By Jose Serrano (staff@latinospost.com) | First Posted: Jul 31, 2015 07:48 PM EDT

Ray Tensing, the Ohio cop accused of killing unarmed motorist Samuel DuBose during a routine traffic stop on July 19, reportedly provoked a similar encounter weeks after joining the University of Cincinnati Police Department last year.

Video obtained by ABC affiliate WCPO in Cincinnati reveals Tensing engaged in a verbal argument with passenger Demetrius Pace, who refused to give his birth date. While Tensing pulled Sexton Henley's car over an equipment violation, citing a dragging rear bumper, he spent several minutes arguing with Pace about probable cause for the stop.

Tensing: "I need your name..."

Pace: "Demetrius."

Tensing: "Your date of birth."

Pace: "I'm not giving you that."

Tensing: "OK, if you refuse to identify yourself, we have a charge..."

Pace: "What's the charge?"

Tensing: "Refusing to identify -- you have to provide..."

Pace: "I told you my name."

Tensing: "Why do you keep interrupting me? You asked me a question."

Pace asks why he should step out of the car, to which Tensing replies, "Because I asked you to."

Later, Pace and Henley ask for a supervisor on grounds that they were being harassed. Tensing's shift supervisor arrives to ease the heated exchange.

Ohio is one of 24 states implementing some form of "stop and identify" statues. In some jurisdictions, Terry stops - which allow police officers to briefly detain suspects - mandate that persons of interest identify themselves upon request.

The CPD is currently investigating whether Pace and Henley filed a complaint, according to WCPO.

On Thursday, Tensing pleaded not guilty to murder and involuntary manslaughter in DuBose's death.

A pair of body camera videos released by the Hamilton County Prosecutor's Office showed the incident for varying points of view. Combined, they tell a complete story; from Tensing pulling DuBose over for a missing front license plate to the moment DuBose's lifeless body drives the car towards the officer.

Neither video corroborated Tensing's claim that he was intestinally dragged by the car, or validated fears of his life being jeopardy, as his attorney told ABC news.

© 2015 Latinos Post. All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.