2 Burst results for "Malcolm Moore"

"malcolm moore" Discussed on Game of Crimes

Game of Crimes

11:43 min | 1 year ago

"malcolm moore" Discussed on Game of Crimes

"Use it, not just to record the stop, but like, did you get a complaint or somebody would say something and you could use it to show? Yeah, yeah. They always complain to say I was rude. I was this disrespectful to them. And all those type of stuff, I was like, chief, no, I wasn't. I was a matter of fact. Hold on. Went up, when the computer got the video filed, put it on a flash drive, headed to the chief. You look at it. All right, I'm good with that. I let I'll talk to him. Or whatever. So yeah, oh yeah, definitely, man. Yeah, look, good thing you're already using it now. Here's an interesting point though, because like with anything at some point, you know how police departments are, there's got to be policies and training and procedures. So did you get to that point to where the two says maybe we need to have a policy on this or was it more just he just kind of gave it his blessing, looked at and said, hey, you're good. And when you did the traffic stop, did you have a requirement in South Carolina or anything to let people know they were being recorded? So my TV wasn't a policy at that time because nobody was really into buying body cameras, anything like that. So he pretty much just gave me his blessing to use it or whatever. And he just made it like just don't share it with anybody just keep it within the department or whatever, but you know, don't be posting and stuff that you do on Facebook or anything like that. So I'm like, I ain't doing that. This is a court stuff. And for us, you know, so yeah, and there was no requirement. So I can let them know I'm recording them. Did you get any issues from defense attorneys in court on any cases or any traffic stops where they tried to challenge the introduction of the video or did that become an issue? So for my traffic stop videos or for the my incident. No traffic stopped videos. No, so with South Carolina, we're office any pretty much misdemeanors and lesser officers prosecute their own stuff and people in esso Dave just their prosecute their own case. They had talked to the judge. I'll talk to the judge. Well, just let them talk first, explain their side of the line. The judge let me talk and then here let them cross examine me and all that type of stuff and whatnot and all that type of stuff. But no, they never soon as I play that video, they'd be like, oh, I don't remember what happened that way. Well, this video remembers. Yeah. Obviously. Yeah. All right. Well, that's what I wanted to make sure we set the stage for that because by the time January comes up, you've been using this regularly for what, like at least two months now, probably. Yeah, yeah, two months, about two months. I've been using a man. And like I said, they've been working great. You know, I've got a lot of good feedback, you know who had a few of my buddies, man. For my hometown, he's an officer too in my hometown. You know, he ended up getting one man. I took because not many people knew that I had a body camera, only my close friends and my close friends and that were officers only had knew I had a body camera, you know, 'cause I did let them see some of my Travis stuff as someone acting stupid or whatever. And write them a ticket whatever. I let them see it or whatever. But other than that, yeah. Do you remember to turn it off when you went into the bathroom? Yes. Yes I did. I was worried about that a few times, man. So what I did, I just made sure I take it off completely. There were glasses anyway, so it was not no lands in that. It was just a plastic cleared lens. There was no medicine and then over here. I mean, I just take them out completely. Yeah. I was at a conference one time. One of the speakers had that wireless lavalier mic. Tell them, just make sure you shut it off. Well, he added on went into the bathroom and not only could you promote what's going on. They were making some inappropriate remarks about some of the students and it's kind of like, yeah, his career kind of got cut short teaching. Anyway. Yeah, not fun. So let's talk about January 1st, 2016. So like, say, your day, you're doing a 6 to 6 shift. You get there. How should they start off for you? What do you do? So like I said, I worked at 66, it started off just like in the other. I said my prayer, I get dressed for work, and we had take home cars too. So I get in my patrol car, and I drive to Estelle. A lot of people, they think cops are just, you know, just a lot of times they don't realize that faith plays a part in some of this, so you said you say your prayers. So tell me about that. So I have, I actually have a dog tag too, and they pretty much have the police officer spray on it. On the back of it. And like I said, I'll just say that, you know, God gave me strength and courage, you know, to do the best job I can do and you know to help me serve my community and stuff like that, you know? So, but yeah, that's pretty much it isn't protect over me and watch over me and protect me and my family and stuff like that. So yeah. Good for you. So very good. Yeah, so you say your prayers should get in the cars. So now go ahead and take us off, you show up at work and how does the day start off for you? So I thought when I get there, I talk to the night shift crew. We get the pass down or what happened during the night. They told me pretty much everything was fine, you know, people shot some fireworks. It started raining a little bit, so mostly everybody went inside, but they didn't really have any issue. So I'm like, oh, okay, cool. So what I like to do, I check my reports that I've done prior to that, or if chief leaves something, hey, you need to fix this or, you know, or whatever, I'll fix it, you know, complete it, and you know, after I do that, I'll go check property. And so my whole plan was for that day, I was going to stop a few cars and, you know, be seen, but I wasn't going to be aggressive because for one, I'm only officer working in two, it's new years. You know, I was going to go eat with my family later on that day. So I was just going to be more of a reactive than proactive that day. So like I said, I go out and I check property, make sure, you know, nobody vandalize anything or anything like that, the business is and stuff like that. And then I said, I'm going to stop a few cars and be seen. Let my prisons be known. And even within, I didn't even write a few. I didn't write a whole lot of tickets. This is for like what 5 or 6, you know, like I said, just so everybody see, hey, blue lights. Do we still working? So what do you do with your own cars? Or do you guys rotate cars? Or do you have take home cars? No, we have take home cars. I had my own car. That's nice. What did you have? I had the newest model of the dawn's charger back in 2013. They literally had just got that car too, because I was so proactive, you know? They said, they benefit you more than anyone else, because you write the most tickets, and I want you to get DUIs and stuff like that, 'cause I was a DUI instructor. And when I was at USC buford, so they wanted me to start doing that type of stuff so he said car benefits you more than anyone else since you're the most proactive. Because they had so little sidebar. Patrol cars, the older ones, other than the one I had, the new one they didn't have in core radio was we had to get another handheld, put it inside this unit, and pretty much remember those, yeah. Yeah, yeah, we had that. Yeah. And the car that I had at that time, that was the only car that we had that had an incar radio, a dash camera, and all the bells and whistles. So when Murph started, he had an in car homing pigeon, he would write a message, send it off to dispatch. Two days later, they'd get back to him, and he'd know which call he had to respond to. Yeah, but Wesley, we were mostly we were saying the message is a troopers because they weren't doing it. Because we got our work done early because we had radios. I will tell you, I'm from a first 5 years on my patrol crew. We had no handheld radios. Everything was in car. So if you get out, you had to flip on the outside speaker. And that was kind of bad when you'd be walking up there and they would say like, you know, garden city one 50 or you ten, 12, which I don't know if you guys use ten codes like we did, but it's like is anybody around. And then there was one time one of the dispatches said garten said he won 50, your vehicle is been reported stolen. And I'm just walking up to the front of the car and it's like, oh, that's not good to hear for those guys to hear. Anyway, signal, I think it was signal three or signal 5. I forgot what the signals are, but reporters show them anyway, back to you guys. When he says that, he's talking about three puffs of smoke from the little fires they'd send up like the Indian speaking language. I think pretty soon we'll be talking about the pony express, but anyway. So you're out there checking vehicles and stuff. And so what's it like? Are things kind of slow that morning? Yeah, things are really kind of slow. Like I said, it wasn't a whole lot of traffic. Like I said, it was New Year's Day, and mostly I think everybody was it at home, still sleeping recovering and all that type of stuff. So I was just sitting on the south side of town, even though the town is small, you know, like we only had one traffic. You know, so I was sitting on the south side of town in front of the liquor store in an abandoned car lot, and there's nothing else behind me, but trees, a few houses, and the country. That's it. 'cause every house is spaced out every so often now at the F of that. So while I'm sitting in the car, you know, like I said, watching traffic, I see the gentleman, his name is Malcolm orle. He was dressed in a camouflage hunt suit, and he liquor store, and he was walking towards my patrol car. And he wasn't doing anything, you know? So I didn't think nothing of it. He wasn't doing anything. I'm still watching traffic or whatever. And then I'm listening to the radio weird hooked into our dispatch is hooked into a 5 different agencies. It's Estelle, the sheriff department, Hampton city, Yemen, and von ville police department, all smaller towns, they got up at least about ten, ten to 12 offices themselves and stuff like that. So yeah. So, and also, probably 6 Gifford trying to Gifford, like I said, they only had like three officers too. So anyway, it was an officer and Gifford, she stops the car and dispatch came out with the information and said the person in the car was wanted. I think I got a Charleston or something like that. So I'm thinking myself, I, you know, I get on the radio and I say, hey, you need any help or anything like that? She said, no, I got everything under control or whatever. I was like, all right, so now Gifford is pretty much it's three miles away. So, but yeah, they don't work. They come in around like what? 8 and a 9 o'clock in the morning, they get off at 10 o'clock. So yeah, that's how they work. Like I said, they were small. So anyway, I said, you know what? Let me sit on the north side of town. Just in case something breaks bad, I can already be at the edge of town. I have to go through town doing a 130 and risk an accident because people do run that traffic light. They won't care. And I be in a worse situation than anything. So I should ruin your nude, your Dodge charger, man. I know. I know for real. Anything else can happen. Just don't touch the vehicle. Yeah. That's right. So I get back on the highway and like I said, the gentleman well, you know, gentlemen, but a guy Malcolm Moore, you know, he was still walking or whatever, and I just happened to look at my rearview mirror. And when I looked at it, I just had this funny feeling like, you know what? I'm glad I moved type feeling. But I didn't think nothing of it. It looked funny, it was weird, because when I looked in my review mirror, he was checking over his shoulder. Like check and see where I was. You know, but he kept walking, but he was just.

esso Dave South Carolina Estelle Travis Gifford Facebook Murph Malcolm orle USC garten garden city Hampton city Wesley von ville police department Yemen Charleston Malcolm Moore Dodge charger
"malcolm moore" Discussed on Patriots Beat

Patriots Beat

03:23 min | 2 years ago

"malcolm moore" Discussed on Patriots Beat

"Then I, I've talked about this since back to free agency since the draft, they don't have enough outside corners. If Gilmore walks, when you face the bills, one of your, you know, one of your starting outside corners is dead. Either Chauhan Williams. Jalen Mills, or Michael Jackson. And I'm not saying those guys can't be good players. I'm saying, we don't know if they are and I said the bills. The Dolphins are weak one. So when you go up against that receive or yeah, DeVante Parker you got Jaylen waddle, you got these guys coming out. You, we want you want. You want you on Williams on Davante? Parker week? One, that's the question, right? And I know they have Joe Jackson. We're going to get to him in a second to hang on. Cuz somebody in the chat said we saw the Patriots Malcolm Moore last year, they had Jason McCourty. If they still got Jason McCourty, it's another conversation. Jason McCourty played 65% of the Patriots defensive snaps last year. He has gone. They didn't bring anybody else in. That's a true outside corner. So that's 65% of snaps. You have to replace in house and I just went off in house options. There is no Jason McCourty in those options. There is no sure thing in those options, you can like, John Williams upside and there is something to like there, but he's unproven, you don't know for sure. And you don't Reserve. I have an insurance plan. The Patriots needs to find Gilmore more than he needs the Patriots, right? So I put up the stat on Twitter earlier today of the Patriots defense with, and without Stephon Gilmore in 2012. And I know that there are some sort of caveats of this, right? First of all, much different front, seven this year compared to last year. So that's going to make life easier on the secondary. I get all that, but last year with Stephon Gilmore, the Patriots allowed, a passer rating of 80.2, which would have been top ten if that had been the entire year. Without Stephon Gilmore, their passer rating, clamp to over a hundred, right. So you're also seeing last year they gave up a touchdown rate of a TD, every six point, like five, percentage of points of throws without with life on Gilmore that dropped 3%. So this is a player that statistically makes a huge impact on this defense. And furthermore, when you watch the tape of this team, You see in Devin McCourty, said this in 2019, when Gilmore was having his Defensive Player of the Year campaign, it all starts with death and what he meant by that was sung, watch the way that they play. They play so much single Hai man-to-man. They play more single Hai man-to-man than just about any team in the league. And if you're going to only play with one deep safety, in the middle of the page, you are going to have to live with the fact that you're outside corners are more or less on the island you have posed, safety help. But for the most part, your one-on-one with your guy out there, and as we walk through the gauntlet of the season and starting a week long with DeVante Parker and Jaylen waddle, if you don't have a lockdown, number one corner in that type of coverage system. Your quarters are going to get exposed, so yeah, the Patriots can change the way that they play. Maybe they play a little bit more off manners, do nor too deep or something like that. To mitigate the fat to Stephon Gilmore is not out there, but if they want to play a game Our bread-and-butter cover one Robber with a one high safety, put another guy in the Box to stop the run, or rush the passer, or do whatever they want to do with them..

Jason McCourty Patriots Stephon Gilmore Gilmore DeVante Parker Jaylen waddle Chauhan Williams Jalen Mills Malcolm Moore Joe Jackson Michael Jackson Dolphins John Williams Parker Williams Devin McCourty Twitter