On Fox and Friends this morning, Judge Andrew Napolitano was pretty riled up about a recent decision by Dallas Police Chief David Brown.

Brown quietly changed the department's policy on police shootings, giving officers a 72-hour period to remain silent about the incident before giving an official statement.

Officers can even watch video, if footage exists, of the shooting incident before they make their statement.

The change was prompted by the killing of a man by a Dallas policeman. The officer, Cardan Spencer, claimed that the man he shot lunged at him with a knife. It later emerged that there was video of the shooting and the victim did not have a knife and did not lunge at the officer.

Spencer is now under investigation and could face a murder charge.

Napolitano said the police union pressured Brown to make the change, arguing that officers should be allowed to look at the evidence in the case and speak with a lawyer before making their statement.

"What is that? A special rule just for the police!? said Napolitano, arguing that it allows the police to ask around about what happened before giving their version of events.

"[This rule] allows them to collaborate, allows them to shade and spin what they're saying," he explained.

He said just like in the case of Harry Reid exempting his staff members from ObamaCare, it's "a law for everybody and a special law for people in the government."