19 Year Old Fake Cop Pulls Over Drivers in His Girlfriends KIA

🚨 19-YEAR-OLD FAKE COP PULLS OVER DRIVERS IN HIS GIRLFRIEND'S KIA 🚨 A 19-year-old police impersonator from Tennessee named Jackson Jones drove to Oklahoma to visit his mom for New Year's — and somewhere along the way, decided to make unauthorized traffic stops in his girlfriend's KIA sedan. Oklahoma County Sheriff's deputies responded to reports of a suspicious individual acting like law enforcement and tracked him down wearing a vest with a sheriff's patch on the chest. What happens when a teenager with a corrections job and a dream decides he's already a cop? šŸ” The Setup — A Tennessee Kid Far From Home Jackson Jones drove from Tennessee to Oklahoma for the holidays. He'd already been stopped in Tennessee and Arkansas for the same behavior — both times, officers let him go with a warning. He thought that meant he was in the clear. 🦺 The Equipment — A Vest That Said Everything The centerpiece of the stop was a legit-looking vest carrier with a "sheriff" patch on the chest. Jackson worked at a jail in Campbell County, Tennessee — but wearing that patch on a public road while pulling people over is a different matter entirely. šŸ“ž The Unraveling — His Story Doesn't Check Out Officers called the Campbell County Sheriff's Office using the number Jackson provided. The line behaved like a personal cell, not an official department contact. His employment record showed his name and address — but he hadn't reported to work in over two weeks. šŸ‘ļø The Witness — A Third-Party Account Changes Everything The man who originally called in the report came back to officers and described exactly what happened. According to him, Jackson had gone further than a brief misunderstanding. This wasn't a parking lot encounter — Jackson had conducted actual traffic stops on the road. šŸš” The Arrest — Procedural, Not Emotional Once the witness account landed, the outcome was no longer in question. Officers took Jackson into custody. Two charges closed the book: impersonating a law enforcement officer, and transporting an open container. āš–ļø The Aftermath — A Role He Wasn't Authorized to Have Jackson doesn't fit the profile of a calculated offender. He reads more like someone who committed to a role he wasn't authorized to hold, then kept escalating it without ever stepping back to assess what it actually meant. šŸ”Ž WHO was the impersonator? Jackson Jones, 19 years old, from Tennessee. He worked as a corrections officer at the Campbell County Sheriff's Office and was visiting Oklahoma for New Year's when he was arrested by Oklahoma County Sheriff's deputies. šŸ”Ž WHAT charges did he face? Jackson was charged with impersonating a law enforcement officer and transporting an open container. šŸ”Ž WHERE did this happen? Oklahoma County, Oklahoma, in January, during a traffic stop initiated after a witness reported a suspicious individual acting like law enforcement. šŸ”Ž HOW did real police identify him? A witness called in the report. When deputies located Jackson, he was wearing a vest with a sheriff's patch. His employment story fell apart when officers called the number he provided and it went to voicemail on what appeared to be a personal line, not a department contact. šŸ’¬ Jackson had already been stopped twice before this — in Tennessee and Arkansas — and both times officers let him go. Do you think those earlier stops should have ended differently, or did Oklahoma County handle this exactly right? šŸ”” Subscribe for more real bodycam breakdowns — new fake cop cases every week. 5 Accused Police Impersonators Get Arrested by Real Cops — Caught On Bodycam    • 5Ā AccusedĀ PoliceĀ ImpersonatorsĀ GetĀ Arreste...Ā Ā  Top 7 Alleged Police Impersonators Caught by The Real Cops    • TopĀ 7Ā AllegedĀ PoliceĀ ImpersonatorsĀ CaughtĀ ...Ā Ā  Fake Police Impersonator Approaches WRONG Teen With Stolen Badge — Gets ARRESTED    • FakeĀ PoliceĀ ImpersonatorĀ ApproachesĀ WRONGĀ ...Ā Ā  #PoliceImpersonator #FakeCop #BodyCam #FakeCopArrested #PoliceImpersonatorArrested #BodycamFootage #FakeCopBusted #PoliceImpersonation #RealCops #CaughtOnCamera #PoliceArrest #FakeBadge #FakeCopsGetArrested