Nothing but the truth. Even if against me.

Nothing but the truth. Even if against me.

Saturday, December 6, 2025

Story Reveals How White Americans Feel Entitled Above the Law

Just like that idiot they elected.

Madison Williams will probably also expect the President with "Beautiful white skin" to pardon her because "they told him" she was treated unfairly.

Please compare this entitled white American b- - - h's insubordination, foul language, threats, attempted bribes, and refusal to cooperate with the police officer (whose name is Singh, which means he has dark skin), with George Floyd's begging to be allowed to breathe before he is killed by Derek Chauvin's knee suffocation.

https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2025/12/06/03/104498555-15358323-Madison_Williams_29_was_arrested_in_Bakersville_and_charged_with-a-1_1764992029006.jpg
================================================
BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (KGET) — When police questioned her on suspicion of drunken driving in June 2022, Madison Williams gave a number of reasons why she shouldn’t be arrested: her race, wealth and connections.

“Let’s end this right now,” Williams tells Officer Singh of the Bakersfield Police Department, according to a transcript .

“How?” Singh asks.

“Number one, I’m white, so let’s stop,” Williams says.

“That has nothing to do with it,” Singh responds.

During their interaction, recorded by body-worn camera, Williams offers Singh $15,000, tells him she’s “really good friends with all the judges” and threatens to sue.

Singh didn’t budge.

A breath test measured Williams blood-alcohol content at 0.19% — more than twice the legal limit.

She refuses further tests, and Singh tells her he’ll get a warrant to draw her blood. Then he’s booking her.

“Now you’re just trying to have power, that’s ridiculous,” Williams says. “That’s all right. Thank God I’m white. That’s hilarious.”

Williams, 29, was booked into jail and charged with two counts of misdemeanor DUI.

Three months later, she’d find herself in considerably more trouble.

On Sept. 14, 2022, her Mercedes-Benz C300 ran a stop sign and crashed into a home at Old River Road and Taft Highway, catching fire.

The occupants of the home were injured but managed to escape.

Williams was again arrested for driving under the influence, and a jury in October convicted her on felony DUI charges.

She faces anywhere from probation to 16 years in prison. A sentencing hearing is scheduled Dec. 12.

‘I own like half of Bakersfield’

Prosecutor William Mord attached the transcript from Williams’ June, 17, 2022, arrest to a document provided to the court ahead of her sentencing for the September crash.

He argues Williams learned nothing from her first arrest, and deserves the maximum sentence.

The 47-page transcript starts when Officer Singh first contacts Williams and lasts until he reads her the Watson advisal, which warns motorists arrested on suspicion of drunken driving that they could face charges up to murder if they drive drunk and someone dies as a result.

The encounter starts politely enough, with Singh telling Williams he’s conducting an investigation and her answering standard questions about her health, medications and any issues with her car.

She says she last had a drink — a Moscow Mule — around 1 p.m. at Luigi’s Restaurant and Delicatessen. That was about five hours earlier.

Singh has her perform field sobriety tests. Williams complains — “This is exhausting” she says of one test — and after a few tests refuses to perform more.

The officer then gives her a preliminary breath test.

When it shows she’s over the limit, Williams refuses to either provide an evidentiary breath sample or have her blood drawn for testing as required by state law.

Singh tells her he’ll get a warrant to obtain a blood sample.

“How do I get outta this?” Williams asks.

“Un- unfortunately, ma’am you cannot,” Singh says.

She continues to argue, saying he can’t legally get a warrant for her blood if she doesn’t agree. Plus, she says, there will be no alcohol in her system by the time she’s tested.

“Like I said, ma’am, if you do not authorize, I’ll get a warrant,” Singh tells her.

“Then get a f—— warrant, babe,” she responds.

“I will, ma’am,” Singh says.

“There you go,” she says. “By the time you get a warrant, there’ll be nothing. Okay. There already is nothing.”

When told she might be in custody between eight to 10 hours, Williams tries to make a deal.

She offers Singh $15,000. He declines, telling her she’ll need that money to handle the DUI.

Williams continues to try to wriggle out of an arrest, asking Singh to give her a ride to her mother’s house.

“Do you want me to lose my job?” Singh asks.

“I will f—— pay for your job,” Williams says. “I make way more than that.”

Williams owns multiple businesses in town. She brags about her wealth when Singh asks about her work.

“I own like half of Bakersfield,” she says.

Her remark about being white, “so let’s stop it,” follows soon after, and she becomes increasingly argumentative. She threatens to sue, and drops the names of a couple attorneys.

No judge will approve a warrant to draw her blood at night, she says.

“And if they do, I will f—— sue their asses and you, and you will f—— owe a lot of money,” she tells Singh.

She continues, “I donate thousands of dollars. You are so much better than that. Why, why would you wanna do that? Do you just don’t give a s—? F— this. Whatever, you’re a f—— Boomer.”


‘My best friends are lawyers’

After insulting the officer, Williams asks him to call her mother. She offers to give him a bracelet worth $600.

Then she goes back to saying she’ll be below the legal limit by the time Singh gets a warrant.

“Honey, by the time you get a warrant, like, through t- there’s no way that my BAC is going to be over 0.08%. So, can you stop? There’s absolutely no way. It’s not gonna happen. My best friends are lawyers. So, can you undo this and can we stop? I will give you someone to actually arrest if that makes a difference.”

She adds, “There’s no way a judge is gonna (sic) to approve it right now, there’s just no way . . . especially because I’m really good friends with all of the judges.”

A warrant to draw her blood was authorized after Singh took her to Kern Medical.

Williams again references her race — “Thank God I’m white” — when Singh refuses to tell her which judge authorized the warrant. He says it will be included in the paperwork she’ll receive after she’s released.

She continues to insult him, saying he’s acting like an “idiot” and being stupid.

“You are honestly the dumbest person I’ve ever met in my life,” she says.

No comments:

Post a Comment