Jumped selling sneakers, or drug deal gone bad?

This is a teaser for a hopefully-upcoming story. In it we go along along for the ride as Noah’s alibi-generation skills go up against against the investigatory skills of a few police officers.

Noah is insistent that he was selling a pair of “Jordan 6” sneakers. The police, on the other hand, don’t find any sign of sneakers. But they do find something else in his car: drugs.

According to Noah, the people who robbed him must have left the drugs behind. Do you believe him?

[You might be wondering why I don’t just publish the full story. It’s been ready for more than a week. The answer relates to YouTube’s advertiser-friendliness guidelines and their relationship with search and discovery on YouTube. I would have sworn that the full video easily meets those guidelines, but apparently YouTube’s systems and then a human reviewer didn’t see eye-to-eye with me on that. To YouTube’s credit, there is an unofficial way to appeal by one more round, but it’s all a process and it all takes time. That’s where things stand with the full-length video… and unfortunately a number of others as well.

Fortunately, this doesn’t happen often, but there are a solid half-dozen videos waiting for re-review. Even the most recent published video — of the woman who successfully ran from her DUI arrest — that, too, required an appeal of an appeal before it was green-lighted. Prior to that, a human reviewer had somehow categorized it as “focusing on graphic violence.” Which it obviously doesn’t.

Many of videos on this channel are demonetized, and for most of those videos I predicted as much. It’s only an issue when a video’s classification appears to be wrong, since improper classification dramatically and artificially limits a video’s reach. I publish original investigative reporting covering US law enforcement and crime, and I want my work to be seen by the people who want to see it. The last thing I want is for YouTube to suppress them for reasons that are not reality-based.]

That digression aside, and without further ado: the teaser.

*The full-length, 71-minute video is available now on Patreon.

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20 thoughts on “Jumped selling sneakers, or drug deal gone bad?

  1. Most LEOs are highly trained in lie detection. Nice to watch these guys going through the process. Do a ride-along sometime, you'll have a high probability to see this live. If you ever get to see a non-suspicious death investigation you'll be amazed at what the Detectives pick up.

  2. Drug deals don’t go bad over a zip. Lol

    Also imagine trying to file a report and the cops being like “not only can we not help you but also you’re going to jail because we searched your car.”

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