This is one of those legal review channels which mostly consist of reading a long document out loud, very completionist, but it starts with a summary and has analysis towards the end.
"Impaired" Aurora Police Officer Won't Be Charged22:42 stops to cover a previous case which established a questionable, relevant precedent. If I understand correctly, testimony from New Jersey police is considered coerced if they had to answer or be fired. In other words, they can't be fired for refusing to testify.
My summary: Aurora police found one of their detectives passed out in his car, smelling of alcohol, with a bottle of clear liquid. When they determined he was impaired they turned off their body cameras, and nothing was done until local reporting somehow caught the story months later. Current police leadership denounces how it was handled, but there's nothing they can do about it due to lack of legally usable evidence.
tldr; Bunch of cops covered up for a drunk detective, obvious double standard, everybody acknowledges that it happened but he's protected by special cop laws.
Edit: In fact,
here's the "best" 5 seconds which makes me particularly upset. I'm always calling for more body cameras. Just... that real, visceral disgust from the officer- while instantly moving to cover up the incident. It's second nature for them to defend each other. I actually understand that a lot. I haven't worked in the police or military, but I've worked dangerous jobs. That instinct to cover for peers, hiding the truth from safe observers who won't understand, is actually relatable.
But it can NOT be allowed in law enforcement!
(also law enforcement is not nearly as dangerous as appears to be, those jobs I did were statistically more dangerous)