Looks like everything the cops did was illegal.
It was another stop on the same day that Kraft attorney Alex Spiro zeroed in on on Kimbark's second stint on the witness stand: whether Jupiter police sought probable cause outside what occurred in the spa to stop the men charged in the case. Kimbark testified that he looked for traffic violations and — in Kraft's case — the driver of the white Bentley allegedly swerved before the traffic stop was initiated.
"Did you say, jokingly or not, that you would, 'make some (expletive) up?'" Spiro asked Kimbark about a stop on Jan. 19.
Kimbark: "I'm sure I say a lot of things that are captured on body-worn camera, however, I do not remember specifically saying that. As it seems like it's a home run on your side, I would (not) have (brought) that profane word up."
Spiro asked whether it was "possible" he made such a statement, even in jest.
"Is it possible? Sitting inside my car, I could have said a thousand different things, and if I walk around with you all day with a recorder ..." Kimbark responded before he was interrupted by an objection by prosecutors.
Hanser overruled the objection.
"I find it relevant to an officer's intent to the determination of probable cause," Hanser said.