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jcd24fan's Replies
I believe that's the only segment he appeared in.
I remember many people commenting saying that if more cops were like Gish, law enforcement would be more respected.
Another officer I really liked was Brandon Gish from Brevard County. He was the Deputy who stopped the one Black Guy for being a potential battery suspect and a broken taillight, but the attention later turned to him eating a large amount of weed. He was very calm where many others would've been aggressive and raised their voice for destroying drugs. Many people wondered if he used weed too by how calm he was to the suspect. This was Season 19.
Yeah by the way the officers were acting with the whispering and the yelling, You'd think they were trying to stop a drug dealer from discarding his drugs by flushing them down a toilet or something. I also don't think just simply burglarizing and damaging a house is something that warrants a death sentence either. The call was listed as a burglary in progress so maybe the officers were trying to give the suspects the element of surprise but it still seemed very excessive to me, as if they were trying to show off for TV.
Yeah, the woman knew the meth addict had severe problems. I wonder if he was a great guy before his addiction?
That hotel room segment was hard to watch, as the couple was in disagreement over who had it, so the cops arrested both.
That segment with the couple breaking into the house was not my favorite, especially since they treated the suspects like they were hardened criminals by quietly sneaking up and then yelling at them with guns drawn, and with Hutchinson saying to the male suspect, "You almost made a fatal mistake". The owners remind me of certain people who if they see a dark-skinned person, they get really upset. If they were white, I wonder if the owners would've reacted the same way. Hutchinson tried to quiet down the woman, but it din't work.
Victims should never confront the people that break into their house or steal their car. I remember a segment in season 17 where a younger Hispanic guy broke into a car in Vegas and the victim, a middle aged big white guy with sunglasses and shorts and got nasty with the suspect who actually seemed calm.
The Cheech and Chong suspect is probably my favorite of Hutchinson's.
I wonder if it's normal for officers to react that way with buglaries in houses with the guns drawn and sneaking up on them. Seems like the Hispanic people were the only people in the house at the time, so it wasn't really a home invasion.
I actually felt buy for the guy who was freaking out because of his meth addiction. I know he also manufactured the drug. His wife really seemed like he was trying to get him help the best she could.
I'm half and half on William Hutchinson. In the segments like the guy acting strange at the hotel, the two guys who had marijuana coming out of their car, and the guy with the two drag queens who were pulled over, he was cool and funny. I didn't like him quite as much in the segment with the Hispanic couple breaking into the wealthier couple's house, the segment with the drunk guy at the restaurant, and the slightly older husband and wife who had drugs in their hotel room that were found on their bed.
With the couple in the burglary case, I was slightly surprised by the amount of force they used, as the owners weren't home at the time, and it seems like the cops noticed it first. They claimed they were having sex, but drugs were found. I didn't like the owner's reaction either, as they both seemed arrogant when confronting the suspects, calling them liars, and assuming they were illegals because they were both Mexican.
I also wasn't fond of Hutchinson at the restaurant when the suspect was slightly touching him, causing Hutchinson to throw him to the ground hard.
Hutchinson was actually the head of the Palm Springs Police union for a bit.
Season 18 was one of my favorite scenes. Ryan Cook from Vegas is my favorite cop from that season. He got into so many weird and interesting calls/situations. Seasons 19, 21, 24, 25 and 27 were decent, but any other seasons since then are fairly bland, although at least once per season, you'll have at least one memorable segment.
I've only seen the trailers of the COVID/Fox Nation seasons, as I don't have a Fox Nation subscription and who knows how the long full episodes on YouTube will stay up. I'm pretty much stuck to reruns.
The traffic stop and drug possession cases that started to become big during season 19 are tiring as well, and many of the typical domestic disputes with arrests in the later seasons are also tiring as well.
They only blur out drugs and tasers on the Law and Crime channel, but not on the official COPS channels. It's pathetic to me as nudity has always been blurred and the strongest profanity bleeped out no matter what. I've noticed in later seasons you don't see any graphic violence or blood compared to their earlier seasons.
I've noticed on Law and Crime Network uploads they pause when a tasing is shown up close and also blur out drugs. I've not seen it on the official COPS uploads. I wonder if it's to abide by YouTube's policies.
I was wondering about him as he looked a bit old back in 1989. I think he was about 55 in those segments. I miss the days when you saw older officers as compared to later seasons where they are mainly young and fresh on departments. I saw a post a few years back that he was in his 80's. He seemed to be very cool with every suspect, like the shirtless drunk in the jail. May he R.I.P.
What was that video about and how did you know it was her? Did it show a clip of her segment?
Paul Mertz, one of the officers who dealt with the teen who had inhalant problems and had a breakdown and fight with police in one of the 1999 season 12 Fort Worth episodes, died in June 2019 at the age of 67. He was very calm despite being stern with the girl. Hopefully she cleaned up and stopped using inhalants.
I have it in my music collection and Tyler's vocals are great for the song.
He may have had so many flaws and problems in his life, but he was a legend and helped shape Rock and Roll music. He was also the last living inductee of the first class of the Rock and Roll Hall of fame.
R.I.P. Jerry.
Yeah, I think Officer Cameron had every right to be angry because she put her hands on him, but that story seemed a bit strange to me.
I think Maldonado is good in most segments. There were 3 of them where he seemed slightly aggressive.
I know drugs can age you. Hopefully drugs weren't the reason for his death. I could easily put him into the "criminals you wish weren't arrested" thread. You could tell he was struggling and knew he wanted help.
The segment that followed was one of my favorite Joe Morgan segments where he helped find a 5-year-old boy who left his house.
I remember that guy. I didn't know he died though.
While it's fairly easy to find cops who died, suspects and other people are often more difficult to find as their last names are edited out.
I saw the one domestic with Lori Wilson and the domestic violence victim. Some people on YouTube believe she deserved to go to jail as she was still with her boyfriend despite being an abuser with her child around, others thought it was bad that they actually arrested a victim instead of the suspect. Technically she was arrested for interfering with the investigation, but it still upset me with the way they treated her, and it's a shame because I like Lori in her other segments.