Clinton Jaws - Indigenous Man who Killed Police Dog Loved Animals Campbell River RCMP
Episode Date: August 18, 2021Did you know the suspect who killed Gator the police dog had a big heart for animals. Jared Lowndes stabbed a police dog to death in Campbell River and according to his family he was a gentle giant. ...Clinton Jaws says a lot in this video. I was followed by a man the other day who I once arrested. A man who should be locked in jail. Do not blame the police for their actions. Blame the bad guy. Blame the criminal justice system in Canada for releasing the criminals into your community. It is not their community it is yours and you deserve to feel safe. After a police officer retires they are stripped of their weapons and expected to mingle with criminals safely. Good Citizens are forced to live with criminals who serve their sentence in our community and its wrong. Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWxFkykJzUk32iGqzSzXNYQ/join hotline number 604-330-2512 Call it. https://www.clintonjaws.com/ https://www.instagram.com/clintonjaws/ https://open.spotify.com/show/3hWntbop6gLEg6RFR0aOzJ https://www.facebook.com/clinton.jaws.7/ https://twitter.com/ClintonJaws #campbellriverrcmp #policedog #clintnojaws
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He murdered an animal.
And now they want you to believe that he loved animals.
This is the checkers game.
Clinton Jaws.
I have a short story I want to share with you guys.
Testing.
Testing short story.
Got a short story I want to tell you.
But first, man, things have happened.
Okay.
Not a good start, I know.
I'm going to do...
Before I start my short story and get into what I want to get.
get into guys I thanks for subscribe and keep on subscribing I know I always say that but you have to
hit the subscribe button I'm going to be doing live streaming next week Monday I think it's a 23rd
August 23rd Monday at 630 for members only now if you want to become a member I'll show you how to
do it and this is for subscribers too this is for all members you have to hit the notification bell
I didn't even know about this so I got about 40 people who have become members so far which is
Good. Thanks, guys. I appreciate it. I love it.
I got a couple live streams up there right now.
It's not very good, but I'm failing at what I like doing.
So, I'll get better. I promise I'll get better.
But this is what you have to do, and I didn't know this.
You go to my front page, but my YouTube.
And you see the subscribe button.
Hit the subscribe button. See that bell?
now you have to hit the bell you hit the bell and hit all then you will know when i'm actually
live streaming it will pop it will pop up on your phone it will let you know that i'm live streaming
subscribers hit the bell apparently it's important when i put new stuff up you get a notification
from it and if you feel like joining you can join clinton jaws that's the join button self-explanatory
Okay, I got a bit of a story for you.
The summer has been a little bit crazy.
Things haven't been going.
The kids are having a great time this summer, a great time.
But we've had some things that have been going a little bit loony out at the lake,
which I'm going to get into more in September.
The wife wants me to walk more.
She wants me to go for walks.
She wants my heart to pump and she wants me to stay healthy.
I don't like going for walks.
I think it makes me look homeless, walking a day.
dog. I look like a homeless guy. I don't like it. I don't like people looking at me. But the good thing
is we're out the lake. The road is closed. There's no traffic going by. There's really nobody on the
trail. So I've been doing these walks. We did it about four times. And I'm out the other morning.
This just happened, not very long ago. And the story doesn't make me look all that good.
It makes me look like a bit of a wuss. But I'm going to, there's a point to it.
So I take my little dog Friday and we start walking.
We start walking up the trail and the road is closed because they're putting a culvert in.
And I'm about half an hour into my walk.
Yeah, pretty good, eh?
Half an hour into it.
Rural.
Nobody around.
And right where the road is closed, there's a sign that says road closed and I see a car parked there.
A fancy car.
And the car's just sitting there with the engine running.
I'm like, a little weird.
well when the car turn around and go back but it's not it's just sitting there and the guy has
his window down with the music blaring and i'm getting closer and closer and as a cop mind i'm thinking
i'm thinking not very good thoughts i'm thinking that's that's just odd it's 10 o'clock in the morning
why is this guy sitting here it's almost like he's waiting for me that's what i'm thinking in
my crazy mind and i'm getting closer i'm thinking cops
scenarios, right? All he has to do is lean out the window and fire a gun. This is what I'm thinking.
Of course, he doesn't have a gun. It's not going to happen, right? And it didn't happen.
But then I started thinking, if he's waiting for me, then he wants a confrontation. And if he's
waiting for me, how do you know I was going for a while? Because I didn't see him drive by me.
So I get up, I get up, I'm on the path. The car is parked down on the road. Okay, the path follows the
road. I get up beside him. And I look, and the guy looks like a lunatic. Like a lunatic. I don't recognize
him, but a lunatic. And he turns to me, and he says, fuck you, Clint. And I'm like, oh. And
usually my ass would pucker, but it actually did the opposite. It opened right up, and then I had to
pucker it, you know what I mean? I'm like, I don't like this. No one's around. He's a lunatic. I know
this right away. I don't like my surroundings. And I'm like, dude, I don't even know you. What's going on?
He goes, you've been pulling a lot of effing shit lately. Like, who's this guy? And he knew me by my
first name and he knew me by my last name. We had some more words.
he says a couple of other things and I'm thinking and I'm like dude I don't even know who you are
I don't even I can't I don't even know who you are and he said something like I'm not here to talk
and I'm thinking do I continue because the trail continues even the road even though the road
doesn't do I continue because he can see me if I go ahead
of him. But if I go behind him, if I turn around and go behind him, like it was, he's not going to
know where I go. Normally, like if it was in Walmart parking lot, I would say F you too. But, you know,
something stood up in the back of my neck, and that's only happened a couple times in my life.
Like I said, there were bad surroundings. I made, so I turned around and I started walking away.
And as I'm walking away, I hear his door open. And his door should.
shut. And I'm like, holy shit, he just got out of his vehicle. But then I heard him rev the engine.
Somebody else got out of his vehicle. So I keep on walking. Don't really know what I'm going to do.
There's one house, one house on that pathway. And I know I'm coming up to it. And there's a line of,
it's all trees, okay? It's all trees. There's a line of trees. This is me on the path.
then there's an opening to the path.
The path continues.
But I jet into behind the trees
because I have a feeling that there's a guy following me.
So if I go along the trees, the back part of the trees,
this guy's not going to see that I did this.
Driver, lunatic driver drives by me.
He doesn't see me because I'm behind trees.
The moment he drove by, I see this guy.
on my same path, walking briskly, on his phone, on his cell phone, talking to the driver that just drove by me.
I listen in to the distance, the car stops, and those two have a conversation on the pathway.
Probably, where is he? Where'd he go?
So I waited a while, and I went home, and there's a point to my story.
I call up the cops, okay? I call up the cops, and I say, this is what I got.
a great cop, great cop in Port Al Burnie, seemed like a great kid, and I'm not shitting on cops
in Porto Bernie at all. And you see, I used to be a cop. So I know what I have is nothing.
I got a license plate of a lunatic. What do I have? I have a suspicious occurrence.
And no cop is going to investigate a suspicious occurrence. I shouldn't say ever,
but hardly ever, okay? The priority of the...
list, priority list of a suspicious occurrence is really low. That's a file that you're just going to let
expire and eventually conclude one day. Police officers don't care about suspicious occurrences.
And that's really all I have, even though what's the intention of these two dudes? What were they
going to do when they got a hold of me? When they cornered me. Suspicious occurrence. I guess,
man if I could be a if I could part of me wishes I was a cop again because I would look at things
differently I would investigate suspicious occurrences but police we got too much shit on our plate
they got too much shit on their plate when you get a suspicious occurrence file that's like a bonus
that's like happy times great I got a file that's not going to end up into a criminal charge
where it's going to be a lot of work okay
And the last thing police want to hear is a suspicious occurrence turning into an uttering threats file.
They don't want to hear that.
They don't want that.
It's suspicious occurrence.
It always will be a suspicious occurrence.
And it's funny.
I know this is bad to say, but as a police officer, because you're so busy, when you get a call, the first thing you think is, how am I going to conclude this?
Because I'm just too busy.
So when you get an erratic driver, noise complaint, suspicious occurrence, it makes you feel good.
I don't know what he's going to do with the file, but I did my own little investigation in town.
And I found the owner of the vehicle.
And I'm thinking, I was thinking, is this a subscriber?
Is this a guy that, I don't know, didn't like what I had to say?
Or is this a guy I arrested once?
how did he know I was going for a walk?
So I did my own investigation and I found where he lived.
I didn't go there.
But I found out his name.
And it turned out a few years back,
I did have an interaction with him.
I had to go up to the hospital.
And the guy's a lunatic.
He's a nut show.
Crazy as balls.
And we had to apprehend him because he's a nut.
He's a criminal.
We had to apprehend him, bring him up to the hospital,
where he destroyed the hospital.
For 30 minutes, I sat there with some pills given to me from the nurse,
and I convinced him to take his pills so he could get better in the head.
But I'm thinking, this is what I started thinking.
I've never thought this before.
When I retired, I had to give my pepper spray, my baton, my gun.
And here I am, walking on a trail.
And I'm like, this does just, just, just, just.
just doesn't seem right. I feel like I should have some sort of weapon. I'm expected to live in a
community filled with bad guys that I have arrested or dealt with, or not even the community.
The amount of arrests that I have made on this island. And what did they do? They strip me of all
weapons and they expect me to share the same community with them because that's what happens
now, right? The police arrest these people. They get out on probation. You can serve your community.
You can serve your time in the community. The court system is a failure. That guy, I know for a fact,
he should be spending the rest of his life in jail behind bars, no doubt about it. But he's not.
I don't know.
It just don't seem right to me.
Being a cop is a crazy job.
And then when you retire, they strip you of all weapons
and expect you to share the same restaurant as them.
I look at America.
I'm not going to criticize America, but, you know, the right to bear arms.
Not all that bad.
That was a 250 shot.
I was a good shot.
I was really good with my handgun.
I don't see any point of taking it away from me
because the next time I go for a walk, I want my gun.
I want my gun and I want to do, maybe I have to do a little killing.
You know what I mean?
If someone's going to attack me and want to kill me and beat my head in,
do I not have a right to defend myself?
I guess not.
Not in Canada anyways.
That's my short story.
And this is one I'm going to talk about now,
which is something to do with my story.
by the way
I don't know if the police officer has talked to that guy
I don't know
I don't even know if the police know who it is
I know who it is
and that's another thing
man it's weird
looking at it on the other side
now that I'm a civilian
and I'm not a police officer
I'm not going to tell
a police what to do
but like I said
I wish I could go back in time
and do things a little bit differently
and not be so quick
to write off files
to not investigate small stuff.
I wish I investigated small stuff like this,
which is deemed as a small thing,
but a big thing in my mind.
I would go up to the driver,
and I wouldn't say,
did you follow Clint?
I would say, why did you follow Clint?
I would make statements.
I wouldn't ask you if a buddy came,
I wouldn't say,
did you have a buddy that exited your vehicle
and started to follow him?
No, that's the first thing.
they're going to say. That's what all shit rats say. When asked the question, they say no. But you make
statements. Why does somebody leave your car and start following them? Well, I don't know. Okay. Well,
now you know what really happened, right? That's what I would do when I would pull over a pair of drivers.
I didn't ask, you know, have you been drinking? Have you been drinking? I wouldn't ask the question.
I would tell them. You're drunk. You've been drinking tonight. No, I only had three.
I don't know the point of that was, I guess.
Short story turned into a long story.
So I was thinking about my story and I was thinking about Campbell River July 8th.
July 8th and Campbell River, 2021.
There's a bad guy driving around, okay?
They try to pull him over.
He flees from police.
Now, I'm getting it from the newspaper.
Obviously, there wasn't a pursuit because RCMP aren't allowed to pursue.
But they later found his vehicle at Tim Hortons.
They contained him a little bit at Tim Hortons.
Hortons, what does this bad guy do? He has a knife and he kills a police dog named Gator
in Campbell River. Kills him. The dog handler gets stabbed by this guy because he has to get treated
for knife wounds. RCP don't say much, but that's obviously what happened. They end up shooting
and killing this guy. Bad guy had a warrant. Apparently he breached his conditional sentence order.
conditional sentence order is a big deal.
You got probation and then you got CSO, okay?
What a CSO is?
Is the judge basically this, okay?
The judge says,
you don't have to serve your time in jail
because there's an over-representation of certain groups
and apparently we can't have that.
So you don't have to serve your sentence in jail.
You can serve your sentence in the community.
where people like me are forced to live with these people,
where they deserve to rot in jail,
but the court system, they are blowing it.
They allow these people to serve their sentence with normal people.
So that's what happened with this guy.
He had a breach of CSO, and he knew, he knew without a doubt,
if he was caught with the CSO, you're going back to jail no matter what.
CSO is a powerful document if you're on a CSO.
There's no doubt that he knew he was going back to jail.
Probation different.
A lot of times you breach probation, breach probation, breach probation, you're allowed back out.
The court system is a complete joke.
Judges are failing you.
They're failing everybody.
But nobody talks about it.
Instead, they blame the police.
It's the police fault.
No, it's not.
It's not the police fault.
It's shit rats fault and it's the court system.
There should be more jails.
People should be in jail.
Believe me, you want them in jail and you don't want this guy driving around.
So the MPF, the RCMP union, they come out and they make this statement.
Which I love the statement, by the way.
Bad guy's name is Mr. I don't know why they call him Mr.
Just call him by his last name.
Oh, good Lord.
loan dis
Loundiz, londiz,
loan dis.
Okay, just call him Lowe.
So, Lo, this is what they said.
If Mr. Lowe had not,
however, evaded police,
stabbed PSD
police dog service, Gator,
and injured an RCMP officer,
and instead turned himself into the courts
to comply with a warrant for weapons offenses,
a warrant for weapons offenses,
he could be alive today.
That's what they say.
If he didn't resist arrest, he could be alive today.
If he didn't evade police, stabbed a dog, killed a dog, he could be alive today.
Really, I would change the word could and would.
He would be alive today.
They all would be alive today if they didn't resist arrest.
They'd all be alive today if he wasn't on a CSO.
if he was in jail where he belongs.
Keep them in jail.
That's all you have to do.
Stop resisting arrest.
I was going to call my channel.
Stop resisting.
Anyways, I love the comment by the MPF because it's truthful.
It's a truth.
And we've, our CMP have never had anybody stick up for us, ever.
So when you hear a comment like that, as a former cop, as a cop, you're like,
Wow, not used to it.
Sounds great, but everybody.
They're up in arms over this comment that the MPF has made.
So this Roxanne, Edgar, or I don't know her name, but she's a journalist, she wrote this article.
And this is what she writes.
Rob Gillizoo, an assistant professor of economics at the University of Victoria.
What does he say?
Police officers, society more generally, no one gains,
From the use of lethal force, it is something that we want to avoid in all circumstances.
There's lots to gain from lethal force.
That PDS member, police dog service member, probably alive.
There is tons to gain from lethal force.
Like, who is this guy?
And he has an expertise in policing and use of lethal force.
He's an expert in use of lethal force.
and an expert in policing, this professor.
How is a professor an expert in policing and lethal force?
How?
I looked all over.
I can't see where he's an expert at all.
He reads some books.
I emailed.
I contacted the journalist.
I asked her the question.
Tell me how he's an expert.
I didn't hear back from him, of course, right?
These are the people they interview.
We want to avoid in all circumstances.
It is something that we want to avoid in all circumstances.
Sometimes it's unavoidable.
We try to avoid it all the time.
He doesn't even know this.
These are the people that they're interviewing.
His warrant was for breaching his conditional sentence order,
where I am forced to hang out with him,
eat with him, walk with him,
unarmed.
I don't like the position I'm put in.
What does Rob Gordon say?
Oh, Rob Gordon.
The criminology professor,
another professor, she's interviewing.
Rob Gordon's a professor at Simon Fraser University, criminology.
Look out criminology students.
Has this guy taught you?
What's he say?
He said, if there's a current warrant, there are legal grounds to make an arrest and failing
to do so could open an officer to criticism.
Well, that's not true.
Right away, he's wrong.
It's not necessarily true.
The nature of the alleged breach of condition is an important
issue, he said. Was the breach so bad that it warranted the kind of intervention that actually
occurred? Huh? Huh? Listen to that statement. Was the breach so bad that it warranted him to be dead.
Him being dead, bad guy being dead, had nothing to do with the breach. This is the guy,
this is these, these are the people that they're interviewing. He fled, failed to stop. He
for police.
Had nothing really to do with the breach.
He's already committed the...
We respond to their behaviors.
The guy could be a J-Walker.
The J-Walker could pull out a gun.
You shoot him. What do you have?
What? You shot a J-Walker?
No, I shot a criminal because I feared death and grievous bodily harm.
That's why.
We react to their behaviors.
It has nothing to do with the breach.
Was the breach so bad that it warranted?
that kind of intervention? Well, of course not. Of course it didn't. Him killing a dog and stabbing
another cop. That's what warranted it. These people, what do they expect you to do? Somebody comes out
with a gun. Somebody comes out with a knife. He wants us to de-escalate. Hey, sir, can you please stop
killing my dog? Can you please stop stabbing him? Sir, why are you stabbing at my hands?
Please stop stabbing me.
Please stop killing me.
That's how they want you to do it.
It's insane.
This is what else he says.
He doesn't like what the MPF statement said.
He doesn't like what the MPF said.
This is his comments.
They're defending their membership in aggressive way.
And that's going to result in increased heat in the conversation around key issues to do with police, police reform.
Da, da, da, da, da, da, he says.
They're defending their membership in aggressive way.
It's okay if he speaks.
But when a police officer does or the union does, you label it aggressive.
You're allowed to say it.
You're allowed to say things that what you say doesn't even make sense.
But when somebody actually tells the truth and makes sense, it's aggressive.
He can understand why the statement may be inflammatory at a time when police use of force against indignious people has come under focus.
But you want us to be forced to listen to your boy.
bullshit in your bullshit only when that statement is bullshit it's a hoax it's a sham why is it under
focus police use of force against indignious people why is that under focus because people like
rob gordon who lie to you it's under focus because of the media aren't telling you the truth
they're under focus because some of them are criminals and they're trying to kill people
or animals that's why it's under focus
if it's ever a white guy, you rarely hear about it.
You know, I thought this was going to be a five-minute video.
What the family have to say about this?
They condemned his actions, right?
They condemned what this kid did.
Mr. Lowe, I guess that's what we're going to call him.
They condemned his actions for what he did.
He killed a police dog.
He stabbed another member.
The other member received knife wounds.
We don't know for a fact if he was stabbed or not.
But his behavior is what caused all this, not the police.
So the family must have condemned his behavior.
They must be on the side of police, right?
Wouldn't common sense tell you that?
Of course not.
There is no common sense anymore.
This is what the family says.
Justice for Jared.
What the cops did was bad.
It was dehumanizing treatment of Jared by the police.
Disturbing, they say.
just gets so old.
He was affectionate.
He was a gentle giant.
He had a big heart, guys.
He's just trying to turn his life around, right?
He had a big heart for everybody,
and especially for children and animals.
Especially for children and animals.
He murdered an animal.
And now they want you to believe
that he loved animals,
and he had a big heart for them.
You can't,
this up.
Insanity.
And people who read it, they buy it.
Oh, what was what was mom say?
Inflamed racism, of course.
It's racism.
I'm definitely aware of all the racism by the police towards indignious people.
Indignious people are disappropriately likely to be shot by da, da, da, da, da.
There's so much systemic racism against us.
Stop being mad at the police.
You're being mad at the good guys.
You're not thinking.
you're not critically thinking.
And none of these people that she interviews are critically thinking.
Have some common sense.
The police aren't the bad guys.
The bad guy is the bad guy.
The criminal justice system, the court system, be mad at them.
Why is this guy out and about?
Why is the guy who followed me out and about?
We are forced to live with these people.
And when they blow it again and the police have to react,
They're the first people to get criticized.
You're criticizing the wrong people.
I want to talk about something else, but I just want to say,
Good job Campbell River.
Police station.
Sorry about Gator.
Seven-year-old dog.
Yeah, that's who we murdered.
A seven-year-old police dog.
I'm glad everybody else is safe, and I don't know,
feel like I'm going around in circles.
I just talk about the same thing.
Let's talk about something else now.
