[police radio chatter] OFFICER CUTE: Well, it
sounds like these two vehicles were racing. The Sergeant has one of
those vehicles stopped. We have the other one
right here in front of us. I'm going to be doing a
traffic stop in a second here. DISPATCH: 10-4. OFFICER CUTE: Turn the car off. Turn it off. Hop out for me now. I asked you to hop out. No, I can pull you out
if you want me to do that. Hop out of the car for me. Put your phone down. Step over here. Just walk over here. OK. You can turn this way. Take your hands out of your--
- OK. OK. Put your hands on
top of your car. No, it's not, oh, my god.
- What's-- what's the reason. I'm telling you
to do something. You just got to do it.
- OK-- And then we'll figure it out. [interposing voices] I will explain that to you. I need to know
the reason for it. You're going to
turn away from me. I have the right
to know the reason why I'm being pulled over. You absolutely do. And I'm going to tell
you in one second. So be quiet.
- No, I need to know first. That's the first thing
you got to tell me. - Really?
- Yeah. - Really?
- I know my rights. Really? Apparently, you don't. Yes, I do. Apparently, you don't. [police radio chatter] OK. And you're treating
me like a criminal. I'm not treating
you like a criminal. You are. Why did you pull me
out of the car for? Put your hands on the car. Let's both relax, OK? Turn around. Relax. Are you all right? Yeah, I'm good. OK. Just do me a favor. Keep your hands out of
your pockets, all right? Just the thing I have. You don't have to-- - I have no criminal record.
- OK. I'm not-- And that's beside-- that's besides the
point, all right? Were you involved possibly in
some drag racing back there? No. I was just coming
from [inaudible].. Well, I have someone--
another vehicle that stopped, and this exact vehicle
description given out, including your registration,
stating that you were racing with another vehicle. I wasn't racing nobody. OK. Well, I'm-- I'm telling
you that's what I have. And that's why
you're being stopped. And that's why I'm
talking to you right now. There are so many cars
like-- there's so many Subarus in East Providence. OFFICER CUTE: Are there so
many Subarus with WZ 173? No, there's not. No.
OK. But I wasn't street racing. I'm on my way back
to [inaudible].. So I didn't just
happen to stop you. I didn't just see
your car and say, oh, I want to pull this kid out of
his and talk to him, all right? It's for a reason. Do you understand? I'm not trying to
bust your balls or anything like that, OK? OK. All right, the
Sergeant is going to come down and talk to you. He's the one that observed
whatever violation he observed. He just didn't
think he-- we-- we had the right to just get him
out of the car and talk to him and start patting him
down and stuff like that. So I-- I don't know what
you did with the other one. - There you go.
- Ticket? Ticket. All right?
Drive safely. - All right, man.
- Have a good day. Take care. Drive safe, man. He was a little upset when
I pulled him out of the car. There is oftentimes
some confusion as to whether or not we
have to tell people what they were pulled over for. Until we know that
the scene is safe, and we'll tell them
later on, we don't have to tell them that right away. He could have been arrested
and charged with eluding. Instead, he was given
a break and was only issued a ticket for speeding. [music playing] SERGEANT RAPOZA: So we're,
uh, going to a business that reported that there was couple
of people shooting up heroin in the businesses parking lot. So we're going to head
over there and see if we can locate the party. It's, like, one
of the officers is out with a male part and maybe a
female that's involved as well. Where'd she go? She goes this way, walking. She's, like, oh, I'm
leaving, you know? I already brung this
for you to get your car. Yeah. And then she just
bounce, you know? Do you-- do you
have your car here? No. I'm just looking at this car
to see if I could buy it, you know?
- All right. [inaudible] You weren't-- you weren't
using heroin, though? No. You could look at
my eyes, you know? You could see when a person
just finished shooting. OK. Can you stick your
hands out that for me? Yeah, I use heroin. You use? OK, you see some marks. [inaudible] outside. I saw-- she was here
sitting sitting down. You pat him down? She's like, you know-- Yeah, I already
patted him down. I took the [muted] from her,
like, I grabbed, and I'm like, yo, what the [muted] you doing?
Sit down. Right. And she came she
like, oh, I'm not. Just check the area.
[interposing voices] No, she-- just see if-- All right. - A what?
- A bag. Bag. Put on the ground. Put-- spit that out. Was there heroin in it? Put-- put your hands
behind your back. What? Do you have any
other bags on you? No. I don't got nothing on me, sir. Yep. All right, but-- You got a heroin
in your mouth. You got a bag of heroin in
your mouth, though, right? Yeah, OK. OK. All right, but-- SUSPECT: Like, for
real, like, [inaudible] I came over here
to look at the car. You got anything in the-- That's heroin right there. You got-- I just asked you if
you had heroin though. SUSPECT: Huh?
- Is there heroin in here? SUSPECT: It's heroin. It's a little bit of heroin. I use heroin, you know, like-- Well, that's what I asked you. You know, like-- is it heroin or fentanyl? No, not fentanyl.
It's heroin. OK. No, you know, I use heroin. Do you got-- do you
have anything will-- oh, it doesn't matter. Once you come to the
station [inaudible].. Yeah. Do you have anything
tucked in you? - No, I don't have nothing.
- You sure? Huh?
You sure? No, I don't have-- No nothing-- nothing
in your cheeks? No.
No. I don't have nothing. All right, well,
we'll check later. So--
OFFICER: Anything in your shoes? OK. All right, well,
let's-- let's take-- OFFICER: We'll bring
over to my car. All right. Well, we're going to--
we're going to go over here. We're going to grab
whatever is in your shoe. And then we'll talk about it.
- All right. All right? All right. [police radio chatter] Relax. Relax. All right, just turn
around and put your butt right on the seat, OK? Which shoe is it in? - This one?
- OK. Which one?
Left? That one there? OK. [police radio chatter] In your sock? OK. Relax, bud, relax. [police radio chatter] There's more in here too. OFFICER: What's
you just pick up? No. OFFICER: Oh, yeah. SERGEANT RAPOZA: Is that heroin? Is that all crack? All right. How many bags you have in here? Two bags?
OK. Were they 40 piece? OK. All right, so it looks
like he had a couple bags, like, two 40 bags of
crack in his sock. So we seized that. We're going to be bringing in
this gentleman for possession of heroin, possession cocaine. And we're going to try to see
if we can still find the female involved in the disturbance. [music playing] OFFICER MOUNT: This
is just a report of an intoxicated male
outside of his house yelling obscenities. But it looks like this could
be an ongoing neighbor issue. How's it going? This guy over
here, he's been-- I've-- I've got-- I've got a couple of complaints
in the last couple of years. I've got-- I've got
a no-trespass on him. He just pulled up loaded
with something in his car. All right. What's up, man? All right. Take it easy. Why don't you put your
phone on the tailgate for me because I don't like people
having stuff in their hands. What's going on? What's happening? No, this [muted] over here. OK. He [inaudible]. He broke up two families. OK. That's fine. He's a cop calling, a [muted]
homewrecking piece [muted].. OK. - He broke up two families.
- That's fine. What's going on with you today? Oh, nothing. I just got home from work. I walked a long [muted] day. Yep. I'm tired. I come home, and this piece of
[muted] said something smart. Lower your voice. He's a piece of
[muted],, this kid. OK. Do me a favor and go sit
up on the porch over there. Have you been drinking today? OK. Is there anybody else here? There's no-- you live
here by yourself? So you live here
with your mom? OK. You were born-- how old are you? You're 56? MAN: I mean, it's it's very,
very, very uncomfortable. No, absolutely. MAN: And he just keeps
calling me out to fight him. He just keeps calling
out to fight him. And they call me--
and I'm just-- you know, I'm-- I'm--
- Yeah. - --50.
- Yep. I'm a single dad.
You know-- No, I hear you.
I hear you. [interposing voices] I mean, you guys have
put up with a lot-- Yeah. No, I hear you. [inaudible] No, you can-- you can
keep your shirt on, or you can take it off if you want to. OK, so what exactly
happened today? You went over there to say hi? Oh, no, I was--
I was [muted] driving home. So they keep calling every-- And I said, hey,
how you doing, Mark? And he made a-- a-- he started this garbage. Yeah, OK. So you went over there-- so hang on. If we come back here
again because you're yelling out-- out the window. You're yelling
from your driveway. No, I'm going in the house.
I'm going in my room. SERGEANT RAPOZA: Let me explain. You're going to go
to jail tonight. Do you understand?
- I understand. OK.
Everybody's-- What's your first name? Mike. Mike, I'm Steve, man. Steve, I met you a
couple of times last year. But you probably don't remember.
- No, I don't. I don't. I meet a lot of people. In my line of work,
I meet people-- No, we met-- we met, like-- [interposing voices] We met like this. Why don't you just go
back in the house-- - I am.
- --and hang out for the night. I'm going in there right now. Because we don't
want to come back. I know that. I [inaudible]. I got a job-- I got a big job I'm working now. SERGEANT RAPOZA: All
right, you got a big job. [inaudible] When's your mom get home? I don't know. All right. So he's warned. If it continues again. If he starts off with a--
with the smarting off again-- Yeah? Give us a call back. He's been warned
plenty of times. I mean, he's-- this isn't--
this isn't his first time. So any other issues,
feel free give us a ring. OK. All right? OK. All righty? All right, you got it. Have a good night. (SINGING) Because
I'm a cowboy, baby. Steve, why don't you
take it inside, bud? I am.
OFFICER MOUNT: All right. That's where I'm going, man. OFFICER MOUNT: Good. (SINGING) Because
I'm a cowboy, baby. SERGEANT RAPOZA: This
is an ongoing issue. It's been going on for
probably a year and a half. So he'll be going
in for the night. If he comes back out and starts
screaming obscenities again, we'll come back,
and we'll give him a place to stay for the night. [music playing] We are headed to a call where
there's a verbal disturbance at this time. The son's girlfriend
is causing a scene. Hi. What-- what's going on? Mom called. His mom. [laughter] What's up, bud? What's going on? I don't know. You guys were
having an argument? No. What happened? I just told you. You have the report. So tell me what's going on.
- Sir-- Why did you guys get called? We got a call here because
there's an argument going on. That's all. Then you-- and you pulled
up, and there's nobody arguing, right? OK, so I started--
come on-- That's what I'm saying. Let's-- let's
lose the attitude. I'm just here-- I didn't come here
and decided to stop. [inaudible] [muted]. No he retired years ago. I don't got attitude. Are you mom? All right, I'm not
going anywhere with him? MAN: [inaudible] Ms.-- who-- who rents--
who rents this household. So I own the house. You own the house, yeah. INSPECTOR SROKA:
You want her gone? All right. Just a mutual friend? All right. She-- This is his car. This is his car. Well, you can-- whose car? It's his car? [police radio chatter] Grandma doesn't want
you hear tonight because of the argument. All right. It's just someone is just
going to have to escort me home because I don't have a ride. Where do you live? Well, we can't give
you a ride to Pawtucket. Well, I know-- I know you guys can't help. INSPECTOR SROKA: How
often do yo guys argue? WOMAN: We argue all the time. [muted] How long you
guy's been dating. We've been dating for
like a year and a half. JARROD: [inaudible] More good than bad times. More bad than good. What's keeping you together? Um, hope. Hope? How long are you going
to hold onto that hope? Probably not much longer. All right, well, you
can't stay here today. We'll give you a ride
to Dunkin' Donuts. Sir?
WOMAN: Don't forget-- Let's go.
Come on. Come on.
- Oh, that's you! That's-- no, no, no.
- OK. OK. I'm getting my [muted]. This is how it's
going to work. I'm getting my things.
JARROD: Listen-- Now you're starting to cause
a disturbance, the both of you. So knock it off. Don't-- don't get my [muted]. What do you need? JARROD: [muted] [interposing voices] Stop yelling. You're causing a
disorderly conduct. You see that [muted]. Stop. WOMAN: Waa! I'm done. What-- what is
going on in this car? Jarrod, very close,
you keep yelling, you're going for
disorderly conduct. Then we don't have to worry
about coming back here. Enough. JARROD: [inaudible] INSPECTOR SROKA: Enough. [inaudible] Is that macaroni and cheese? Cornflakes? Toothbrush? Everything. [police radio chatter] Do-- do you mind I give her a-- an escort to DND so
she's not carrying all that stuff [inaudible]? OFFICER: That's fine. That's fine.
- [inaudible] - You good with this?
- Yeah. Let me talk to you for a minute. What's your name, miss? Is it your grandmother
or your mother? OK, so if you and your mom
want her trespassed from here, it starts today. She'll be warned. She'll sign a form. And then you're going to sign
it, and mom's going to sign it. If she has to come
back here, she will be arrested for trespassing. JARROD: But I don't want to
put in no trespassing order because I might be sitting
in my driveway with her. Later on? Yeah. Today? Not today. Tomorrow? Hopefully in the next
couple of days because-- You guys went together for
a year and a half, she said. And it was my best
friend before this. MAN: A couple of years, right? Yeah. All right.
All right. So I'll tell him not to sign-- I'll tell her void
that no-trespass order. You don't need it. Yeah. You guys just need a little
space for now to cool down. That's-- yep. INSPECTOR SROKA: That
went from hot to cold. So at the end of the day, he
does not want her trespassed. And they'll be
together tomorrow. [music playing] OFFICER GRAVES: So
we're going to go check an area just south of here. Dispatch reported that a-- a woman was walking in the
lane of travel on Dugan Avenue. How are you? Were you walking-- were you
just walking down this way? Where you headed? To the Terrace? All right, were you walking
in the road. by any chance? Um, yeah. You were walking in the road? Well, not directly. All right, just kind
of walking in and out? What's that? - I might have.
- You might have? All right, we just got a
call because somebody said that a female was
walking in the road and traffic was having
to go around her, you know what I mean? - Let's do-- let's give
you a ride, all right? Here we go. [music playing] 303. Stop it. I can't-- who can ride in that? What's up? You want to sit
in a a bigger one? OK.
All right. All right. Have a seat. It's a little-- little
more spacious for you. Why's that? Well, listen here, ma'am.
Come here. Hold on.
Hold on. - [inaudible]
- Yeah. You can't walk. So you either going
to get a ride from us, or I'm going to bring
you to the hospital because you almost just
walked in the road right now. We're trying to help you out. No, it doesn't--
it doesn't move. I wish I could too. How do you think I
feel driving around in that thing for 16 hours. Why am I busting your balls? Do you want to ride with her? She does. We all do. Same size. OFFICER: Is there anything
on you in your pockets? We already-- we already-- Huh? She's-- yeah. All right, let's do it. Yes. Listen. We're going to put
the window [inaudible].. - Listen, Andrea.
- No. Come here.
Come here. Come here.
Come here. No.
I can't do bars, please. OK, then you're going
to go to the hospital. Then-- then we're going
to call you a rescue. Come here.
Come here. Come here.
Stay right here. - I can walk.
- Stay right here. - You cannot hold me.
- Yes, we can. [interposing voices] Unfort-- listen,
unfortunately, we can, all right? We have to make the decision
for you because you're not making it for yourself. So our decision is that you're
going to go get evaluated at the hospital, all right? We gave you more
than enough chances, you know, to make that decision. So let's stay right here. So-- so you want to walk in
the back of the rescue with us? Are we going to have
to put the cuffs on you? No?
No. Oh, no, no. All right.
All right. All right. Well-- [inaudible] Other arm, please. No, no, no. All right, I'll go-
I'll go in the-- - Other arm.
- Other arm. I'm going in the rescue. OK, thank you. I'm going in the rescue. OK, you are going
to go on the rescue. - You will.
- Come on. You got a car? Yes, I do. Taking her. All right, so kind
of a strange call. I mean, she couldn't make
up her mind, obviously, about if she wanted
a ride from us or she wanted to
go to the hospital. So, unfortunately, in those
situations, we have to make-- make decisions for
people and what they do. We had a rescue come that's
going to evaluate her. And they're actually going
to take her to the hospital to get some medical treatment. [music playing] I'm going to go
to this disturbance. Unfortunately, we've been
here so many times it's-- we're on a first-name
basis with everybody. So-- [police radio chatter] So you-- so you called? MAN: I called the cops, yes.
- OK. - I asked her to leave
- About what? She's been drinking all
[muted] day since [muted] 2:00 in the [muted] afternoon. OK. Listen. Relax, relax. And-- and-- and I asked
her to [muted] leave. And she [muted]
threatened to leave. Right. And, finally, it came
to a point where, um-- it came to the point
where she had to leave. So I called the cops, and
I says, I want her out. And she was already
packing her [muted].. Yeah. And she-- she-- she-- she-- she--
you know, whatever. She started doing [muted]. OK. How much have you had
today-- to drink today, Mike? - I had [muted] two cocktails.
- OK. I just got home. OK. - I-- I worked a double today.
- OK. I worked double
[muted] all week long. OK, all right. Relax, relax. I can't relax. I mean, she's [muted]. Are you letting--
are you still-- are you letting her stay here still?
Or-- No.
[muted] I want her out.
SERGEANT RAPOZA: OK. All right. So what exactly
happened tonight? What started this whole-- - He's been drinking all night?
- [inaudible] [muted]. Was there anything
in particular that happened that caused it? Yeah. Doesn't sound like
it's going that well. - No, it's not.
- No? It's been-- it's been
back and forth like this. But I love her. She loves me, you know? [muted] together? Like, four or five
months, you know? It's [muted] crazy. Does-- [inaudible] Sounds like you're in love. I-- in the wash machine,
I have a few things. OK. And that's it. Let's grab-- let's grab a
bag and get that so we can-- [interposing voices]
- --get this moving. She's going to grab her stuff. Better come with me. OK, she's not
going to grab that. MAN: Whatever. I ain't got no space
[inaudible] deal with you guys. That's for damn sure. No? I work [muted] 60
hours a [muted] week. Cool. Yeah. Gail's all set to go. All right. Hopefully, we took care of this
situation for tonight, right? - Yes, sir.
- All right. So no-- I appreciate your help. I don't-- don't
have Gail back. That's-- [muted] That's your best bet, right? I appreciate it, sir. All right. It's a sad situation here. I mean, there's
two toxic people, both with addiction issues. Hopefully, both of
them can get some help and avoid these
issues in the future.