TX Cops Get Busted by a Former Narcotics Agent
Monday, September 7th, 2009
Former Narcotics Agent Barry Cooper’s new reality show “Kop Busters” gets the footage for its pilot on 12/4/08.
“Visit http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uunOZe… to view Channel 7’s Follow Up On KopBusters.”
More information on Yolanda Madden: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xPOy1i…
See the documents from that video at: http://nevergetbusted.com/v2/node/188
There have been some questions about supporting “Kop Busters” through donations or help. The very best way to support “Kop Busters” is by purchasing Barry Cooper’s “Never Get Busted” DVDs through his website: http://nevergetbusted.com/v2/
If you are set on a non-profit, there are several good organizations, albeit less electrifying than Barry Cooper. Some of my favorites include:
The National Organization for the Repeal of Marijuana Laws (NORML) http://norml.org/
The Marijuana Policy Project http://www.mpp.org/
Law Enforcement Against Prohibition http://www.leap.cc/cms/index.php
also, Sam (pictured on the far left of the group photo from the video) has some great videos of interactions with law enforcement and the courts at http://www.obscuredtruth.com/
Raw video from the raid: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EHmP_K…
Duration : 0:2:22
Barry Cooper, a former top narcotics officer, credited with over 800 arrests in eight years, is now selling a DVD that shows marijuana users how to avoid arrest when traveling with a stash. Law enforcement officials are outraged.The opening of Barry Cooper’s DVD has that same compelling, grainy quality you find on true-life cop shows: police cars in high-speed pursuit, drug dogs jumping into the backs of pickups, hidden cameras in hotel rooms and cardboard boxes stuffed with cellophane-wrapped marijuana bricks. But one thing is clear: this is real. The people are about to make their debut on local news. The DVD is called NEVER GET BUSTED AGAIN, and these pictures are from Barry Cooper’s previous life. That’s what gives him his unique credibility. As a narcotics officer in West Texas, Cooper was a law enforcement star. That was partly due to his work ethic: Stopping 30 cars a day on the highways was routine for Cooper and his K-9 companion.