Live PD: Cop Calls w/ Jeffersonville, Indiana Police Department | A&E

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And a reckless driver. The caller thinks that the vehicle struck something. All right. [sirens] Unknown if there are any injuries at this time. Oh, they went across the road and struck the telephone pole. [police radio chatter] OK. Can you stay here for me while I check him out? Hey, man, are you OK? OK. Can you open your door for me? Can you open your door for me? OFFICER WOODARD: Come on. What have you taken today? OK, because the person behind you said that you almost swerved off the road several times. Do you have anything illegal on you? No? OK. If you'll just stand right here for me. Do you have an ID on you? You've done cocaine and marijuana? Just marijuana? OK. Is there any in the vehicle? Hey, sit up for me. Just do me a favor, OK? [mumbling] OK. Well, I've got EMS en route for you, OK? [mumbling] Radio, Baker 117. [mumbling] Advise EMS the driver's starting to go unconscious. Hey, man, stay awake for me. [mumbling] Stay awake for me. [mumbling] Huh? [mumbling] [bleep] I'm making sure you don't have any weapons on you. Hey, man, stay awake. [sirens] Stay awake for me. James-- - What? What? Stay awake for me. I want you to stay awake, OK? He's probably intoxicated. Admitted to smoking marijuana. He's kind of in and out of consciousness. OFFICER WOODARD: He's saying it's spice. OFFICER WOODARD: Yeah. He admitted to smoking spice. Spice is just a synthetic for marijuana. Here we have some spice found in the center console. He was probably smoking and driving. So he doesn't have a whole lot left. OFFICER: This is recently used. OFFICER WOODARD: Yeah. I was wondering when he smoked it with. This was on the passenger floorboard, so he was probably smoking while he was driving, which caused him to lose control of his vehicle. We've actually had some bad spice going around where people been going unconscious, gone into comas. Just doesn't react to people the same way. It doesn't affect their body and their mind the same way. So spice is actually, in my mind, worse than marijuana. So what he'll be charged with is OWI, possession of paraphernalia, possession of spice. OFFICER O'NEIL: Try to stop him here so they'll get in the parking lot. Passenger's making a lot of movements. Can you open your door for me, man? The reason I stopped you, your license plate comes back to a different vehicle. If you could get your driver's license, all documentation you have for me and step out. He was reaching down. You don't have any paperwork for the vehicle? Yes, I have it all. OK, just here to of the back so we don't get run over. I was hoping you'd pull into a parking lot to make it safer for us. I have it in my pocket-- OK, just leave it your pocket, OK? Step back here for me. I don't want you between the cars. That way if my car gets hit, I don't want you pinned. OK. Hang out with her for a second. Gonna be running? Yeah. Plate's bad? Yeah, they're false and fake. When I stopped the car, you started-- you looked back. You looked at me, and then you started reaching down in the floorboard. What were you doing in there? Just moving your bag out of the way? Is there anything illegal in the vehicle that you know of? Because she's nervous, your movements and stuff, what we're going to do, search the vehicle. So if you've got a little something on you, now's the time to tell me. Just a set of scales? What do you use to weigh on the scales? Meth? OK. Do me a favor. Step out real quick. He's got scales and possibly baggies of empty meth, so I'm going to check his bag, if you'd just step back here with him? Come on back here, babe. Babe, put your cigarette out. All right. He just made statements that he has scales in here, which is going to be with methamphetamine on them. As you see, the white, powdery substance around the scales shows that's what he uses them for. There's multiple colored pencils. I have no idea why, but methamphetamine use and colored pencils, crayons, and markers go hand in hand. I mean, I don't know if it's a way to pass the time when you're awake for three days or-- OFFICER: The last you used meth was-- You don't do no meth? You don't do nothing. A monkey can't sell bananas. That's a good analogy. I like it. If you did meth, you'd use up all your product, wouldn't you? That would cut into your profit. There you go. Consistent with the coloring book-- or the pens, adult coloring books. I don't understand why it goes with meth, but it's hand in hand. So if we search that whole car and you, we ain't going to find nothing? Yeah? - You got meth in your pocket? - Yeah. I got a lot. All right, turn around and face the car. Yeah, I'm not going to lie to you. Yeah. Keep your hands on the car. Step up against the car. Spread your feet. Spread your feet. There you go. Put your hand behind your back. Watch my back, please. Keep your hand-- put your hand behind your back. OFFICER: What do you got? He says he's got meth on him. I asked him, do you have any drugs on you or inside the vehicle. Yeah, I got meth on me. So I mean, it doesn't get any, really, easier than that. He's incriminated himself. Said he sells two points for $20 and a half gram for $60. Did you say $50 or $60? Huh? $50 or $60. $50 or $60. You can stand up. No needles on you? Huh? All right, I appreciate you being honest. How much is this, like, weight wise? That right there is probably about two grams. OFFICER: How much you buy this for? Probably about 80 bucks. 80, 90 bucks. So you bought two grams for $80. No, they're in the car I think. One of them might be in there. Ah! SUSPECT: Aw, [bleep]. OFFICER: Damn! SUSPECT: I forgot that was even in there. I swear to God, officer. OFFICER: So how much is that? SUSPECT: That's probably a half gram. [bleep] Tom-Tom, you got another bag? He actually had a second bag, which is a half gram, approximately. OFFICER: He's a street-level dealer. But hey, dealing drugs is dealing drugs. I don't care if you're dealing kilos or grams. You're still killing people, and you're ruining families. At the end of the day, though, it's still a job that we got to do. We've got to take drug dealers off the street. And then he's going to transport you to the jail, OK? The passenger is going to jail for level-four dealing in methamphetamine and possession of drug paraphernalia. Officer Campbell observed two people walking eastbound on 10th Street. He thought that they may have been burglarizing a business. And when he went to stop them, there was a male that took off. OK, so we have an officer-- OFFICER WOODARD: Yeah, [bleep]. Here. Here. Let's get a position. Let's get a position right here. Jeff Police K9. Make yourself known or I'm going to release the dog. Platz. OFFICER: Show yourself. Come here. Let me see your hands. Jeff Police K9. Come on out. OFFICER: Walk to us. OFFICER WOODARD: Oh. OFFICER: Turn around. Watch him. Walk back. Walk back. Walk back. Get on the ground. Walk back. Hey, get him all the way back so I can get there. You got him? - Walk back. Don't look this way. Don't bring him back past me. Go down to your knees. I didn't say that. I said do what I said. - Yes, sir. - Correct? Yes, sir. What are you doing in here behind a car? Think about it. Be honest. You're an honest man, correct? Well, that part when you took off running after you heard "stop, police"-- --that's where it went downhill. You resisted arrest. So do you live here? No? Do you usually cut through this guy's driveway? What's he got? He's got-- looks to be meth. See, it's a white, crystal-like substance that he had placed under the car. He was going to come back for it is what he was going to do. That's a big rock. I'm sure it is. OFFICER WOODARD: So what do you need sugar for? So if I test it for meth, it's not going-- OFFICER WOODARD: OK. OK. Good deal. OFFICER: I'm talking to him. I'm not talking to you. OFFICER: OK, you're being charged with resisting law enforcement. OFFICER: We all are human beings. OFFICER: I don't understand what the significance of that is. OFFICER WOODARD: I don't deal sugar, though, and this guys does. --puts his socks and shoes on first and then shorts. OFFICER WOODARD: Somebody have test kits that they can test that real quick? Officer Campbell more or less interrupting a drug deal that was about to happen. The dealer is telling us that it's sugar that he has. If it's sugar, it's still a crime just to deal a lookalike substance. So what he's telling him is it's meth and he's trying to get them to buy meth from him. We'll see if we actually have meth or sugar. Is it meth? Since we field tested it positive as meth, he's being charged with dealing methamphetamine and resisting law enforcement. OFFICER: (ON RADIO) Dispatch received. OK, so we somebody that's unconscious, unresponsive at a gas station here. It's a high-drug-activity gas station, so it's probably-- we get a lot of drug use in the bathroom. I don't have any more information yet, and we're on scene. Got a car over here with their flashers on. I'm going to say it's going to be this vehicle. Baker 117, I'll be out on an Indiana in guide, Victor, Charles, [bleep].. WOMAN: Hey! Please help me. I'm not sure, but I just picked him up and-- OK. he's like-- Huh? My name is [bleep]. His name is [bleep],, and I'm not for sure what he's taking. Um-- my left hand? It's going to be a heroin overdose, of course. Hey, man, wake up. Wake up. What did you take, man? WOMAN: Yes. What did you take? WOMAN: Yes. Stay awake for me. WOMAN: T. OFFICER WOODARD: You got anything on you? Stay awake for me. WOMAN: Yes. Radio Baker 117. He is awake. Going to be a heroin overdose. WOMAN: I don't know what-- What did you shoot? WOMAN: OK, there's an officer, and she's helping me. She's talking to him. Stay awake. WOMAN: He was fine. Hey, what did you shoot? What did you snort? Listen, you're not going to get in trouble. EMS needs to know, OK, before you go back out. What did you shoot? Hey! Stay awake. WOMAN: Is he OK? Stay awake for me, buddy. [sirens] Well, he's obviously overdosed on heroin. That's why I called. That's why I called. I knew he wasn't OK, so I called immediately. He's-- step-- step back there for me, OK? WOMAN: I'm sorry. I just wanted to call because-- Is there any heroin in here? WOMAN: No. I just picked him up. OFFICER WOODARD: Just step back for me. WOMAN: OK. There's-- I don't have anything. I just picked him up. That's why I called you. I knew he wasn't OK. OFFICER WOODARD: Yeah, he's giving you Narcan because you overdosed on heroin. OFFICER WOODARD: Yeah. Did you forget when you snorted or shot heroin? Can you stand up, or do we need to help you on the stretcher? OFFICER WOODARD: You can't walk at all? Where's the rest of the heroin? [bleep] Come on, now. Look, I'm not trying to charge you with it. I'm just trying to get it out of here because it's obviously got a lot of fentanyl in it, OK? I'm trying to make it so that nobody else uses it. OK, do you understand that? OFFICER WOODARD: Where is the rest of it? You did all of it? Yeah. How much did you buy? You guys need to stop. You understand? He literally-- So did you take him over to get this stuff? And now-- and now he's overdosed. I know. I know. I know. And now I'm like-- So how is this any better? Here's the deal. I don't appreciate being lied to, you know what I'm saying? At least [bleep] was honest with me about what happened, OK? You were like, I don't know what he did. I don't know this. I don't know that. Well, you were there during the-- I am being honest, though. You weren't there during the-- you were there during the whole drug deal. I didn't see him use. I don't know what he did. I did not see that part. That could be you in two days. WOMAN: I know. You realize that, right? And you may not get saved. We didn't locate any paraphernalia, and we also didn't locate any product. So at this time, we're not going to charge him with anything. He's going to go to the hospital and get treatment for the overdose. She's also not going to be charged with anything. I really hope she can turn her life around because I think she could have a bright future. So we're getting ready to go pull over this car because while we were stopped at a stop sign, they completely did not see it or decided to completely disregard it. So-- [sirens] Hi. DRIVER: How you doing? Are you in a hurry? Where are you headed? You know there's a stop sign right there in front of the lighthouse that you didn't even do a tap and go. You just completely just went straight through it where I was stopped. DRIVER: Oh. There's a stop sign there. OFFICER WRIGHT: It's fine. I just need to make sure you're aware that there's stop signs that you need to stop at, OK? OK. You have your driver's license, registration, insurance? OFFICER WRIGHT: Yep. And you have insurance on the vehicle? OK, well, then you can't have this vehicle on the roadway. OK, well, you can't be driving it. Well that's probably what's going to happen. OK. Stay parked. Good Lord. Stay in your car. OFFICER WOODARD: Well, now that you're out, have a seat over here. We're going to go through some procedures, OK? If you get stopped by the police, unless we ask you to exit the vehicle, probably stay in the vehicle because for safety procedures it makes us a little uncomfortable if you pop out of the car, OK? So you're leaving from where? OFFICER WOODARD: OK. And you're trying to drive your vehicle home, but you cancelled the insurance on your vehicle. Why would you cancel the insurance? OK. OK. Well, here's what I'm going to suggest, is we'll have you park your car here. I'll mark that it's here. You're going to lock it, secure it up. Well, no. You can call somebody to come get you. OK. Do you want me to call for a cab? No, because I don't want to pay for a cab ride home. Do you have someone they can contact for you? I'm trying to be nice. I know you just got your car stolen. I'm not trying to give you a ticket for the stop sign, OK, and just give you a verbal warning. At least have your vehicle parked so you can get insurance put on it, and I'll log that your vehicle's here, OK? I'm going to park this over here, OK? No, you're all right. Good Lord. So I did not lock it in case you need to get anything out of there, but the windows are up. OK. We went ahead and had his vehicle parked, and I personally parked it because obviously I don't want to put him back in the vehicle. And then if he strikes another car while I'm here, then we have problems. Get the insurance on it and then come down here. If you can call them as soon as you get home and get that set up, then you can come right back down here and get picked up, OK? Thanks. You're fine. Have a good one, man. Well, I have no comment there. Pretty much everything you don't want to have happen in a traffic stop, he pretty much did. He's a young driver, has a few issues going on. So hopefully next time around he'll make us a little bit more comfortable and he'll be a little bit more comfortable to know that we don't just come out here and bite people's heads off, so.
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Channel: A&E
Views: 11,485,805
Rating: 4.7827692 out of 5
Keywords: a&e, aetv, a&e tv, ae, a&e television, a&e shows, a and e, a+e, live pd, live cops, live cop show, law enforcement, ride along, ridealong, police car, police ridealong, live pd full episode, live pd compilation, compilation, best of, live pd best moments, live pd best moments 2019, Jeffersonville, Best moments from jeffersonville, Indiana, live pd episodes, jeffersonville indiana live pd, jeffersonville indiana, best of live pd, jeffersonville live pd, police arrest live pd
Id: 8NLE8d4GW-Y
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 20min 49sec (1249 seconds)
Published: Fri Sep 13 2019
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