Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast - Female Cop Reveals Her Secrets to Catch & Escape Criminals

Episode Date: October 1, 2024

Retired NYPD detective Marique Bartoldus shares her amazing stories from her new book Twenty & Out: A Compilation of Chaos Experienced while serving 20 years in the New York City Police Department.... https://www.amazon.com/Twenty-Out-com... Do you want to be a guest? Fill out the form https://forms.gle/5H7FnhvMHKtUnq7k7 Send me an email here: insidetruecrime@gmail.com Do you extra clips and behind the scenes content? Subscribe to my Patreon:   / insidetruecrime  

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 being a girl you kind of were able to like sometimes flirt a little bit to like diffuse situations or but then on the flip side they if it was a fight they looked at you like you were the weak length so they would kind of go after you first so it kind of you kind of played it either way but most of the time like there was one time um i was in a in the 105 precinct it's called the conditions unit so you're basically dealing with like the guys who piss on the street the drinkers open containers like the the things that kind of bring down the quality of the neighborhood, you're kind of addressing those conditions and, you know, writing summons is forward or making arrests or whatever. So we go out, my partner and I see this group of guys
Starting point is 00:00:40 hanging out on the corner. And one of the guys makes like a motion on his waistband. So it's tricky because sometimes they do it without realizing they do it. It's like a, they see the cops and they're like, oh, I got a gun. Let me make sure it's still there. Kind of a thing. Sometimes they do that because they know they don't have a gun, but they know we're going to see it because one of their buddies has the gun. So it like helps, you know, we get the, we miss the jump on the guy with the gun and we're focusing on this other guy. Or it could have just been a random like movement, but the way that he moved, it kind of looked like we had a gun. So we jump out on him. And it's, I think it was like five or six of those guys. And it's me and my partner. So I go right up to the guy, grab them and I, you give him a
Starting point is 00:01:20 toss, which is like you kind of just feel where, or out in the outside. You're not going into pockets or anything like that. You're just feeling to see if he has a weapon. So I grab him where I saw he went and grabbed and he just had like a cell phone or something like under his under his things. So it kind of looked like a bulge. It was, you know, nighttime. So it's hard to see. But it wasn't anything. So I'm like, all right. So now all these guys are getting aggravated. And they're like, yo, what's up? Why are you coming after us? So it was like, you know, I kind of just kind of did a little like, sly like giggle. And I'm like, I don't know how you doing baby. You know, like kind of just like flirting a little bit with them. And it wasn't anything like being unprofessional
Starting point is 00:01:55 or anything, but it was like, I'm about to get my butt kicked by like six dudes. We're surrounded. It's kind of defuse a situation. Yeah, like I got to get out of here. So, you know, I kind of made like some jokes like flirting with him and stuff just to kind of get myself out of that situation. So in, you know, and in that respect, like my partner was like, thank God you're a girl because, you know, it wouldn't have worked if he had tried something like that. That probably would have ended up in a play. We'd talk the other way.
Starting point is 00:02:18 Yeah, it would have been really bad. But so, you know, like the situations like that kind of helped. and then helping like with domestic violence with, you know, the women who are victims of domestic violence, sometimes they would open up more to a female, kids a lot of the time. So there's benefits to having police. And at that time, there was police that are females, there was, I don't know, maybe a handful of women in the precinct that I was in at that time. So it was interesting.
Starting point is 00:02:46 But the bad guys on the street did not hold back if they were going to fight you. because they wanted to get away and they didn't feel like going to jail, they were going to hit you just as bad as they were going to hit a dude. They didn't discriminate because you were a girl. So, you know, you had to be, and I always always tell the girls who came on, like if you've never been in a fight before, go take some self-defense classes, like take Krav Maga or do something so that you know how to defend yourself. Yeah, you get punched in the face.
Starting point is 00:03:15 It's something you need to get punched in the face to be prepared to be punched in the face because when it happens, it's, you know, you see stars. Like if you've been affected, then the situation is, it's not something you want to learn in a fight. No, and that actually, that happened to me once. I mean, I spoke to the new people who came on after me when I had time on from experience because I had gotten into a, I guess it was like a, you could call it a fist fight with a guy. He was, he was, it was like he was, he had a BMW in a driveway. And him and this other guy are like, working.
Starting point is 00:03:50 underneath the BMW where the where the steering wheel column goes into the thing like they looked like they were trying to hotwire the car and it was like I think it was actually I was working for some reason during the day or like early early evening or something so it wasn't there wasn't like a lot of people out and it was a time when we were really high in stolen cars like where there was a period where our precinct was like number one for stolen cars so I'm looking at these guys and I'm like are they trying to hot wire the car so my partner I go out just to to see what's up because I'm like, it's still like kind of daylight. I don't know if they'd be doing this, but you don't know and it just doesn't look right.
Starting point is 00:04:24 So we go out to talk to them and this guy immediately started going at me. You can't do, you can't stop me. And usually when they're throwing static like that, it's because something's up and they're just trying to make you be like, oh, okay, we'll leave you alone. So the opposite happens. Now it's like, okay, why are you throwing off static? What's the problem? Do you just hate cops or are you up to no good and you're just trying to like,
Starting point is 00:04:46 you know, give your buddy a head start on running. So we end up trying to like talk to the guy and I'm like, listen, trying to calm him down. Like, bro, I'm just, is this your car? Like, what's going on here? Like, what is it broken? Do you need, do you need a jump start? Like, do you need a tow truck? Or I'm thinking in my head, are you trying to steal this car? And now I'm kind of raised up because of the way that he's reacting to me. So he just goes and like, text me. Like, just text me right in the chest. And like, and I'm like, what? So in the police department, it's not like levels equal levels of force like you hit me i'm hitting you back like that's you just you know there's there's levels of force that you're allowed to use and it depends on what's given
Starting point is 00:05:26 to you that you're allowed to use a certain level back so i open palm them in the nose i just whacked him right in the nose and he had like blood trickling down and i'll never forget the look on his face and my partner goes to grab one arm and go over the radio and tell where we are because we're about to have a fight we got another guy here I don't know if he's going to jump on his backs. Right now he's kind of laying low and he's kind of talking his buddy like, yo, calm down, calm down. I don't know what's going on. So my partner's going to the radio.
Starting point is 00:05:53 I go to grab his other arm and he just cockbacks and boom gets me, which I mean, it happens. So he got me right in the head. It was a beautiful haymaker that he landed and it spun me around and like, you see stars. I see the stars. But I'm like, you know, like, all right, get back in because now my partner is by himself with this guy. so you know we we get back in and we're rolling around with him and I'm on the radio given our location just over the radio just you know we need some help here because by now like I'm still seeing SARS my vision is completely blurred because my eye is tearing and I'll never forget when
Starting point is 00:06:29 the guys got there they all looked at me and they were like they gave me like a weird look and I'm like my makeup my makeup must be running because my eyes tearing so I'm thinking I look like some kind of freak show so I go running over so now you know the other guys have them and they're handcuffing and whatever he's still fighting it was it got a little hairy too because like the people in the neighborhood kind of came out and everybody's surrounded us with the cameras out and well back then it wasn't cameras it was like the flip phone things or whatever taking pictures and like you don't know who's enemy who's foe who's going to jump on my back who's going to help me out who's you have to assume that everybody is is an enemy at this point so you know I'm just trying to yell at everybody
Starting point is 00:07:05 to get back the brother I hear him yelling like stop fighting the police stop it so the other car is finally get there. They put them into handcuffs or whatever. So I go running over to a side view mirror of a van to take a look at my makeup. And I'm like trying to, I look and I'm like, well, my makeup doesn't really look too bad because I wore like liquid eyeliner. And I look and I got a huge unicorn knot on the top of my head. And I'm like, oh gosh, this is horrible. So my partner had gotten hurt. So I helped him over to an ambulance. And then my sergeant was like, you need to go to the hospital and get that thing checked out. You have a unicorn, you know, horn on the top of your head. So I get into the ambulance and it was, you know, maybe five or ten minutes later. And I said to
Starting point is 00:07:46 the guy that was in the ambulance with me, I'm like, bro, can you just take a picture of my head so I can see like how bad it actually looks? Because I was only looking at the side of your mirror. So he takes a picture and like my whole face looked like it was just swollen up, disgusting. So, you know, went to the hospital, got checked out. I had a concussion. I was out sick. A week later, I come back and I'm walking past the arrest processing area, which is a couple of computers and like a little area with paperwork and stuff and I see something out of corner my eye and I look and there's my picture with the knot on my head bouncing around as a screensaver on all of the computers in the arrest processing room and I'm like these guys got me so good like you know the bullbusting
Starting point is 00:08:28 was a part of like being a cop you know we have like a very disturbed sense of humor so I was like okay fair enough you know it was they blasted that picture everywhere it was pretty good every day I went into work, it was like, you know, what's going to happen tonight? I have no idea. Next thing you know, you're like chasing some guy into a dark alley or like one time I fell out of an, a police car, just like chasing somebody, like just crazy insane stuff happens. It's just fun. How do you fall out of a car? Yeah. So we, my partner and I were driving around and there was a radio run central who's the radio dispatcher raises us up. And she, She's like, I have a man with a gun. He's like wearing a white t-shirt. And I'm like, okay, well, I'm a block away. So we turned the corner. And it was like in the middle of the street.
Starting point is 00:09:22 So on the left side was a school. And there was like a driveway sort of opening in the fence halfway down the block. So there's like a couple of trees and there's like a streetlight. And in like the circle of light that the street light illuminates on the street was this guy. And here he is. I turn the corner and my partner kind of like slows the car down and maybe 10, 15, 20 feet away because, you know, you, we don't know if he's got a gun. It's dark. I can't really see his hands. Central's trying to call the complaint and to see like, you know, does he have a gun?
Starting point is 00:09:55 How did you see this gun? What's going on? Is this the guy? Is he still there? Do we have the wrong guy? And he's looking at us and I'm like, it's him. I just know it's him. Right. So I'm trying to see his hands to see if he's got a gun. It's hard to see. So I pull the door open a little bit, like I unhook it because I'm ready to jump out and use the car as cover to like, you know, give him orders to to end this scenario safely so we don't have like shots going off on this on this block. And as soon as I like unlatched the door, he takes off through the driveway of the school. So my partner guns the car and makes the quick left to drive into the school yard. And as he goes left, I go right out the car.
Starting point is 00:10:39 And I just remember like tumbling out of control and because I mean, I wasn't wearing my seatbelt because I was ready to jump out on him. So I'm just flying. We used to have these summons tins, which were actual tins where you put your paperwork for summonses and complaint reports and accident reports. So you have all these metal tins, my radio. Everything just comes flying out with me. I'm tumbling. I remember thinking like just tuck your head in so you don't like, you know, get knocked unconscious. And I rolled uncontrollably and I slammed into a tree that was on the curb. you guys aren't slowing you're slowing down but you're still going fast yeah like it was like zero to 60 like my my partner gunned it we were we were going okay so because we didn't want to lose the guy in the in the dark park it was like we got to go follow this guy in there so i hit the tree and i just remember being like oh you know like i hit it with like force and i get up and i'm like i got to get my radio and i see my radio on the ground i grab it and i go running into the park after this guy and i hear my
Starting point is 00:11:39 partner behind me, yelling, where the hell are you going? You just got thrown out of the car. Like, forget the guy. Like, are you, are you okay? So I was like, I just ignored him. I just went running into the park and I'm like, you know, I don't want to turn my flashlight on because that gives away my position. So I kind of lower the radio so he can't kind of make me out. So I'm like, you know, creeping around trying to see if I see movement in the shadows. And I'm like jogging lightly through the park as I'm like looking around corners and stuff. And I don't see him. And I get to the other side of the playground and he's gone he's in the winds we we never it's an open-ended we never found the guy but my partner ended up stopping some other guy like it's like a dark night there's
Starting point is 00:12:18 not a lot of people out all of a sudden we got two guys in white t-shirts just walking around where we are so my partner had stopped another guy hear him yelling so i go running over to him and uh you know to help him out but it was it was a different guy but i'm assuming it's the guy who ran who i would i would I don't think that it would be, but it, I mean, he wasn't like sweating or out of breath or anything, so I don't think that it was, but he had come from like the other side of the playground. So I think my partner thought that he had just walking, but I don't mean the guy that your partner stopped. I meant like the guy that ran is the guy where after he, your partner sounds like jumped out and said, hey, there's a guy in a white shirt. Let's stop him. No, this guy went.
Starting point is 00:12:56 I think the guy that ran that way is our guy was. This guy's got a white shirt. Yeah. I mean, it was fair. He saw him coming in the direction. So I was like, it wasn't, it wasn't him.
Starting point is 00:13:08 It wasn't, it could have been, but it wasn't him. So, you know, that was, that was a fun time. So my,
Starting point is 00:13:13 my boss shows up to the scene afterwards, because it's a man with a gun. So, you know, you have a couple of guys coming. So he, he shows up and my partner tells him like, you know,
Starting point is 00:13:22 Mary just fell out of the car. And he's like, are you all right? And I'm like, yeah, I'm fine. And he's like, you're bleeding.
Starting point is 00:13:27 So I had like road rash on my arms and my hands from like getting like scraped alone on the concrete. I was thrown out of the car. I'm like, I'm fine. Let's just go to the next job. I'm good. Being a girl was a little interesting in the NYPD when I came on because there were not a lot of females.
Starting point is 00:13:44 When I came on, the girls that were on were like hardcore. Like these were tough chicks. Like you did not mess with them. They were harder than the guys sometimes. Like they were just, some of them even carried the revolvers still at that time. So they had like the low slinging belt like the Clint Eastwood thing and they would like walk around. And, you know, they were just. They were just rough and tumble chicks
Starting point is 00:14:04 and they could hang with the guys. So it was really important to me to be able to like hold up the, I'm not a feminist in any way, but I just wanted to be able to show the guys like, yeah, you can trust me. If you get into a fight, I'm gonna jump in there and help you out, you know, and cuff the guy up. I'm not gonna be one of these, you know,
Starting point is 00:14:23 girls that runs the other direction that's scared to get involved. So it was important to me to be able to hold up the reputation that these hardened women had achieved with, you know, just being, good cops. They were great street cops. I had a female partner for a long time. And she and I went to like, they call it a lift job where you have like an elderly person who falls and they can't get back up
Starting point is 00:14:45 again. So the man had fallen. The wife comes to the door and she opens the door and she's like, oh, they sent females. And I'm like, all right, see you later. I'm out of here. You don't want help. Then don't, you know, like, are you serious right now? So I guess she was really in a jam because she's like, oh, no, no, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. Come back. And I'm like, all right. Where is he? And I mean, the guy soaking wet was probably 100 pounds. You know, it wasn't like he was like a big. So, you know, we lifted him up and we helped him out and, you know, whatever. And, you know, she was like, oh, I'm really sorry. And I'm like, yeah, well, don't underestimate us, man. I had to pass the same or similar, you know, physical tests that the dudes did. Like, you know. So it was the people that. And especially like the perps. How long was it until you like you went to, you were in homicide, right? No, I never went to the detective squad. So when I was in the 105, I did patrol for like five years. Then I went to the Conditions Unit.
Starting point is 00:15:40 Then I went to SNU, which was street narcotics enforcement. And then I went to anti-crime. And then I went to the field intelligence. The new BMO, V.I. Porter, MasterCard, is your ticket to more. More perks. More points. More flights. more of all the things you want in a travel rewards card
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Starting point is 00:16:27 whenever it hits you wherever you are grab an oh henry bar to satisfy your hunger with its delicious combination of big crunchy salty peanuts covered in creamy caramel and chewy fudge with a chocolatey coating swing by a gas station and get an oh henry today oh hungry oh henry office which was basically me and my boss and we debriefed prisoners that came in there and gathered information on you know who's got guns who's something what kind of gang be you saw there whatever and we would sign up informants and you know do search warrants and then i went i did that for i guess like 10 years and i went into they had started an animal cruelty unit and that was my real passion was like animal cruelty and you know i'm a big like animal rights activist so don't hurt any more gators because that's horrible but as long as they eat the meat it's like okay there's plenty of gators yeah they've been here for like thousands of years i think they'll be okay my one of my uh one of my uh one of my uh one of my uh
Starting point is 00:17:27 one of my old bosses was a he was an avid, my, my boss in the Intel unit was an avid hunter. He would go like hunting upstate or whatever, every, whatever the season is. And he knew that I was like this huge animal rights activist. So every day I would come into the office and he'd have on the TV like the hunting program and like watching little little baby Bambi getting shot and killed and like, you know, gutted and stuff. And I'm like, seriously. So, you know, I'm not really good to.
Starting point is 00:17:55 Are you in Florida? Yeah. Yeah. to Florida after we're retired. Yeah. So my wife and I go walking in the morning. We're supposed to be jogging. Sometimes we jog.
Starting point is 00:18:05 But mostly it's walking. It's like an 80-20 mix. So, but we probably go around one, two, three. There's four ponds that we go around. There's huge ponds. There's at least two gators in every single pond that we go around. I mean, there's, you know, they're everywhere. And I grew up in Temple Terrace,
Starting point is 00:18:27 right across from the Hillsborough River, man, it's probably once a month animal controls out there dragging some alligator out of somebody's pool, right at the front yard. Like, it's just super common, you know? And that's why I'm like, listen, we're not running out of alligators. Yeah. They're over. It's the wildlife down in Florida is a different. I was very big into hiking.
Starting point is 00:18:53 I would hike like the Adirondack Trail. Like I would always go upstate and go hiking. I was an outdoor person. I love the beach. You know, I lived, I live 10 minutes from the South Shore beaches my whole life. So I lived on the beach. And we moved down to Florida. And I'm like, I, you know, there's like the econ area. And I'm like, no, not going there. You know, you see like the lake or whatever in upstate New York. It's like, oh, you go stick your feet in the lake and cool off or whatever, swimmer out, not down here. I'm like, the good Lord did not really intend for man to live in Florida because it's like Jurassic Park down here. You have these
Starting point is 00:19:24 giant sandhill cranes with these long beaks that want to peck your eyeballs out that walk around the gaiters the the mosquitoes i'm like this is this place is legit like i need civilization in florida yeah listen the heat that yeah that's the mosquitoes the it's you know listen i was doing a shoot one time and i was just going to tell you this because this is so obnoxious but But my wife versus these guys just walked into it. And I was doing a shoot one time and I was like reviewing a movie and no, reviewing a, you know, I was reviewing a movie like a con man movie or something. And there was a mosquito or something like no, yeah, it was a mosquito was flying around and somebody goes, wait, wait, wait, you know, the camera guys are like, wait a second. There's a mosquito. And they're like, where is it? Where is it? And I'm, you know, kind of look at it. And I said, well, I said, bro, we just keep shooting. I said, I'm not worried about it. I said, they don't bite me. And, and somebody goes, I think it was, I want to say it was my wife goes, she goes, why?
Starting point is 00:20:26 And I go, out of respect. Okay. Listen, she's just, these guys were, everybody's bawled out laughing and they were just, so anyway, I was just walked right into it. That's awesome. So, so what was, and I was going to say when you were saying that, you know, people coming off street that you're interviewing and for information or criminals you arrest and you interview i was but what about the code there is no there is no code with that there is no code when your
Starting point is 00:21:02 ass is on the line people are going to they will tell and it's you they can't everybody at the end of the day is out to save him his own skin that's just you know and you got to capitalize on that and i mean i guess yeah from your perspective it's like these guys are rats right from my perspective what are you talking about i got 26 years in four months i didn't even do 13 years so i i hear you you know how many times i i did these guys that come here and they talk and they they tell me their story and and i'm thinking like you know mandatory minimum guidelines they're like yeah so you know they called me with like two keys of hair i had a really good lawyer i'm like yeah and i only got five years
Starting point is 00:21:49 you got caught with two kilos in the federal system and you got five years come on listen i hear you yeah yeah you did the right thing i'm not judging you but i feel like that's 15 minimum but yeah yeah i mean what do you have to do what you have to do right and it benefits us because it's like you i mean the more every gun i got off the street was somebody that didn't get shot, whether it be a cop or a civilian or like another drug dealer. I'm, you know, like it was, it wasn't really, I didn't look at it like, you know, and sometimes you'd have to tell these people like, don't think of it like you're ratting people out. Think of it like you're going to try and make the neighborhood you live in safer because I don't
Starting point is 00:22:41 live here. You do. I, you know, you need to make the, the people who are scared to come out of their houses, you need to make them feel safer. And every gun we take off the street is a way to do that. That's just what it is. And you don't have to go to jail. Bonus. Yeah. Big bonus. But for a while, it was like in New York State, if you got caught with a gun, an illegal gun, you were doing two years. There was no plea bargain. Now it's like the plea bargaining is so insane. I don't even know if people are really doing considerable time for having like an illegal firearm. But back then it was like, you know you're going away. So it wasn't, it didn't really felicitate like cooperation because they're like, if I don't do two years
Starting point is 00:23:27 for this gun, they're going to know that I'm cooperating. So I, you know, I can't help you. So it was like, yeah. Good point. I knew a guy who got like 25 years and he cooperated. And when he went to be sentenced, they were going to give him 178 months. So he has a mandatory minimum of 25. or sorry minimum mandatory of 25 so he gets there and because he cooperated they're going to give him 78 months and he went and he literally asked the judge can you give me 180 months because that would be the mandatory minimum you know if you don't count the priors if you count if you count one less prior it wouldn't have been 25 would have been 15 so he's like can I get 180 because if you give me 178 and I go in with that paperwork They know I cooperated because of my charge. And so the judge is like, I'll give you a 180. And he's like, okay, went in with one 80. And listen, you want to talk about somebody who walked around?
Starting point is 00:24:28 First of all, everybody in there, he called the snitch. He thought it was a snitch and he walked around with that paper like in his pocket. If somebody said, I got 180. If I cooperate, you know, and they'd be like, oh man, I'm sorry, bro. I'm sorry. That projection is really good. Cool other people what you're doing. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:46 It's a horrible situation. But yeah, it was killed me because, because like, you know, that whole, the whole street code thing is like, you're, you're, you're protecting people that don't care about you, that aren't going to help you when you go to prison, that aren't selling you out, right. Absolutely. But I literally know a guy that I wrote a story about because when I went to federal prison, I started writing guys stories, right?
Starting point is 00:25:13 I started writing true crime stories. because I'm an opportunist. So, you know, there was nobody in there that could write. And I realized after writing one story that you could sell these things for options. So I said, I get out of here with a bunch of stories. Maybe I can sell some options. So I did a story on one guy, never been in trouble, ends up, he raised in the projects, ends up getting his concealed weapons license and ends up being a guard for like cash logistics as a company that moves money.
Starting point is 00:25:46 you know they move money for banks and stuff right okay so he and he and his buddy decide that they're going to rob the place where he works they'll he's they're going to set him up to get robbed so he sets it up so he gets robbed they get three and a half million FBI knows immediately he's involved in it I mean he's a he's a numskull so and the guys were idiots too but they'd been to federal prison for robbing banks so when he get so then he turns around they screw him out of the money he gets maybe a couple I think he got got like two three hundred thousand they're supposed to give him a million and change they're supposed to split it in thirds he they never give him like 10 percent 300 grand they keep whatever so he spends
Starting point is 00:26:27 the money he blows the money right away you know he has no idea how to what to do with this money so he buys just stupid shit gives it away to people you know um this sounds like the good fellows with the fur coat oh yeah just get it out of here yeah a year later he decides you know what I'm going to rob one of these places, one of these things myself. So he robs a truck himself. He does get the money, but he doesn't even get home before the cops have him. So when the FBI comes in, they say, look, you're going to do like 10 years just for this robbery. But we know you were involved in the other robbery with these two guys.
Starting point is 00:27:01 Now, nobody's talking right now. But if you talk, one, we can give you a pass on that robbery. And we can knock your 10 years or 15, whatever it was. we can knock it down you do five six years you'll be home he said i'm not going to do that i'm not doing that anyway a few like six he gets sentenced he gets whatever it was 10 15 years six months later the FBI arrest the other two guys they immediately cooperate they cooperated against him he gets re-indicted he gets additional 10 or 15 years he ends up with 25 years they end up with less than 10 years they're out on the street right now he's still serving
Starting point is 00:27:45 the original 25 and they've been in and out of prison but see they'd been out in and out of prison they knew how it worked right and those these are the same guys that go to prison and call everybody a snitch um there's no honor amongst thieves yeah and now now he's in prison like he was not then in prison trying to cooperate now it's like you got nobody to cooperate for you're not a career criminal you don't know anybody right it's too and the FBI is like for that I can't Yeah. Like you had a chance. Like what, um, but I mean, that's what happens is these guys. They, you go to prison. They say don't say anything. They don't send you money. They don't come to see you. They steal everything in your house. I mean, it's just, you know, they get caught. Then they turn
Starting point is 00:28:25 around. They cooperate against you. I mean, and you see it so much. Like I'd seen it by the time I got arrested the second time. My second federal sentence, I was like, uh, uh, that's not happening. this time yeah i know better now your mama is the only one putting money in your commissary when you go away like this my mom came to see me every two weeks for almost 14 years good woman you know all those guys that i didn't ever say anything about the first time i got arrested they didn't answer the home yeah you know yeah so i mean that's that's part of the bargaining tool is like you know we got you on this one right it is what it is And I would be very straightforward with these people.
Starting point is 00:29:10 I didn't, I wasn't into lying, right? That's just not good karma. That's not the way you're, if you tell a lie, now it has to be the truth. And it's too complicated to make lies truth. So I would just be straight up with them. Like, listen, we got you dead to rights. You're going to go do time. Like I would have to go to Rikers Island sometimes, which was like the jail for holding prisoners for New York City.
Starting point is 00:29:32 And I hated it. It was dirty. It was noisy. It was loud. Forget about like all the fights and the shivs and all. the other stuff that goes on just you know like i'm i was just the place is just a nightmare i'd be like do you really want to go to the island and be stuck there the these guys are going to get caught they're gonna you know they're gonna rat you out as soon as you get caught like you it's a survival
Starting point is 00:29:53 do you want to survive and like be able to be okay and maybe we can help you like straighten your life out i mean we had a couple people that were like you know drug addicts and you don't you know it's it's tricky to sign them up but it was it was more like some people i felt like mentoring not even like signing up as an informant, just be like, bro, we got to get you on the straight and hour. You got to clean your life up, you know, like, let's, let's find God. Let's get the Bible, get a job. Let's try and get you into away from this and get out of that life. Because granted, there are like criminals that are like bad dudes.
Starting point is 00:30:28 They just have no empathy. They will kill you. They don't care. You know, they don't care who they hurt or, you know, what they steal or there is no, like, conscience there. But then there are a few that get into the life because they didn't have a father figure and they, you know, they hung out with their boys and their boys got into drugs and gang stuff and whatever and inner city stuff. And that was that, that's the only thing that they knew, right? That's all that they know. So they don't know like going to a job nine to five. I mean, that's like an unrealistic expectation for them is like you want me to go and deal with rush hour traffic every day and work from nine to five and make 50,000 a year. I can sling crack. sleep all day and make a hundred grand a week you know like why would i ever be a normal person so it was it was tough to see because you just see this repetitive thing of like these 15
Starting point is 00:31:19 16 year old kids of you know they're getting into trouble and it's like you know the life they're going to lead and so you try and if they're not going to cooperate with you or you know whatever you just try and push them onto the right direction you know like i was you once man i used to run from the cops and you know like I did all that stuff but you know now I am a cop because I you get too old and you can't run anymore you know like there's only so many fences you can hop in your life so it's funny my my wife um she was she got uh indicted on like a huge um meth conspiracy out of okechobe before I met her okay and she um was going to trial and she was going to trial because in her mind she thought they didn't catch me with anybody and the only people that they've got are friends of
Starting point is 00:32:10 mine they're not going to cooperate so you know in the feds i don't know how it is in the state but you get your witness list about 10 days before trial you can imagine what that witness list looked like she was like everybody yeah like like nobody was willing to spare me you know like it's like no like every single person had signed up that you she was and of course they've already taken pleas or they're getting please and it's funny too she's like you you knew something was wrong because the lawyer would come see them or they'd take them out and they'd come back in and they'd be glancing at you they go hey what's up and they'd put them in because when they rest them all they put them in the same pod right and then really okay yeah well
Starting point is 00:32:53 at the same time yeah well i'm not saying all like 40 people but let's say you've got 15 or 20 people that are in the same u.s marshals the holdover together and there's 150 people and so you've got like 30 of your co-defendants. Well, what happens is as they, their lawyers come and see them, come and see them, and then one day they come in and they have this look. And then one day, and the next thing you know, they, you know, then they lock everybody down. And the next thing, you know, the cops come to them and they take them and all of their legal work and they move them out of the pot. And you know, right then they just added their name to my witness list.
Starting point is 00:33:29 And then the next person, you know, a week later, this person gets moved. It's like they're all being moved the same pod, you know? And and that's what had been happening for her. She was like, so I felt like something was wrong, you know. But then when she got that stick feeling. Yeah. Yeah. And then of course, she turned around and went, you know, said, hey, call her lawyer and said,
Starting point is 00:33:49 look, I want to plead guilty. And the original three year offer was off the table. Yeah. You know, now it's like. Yeah, you got to jump on it. And then the feds, you know, you can go to trial and get 20 years or you can take five years you know she's like i'll take five years there's a little over five years but she's like i'll i'll take that because that beats the 20 that if i lose and i know i'll lose because you've got
Starting point is 00:34:13 eight people that that are all going to get on the stand and say absolutely she was supplying me she was this she was that you know and it's a it's a it's a hard lesson to learn when you're being hanging out with these guys and your friends and i even know police officers who have you know they're undercover for a year i've interviewed guys have been undercover for six months or a year or two years you're like you know and you're you're eating with these guys and you're hanging out and you have to keep reminding yourself like like god you know you're laughing with them and joking with them and and you know you're like this is not a bad guy you know it's like and then you know you know that it's i'm going to be arresting this guy at some point but he's like so you know
Starting point is 00:34:53 you know you feel bad because you know the undercover guys are like you know of course some undercover guys are like the more they get to know them they're like oh this guy's a scumbag like i can't wait for this to end yeah but but um yeah it's up and then you know what's so funny is you've got the street guys that sell drugs that are always talking about snitches and not trust in this guy and these guys and the truth it and the truth is is like like the el chapos of the world cooperated you heard what happened with uh el maya right like they everybody always turns yeah can you imagine that old guy the guy's like in his 70s he's like he's never been arrested there's like two photographs of him he's with el chafo's son
Starting point is 00:35:39 checking out some airfields clock throw a bag over his head tie him up throw him in the plane and fly him you couldn't you couldn't if you saw that in a movie you know you'd say that's not that's not reasonable that would never happen. Yeah. Pain. Yeah, it's, we, we tried to kind of outsmart the perps when we would have a few guys in or something, especially if they were all arrested for like the same crime, you separate them immediately. So they can't like, but we, I would always, and even if we had, because we had like one cell area,
Starting point is 00:36:13 we had like two separate cells. So no matter who was in there, if I had one guy in there, I would kind of feel them out in the cells, see if you wanted to talk to me or whatever and then, you know, leave them. But if I had more than one guy in there, because they're all going to go down to central booking, which is the holding place for arraignment, right? They're all going to, and then they're going to know people who are there and they're going to start talking and be like, yo, that guy was upstairs and that chick's office for a long time. You know, he ratted, you know, like when they come down and they're not hungry anymore and they have like the chicken grease and, you know, a soda.
Starting point is 00:36:40 It's not a good look because now, you know, you're putting this guy, he's going to get his ass kicked into the cells. So I would always take everybody and let everybody see. And I would keep track of the time so that I knew like everybody kind of. came up into my office and was debriefed for a certain period of time, whether they were cooperating or not. Some people who didn't want to talk. So it'd be like you want a cigarette, hang out, ask about it. Because you never know, once you get to know somebody, people like to talk. Yeah. So I would just be like, you know, I'd almost sometimes pretend like I wasn't even paying attention to them. Like you get a cigarette, I want a soda. Okay, cool. You know
Starting point is 00:37:10 anything about this. And the other thing. No, I don't know anything. Oh, all right, cool. And then you just start talking to them about, you know, the baseball game or the, you know, the football game or who were your draft picks or something. And then you kind of start leading into other stuff and sometimes that would warm them up but i always kept track of the time if anybody was in the cells i always brought like everybody up um and that way i wouldn't have like a guilty conscience that if they got their ass kicked in jail it was because they knew that some you know they had cooperated with me but i would tell them flat out like listen man i would release you right now because you know sometimes in new york city you can release on a desk
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Starting point is 00:38:20 because we don't want to raise you raise people up you come back later and come and talk to me so you had to be very careful because you need people to cooperate but you don't need it out there that they're cooperating with you so you know it was uh you know but it's just it's smart for people who get locked up to cooperate it's just it's the it's the smart move because if it's not going to be you it's going to be them and you know that whole thing snitches get stitches just snitches don't get stitches. Snitches get no jail time. That's that's that's it.
Starting point is 00:38:55 So it was a, when I first got locked up, right, and I had like 26 years. So it was going around. The guys were like, that's a white collar guy. He got 26 years.
Starting point is 00:39:05 So guys are coming up to me. And this is really more like when I, well, I know I said this into the medium too. I went to a medium security prison. Guys would be like, bro, how much time did you get?
Starting point is 00:39:15 I go 26 years. You know, it was actually 26 years and four months, but I don't like to say the four months. It makes it sound like I'm whining. What does four months matter after 26 years? Exactly. Yeah. That's like a long nap. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:31 Yeah. So I was going to say, have more time standing in line. Yeah. So I would go, you know, I'd be like, oh, I got, you know, 26 years. I go, but they go, man, that's fucked up. I go, yeah. I said, well, I could be out of here. tomorrow. Somebody might fuck up and tell me where there's a body. And they'd be like, damn, bro,
Starting point is 00:39:50 it's like that. I go, oh, it's exactly. Like, we're not friends, you know. They'd be like, oh, okay, okay, you know. And they kind of, but I joke around a lot, you know, I don't think realize how serious I was. Yeah. It was like seven years in before I got my sentence reduced. Yeah. So I got to reduce twice. That's, that's lucky. That's, that's just lucky that you like knew the right stuff and everything and yeah it was a lot of hard work and it's funny because i'll be interviewed by other guys who are who've been locked up i was interviewed by this guy named ian bick and he was like you know and he got like all of like three years or something and he's you know big on like not cooperating it's like where you got three years yeah anybody can be a stand-up
Starting point is 00:40:37 guy for three years um but he was like he's like damn bro like you don't you like you weren't concerned about being a snitch. And I was like, well, no. I said, you know, Ian, you're not going to believe this. But at some point, I had to, I had to make the choice, you know, 26 years in prison or the respect of my fellow inmates. You're not going to believe this. It wasn't, though. you know it was you know yeah it always it always people will always tell you when when they're faced with the reality of their situation they they're going to cooperate and you can't blame them for it and you know you it would get irritated because i'm like cut the rat crap out just just stop it with that with that stupid you know name on yourself it's self-preservation you're doing this because you
Starting point is 00:41:37 can't you're going to help other people you're going to make your neighborhood safer and you're going to get that other bad people in jail and you know you're going to you're going to work off your time that's just what it is i got no problem you can call me a rat 12 years off my sentence i'm supposed to be in prison right now yeah 20 30 you can i got people in comments that call me a rat like you rat piece of the absolutely i'm leaning into it it was the right call yeah i wish i knew more I wish I had more names I could have given. My God.
Starting point is 00:42:15 Yeah, what's so funny too is like, the people that cooperated against me, like I talked to all of them. You know what I mean? Like I don't have a problem. Yeah. Like I'm like, hey, what's up? Like I, you know, I never, I don't bring it up or anything, you know, but, you know, hey, I'm no problem. I got one guy that cooperated against me. He doesn't talk to me, but he and he never went to prison.
Starting point is 00:42:34 And I have, but I'd talk to. I'd love to have dinner with them. I'd love to go hang out with it. You did the right thing. So there's, I mean, there's, there is that with like the perps and with, you know, a lot of the cops because we would, we would know each other. So you'd run into the same people all the time. So I had like this, this one gang that was for a while, like a really driver of crime. It was, you know, they were doing all kinds of credit card fraud and all this other stuff and shootings and, you know, territory beeps and stuff.
Starting point is 00:43:03 So they would see me and I, you know, I knew them and it'd be like, you know, what up. you know how you doing what's up you know because it was it was like a mutual respect i guess a little bit and it was you know like it was it was an understanding that like sometimes i'm gonna catch you and sometimes you're gonna get away with it and we're gonna play it like that but like you know you see them get a rest and it's like bro what happened this time man you want a soda you want to eat like we would know each other and like one time this one guy it's like the coyote and the cheap dog right yeah like yeah like yeah it's like a nod of respect like yeah okay cool And it was, it was also nice because when these guys knew they got caught,
Starting point is 00:43:41 they didn't play this game of like resisting and fighting and throwing punches and stuff. That was that was almost looked at by them as like a rookie move of a perp or you're like fighting the cops. Like, you know, you got caught. Go, go deal. You know, the judge is going to cut you a break. You're going to get a plea. You know, you don't need to fight. So it was like, it was an appreciation of us that it was like, okay, we got you.
Starting point is 00:44:01 You know it turned around, put your hands behind you back. It's over. But, you know, I would see them on the street. One time this guy got his good buddy got killed and, you know, they had the whole gang is out on their corner and, you know, representing or whatever. And we were driving around because we wanted to make sure we didn't have retaliation shootings and make sure these guys weren't going off with guns to go shoot whoever it was that, you know, did the shooting or whatever. And so I see, I see the guy on the corner and he was historical crime. And I just, you know, I mean, I know he's done a lot of illegal stuff. And I know that he's not the nicest person to other, to his fellow humans, but he was hurting and I felt bad for him.
Starting point is 00:44:40 And I actually like, I got out of the car and I was like, bro, I'm so sorry if he had lost. And I gave him a hug because I just, I felt for this guy. He was like, it was like his, his non-blood brother. And I felt for him, you know, and I just, I mean, like before I retired, I would see other guys from the same thing. And they would be like, yo, Mons, what are you doing out on the street, son? You're about to retire. You shouldn't be out here. you should be like in the precinct tiding out you know and like they were like yo you want to
Starting point is 00:45:06 we'll roll you a blunt for when you retire if you want to come smoke with us and i'm like yeah thanks for the offer i don't i don't want to be smoking on your porch and you know get locked up by my fellow officers that i just uh you know retired from but you know it was it was like a it was like a mutual understanding and respect and they did bad things and when they did bad things they had to go to jail for and they had to answer for it and that's that's what it was But it's, you know, you just, you work in the same place for a long time. You see the same people. And it's there's a code.
Starting point is 00:45:39 There's a code. And we, you know, I wish they hadn't chosen that life. It was like wasted talent, but that's what they chose. And, you know, sometimes we got lucky and caught them. And sometimes they got lucky and got away with it. I interviewed a retired FBI agent, uh, named, um, Jim DeOrio. And he was funny. He's, he'd lock guys up for like, he's like, I have locked these guys up for like 15 years.
Starting point is 00:46:00 Like, these are mobsters. wise guys, you know, so like he's like, he said, you know, 15 years goes by or 10 or 12 years and they get out of federal prison. And he's, and he said, you know, and I'm in New York. Like, I'm, I'm at a restaurant. I, look, I hear some guy say, Jim Dioio over. The guy's like, hey, it's me, Polly. He's like, what are you doing? He's like, what are you doing? He's like, he's like, you go over, you sit down and you talk to him for a little bit. Like, I'm eating with someone, but I'm glad yeah I got out like a year ago bro I was how you doing and he's like he's like this guy like this guy was you know robin banks or this guy was you know whatever he was doing you know and
Starting point is 00:46:42 at the time what you know he's like was you know he's like he was a big tough guy and he was you know go fuck yourself I ain't got nothing to say or whatever the case may be and got 15 years and then he gets out you know 12 years later and he's like it's like it's like it's like it's just like they do what they do and you do and you do and that's the way the world works and there's no reason to be angry and he's playing his part when he gets arrested and you know but the thing i'm gonna say one one more thing i was going to say about the cooperation thing is that it's like let's face it most police work gets most cases get solved through some type of cooperation and so you know unless it's somebody grabs a purse and the cops
Starting point is 00:47:24 chase them down or they run a red light and they chase them down like they're there for the event like Typically, you need the neighbors or you need other criminals, mostly it's other criminals to get caught and say, look, I know there was a murder six months ago. I know where the guy is and I know where the gun is. You know, like, and I was there, I can help you with that. So, you know, is it in his own interest? Of course, but that's everything and life is in your own, your own interest. So, you know, to me, I have talked to these guys who will be like, yeah, you should never cooperate. Okay.
Starting point is 00:47:53 If you didn't cooperate, society wouldn't function. And you think in your sick mind, these guys think that they would be okay in that society. But the truth is, that's chaos. That's anarchy and it's chaos. And you couldn't function there. And even if you could function your wife and your children and your mother and your older mother and older father. And most people can't like, it doesn't function like that. Like you're delusional to think not cooperating is the way.
Starting point is 00:48:27 way to help society in general. So I just thought, you know, I've thought about that, you know, many times when these guys say that and, you know, typically I just laugh it off. But when you really think about it, it's like somebody has to help because the cops just can't do it on their own, you know, they would have to be surveillance cameras everywhere. And then I'm not even sure you'd have maybe AI. Maybe if you had cameras everywhere and AI was running those cameras and watching them, maybe eventually we'll get to that. But it's not happening right now. Yeah. Cooperation is like the criminal currency. You have to do it for self-survival and you have to do it to, you know. It has to be done because otherwise the bad guys are like going to really, I mean, the real bad guys that like really, I mean, I was doing a lot of like animal cruelty stuff of like just brutal, brutal acts on animals that were just absolutely horrific. And a lot of the time it was because we had tips. We got tips from people that, you know, this guy did this or I see this dog,
Starting point is 00:49:28 I see this is going on and they would videotape it and send it to us or whatever. And then, you know, that was the only way that we would know that, you know, this dog gets beat with a baseball bat on a near daily basis and, you know, has every ribbon is body broken and it's just sitting there suffering, starving to death slowly and getting beaten. And if it wasn't for somebody speaking up and saying something about it, you would never know. So police work, I think, really relies on people like that for the good of society.
Starting point is 00:49:53 people in my opinion who hurt animals just they have no empathy towards anything there's just there's no excuse for hurting something innocent hurting children babies you know the shaken baby syndrome there's no excuse for it and these people are dangerous and they need to be taken off the street and you know the only way sometimes you do that is by an informant whether it be like a registered or like a tipster right yeah i was going to say animals don't call 9-1-1 um Yeah, they just sit there and take the abuse. Right. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:50:26 Or their uses like leverage too. Like, you know, I'm going to, the husband or, you know, sometimes the wife. Really? But very rarely, very rarely. But usually the husband's like, you know, you love your little, you know, your little puppy. I'm going to beat the crap out of it. And this is what I'm going to do to you. Or, you know, like they would threaten the woman or like a lot of times the women were
Starting point is 00:50:45 afraid to leave because they didn't want to leave their animal because they knew it would happen. And domestic violence shelters sometimes don't take the animals or they have nowhere to go. that will take the animal so it's it was it was a you know that is a hard situation i feel i feel for i feel for the animals a lot because it's it's just it's not fair it's really i would never think that like to me i would like that scenario you just said you just thought well i'm going to kick the dog or you know like i wouldn't even i didn't even realize that's a thing yeah it's the the stuff that you see in animal abuse like i mean you get your run-in-the-mill dog fighting which is horrible
Starting point is 00:51:22 and most people don't even know that it goes on because it's so underground. But you get the people who, I mean, I had like a German Shepherd that was raped and we recovered, well, the vet recovered a metal broomstick handle, you know, in the dog's vagina. And you could see like the hair on her muzzle was missing, you know, because she was, she was muzzled. So she had like the hair missing because she was muzzled so often. And, you know, it's the chain of custody is broken a lot.
Starting point is 00:51:51 so it's hard to prove these things because they're personal coming and rescue the animal cruelty investigations are like probably one of the hardest to do because you have a victim that can only speak through their injuries most of the time you don't have witnesses and the people who do it I mean you just you kill a dog you just throw in a garbage bag and put it out for the trash and nobody thinks otherwise you know like a body usually the bodies you know are discovered but you know the dogs are found in the bottom of the trash compact or that are thrown down you know 20 stories in the projects and stuff and you get these jobs and it's like does anybody know who's this dog this is has anybody seen anybody with this dog and you know then sometimes you
Starting point is 00:52:31 catch them and then you got to talk to them and see if they'll give you any statements and showing empathy towards those people for me was hard because i didn't feel like i was talking to somebody who had a heart and a soul i was talking to somebody who just you know did not care at all and would just willingly hurt something that couldn't defend itself. And that to me was just you're missing something up here when you're capable of doing that and not feeling regret for it. Granted, some felt regret and stuff, but some people just, they don't care. And that's, that's scary to see that side of society too.
Starting point is 00:53:07 You know, you have your legitimate, you know, upstanding criminals who are like, you know, they just do their thing and that is what it is. And then you have the people that are just brutal people that are just out there to hurt. They just have this need and drive inside of them to hurt other things that can't defend themselves. And we need the people who see this stuff to report it because, you know, you don't report it. We're never going to find it sometimes. How long did you do that? The animal unit I was in for like nine months.
Starting point is 00:53:37 It was a brand new unit. It was me, this other guy, and the sergeant. And it was basically like the ASPCA had turned law enforcement for animal cruelty over to the NYPD. So we were like creating how the NYPD was going to handle this. So I was creating PowerPoints to train cops on how to do investigations and how to like what to ask and, you know, what to document it scenes and stuff. And then I was also going out there and looking for cases of animal cruelty that, you know, we could build cases on. And I was at the detective level, so it wasn't, like, responding to it. It was like, okay, here's a complaint for a dog that got hit by a car.
Starting point is 00:54:17 Was it an accident or did somebody intentionally hit it? You know, was it? So I did that for like nine months. And, you know, my husband said to me, he's like, you're like depressed. You know, like it's not, it's not fun. Like, police work was fun for me. This was not fun for me. This was, this, this, it was hard to see a lot of the stuff that I saw.
Starting point is 00:54:37 And it was also hard for me to maintain a distance. Like, when you see people. shot and you see, you know, I had a baby that would shake in baby syndrome and I've held the hands of people as they died. And you do, you do these things and you develop a sort of a separation from it. Not that you don't have empathy and, you know, feeling, but to survive in that world of being a cop, you kind of have to put those feelings aside and kind of forget about it, right? Just turn your heart away. Do the job that you're doing. Handle it, help the person. But then you have to be able to go home and like have a happy home life and for me the whole animal thing was just it was
Starting point is 00:55:13 like seeing the worst of society and the inability of justice to be brought you know when you have like a baby that's hurt or you know a woman who's shot and she's bleeding on the street and you know the husband did it those criminals will be brought to justice there will be a trial and there will be witnesses presented and you know they will get their jail time a lot of the time with this stuff that I was getting, I couldn't make an arrest. Justice couldn't be brought. And it was, it was rough for me to have to try and deal with that. So I left that unit, went back to the, to the 105, back to the Intel spot after like nine months. Okay. Other than the animal unit, do you ever need any interesting stories? Oh, gosh. So, so many. I'm trying to, like, think it's like as you talk, you,
Starting point is 00:56:03 you remember um stories that would come up like um i had a i had a case where we had a a robbery at a at a at a bodega there's a robbery at gunpoint at a bodega which is like the corner candy store for people who aren't from new york it's you know yeah i was going to say people it's not called a bodega it's a bodega um but that's you know you buy your beer and some groceries and you know they kind of have you know your cigarettes and stuff there so these places got frequently robbed so my partner and I were an anti-crime and the job comes over so we kind of are circling the area to see if we see the guy and they put a description over of like khaki shorts and a black hoodie right so I'm driving down and I see this guy walking and he's got khaki shorts and he's got
Starting point is 00:56:50 a black hoodie but it's over his shoulder and he's wearing like a white t-shirt so like whenever they'll never put they'll never put this together yeah like yeah like we're not like he should have just chucked it and maybe but the khaki shorts but like Like whenever somebody who put a description over, you always take the outer layer of clothing off, right? Because it's like, you know, they're going to lose it. So assume whatever the pants, like they never kicked their sneakers off, right?
Starting point is 00:57:11 So what sneakers was he wearing? So this guy happened to choose like these very bright, red, white, and blue sneakers. So we jump out on him. And I'm assuming that he's got a gun still because usually they don't chuck the gun because guns are expensive to buy on the street. So I just, I yoke him up real quick.
Starting point is 00:57:26 You know, I put, I, which you take his arms, you approach him from behind. I put his arms behind his back as I'm saying. like police don't move or whatever so he doesn't think that you know he's getting robbed on the street um and so i see he's got like a bulge in his pants pocket so i grab it and it's the cash from the robbery so i'm like all right this is our guy you know with this so i take yeah like you know like do you not believe in banks you know that's the famous i don't believe in the bank i just carry my cash on me all the time i'm like yeah that's what every normal person does you know
Starting point is 00:57:57 singles and fives and tens it just got taken out of a register so you know i take his sweatshirt and I throw it over my shoulder so he can't like chuck it and I forget about it because it was black and it was dark out. So the victim comes and we do a show up and it's positive. So we go into the, he gets transported back to the precinct and the detectives are going to do their interview, right? So I go back to the bodega and he's got great video this dude. I mean, high definition, color, legit video. And I watch what the kid does. He comes in with the black hoodie on covering his face and I think he thinks because his face is covered will never solve it, but there are those red, white and blue sneakers and the khaki shorts. So he, he was kind of brutal. Like he,
Starting point is 00:58:39 he robbed the guy. He pointed the gun at him, robbed him. And then as he was walking out, another store worker was like sitting by the entrance. And for no reason, the worker was just sitting there, not moving, like just kind of froze in, you know, doing nothing. And he just cold-clocked him for no reason. And I'm like, that's such a jerk thing to do. So I have all the information. I get the video and everything. So I go back to the precinct and he's in the box with the detective denying everything. I was just walking.
Starting point is 00:59:09 I wasn't doing anything, you know, just total innocent. So if you didn't know any better, this kid was very convincing. He did nothing wrong. You got the wrong guy. He would never do this. You know, he was going to the store to get his mommy something and, you know, whatever. So I just looked at him and I'm like, bro, we have you on video. And I just told him what he did in the store.
Starting point is 00:59:32 And I'm like, you see the sneakers that you're wearing? I'm going to take a picture of those sneakers and I'm going to show it to a jury. And the shorts that you're wearing, I'm going to take a picture of those shorts and show it to the jury. And we're going to put the clothes that you're wearing now up next to the video of you robbing the store. Who do you think is going to believe the truth? Right. So I'm like, just, you know, just cut the crap and be honest. So, you know, he told what happened.
Starting point is 00:59:57 and he ended up doing time or whatever, but you get, you get nonsense like that of like, just like be honest. Like we had another guy one time when I was in the street narcotics. Did you ask him why he punched the guy? Yeah. I was like, why? That's such a dick move. Dude.
Starting point is 01:00:13 Why would you do that? And he's like, I don't know. I don't know. I just did it. I'm like, okay. Well, you know, that's another charge. So good move. Stop.
Starting point is 01:00:21 Do you know how fast you were going? I'm going to have to write you a ticket to my new movie, the naked gun. Liam Nissan. Buy your tickets now and get a free chili dog. Chili dog not included. The naked God. Tickets on sale now. August 1st. That's an assault three. So congratulations. You just add another charge onto your robbery. But and here's like the open-ended thing is that he didn't have the gun on him. So that was the other problem of like, I'm like, where did you ditch the gun?
Starting point is 01:00:46 Because in my mind, I don't really know what his path of flight was. And you know, like, I knew where I found him? So we would check the vicinity. But like from there to the store, like where else does you go? that you know because sometimes when they run they have fences and stuff and he just was like I just threw over a fence I don't know where it was so we had a huge search for this gun because the last thing you want is some kid to find it and play with it and have like an innocent life taken because you know you didn't do a good enough job looking for the gun so we never we never found that he saw was a BB gun but I didn't believe him you know you can't you said there was another guy yeah so oh so the The another guy in the street narcotics unit, he, weed was illegal in New York City then.
Starting point is 01:01:32 And weed, I wrote a little bit about this in my book that is like, everybody thinks it's like a peaceful drug and like hippie movement and like love and peace. But my experience is that precipitates every other crime. Only the real hardened criminals who are like up to legitimately no good and do like organized stuff. They don't smoke because they know it's an easy way for us to, you know, once you smell it, that's it. We get the car. We can search everywhere. So regular everyday criminals smoke like everybody else does. And they would do other things like robberies and other stuff like that.
Starting point is 01:02:09 So it would always graduate to other stuff. So we would go and look for guys smoking and stuff and try and stop that trouble from escalating into something more. So we stop this car. It's a hot summer night. All four windows are down. There's four people in the car. And it's three girls and a guy. and each of them has like a blunt and they're just smoking all right well then everybody goes so we we go to
Starting point is 01:02:31 open the car you know start step out of the car whatever police and he's like i'm not going i'm not going so now it's a fight trying to open the door and he's screaming and like my partner looks down and sees he's got the little blades the razor blades in the little pocket of the door so he's going to reach for the blades and we're trying to stop it because i'm like what's this guy going to like he's going to slice me like I don't what is this guy doing it's weed like it's not that big of a deal like you're going to get a desk of here and take it's going to take your and you're going to be out in like maybe three or four hours like it's not crazy deal now he's fighting so as he's fighting us he starts screaming mama mama and sure enough across the street out comes mama wearing her curlers with the
Starting point is 01:03:14 shower cap the pink fluffy bathrobe the slippers running out there don't hit my son don't be police is beating on him screaming at us making this whole big chaotic scene over weed and i'm like this guy is sitting here with these three girls i don't know if they were girlfriends or whatever but they weren't going to be after this because instead of being a man and being like okay you guys got me he's screaming for his mommy i'm like what what do you scream for your mommy for but you know you kind of i mean i don't know how other cops felt about this but i always kind of gave respect to the guys who maybe tried to get away but then once they were caught they kind of were like okay you got me and you know like I had this I had this kid one time it was it was Thanksgiving Eve and I had off the next day which was rare right so I'm like okay I don't really want to get involved in anything tonight we're just kind of drive around if we see trouble it's nothing we can do but I just I you know so we're driving around and it was like 11 or 12 it was late 11 or 12 o'clock at night and I'm like I got to pee my bladder's going to explode let's go back to the precinct I'm I got to go to the bathroom.
Starting point is 01:04:18 So we're driving this big unmarked van. So my partner spins around and we're taking a ride back to the precinct. And as we're going, I see two guys running up the sidewalk in the shadows. And then I look and there's like a Chinese delivery guy standing in the middle of the street with like bloody nose, blood pouring down his jacket. And I'm like, oh, God, we just walked into like, I have to pee. And we just walked into like a robbery. I'm like, you've got to be kidding me right now.
Starting point is 01:04:45 Couldn't get worse luck than that because I, you know, you know, like you're wearing your belt and it kind of puts pressure on your bladder as you're sitting there with like your gun and all this stuff. So we said, you know, we stopped the guy and we're like, are you all right? Stay here. Don't move. We're going to go grab these guys because we knew it was them. He's pointing at them. But I, you know, they're running. So we catch up to them and we get like a couple of blocks away. We, we jump out of the van and we grab them. So I grab the one guy and he's wearing one of those like billowy winter coats. Like they're like, you know, they add like six inches to your to your body you know it's just like you're walking around like
Starting point is 01:05:19 human snowman and he's got this jacket on and he's got blood it's a white jacket he's got blood all over it from the victim i'm like well you just incriminate yourself you know like whatever and then his buddy was with him so my partner grabs his buddy and his buddy was very tall and this guy was about my height so i'm putting over that you know we have a pickup robbery this is my location the victim's over here get an ambulance over there you know i need another car over here so i just i have this guy up against the fence as I'm putting over the radio and my partner is trying to cuff the other guy. So I put the radio on my back pocket. I go to cuff, cuff this guy up, but I can't find his wrist because of this stupid puff jacket. And I'm like, I can't find his arm. And he literally
Starting point is 01:06:01 just does like the quick body twist. And I'm left like with the jacket. Like you, you know, like I there's nothing for me to hold. I'm not holding onto his body part. I'm holding his jacket. So his jacket just rips out of my arm. And he's gone. So I go and take it after him. And he's gone. So I go and take after him. Meanwhile, my partner started, the other perps started fighting with my partner, he got off of him because he's in another puffy jacket. So they go running in the opposite directions. Now we have like two foot pursuits in two different directions. So my guy makes a left and goes like northbound on the street. And I'm right behind him. And as soon as I turn the corner, he's gone. I don't see him. It's like vacant street. And I'm like he couldn't have
Starting point is 01:06:39 gotten far. He went up this block. So, you know, I put over the location, foot pursuit, whatever. And the last known location that I had in his description and I turned my radio like almost off to like the lowest volume possible because I'm like he's here. I know he's here. So I'm creeping around and I get like to the next house up and I look up the driveway and in the back of the yard there's this huge beautiful maple tree. I mean it was just like it must have been a hundred years old. This thing was ginormous behind a garage and I'm looking and in like the street light from the other side of the street I can see branches moving. And I'm like, you know, we have a lot of raccoons in queens but there's nothing that's going to make this type of disturbance so i'm like this bastard's in
Starting point is 01:07:18 the tree i'm like nice try i got him so i'm like creeping trying to like get up the driveway so i can kind of get the jump on him because he's at such a disadvantage and at this point i don't know if this was like a strong arm robbery where he didn't have a weapon or if he had a weapon like so i'm just trying to like be able to at least creep up to him so i can get the jump on him even though tactically i'm a way disadvantage because he's on top of the roof in the tree so he sees me coming and he jumps off of the tree into the yard behind the house that i'm at so i take off and i have the fence and as i have the fence my foot doesn't hit the top bar and i go down and i fall like i think it was like a five foot fence or something and i fall right on my ass on the concrete and i just was like another one
Starting point is 01:08:03 like every like i just the breath got taken out of me and i'm like oh and i see the stars and I'm like that that's something something broke because it doesn't it doesn't feel good so I get up and I'm like oh like I can't my tailbone is killing me and I'm like I can't let this guy get away plus I don't know where my partner is meanwhile there's like police lights everywhere the whole street is lit up like daytime everybody because it was very close to the precinct so every cop from the precinct came out everybody's there so this guy ends up getting found underneath the car in the driveway because when he went to go run up the driveway he saw the other cop so he just like dove underneath the car and one of the detectives is like he's under the
Starting point is 01:08:43 car you know like like just like nods a lot he'd he'd been involved in so many police pursuits that like didn't even phase him he's like he's like come out from underneath the car just just come out we got you like it is what it is so he came out and um you know the other guy was eventually caught and so i these guys i ended up going to hospital i like broke my coxics so like the next day of Thanksgiving. It's like you can't sit. You can't stand. But like, you know, it was it was brutal. So I would see this guy over and over throughout the course of my career because I stayed in the same precinct for almost my whole career. So, you know, it's he would always get in trouble for something. He just couldn't help himself. And every time I would see him, I'd be like, bro, what are you in here for now? And then he would tell like the guys that were in the cells with him. You're like, yeah, she was chased me. I broke her ass. She busted her ass because of me. You know, like he would. So I was like, yeah, he did. I broke my toxic because of this guy because he was running from the cops and I you know I fell off the fence and then like the other guy I would see once in a while out there and he they kind of stopped being friends after that incident happened with the robbery but like I would see him on the street and
Starting point is 01:09:47 I'd see him hanging out with guys that I knew were like criminals and I would say his name as I woke up to him and I would be like his mom like what are you doing hanging out with these guys and they would be like yo son she knows you a name it's like it was I felt bad for him because I'm like his mother chasing him around but you know you see the you see the same guys over and over and you have the mutual respect but i'm like you know he've tried to run okay you know you did you know it's you got you didn't get away though we got you but it's that part of the job i really enjoyed because it was always like it you never knew i mean i feel like i'm telling all kinds of crazy war stories now but like talking about this story
Starting point is 01:10:25 reminds me of like another time of chasing this guy who had stolen a car and like that whole pursuit or whatever and it was like that was the the beauty of that job is that you never knew what was going to happen during the day you never know um that was just thinking about the uh the jacket the i think it was a signfeld episode where like um george bought one of those jackets is like they kept calling it he kept saying it was made of vortex or something i forget what it was massy it almost looked like a snowman wearing the jacket it's so fluffy and you can't get your arm you know like it's just it's like the it's like the christmas story he's you know you're yeah yeah i hated those jackets because and you could hide stuff like
Starting point is 01:11:12 perps would hide or bags like in the sleeves so when you would because it was i mean it was hard to feel anything so when you would toss people in the wintertime you'd have to like squeeze the sleeve so you could feel if they had like a mouth i mean and you know women were also hard i had i had one chick one time narcotics had brought her and she wasn't even my arrest but she had narcotics and I mean it is what it is you're going to hide stuff in every orifice of your body so if there's an opening in your body you're going to stick stuff in there so they would need females to do like the strip searches once in a while when they suspected that she had shoved something somewhere where the sun don't shine so of course that was me so I'm like I never enjoyed
Starting point is 01:11:55 it it was always an uncomfortable experience so this one chick one time I'm like you know searching her and I pull because like women's bras have the underwire right so i pull it away and out falls a crack pipe with the rock out from underneath her bra and i'm like seriously dude like i why don't you just tell me this was here now it's like broken glass like so you know i kind of kick it away to the side so that i can get her like you know handcuffed in a way and she's like no you don't understand this isn't my bra and i'm like what what are you talking about she's like i just i just found it and i just put it on i didn't even know that was in that that's not mine this isn't look the bra doesn't even fit me look it doesn't even fit me
Starting point is 01:12:35 And I'm like, good try, good try. Not going to fly in court. I don't think, I don't think you're going to get away with that one. So, you know, they try and be like, slick. Yeah, not going to work. Well, you know, the guys they do the, they're the strip searches. They, you know, bend over, squat and cough. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:12:57 I always ask the cop. I'm like, why? Like, have you ever, has there ever been a situation where some guy coughed and like a, a 22 dropped out of his ass. I mean, is that ever happened? And they're like, no, but you know what has happened? They're like, listen, you'll see it like a cell phone or something or they're like, it does work.
Starting point is 01:13:15 And I'm like, really? And he's like, yeah, yeah. Okay. Yeah. I mean, there's stories that, that was the other part was like the searching people on the street is that guys love to hide drugs underneath there. So, you know, like you got to like, and you know, sometimes you don't have the Empire. Like, I know I'm a girl, but I have to search you too. Like, you know, we only have
Starting point is 01:13:38 a certain amount of people and there's, we're number outnumbered here by perp. So I have to search you. And, you know, you'd have to do like the tap to make sure there's nothing in there. And I can't tell you how many times you do that tab. It's like, yeah, there's, I feel rocks. That's, you know, you either have some type of a severe disease where you have rocks forming down there or you have crack and I'm going to need to go and retrieve that. So, you know, but you try to make a joke of it. Like, you know, just a little pickle, no big deal. You know. know whatever just joking around but it's like i'm not i'm not getting pleasure out of grabbing you know away it's just these are the orifices that are known locations for hiding stuff so i have to
Starting point is 01:14:15 go so um i why did you i mean what you didn't ever want to be like go to like homicide or go was there ever a specific division you wanted to go to or you just you know no i you know i you know i i didn't want to go too far from the street like i the investment of work was interesting to me, which was why the Intel spot was great because we did case investigations. There was times where, you know, you would, if you had a lot of perps and you had to brief them, you'd be in the precinct for, you know, a few hours or whatever. So there was that aspect of it. But then there was the street. You had to go out there on the street and, you know, do surveillance and do recon and send your informants out to do stuff. So that appealed to me
Starting point is 01:15:00 because I got the best of both worlds, whereas like going to work every day in like a suit. and kind of like showing up afterwards it was it just wasn't anything that I was really interested in doing because I just felt like it was it was kind of an after-the-fact thing and I still had the the drive for like adrenaline and being on the street and I felt like if I if I left the street I might kind of eventually lose some of that savvy because you're kind of just you know responding after the fact and you know I didn't want to lose that ability to see stuff that's going on because it it's really amazing when you when you see i mean even now like when i was driving down from florida from new york when i was
Starting point is 01:15:40 driving to florida was by myself moving um because my family had already moved down here and i went into a gas station it was like two or three o'clock in the morning and i pull in and i see you know the mopes on the side over there and it's like perps move the same no matter what state you're in and i saw them and they saw me and i saw that they were trying to like come over to me and i'm like you know, they're going to try and see if they can, they can rob me here. And I, you know, I was happy because at least I was able to recognize that. Like, I feel almost bad for regular people because they're just like waiting victims because you don't, you don't see that. So for me, that's why I love the street because that stuff kind of pops out at you when you see it long
Starting point is 01:16:18 enough. And I loved being able to be on the street and see that stuff and then be able to kind of take action and stop crimes or, you know, at least arrest the guy of a crime I've been committed. so when when people did was there were there so people would give you information and then you would would you pass it on like you're you're talking to some guy and he says listen you know I know about this or I know about that do you then just call the detective that investigated that or do you guys go out and kind of see if you can put something together and then go and hand it off to somebody I mean I'm not it depends so it depends on the information like if if if you were talking to me and you're like, you know, I have this scam and it's stealing money and it's involving this and
Starting point is 01:17:03 this and the other thing. Like that might be like a grand larceny thing. So I would take all the information down and then I would call the grand larceny guys and be like, you know, are you interested in this? Or if I had somebody who had information on a shooting or a homicide or, you know, they started talking about that. Okay, I got to call the case detective or if it's another precinct at least call one of my detectives and have them interview you because it's like, you know, they have the information on that particular case. they know what to ask and it also goes into like the court stuff of like now he's making admission statements or if he was involved in it now does Miranda come into play and stuff so depending on the
Starting point is 01:17:37 information that you've got it depended on if you would refer it elsewhere or if you would keep it in-house and then build a case on it so like we would do uh narcotic sales cases or people who were selling guns we would you know do that but then sometimes you also work with other units you work sometimes with the feds you work with other precincts you know you work with other counties if if it goes that way so it all depends on what information the person's giving you and also if it's credible you know you got to vet the information that they're giving you because you don't you don't want to be like getting information and then you call the case detective and they come down and stuff and then he's like he's full of shit because the story that he's telling isn't actually what
Starting point is 01:18:16 happened so you have to kind of make sure that he's not lying to you and we get lied to like all the time or partial truths you know it's like all right all right i'll be honest with you and then next thing you know it's like well that's not really the whole truth like i need you you're i'm gonna be honest with you you need to be honest with me so it would it would depend on what we had did you ever have like professional um informants that were like on the um that were actually getting paid like i've i've read articles where there are people written article one time i was in prison but there was also there i've read a few articles on this where there was actually it's funny this was actually a woman who um her boyfriend was a drug dealer and she was black and
Starting point is 01:18:56 she had like a gold they said they noticed they don't show her they she had a gold tooth they said they said but she was in college they like she's she's like had was two years into school they said she could have you know what they call their interview voice she could speak perfectly you know um or she could do the whole kind of street uh you know lingo right the whole street vernacular and and talk like she had, you know, like she was straight from the streets. So her boyfriend, who was a drug dealer, got arrested, went to trial like an idiot, got 20-something years. She goes into the DEA and says, look, he's explaining to me that there's something called the third-party rule 35, which just means I can I can help you bust drug dealers and, you know, you'll give him credit for it, which is a real thing in the feds anyway. So they talked to her and they went to the U.S. attorney.
Starting point is 01:19:51 The U.S. attorney was like, I went, this guy went to trial. I don't care what. I don't care. You know, it's one of those. I don't care if he tells us where Osama bin Laden is. He's not getting any time off. Like we gave him, we were going to give him five or 10 years. He could have cooperated and gotten four or five years.
Starting point is 01:20:04 So they were like, no. But the DEA agents were like, listen, look at you. Like, you're perfect because you're, you don't have a, she'd never been arrested. She's not in trouble. She speaks. perfectly. They're like, and yet you can blend in and with these guys. And they spot us right away. So they started flying her around. And she did this for years. They would put her on a plane, fly her somewhere, have her do seven or eight buys from drug deals. Because all the drug
Starting point is 01:20:39 deals they see are they want to sleep with her. You know, for their first part, that overcomes any type of resistance that any type of a caution that they have they're like oh look at this chick so she's buying whatever it is crack or whatever they're they're selling these were like street buys most of the time but i mean she talks about one time where they had asked her to get close to like a guy like go to like she had made some buys they got invited to a party there was a whole thing they were like it was super super like undercover and then they said the great thing is is that she makes the buys we can't make we put together a case we bust the guys and if the guys go to try while she shows up, sits on the stand, and they said, unlike our other informants who have been
Starting point is 01:21:21 arrested seven times, who they're, they're almost incoherent when speaking to them. Right. She gets up and she speaks, you know, perfectly. I mean, she's 100% credible. And they were paying her and they were talking about like, I forget what they were saying, but she was making, you know, she was making, whatever, $3,000, $5,000 a month doing this for years while she was going to school. that was the other thing they said she's extremely flexible like she can go somewhere for three
Starting point is 01:21:49 days or two days or because she because of her schedule and they had her schedule they knew when she was between semesters um super interesting there are guys that i mean i know there are people that do that i was wondering if you ever had any anyone like that or are you paying people for information that's yeah oh yeah that i mean that was yeah i guess for most people it's probably a motivating factor is like you know they get paid for it so there's there's the double-edged sort of like you have to you know these people usually they're not like good people that come in from the street and it's like my neighbor's selling and it's usually these people are involved in thuggery right that's why they know the stuff going on so you have to make sure that you know we would pay the informants and you'd
Starting point is 01:22:34 also have to make sure that they were giving you correct information so you'd also test them sometimes so we would do the same thing as like you know go in and buy or whatever and it would be like we knew that it was a dud and nothing would happen and if they come back with like a bag of or something it would be like all right now we don't know we were constantly testing to make sure that the informants were not lying to us to to get paid right or exaggerating or exaggerating what yeah like making stuff up like a lot of times like with information you'd have to vet the information okay this is the information that they gave us does it make sense first of all with the stuff that we know does it follow with what actually happened you know like because you know you'd
Starting point is 01:23:13 We worked very closely with the detective squad on a lot of cases. But yeah, we paid our informants, you know, that information wasn't like a private thing. That's just that was part of, you know, you're working for us. We're going to pay you. It's like a job. But we would also demand that they didn't use drugs. You can't, you know, you're not going to lie to me. I'm not going to lie to you.
Starting point is 01:23:33 You've got to stop using. If you're an addict, then you're going to go get help and I need to know you're clean before you come back to work and, you know, just sorry. Go ahead. Well, I was going to say, and what I mean, what are they getting paid in or when I say professional like is this all they're doing like is it enough to make a to pay your bills or is it like they make six hundred dollars a month like well that's not enough you know that's not yeah I mean it would depend on what they were doing
Starting point is 01:23:57 for us like if it was gun stuff it would be a certain amount if it was you know and then when you're doing buys obviously the end game is to get a warrant so we had to make sure that they were credible so that when they spoke to a judge the judge believe them because if the judge doesn't believe the informant they're going to be like yeah this guy's he comes in here stoned and drunk and you know i can't believe what he says so we would have to make sure that the informants were they they were paid we disclose that information and it depends on what they bought especially we work with the feds the feds paid a lot of you know they pay a lot of money or whatever um for information it's a lot of money like humor me with specifics oh god i don't you know i don't even
Starting point is 01:24:37 really for them it's like it's it's you know i think it's you know i think I don't remember exactly how much they were paying, but I know for us it was like, okay, go do a buy and we'll give you like, I don't know, 50 bucks or 40 bucks. It wasn't like a substantial amount of money. But if they knew enough stuff, they could make a good amount of money because it's like, okay, you know a guy here who sells drugs. You know a guy here who sells drugs. And you know this guy who has a gun. You know this guy who sells guns. And so it depends how much information they knew benefited them because they would be, you know,
Starting point is 01:25:11 compensated for whatever the work was that we had for them but you know you're dealing with people who are in the world of criminal activity so they can't be like you know getting into too much trouble or whatever and you know if they did get into trouble sometimes they would have to go to jail and you'd be like you know you you got caught I can't help you out because it's going to give you up so it was it was you had to kind of be savvy you had to think like a criminal so that you wouldn't raise up the other people and put this guy's life at risk because really you know informants are like the most important people because they're giving information and you want to make sure that they're safe so that was like our number one thing is like you have to be safe and you
Starting point is 01:25:53 have to you know we got to be in contact and stuff um i had read an article uh in the new yorker god this was 10 years ago 10 or uh is it 10 no wait um I would say maybe, maybe almost 50, probably closer to 15 years ago. This was, of course, you know, in the really like the thick of the whole, you know, war on terrorism kind of thing. Like they were pushing it every day hard. And there was a guy who he was a professional. And this is like all he did. It was, it was buying and selling weapons.
Starting point is 01:26:30 But this was like internationally. And he was, the terrorist task force was paying him because he was in the middle of, of helping set up what appeared to be, you know, like charity organizations that were then taking money that was deposited there and buying weapons and smuggling weapons. And he would, they would let him just blatantly kind of break the law for six months to a year to 18 months. And the amount of money that he was getting paid was, I mean, and I know this is completely incomparable. I mean, we're talking about it was, it was hundreds of thousands of dollars. right you know it was outrageous like and i was and that girl like i said i think she was making like three to four thousand dollars a month working for the DEA but they were like she's a and
Starting point is 01:27:18 i'm sure she was the exception because that's why they were at the article about her right but um uh yeah that that's that's always interesting to me that these guys it's like you know this is because i've talked to tons of guys that like this is all they knew how to do was be involved in crime and drugs. And I always thought, you know, but they like, some of these guys like they want to get out of it. They don't know how to get out of it. Yeah. Yeah. Um, you know, they don't know what else to do. And it's like, well, you don't really, and I was thinking to myself, like, you don't really have to get out of it. You know, like you could still, that's your life and that and you like those guys and you like that life. But let's face it,
Starting point is 01:27:55 those guys are coming in and out of your life all the time. Yeah. You know. And I've actually, it's funny. I've actually broached the subject. I don't want to mention the guy's the name. He's like a high profile guy um but uh you know he's actually thought about you know he and i have kind of picked this around is that because i get contacted by people probably and i never mentioned this they just reach out to me because they're involved in some kind of crimes some kind of criminal enterprise of some kind they don't know what to do to get out of the situation because they have involved themselves but suddenly somebody gets busted that's associated with them and then two other people get busted they know it's coming down right and i had actually have talked to this guy and
Starting point is 01:28:45 thought to myself like how cool would it be or interesting would it be let's say um to actually start like a some kind of a a consulting firm and it's funny because i've actually talked to a a couple of a DE agent and an FBI agent for informants like like like I know like like and I give an example is you're run you're in an organization like whatever you're 30 40 years old you got eight or nine guys that are working with you however large it is you've been doing it for for a while periodically people get busted maybe something's happening maybe nothing's happening but you're running this organization or you're a big part of it and the problem is people most of these guys are like, yeah, I make good money doing this and these are good guys, but at some point,
Starting point is 01:29:30 you have to kind of realize, like, look, at this point, you know, because these guys always kind of think they're either going to do it forever, so they're delusional, or they think, I'm going to get a bunch of money and get out. Never happens. Yeah. No, it never happens. But the other option is to go in now to law enforcement and say, I'm here's, I've been doing this.
Starting point is 01:29:55 I'm I want I'm not getting charged and I will help now I will help go ahead and infiltrate the organization which I'm already in and help you get stuff on everybody else and but you know either I'm keeping all my stuff or I'm going to get paid for this right and and that but those people are too scared to reach out to law enforcement and they don't know right how much like to broker that deal like could you get paid by them or by law enforcement and this is this would all be federal we were always thinking federal because some of these guys look well that's where the money is i mean the feds have like the bottomless pocket yeah typically when i get a phone call from somebody not phone call but i get an email you know some cryptic email or some cryptic you know
Starting point is 01:30:47 instagram message like i'm i'm in a bad spot i need to watch you i don't know who i watch your stuff all the time And, you know, so you're like, okay, well, you know, and sometimes if the, if it's sounds reasonable enough, then I'm like, okay. And I'll say, look, let's arrange a time to talk. And usually it's after they got like a target letter. You know, like they're there. It's like, okay, listen, bro. Like the walls are closing in on you. Yeah. Yeah. Closing in. So typically with those guys, I say what happened and they tell me what happened. And then I, okay, here's what you need to do. You need to go ahead. They're like, I don't have any money or enough money to go get. or I talked to a lawyer, they want $40,000 or these guys want $20,000 up front or these guys want. And I'm like, okay, go to the public defender. Like, you're destitute. You know, you need to go. You can't come up with that money unless you start selling off the assets that you've acquired, like a couple of cars or whatever.
Starting point is 01:31:41 And you know what I'm saying? And usually the guys have pissed away everything. So it's like, look, go to the federal defender program. They will give you somebody. He's like, yeah, but I haven't been charged yet. It doesn't matter. You got a, you got a target letter. They're like, no, but you got to be.
Starting point is 01:31:54 No, you don't. Stop thinking you know what's going on, first of all. You know, I have this one guy who literally I, so I send them to, to the federal defender's office. And they immediately assign him somebody. So he calls me like, oh, they gave me somebody. She's going to call like in the next couple days. I'm like, okay. And then like a couple days ago by him getting the text messages, I haven't heard anything. Calm down. Give them a couple more days. They'll call. They'll get to you. Well, yeah, but what about the feds? I'm like, you got a target letter. Yeah. Bro, you're not even close to being having your they haven't indicted you yet they're still investigating they're just hoping you'll walk in the front door and confess right right right make their jobs easier right right um and so you know i talked to him and then eventually he did get a phone call it was weeks later and then it was they're going to call the fbi get back with me they don't know how long that's going to take i mean literally so two months later he's like what is taking so long i'm like he's like i want to plead guilty i'm like right and right now if they said you could be plead guilty. You're not getting a court date for six months. And you're not getting sentenced for
Starting point is 01:32:57 another three months. Right. And he's like, what? Like, bro, you're looking at a year. And honestly, you're probably looking at a year to two years before you're even going to prison. It might be 18 months before you're going to a prison. So that, I had to talk him off a ledge after telling him that. He thought this whole thing, he thought he could get six months to a year just based on the dollar amount. And I, oh, I'm calculating the guidelines for them everywhere. And I'm talking about prison is not what you think. You're going to a camp. You've never been in trouble. What are you doing? Like, so I've actually thought how interesting would that be to have people that are in the, in the middle of a, of something that's been going on a while in dealing with a bunch of people
Starting point is 01:33:41 that deep down you, you can delude yourself, but it's going to come down around you. So your best bet is to go now, even if they've heard about you now if they haven't heard about you you're in even a better situation but they may know who you are right they're still trying to put together on something now you could you could also go to them then and say look oh i need to walk away scot-free yeah you know yeah self-preservation right i would be cautious with that because one of the mantras that we had was like you cannot tell anybody you can't tell your girl you can't tell your mama you can't tell your boy who you think is your boy because nobody is really your friend and if they find out that you're cooperating with us or if it leaks out you know like like we weren't worried about like computer hacking
Starting point is 01:34:26 because everything was encoded and whatever but like for something your level like I would be worried like you know you do you have a computer database with these people's information how do we know that it's protected like we we were very careful even like when we would go into looking into like you know, buying stuff from drug dealers or whatever, like how many people, we would go sit on the spot and see what kind of traffic they had coming in and out. And, you know, how many people know this? Because at the end of the day, we have to protect the identity of the people who are giving us this information. Their lives are, that's our responsibility. Their safety is our responsibility. And I took that really seriously. So I would, my first thought would be like,
Starting point is 01:35:05 okay, how many people know that you're going to cooperate with us? Because my objective would be zero you know like i we're not going to meet at the precincts we're going to meet you know in a different county in a different borough you know like like as far away removed as possible from all of the people that you know at the federal level though it's it's got to be a little different because you're you're kind of dealing with like a bigger bank account whereas what i was dealing with in like the city was people who were just hand in mouth they were dealing and then you know it wasn't like they had a savings account or you know they had like the fund of like you know the town where ben afflick just takes his piles of money from a brick building and like disappears to florida for the rest of his
Starting point is 01:35:44 life these it was it was more like i'm going to make what i need and then you know that's that's we're going to spend it and that's it so they didn't have like the means of selling the cars and getting a hide away and stuff you know and running from the situation they were stuck there and the sad thing was that these guys grew up with these people like these were the people that they grew up with so they looked at to them as family and you know it was like you can't think of it like these people are family because if you guys will do the same thing and they get caught, they're going to say you're the trigger man, even if you're not, just so that they, you know, like you can't, you can't look at it like that. You have to learn to take care of yourself. And I would,
Starting point is 01:36:24 I kind of took on like a maternal role sometimes with some of these informants because I felt like they were kind of like lost souls. Like they wanted to do the right thing, right? They wanted to come clean and just be like, you know, this is wrong. And I don't want to live this life anymore, but I don't know anything else. So I would kind of coach them. I'm like, okay, well, let's go look at getting you a job. You know, like McDonald's is hiring. Start at the bottom. You know, work your way up. Like, you know, what do you like to do? Do you have a GED? Like, let's get you a GED. Let's get you enrolled in these programs and try and get them on the right footing to get them out of that life. Because it just, it, it like is a habitual thing because then they get a girl and then the girl gets
Starting point is 01:37:03 pregnant and now they're raising a kid and they don't have a job and now the kids growing up in the same environment. And it's like, it's like a, it's like a, it's like a, revolving door cycle in the inner city that I found that was like it was depressing because it's like they they don't know how to get out of it so I kind of tried to help them alleviate their guilt right and then be like you know it's okay that you're doing this it's a good thing that you're doing this and now we're going to help you to get out of this life so eventually you know you're going to be useless to me because you're not going to have any information for me to you know work off of so I would I would try and do that yeah I was going to say I was going to say two things so the one thing I
Starting point is 01:37:38 had been thinking about was like using my the YouTube channel to to talk about this yeah this thing and then those people could reach out to you pay you a fee you could explain the whole situation and then there would be somebody you could hand them off to on the federal system right so then the feds would you know take it over at that point but they can always talk to you and say this is what they're saying is that is that okay is that you know and explain to them up front you know like look you know just be very honest with them because a lot of times you know federal agents will promise you things that they can't promise you so you're just explained to him look if he says don't worry you're not going to do any time say he can't prove that he can't promise that like
Starting point is 01:38:16 be honest with them how it really works and what there what has to be reasonable um you know what's that was big yeah that was big for me no i i i agree with that 100 percent i would never if if the guy was going to have to do jail time and we'd have to do like a proffer type of a situation i'd be like you're going to have to do the time like i never applied to them because i thought that was the basis for our relationship is trust is really all that you have and I'm dealing with somebody who lies habitually for a living right they deny they ever do any criminal acts and everything so the the trust for me is like if I get proven to be a liar they're not going to work with me because they're going to not trust anything else that I say so I have no credibility so I'm I'm with
Starting point is 01:38:56 you on that that you have to be able to have the trust and you can't you can't BS people and just give them like a smooth job because half of them know the system better better really than you do you know sometimes know this isn't better than the cops there but they they also know like they're kind of going on your word they're hanging on your word and you don't you know it's like a moral thing i think sometimes you don't you know you got to you got to be truthful and honest because you you can't tell a lie and then be found out because now it's over right so yeah i mean i i i agree but i but not unfortunately not all agents are playing by that rule um yeah i mean every all the ones of course I've talked to they are all they're all straight shooters but I've I know I know that's not the
Starting point is 01:39:42 case but yeah so I was going to say that would be great because if they could contact me and I can be honest on every single facet of it like cooperating how it goes what the time frame is what you're really looking for right or looking at if anything you know can you do pretrial intervention you know can you or diversion you know can you what if you go to prison what prison you're probably we're going to go to what that's going to be like like you know i could help them on every every in every facet and the other thing is you mentioned something about the the people right like their family because they're because they're hang out with my boys every day i hang out with them and this and that so um i met a guy when i was on the run um i met a guy one time they called him new
Starting point is 01:40:25 orleans he worked at home depot and i'll never forget this guy because i was we were i was buying I'm on the run, buying houses, renovating them and selling them and refinancing them because fraud is not a full-time job. Like, I don't, I have plenty of money, but I have nothing to do, and I am somebody who is always doing something. I sleep four or five hours a day. I have to get up. I have to go work out. I'm doing, I'm running multiple channels. I'm doing, like, I'm just always doing something. It's, it's, I feel bad for my wife. Like, I'm a horrible person to be in a relationship with um especially because you know like gator hunting so it's you know kind of exactly so this kid of new Orleans I used to see him all the time at Home Depot because
Starting point is 01:41:13 I'm always there picking up lumber dropping it off for the guys doing the work and doing this and driving I'm in I'm on Home Depot sometimes two three times a day so I would walk in and the thing about New Orleans was what I liked about him one he's young he's probably 24 25 uh you know black kid uh and almost ran wherever he went, knew the store inside now. And so if you said, hey, man, where's such and such? Oh, I got to come, go, go, come, come, go. And you almost had to, like, run after him, you know, like, wanted to help everybody.
Starting point is 01:41:44 Where some of those guys are like, are like, yeah, it's aisle 12. And they just kind of walk off like they're only sure. Yeah. Like, you weren't the customer service job, but yeah, they don't know it. They're upset. They're working there. Yeah. Even he loved his job.
Starting point is 01:41:59 So I remember seeing him and, um, And I, listen, after maybe six months of seeing this guy, I go, bro, I said, why do they call? Because now I know him as New Orleans or whatever. And I'd say, I'd say, hey, bro. I'd say, why do they call you New Orleans? And he goes, oh, he said, I used to live in New Orleans. And I was like, oh, really? I said, he said, yeah.
Starting point is 01:42:19 What did I ask him? I said, when do you come to, how did you end up in, you know, it was a Nashville, Tennessee? He goes, oh, Katrina. Or was it Katrina? Wait, what was the one that hit? Yeah, Katrina, yeah. Oh, Katrina, Katrina. Katrina. He said, yeah. He said, I was there when the levees broke. He's like, flooded my house.
Starting point is 01:42:36 He said there was eight feet. My house was eight feet underwater. He said, boats, you know, came and picked us up. And he said, it was just destroyed my entire neighborhood. My neighbor is not even there anymore. It was like, yeah. I said, oh, man, I'm sorry about that. He said, now, bro, saved my life. Save my life. And I went, what do you mean? He said, oh, I was selling crack, bro. He was, I was selling crack. He said, my two brothers, well, one of them was like in prison. them was and one's in prison one was like dead or something i got four cousins he said they were all selling crack he said one of those guys one of them got shot he said he died a couple years ago he said uh my dad's in prison doing life my like he sat there and rambled off a fucking tragedy of a
Starting point is 01:43:17 yeah yeah and he said new orleans came he said katrina came in knocked everything out he said i stayed in i forget what that big stadium they stayed in he said stayed in the stadium for so many days. He said, was there? He said, maybe two weeks afterwards. He said, my name came up. They stuck me on a plane. He said, he said, they flew me here.
Starting point is 01:43:37 Home Depot gave me a job, a place to stay, and a vehicle to use. And a job. And a full-time job. He said, I've been working here ever since. He said, well, I pay my own rent now. He was, I pay my own rent. He said, I got my own car. He said, that only lasted so long.
Starting point is 01:43:54 But he said, they kind of did it in phases. He said, but I still got the same. apartment he said and he was ecstatic and i go did you ever find out what happened like listen this is his mother i did you ever have what what happened with your mom or you know your cousins or anything and he said no bro he's i don't want to know he cut it yeah well and i was like i was like you don't want to know because i said because something bad happened he said i don't want to know because he said that was a life i couldn't escape until katrina and i was just like bro like even now thinking about it like I teared up when he was telling me it was so it was sad but he was
Starting point is 01:44:32 so this guy walked away from everything he knew yeah and he was ecstatic about it because he was in a situation he could not escape yeah you know and then he ran and it got me like 12 uh 2 by 4s and but yeah but he was great and the problem is with you know and i i was thought that too so you know after thinking about that a lot i was like wow these guys are trapped some of these guys are trapped yeah you know like they don't they don't know it though i don't they don't yeah i don't think they do know it i think that it took that he'd had never done that by himself and that was his big thing like it saved me because he would have never he didn't even realize the situation he was in until they they picked him up and stuck him in a better situation
Starting point is 01:45:18 And he also knew, but he was smart enough to know, I can't, I can't talk to it. I can't go back to them. I can't, I'm done. Like they were, they were a part of the system that was dragging him down. And, and I feel like that's something that you would have to tell of these guys is you can't go back. Like if you do this, you have to leave, but don't look at it as being a bad thing. You know, you've got to look at it as being, you know, a gift. I would say that to a lot of these.
Starting point is 01:45:50 Yeah, like I had a guy, we, we caught him with a gun on the street, you know, he tried to run or whatever. We grabbed them. It was a cannon. And I just, I remember, like, he was just too nice. He was just, hey, ma'am, I apologize for that. I'm sorry that I ran. You know, I shouldn't have done that. And I'm like, you know, I just, I don't know.
Starting point is 01:46:11 There was like a kindred spirit type thing. Like, I just felt like this. So, you know, we were sitting in the thing and I'm fingerprinting and whatever. and then I take them out and I'm like I said to I go bro listen you're going to have to do your two years like I can't there's no negotiating that like this just a mandatory sentence we got you with a gun dead to rights it is what it is I'm like but use your time in prison for good like this isn't shawshank redemption I'm sure they have like a library and you know self-education classes and I'm like you can educate yourself and get yourself out of here because you're you're
Starting point is 01:46:43 a gang member you're going to come back and you're going to get the pressure to go fall back into it again and I'm like I try to explain like there's so much more to life you know and I feel like for me the police department was kind of like a redemption because I feel like I was like a lost cause I was going all over the place I didn't know what I wanted I was just like you know flopping in the wind and then it gave me like the structure and like okay you have to report it you know 1500 hours like so it was like you know it it led me down the path that I'm on now and I try and explain to him I'm like, dude, I'm in a job where after 20 years, I get 50% pension and I'm going to be, you know, 43 years old when I retire and I'm going to be able to start a second life or
Starting point is 01:47:24 continue if I want to. You know, a lot of guys stay cops. You know, you have all these opportunities. I said, you are living in a, in a neighborhood where every day you have to worry about drive-by shootings. You have to worry about the rival gangs coming after you. You have to worry about going to jail. Like you're getting crushed from all sides. And this is not what life is about. I'm like, what about traveling? Like, have you ever been to, like, you know, Italy or Ireland or, you know, anywhere? Like, get out of, get out of the city. Have you been out of state? You know, like, have you, have you left New York City? And it was, it was sad because I he, I followed this guy. Like there was a program where you get notified when they get
Starting point is 01:48:02 released. And I, and he got released and he moved out of state. I don't know what happened to him, but I was, I was hoping that he started fresh. And, He saw like, I have to get out. This is no good for me because it's sad. It's almost like I always, I mean, not to get like a too religious thing, but I working in the city, I was like an atheist. I was an atheist already. And I'm like, there's no God here.
Starting point is 01:48:27 People are evil. There's just evil everywhere. And I realize it's just because people don't, they're not enlightened. They don't understand the other side of life and that these people who they think are their friends aren't really their friends. It's a friendship of convenience temporarily. And the minute that you've got jail time hanging over your head or, you know, somebody's coming for you, you know, there's no, there's no honor there.
Starting point is 01:48:51 And the only option is you're going to get shot and killed or you're going to end up in prison and rat it out by the people who you consider your brothers. So the real only option is to get out of that life. And how do you do it? You have to, you get an education. You get away from those people, you know, like you just, you have to, you have to physically remove yourself from that scenario because these same people are going to keep coming around and maybe they don't mean evil for you but they don't intend for you to get caught up in
Starting point is 01:49:20 this but that's the only life they know and you have to get yourself out of it and i you know it's it's tough to watch because you see it especially when they lowered the uh the age for crime in new york city they did that lower the age thing so like if you were 16 and you got caught you were charged an adult and they raised it to 18 so now you had like these 16 and 17 year olds that felt emboldened because they're like, I'm not going to do the time that I would have done, you know, like if I get caught with a gun, now I'm going to the juvenile facility as opposed to like the real jail. So it actually encouraged kids to do more crime. And I'm like, this is, this is, you know, politicians are not usually helpful because they, they usually make the problem
Starting point is 01:49:58 worse. And I saw the change of like these kids who maybe were inhibited from doing things because they were like, I don't really want to go to real jail. Now they're starting even earlier because they know they're not going to go to real jail. And the early you start on that life, the harder it is to remove yourself. And it's like an addict. You just can't get out of it. So I think that's an admirable thing to try and create a program where you're not only helping people to, you know, turn on the other bad people and to, you know, solve the crimes
Starting point is 01:50:27 and to get the guns off the street, but you're also trying to find a path for them to get out of that life entirely. That's the challenge, you know. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Well, I was going to say it's, yeah, there's tons of excuses for these guys not to get out of that life. You know, they, they give themselves tons of excuses. But truth is if they really sat down with a pen and a piece of paper and started doing the math and thought about it, like you can go somewhere. You can live in someone's spare room. You can, you know what I'm saying? You can rent a room. You can get next to the bus line. You get a job. You start slow. And in a year from now, you'll have all your shit together. And within any year and a half, you'll have enough money for a car. Like, you can, you can fix your credit. You can get a car loan. You can get a better job.
Starting point is 01:51:10 You can, like, you can do these things. These, this is not impossible. Like, it's tough. It's not as much fun and it's not as easy as it is to sell drugs or, you know, commit for or something. But, you know, you don't have to do five or 10 years. And those sentences only get worse and worse. And every time you get cool. And you really have no clue what you're going to get.
Starting point is 01:51:29 These guys all think that they're going to get two years or three years. And they end up getting 15 and they never saw it coming. Yeah. And they're like, oh, my God, like, now what are you going to do? You know? Right. Now you're a convicted felon. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:51:40 Yeah. Now you're convicted felon. You're getting out when you're, you know, in your like 40s or 50s or something. Now you're starting over again from scratch. And you got somebody watching you. You got a probation officer watching for the next three years. Like, you like, you had, you had many, many opportunities. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:51:55 It's, it's sad. I don't know. I don't know. I think they feel to an allegiance. Like I would talk to some of these guys and they'd be like, this is my boy. You know, I grew up with these guys. not ratting on them. And it's like, no, you got a, I'm like, I, I don't know. I could never be a criminal because I can't do jail time and I need to sleep at night. Like, I can't put my head on
Starting point is 01:52:16 the pillow and know like the cops might be banging down my door at 5 a.m. on a warrant, you know, like that. I can't deal with that kind of thing. So I would never be good at being a criminal because I'd be like a paranoid disaster. But I'm like, wouldn't it be nice just to go to bed and not worry like, are the police coming? Is, am I going to get shot? You know, is my girl going to wrap me out because like just to be able to like live a good life right you didn't even like visiting uh i hate to go into rikers island yeah yeah i hated it because i'm just like i don't know you you know you're a bird you can't be caged you know and i would try and explain to these guys like you just you you can't it's not it's not a healthy lifestyle but it's you know it sucked
Starting point is 01:52:59 because it was just watching young kids enter the life because the and the and the music too like it's the it's the whole atmosphere of like you emulate the guy on the corner because you see him in the flashy car with all the money and he's you know dollars dollar bills all this stuff so that type of lifestyle is emulated and i would see the kids that tried to do well in school they would get beat up they were bullied you know i had like one kid one time he was i guess maybe he was maybe mentally i don't know what the appropriate pc term is mentally retarded or not down syndrome but like he was something was a little and he was slow and he was slow and he got beat up bad. You know, the kids from school came and they bullied him and they beat the crab out of this poor kid. And I just remember I went to the house and he was just hysterical crying and he wouldn't tell us who beat him up. But he was just so devastated because he's like, you know, I'm trying to do well in school and he was slower than everybody else and you get picked on for it. And it's not, it's not encouraged behavior to do well and excel. It's encouraged behavior to sling crack and make money the easy way and fight the system and you know whatever and
Starting point is 01:54:08 I would say to these guys you're so smart like you're so this scam that you have is so smart and you're so smart the way you do it it was so hard to catch you why don't you go work on the stock market you know go take your test and pass your serious seven and and go work on the stock market and make money legally so you can you know like the only thing that's going to rob it from you is like the government and taxes like that's that's your biggest thing you have to worry about Like, go and get a legitimate job. You're wasted talent. You're going to get shot out on the streets.
Starting point is 01:54:36 This is such a waste. And for them, you know, sad to say most of the time, I think it went over everybody's heads. And they just, you know, they didn't care. There might have been a few cases where I might have helped a few people. But, you know, that's the life. That's what they do. But so this is why I tried to, I kind of gravitated towards saving the animals, you know, like, you see a cat on the street. And it's like, oh my gosh, this thing or like the dog that's beaten up or it's freezing cold in the backyard.
Starting point is 01:55:00 It's abandoned. And it's like. I think you try and crave a happy ending sometimes being a cop because most of the time you just see the same people doing the same thing. And it's a repetitive spiral, you know, the drug addicts and the shootings and it like it doesn't end. So it's hard to watch that. So you try and bring some good into the world by helping what you can. All right. I was like as I go on and on.
Starting point is 01:55:30 I'm trying to think of funny stories. is to like lighten the mood but this is i mean there's a reality of it and then there's like you know the bull busting pranks that cops plan each other because you are living in this world of like depression and sadness and horrible uh living situations that these people are in and then the no sleep and you know problems at home because you're never home and you're you know you're at work for three days and whatever so you know i you would bust each other's bowls relentlessly and play practical jokes and that was how we relieved our stress hey you guys i appreciate you watching do me favorite if you like the video hit the subscribe button please hit the bell so you get notified also
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Starting point is 01:56:40 Also, we are going to put a link in the book to Amazon, so you can buy that. I appreciate you guys watching. Thank you very much. See you.

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