
Soren
3K posts





One of these officers should lose their job for this one. This bodycam footage is one of the most chilling examples of how quickly a routine drive home can turn into a life-or-death confrontation due to "willful incompetence." Derrick House, a local basketball coach and father, was driving home from the gym in Woodridge, IL. He was pulled over by officers who were searching for suspects in a shooting that occurred in Oswego. The description they had was a black Tiguan with out-of-state plates. Derrick was driving a gray Atlas with Illinois plates. Despite the vehicle models, colors, and plates not matching, officers didn't hesitate. They converged with guns drawn, shouting contradictory commands. You can hear the officer in this clip explicitly threaten to "shoot him in the head" if he moves. The most staggering part of this footage isn't just the mistake—it’s the immediate realization. Once they checked his plates (something that should have happened before the guns were drawn), the energy shifted. "This is the wrong car." "The plate doesn't match." Officer Harvey's direct quote: "I fed this up." The Lawsuit & Legal Progress In January 2025, represented by Ekl, Williams & Provenzale LLC, Derrick House filed a federal lawsuit against the Village of Woodridge and five officers. The suit alleges: False Arrest & Excessive Force: Arguing that the high-risk stop was legally unjustified given the lack of a vehicle match. The complaint asserts that the only "match" the officers saw was a Black man in a Volkswagen. House has been open about the lasting terror of having a gun pointed at his head in front of his own neighbors. As of May 2026, the case is moving through the discovery phase in federal court. While the Village has expressed "regret" for the distress caused, they have defended the officers' tactical decisions as "standard procedure" for a violent crime investigation. No public settlement has been reached yet, making this a pivotal case to watch for police accountability and Fourth Amendment rights. An admission of guilt on camera is rare, but it doesn’t erase the trauma. When "I made a mistake" follows a threat to "end" someone's life, an apology isn't enough.
















Laura Loomer is having a mental breakdown because Candace Owens said she has a micro penis and had sexual relations with President Trump.










