Live PD is the ratings-winning law enforcement ride-along show that ordinarily airs fresh episodes on Friday and Saturday evenings at 9 p.m. Eastern time on the A&E television network. Videographers embed in real time with officers from eight different police agencies. A Live PD recap follows below, including the Wednesday night, June 19 bonus episode that aired from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. Eastern.

Live PD has also spawned several spin-offs.

Because of its often intense action, unpredictability, danger,  plus quirky and humorous, and sometimes mundane, interactions between cops and citizens, Live PD is perhaps the closest thing that even approaches appointment TV anymore in the fragmented entertainment space.

With 32 live feeds coming into the studio, most segments air on a reported five- to 20-minute tape delay. When nothing is happening in real time, pretaped segments air, which Live PD describes as incidents that happened “earlier.”

For viewers, Live PD is addicting, which perhaps is an unfortunate choice of words in this context. While millions of Americans experiment — and more than experiment — with drugs when younger, Live PD reveals a self-destructive cohort hooked on narcotics (and/or booze) well into middle age and beyond.

Many thanks to Twitter user TG LivePD (@TLivepd) for compiling and sharing video clips on social media.

As the Live PD disclaimer indicates, not all outcomes are known or final, and criminal charges, if any, may have been reduced, dismissed, or never filed.

When alleged criminal activities are depicted on Live PDall persons are presumed innocent unless convicted in a court of law.

Rules of the Road?

Many subjects who appear on the show are covered with tattoos (as are the cops more often than not), love cigarettes, and often have warrants, along with carrying contraband on their person and/or in their vehicles, the latter which are often unregistered and/or uninsured.

Transporting contraband plus no valid license/registration is usually an ill-advised combination as is contraband plus vehicle equipment malfunctions.

Alleged drug traffickers who fail to abide by routine traffic laws or, as noted, lack working vehicle running lights or other related equipment, can also wind up in big trouble following a probable cause search.

Two Beers, Not My Pants

“I only had two beers” is a familiar mantra from motorists pulled over upon being asked by cops if they had anything to drink that evening.

Another mantra is “not that I know of” when cops question a subject as to whether there might be illegal drugs in a vehicle or even on their person. In the alternative, subjects also often claim that drugs “belong to a friend.”

From time to time, they also claim that the pants that they are wearing in which cops find drugs belong to a friend.

Not my jacket or not my purse are also familiar refrains.

In addition to the drug epidemic across across the country as well as alcoholism, the obesity epidemic is also frequently on display.

When a subject begins a sentence with “I’m going to be honest with you officer,” you can generally expect that things will quickly go sideways.

Some combative subjects argue themselves into an arrest (i.e., talking themselves into handcuffs) even when cops are about to let them go with minor infractions, citations, or warnings.

Some suspects seem more concerned about smoking one last cigarette before jail than they are about going to jail.

Several of the cops, who are impressively observant when they question subjects, have become social media celebrities as a result of their participation in Live PD.

As an aside, officers across the country have a tendency to ungrammatically add the preposition “at” to the end of a sentence. I.e.: “Where do you live at?” or “Where is he/she at?”

Expect the Unexpected

Traffic stops are often like a flea market. Viewers never know what the officers might find inside vehicles after either a probable cause search pursuant to a K9 alert or consensual search. Moreover, as suggested above, no license, no registration, and no insurance consists of a trifecta in many of those stops. (A disproportionate number of pick-up trucks seem to have issues when stopped by law enforcement officers).

Somehow, a driver’s license became an optional credential for many motorists.

Motorists sometimes claim to have a valid driver’s license, but for some inexplicable reason, they aren’t carrying it with them. Or it was stolen.

Offices often give break to those who are driving illegally, however.

Judging by these traffic stops, driving while buzzed seems to be a growing, as it were, problem across the country. Weed laws vary significantly from state to state. Some jurisdictions have decriminalized possession of small amounts.

Some, but not all, of the subjects that police make contact with express excitement about being on Live PD (although occasionally they think they’re on Cops).

In switching quickly from sequence to sequence, and as you’ll see below, Live PD does not always provide an update of how cops resolved a particular encounter, if at all.

As alluded to above, K9s well trained in drug detecting and human tracking regularly assist cops in their investigations on Live PD.

This Week on ‘Live PD

If you’re wondering what happened on Live PD this week/weekend, a recap of Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday night’s Live PD follows (check back for updates).

Host Dan Abrams — he of the puns and the double entendres — and regular studio analysts Tom Morris, Jr., and Tulsa PD Sgt. Sean “Sticks” Larkin provide studio commentary as usual.

Live PD,’ Season 3, Episode 73, June 19, 2019

Again, please understand that what is depicted on the show, and summarized below, including but not limited to any arrests, constitute mere allegations.

  • Richland County, S.C. — Deputies pursue subject fleeing subject fleeing on dirt bike. Foot pursuit after he ditched bike. Deputies take him into custody and charge him with simple possession of marijuana, operating uninsured vehicle, plus traffic violations. Bike impounded.
  • Williamson County, Tex. — Traffic stop. Open containers found. Passenger arrested for alleged heroin possession. Driver released with no charges. Lt. Kennedy nearly got stuck with needle, but appears to be okay.
  • Lawrence, Ind. — Officers spotted man passed out in parking lot. Knife found on person. Abrams: “That’s not how anyone wants to wake up.” Subject arrested for public intoxication.
  • Okla. Highway Patrol (pretaped segment): “Trooper Callicoat pulled over a biker carrying a guitar on his back as well as some dough, the real kind.” Traffic stop; no license, no registration. Citations issued. Subject told to call someone who is a licensed driver to drive the bike home.
  • Williamson County, Tex. — Traffic stop; consensual car search after some haggling. Drug paraphernalia allegedly found. Driver released with no charges.
  • Okla. Highway Patrol — Traffic stop; speeding. Consensual car search. Trooper finds vial of urine. Subject released with no charges with a warning for speeding.
  • Williamson County, Tex. — Traffic stop; motorcycle alleged traveling at 106 MPH. Released with warning.
  • Greene County, Mo. (pretaped segment) — Abrams: “We learned there’s nothing better for a driver that’s been pulled over than another driver who did something worse.” Deputies pursue fleeing vehicle. Driver taken into custody and arrested on numerous charges including probation violation. Morris, Jr.: “And I doubt that speeding [by itself] would have violated his probation and put him back in jail.”
  • East Providence, R.I. — Officer responds to citizen who complains about Facebook harassment. Officer tells him to take it up with Facebook moderators; not a police matter.
  • Santa Fe, N.M. — Officers serve outstanding warrant at residence for aggravated assault and evidence tampering. Suspect arrested without incident.
  • Williamson County, Tex. — Traffic stop; expired tag. Vehicle search; drug paraphernalia and crystal meth allegedly found. Occupants argue over who owns backpack in question.
  • Lawrence, Ind. — Traffic stop; running stop sign. Officers detect odor of marijuana. Pat down reveals pistol (legal), about $2000 in cash. Male driver arrested for weed. Female passenger released with no charges.
  • Wanted segment, Los Angeles, Cal. — Deadly hit and run on Father’s Day:
  • Greene County, Tex. — Traffic stop; expired tags.
  • Salinas, Cal. (pretaped segment): Abrams: “A suspect under the influence was giving officers a particularly hard time.” Subject behaving erratically on street. Apparently he got excited. Taken into custody on warrants. Abrams: “It seems like a pretty stiff penalty there. I guess, as they say there’s no escaping the long arm of the law.” [You have to see the sequence to get the context.] End of episode.

Live PD,’ Season 3, Episode 74, June 21, 2019

This episode includes a one-hour, commercial-free portion.

  • Salinas, Cal. — Officers pursue alleged child abuse suspect. Car stopped. Subject is noncompliant with officers; he is tased and bitten by K9. Subject transported to hospital for treatment and then booked into county jail.
  • Okla. Highway Patrol — Traffic stop; reckless driving. Trooper detects marijuana odor from car. Driver admits to small amount of weed in purse. Field sobriety test. DUI arrest. Car towed. Passenger released.
  • Sante Fe, N.M. — Traffic stop; suspended registration. Noncompliant driver. Multiple officers grappled with him on the ground to take him int custody. Drug paraphernalia allegedly found. Driver may have been operating the vehicle with revoked license. Arrested for resisting.
  • Okla. Highway Patrol — Troopers and Tulsa PD respond to report of male assaulting woman in motel room. Shotgun found in room. Investigation ongoing.
  • Williamson County, Tex. — Deputies spot car in handicapped spot with music blaring outside of convenience store. No license. Vehicle not legal. Driver released with no charges; someone giving him a ride home.
  • Greene County, Mo. (pretaped segment) — Abrams: “A bizarre domestic disturbance involving a baseball bat, a former MMA fighter, and a stolen safe.” Deputies respond to report of disturbance between two males at residence. No charges. Deputies mediated, and couple left residence.
  • Lawrence, Ind. — Traffic stop; mismatched plates, suspended licenses. Consensual car search. Passenger fled, prompting foot chase. Passenger arrested on warrant. Driver released with no charges.
  • Okla. Highway Patrol (pretaped segment): Abrams: “A trooper pulled over a couple–one dint’ have a license to driver and the other seemed driven to run.” Traffic stop; expired tags; obstructed license plate. Male passenger fled; arrested after foot chase on warrants. Car impounded.
  • Santa Fe, N.M. — Officers respond to report of “rampage” at residence. Suspect arrest for disorderly conduct and criminal damage to property.
  • East Providence, R.I. — Officers respond to report of woman screaming for help. Traffic stop on car supposedly associated with incident, but occupants were uninvolved (wrong car).
  • Okla. Highway Patrol (pretaped segment) — Abrams: “What started out as a race between two bikers turned into a race between one biker, several troopers, and a helicopter.” After a chase, biker arrested on traffic warrants, felony eluding, street racing, fake tag, and possibly other charges.
  • Williamson County, Tex. — Deputies make pedestrian contact. Needle found. Abrams: “You hate it when that happens, when you accidentally flush your meth down the toilet.”
  • East Providence, R.I. — Cops respond to report that father allegedly won’t let wife and child out of a car.
  • Richland County, S.C. — Traffic stop; probable cause search in truck. Needle and other items allegedly found. Deputies apparently issue warnings or citations. No charges otherwise.
  • Santa Fe. N.M. — Officers give second noise complaint warning for church event whose organizers did not obtain a permit.
  • Okla. Highway Patrol — Traffic stop; headlight out. No license; no insurance.
  • Greene County, Mo. (pretaped segment) — Abrams: “You know how people say things were better back in the good old days. Well, according to one man earlier in Greene County, that same saying can also apply to meth.” Deputies come upon suspicious individual with flashlight looking at cars. Arrested for meth possession. Abrams: “One thing you can say about that meth pipe: It takes a lickin’ and keeps on tickin.'” Abrams: “The way to really ‘arouse’ suspicion is to be outside an adult video store with a flashlight looking into cars.” Morris, Jr.: “We’ve seen a lot of people lie about drugs in every single episode, but that guy was one of the worst drug liars I’ve seen.”
  • Wanted segment, Athens, Ala. — Morris: “Only in America.” Police on the lookout for suspect and his “attack squirrel” named Deez Nutz. Abrams: “Something squirrely going on there.”
  • Lawrence, Ind. (pretaped segment): Abrams: “A man was giving himself high marks after an officer spotted him smoking spice.” No charges; officers advise the man to go home.
  • Greene Co., Mo. — Deputies respond to report of disturbance at residence. Turns out couple were just possibly bickering when backing up boat to driveway. No police issue.
  • Lawrence, Ind. — Officers respond to report of assault; man allegedly throwing brick at woman at apartment complex. Subject taken into custody on warrant.
  • Crime of the Week — Morris, Jr.: “We span the country in search of drivers behaving badly.”
  • Williamson County, Tex. — Traffic stop; speeding. Open container found. Subject detained.
  • Lawrence, Ind. — Officers respond to woman loitering outside gas station/convenience store. Apparently was arrested five previous times for trespassing. Detained.
  • Williamson County, Tex. — Traffic stop; reckless driving. K9 alert. Car search. Drug paraphernalia allegedly found. Driver arrested.
  • Santa Fe, N.M. — Officers respond to panic alarm at residence. False alarm.
  • Mission, Tex.Live PD pays tribute to Mission Officer Jose Espericueta who was tragically killed in the line of duty. Live PD previously followed Mission PD, including Cpl. Espericueta.
  • Williamson County, Tex. — Deputies respond to disturbance at apartment complex. End of episode.

‘Live PD,’ Season 3, Episode 75, June 22, 2019

  • Santa Fe, N.M. — Officer Diana Conklin and other officers respond to report of stolen vehicle outside residence. Officers subsequently find unoccupied car in nearby park with significant damage. Female cited for falsifying police report, careless driving, and hit and run.
  • Williamson County, Tex. — Traffic stop; erratic driving. Driver declines consensual search. EMS called because driver was woozy. K9 deployed; K9 alert. Probable cause search. Deputy finds vape pen that allegedly tested positive for THC (illegal) rather than CBD (legal). Driver arrested,
  • Okla. Highway Patrol — Traffic stop; window tint violation. Trooper smelled marijuana in car. Field sobriety test.
  • Lawrence, Ind. — Officers respond to report of female passed out in shrubbery. She is okay; apparently homeless. Later in episode, cops stop same woman for allegedly entering someone’s house supposedly owned by her grandmother 10 years ago.
  • Greene County, Mo. — Deputies respond to report of drive-by shootings. Two individuals shot (one needed surgery) but both are expected to recover. Deputies search area for subject vehicle; investigation ongoing. Later, deputies in another county detain suspect and subject vehicle. Both en route back to Greene County.
  • Santa Fe, N.M. (pretaped segment) — Officers pursue alleged drunk driver. Traffic stop; subject detained and refuses field sobriety test. Officers take him into custody with option of consenting to a blood test or a breath test at station.
  • Lawrence, Ind. (pretaped segment): Abrams: “Police trying to put together the pieces after a pursuit.” Cops detain three subjects in car; mismatched plates. Occupants allegedly tossed two guns out of window. Both retrieved; one of the weapons apparently stolen.
  • Williamson County, Tex. — Traffic stop; no front license plate installed. Slow roller. Abrams: “She’s complaining that there are too many officers there and yet she is now calling 911 in hope that more arrive.” After a lot of drama, driver receives verbal warnings for plate and failure to yield.
  • Santa Fe, N.M. — Traffic stop; ran red light. Driver had revoked license.
  • Salinas, Cal. — Traffic stop; tinted windows and running stop sign. Cops find “ginormous” or “jumbo” joint in car. Cops issue citations for joint and stop sign infraction to 19-year-old driver.
  • Lawrence, Ind. (pretaped segment): Abrams: “A guy seemed flat out of luck, and then out of thin air, a visitor approached who further deflated the situation.” Cops make citizen contact for flat tire. Cops determine that he is allegedly intoxicated. Girlfriend arrived at the scene very upset but refused to give him a ride. Daughter arrived and took him home. Officer Randle: “He’s got a lot of women in his life–probably gonna have a lot of trouble to deal with when he gets home.”
  • East Providence, R.I. — Traffic stop on highway; speeding. Motorist pulled over into the high-speed breakdown lane rather than shoulder. Released with warning.
  • Wanted segment, Florence, Ala. Morris, Jr.:”A woman who gives a whole new meaning to the term regifting.”
  • Santa Fe, N.M. — Officers respond to report of woman allegedly throwing toys at kids at apartment complex pool. Witnesses had cell phone video of woman’s alleged behavior which occurred at a six-year-old’s birthday party. Cops contact woman who said she was trying protect kids from drowning in the pool. Abrams: “…She said she was also trying to prevent them from getting into the deep end, and the response is that she was going off the deep end.’ Disorderly conduct charge.
  • East Providence, R.I. — Traffic stop; no lights. Officer issues warning. Some discussion about the term “goo.”
  • Missing segment, Portland, Ore.
  • Santa Fe, N.M. — Cops respond to report of mom of toddler doing drugs in car outside residence. Officers search neighborhood in child wellbeing check but unable to find a subject or subjects.
  • Lawrence, Ind. — Traffic stop; motorcycle/scooter with no plates. Released with warning.
  • Williamson County, Tex. — Traffic stop; expired tag. Driver apparently has no license. Deputy detects weed odor from car. Probable cause search but nothing found. Deputies tell driver to park vehicle in nearby parking lot and call someone to drive him and the car home. Car is registered and insured.
  • Richland County, S.C. — Noise complaint at large party, Deputies ask residents to turn down the music volume.
  • Lawrence, Ind. — Traffic stop; officers ask another occupant to drive (possible license issue perhaps). Occupants give impromptu concert for Live PD. camera.
  • Santa Fe, N.M. — Officer Martinez en route on highway to missing child call spots reckless motorcycle driver. Motorcycle fees even before officer lights him up. Officer does not pursue and continues to missing child call.
  • Salinas, Cal. (pretaped) — Abrams: “The worst possible matchup: A collision between an 18 wheeler and a motorcycle.” Officers respond to accident; biker transported to hospital.
  • Okla. Highway Patrol — Traffic stop; reckless driving (swerving). Trooper administers portable breathalyzer test.
  • Lawrence, Ind. — Cops respond to report of man cut on arm in fight with another man. These guys and their location have appeared on Live PD before. Cops apparently broker a truce between the duo. End of episode.

Live PD is on hiatus for two weeks. New episodes return on July 12, as will these recaps