The daughter has such a beautiful soul. She had my eyes watery the whole time. Im from the bay too and i would love to be around such a beautiful person. So glad they got the answers they needed.
Mom has taken accountability and raised some beautiful children in the process. Great job mom and intelligent beautiful daughter 😍. Now y'all got a lot of catching up to do. Beautiful family 💞
Wow! I’m from Congo it’s amazing how much the niece looks like women in my family. We’re also Bantu people leaving in the Bay Area. All three women definitely have the Bantu features.
@@kasandrajohnson5252 I pray that you continue your journey on educating others on the importance of heritage and cultural values. You brought tears to my eyes and now I am searching for my connections to my ancestors as a result. God bless
Kasandra girl, you need to have your own podcast, show or whatever, I mean something……I can just see that you have a lot to give. You are so knowledgeable. And by the way I am African from Congo. Welcome home sis
Why can't television show this more? More beautiful intelligent, articulate black women who are married, full of love and are inspiring like they are. ❤
Mom looks absolutely beautiful. Praise the Lord you have a struggle but Praise God that struggle does not have you, Sis! I declare your complete and total deliverance this day and for the rest of your life, in Jesus Christ name, Amen!
8:31mark she's 39% Nigerian.. I love it! I'm Nigerian and always get excited when people trace their roots..she could be from my beautiful Igbo tribe..beautiful ladies ❤❤
@@FinDom1 yayyy! My Nigerian sister. Have you tried Nigerian dishes? If not, give it a try... we have the best jollof rice, fufu with different types of soups..yummy..we have some of the best Afro-Beats artists, Nollywood movies.. great culture indeed, Naija 🇳🇬 ❤️❤️
@@FinDom1 jollof rice is really good. See if there are African Restaurants in your state. I live in Georgia and there are lots of them here. I know California, Texas, Maryland, New York have lots of African Restaurants too. Some southern states like Alabama, Arkansas, Mississippi etc may be rare. If there are none in your state, you can maybe try making it. Jollof rice is easy to cook, there are lots of recipes on UA-cam. Enjoy!
I also love you and how you represent your profession and some of the people that come in your court room thinking they can get over... love to see when you put them in their correct places....Gods blessing on you a d Family..
Then they registered by ancestry in their families,by their father's households.Numbers 1:18.For it is your biological father who determines what is your ethnicity;so it is not you mother who determines that.
How did AncestryDNA get it wrong? They are usually accurate. I would ask JM for a copy of the papers because he looked at that real quick and you know how he is these days.
Where is Doyle Doyle got to stop leaving going on vacations we need him in court I guess he say he has a life too outside that court room but still wya😂😂❤
I enjoy watching all the episodes on Judge Mathis show..Its always a lesson to be learned or a good out come of a DNA, that certainly makes me cry and wish that i could find my long loss Father..
"Ancestry" revealed the sisters' relationship all along. What they all needed to do further was to click on their relative's name, then where it says "Relationship" and "predicted relationships:" it will provide a "predicted relationship" and "DNA shared percentage." This is where Miss Maxwell went awry. She only paid attention to the initially predicted relationship, which perhaps said "first cousin." She needed to go another step and click on the green-highlighted numbers. Doing this takes you to a page with your and your family member's shared DNA sequence highlighted in blue. These numbers are significant because this is your DNA link. One must click on that as well. Doing so takes you to another page that further breaks down the possible relationship. It will provide number percentages. For example, 100% and Relationships. It will give possible connections. You have to use common sense. This is what happened with me and my half-sibling. "Ancestry" initially revealed we were first cousins, and we wasted time thinking that was our connection. We were wrong. We needed to take further steps to find our genuine relationship. The final page revealed the possible connections. Our DNA sequence revealed that we shared 27% DNA. That made perfect sense, as half-siblings share at least 25%, no more than 30% of DNA shared through their parent. The truth was right in front of the plaintiffs and the defendant. They didn't know that they needed to take additional steps. I wish them well.
Actually I did my research fully. I actually didn’t go awry at all. Furthermore the percentage was one thing, going further into it she was only listed as a first cousin. It’s not like she is my child and the percentage was going to be extremely high. So, the other step was actually done as well. I’ve did my research as far back as my 9th generation actually. My niece ancestry is also private and mainly consists of her paternal side. So in fact unless it had been my sister who did the ancestry instead of my niece than this might have some truth! You are right about going further. Just not in this case.
@@virnisamaxwell1251 Oh, your half-sister, Rochelle, didn't put her DNA on "Ancestry"? Now I see why you all went to the "JM" show for clarity. If your sister had submitted her DNA, I'm confident the results would've led you both to each other much sooner or would've answered unresolved questions. Meanwhile, I'm happy that you and she have conclusive results. Good luck and Godspeed.
I was also able to find that my father side is actually Cherokee. My father and grandmother were born on the tribal land. I’m also choctaw and Cherokee on my mother’s side.
Why would the niece interrupt the aunt while she was talking about how her brother died ? That was rude to interrupt her to bring up what you do for your brother because it wasn’t his time to pass. Although that’s true that completely threw me off.
I did not intentionally mean to interrupt my auntie when the judge asked how old was my brother he thought that my brother also had died I did not want to make it seem like my brother was not alive, and he is a living testimony, They also cut out the part where I acknowledge my uncle in his legacy…
Let us not forget Israel,if the Lord's will we should live this weekend will be the weekly seventh day Sabbath of rest from Friday sundown unto Saturday sundown.
It’s amazing to see how genuine the love is coming from all three of them. Hearts are pure of love.
What’s crazy is that the niece looks just like the aunt like a younger version of her
They look just alike. I loved this ending
Like she c old be here daughter
Yes she does I felt it was my auntie
Yes Seriously... I wonder why she hardly spoke... because her niece speech etiquette was very horrible
She sure does
Beautiful family. The niece is a jewel (and well dressed). Great outcome. Love to see my people awakened.
I'm glad both parties reconnected positively through the DNA testing and have the wonderful opportunity to continue their family's blessings. ⚖️
Niece made me cry! Beautiful story and great representation of the whole family ❤️. May God give the mother strength fight the addiction.
Thank you so much for watching. It feels so good to know I can touch people through my story
This was beautiful and the young lady is extremely intelligent. Love this!! And happy for the mom's honesty and recovery.
Thank you so much that young lady is me. Really appreciate your comment
@@kasandrajohnson5252 you are beautiful, smart and well spoken. Yall brought tears to my eyes. Congratulations on finding your aunt.
Thank you so much I don’t know you but I love you god bless
@@kasandrajohnson5252 On behalf of other Nigerians, I call you my sister. One love ❤️
Yea that's my lil cuzzin Ka'sandra she has always been very smart we been thru hell and back and learned a lot from our experiences 💯
The daughter has such a beautiful soul. She had my eyes watery the whole time. Im from the bay too and i would love to be around such a beautiful person. So glad they got the answers they needed.
Thank you so much 😊
@@kasandrajohnson5252 Your very welcome
Mom has taken accountability and raised some beautiful children in the process. Great job mom and intelligent beautiful daughter 😍. Now y'all got a lot of catching up to do. Beautiful family 💞
Where is our favorite bailiff Doyle? 🤔 On another note, I would love to do one of these DNA test to locate potential relatives..
Doyle must’ve came back from vacationing in Jamaica 😂 All jokes aside, this episode was enlightening during the Black awakening.
Nooo where is Doyle 😂
This is what I needed in order to get an ancestry kit done. I’m finally going to do it! Beautiful outcome, ladies ❤
The niece carry’s herself like the Queen she is ❤❤
Wow! I’m from Congo it’s amazing how much the niece looks like women in my family. We’re also Bantu people leaving in the Bay Area. All three women definitely have the Bantu features.
What a beautiful young soul!!! She is well spoken! Great example of Family
Thank you so
@@kasandrajohnson5252 I pray that you continue your journey on educating others on the importance of heritage and cultural values. You brought tears to my eyes and now I am searching for my connections to my ancestors as a result. God bless
Kasandra girl, you need to have your own podcast, show or whatever, I mean something……I can just see that you have a lot to give. You are so knowledgeable.
And by the way I am African from Congo. Welcome home sis
Such a well spoken young lady!! I love this episode!! ❤❤❤
Me too❤
So happy for all of these beautiful women I wish them love and happiness and all the success in the world going forward 🙏🏿❤️
Where is Doyle though?
When she spoke that truth about her/our history...loud and proud. Called out
As a Nigerian, I accept you both, sisters. ❤️❤️❤️
I love it Judge Mathis, great to see uplifting black episodes...Love and respect to that family
God is good, I’m so happy for them. Everyone deserves to know who they are and where they come from. I’m in tears listening to their story.
Such a great outcome, & especially from my hometown of Oakland. So many memories can be shared & made from this. I’m extremely happy for them
Love you brother thank you so much for watching. BAAAYY AAREAAAAA
When she took her glasses off at the end I could really see the resemblance.
Why can't television show this more? More beautiful intelligent, articulate black women who are married, full of love and are inspiring like they are. ❤
Doyle dun got a tan and went bald😂🤣😂🤣
🤣🤣🤣
😂😂😂
Idk why I’m crying but I love this whole story!!! ❤❤
It’s refreshing to see a blk woman that is proud of her roots and not claiming Cherokee or some other mess
This brought tears of joy to my eyes. I feel like I know them especially since I am from Oakland and knew about her son who was shot.
Mom looks absolutely beautiful. Praise the Lord you have a struggle but Praise God that struggle does not have you, Sis! I declare your complete and total deliverance this day and for the rest of your life, in Jesus Christ name, Amen!
They literally have moles in the same location and the niece looks just like the auntie ❤❤ this is beautiful
Smart intelligent beautiful woman
I suggest people do the African Ancestry test. It can pinpoint your maternal or paternal ancestors to the today's current ethnic group
That's good they found closure to discover that they are siblings.
The all look like Uncle Butch (Virgil Owens)...this is beautiful 😍
I am so happy for these ladies.
8:31mark she's 39% Nigerian.. I love it! I'm Nigerian and always get excited when people trace their roots..she could be from my beautiful Igbo tribe..beautiful ladies ❤❤
I did mine and i’m 33 percent Nigerian.😊
@@FinDom1 yayyy! My Nigerian sister. Have you tried Nigerian dishes? If not, give it a try... we have the best jollof rice, fufu with different types of soups..yummy..we have some of the best Afro-Beats artists, Nollywood movies.. great culture indeed, Naija 🇳🇬 ❤️❤️
@@sheilae.9670 I definitely want to try the jollof!
@@FinDom1 jollof rice is really good. See if there are African Restaurants in your state. I live in Georgia and there are lots of them here. I know California, Texas, Maryland, New York have lots of African Restaurants too. Some southern states like Alabama, Arkansas, Mississippi etc may be rare. If there are none in your state, you can maybe try making it. Jollof rice is easy to cook, there are lots of recipes on UA-cam. Enjoy!
I'm so happy for them
Where's Doyle
She looks so pretty with those blonde twists❤
I also love you and how you represent your profession and some of the people that come in your court room thinking they can get over... love to see when you put them in their correct places....Gods blessing on you a d Family..
These women are beautiful and I'm glad the mother is staying the course.
Ummmmm, WHERE'S DOYLE 😊 HOPE YOUR OK DOYLE. Wow, with the info on ancestry.
I just love these kinds of episodes. What a happy ending. 🥰
This case was beautiful ❤️ and the ending was priceless❤
Love this for them! I hope they’re all doing great!!! ❤❤❤
Wow! Super interesting case!
I wonder what in the world would happen if I did the ancestry probe.
Have you all done it? Would you do it?
Wow, Love the Wonderful Outcome of this Case.❤
Family can be your very worst enemy so it all depends upon who it is..
Thank God for DNA testing 🙌 .the girl in the peach looks like the defendant.
Why Im crying at work?
Ok now who’s cutting the onions 😅 this was beautiful ❤
Meeee🖐️
Then they registered by ancestry in their families,by their father's households.Numbers 1:18.For it is your biological father who determines what is your ethnicity;so it is not you mother who determines that.
this was a beautiful case.
Blessings upon their healing journey
Beautiful Family….so happy with the outcome!
How did AncestryDNA get it wrong? They are usually accurate. I would ask JM for a copy of the papers because he looked at that real quick and you know how he is these days.
Where is Doyle Doyle got to stop leaving going on vacations we need him in court I guess he say he has a life too outside that court room but still wya😂😂❤
Beautiful family
Aww that’s beautiful I’m so happy for this beautiful, strong family ❤️
Wait....where's Doyle????
These are the kind of court cases that I enjoy. Some of the other cases are so messy, IMO!!!
I enjoy watching all the episodes on Judge Mathis show..Its always a lesson to be learned or a good out come of a DNA, that certainly makes me cry and wish that i could find my long loss Father..
Yess I discovered my family is from the Bamileke people of Cameroon and yes some Nigerian as they are our next door neighbor
Nice.
That boy Johnson for San Diego state nice
West Oakland 😮 I knew I recognized her
My cuzzin Ka'sandra and my auntie Rochelle lol crazy seeing them on TV 🤣
They do look alike. Glad it came out positive.
Ummm … where is our guy Doyle? 😂
The niece looks just like the aunt
She looks like the aunt
If they already took the Ancestry DNA test why would they need another DNA test?
I thought about that too lol
Confirmation
@@danreg786 So it takes two DNA tests to get confirmation? Why not 3 or 4 tests then? When do you know you have "confirmation"?
Wholesome content. Love to see it 🥰🥰🥰💖💖💖
Looks just like her niece😻
Not Bargain Doyle, again!
BEAUTIFUL!! 🙏🏽❤️
WHERES DOYLE??
Amazing making me wanna open my ancestral account back up ❤
Ancestry is nothing but a paternity test. It can not tell you where you come from 😂😂
Where is Doyle??? 👀
Omg first thing that comes to mind where is Doyle lol
Where’s Doyle 🧐!!
U can never know your actual lineage in "Africa" just based on those names(nations) didn't exist back then.
Where's Doyle?
The niece looks just like her aunt. Wow
"Ancestry" revealed the sisters' relationship all along. What they all needed to do further was to click on their relative's name, then where it says "Relationship" and "predicted relationships:" it will provide a "predicted relationship" and "DNA shared percentage." This is where Miss Maxwell went awry. She only paid attention to the initially predicted relationship, which perhaps said "first cousin." She needed to go another step and click on the green-highlighted numbers. Doing this takes you to a page with your and your family member's shared DNA sequence highlighted in blue.
These numbers are significant because this is your DNA link. One must click on that as well. Doing so takes you to another page that further breaks down the possible relationship. It will provide number percentages. For example, 100% and Relationships. It will give possible connections. You have to use common sense. This is what happened with me and my half-sibling. "Ancestry" initially revealed we were first cousins, and we wasted time thinking that was our connection. We were wrong. We needed to take further steps to find our genuine relationship. The final page revealed the possible connections. Our DNA sequence revealed that we shared 27% DNA. That made perfect sense, as half-siblings share at least 25%, no more than 30% of DNA shared through their parent. The truth was right in front of the plaintiffs and the defendant. They didn't know that they needed to take additional steps. I wish them well.
Actually I did my research fully. I actually didn’t go awry at all. Furthermore the percentage was one thing, going further into it she was only listed as a first cousin. It’s not like she is my child and the percentage was going to be extremely high. So, the other step was actually done as well. I’ve did my research as far back as my 9th generation actually. My niece ancestry is also private and mainly consists of her paternal side. So in fact unless it had been my sister who did the ancestry instead of my niece than this might have some truth! You are right about going further. Just not in this case.
@@virnisamaxwell1251 Oh, your half-sister, Rochelle, didn't put her DNA on "Ancestry"? Now I see why you all went to the "JM" show for clarity. If your sister had submitted her DNA, I'm confident the results would've led you both to each other much sooner or would've answered unresolved questions. Meanwhile, I'm happy that you and she have conclusive results. Good luck and Godspeed.
It’s real strange that everybody who takes the test has roots from there…Indian tribes are never mentioned 🤔
I was also able to find that my father side is actually Cherokee. My father and grandmother were born on the tribal land. I’m also choctaw and Cherokee on my mother’s side.
@@virnisamaxwell1251 Same as for me my Grandmother on my Moms side is Choctaw and my Dad side Granny was Cherokee
What happened 2 Doyle?
Why would the niece interrupt the aunt while she was talking about how her brother died ? That was rude to interrupt her to bring up what you do for your brother because it wasn’t his time to pass. Although that’s true that completely threw me off.
I did not intentionally mean to interrupt my auntie when the judge asked how old was my brother he thought that my brother also had died I did not want to make it seem like my brother was not alive, and he is a living testimony, They also cut out the part where I acknowledge my uncle in his legacy…
Harpo! Who dat man!?!
same!!! like who the heck is that!
@SianiLamony awwww 💔Thank you for sharing that.
I'm crying!!!!!❤
Hey. Judge Mathis Family!!❤❤ I'm late, but I'm here now.
I'm here My Beloved Favorite Judge ***ASHAY ***
Ok Cameroon sister 💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾🇨🇲🇨🇲🇨🇲🇨🇲🇨🇲
Awwwww❤❤❤ I love this
Let us not forget Israel,if the Lord's will we should live this weekend will be the weekly seventh day Sabbath of rest from Friday sundown unto Saturday sundown.
Who's this baliff, is he a substitute?
We are smart and always have alot to say. They’re definitely Nigerians 😂
Where the heck is doil
Harpo, who dis? 🧐