The Importance of Knowing Your Rights: A Conversation with Jerry

That’s what I love about Jerry. He’s an open book. He gonna Crack. Jerry, if you ever. You ever get interrogated though. Yeah, I’m. I’m toast. Jerry, just say lawyer. Yeah. Can you say the word lawyer? Lawyer. You wanna talk to a lawyer? No, not right now. Yeah, but. No, when they ask you that. Oh, it’s lawyer. Lawyer. Okay, I’ll. I’ll be the cop. Well, we could go a couple different ways. If you want to talk to a lawyer, then we can’t help you out anymore. Are you sure you want to talk to a lawyer? I’m alright right now. Yeah, you’re. Yeah. You’re not charged with anything. Lawyer. So you’re saying you’d like to talk to Lori? Cause then we can’t help you anymore. Lawyer. Well, how can you help me? Well, we need to figure out your timeline and everything. And then based on that, we can figure out what’s really going on here. Otherwise people are gonna point the finger at you. But if you can tell us what you were doing, then we can look at somebody else and find the real guy that did it. Sure. No, don’t do that, Jerry. Don’t do that. Oh, he’s gonna help me. Just look. Yeah, that’s my favorite one. Cops. So we’re just trying to help you. Never. We’re trying to help you. You know, their. Their favorite question is, do you mind if I search this vehicle? If you say yes. They say that You said yes, you could search. Yeah, if you say no, they say you said no, you didn’t mind if they search. Okay, gotcha. You say, I do not consent to a search. Gotcha. Gotcha. I agree, no matter what.