Mr. Edger did sue, and the case took 5 years to litigate. In the end, it went to trial and Mr. Edger was awarded $75,000 in compensatory damages, and $2,000 in punitive damages, plus attorneys fees and court costs. Additionally, the officers involved lost their qualified immunity, and were held partially personally liable for the damages( I expect they each paid $1,000 in punitive damages mentioned above).
2026-05-30 06:01:37
109
Boo Berry :
I’ve known Roland since 1980s great guy great mechanic! Hope he did sue them
2026-05-30 04:40:06
153
ThugMuffin :
Ppl just need to mind their own business
2026-05-29 23:54:46
482
Upright_Banana :
How does ID prove if he's suppose to be working on the car or not???
2026-05-30 14:54:46
65
james webb160 :
Cops need to learn the law
2026-05-30 00:35:23
282
josedavis531 :
easy lawsuit
2026-05-29 23:54:16
12
rd51522 :
he got 77k from the city in 2023 and 76k each from McCabe and Perillat in 2024.
2026-05-30 13:35:48
21
Michael Bentley :
Cops need much more training and education on the law
2026-05-30 19:32:23
38
thegoudagod :
very unconstitutional
2026-05-30 11:00:41
34
Jimmy the logger :
he doesn't have to he wasn't driving. and that is an apartment which is a private space.
2026-05-30 18:32:31
5
WHISPER :
Just play the video geeeezzzz
2026-05-30 03:02:04
17
Richard Adams :
That’s just crazy the law need to learn the laws
2026-05-30 03:15:31
11
Chris Grimes :
1234 ....fiiif
2026-05-30 04:42:50
5
Allen Burton :
The Settlement: In October 2024, a federal jury awarded Edger $75,000 for pain and suffering, plus $1,000 in punitive damages against each officer, finding the officers and the City of Huntsville liable.
2026-05-30 20:12:41
9
SheilaAnn :
I hope he won a lawsuit
2026-05-30 12:50:33
17
Sherry Blankenship :
lawsuit
2026-05-29 23:37:04
5
AntiSLOBB :
He sued and won millions
2026-05-30 09:18:57
6
John Burton :
No corruption, but parking lots are not garages
2026-05-30 16:34:59
2
HoodMinistry✨ :
If a police officer has reasonable suspicion to stop you (a Terry stop), many states with "stop-and-identify" laws can require you to provide your name; some require you to show physical ID. Other states do not require giving your name or ID during a Terry stop.
If you are being detained or arrested (reasonable suspicion elevated to probable cause), you must identify yourself and may be required to show ID.
If there is no lawful stop (i.e., the officer has no reasonable suspicion), you are not required to answer questions or show ID and may politely decline.
For a definitive rule in your state, follow local law—requirements vary by jurisdiction and by whether the stop is investigatory, custodial, or a traffic stop.
2026-05-30 10:38:34
3
thndr512 :
lawsuit
2026-06-13 08:26:11
1
Johnny Sizemore jr :
our laws are stupid
2026-05-31 21:45:08
3
chubbyguy541 :
thats a big lawsuit
2026-05-31 00:24:29
3
Fatalgeuse :
Reform and retrain all police and law enforcement.
2026-05-30 17:13:11
4
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