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Guy gets arrested by high ego tyrant cops because he wore his motorcycle helmet in Walmart. ​22-year-old Freedom Pfaendler was riding his motorcycle to his job at an automotive dealership and made a quick stop at a Walmart in Sahuarita, Arizona. Because he was on a bike, he kept his riding gear on—including a full-face motorcycle helmet and a backpack. Just three days prior, the tragic El Paso Walmart mass shooting had occurred, leaving public anxiety at an all-time high. ​The store manager tried to get Pfaendler’s attention to ask him to take off the helmet, but Pfaendler had a Bluetooth headset playing music inside and simply didn't hear him. Instead of trying to flag him down normally or realizing it was an honest mistake, Walmart management panicked and called the Sahuarita Police Department. ​When the cops showed up, they didn't look to resolve a simple misunderstanding; they looked to humiliate and dominate. ​From the second they approach him on a bench near the exit, the tyranny is relentless: ​Immediate Compliance, Zero Respect: Pfaendler doesn't fight, doesn't resist, and immediately hands over his ID without protest. ​The Power Trip Lecture: Instead of checking the ID, confirming he’s a regular commuter, and resolving the issue, the primary officer launches into a profanity-laced tirade. He barks at Pfaendler to "pull his head out of his ass," calls him "hard-headed," and actively mocks his Bluetooth headset. ​Silencing the Citizen: Every single time Pfaendler tries to calmly explain that he didn't hear the manager because of his music, the officer aggressively cuts him off, ordering him to "stop talking" and "stop arguing." It’s a complete suppression of a citizen's right to speak during an investigation that the officer himself initiated. ​Walmart wanted him trespassed, which is within a private business's rights. But these officers chose to weaponize their authority by placing Pfaendler under full custodial arrest for a class 1 misdemeanor of disorderly conduct. The only person acting disorderly, yelling, and creating a scene on that bodycam footage was the cop. ​While local prosecutors rightfully dismissed all criminal charges against Pfaendler, his federal civil rights lawsuit faced a massive hurdle. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in favor of the officers. Why? Because of a frustrating legal technicality: under the Fourth Amendment, an arrest is deemed lawful if probable cause exists for any crime at the scene. ​Because Walmart reported that Pfaendler didn't comply with requests to leave, the court ruled the officers technically had probable cause for trespass—which meant the completely bogus, retaliatory disorderly conduct charge they actually booked him on didn't violate his constitutional rights. ​This case is a textbook example of officer venting over officer working. Legally untouchable due to structural loopholes, but an absolute failure in professional, constitutional policing. This is the type of stuff that makes you sick because rider really did nothing wrong and was not able to hold the people accountable that swore to defend his rights but instead mocked and stepped all over those same rights.

Giggling Ganon

33,932 views • 16 hours ago