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A flashing light in your rearview mirror can change your life, even when you’ve done nothing wrong. Grantley Martelly sits down with Dakarai Larriett, an Alabama entrepreneur and public servant, to unpack a 2024 Michigan State Police traffic stop that Dakarai says spiraled into humiliation, fear, and a wrongful DUI arrest despite a negative alcohol test. What starts as a routine roadside interaction becomes a case study in racial profiling, discretionary policing, and how quickly your rights can feel conditional on an officer’s assumptions.

We dig into the aftermath most people never see: the long FOIA fight for body camera footage, the frustration of partial releases and redactions, and the reality that “charges dropped” does not always mean “record erased.” Dakari explains why qualified immunity can block accountability, how the incident still surfaces in background systems, and why transparency in evidence handling matters for public trust and for ethical law enforcement.

Dakarai shares the thinking behind a proposed Motorist Bill of Rights, including federal standards for traffic stops and real-time video uploads to a neutral third-party cloud so defense teams can access evidence without months of delay. He also connects generational trauma to the present, discusses his memoir Don’t Flush, and explains how this experience helped push him into an Alabama US Senate campaign focused on criminal justice reform, economic opportunity, education, and community-based policing. 

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Podcast art by Mario Christie.