🛡️ Teen Survival Guide for Police Encounters
Course overview
Lesson Overview

4.4 – How to Save Videos, Notes, and Screenshots the Right Way: Evidence only helps if it’s safe and verifiable. When saving videos or photos from an encounter, back them up immediately. Use a secure cloud service or a trusted friend’s device, not just your phone. Rename files with clear dates and times to make them easy to find later. Never edit or crop the footage—it could weaken your case. If you post clips online, it might get taken out of context or removed. Keep the original version untouched and store a copy somewhere private. Screenshots of texts or calls should include timestamps. Notes should be scanned or photographed so they can’t be lost. Consider emailing copies to yourself with subject lines like “Police Stop Evidence – June 12.” This proves when they were created. If someone pressures you to delete something, that’s a red flag—say nothing and seek legal help. Good organization helps your lawyer or advocate act fast. Treat your files like gold—they hold your truth. The right system today can save your future tomorrow.

About this course

This comprehensive guide is designed to help teens navigate real-life encounters with law enforcement with confidence, clarity, and caution. From understanding your legal rights to knowing what to say—and what not to say—this series empowers young people

This course includes:
  • A full series of engaging, age-appropriate lessons designed specifically for teens
  • Real-world scenarios and roleplay examples to prepare for actual police encounters
  • Easy-to-understand breakdowns of legal terms like probable cause, reasonable suspicion, and Miranda rights

Our platform is HIPAA, Medicaid, Medicare, and GDPR-compliant. We protect your data with secure systems, never sell your information, and only collect what is necessary to support your care and wellness. learn more

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