This Weekend’s On Patrol: Live Highlights

On Patrol: Live — i.e., Live PD 2.0 — premiered on the Reelz channel in July 2022 and generally follows the same basic format as its A&E network predecessor in which videographers accompany cops on night patrol in real time.

About 50 On Patrol: Live cameras go into the field with the law enforcement officers during the ride-along on Friday and Saturday evenings.

According to a report published by IndieWire on February 7, Reelz viewership has increased nearly 300 percent year over year with On Patrol: Live on its schedule.

Perhaps for this reason, Reelz has now renewed On Patrol: Live for an additional 90 episodes.

An On Patrol: Live recap, including the social media reaction, follows. NOTE: See Disclaimer below.

On Patrol: Live Summary for February 17, 2023 (#OPL Episode 01-57)

  • Beech Grove, Ind. — Officers pursue motorist who fled from traffic stop. Driver originally stopped at cul de sac, but then took off, prompting a further chase, which ended at residence. Driver detained at fort porch. Sgt. Brandon Shipley mentions that if he had pulled over originally, he either would have just received a speeding ticket or a warning. Vehicle released to parents.
  • Volusia County, Fla. — Deputies respond to a robbery involving a dispute over an alleged stolen cell phone. Amidst bleeped-out dialogue, deputies interview the purported victim named Jimmy outside of a store who allegedly was punched. Apparent blood stains on pants. Another man, who was apparently retrieving his mom’s phone, also interviewed. Mom also comes to the scene as deputies sort out the situation.

Deputy Jake Bissonnette: “So it looks like the gentleman that we’re out with now, possibly, we don’t know, may have taken somebody else’s phone, intentionally or accidentally. We’re not sure yet. The victim of the phone theft tracked their phone to here. They came here, I guess saw him, confronted him, ‘hey, my phone’s here,’ whatever. Some type of argument ensued. The guy…outside was trying to get away…allegedly ramming his bike, or trying to get away from them. At some point, the victims of the phone theft or lost phone, whatever it is, battered him, and apparently took the phone back…it sounds like we have a victim and suspect on one slot, and a victim and suspect on another. Figuring out where this goes and whose it is is the next task. Looks like he’s not gonna go to the hospital; his injuries are minor. He’s just bleeding.”

On Patrol: Live co-host Sean Larkin: “The gentleman that’s bleeding — in his mind, does he think ‘hey, I just found a phone, and this guy now has robbed me, assaulted, taken the phone from me? The [other] gentleman — his phone’s been lost or stolen, and he’s trying to retrieve it back. So he got into a tussle with this guy to get it back. Police got to obviously talk to both parties, they’ve got a camera there…” Co-host Curtis Wilson: “Not only that but [the other guy] says they pinged the phone. Not only that, but they were using ‘find my phone,’ and they saw this guy at that location. But he wasn’t sure it was him, so they followed him to another location, tracked that phone to that location, and that’s where they say, ‘yeah, this is the guy.. This is my phone. It’s got to be.”

Follow-up by Bissonnette, who claims the first man is “not a good liar. It’s clearly the phone he had. He doesn’t want to come off it; he’s gonna stick to that story probably till the day he dies…and that’s fine. He’s lying; we know he’s lying.” The owners of the phone apparently don’t want to press charges. “If they don’t want to pursue criminal charges, and neither does he, so everybody’s gonna go home tonight. They got their phone back, and Jimmy will have a couple of days to let his mouth heal, and happy ending for everybody, I guess, kinda.”

  • Berkeley County, S.C. — Deputies pursue pick-up truck from gas station/convenience store that allegedly wouldn’t pull over for purported improper display and failure to maintain lane. Driver pulls into driveway of home and bails. Dog left in truck. Ironic sticker on truck (see below). Vehicle searched and inventories. Residents say the man is not in the house. K-9 deployed to search backyard area. Deputies suspect the driver is in the home. Animal control summoned to the scene to take dog. Truck towed.

Sgt. Paul Yacobozzi reviews gas station surveillance footage to determine that the suspect got into the vehicle and drove off at the beginning of the chase. “What I want to do is get him leaving the store, getting into the driver’s seat of the truck, and actually starting the truck up and leaving. This way, when it comes time for court and prosecution, that he can’t say ‘well, there’s was someone else in the car’ [or] ‘I got out and ran.’ I can prove that he was the only one in the vehicle. I watched my dashcam footage, and he’s the only one that get’s out of the vehicle. I’ve now linked him at the store, getting in the truck, taking control of the vehicle, and leaving…I’m just placing him driving the vehicle, and being the only one in the vehicle that could have driven it from the store when I attempted a traffic stop.”

Studio host Dan Abrams: “And that can certainly help them get a warrant to go inside the house where they believe he is hiding.”

  • Spotsylvania County, SC. — Traffic stop in residential area; headlights off and then originally drove off. Driver apparently told deputies he consumed two drinks. Field sobriety testing followed breathalyzer. Driver allegedly tested .101 on the latter device and is arrested on suspicion of DUI.
https://twitter.com/landcollier/status/1626774896675102721
  • Richland County, S.C. — Ever-vigilant Capt. Danny Brown detains motorist at motel. Gun found on ground. Brown: “Looked to me like he was making a deal with the guy who was hiding under the stairwell…As soon as he hit the corner, I heard that gun hit the ground, heard that metal scrape…” Driver also allegedly tossed a phone under the vehicle, “which made me think he’s was trying to get rid of dope or another gun.” White substance found that will be tested. Checking gun to see if it is stolen. Likely car search. Investigation continues.
  • Daytona Beach, Fla. — Sgt. Richie Maher spots van parked outside abandoned building and questions driver (who seems to be sitting in the passenger seat) who is in his underwear and said he just finished consuming a Wendy’s meal. Maher about the older gentleman: “I noticed his blue-jeans shorts are pulled down so his buttocks is exposed. His front side not so much, but I have concerns for what he might have been doing back here. Hence the reason why I…asked him to hold his license, because if he was doing something uncouth, I’d rather not [touch license].” ID/tag run; man has no warrants or probationary statuses. “I’m gonna ask him to move along; he is on private property here. It’s clearly marked for no trespassing. And I believe it’s part of our trespass-arrest-site initiative, which is certain areas in our the city can sign up with us on private property where we can technically arrest for trespass after a warning as soon as we find someone on a property after hours. But with the [Daytona Speedway] races in town, I don’t think it’s gonna behoove me to lock him up for simple misdemeanor like that.”

Maher tells driver there is no need to apologize. “No worries…I’m your servant; I’m a public servant. I just want to make sure you get out of here safely…do me a favor, and have a safe night. Drive safely.”

Sean Larkin: “At least he pulled his pants up.” Abrams adds, “All right, ‘cracking down’ there in Daytona Beach as they get ready for that big truck race.”

  • Wilkes-Barre, Pa. — Officers detain man who was allegedly walking on train tracks. Subject gives a shout-out to Abrams. He also asks cameraman if he “can get a copy of this.” Pat-down and bag search.
  • Spotsylvania County, Va. — Traffic stop outside strip mail. Deputy Tristan Burnett indicates the driver for swerving. Passenger allegedly “on a bender,” and couple were heading to liquor store before closing time for a “reup.” Burnett has a friendly conversation with the couple and sends them on their way. Burnett: “It was a female with a pretty intoxicated husband in the passenger seat…she was dealing with him and trying to clean her glasses…they’ll be having a fun time at home.” Abrams: “I’m not sure how fun it’s actually gonna be for her.” Larkin: “At least they were smart.”
  • Daytona Beach, Fla. (pre-recorded segment) — Officers in a “high-risk traffic stop” pull over a rental van they believe to be stolen. Occupants detained. Vehicle is confirmed stolen and occupants are arrested.
  • Berkeley County, S.C. — Deputies respond to report of a drunk man in yard. As part of the investigation, they interview two witnesses as well as another man standing on porch.
  • Nye County, Nev. (pre-recorded segment) — Deputies pursue fleeing pick-up truck driven by an alleged shoplifter. Driver wrecks out in front of home and crashes into garage. Vehicle also suffers substantial damage. Driver, who is 17, is detained and faces various charges. Wilson: “It’s fortunate that nobody was in that part of the house that he struck with that vehicle because that’s dangerous in a high-speed chase like this, and this guy loses control of the vehicle and crashes into a home like that. Larkin: “This thing started from a shoplifting, something that probably would have been a citable offense, a ticket, and the kid would have gone home to his parents. Instead, he puts all these other people at risk.”
  • Berkeley County, S.C. — Deputies respond to report of robbery that involved a stabbing. Deputies set up perimeter and search for two suspects. K9 deployed.
  • Beech Grove, Ind. — Cops investigate mismatched plate on parked vehicle in front of home that may be stolen. Sgt. Shipley makes contact with homeowner who says the occupants of the vehicle walked away. Cops canvas area for them and also search vehicle.
  • Beech Grove, Ind. (pre-recorded segment) — Officers pull over truck that was reported stolen in another jurisdiction. Meth and paraphernalia allegedly found during vehicle search; driver arrested on drug-related charges. The other jurisdiction does not pursue any charges. Larkin points out that car theft is “on the rise” in America.
  • Richland County, S.C. — Traffic stop at gas station for reckless driving. Cpl. Kenny Fitzsimmons spots baby in vehicle allegedly sitting in the passenger’s lap instead of in a car seat. Fitzsimmons: “That irritates the hell out of me.” He informs driver that the car is not moving from the scene until she obtains a car seat for the infant. Abrams: “So reckless driving is bad, and not having an infant in a car seat is bad. You put those two things together, and it’s particularly problematic.”
  • Richland County, S.C. (pre-recorded segment) — Traffic stop. Driver appears very upset (“not my year’). Deputy Christian tells him there is “plenty of time to turn it around.” He understandably declines to give driver a hug, however. Weed allegedly found in vehicle. According to officers, driver receives “a traffic summons for simple possession of marijuana. He’ll end up having to go to court for it. He’ll be able to take his car home, and hopefully have a better night.” Larkin admits he occasionally gave a subject a hug or fist bump when he was on the job. “They’ve given a few things back that weren’t so friendly.” Wilson jokes that the deputy should have given the driver “a big old hug; that’s all the guy wanted. He just needed a hug; he was having a bad year already, only about six-weeks in…” Abrams: “I think that guy’s year is gonna get better. I don’t know why, I have a feeling.”
  • Nye County, Nev. — The Murphy family (Lt. Eric and Deputy Cody) conduct traffic stop on vehicle whose headlights were out. Driver informs deputies that she is searching for a missing dog. Lt. Murphy searches for the husky using a thermal-imaging camera mounted on cruiser that is connected to his laptop.
  • Richland County, S.C. (pre-recorded segment) — Abrams mentions that someone was “left holding the bag” after a traffic stop on an alleged stolen car with two occupants. Vehicle search; drugs allegedly found. Male claims he put the drugs in female’s purse. According to Deputy Fitzsimmons, male charged with possession-with-intent-distribute offenses, and female driver charged with possession of a stolen vehicle and operating the car without a license.
  • Richland County, S.C. — Traffic stop. Driver apparently has a license but she hasn’t retrieved it yet from DMV. Capt. Danny Brown and Cpl. Fitzsimmons have a friendly, humorous interaction with driver and a passenger.
  • Crime of the Night — High-speed pursuit in Wyandotte, Mich., for driver who has 15 felony warrants. Subject wrecks out and car catches on fire. Cops rescue driver. In addition to warrants, he faces additional charges in connection with fleeing from police.
  • Nye County, Nev, (pre-recorded segment) — Deputies investigate report of dog shot by angry neighbor. Subject allegedly confessed, and he is arrested.
  • Wanted segment — Minnesota man is on the run for failure to appear at his trial where was subsequently convicted of murder.
  • Daytona Beach, Fla. — Traffic stop apparently for headlights and seatbelt issue. Note that the Reelz Channel/On Patrol: Live feed froze at this point in the broadcast.
  • Spotsylvania County, Va. (pre-recorded segment) — Deputies investigate a situation involving a “bizarre love triangle,” according to Abrams. Deputy interviews woman at residence who claims she was assaulted. Suspect is allegedly a police dispatcher in a neighboring jurisdiction. The latter is arrested on several charges.
  • Richland County, S.C. — Traffic stop; driver has warrant from U.S. Marshals Service.
  • Daytona Beach, Fla. — Officers respond to a report of a fight between a man and a woman. The woman apparently was involved in a prior incident. Sgt. Maher tries to contact the latter at a residence, but she is not home, and then searches the area for her. The On Patrol: Live feed crashed again briefly during this segment.
  • Spotsylvania County, S.C. — Traffic stop. Driver is doing college homework “in the middle of a random parking lot,” according to Deputy Burnett, who has a friendly chat with the student. No law enforcement issue.

On Patrol: Live Summary for February 18, 2023 (#OPL Episode 01-58)

  • Berkeley County, S.C. — Deputies respond to report of disruptive passenger on bus. Bus driver tells Cpl. BJ Nelson that he wants the man removed. Cpl. Nelson: “So we kind of treat the bus like it’s a cab. If he’s basically showing his behind, acting irate on the bus, and they don’t want to serve him anymore or drive him, we got to kind of kick him off at that point. He’s acting a nuisance. So we’re gonna go see if he has any luggage and stuff on the bus. If not, then we’re gonna have to tell him to ‘kick rocks’ and find another bus.”
  • Beech Grove, Ind. — Lt. Jeff Bruner responds. to report of dog hit by car. Dog wrapped in blanket by driver (the dog may have been hit by more than one car). Bruner takes custody of dog and brings it to police headquarters; animal control officer notified. Bruner suggests that dog is okay and just “super freaked out.”

Update From Lt. Bruner: dog is in stable condition, and animal control transported the dog to a local medical hospital to asses its injuries. Someone from Pennsylvania contacted Beech Grove PD suggesting that he might be the owner of the dog if it’s the same one that was stolen about three years ago. That man is following up with animal control. No update as to whether the dog has a chip. Abrams: “Wow, that would be quite a turn of events if one of the viewers of OPLive has just found his stolen dog, but the good news is that the dog is stable.” No update as to whether the dog has a chip.

  • Daytona Beach, Fla. — Sgt. Maher responds to report of disturbance at hotel. Subject had allegedly already been trespassed from the location. Maher catches up to suspect who is not particularly communicative when he attempts to interact with her. She told officer her last name was Rockefeller. Update from Abrams: “Turns out her name is not Rockefeller; ‘shocker’ there. She was just trespassed from the hotel and told not to go back there.”
  • Nye County, Nev. (pre-recorded segment) — Deputy Nicholas Huggins and other first responders are on the scene of a serious rollover accident in which at least one person was ejected. Five persons in total suffered injuries. Field sobriety testing on driver who is arrested for DUI.
  • Wilkes-Barre, Pa. — Traffic stop outside auto parts store. That stop is cancelled when a serious two-car accident occurs at adjacent intersection. Both cars with serious damage. Abrams; Officer Bill Wilk obviously “prioritizes the accident over the traffic stop.” Larkin: “Absolutely. He’s just stopping the car and quickly has to make that transition. I can assure you that if it was just a minor fender bender that didn’t look like there’d be any injuries or potential death, he’d probably stay [with] the traffic stop and get somebody else started. Sees how serious it is, moves right over, does the right thing…his intention was let the traffic stop go altogether.”
  • Berkeley County, S.C. — Traffic stop on pick-up truck for lights and tag issues. K9 deployed and alert. Probable cause vehicle search; dog in the vehicle. Driver admits to having a small amount of weed on his person. Abrams: “A lot of pooches on the show tonight.” Driver asked to stomp on weed and released with written warning only.
  • Richland County, S.C. — Deputies respond to automatic gunfire report at apartment complex. Sgt. Garo Brown interviews residents, examine bullet holes, and he and other cops search area on foot for shell casings and other evidence.
  • Volusia County, Fla. — Deputies respond to report of dog vs. dog fight. Investigation suggests that it is actually a dispute between neighbors. “He called my wife a b–ch,” man claims. Deputy Brady Bergeron also interacts with man’s friendly and not a “killer dog “, i.e. that appears hardly aggressive, at residence. Bergeron then has to leave the scene when a priority call comes in.
  • Volusia County, Fla. — Bergeron and other deputies respond to report of a possible burglary at a residence that was caught on homeowner’s Ring camera. No forced entry found. Bergeron praises such home cameras that benefit citizens and law enforcement. Homeowner arrives and shows cops some footage on his cell phone of possible prowlers, one of whom milled around car and allegedly was at screen door. Investigation ongoing.
  • Beech Grove, Ind. — Traffic stop by Sgt. Shipley for running stop sign. Interesting artwork on car’s hood. Abrams: “No mention of the bloody skeleton on the front of the car?”
  • Berkeley County, S.C. — Deputies respond to report of disturbance at convenience store/gas station. Deputy Nelson: “That’s the crazy guy.” Turns out the subject is the same person who was kicked off the bus in the show’s opening segment. He is arrested at the scene for disorderly conduct. Abrams: “So it appears he caused some trouble on the bus and now causing some trouble at a nearby convenience store.” Wilson: “‘Hey, you can’t be acting crazy out on the streets or we’ll come and get you.'”
  • Richland County, S.C. — Deputies respond to report of an assault in progress by a man in the front yard who allegedly had an axe and possibly a gun and/or was threatening other people. Deputies interview witnesses on the scene. Incident may have involved a family related dispute. Suspect left scene by car before deputies arrived.
  • Spotsylvania County, Va. — Traffic stop on van. Graphic: “Slow-speed chase.” Deputy Burnett claims that the driver “is extremely drunk.” Field sobriety test. Driver agrees to take breathalyzer but doesn’t seem to understand instructions. Abrams; Either there is a language barrier here or the guy is not being particularly helpful.” After several tries, driver finally completes breath test and allegedly records a .013 on the device. Abrams: “Translation: You’re being arrested.”
  • Richland County, S.C. — Attempted traffic stop for erratic driving. Driver flees, prompting a high-speed chase. Sgt. Brown loses sight of the vehicle but other units are on the lookout for it. Deputies later find vehicle abandoned in McDonald’s parking lot with front, passenger-side tire destroyed. Car search. Deputies examining evidence left in car, including a phone, and will determine if vehicle is reported stolen. Larkin: “I’m a big fan of street justice sometimes, and he might have gotten away, but that car has a lot of damage to the owner of it, if he’s, in fact, the person that fled.”
  • Berkeley County, S.C. — Deputies respond to fender-bender accident in which two cars are stuck together. Cpl. Cameron Blackmon tries to assist the decoupling: “That’s a first for everything.” Front vehicle finally manages to break free. Aibrams: “This car accident ‘love story’ has now ended.”
  • Richland County, S.C. – Deputies make felony traffic stop on allegedly carjacked vehicle. Three occupants detained at gunpoint. Somewhat convoluted situation. Female driver arrested; the other two occupants are released.

Cpl. Bryce Hughes: “I was just speaking with the caller. It sounds like he made a report for this vehicle as a breach-of-trust vehicle some time ago, because his ex-girlfriend took the vehicle, and maybe one of the females that’s in the car took his vehicle without permission. She wasn’t supposed to have it. Apparently, she then turned over possession of the vehicle to the male that was in the car, which I guess is who he said he saw driving the car earlier. He said that he was armed, so I’m gonna try to see if we can locate that weapon, and then we’re gonna get this whole cluster together and make charges and do everything we need to do here.”

Cpl. Hughes provides further analysis: “It sounds like what we have determined with everything is that the female who was driving the car, she is the suspect of the report. We did find the report that was made a couple of weeks ago for the vehicle being a breach of trust. She took the car. She never returned it when she was supposed to; it’s a breach-of-trust vehicle. So she’s going to ‘take a ride’ for that [to the detention center]. The male subject — we can see that it being reasonable that he feared for his life, that someone was tracing down the car that he was in, especially if the female was indicating ‘that’s my ex-boyfriend, I’m afraid of him,’ so on and so forth. So we cannot prove that there was criminal intent behind that besides the fact that he was just in fear for his life. And it’s possible he didn’t know that there was a child in the car as well. However, this all goes back to the fact that the ex-girlfriend took the car, she wasn’t supposed to be in the car, and she shouldn’t have put everyone in this situation in the position that she did. So I’m gonna go explain all of this to the victim now.”

Hughes expresses a lot of empathy in her conversation with the owner, and also mentions, in part, that “in his mind, his safety and the other people’s safety in the vehicle were at risk, because he thought that you were the bad guy. He didn’t know that he was in the car with the bad ‘guy.'”

Abrams: “Obviously, [the victim] is not happy, but she’s giving a pretty good explanation here of exactly what her thinking was on this.”

  • Berkeley County, S.C. — A “huge collision” spotted/heard by Blackmon while he is in between calls. Pick-up truck that struck trailer has major damage. Driver may have been injured by some glass. The other parties are okay. Truck hauling trailer apparently ran out of gas, and trailer was allegedly partially in roadway. EMS summoned to the scene. Liability undetermined at this point. Highway patrol to conduct investigation.

Abrams: “We were just talking in studio about who would be at fault in this kind of situation. It’s not as straightforward as you might think.” Larkin: “Well, traffic accidents were not my niche on the police department, but the little knowledge I do remember from it, the trailer that’s hanging out there, the lights are not facing the roadway, so traffic coming through wouldn’t necessarily see the lights or even notice the trailer. So if you’re having a conversation with your passenger, the trailer still hanging out in the roadway may hit it. I’m thinking it’s gonna be the fault of the people with the trailer who have their load stuck in the main road.” Wilson: “And like you said, that distracted driver didn’t see it, but the driver of that big load tractor could have stood out there with traffic, making sure everybody moved over to the side…” Abrams: “We don’t know if the driver was distracted, but that’s, of course, the concern because, for sure, he didn’t see that trailer.”

  • Wanted segment — Road rage incident in Stockton, Cal.
  • Volusia County, Fla. — Deputies respond to the scene of a motorcycle hit by truck. Motorcyclist is apparently okay. Aggressive woman starts shouting at the truck driver, dialogue bleeped; she is cuffed. Bergeron says he understands that a family member might be upset or emotional when a loved one is in a crash but “acting like that is not the way to go about things…what is fighting this guy gonna do? It sounds like a genuine accident. Like maybe he wasn’t even at fault; maybe the motorcyclist might have been at fault. I don’t know. I wasn’t here; I haven’t seen any video.” Abrams: “It sure doesn’t seem like she’s helping the situation there by just yelling and screaming and not allowing the officers to do what they do.”
  • Daytona Beach, Fla. (pre-recorded segment) — Officers respond to report of shooting allegedly involving a driver who fled scene. Traffic stop; fleeing driver appears to be the victim and has bullet wound in the foot from an alleged drive-by. EMS summoned to scene. Driver is transported to hospital. Investigation ongoing.
  • Wilkes-Barre, Pa. — Traffic stop; pat-down of two male occupants. Drivers gives consent for car search.
  • Daytona Beach, Fla. — Traffic stop by Officer B. Ramirez for woman on bike; lights issue.
  • Crime of the Night — Assault at Tampa apartment-building gym that has already made national headlines. Other woman in the complex was also allegedly attacked the next day. Suspect faces charges of sexual battery, false imprisonment, and kidnapping.
  • Volusia County, Fla. — Traffic stop; motorcycle allegedly speeding and ran red light. Deputy Bissonnette admonishes the driver for potentially endangering himself and others on the road. Gives the man a break by only issuing a ticket for the red-light infraction.
  • Missing segment — Virginia woman who never returned from NYC visit.
  • Daytona Beach, Fla. — Officers respond to report of a dispute outside bar. Sgt. Maher interviews woman who does not seem particularly informative. Maher and another officer do a walk-through of bar. A truck is allegedly involved in the incident. They later interview older gentleman at another location who is the purported victim of perhaps something along the lines of road rage and who gives a long explanation of what may have occurred.
  • Wilkes-Barre, Pa. — Cops respond to nose complaint at residence. Using a translation app on his phone, one of the officers asks homeowner to turn down the volume, which he agrees to do. Friendly homeowner seems to indicate to officers that three people inside consumed 24 beers that evening.

Abrams ends the show by saying that “the bad news is that we are out of time. The good news is that we’re gonna be back just about every weekend for a long time.”

Disclaimer

The On Patrol: Live disclaimer that airs several times during each episode is embedded above.

Moreover, as the the Live PD disclaimer appropriately indicated during its run, and that still applies to the successor show, not all outcomes are known or final.

Criminal charges, if any, may have been reduced, dismissed, or never filed.

When alleged criminal activities are depicted on On Patrol: Live, all suspects are presumed innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law, as the current disclaimer reaffirms.

Further, please understand that the incidents aired on the show, and/or a description of same as briefly summarized in this blog, including but not limited to any arrests, constitute mere allegations. The content presented herein is for entertainment purposes only.

Initial assessments, commentary, opinions, or observations about the incidents, which are sometimes irreverent, made by the studio hosts or cops or On Patrol: Live — or anyone on Twitter or on another social media platform for that matter — may be incomplete and/or inaccurate. No endorsement of that content is intended or implied.

Pending Lawsuit

Parenthetically, A&E and the production company for On Patrol: Live, along with the Reelz channel, have lawyered up.