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In this episode, a man walks into a federal immigration office to file a public records request — and is immediately confronted by Sergeant Perez. What starts as a simple First Amendment activity quickly turns into talk of trespass, “disturbance,” and vague threats of arrest. But here’s the key question: What law was actually broken? Throughout this breakdown, we analyze: • First Amendment right to record in public areas • Trespass vs retaliation in publicly accessible government buildings • “Policy” vs actual law • The difference between a request and a lawful order • Reasonable suspicion vs “you’re acting suspicious” • ID demands when no crime is articulated Then we move to two additional encounters: One driver refuses to hand over ID when no crime is stated — and officers eventually walk away. Another officer responds to a parked vehicle call but can’t identify a single law that’s been broken. This is a textbook example of how: Detention requires reasons — not vibes. Policy isn’t law. Silence is not suspicion. Knowing your rights changes the entire interaction. Watch until the end and decide: Would you comply — or stand your ground? 👍 Like the video 💬 Comment your thoughts 🔔 Subscribe for weekly police accountability breakdowns This video provides commentary and legal analysis of publicly available police-audit footage for education, critique, and accountability under fair use (17 U.S.C. § 107). ORIGNAL Credits: / @yaya-c8i4k / @vatodivino / @katiekidman007