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A routine traffic stop. A 50-minute pursuit at 120 mph. A single gunshot on a Texas highway—and a life surrounded by secrecy. In this episode, we dive into the controversial death of Ronald Carnaby, a Lebanese-American intelligence figure whose alleged ties to the CIA collided with a high-stakes police stop in Houston. We examine the dash-cam pursuit, the split-second decision that proved fatal, and the storm that followed: Internal Affairs rulings, union defenses, training critiques, and a widow’s relentless legal battle for accountability. The mystery deepens when the CIA issues a flat denial—“He was never a CIA officer”—even as plaques, associations, and personal inscriptions suggest a far more complicated story. Was Carnaby a bona fide operative, a trusted collaborator, or a man caught in the shadowlands of American intelligence? Then we shift to a second case on Florida’s I-95: an alleged undercover agent firing at cars, talking about mafia plots and tracking devices. The arrest, the Baker Act, the charges—aggravated battery over attempted murder—and the sobering questions about mental health, training, and public safety. This video connects the dots between two explosive incidents to ask bigger questions about secrecy, procedure, and the razor-thin margin where fear and force meet. Watch to the end and tell us what you think: justified actions, tragic missteps, or something still hidden in plain sight? If you found this valuable: • Like the video to support the channel • Subscribe for weekly deep dives into true cases, policing, and intelligence history • Comment with your take—what detail changed your mind? • Share with someone who follows law-enforcement or intelligence stories