Episodios

  • Report Changed? North Royalton Police Stop | IA Expert Breakdown
    Apr 6 2026

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    North Royalton police stop controversy involving Officer Lowe has raised serious questions about police accountability, internal affairs investigations, and DUI stop procedures.

    In this interview, retired LAPD Internal Affairs Sergeant Marlon Marrache (Truth Behind the Badge) breaks down the North Royalton police stop and explains how internal affairs investigations actually work behind the scenes.

    We cover key issues in the North Royalton case:
    • Was the DUI stop valid?
    • What happens during an internal affairs investigation?
    • What it means when a police report is changed
    • How police accountability applies when command staff is involved

    This is not speculation. This is a real internal affairs perspective on a real Ohio police case.

    Because this isn’t just about North Royalton.

    It’s about whether the rules apply equally in law enforcement.

    The Tentacle Nation pipeline just delivered another receipt.

    Be loud. Be heard. Shake the system until the truth falls out.

    🌐 www.theinfamousexchief.com

    🎯 Join the conversation: https://liinks.co/the.infamous.exchief

    #ProCopNotProCorruption #TheInfamousExChief #NorthRoyalton

    0:00 North Royalton Police Stop Intro (Officer Lowe Case Overview)
    1:00 Recording Issues & Technical Note Explained
    2:39 Marlon Marrache Interview – Internal Affairs Expert (LAPD Background)
    14:00 DUI Stop Explained – Probable Cause & Police Traffic Stop Breakdown
    18:44 Police Double Standard – Law Enforcement Discipline Explained
    22:42 Police Report Changed? Internal Affairs Misconduct & Cover-Up Analysis
    43:48 Body Cam Evidence Breakdown – Police Cover-Up Consequences
    46:53 Police Accountability Explained – Internal Affairs Reality Check
    51:29 Command Staff Controversy – North Royalton Case Final Analysis

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    1 h
  • Chief Miller Breaks Silence on Resignation | No Filter
    Mar 29 2026

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    Apple Creek’s former Police Chief Doug Miller is speaking out… and he’s not holding anything back.

    In this exclusive sit-down with The Infamous Ex-Chief, Miller breaks down what really led to his resignation, the internal battles with council, and what was happening behind the scenes that the public never saw.

    From budget fights and leadership philosophy to what he calls “personal” attacks… this conversation pulls back the curtain on how small-town politics and law enforcement leadership collide.

    We also dive into the so-called “FlaskGate” incident, the anonymous complaints, and the culture clash between departments — including a raw discussion about how officers are often targeted from within their own ranks.

    This isn’t a press release. This isn’t damage control.

    This is one cop talking straight.

    If you care about police accountability, transparency, and what’s really happening inside departments across Ohio… this is a must-watch.

    Drop your questions and thoughts in the comments — we read them all.

    Be loud. Be heard. Shake the system until the truth falls out. 🔥🚔📄

    #ProCopNotProCorruption #TheInfamousExChief #DougMiller

    www.theinfamousexchief.com

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    1 h y 29 m
  • Rob Rosen on Media Bias, Crimes of Omission, and Distorted Justice
    Mar 20 2026

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    What if the biggest problem in media coverage isn’t what gets said — but what gets left out?

    In this interview, I sit down with Rob Rosen, Emmy-winning television producer, investigative journalist, and author of Crimes of Omission: Distorted Justice, the Media’s War on Truth. We break down how major national stories involving police, crime, and public outrage can be shaped not just by falsehoods, but by missing facts, selective framing, and narrative steering.

    We talk about:
    What Rob means by “crimes of omission”
    How media narratives form before all the facts are in
    Why cases like Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, Freddie Gray, Eric Garner, and George Floyd still matter

    The Ferguson Effect and what it did to policing
    How journalism drifted from truth toward advocacy
    Why public trust in media collapsed

    What happens when people are reacting to different versions of reality
    This wasn’t a conversation about blind support for law enforcement or blind hatred of media. It was a conversation about truth, context, omission, and accountability.

    If you’re tired of being handed a conclusion before the evidence is in, this one’s for you. 🎙️📚⚖️
    Support Rob Rosen and check out Crimes of Omission.

    www.theinfamousexchief.com

    #RobRosen #CrimesOfOmission #MediaBias #PoliceAccountability #Journalism #TrueCrime #GovernmentAccountability #TheInfamousExChief

    Chapters
    00:00 Why people feel lied to without being directly lied to

    00:45 Intro: Scott Gardner and today’s topic

    01:20 Meet Rob Rosen and his new book

    02:04 Rob Rosen joins the show

    03:16 Why Rob wrote a book criticizing journalism

    04:13 What “Crimes of Omission” means

    06:29 How media narratives lock in before facts arrive

    07:33 Journalism working backward from conclusions

    10:24 Where Rob saw this happen most

    15:38 “Hands up, don’t shoot” and real-world impact

    18:42 Michael Brown, witness credibility, and media malpractice

    22:42 Officer perception, force, and public misunderstanding

    23:47 DOJ report vs the public narrative

    26:24 How local stories become national flashpoints

    29:06 What gets left out of national coverage

    29:38 Tony Timpa and the stories media ignored

    32:38 Public perception vs actual numbers

    33:56 Trayvon Martin and the damage already done

    38:21 George Floyd, nuance, and bad policing

    41:46 Burnout, PTSD, and officer mental health

    43:47 Reform, broken windows, and the Ferguson Effect

    45:59 The “straw man” problem in media panels

    48:42 Ferguson and “hands up, don’t shoot” revisited

    50:18 What the Ferguson Effect means

    51:46 Where to get the book

    52:56 Why journalism is still the window to the world

    55:45 Does this book give cover to bad policing?

    57:10 What Rob hopes readers take away

    58:18 Final thoughts from Rob Rosen

    59:37 Scott’s closing thoughts and why this interview matters

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    1 h y 3 m
  • North Royalton “Prosecutorial Discretion” Letter Falls Apart (Line by Line)
    Mar 13 2026

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    All my lawyers in the house—this one’s for you. You already know what you’re about to see, because the moment you put body camera, the police report, and the law director’s letter side-by-side, the argument collapses. ⚖️📄🎥

    Today we’re walking through North Royalton’s justification for altering a police report using the phrase everyone loves to throw around: “prosecutorial discretion.” The problem? The way it’s being used here has nothing to do with what prosecutorial discretion actually means.

    Here’s what we’re covering:

    The traffic stop and the officer’s documented observations supporting an OVI investigation
    The discovery of firearms and why that fact matters in the historical record
    The controversy over an edited incident report (and what’s missing)
    Why the Sundance audit log is the key public record—and why I’m suing for it

    The law director’s two core legal errors:
    confusing prosecutorial discretion with authority to rewrite investigative records
    treating suppression as if evidence never existed

    This isn’t about whether a prosecutor should file a charge. That decision belongs to the prosecutor. This is about record integrity—because once the factual record becomes negotiable, the system stops documenting truth and starts managing narrative.
    D
    rop your thoughts in the comments: If “nothing improper happened,” why fight the audit log so hard?
    #NorthRoyalton #PublicRecords #PoliceAccountability #FourthAmendment #OVI #GovernmentTransparency #TheInfamousExChief

    https://www.theinfamousexchief.com

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    28 m
  • “No Public Comment” After Fire/EMS Suspension—Hiram Meeting
    Mar 12 2026

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    What would happen in your town if the mayor just shut down the fire department—no reorganization, no restructure, no negotiation—just turned it off?

    That’s essentially what residents in Hiram, Ohio woke up to: the Hiram Fire Department, including local EMS coverage, was suspended. And when emergency services disappear, even briefly, that’s not small-town drama. That’s a public safety issue.

    I’m Scott Gardner, former cop, former homicide detective, and former chief of police. This platform is about accountability—especially when government decisions put the public at risk.

    Here’s what raised the alarms: residents were left asking who was covering the village, with reports that surrounding departments were expected to handle calls through mutual aid. Mutual aid is common, but it’s supposed to be supplemental—not a replacement for an entire department. If you’re going to suspend fire and EMS, a clear coverage plan should already exist, and the public should be told what it is.

    Then there’s the college factor. Hiram is home to Hiram College, with hundreds of students in dorms and campus buildings. During the suspension, students were messaging me asking if they even had a fire department. Whether that communication failure sits with the village or the college administration is a fair question—but students learning it through social media is a problem.

    And the image that became the symbol of this situation: police cruisers parked across the fire station bay doors while services were suspended. Maybe there’s a practical explanation. If there is, I’ll air it. But the optics were terrible.

    Services were later restored, but restoration doesn’t erase the need for answers. I end with three public safety questions the village still owes the
    residents. ⚠️🚒📌

    #TheInfamousExChief #ProCopNotProCorruption #HiramOhio #PortageCounty #GovernmentAccountability #PublicSafety #FireDepartment #EMS

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    17 m
  • Respect the Vote: The Accountability Problem Behind SB 56
    Mar 4 2026

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    I’m going to talk about something I don’t normally cover—and I want to be clear up front: I’m split on this issue. I’m not a cannabis activist. I’ve never used marijuana. This isn’t “stoner politics.” This is an accountability conversation.

    In 2023, Ohio voters passed Issue 2—legalizing recreational marijuana for adults 21+, setting possession limits, home grow rules, taxes, and a distribution structure. Whether you like marijuana or not, the key point is simple: the voters passed it. In a constitutional republic, that’s supposed to mean something.

    Governor DeWine opposed Issue 2 and raised concerns about kids, edibles, and public health. Those are legitimate debates. But what started making me uneasy was what happened next: almost immediately, the conversation shifted from “the people voted” to “how do we change what they passed?”
    Fast forward to December 2025: Senate Bill 56 gets signed. Now we’re looking at restrictions on hemp-derived THC products, limits on where products can be sold, license caps, recriminalization of certain conduct, and changes to how money gets distributed. Some people call that common-sense regulation. Others call it government overreach. I can see both sides—up to a point.

    Because here’s the accountability question: What happens when voters pass a law and politicians reshape it afterward? If the precedent becomes “let the people vote, then we’ll fix it later,” then what exactly was the vote for? Was it law—or was it a suggestion? And once that precedent exists, it doesn’t just apply to cannabis. It applies to everything. ⚖️🗳️📌

    #TheInfamousExChief #ProCopNotProCorruption #Ohio #Issue2 #SenateBill56 #Accountability #Government #Politics

    https://www.theinfamousexchief.com

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    7 m
  • Total Immunity in Court: Why the System Self-Protects
    Mar 4 2026

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    The 8th District affirmed it: the testimony stands, the evidence stands, and the sentence stands. That’s the ruling.

    On this 4th of 4 series:

    Now here’s the bigger question—when courts and prosecutors make decisions that shape someone’s freedom, who holds them accountable?

    I’m Scott Gardner—former cop, former homicide detective, and former chief of police. I’ve seen both sides of the courtroom. And here’s the structure most people never get shown: police officers operate under layers of exposure—internal affairs, civil liability, criminal exposure, administrative discipline, and public scrutiny. But prosecutors and judges? Absolute immunity for core official acts. That’s not opinion. That’s doctrine.

    This episode breaks down what immunity actually means, why it exists, and where it becomes dangerous—when immunity turns into insulation, when harmless error becomes a shield, and when deference becomes automatic. Systems respond to incentives. Police departments respond to liability. Cities respond to lawsuits. Officers respond to discipline. So what’s the comparable corrective pressure for prosecutors and judges?

    We’ll walk through the doctrine and why it matters to everyone: today it was officers—tomorrow it can be anyone. This isn’t anti-court and it isn’t anti-law. It’s pro-accountability. And if accountability means anything, it applies to everyone. ⚖️📌🧱

    #TheInfamousExChief #ProCopNotProCorruption #Accountability #JusticeSystem #Courtroom #Prosecutor #JudicialImmunity #TrueCrime

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    11 m
  • Eighth District Affirms McDonald — What This Means
    Mar 4 2026

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    The Eighth District Court of Appeals has affirmed the conviction in State of Ohio v. Larry McDonald.

    The court held:

    • Law enforcement officials testified as lay witnesses under Evid.R. 701
    • The testimony was permissible
    • The convictions were supported by sufficient evidence
    • The verdict was not against the manifest weight
    • The sentence was not contrary to law or excessive

    This update is not about outrage.

    It’s about process.

    What does this affirmance mean for lay opinion testimony under Evid.R. 701?
    What does it signal about harmless error and prejudice standards?
    What guardrails now exist — or don’t — for future cases?

    Segment Four of this series will break down the reasoning and what it means going forward.

    This platform is about accountability — for police, for prosecutors, and for the courts.

    Be loud.
    Be heard.
    Shake the system until the truth falls out.

    #ProCopNotProCorruption #TheInfamousExChief #OhioCourts

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    1 m