Bodycam: 19-Year-Old Arrested for Felony Hit-and-Run — The Moment She Left Made It a Felony

On July 17th, 2025, officers located 19-year-old Kaylee Brantley at her apartment after she left the scene of a crash in which the other driver reported shoulder injuries. What followed was a textbook criminal investigation: Miranda at the front door, voluntary admissions, and a felony arrest. This video provides full legal analysis of the hit-and-run statute, Miranda doctrine, voluntary waiver, and the felony/misdemeanor distinction. ⚖️ Legal Analysis Includes: Miranda v. Arizona (1966) — Custodial interrogation rights Berkemer v. McCarty (1984) — Residential vs. traffic Miranda Colorado v. Spring (1987) — Knowing and voluntary waiver Florida Statute § 316.027 — Hit-and-Run with Injury (Felony) Florida Statute § 316.061 — Property-damage only (Misdemeanor) Illinois v. Gates (1983) — Totality of circumstances / probable cause 📋 Case Outcome: Arrested for third-degree felony hit-and-run with injury. Court disposition unknown at time of analysis. 🎓 Educational Purpose: Fair Use (17 U.S.C. § 107) for commentary, criticism, education. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. #HitAndRun #Felony #Bodycam #Miranda #LegalAnalysis #Florida #PoliceBodycam #HitAndRunArrest #Educational #Documentary #CriminalLaw