Ideally I wish none of this would happen anymore. I wish people could stop with the creeper behavior altogether. But short of that, below is the most satisfying video I have seen in a long time. A young woman has left her job at a strip club. She's been followed by a guy in a white, fleet-looking SUV with a spotlight. She makes a few turns into an apartment complex to get away from him, and he follows her. She's parked and ducked down trying to hide from him. He pulls up alongside her and puts the spotlight on her. Says he's arresting her for DUI. She doesn't believe he's a cop and calls 911, at which point he flees. Interestingly, she doesn't seem to connect the dots between her job and his following her; the police officer immediately does. She believes she was followed out of a 7-11 and doesn't remember having seen him at the club. But the last thing the police officer says is basically "Imagine what would've happened if she would've gone along with his traffic stop." That's one of the things that made me really love this video. This isn't the way it was in my day. The cops were not playing with him. They talk to him about all of the available surveillance and plate-reader technology that will let them know if he was at the club where she works, or the apartment complex from where she called. Because when you see him, this is the exact sort of guy she wouldn't notice, even while he was very much noticing her. I did wonder about the possible DUI, which seemed maybe accurate to me. I was glad her father was clearly so supportive. The guy scared her but she's okay. Nothing actually happened except she got this guy off the road. Jeremy DeWitte, Jr. is now on the radar with both Sex Crimes and as a police impersonator in the area. But what I love the absolute most about this video, is the pure professionalism of the cops. They're so incredibly overwhelming for this twerp of a guy who couldn't even intimidate the apparently possibly tipsy stripper who called her dad, and when she cried, sounded like she was barely old enough to work at that club. He couldn't take her in a fair fight in daylight for sure.
Each of the cops is at least twice his size. The cops are in no hurry at all with the whole thing, just standing there eye-fucking him. They're not okay with either side of what they believe he just did there. They're very direct about not believing anything he says. They never call him a bad name or act racist or abusive in any way. It's pure ::mwah::
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AuthorTeresa Giglio writes true crime for survivors. Archives
January 2025
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