's nothing. OFFICER 1: Stay
right there with him. Given that he was coming
from a known drug location, it basically allows you
to search his person. Looks like powder cocaine,
I assume, and then this. When I found the pill bottle, it
was for a controlled substance, oxycodone. The name on it was Joe Main. So he's got fraudulently
obtained oxys. So we look into if they
have any past drug history. As far as I could tell, she
didn't have any past drug arrest. Megan, is there gonna be
anything in your purse? Any pills or anything like that? MEGAN: I don't take pills, no. OFFICER 1: OK. I'm just letting you know-- MEGAN: And I'm
wearing, like this. I haven't even had
a lot of drink. I don't-- OFFICER 1: That's fine. MEGAN: To be honest,
I may have weed. Am I gonna get in trouble? OFFICER 1: If it's
a little bit, I'm gonna worry about that,
but how much you got? Just a little bit. OFFICER 1: OK, just relax. It's only a little bit. I'm not overly concerned. MEGAN: He just picked me
up from my mom's house. I've known him for 16 years. We just started talking again. OFFICER 1: You know, I
like to work with people. Especially when it
comes to marijuana. She had a very small
amount of marijuana, so I basically told her
if she was honest with me, which she was, that I would
put in for obstruction, and that's what
I ended up doing. So when I was doing
my interview with him, he was very hung up
on the tint violation. MAN: You pulled me
over for the tint? OFFICER 1: Yeah. MAN: Look at that car. Can you tell if
it's tinted or not? OFFICER 1: Yeah, you can-- OFFICER 2: Yeah, that
one's pretty dark, but you can see through it. OFFICER 1: You can see
through to the guy. When you can-- MAN: So you can't
see through my car? I can see through right here. OFFICER 1: That's
the back window. MAN: I'm looking from here
and I could see it, man. You pulled me over
for no reason. OFFICER 1: First of
all, that's the front. So if the front's
tinted, then, yeah, that would be an issue, too. MAN: I'm just trying to hang
out like everybody else. I'm not trying to hurt anybody. And here I am in cuffs because
my tint was not up to par. OFFICER 2: That's not
why you're in cuffs. You got stopped because of that. You're in cuffs because of
the substances in the car and because you're
driving without a license. MAN: Because the substances--
they're not mine. OFFICER 2: They're in your car. OFFICER 1: Something
I've learned through the years of doing this
job, it's much safer for us, it's much safer for citizens,
and everyone involved, just to try to keep things calm. Here's what I'm
looking at right now. That car is yours. MAN: It's in my ex's name. OFFICER 1: I understand that. But you've had it for
at least a week, though. MAN: Yes. This is what I told you. OFFICER 1: So you're telling
me I found four separate things in your car that you
drive on a daily basis-- MAN: I'm telling you,
none of that is mine. OFFICER 1: --that you
don't know anything about. So he made it seem like, you
know, this was a mistake. Nothing had gone
wrong in his life. When in reality, I
found out that he had been involved in multiple
robberies in a different state. He had multiple arrests
from different states, multiple arrests in Florida. He was on probation from two
different cases in Florida for possession of cocaine
as well as other controlled substances. MAN: This is just
like-- this is, like, the worst night of my life. OFFICER 1: Didn't you say you've
been arrested for cocaine? That's why you're
probation, right? MAN: Bro, I'm
trying to fix that. If I was a foster, man,
I'll never forget you, man. I'll never forget this, man. OFFICER 1: So the
story that he gave me about his life being
ruined by my fault is, it was a bogus
story just to try to make me feel bad about it. You know, I really didn't. I told him that, listen, I
don't control your actions. You know, I'm not the one that's
out at 3:00 in the morning. I didn't put the
cocaine in your car. I didn't put the
pills in your car. If you are truly
making yourself better, you're not going to put
yourself in that situation. OFFICER 3: Stop! WOMAN: OK. OFFICER 3: Get on the ground! Get on the ground. WOMAN: OK. OFFICER 3: Now! Get on the ground. Turn around. WOMAN: OK. Please. OFFICER 3: Put your
hands behind your back. Stop resisting me now. Put your hands
behind your back now. WOMAN: OK. OFFICER 3: Now. WOMAN: OK! OFFICER 3: Put your
hands behind your back. WOMAN: I am, I am.