A detective pulled over a woman named Tatyana after watching her blow through four or five broken traffic lights back to back — not slow rolls, not hesitation, just straight-up ignored every single one. He had no intention of writing her a ticket. He walked up to the car, asked for her license, and that is when things started to unravel. She had no physical ID. Kids were in the car. What should have been a two-minute stop was about to turn into something completely different. <br />While Tatyana scrambled for her registration, the detective quietly radioed dispatch and ran her name. The results came back clear — she had active warrants out for her arrest. Burglary. Criminal mischief. Disorderly conduct. He didn't announce it in front of the kids. He pulled her passenger aside, walked him to the back of the car, and then told Tatyana straight — you have warrants, you're going to jail today, step out of the vehicle. <br />She refused. Not once, not twice. She kept saying "don't touch me, tell me why, I'm not getting out." The detective gave her every chance. He told her he didn't want to do this in front of the children. She still wouldn't move. Eventually multiple officers physically removed her from the car. During the struggle, two pills fell out of her pocket. She screamed the warrants had already been cleared — but none of it stopped the handcuffs from going on. <br />Once in custody, the detective read her Miranda rights word for word. She nodded — then went completely silent and invoked her right not to speak. By the time she arrived at the county jail, the charge sheet had grown to five counts — drug possession, burglary, criminal mischief, disorderly conduct, and resisting arrest without violence. What started as a broken traffic light ended with five charges, a physical extraction, and a woman going to jail in front of her own kids — all because of warrants she claimed didn't exist anymore. <br />Watch the full breakdown and drop a comment below đŸ‘‡ <br />Do you think the officers handled this correctly — or did it escalate too fast? Let us know! <br />#police cam #crime #arrest #traffic
