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An 18-year-old was pulled from her car during a routine traffic stop—and the fallout ended a police officer's career. South Whitley Police Officer Brian Schimmel stopped high school senior Vivian Augustus in Indiana for speeding and a defective headlight. Bodycam and surveillance footage showed the encounter escalate when Augustus...

469,081 Aufrufe • vor 25 Tagen •via X (Twitter)

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On December 21, 2025, Officer N. Vides #2681 conducted a traffic stop on a vehicle after it failed to stop at a stop sign. When Ofc. Vides activated her blue lights, the vehicle did not immediately stop and continued for a short distance before coming to a stop. Ofc. Vides made contact with the driver, Carolyn House. Due to the driver’s window not functioning, House opened the driver’s door to speak with Ofc. Vides. When the door opened, Ofc. Vides observed a pipe commonly used to smoke methamphetamine in plain view inside the door. Ofc. Vides requested an additional officer to respond to the scene. Once another officer arrived, House was asked to step out of the vehicle. While Ofc. Vides was explaining the reason for asking her to exit, House attempted to grab the pipe from the door. House then began to physically resist officers and refused to place her hands behind her back. During the struggle, House went to the ground and pulled her arms underneath her body, a common resistance technique that makes it difficult for officers to safely gain control of a person. Controlling a person in this position significantly limits leverage and increases the risk of injury to both officers and the individual being detained. Ofc. Vides, who regularly attends Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu training provided to officers at the Gwinnett County Police Department, utilized techniques taught during those classes to safely gain control of House and gain compliance without escalating the use of force. As a result of the traffic stop, Carolyn House was charged with possession of methamphetamine, possession of a Schedule II controlled substance, failure to obey a traffic control device, tampering with evidence, possession and use of drug-related objects, and willful obstruction of law enforcement officers.

Gwinnett County Police

21,013 Aufrufe • vor 5 Monaten

You can't reject peace, choose hostility, and still expect the world to see you as the victim. The incident began when an officer pulls 22 year old India Mixon over after running her license plate and finding that her registration/license is suspended. When the officer approaches her vehicle, Mixon immediately becomes defensive, arguing that she just sent out a check to resolve the issue. The officer repeatedly asks to see her driver's license and proof of insurance, explaining that he is conducting a traffic stop and needs to identify her. Mixon refuses to cooperate or hand over her ID, claiming she does not have to produce it, and instead focuses on calling her case manager on her phone. ​As Mixon continues to refuse to identify herself, the officer warns her that she will be arrested if she does not cooperate. She is seen repeatedly reaching around the interior of her car, despite multiple commands from the officer to stop. After several minutes of non-compliance, the officer orders her out of the vehicle. When she refuses to step out, the officer opens the car door and physically removes her to place her in handcuffs. Mixon resists and accuses the officers of targeting her because of her race. Additional officers arrive on the scene to assist. Mixon becomes increasingly hysterical, claims that she is homeless and that all of her belongings are inside the vehicle, which is being prepared for towing due to the suspended registration. Mixon as$aults one of the officers and winds up having a "spit hood" secured over her head. In the end, she is charged with driving under suspension, simple assault, and as$ault on a police officer and her car was towed.

✨️Serenitee♡Sam✨️

263,349 Aufrufe • vor 1 Monat

Officer discovered that the woman he pulled over has a warrant for trashing a McDonald's. The chaos begins from there. ​An officer with the Tallahassee Police Department initiated a traffic stop on a purple Mitsubishi after witnessing the vehicle blow through multiple malfunctioning traffic signals flashing red. ​When asked for identification, the driver—identified as Tatyana—disclosed she didn’t have her driver's license, registration, or proof of insurance on her. A routine records check quickly revealed a much larger issue: Tatyana had an active, outstanding warrant out for her arrest. ​The backstory behind her warrant according to police records, Tatyana’s friend had recently been fired from a local McDonald's. In retaliation, Tatyana went to the restaurant and attempted to instigate a physical fight with the manager. ​When the manager refused to engage or fight back, Tatyana allegedly took out her anger on the establishment, destroying several pieces of kitchen and restaurant equipment before fleeing the scene. ​Back at the traffic stop, officers repeatedly asked Tatyana to step out of the vehicle voluntarily, explicitly stating they wanted to handle the situation calmly away from the children sitting in the back seat. Tatyana refused to cooperate or exit the vehicle. ​After multiple warnings, officers were forced to remove her from the car and place her in handcuffs on the ground. Following the arrest, a search of her person uncovered suspected prescription pills (believed by officers to be Oxycodone) inside her right front pocket. ​Tatyana was transported to the Leon County Jail and booked on her outstanding warrant, alongside new charges of: ​Resisting an Officer without Violence ​Possession of a Legend Drug without a Prescription ​Her criminal record is like a #1 album where the hits just keep coming.

Giggling Ganon

101,465 Aufrufe • vor 4 Tagen

TRAFFIC STOP TURNS INTO A LAWSUIT BATTLE If a driver becomes argumentative during a traffic stop, does the officer have the right to take stronger control of the situation? Is this a case of someone standing up for their rights… or someone hoping a lawsuit will erase a mistake behind the wheel? A traffic stop in Hurst, Texas will turn to the courtroom to decide who was actually in the wrong. What is your opinion??? Newly released dashcam footage shows a woman pulled over for speeding while traveling with her 15-year-old son. According to the driver, she had just come from a doctor’s appointment and a hair appointment when the officer initiated the stop. At first, the interaction appears fairly typical. The officer runs her information and returns to the vehicle with a citation. That’s when things start to change. The conversation becomes tense. Voices rise. What should have been a simple ticket suddenly turns into a confrontation caught on camera. Now the driver, Taneisha Thompson, says the officer crossed the line…and she’s filed a civil lawsuit against the police department. She believes the stop escalated unnecessarily and that the officer’s actions violated her rights. Supporters of the officer say something different. They argue that traffic stops can turn dangerous quickly and officers must maintain control of the situation. From their perspective, issuing a citation and managing the stop is simply part of the job. Now the question isn’t just about a speeding ticket anymore. It’s about accountability… authority… and whether a routine stop became something it shouldn’t have. A court may eventually decide who is right. It’s currently pending… Should a heated interaction during a routine ticket ever justify a lawsuit against a police department?

𝐌𝐑. 𝐖𝐇𝐈𝐓𝐄 ™

267,462 Aufrufe • vor 4 Monaten

Drug addict uses right in front of cop then plays bumper cars in the parking lot trying to escape. ​This incident is out of Lehi, Utah, that escalated in seconds from a standard traffic stop into a dangerous pursuit, showcasing just how unpredictable police work can be. ​The driver, later identified as 32-year-old Haley Victoria Sullivan from Texas, was initially approached by Lehi Police Department officers based on her behavior in her car at the gas pump. However, things immediately took a bizarre and dangerous turn when Sullivan refused to roll down her window, hand over her driver's license, or cooperate with any officer commands. ​As backup arrived, the situation grew critical. Officers looking through the windows witnessed Sullivan actively preparing drug paraphernalia and repeatedly using right in the front seat. Despite officers screaming for her to stop and attempting to smash the car windows to intervene and prevent any potential harm, she completely ignored them. Instead, she threw the vehicle into drive and slammed directly into a police cruiser to break free. ​After a brief, high-stakes pursuit, her vehicle became disabled, officers were able to deploy a K9 unit, and smash through the glass to safely pull her from the vehicle and take her into custody before anyone else on the road could be hurt. ​Sullivan faced a long list of serious charges following the incident. Her case moved through the court system and concluded with the following legal outcomes: ​ Sullivan pleaded guilty to third-degree felony charges of property damage (valued over $5,000), failure to respond to an officer's signal to stop, reckless endangerment, and driving with a measurable controlled substance. As part of her legal proceedings, additional charges—including aggravated assault, multiple counts of possession of a controlled substance/drug paraphernalia, and interfering with a peace officer—were dismissed. ​ She was sentenced to an indeterminate prison term not to exceed 5 years in the Utah State Prison. However, that prison term was suspended, and she was ordered to serve 15 months in the Utah County Jail, with a strict requirement to serve at least one full year. ​How do these court results make you feel? Justice served or not enough??

Giggling Ganon

88,647 Aufrufe • vor 1 Monat