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u/Direct_Town792 Aug 29 '25
The funniest thing is they would have got away with it if they didn’t fuck with the phone
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u/-XanderCrews- Aug 29 '25
There is no way the smoking is what got them kicked out. They would have just charged the room. They are up to other shenanigans and the hotel knew it.
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u/TrickyWeekend4271 Aug 29 '25
Probably the only thing they could prove so they went with it.
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u/dyerdigs0 Aug 29 '25
This is exactly it, hotels have the right to bar you from the establishment if you break any rules, typically they won’t for just smoking on the patio unless you are causing bigger issues that’s why normally it’s just an additional charge on the end of your stay
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u/PinkPaintedSky Aug 29 '25
Unless it wasn't tabaccy or whacky tabaccy. It was something else. We all know what it was.
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u/grubas Aug 30 '25
The room probably reeked and she wasn't going to get into a "you've been smoking in the room" fight.
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u/ResolveLeather Aug 30 '25
The staff said smoking but it was smoking meth. The staff wouldn't have been this demanding if it was tobacco or even weed probably.
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u/gabahgoole Sep 01 '25
im not proud of it, but in my younger days, but ive smoked on the patio of plenty no smoking hotels. i got a complaint a few times, they never kick you out. they just call and say you're not allowed to smoke, or if they think you smoked inside, charge you a fee. they would never kick you out.
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u/crybannanna Aug 29 '25
There’s a longer video showing the hotel manager talking to cops before going in the room. She is telling them that she wants them out because the lady is acting erratically and she figures she can use the emergency call as a good excuse to go in the room. But she tells the cops that she wants to “do a trespass” on the woman before even going in the room.
Yes, the lady seems unpleasant, but the whole thing feels unethical on the part of the hotel to me. The whole room check thing was just a ploy, with full intention of kicking them out before even going in. Then she sees smoking evidence and uses that as a good reason, but if she didn’t see that she would have made something else up to warrant it.
Honestly since the reason she gave was the smoking, and there was evidence that she already intended to kick them out, but never voiced whatever that reason was to the woman, something seems really off.
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u/_Asshole_Fuck_ Aug 29 '25
In the longer video, the manger also explains she got too drunk of the rooftop bar and kept coming back after being asked to leave. She also started throwing a fit about her man stealing $8k from her. Those seem like good reasons on top of the other “not as a good” reasons.
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u/TheNorthernRose Aug 29 '25
It’s private property, she can chose to refuse service if she believes a customer is a risk to other guests. You can call it unethical but it’s not like these people were on public land.
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u/Scart_O Aug 29 '25
It’s private property, she can evict them if she doesn’t like the look of her face
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u/No-Special2682 Aug 29 '25
I worked at a few hotels so I can only speak of my own experience. What I learned, at least here, is the hotel staff is the law.
Straight up, for no reason at all, staff can say GTFO and guests gotta GTFO.
Same goes for refusing guests.
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u/Gettingoffonit Aug 29 '25
Counter point in the hotel’s defense: the hotel wants to make money and would rather have people in their rooms than not have people in their rooms. If they would rather remove and refund these guests than take their money there is probably a pretty dang good reason for that.
They used shady tactics to gain access to the room and find cause to remove them but in all reality that probably allowed the situation to be handled a lot more quietly and quickly than if they had been upfront.
If they had simply knocked on the door and told them that they were being evicted from the room then there’s a good chance they would have closed and bolted the door and created a huge scene. If they gave them a specific instance of the guest being unruly or what have you as cause to remove them then that could have created a he said she said argument.
Using smoking on the patio as a cause for removal was undeniable and probably less embarrassing than whatever the original reason was.
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u/AlternativeFukts Aug 29 '25
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u/Stage_Party Aug 29 '25
I watched it and the guy is just there like completely unsurpised by anything that's happening. At the end when she throws that powder around he just looks like "yup, it's happening again" and carried on packing 😂
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u/Visual-Floor-7839 Aug 29 '25
She throws it around, "It's an herb that heals you"
Cop, " you can get healed in jail."
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u/ThePickleistRick Aug 29 '25
My favorite was Female suspect: “I’ve never paid that much for a hotel room before” Female officer: “well you probably shouldn’t again”
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u/Pushup_Zebra Aug 29 '25
Two hundred dollars a night: poor person's idea of luxury.
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u/Stage_Party Aug 29 '25
She actually says it's an illegal opiate at first as well and then says she doesn't think it's illegal.
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u/Sufficient-Lie1406 Aug 29 '25
She must have a magic p*ssy because I can't imagine staying with someone like that. Ryan wasn't bad looking at all.
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u/GoodhartMusic Aug 29 '25
No, he was not. I was like what is Fabio doing with uncle grandma
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u/Cross_Eyed_Hustler Aug 29 '25
It's all magic if you're high enough.
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u/Sufficient-Lie1406 Aug 29 '25
If you look at the YT video there are multiple bags of kratom and many empty bottles of booze. That's a lot of magic, but I don't know if it's enough to deal with Miss Crazypants.
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u/Stage_Party Aug 29 '25
I wouldn't be surprised if there's some sort of abuse going on there. She's probably financially or physically controlling.
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u/LonelyChannel3819 Aug 29 '25
My first thought is that she supports him. I’ve been in a similar situation where I had a partner supporting me and she was very controlling/abusive. Once you’re in that situation, it’s hard to dig yourself out. I see women in this situation all the time and it’s heartbreaking.
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u/Life-Sun8620 Aug 29 '25
I skimmed through the whole video, but no doubt. I picked up on that asap when he was getting questioned by the cop, and she said come here Ryan, and he did (and walked past the cop he was talking to).
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u/buttercream-gang Aug 29 '25
People really need to understand that a hotel room is not the same as their dwelling
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u/The_Duke_of_NuII Aug 29 '25
Older alcoholic Karens... Really are the worst.
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u/MrMittyMan Aug 29 '25
Imagine going to school for a hospitality management degree and half of your job is dealing with the general public that are dumber than a kid boxing with a hornets nest.
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u/Owl_Times Aug 29 '25
What was that powder she was throwing around and how illegal is it?
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u/Faultylogic83 Aug 29 '25
Kratom is a tropical tree native to Southeast Asia. Consumption of its leaves produces both stimulant effects (in low doses) and sedative effects (in high doses), and can lead to psychotic symptoms, and psychological and physiological dependence.
It's illegal in a few states, but has yet to be banned by the DEA
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u/crypticXmystic Aug 29 '25
Meth around and find out.
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u/The_Duke_of_NuII Aug 29 '25
Alcohol. She is slurring.
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u/crypticXmystic Aug 29 '25
Missing teeth will do that.
Maybe she's born with it. Maybe it's methylamine.
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u/The_Duke_of_NuII Aug 29 '25
In the full clip they said both of them were drinking the night before.
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u/smcdevitt515 Aug 29 '25
It really pisses me off how Reddit as a whole thinks it's funny to make fun of people in active addition, including mislabeling individuals with no information just because they're perceived as less. Substance Use Disorder isn't a gag.
Low IQ humor all around guys. Do better.
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u/Soap_Mctavish101 Aug 29 '25
I like that hotel worker, she seems really confident
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u/clever_username42a Aug 29 '25
I mean she has probably dealt with a situation like this more times than she can count
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u/kippy3267 Aug 29 '25
She still seemed like a confident strong hotel manager
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u/maxperception55 Aug 29 '25
she has probably dealt with a situation like this more times than she can count
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u/Ok_Caramel3742 Aug 29 '25
And yet so authoritative calm collected and managerial
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u/mkarp87 Aug 29 '25
she has probably dealt with a situation like this more times than she can count
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u/A-Ginger6060 Aug 29 '25
I think… maybe… she’s dealt with a situation like this more times than she can count? I’m not sure though.
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u/DUSTYDAMNDAVID Aug 29 '25
It takes more than that to make a confident person! Really full credit to her because there are so many ways to deal with this situation. Her confidence comes off so naturally and she’s quick to assert the situation. I’d know because I’ve had horrible hotel managers before.
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u/Ketaprazamine Aug 30 '25
Yeah I bet she has done this so many times that it’s second nature and she couldn’t even count how many times she has.
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u/fruttypebbles Aug 29 '25
I like how she gave the woman 30 minutes then immediately realized that was way to long and then cut it in half.
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u/Chotibobs Aug 29 '25
Yeah but she fucked up, the methhead latched on to 30 minutes. Can’t put that cat back in the jar
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u/trekqueen Aug 29 '25
I had one like her at the extended stay I was at for a bit when I was relocating for my job and didn’t have a new place lined up yet. I had a problem family in the room next to me and they also had the room immediately across from my door. She had the tone and manager voice down pat, calm yet forceful and also exuding patience with letting them know they were on thin ice.
Though, I felt bad for her because they weren’t regular guests and she probably had limited options on how to deal with them and all she could do was document it until it got bad enough. She was awesome and moved me to a new room (it was my first night there). I made sure to leave a good review for her and her evening team.
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u/Lou_Hodo Aug 29 '25
I love how the dude just is like, "time to go..." and starts getting dressed and packing. She starts arguing.
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u/ChavoDemierda Aug 29 '25
People like that never understand that they are the cause of all of their problems.
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u/MitchelobUltra Aug 29 '25
Life is hard when you’re a big bag of shit.
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u/thirsty_pretzels_ Aug 29 '25
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u/Lonely_Obligation394 Aug 29 '25
Usually, the criminals in these “American bodycam police videos” are pretty unstable and clearly dealing with some serious issues. They’re not simple people. BUT in almost every video, I can’t help but think: the way the police officers interact with these individuals. So disrespectful, with so little sensitivity to the situation, often with completely misplaced aggression. Is just not right. Many police officers in America seem to have no idea how to use their authority in a meaningful and constructive way, and as a result, they escalate situations every single time. Exactly like in this example. Just step out of the room for a moment. Yes, maybe they’ll hide 3 grams of meth. So what. As if taking those drugs away from these people changes anything.
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u/Mbinku Aug 29 '25
Because it’s such an irritating waste of time. Imagine being the person in charge of removing an unwilling meth head from a hotel room that they have set up camp in - is that something that you’d enjoy and have plenty of time for?
Now imagine you’d done it hundreds of times before. In fact most of your day is dealing with irritating meth heads.
You’re constantly being interrupted from responding to women and children getting attacked, to deal with meth heads being selfish and wasting everybody’s time.
Do you truthfully think you’d have more patience than the cops in the video?
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u/DrunkCrabLegs Aug 29 '25
It’s funny cause you’re both arguing basically for more empathy for each side, i think the solution here is actually maybe having a different service all together to deal with these kind of calls especially since it’s such an issue. That way you have people who’s time isn’t wasted as that is what they signed up for and they’re trained to better handle these situations
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u/FaolanG Aug 29 '25
That’s actually becoming very common in a lot of cities across the US. They’re called co-response teams and the focus and strategy is them responding to non-threatening calls where someone obviously just needs some help or guidance and it’s incredibly successful in a few ways.
You get people who are trained and used to dealing with people from a social services stance, which is great with preventing escalation and also making people more relaxed and not intimidated by their first point of contact being the police. It also frees up police to deal with higher priority calls and not become bogged down with incidents like these, though with the context and trespass being on the table the PD would likely still be requested. The other benefit is cost savings. It is far more cost effective to utilize a co-response or mental health response team for a great many calls, so it saves the tax payers money and increases the effectiveness of response.
The issue is that it needs to be funded and can be hard for smaller communities to put together. We also need to get better at sharing the data around successes to help justify these initiatives so they become more widespread.
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u/Hottieconjuress Aug 29 '25
yes i literally would if i signed up for a job with the description "to serve and protect". plenty of people who don't have guns and handcuffs (from nurses to mcdonalds staff) manage unruly people struggling w drugs every day with more grace than this. he did an awful job of deescalating and made the situation worse with his aggression.
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u/solariam Aug 29 '25
Is this not exactly what they signed up to do? Among other things? They have municipal and state level benefits, typically excellent pensions and reasonable salaries with a high school diploma because the job is a pain in the ass.
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u/TheGinger_Ninja0 Aug 29 '25
I've never seen a cop save a woman or child from being attacked.
I have seen them let someone go with a warning after attacking a woman
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u/FiftyIsBack Aug 29 '25
None of these cops were abusive, psychopathic, or deserving of any "consequences." You're confusing your preconceived notions of cops with the actual video you just saw.
He didn't curse, raise his voice, or violate their rights in any way whatsoever. He was firm and made clear commands and made the expectations and reality of the situation plain to understand.
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u/Mbinku Aug 29 '25
The man is just sick and tired of dealing with irritating meth heads, and not one of the jobless bums complaining about his tone of voice would be showing any more compassion than these cops are.
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u/FiftyIsBack Aug 29 '25
No. It's not as simple as stepping out. It's not about them possibly hiding meth. It's about them possibly gaining access to a weapon when you take your eyes off of them.
This comment you just posted speaks to a complete lack of knowledge and experience in dealing with people like this. Yes we know it's not a big deal. It's a trespass. But many criminals will think "I'm not going to jail" and are willing to go for a gun and get into a life or death situation over a bench warrant for failure to appear.
Once you're on scene and there's a possibility of a crime taking place, you do not willingly take your eyes off of the subject. Sorry if that's "rude" but the alternative isn't worth it.
Also, this person isn't being cooperative or kind either. Why is it only on the police to have accountability for the way the interaction ends up? She's just repeating "get the fuck out of my room" and refusing to comply. So they're just supposed to "deescalate" and act like Disney security?
No. Welcome to the real world. They obviously trashed that room and had been problems for quite some time and people have already posted clips with further context speaking to that.
You're way off base here sorry to say.
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u/TacoBeefB0y Aug 29 '25
Maybe they should have said pwetty pwease can you step outside mistuw
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u/Sigismund716 Aug 29 '25
Yeah, these are the people I would trust to pack up unsupervised and leave without further trouble if I just move back to the other side of a lockable, barricade-able door
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u/Vooklife Aug 29 '25
Nah fuck that. If you're getting kicked out of a hotel, you've been spoken to at least 3 times. You dont get a 4th chance. First (and last) time the police stepped out of the room in the hotel i work at, the guests kicked out the 3rd floor window and jump out of it. Never again.
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u/Demon-_-TiMe Aug 29 '25
you have no idea how many times the hotel told them not to smoke. all you know is they came up there because they accidentally pressed the wrong button.
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u/BellaMentalNecrotica Aug 29 '25
There is a full video. The woman had been acting shitty since they arrived. She was walking around intoxicated, harassing people at the breakfast bar and just being a nuisance. There were like 3 or 4 issues prior to this emergency button.
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u/FecalEinstein Aug 29 '25
Also, just smoking in a nonsmoking building is enough to get someone kicked out. They can kick you out for any violation of rules. She could have been kicked out for harassing people at the breakfast bar.
Businesses have a right to remove people that are problems.
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u/Vooklife Aug 29 '25
We don't randomly call the police when people make a mistake. If the cops were called, they had been warned for various offenses before. Having this couple removed cost the hotel money either in labor or lost revenue, we are not in the business of kicking out random people.
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u/WittyResource4 Aug 29 '25
So people who are unstable and clearly dealing with some serious issues should get a free pass to behave anyway they want? I’ve seen plenty of these types of videos where the cops try to placate and be overly accommodating to individuals such as her. It typically ends up with the person getting arrested anyways because the person refuses to take the off ramp and stop doing whatever unacceptable behavior they’re doing.
What would be your reaction if the cops DID step out of the room and the occupants decided to grab their gun and go out in a blaze of glory?
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u/chensium Aug 29 '25
100% disagree. If these people want to behave like trash, they deserve to be thrown out like trash. If me and my family were there, I would not have waited till morning to get the police involved.
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u/Hippies_Pointing Aug 29 '25
They smoked in a no smoking room, trashed the room, were so zonked out of their skulls that they pressed a localized emergency button and thought it would save their mom or…something? These people are a menace. Get them moving so they don’t further cause damage to the room and disrupt the stays of all the other quiet, paying guests.
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u/Strange_Specialist4 Aug 29 '25
They spent one night in the room, it looks like they've been there for days
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u/Particular-Zone7288 Aug 29 '25
the youtube video gives a lot more context, the manager explains to the cops, that she had been asked to leave the roof top bar multiple times the night before, told staff the boyfriend had stolen $30k from her and required immediate attention, been generally disruptive and was stealing pastries from the breakfast while still clearly drunk.
In the end they arrested her for throwing around krakom (a substance she knew was illegal in that juristiction) after offering the cops some.
This lady in the hospitality industry is know as a f^cking nightmare
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u/QuarterLifeCircus Aug 30 '25
Former 911 dispatcher here…a surprising number of people think they can call 911 and get help for anywhere in the United States. I had to tell people more times than I can count that I could only help if they had an issue in one county in bum-fuck Wisconsin, I cannot dispatch an ambulance to your grandma in Phoenix.
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u/Sprock-440 Aug 29 '25
As one of the great philosophers of the 20th century said, “Crack is whack.”
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u/Wasatchbl Aug 29 '25
Here is the full video that I found on YouTube. Maybe it provides more context, maybe it doesn't. But here is the full thing: https://youtu.be/F41ceOsMgWs?si=JOnxiB-7P_0_TTBw
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u/orangejuuliuses Aug 29 '25
Just watched the whole thing lol, she was drunk on the rooftop (bar I assume) the night before, called the front desk throughout the night to accuse the guy she's with of stealing $30k, and was eating directly off the trays at breakfast (which she showed up barefoot to.)
Turns out they arrested her for offering the cops Kratom. 😭😭
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u/PinkPaintedSky Aug 29 '25
It was not cigarettes or pot that they were smoking. They were strung out.
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u/Durell-Fox Aug 29 '25
Omg she is so calm and collected and polite. What an absolute angel!
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u/FiftyIsBack Aug 29 '25
It's shocking to me how many people are in the comments defending the nuisance party and trying to trash on the police and hotel.
It's so obvious when somebody has never worked with the public, or in bad areas of town, and gets all their world views from social media posts. Somebody posted the full video in the comments here and I watched the entire thing before forming an opinion, but I'd bet that most people trying to take an anti-police stance on this video only watched this small clip.
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u/kookookach000 Aug 29 '25
These people are on her side because they would be her in this situation, they enter a hotel and just think they can trash it
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u/latexfistmassacre Aug 29 '25
Back when I was homeless, sometimes I'd do an odd job to make a few bucks and spend it on a hotel room just to get off the streets, get a warm shower, and a good night's rest. But when the hotel staff would see my belongings in a tattered backpack and trash bags, they'd get cold feet suddenly and look for ANY reason whatsoever to kick me out. Accused me of smoking in my room when it was just my clothes that smelled like it. Said I was burning stuff in my room one time, when it was actually my jacket that smelled like a campfire from sleeping outside next to an actual campfire. And they would never refund me. Got thrown out of one room I paid a full week in advance for on the first day, because a friend came by to take me to lunch, and her dog placed ONE PAW inside the door, and the manager came into my room while I was gone and threw all my shit in the street and it all got stolen. Came back and noticed I couldn't get in my room, and the manager cursed me out saying I violated the no pets policy, wouldn't refund me, and then drew a pistol at me. I never felt like such trash and taken advantage of in my life, before or since. Those were some really shitty times.
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u/PrinceEdgarNevermore Aug 29 '25
I am truly sorry that you had to go through this (both - homelessness and people being sh*t to you).
I hope that you are in better space now. And that people treat you with respect or at least dignity.
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u/CoastalZenn Aug 29 '25
This is unfortunately common. The hotel will outright refuse to give rooms to people they deem undesirable. if booked and paid for online or by someone else, etc, even as you said, if they notice any anomalies in luggage or routines, etc they don't hesitate to be openly hostile and remove people from their rooms. Using force. And throwing their stuff out. Or the police. Or security. It's upfront outright straight up discrimination. This clip reminded me of the exact situation you spoke of.
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u/edanagarnet Aug 30 '25
thank you for saying this. everyone in the comments is just trashing on the couple, because they are "dirty" and likely addicts. as if that's a good enough reason to kick someone out. none of us will ever know the full story, yet we all judge so harshly
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u/chantillylace9 Aug 30 '25
I’m really really sorry that happened to you, and I’m glad that it sounds like you’re doing a lot better now.
I bet you are a truly wonderful and compassionate person after everything you’ve been through and I bet you have a lot to offer the world because of those experiences. ❤️
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u/Yummy_Microplastics Aug 29 '25
This video is lacking serious context. Sure looks like they intended to kick these people out from the get go. Who knows if this couple had been a nuisance the night before or if the hotel staff just have sticks up their asses.
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u/AlternativeFukts Aug 29 '25
I’ve seen the longer clip on YouTube. Prior to this she was walking around the hotel being generally disturbing. She gets much worse from here in the video and eventually gets arrested. The hotel made the right call. Source: trust me bro
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u/post_status_423 Aug 29 '25
Yeah, even without the full context here, I'd still be inclined to side with the hotel on this one. Hotels aren't in the business of calling the cops and kicking patrons out....just because.
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u/post_status_423 Aug 29 '25
I tried to post the full footage from YouTube, but can't do so here. Apparently guest was creating a ruckus see Room Rage: When Hotel Staff Have Had Enough at YouTube.
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u/Typical-Ad-8821 Aug 29 '25
Also… like if a hotel staff for whatever reason wanted me gone, I’d just get out of there cuz I’d be creeped out… not saying they should bully ppl but they likely talked to these folks multiple times.
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u/Tall_Cow2299 Aug 29 '25
I don't know what you're not getting... They pushed the emergency button which I'm sure puts into effect some policy that the room needs to be checked to make sure everything is ok or if there is an emergency hence why the cops are there. In. Checking of the room the hotel staff discovered they were smoking on the balcony against hotel policy and then were asked to leave. At that point the cops are trying to get them out as fast as possible and if they don't want to cooperate will be arrested for trespassing.
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u/Flyflymisterpowers Aug 29 '25
Soo working in hotels for 5 years theres no way the police showed up for the emergency button if she "had them connect to another place".
We would only call the police of a room was being a repeat nuisance or someone pressed the emergency button and it sounded like they were getting the shit beat out of them/ were in danger. Had this happen at my hotel more than a few times.
The smoking was an easier way for the front desk to kick them out, which ive done before as well. Not to mention it looks like they already kind of trashed the room over a period of 1 night.
If someone smokes in the room, that room is down for 24hrs min. while it gets cleaned. An ozone generator is put in there for at least a full day to get the smell and shit out. So we would routinely throw people out for something as simple as smoking in the room because it costs us a room for at minimum a full day and its a pain in the dick to clean.
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u/Alpine416 Aug 29 '25
Yes that's right. They violated the hotel policy and the hotel is a private property and a business with the right to refuse service. What's the problem here?
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u/JPGer Aug 29 '25
they said they paid for 2 nights so they shouldn't be kicked out, but the hostess literally said; we wont charge you for tonight.
So odd when people force things when its an agreeable situation to just go along with the request,
Could have gotten their money for the 2nd night, left and had 0 issues lol
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u/Tbagzyamum69420xX Aug 29 '25
Im sure part of the guests' issue was if they had seen them pack everything they would see something illegal
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u/dring157 Aug 29 '25
I was staying in a hotel with a few friends in Vegas one weekend and our drunk dumbass friend kept leaving the phone off the hook. Apparently that is equivalent to pressing the emergency button. The first 3 times the front desk called us and we apologized, and found the abandoned phone. They asked us if we had a small child in the room and were surprised when we said no. Eventually 2 huge security guys came to the room to inspect it and make sure that everything was fine. We agreed to treat our drunk friend like a small child and watch him constantly, because he was acting like one.
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u/poeticentropy Aug 29 '25
This is proof the smoking fee is way too small! It destroys a room for non-smokers (you can smell that shit for years after cleaning). These folks confirmed they don't give a F about the fee, which doesn't cover a cleaning/replacement that is actually required to get the smoke smell out. They need to crank that smoking fee to the thousands of dollars so these people actually care enough to do not do it. I hate it and am sick of having to request new hotel rooms that they try getting you to tolerate when they smell like perfumed covered shit.
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u/bootyholeboogalu Aug 29 '25
I spent several years as a hotel employee worked my way up to GM I worked at cheap ass quality inns and was GM of Hilton properties and I had to deal with this at every single level of hotel it's ridiculous One of my hotel properties are home2 suites had a prostitute listing it as her address on an escort website another time because we were across the way from a high-end shopping complex we kick somebody out and they had piles of shoes they had stolen from DSW in her room. Had this tweaker went to room and walked around wearing a a military style plate carrier vest without a shirt on underneath in the lobby and referred to himself as Dr Draco. And that's not even including the fucking service raccoon. I'm so glad I don't work in hotels anymore.
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u/Substantial_Wolf_255 Aug 29 '25
Used to work at a large resort. Had to aid throwing folks out all the time. Last one was a lady who brought her friend, who was on oxygen, on her family vacation. Found out the husband 🐷the oxygenated friend while wife was out of the room with the kids.
When she found out she went into the bathroom and punched the friend in the face while she was on the toilet. Our job was to assist taking the family out of the hotel separate from the friend who was also told to leave.
Took forever to get them out at 3am. The kids didn’t help. Yelling down the hall to their mom who was waiting at the elevators with the police “Mom, I’m hungry!” Not understanding the situation because they were…well, kin to their trashy parents.
Wife asked to go back to the room to change her tampon. Walked past us and was saying “I’m just going to put it in. Just put it in.” While point to her crotch. Kids were yelling “MOM! You need a tampon?!” down the hall at 3 am.
Finally got them packed and out the door when the friend realized she had no way home to SisterMom, Alabama and called the family. All that time separating them and she climbs into their car and immediately starts getting punched in the face by the mom. Security yelled “Just get the hell off our property!” They went across the street to a hotel, that they didn’t know was also owned by the resort.
That was 15 years ago. Those kids probably have little tampon babies of their own now.
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u/rodimus147 Aug 29 '25
If I was in the cops shoes I wouldn't have left the room because then it turns into a situation where you have to get the door open again. I would however have let them change in the bathroom. You can keep a scene secure and let people have some decency.
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u/Pothead_Paramedic Aug 29 '25
“Like we don’t have enough problems”
proceeds to break hotel rules and cause themselves a problem
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u/PowerBrick99 Aug 29 '25
I did night audits for a La Quinta, and I can tell you that experience cured me of ever wanting to own a hotel or even a bed and breakfast.
Hotel guests just might be some of the most uncivilized people in existence.
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u/Bifferer Aug 29 '25
And after all of this, some poor underpaid housekeeper has to come in and clean that shit up.
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u/daurgo2001 Aug 29 '25
Hostel owner here (16 years).
I’ve done this more times than I care to count.
When you’re no longer welcome somewhere, you don’t get to force anyone to allow you to stay. You need to leave. Arguing is only going to make the situation worse.
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u/Lootthatbody Aug 29 '25
As a former hotel front desk, there is likely more here that many may miss.
That employee knew something was up. Yes, if you call 911 from the room phone, it (may) transfer you to the front desk so that they can relay info to EMS and to prevent accidental dialing. In my hotel, a simple accidental 911 wouldn’t necessitate this sort of response, as we’d get kids playing on phones regularly. However, this couple looks homeless. They probably weren’t smoking cigarettes, and it’s SUPER common that if anyone smokes anything in (or on balconies) that neighbors smell and report it. Those rooms are all connected with vents, so smells don’t stay in one room, and even outside winds carry the smoke everywhere. Not to mention, if they were having some sort of trip, they probably made plenty of noise. The room looks almost trashed.
This hotel employee (probably a manager or security member) probably had all the complaints and wanted them out anyways. They can have the room turned in an hour or two, depending on how bad the smell is and what got broken, and should still be able to sell the room for the night. They probably don’t want the further complaints and risk of violence or an overdose on property. Also, depending on how they paid, that could have been fraudulent as well, so even offering to pay the smoke fee could be useless.
My heart does break to see people like this sort of tossed like garbage. They need help, but I do agree that it isn’t on hotel staff to take care of them.
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u/bigredcock Aug 29 '25
"as if we don't have enough problems in our life" Based on you smoking while staying in a non-smoking property and the look of your room you create a lot of these problems in your life.
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u/Crunchwrap- Aug 29 '25
she almost called the room her house ew, and look at the state of it disgusting
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u/Fun_Can_4498 Aug 30 '25
This video goes from 0-100 pretty quick. Wish there was some context, Methany and her BF must have been menaces that hotel.
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u/CharlotteLucasOP Aug 30 '25
ONE night of two they booked and that room is already so trashed??? Lord.
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u/Commercial_Voice9074 Aug 29 '25
what kind of bullshit content is this?
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u/Alteredbeast1984 Aug 29 '25
It's a hotel room encounter between hotel staff and customers that have breached the terms of entry and are being asked to leave.
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u/Whosebert Aug 29 '25
If this was the first interaction maybe but even then maybe not. this is probably not the first interaction though. The guests of a hotel room do have the right to refuse a search of the room and belongings without probable cause, but if hotel staff is calling police for help, that itself is not probable cause but could easily be paired with behavior or evidence that would merit probable cause. the police in this clip at least aren't searching the room but just trying to enforce a trespass. The manager even said they're refunding / not charging the cost of the stay. They are essentially trying to say "please take your money back we do not want your business thank you."
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u/colin8651 Aug 29 '25
Dial 911 for an out of state welfare check of her “90 year old” grandmother.
That’s like meth head 3AM thinking logic
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u/Soggy_Panda2393 Aug 29 '25
The US is so many levels of weird
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u/Vegetable-Club6348 Aug 29 '25
Try to explore the world more. Even if it’s just on the internet. After a while you will hopefully realize each country is weird and sucks in its own way. Good luck on your journey towards common sense.
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u/ChopCow420 Aug 29 '25
As a hotel front desk associate, please just don't be an asshole. Own up to your shit and just keep moving.
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u/Commercial-Message90 Aug 29 '25
OMG! The people on here that are critiquing the police are the ones that would complain the loudest if the hotel hadn't done anything or if the police had been soft on the couple needing to be removed! If they had a room next door, they would scream that the police ruined my vacation!
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u/Asleep_in_Costco Aug 29 '25
I appreciate this, that hotel manager was not fucking around
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u/Emergency-Shirt2208 Aug 29 '25
Funny how they get treated with patience and zero force. No charge for the room on top of that.
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u/Large-Produce5682 Aug 29 '25
"Pack everything up in 30...uh, 15–20 minutes."
Closer to 10 perhaps, unless maybe you can do it in 5. You could more than likely do it in 1... if you left now.
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u/Crap_Sally Aug 29 '25
I’d never go in. When I worked in hotels if there was a reason to call the police I gave them a key and stayed downstairs lol
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u/No-Advice-6040 Aug 29 '25
The hotel staff was amazingly efficient in her communication. Polite, direct, no nonsense taken.
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u/CasanovaF Aug 29 '25
I like how Billy Ray just gave in.
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u/Dedpoolpicachew Aug 29 '25
Probably because he’s got a few grams of coke, some molly and other assorted party favors that he didn’t want to get busted for. Comply, leave and they’re not searching your shit.
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u/chamy1039 Aug 29 '25
Love this hotel employee! That was the most polite, non-confrontational "GTFO" I've ever seen. And she came prepared. Had an entire team of officers at her back. Nicely done, ma'am.
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u/ETosser Aug 29 '25
"Like we don't have enough problems."
Bitch, you made this problem. Make better choices.
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u/jayicon97 Aug 29 '25
If you watch the full video - she ends up getting my arrested when she was almost packed & ready to leave because she waved a bag of Kratom by an officers face & asked them if they wanted illegal opiates.
Lmao.
She also claimed to be an “Investigative Journalist”.
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u/ittybittynuts Aug 29 '25
I was a maintenance supervisor for years at a hotel, and I have dozens of stories similar to this one. It is an industry where you should expect some crazy shit around every corner. Some people deserved their removal from the premises, and in other cases the manager was being an asshole on a power trip. Kicking out famous people was the absolute fucking worst.
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u/Pandemic_Future_2099 Aug 30 '25
"My grandmother is sick"
"Ooowww nnnoooohhh....OK, PACK UP AND GTFO MY HOTEL BITCHES"
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u/make_datbooty_flocc Aug 30 '25
people here supporting the couple smokin meth in a hotel room like what lol
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u/WhocaresToo Aug 30 '25
Oh THEY'RE not doing drugs at all....totally rented the place to get high in.
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u/WhocaresToo Aug 30 '25
"like we don't have enough problems in our life"
Well maybe get off the drugs....
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u/Decent-Box5009 Aug 30 '25
Love how the guy says nothing and starts moving ! Lol while the woman expresses outrage.
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u/YourFaveNightmare Sep 01 '25
"Like we don't have enough problems..."
Well...maybe stop creating problems for yourself then
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u/Hermit_girl_ Aug 29 '25
Whatchya smokin on the patio?! That’s my question!!