On Patrol: Live All-New Episode Tonight
A recap of the June 13, 2026, On Patrol: Live episode on Reelz, as anchored in the #OPLive Jersey City, N.J., studio by attorney/executive producer Dan Abrams, along with LEO analysts Curtis Wilson and Tom Rizzo, follows below.
This On Patrol: Live recap/update also includes the often-provocative or playful social media reaction to the law enforcement incidents in the field.
As #OPNation (i.e., the cohort consisting of the reality show’s avid followers) is well aware, and for those viewers and/or social media users new to the program, On Patrol Live on Reelz is more or less a reboot or rebrand of Live PD.
Updates from Friday Night’s Episode
See the First Shift video clip below for the following updates and features:
- Richland County, S.C.
- Knox County, Tenn.
- Richland County, S.C. BOLO follow-up
- Chattanooga, Tenn., viral fireworks video
On Patrol: Live Tonight
An extensive Clayton County, Ga., foot pursuit plus police incidents in other jurisdictions involving conveyances such as Slingshots, motorcycles, horses, shopping carts, and mopeds in addition to cars and trucks were among the significant highlights of this all-new episode of On Patrol: Live.
See below for details on all 28 law enforcement encounters across nine scheduled police departments in this On Patrol: Live episode guide, although Colton, Calif., PD did not appear.
How to Watch or Stream On Patrol: Live/Where to Watch On Patrol: Live
CLICK HERE for information about ways to get access to live and on-demand On Patrol: Live episodes. Separately, for those interested in purchasing some swag for Father’s Day or otherwise, visit OPLstore.com for On Patrol: Live merchandise.
On Patrol: Live Recap for June 13, 2026 (#OPL Episode 04-86)

- Toledo, Ohio — In the video clip below, Officers Eric Draper and Dallas Kwapich are on scene downtown during a “Slingshot parade” and advises one participant not to block traffic.
- Baton Rouge, La. — Sergeant Jordon Lear leaves a routine (but somewhat contentious) traffic stop — “people take kindness for weakness all the time” — to respond to nearby rollover accident. Paramedics transport the driver, who is conscious, to a local hospital. In the course of the investigation in which he examines evidence on scene, Sgt. Lear also reviews dash-cam video. Officer Caruntal Harrell is among the other cops on the accident scene.
Sgt. Lear: “So this is the dash cam from the lady’s car. We’re just trying to make sure she wasn’t run off the road or victimized by anyone. If she ran off the road on her own, that’s one thing, but we just want to make sure she wasn’t victimized by anyone.”
Listen below to Tom Rizzo mention that a warrant is unnecessary at this point (“…they want to ascertain, make sure, this wasn’t, like, a road rage or an assault by auto, so they’re accessing that camera…”):
Abrams update: “We’re just getting information…in that overturned vehicle. No one hit her. We know that now. And they now think there’s a possibility this was a medical incident. So they’re investigating the possibility that it was a medical incident. As we said before, she was conscious when taken to the hospital….”
- Clayton County, Ga. — Deputy Shamari Davis initiates a traffic stop initiates a traffic stop for allegedly not slowing down and moving over for emergency vehicles. “I guess his music was too loud, and preventing him from…seeing the flashing blue lights in the middle of the roadway.”
Listen below for Deputy Davis’s further explanation for the stop:
- Greene County, Mo. — Detective Travis Sanders on a traffic stop with a pickup truck. Three occupants. He interacts with a possibly intoxicated passenger who may or may not be 16. “How old are you? Sixteen? And you’re drunk?” Abrams: “And apparently ‘honest.'” Det. Sanders to the passenger: “…you’re playing games. Your buddies are all saying you’re 20; you’re lying to me, saying you’re 16. You clearly aren’t 16, so why are we continuing to play these games?” Abrams subsequently mentions that “I got it wrong. I said he was being honest right at the outset…he said ‘I’m 16 and I’m drunk.’ He got one of the two things right.” The subject ends up detained on alleged warrants.
Det. Sanders recap: “Neither the male driving or the female passenger had any signs of alcohol. Female’s a valid driver. She going to drive them away from here. And I’m gonna take the plates because they don’t belong to anybody — can’t be switched to this truck…passenger with his 10 warrants is being taken to the Green County jail by our transport unit. They’re being released; they were cooperative. No signs of alcohol use on ether of one of them, so they’re gonna catch a break, and I will be submitting charges on the passenger for…visibly intoxicated minor in possession of alcohol…” #OPLive studio analyst Curtis Wilson: “…it’s one of those things where you, I guess, they use their discretion, because normally you take that tag, you got to park that car, and leave it there.” Rizzo: “Just like age: Age is just a number.” Abrams: “…the guy initially said he was 16 and drunk. He was drunk, but he wasn’t 16. But the other lie was a lie of omission where he didn’t say ‘I have have 10 warrants…'”
- Tempe, Ariz. — On Patrol: Live caption: “Trespassed from property.” Officer Kate Anaradian provides backup in a one-year, trespass warning for two individuals from a store where they were allegedly “either smoking drugs or possibly just vaping.” After the warning, cops release the female. The male, who Officer Anaradian describes as the female subject’s “situationship,” is detained on a misdemeanor warrant from a nearby jurisdiction.
Listen below to Officer Anaradian’s incident recap:
- Toledo, Ohio (pre-recorded segment) — In the video clip below, Detectives James Macklin and Aaron Dudley detain a male in a brief foot pursuit after making routine contact. The subject has a seizure but recovers with the help of Det. Dudley. Paramedics responding to the scene transport the subject to the hospital.
Dan Abrams: “That is an example of a guy who made a very simple situation become a lot more difficult.” Curtis Wilson: “And then you got into the rescue mode after you get him — get him some help.” Abrams: “Immediately.”
- Baton Rouge, La. — Sgt. Lear and Officer Harrell make a traffic stop in a residential driveway. Sgt. Lear removes a ‘temp tag’ that he implies might be fake: “If you’re gonna do something like that, you at least got to take an art class.” Consensual car search. Sgt. Lear explains that “she got a couple things that drew my suspicion that she might possess some type of a narcotic…she gave consent, so we’re just gonna look right quick.”
- Toledo, Ohio — Officers Draper and Kwapich assist colleagues for a foot pursuit. They detain a male but then quickly release him when they determine he’s not the suspect. Bleeping. Search ongoing.
- Triple Play #2 — A Kalamazoo, Mich., PD, officer dramatically rescues a baby during a house fire:
- Richland County, S.C. — Sergeant Ethyn Perkins slowly drives down the street amidst a block party (according to Abrams, the sergeant “appears to be heading into a ‘party zone'”) in a residential neighborhood presumably just to make sure everything is okay. Sgt. Perkins: “It smells good! It’s like ribs.”
Listen below to the On Patrol: Live studio panel discuss party zones:
On Patrol: Live Hour 2
- Richland County, S.C. — Master Deputy Colin Davis makes a friendly traffic stop when he spots a passenger hanging out of a vehicle, “having some fun.”.
- Richland County, S.C., BOLO — As a follow up to the information provided during First Shift above, a suspect is still at large in the June 4, 2026, drive-by shooting incidents where suspects from two rival groups fired 70-plus rounds.
Curtis Wilson: “…it’s a guy that we want to get off the streets because we’re talking about a person who not only was shooting at deputies, so that means he will also shoot at individuals who are out in the street as well. So don’t approach him if you see him; just call the number that you see on the screen because he’s got to get off that street because he’s very, very dangerous.”
- Baton Rouge, La. — Sgt. Lear and Officer Harrell make contact with a male who allegedly might be loitering outside a convenience store. Sgt. Lear alludes to that the subject’s name being apparently similar to Tony Stark, a.k.a. Iron Man: “You got a little ‘Mojo’…that ain’t good…do you hang out with Captain America?…” Sgt. Lear also asks the store manager to post a “no loitering” sign outside the premises: “If y’all do that, then we can enforce it easier, okay?”
Sgt. Lear summary: “So when we got here, [the subject] is out here holding the wall up because he’s intoxicated, and he got a little Mojo in his pocket, very small amount. We’re gonna check him, make sure he ain’t got no warrant, and then we’ll send him on his way, and dispose of his drugs.”
On Patrol: Live studio analyst Tom Rizzo explains that Mojo is synthetic marijuana: “No two are ever the same. You got to see the chemical compounds in these, but down in certain regions of the country, they also combine that with another hallucinogenic or some type of upper, like a methamphetamine. It just spaces people out really badly.”
- Clayton County, Ga. (pre-recorded segment) — Dan Abrams introduces this segment in the video clip below by noting that deputies “pulled over a driver they believed was a ‘traveling salesman’ of sorts.” Lieutenant Joseph Toombs backs up Deputies Davis and Desmond Whitson on a traffic stop. Four occupants. Drugs and a gun allegedly found in a vehicle search. The driver, who allegedly accepts responsibility for the contraband, is arrested on “a ton of charges.” Passengers released.
- Toledo, Ohio — On Patrol: Live caption: “Report of burglary in progress.” Officers Draper and Kwapich, along with other units, respond on scene at a residence, but the suspect already fled the location. Cops obtain a description of the suspect, however.
- Knox County, Tenn. — On Patrol: Live caption: “Searching for domestic violence suspect.” Officer Dalton Swanger and other units enter the home, but the suspect apparently took off into the woods. Deputy Swanger: “We looked everywhere we could…unfortunately, we weren’t able to locate him. We missed him twice by just a couple of minutes, so it’s extremely frustrating. We’re gonna go back out with the victim and try to get her transported to a safe place, women’s shelter, something along those lines, and move forward.”
- BOLO segment — Clackamas County, Ore., alleged ATM thieves:
- Fullerton, Calif. — Corporals Brandon Ramek and Daniel Warner on a friendly traffic stop. #OPLive host Dan Abrams claims that “apparently they found some cocaine.” Cops allegedly find a prop gun and fake money in a trunk search. The driver, who has an Instagram page, apparently makes music videos. Abrams adds that “I’m being told that they just found, I guess, a small amount of personal use cocaine, and so they are searching. Doesn’t seem like they found anything else.”
- Clayton County, Ga. — Deputy Davis makes friendly contact with two men riding horses and asks them to be safe. During the conversation, and much to the displeasure of #OPNation, Deputy Davis seems to refer to On Patrol: Live as “Live PD.”
Abrams: “The Old Spice men will go on their way.”
Deputy Davis’ reaction: “Got to love it, out here with some horses. Riding in the little road is a little dangerous, but hey, at least that’s interesting. That’s something you don’t see very day, so that was pretty cool. They need some more lights on those horses, though. Don’t want to get hit; that would be bad.”
- Clayton County, Ga. — In an incident that consumes a lot of the episode’s airtime, Deputies Davis and Devon Brown, and Lieutenant Jonathan Carey, among other units, initially search for a vehicle that previously fled from another agency earlier in the day and that possibly may have been involved in a drive-by shooting. On Patrol: Live caption: “PIT maneuver executed.” In the midst of a the pursuit, the driver foot-bails after the PIT by Deputy Davis. Police set up a perimeter and extensively search a wooded area for the fleeing suspect. K9 and drone resources deployed in the search. Cops also search the abandoned vehicle and allegedly spot a cell phone and a gun. Deputy Davis calls 911 to ask dispatch to find out who the phone belongs to or just the number itself. On Patrol: Live caption: “911 call from the suspect’s phone.” The suspect who has multiple warrants from two agencies is still at large. Deputies provide multiple updates on the search during the #OPL episode.
Listen below to preliminary updates from Deputies Davis and Brown:
In Lt. Carey’s final update of the #OPLive episode in the video clip embedded at the end of this report, he indicates that police have positively identified the suspect through documents left in the car and then checking with the officer that had pulled over the suspect earlier, and will obtain a warrant. Police will also try to make contact with the suspect at his address of record.
Lt. Carey: “We don’t catch everybody, but for the most part, we catch everybody. It is what it is.” Dan Abrams: “They still very well may catch this person. They know who he is. That’s gonna help enormously.”
- Triple Play #3 — a Flagler County, Fla., motorbike pursuit:
- Tempe, Ariz. — Officer Shante Adkins backs up a colleague on a friendly motorcycle stop for no license plate on the bike itself apparently because of a broken mounting bracket. Instead, the license plate is apparently zip-tied to the passenger’s backpack. On Patrol: Live caption: “Wearing license plate.” The other officer releases the couple with a warning.
Officer Adkins recap: Her colleague “pulled them over because this motorcycle was not displaying a license plate, but when my partner got here, he did notice that they’re displaying the license plate on her backpack, which is okay for now until the sun goes down. Then she’s probably gonna have to be off the streets. But we’re just gonna let him off with a warning since she does have it properly displayed right now…that’s actually clever. I’ve never seen that before…so they’re good to go now. Gave them a warning. They know what to do and what to fix.”
Abrams: “What if she had a light at the bottom of the helmet…could that serve for nighttime as sort of like illuminating the license [plate] on her back?…so next time, I go to Daytona, I want to get one of those…riding on the back…our regular viewers will get that.”
- Baton Rouge, La. — Sgt. Lear, Corporal Blake Welborn, and other officers on a traffic stop. Sgt. Lear to the driver who is Mirandized: “…right now, it’s a summons…so you are aware that you can’t smoke marijuana and drive, right? So before you get aggressive in the attitude with me, you may want to think about the consequences of DWI, which are much stiffer than possession of marijuana, if you want to go that route…but I prefer not to…marijuana is just like drinking. You can’t do it and drive…you have somebody you can call to come drive your vehicle? Let’s get that ball rolling…”
- Fullerton, Calif. — On Patrol: Live caption: “Report of naked disturbance.” Cpls. Ramek and Warner make contact with a clerk at a convenience store where a female allegedly wearing no clothes or partially dressed had allegedly refused to leave. The subject had already left the location when cops arrive. After speaking with the clerk, Cpl. Ramek mentions that “it sounds like she’s not completely naked. Sounds like she might have just a little bit of clothes on…”They subsequently locate a possible subject nearby who is pushing a shopping cart and advise her that she is trespassed from the store.
- Toledo, Ohio — Officers Draper and Kwapich, plus other cops, make contact with two females at a residence in connection with a disturbance that may involve a family issue.
- Tempe, Ariz. — On Patrol: Live caption: “Serving outstanding warrant.” Officer Anaradian is on scene at an apartment complex where a group of cops knock on the unit door (and no one answers) and then enter the unit which turns out to be vacant. Based on Officer Anaradian’s comments in the video clip below, the #OPL caption might be incorrect. Instead, police may have entered the premises as part of a drug-related investigation owing to exigent circumstances involving a female and now will apply for a warrant (#OPNation can draw their own conclusions from her remarks). Perhaps On Patrol: Live will clarify the scenario during next Friday’s episode. As of this writing, the Tempe PD X feed has no information about this incident.
- Greene County, Mo. — On Patrol: Live caption: “Moped stop” As the episode concludes in the video clip below, Det. Sanders pulls over a moped carrying a kitten, for no plates and an expired driver’s license. In releasing the operator with a warning after a friendly interaction, Det. Sanders clarifies the name of the current show.
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