November 8, 2022

Nothing like a little retaliatory arrest from some Florida Sheriff's deputies to embarrass the entire force. Normally, that'd get a cop fired almost immediately with the video evidence but it's Florida where the law is...shall we say, variably enforced. There will be a lawsuit brought though, with a hefty settlement for this type of bullshit.

An account called Jim Hodges upped the video to YouTube.

Source: Orlando Weekly

A newly released video shows Columbia County Sheriff's Office deputies arresting a legally blind man for carrying a cane.

Lake City's Jim Hodges was taken into custody by the North Florida cops after a tense interaction with local authorities. In a video that has since gone viral on Twitter, Hodges is accosted by one of the deputies who spotted his folded cane in his back pocket.

After the deputy and Hodges exchange greetings, she asks after the cane.

"It's a navigational aid," Hodges said, visibly frustrated. "What's the problem? You a tyrant?"

"Yeah I am, actually," the deputy responds before asking Hodges to identify himself.

Hodges refuses and asks whether he's being detained. The deputy says she'll put Hodges "in handcuffs right now" and explains that she thought his cane was an improperly secured firearm. Hodges asks the deputy if she's satisfied that it's not a firearm before pulling out the cane and holding it up for her to see. Hodges then asks her to call a supervisor. She points to another nearby deputy. That deputy repeats her suspicions before asking Hodges again for ID.

Hodges tells the second deputy that he has ID but does not need to show it to the deputies because he hasn't been detained and is not suspected of a crime. At that point, both deputies move to place Hodges in handcuffs. While in handcuffs, Hodges repeatedly asks for the deputies' names and badge numbers. He also explains that he was walking in the dark to get to jury duty, which is why he was carrying the cane. When he once again asks them to identify themselves, the supervisor says "You know what? Put him in jail for resisting."

The 61-year-old Hodges was booked into Columbia County Jail on Halloween morning and was not released until 10:30 a.m. the next day. The only charge on his booking is resisting an officer. Retaliatory arrest — a.k.a arresting someone because they've made a cop angry — is illegal under the US Constitution, though recent decisions by the conservative Supreme Court have cast that idea into doubt.

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