- Joined
- Aug 19, 2019
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I love sharing it especially the crazy black people.This is some good shit. Thanks for this!![]()
This one was a pleasant rollercoaster between the raging fag on two wheels and the chick who couldn't just shut up.I love sharing it especially the crazy black people.
Because I'm sure he was on the fast track to becoming a doctor and an engineer.Basketball American fucks around and learns he’s not in Milwaukee. Gets shot 6 times and dies. His family is distraught and doesn’t understand why the white police officer would shoot her son when he points a gun at him.
Seeing police gun down career criminals is a white pill for me. I wish they did it more, they always kill someone eventually if they aren’t put down or put in prison for life.Because I'm sure he was on the fast track to becoming a doctor and an engineer.
That’s very true: police misconduct is usually when the bodycam “stops working.” But we do get all the fun footage from body cams because the police love having evidence from it for court. It’s actually a great tool for them because the jury doesn’t need to determine the credibility of the cop and instead can watch the video and decide for themselves.See, bodycam footage is fun and all, but we all know the real fun happens when the bodycam turns off.
Description:
Police chase man going 100km/h on e-scooter after he crashes | Heart-pounding footage shows the moment an Australian man going 100km/h on an e-scooter leads police on a chase from the highway to a bike path where he narrowly avoids cyclists. James Cole, 38, was spotted by police going at high speed along Majura Parkway in Canberra's east on December 23 last year. When two officers on motorbikes try to pull him over, bodycam footage shows Cole refusing to stop and hitting the throttle in an attempt to evade them. The clip, played recently to the ACT Magistrates Court. shows Cole turning off the road and onto a bike path where cyclists dismount to avoid a collision as they hear the engines approaching. When the officers do manage to apprehend Cole after he tumbles off the e-scooter following a nearly five-minute-long chase, he pleads with them that he is late for work.