Omg! I was staying at my moms when a strange man knocked on her door really early in the morning and asked if he could use her bathroom. She let him! I think he didn't expect two of us. He wouldn't come out of the bathroom for a long time. No water running. No flush of toilet. I called my mom's neighbor and had them come over too. Finally he came out but he was acting odd and wouldn't leave at first. Finally after some more prodding he left. I was so mad at my mom. I couldn't believe she let him in. There's a gas station near by. Scary
I feel so bad for the old man who lost his wife and got called a murderer, not only did he have to grieve his wife's death but also had to deal with countless people calling him a murderer.
This is what ALWAYS comes to my mind when someone is released from prison after they are proven innocent. The penal system is bad enough, the GRIEF of the lost loved one is bad enough, but then to have everyone thinking you did it ....... that would just be too much.
@@danieleriksson5728 I hope the person who did that never has to go through anything remotely close to the pain her husband experienced. That was plain wicked and nasty.
Why do people think that they have the right to be judge and jury over a person's life. This poor man was proven innocent yet another person figured proof wasn't good enough... They wanted to hurt, humiliate him and then break his spirit. 😔 Sad
Shiela was a true friend, she called the police over 750 times in one year to get answers about her friends death and to get her justice, we all need a friend like Shiela, and we all need to be like Shiela
She hounded an innocent man for 15 years. I don't understand how your value system works. Her type of unrelenting faith in her own false intuition but no evidence, like many others before her, has destroyed the lives of thousands of people over the years.
@@ZombieSazza I realise that, but to ignore what else she had done to that poor man at the same time is not something I could not let pass. When people do bad or even evil things to others we should not allow this to happen because these people claimed they had good "intentions".
@@MrStringybark I completely agree with your sentiment. The fact also that the actual person guilty is now on death row - imagine being found guilty of a horrible crime like this that you didn't commit and then being put on death row. And all because of someone's intuition.
@@TK-ui2th Sheila just looks like one of those ppl lol. But my god look at the guy who actually did it. Name should’ve been Chester. Just bc he can’t get with a woman by himself he has to take it unwillingly.
Ben's story about an unknown man knocking on her wife's door and requesting to use her bathroom should have been enough to vindicate Russell of any wrongdoing, plus his cooperative behavior.
I would think so too but maybe he didnt have anyone to back up his story and since it wasnt too recent there may have been no cameras to check out his story.
@@diaryofarealmom3264 the legitimacy of polygraph tests might have been different at the time where this case took place, but today the results of a polygraph cannot be used as evidence in a court of law. However, they are still used for reasons such as study the persons behaviour and just a way to get the person to reveal things that _can_ be used in court
It’s pretty alarming how often the police believe with all certainty that they know who committed the murder and then it turns out they were completely wrong. How many people have had their lives ruined by overzealous/incompetent law enforcement officers who just wanted to convict someone; not necessarily the perpetrator.
All of them need to be held accountable and be punished severly, instead of giving excuses like "oh its very easy to make a mistake given the situation"....utter morons. Innocent till proven guilty always.
It is even far worse than that. When the police focuses on the wrong guy and put all focus on finding all evidence that supports their wrong ideas the cops are leaving out a lot of evidence and many lines of investigations are simply not done. People are not interrogated, witnesses not heard and things like phone records and stories not checked. In the end due to their incompetence and laziness the cops can say in the end that there are no other suspects. Who else could have done it. Trying to make it sound like they just can't find the evidence t put the obviously guilty person behind bars. But of course there are no other suspects and no evidence pointing anywhere else because they made a point to not check any of that. The cops literally handled the case on purpose in such way that nobody else can be found guilty. And you as a taxpayer pays all this. The killer goes free with no worry on his mind and will kill again. The victim and their families don't get any justice and a wrong person's life is ruined on purpose. The cops know he is innocent but have to keep going to save their own face. In addition to incompetence and laziness it is even more about pure dishonesty.
@@xAnimelovvvvverx I mean it was the 80’s and there was no dna testing this is the only way they could really do it. Luckily nowadays it doesn’t happen as often as people would say it does but I bet it still happens. I agree, anybody who prosecuted and sentences an innocent man to jail with no enough evidence should pay a price.
I still remember reading about the case about the drunk moose. Happy that everything was resolved in the end. But the trauma of losing his wife and then being ostracized by his neighbors and society, poor man 😢
@@shaunlevant323 I don't know how you came to that conclusion, but no I didn't because I waited till the case was solved and waited until they would convict him or not. But I don't remember reading about that he had to move because the outraged from the neighbors believed that he did it. The sad part with Swedish media/news that I have noticed more and more. Is that they cover a story intensely a day or two and then radio silence, the notifications from their phone apps stops. Sometimes I have to google to see what happened. I'm sorry if you misunderstood me, but Innocent until proven guilty, right? P.S I'm using Grammarly to write this because English isn't my native tongue, but I hope this answer helped the misunderstanding.
To lose 50 pounds, crack your skin, have burrs in your feet, covered in poison ivy rashes, and covered in bug bites to get out of a misdemeanor charge that you would get probation for? Hell, let her have that one… lol.
I think they did drugs, thought she had overdosed and was dead so they left her for dead. The one guy tried to blame it on his friend for some reason?!?! I am sure she could survive in the wilderness for that amount of time, water is basically all you need and a little bit more but the bugs sun were probably beginning to get to her and she was probably just so confused where she was
I couldn’t have guessed I would ever in my life hear “a drunken murderous moose” was responsible. My heart goes out to her poor husband who not only lost his wife, but had all his friends and neighbors turn on him.
For starters, it wasn't winter when this happened - it was early September. Lofthammar is in the southern part of Sweden and it does not snow there at that time of year. Second, it wasn't a "drunken murerous moose" but probably a young bull that got mad at the dog barking. It is believed that Agneta tried to scare the moose away, but she did not succeed and was attacked instead. The police theory was that the husband had run her over with a lawnmower because the length of the lawnmower blades matched the length of some of the injuries she had. However, very sad story 😞
I just discovered this channel 2 days ago and after binge watching all the videos, to see a new video just uploaded made me happy 🥰 love this channel and the narrators voice
I don't see why the architect ex was ever a suspect, based on the phone call to her boyfriend, the man in her apartment was a stranger, she would have said if it was someone she knew, especially the ex, and there was no evidence against him except that he was her ex-boyfriend, I hope that's not a crime or I'm in trouble.
Right. All parties involved in seeking justice were overzealous dunces. The only thing Sheila has to her credit is persistence. Besides that, she literally chased an innocent man and accused him of a crime he didn’t commit for years. What qualifies her to open up her own investigation company and help other solve other cases when she hasn’t even solved the one she was chasing for forever? Without dna, nobody would’ve found the actual criminal.
It is scary that law enforcement can be so suspicious of someone, simply because the person survived something awful. So it's like surviving is criminalized.
I watch a lot of true crime and “survivors” are often found to be the murderer. So, yeah it sucks to be suspected when you are innocent, but it is too common a scenario to not investigate fully.
There are a LOT of cases like that where the survivor is accused of something. People pray for their safe return but when they actually return they’re shunned.
All because she had a misdemeanor charge pending. Do they really think she went to the lengths of stranding herself out in the woods just to get out of it? Starving herself to lose 50 lbs. and sustaining poison ivy rashes and bug bites? Those officers were damn incompetent.
They were not suspicious "simply because they survived". They were suspicious due to extenuating circumstances and perceived inaccuracies in the person's story, as anyone would be.
Aren't you precious. There's plenty of cases of false kidnappings staged by the "victim" themselves. In most of those cases people don't immediately go "UR A LIAR", it's when the "victim" tells a story that's completely at odds with reality that eyebrows get raised. I think the theory that she was just whacked out of her mind on meth and then found her legally blind self in strange woods is probably the most likely, though. I feel like if she was trying to get out of her own legal responsibilities she wouldn't have purposefully set up a situation where she was waiting for herself to be declared dead while wandering naked in the woods and subsisting on basically nothing. But who knows, maybe she would. People have done stupider things.
I feel so bad for Russel :( good thing he was able to flee US and get his degree, I can't imagine how terrible it would have been if he had lost his schoolarship because of a crime he didn't commit ALSO INGAMAR!!! The man lost his wife, was ostracized AND went to jail!! BECAUSE OF THE CRIME OF A MOOSE!!! I hope he is better now, that was surely a hellish experience for him and his family
Man, when someone fails a polygraph test it's immediately assumed they are guilty. However when one PASSES the test it is seems to not be so important. In this case they just scrambled to then find some dirt on him. Hmmm... I haven't finished the story yet so I don't know if he is guilty or not. It just doesn't seem right how polygraphs are used in this way.
Polygraphs can be easily manipulated and aren’t even admissible in court, and the police often lie and tell people they’ve “failed” to try to coax a reaction. The guy who invented them even said they shouldn’t be used for police investigations, yet they use them today because they can manipulate a suspect with them. If you refuse to take one, because they’re not scientific and not admissible, they’ll assume you’re guilty and manipulate you with that, they just shouldn’t be used at all by police.
@@DefinitelyNotBender they aren’t admissible, but they still matter. If someone “fails” one it can give the police departments adequate reason get tunnel vision, and divert resources and manpower solely on that person. Not to mention sway public opinion. If an innocent person fails one it can lead to other suspects and clues being overlooked or ignored.
@@hollyhayes9640 gary ridgway passed a polygraph in his murder spree then was eliminated as a suspect and continued killing. the amount of derailed investigations has to outweigh any benefit they have
It has been so cool watching the evolution of this channel. I've been here from the beginning and I mean back when we were exploring abandoned houses and trying to help solve missing persons cases. What a glow up!
15:44 well, no. Because the gurl clearly said she let a stranger in to use her bathroom. If it was Russell who EVERYONE knew, she would have said Russell.
You find the best most shocking cases! Me and my husband are hooked on your videos and bond over them every time you upload a new one &’ I tell him he’s like “ don’t watch them without me “ lol
I could listen to this narrator's voice all day long. I LOVE (EXPLORING WITH U)! Thanks EWU for another great video glad they got to the bottom of this case. Also just subbed to EWU history cool channel thank you for all your hard work and dedication 👏
i don't understand why people are so ready to call lisa a liar. you can see from the photos shes in very rough shape, her skin being rough and dry and her feet being covered in wounds and all that. like, she was legally blind and quite possibly didnt have very much information on the woods so even if theres clues to get out of there, im not surprised that she didnt realize it. then the people saying she shouldnt have been able to survive off berries and mushrooms while being legally blind, theres tons of way more amazing survival stories of people surviving with less so i really dont understand why theyre so quick to blame her.
Last year a pilot got lost in the Amazon forest and was rescued 36 days later. He ate what he saw the monkeys eat because he assumed it was not poisonous and drank stream water. So it's not so surprising that Lisa survived this long 🤷♀️
And if they drugged her, she was probably really disoriented for the first few days and then continued being disorientated due to dehydration and famine. Also, how would she have even known they dropped the case if she was stuck in the wilderness with nothing, like, it makes no sense. And every direction looks the same in a forest, especially when you can only see blurry greens and blues.
@@Sanas_Shy_Language "how would she have even known they dropped the case". She would've known if she was holed up in some motel, hiding and planning her woods story. That's what the police were suspiscious of. That she pretended to be in the woods
One that claims to see ghosts of their dead friend and obsessively attempts to get the wrong person locked up for decades despite having literally no evidence of them being guilty? Sure, I guess we all need a crazy friend.
@@StrewthSeeker Exactly. And when the victim called her boyfriend, she said "a STRANGER asked to use my bathroom". Surely, she would've called the guy "Russel" if it was him. What evidence did the police have on this guy that they decided to haunt him for so long? Probably nothing.
There was a case where police just took the wrong appartement in a big building... They went to the wrong floor. The lady living there was shunned so bad, she had to move out only because a mistake of the police... it's scary how easy people jump to conclusions...
The investigators actually believed the husband mangled his wife with the mower. Her body just in a horrific state when found, completely mutilated. And mooses are dangerous and can attack if they feel threatened, which some can become just by the presence of humans. I have countless of stories where people had to climb up in trees and so on, stuck there for hours because the pissed off moose has been on the ground. I myself was chased by a moose while on horse back, and boy did we run fast home. Not an animal you'd like to have an encounter with all alone in the woods 😂 I'm Swedish so quite familiar both to the case and to the Swedish mooses 🤭
Seriously? There would have been SO MUCH EVIDENCE if it was done with a mower. Literally impossible to hide. I have always known moose to be aggressive and deadly, not an unlikely scenario at all! Just strange they didn't notice tracks if it was snowy? Utter incompetence
It's sad how we think we have socialized public safety, but so many cases don't get solved until a private investigator (as in paid out-of-pocket) gets involved.
The problem is that, the investigators that are funded by government, typically have a gigantic pile of cases. They have a limited amount of time that they can devote to a single case. Not to say they don’t care, but how do you choose which case takes priority? If you were missing your child and I was missing my sister, who do we devote the time for if we are in the same area? A private investigator will usually only have 1 or 2 cases at a time and devote their entire time to that particular case.
I hope this particular private investigator learnt something from her false intuition which began her on this journey. If she had researched her friend's neighbors maybe she would have found the real killer.
@@MrStringybark What story are you talking about? Angela? Her friend Sheila didn't become a p.i. until long after her friend's murder, and the killer was not a neighbor, just a guy who followed her home from the bar. Nobody witnessed him so the only way it was ever going to be solved was the advancement of DNA analysis. Until then, suspecting the guy 'Russell' was perfectly good intuition. There was nothing to prove he did it but nothing to prove he couldn't have done it either.
@@audreymuzingo933 I thought I heard during the video that police discovered later on that he lived in the same building. I went back and listened to it again but I am wrong. But back to Shiela and her obsession. You believe there is such a thing as "perfectly good intuition" even though it is utterly wrong and despicable. I suspect there were a lot of people like you in the crowd at the Salem Witch trials yelling that your intuition tells you these are women are witches, burn them.
For that last story, it is obvious to me that whoever wrote that has not been face to face with a Moose in Rut. Moose are normally fairly docile creatures that just don't care unless they are mentally compromised or in Rut. If you consider the proverbial "going from 0-100 real quick," these creatures can go to 1000. There are stories of them requiring entire coordinated teams to simply sedate and capture them. When being hunted, they aren't a joke either and require group coordination as well. Moose are absolutely terrifying. A tragic story indeed.
I'm in some of the same situation medically...I could have survived on the woods for a month but probably not find my way out. I'd try to head toward the sound of traffic but you can go in circles in the woods without noticing pretty easily
about 2 years ago I went into a little forest not that far from my home and went downhill to a spot next to a stream as I did for years and that night at around 10 pm I left without my friends and got lost for about 2 hours even tho it normally takes 10 minutes to get out. I was was freaking out and had left my anxiety meds at home. It's very easy to get lost in the forest especially at night !! PS: Awesome video !!!!!!
I'm sorry but i highly doubt that you suffer from anxiety, because if you did... The very thought of being in the woods at night alone would cause just about anyone to have a panic attack! So we are to believe that someone who's taking medication for anxiety just willingly walked into the forest at 10 pm all alone?! Your story seems a bit bogus, it would make a bit of sense if you were drunk or on drugs that particular night.
@@childrembirgit5020 bro not everyone's anxiety is the same. You know that... Right? Like?? Some people like being outside in the forest bc it's just calming or peaceful to them. I am not one of those people, but you know. It does happen.
I'm so upset that I didn't know that EWU has another channel. I don't know how I missed this. But I'm so glad I found it. As usual, brilliant narration, exceptional research and extraordinary story-telling.
Well theres degrees of legally blind, regardless though a legally blind person would have alot of trouble getting around since they're legally blind. Idk for the state she's in but in mine legally blind means even with glasses your vision is still really bad
Not quite. It means that *with all corrective lenses in*, your vision is at or worse than 20/200. Not that your vision without correction is 20/200. Since she didn’t have her glasses with her, it means her vision was significantly worse than the 20/200.
@@lizzit917, THAT'S EXACTLY WHAT I SAID! What the hell is it with you people who have to dissect a comment that gets the point out there, without going into the fine details. Was she lost for a few days because she was deemed legally blind? YES! Did I say legally blind doesn't mean you're completely blind? YES! So what's the point of giving any more detail other then "legally blind doesn't mean you're completely blind" Do you beat dead horses? Cause you sound like you beat dead horses.
@@awakenotwoke8580 That's absolutely not what you said. What you said is that legally blind is 20/200 sight, which is not the case. Yeah, what is it with us actually legally blind people who correct people who are wrong about what legal blindness is, gosh why would we do that? Why would we want to correct the misconceptions people like you leave all over the place that makes things harder for us? Do you often speak incorrectly about topics you clearly know nothing about and then get pissed when the community that topic refers to corrects you? Cause you sound like you do.
Yo, my grandpa also done this and he regrets it. This person come and said that they are a friend of my aunt. They also said that they had an appointment and agree to meet up there. To our surprise, my strict and very distrust grandpa let them in, but only on the terrace. He was alone in this house, so he just do what he always do on daily basis. Not even once suspicious of this person. Not long after that, this person says that they want to used the bathroom. He let them in! And then, they excuse themselves to went home. My grandpa doesn't realise it until night come, when he checked his wallet in the closet. He lost about RP. 6.000.000. Idk how much it is in USD, but this is a lot of money in our country. We just feel grateful and relieved that nothing more happened to him. That person luckily didn't harm my grandpa.
Angela met Russell at the bar, but during her phone call to her boyfriend, she said a strange man knocked on her door. Shouldn't have this detail been enough to clear Russell, because Angela would have recognized Russell if it was really him?
On the last case, how good was that moose at hiding evidence?! Do we know if that poor woman was the only victim of this moose? Because I'd hate to believe that the police in that area are so incompetent that they couldn't differentiate between a homicide and an animal attack! Maybe her husband was a moose hunter? And that moose was getting revenge for the murder of his wife from hunting season the year before? I don't know, but these questions NEED answered!
wait a minute your telling me a blind woman avoided eating poisonous berries by not eating the bright colored ones? and no one found that odd, could she feel the colors or smell how bright the colors were thats insane to me.
She may be legally blind, but not totally blind. Blind enough that it handicaps most or all aspects of her life, but has enough vision to still see colors, shadows, and/or outlines
Lisa - you can totally live a month on berries and mushrooms for a month as long as you have water. I am nearly legally blind, and I would not be able to see power lines or signs in a forest. I can see the difference between dark and light, and bright colors, but no details. I would probably run into thin trees. I would not be able to see berries and mushrooms unless I ran into them.
The only thing Sheila has to her credit is persistence. Besides that, she literally chased an innocent man and accused him of a crime he didn’t commit for years. What qualifies her to open up her own investigation company and help other solve other cases when she hasn’t even solved the one she was chasing for forever?
20 MINS JUST ISNT ENOUGH GRACE OF YOUR BEAUTIFUL VOICE/STORY TELLING!!!! I LOVE THESE BUT I WOULD LOVE MORE IN DEPT OR LONGER VERSIONS, 30/40+ MINS OF CONTENT IS PERFECT.
Seriously! Plus all of her exposure injuries and losing over 40lbs. I just don’t believe she faked all of that. I think a combination of starvation, dehydration, and near-blindness led to her going in circles and being unable to recognize any trail markers she may have come near. No one would go through such a harrowing ordeal to avoid something so meager by comparison. It reminds me of the case of poor Denise Huskins. She was kidnapped, but cops didn’t look for her because they didn’t believe her boyfriend’s story and accused him of murdering her, even though he’d clearly been beaten and drugged. When her attacker later let her go, cops were so embarrassed about having insisted so hard that she’d been murdered that they then accused her of faking her own kidnapping. Even after they caught the guy who kidnapped and assaulted her, some people still accuse her of staging the whole thing!
@@bistitchualbee More articles were written on the case - police concluded she *was* high on meth and got lost, and the other two guys were drugged out with her. They argued over a murder that never happened because all 3 were high on meth. She didn't fake being lost, she was high on meth and got lost, and still to this day tries to "prove" it wasn't the obvious.
Cops: "The berries she said she ate don't grow here" Intelligent person: "she's legally blind and was drugged, she could easily be mistaken" Cops: "her story makes no sense, she must have been on Meth intentionally" Intelligent person: "one of the first things she said is she was drugged. Her abusers even thought one or the other killed her. Admitting to guilt that they gave her the drugs." Cops: "there were trails and power lines she could follow" Intelligent person: "again, she's legally blind and was drugged" Cops: "She was hallucinating" Intelligent person: "she was drugged" Cops: Intelligent person: "Stop trying to blame the victim" Cops: "We're trying gather revenue for the state, that's our job"
Exactly, every exact thing about her story makes sense. Being so dehydrated and hungry skin cracks and 50 pounds is lost in a such a short time isn't the most likely way to get out of a robbery charge she could've plead on.
@@AliValentine143 yep, they just wanted to get one more conviction under their belt to get more funding from the state. Gotta secure those bonuses to their paychecks.
If you guys read articles from 2017-2018, you'd have known police stated meth was involved and her story fell apart. All 3 adults showed signs of meth use, including her.
@@cassidylynn6203 Her story doesn't check out and cops said such. She was using before those two men even came along, and was suspected of robbing the store with them. The only victim she is is a victim of her own dumb actions. Also, how do you forcefully drug someone with meth, hm? Surely needles would have been found? None were. She willingly used. Get over it, her story is full of it.
EWU, I’ve been a fan for a long time; since the days when you’d go out exploring on foot. Those were fun and very enjoyable (especially since I used to live in the SW desert, so it was nice seeing it again), but I also love these explorations into different crimes. I just discovered your EWU history channel (I’m always late to the party) and am very much looking forward to those videos! The Raven has a fantastic narration voice, by the way. He has always been my favorite. Just an idea, but I hope you might consider doing a paranormal channel / theme someday. I feel EWU’s awesome creativity combined with the Raven’s voice would fare excellently with paranormal topics. Plus, many true crime fans are also paranormal fans. Phenomenon such as glitches, night crawlers, time slips, skinwalkers, ET’s, cryptid and elemental encounters, and more, EWU would do fantastically with; especially topics that aren’t covered as often, like glitches instead of ghosts (though hauntings are still fun). Check out Nuke’s Top 5, Beyond Creepy, and Paranormal Rising for inspiration when you get a chance if you feel up to it. Again, it’s just an idea from a fan, but it’s because I think so highly of your work!
Not be a jerk but I have never met anyone who are true crime fans and paranormal fans. Most true crime fans like facts and evidence that lead to real things. Paranormal ghost hunter and cultural stories about sea monsters and hauntings aren't part of the real world nor factual. It's like saying astronomers are also into astrology. There are a lot of paranormal channels already on UA-cam that might interest you.
@@stevorobo692 Actually, there are people such as myself who like both. I like science, history, true crime, and mythology/folktales, paranormal, ghost stories, to name a few interests. I have friends who are the same. One can enjoy fact-based subjects and fictional ones, too. And, no, you’re not being a jerk. You haven’t met the right sort of people yet. 🙂
@@joanhoffman3702 Thank you, Joan! I enjoy the very same, including mythology / folklore! May I recommend the channel Scary Fairy Godmother? She has some pretty neat stuff over there, pertaining to folklore, including a pretty cool interview with a Dr. Simon Young who specializes in certain folklore (and also has a fantastic accent, if I might add :). Scary Fairy Godmother is great to listen to while driving, crocheting/knitting, or just relaxing. Despite the name, much of her content is not scary at all. To the contrary, a lot of it is quite nice!
@@stevorobo692 I never said “all.” I never even said “most.” I believe the particular word I used was “many,” and this is true. Both crime and paranormal events pertain to mysteries, so they have that in common, among other things, which I enjoy this aspect of, as do quite a number of people I know. Just because we don’t understand the paranormal yet, doesn’t mean it isn’t real. One day science will prove what and where it comes from, like everything else so far. No one said you have to like it, least of all, me.
"Yeah the legally blind woman definitely stayed in the forest naked with no food or her medication until the point where one more day would have killed her to avoid a $500 fine." - the police. Methinks they have been getting into that sweet evidence locker stash of the good stuff before starting their working days.
you guys are the best true crime channel i’ve ever watched. you always cover stories i haven’t heard of before and the narration is always clear so i rarely need to turn on subtitles. and when i do, they’re detailed and well written. keep it up EWU
You arrest the guy before you even got test results back. "Some experts" need to learn to not jump to conclusions before test results come back. The sheer incompetence of police in these videos is astounding. It's not even blinders, but straight up blindfolds. Too much insinuating, not enough detecting.
absolutely scary to think the woman who tried her best to have a man locked up for life or exterminated start her own investigative firm to help other people because of her stellar skills..
i am absolutely blown away by that. i mean, at least she took her dues and apologized to him but her detective work was not exactly something to brag about
This just goes to show how dangerous it is to assume someone is guilty without any evidence. The human mind is so inclined to confirmation bias, they'll start to become fixated on a suspect for no good reason.
Wow. I just looked at Sheila’s Without warning private investigator website and it’s just amazing how this all turned out for her. She’s helped hundreds of families reopen and investigate cold cases. I’m just so happy to see it. 🥰 RIH Angela.
I don't know why the cops and Angies friend Sheila continued to think it was the architect guy. She said to her boyfriend that "some guy" asked to use her bathroom. She knew the architect guy so if it was him she would've said his name not "some guy."
In the end, Angela’s boyfriend was still blamed, this time by the killer, who said he didn’t intend to kill her but stabbed her to keep her quiet when her boyfriend knocked on her door. How horrible.
What the narrator forgot to mention is that she was trying to make her boyfriend jealous all night trying to drag him out for the night. She even invited a dude that they both knew wanted her to threaten her boyfriend to come out. Being a shitty girlfriend isn’t doesn’t warrant the karmic justice of death tho
The first case where everyone’s doubting her story.. are we just going to ignore the fact she lost 50 LBS!.. and the two men accused the other of killing her! The second detail in particular makes ZERO sense if she had faked this
Wait so you're telling me in story #2 that everyone completely ignored the fact that the lady straight up told her boyfriend on the phone that it was a random guy and then proceeded to harass that guy with no evidence for like 20+ years. Yikes
Yeah a little suspicious that he didn't try to any further than knock and then call the police. If I had the same information I would've busted a window or kicked the door down.... If I hadn't already driven the car into the front door. If the attack happened while he was out there as suspected maybe she would still be alive
Yeah..was going to point this out.Not many people realise that a Radiologist is a Doctor who specialises in Radiology, While a radiographer (XRay tech) takes the x-rays for the Radiologist to read.
Why did the police and Sheila think it was Buchanan? She'd spent the night partying with him, but called her boyfriend saying a "strange man" had knocked on her door aksing to use the bathroom. It makes no sense to blame Buchanan unless you think the boyfriend lied about what she said...but then, if it was Buchanan and not the boyfriend, why on earth would he lie for Buchanan, a man he didn't know? Sheila ultimately got them to open the case back up, but she also ruthlessly harassed an obviously innocent man. Dallas police suck equally for sharing her delusions...but then, them being terrible is par for the course.
Why would they suspect Russel when the victim stated on the phone to her boyfriend that a creepy guy had knocked on the door? She didn't name Russel, so it implies the creep was a stranger?
In the mid 80’s and early 90’s before cell phones etc… my husband worked nights and weekends ( he was a Chef) I had a guy knock on my door two nights in a row saying “I know it’s just you and your young son are alone, I am going to come in when you least expect it …. “. I called the police and they said “we can’t do anything until something happens!” my husband asked one of his friends to come over and stay with me and our son until he got home from work. The friend stayed during the nights my husband worked for about two months, the guy never came back, thank God.
Omg! I was staying at my moms when a strange man knocked on her door really early in the morning and asked if he could use her bathroom. She let him! I think he didn't expect two of us. He wouldn't come out of the bathroom for a long time. No water running. No flush of toilet. I called my mom's neighbor and had them come over too. Finally he came out but he was acting odd and wouldn't leave at first. Finally after some more prodding he left. I was so mad at my mom. I couldn't believe she let him in. There's a gas station near by. Scary
I certainly hope she doesn't do this when you're not there 😳
I hope she never does this again! OMG!!
I bet you he was shooting up. As a former heroin addict, this sounds like something we would do.
You shouldn't open the door for a stranger, period.
@@HandlesAreStupid167 Regardless if she's there or not it's dangerous to let a stranger in your home.
I feel so bad for the old man who lost his wife and got called a murderer, not only did he have to grieve his wife's death but also had to deal with countless people calling him a murderer.
someone actually sawed out a lifesized profile of a moose in steel and put it on his lawn when he was out. it wasn't only murmurs going around.
@@danieleriksson5728 wow. That’s awful. That dude still went to the funeral with everybody there thinking he did it.
This is what ALWAYS comes to my mind when someone is released from prison after they are proven innocent. The penal system is bad enough, the GRIEF of the lost loved one is bad enough, but then to have everyone thinking you did it ....... that would just be too much.
@@danieleriksson5728
I hope the person who did that never has to go through anything remotely close to the pain her husband experienced. That was plain wicked and nasty.
Why do people think that they have the right to be judge and jury over a person's life. This poor man was proven innocent yet another person figured proof wasn't good enough... They wanted to hurt, humiliate him and then break his spirit. 😔 Sad
Shiela was a true friend, she called the police over 750 times in one year to get answers about her friends death and to get her justice, we all need a friend like Shiela, and we all need to be like Shiela
Thinking the same thing. More so than her own family.
She hounded an innocent man for 15 years. I don't understand how your value system works. Her type of unrelenting faith in her own false intuition but no evidence, like many others before her, has destroyed the lives of thousands of people over the years.
@@MrStringybark I was referring specifically to contacting the police constantly for answers so they didn’t ignore the case
@@ZombieSazza I realise that, but to ignore what else she had done to that poor man at the same time is not something I could not let pass.
When people do bad or even evil things to others we should not allow this to happen because these people claimed they had good "intentions".
@@MrStringybark I completely agree with your sentiment. The fact also that the actual person guilty is now on death row - imagine being found guilty of a horrible crime like this that you didn't commit and then being put on death row. And all because of someone's intuition.
Wow this woman Sheila! Wow you’d want a friend like that. God bless her
Fair play to Buchannon as well because I certainly would have held some animosity
youd want your friend to relentlessly hound and smear an innocent person for over a decade on your behalf? yikes.. remind me not to be your friend
@@TK-ui2th Sheila just looks like one of those ppl lol. But my god look at the guy who actually did it. Name should’ve been Chester. Just bc he can’t get with a woman by himself he has to take it unwillingly.
Hell no . She got lucky and was wrong about the killer and that he was still out there. She was wasting cops time with 750 calls.
seriously... she sounds like the eptimome of a Karen
Ben's story about an unknown man knocking on her wife's door and requesting to use her bathroom should have been enough to vindicate Russell of any wrongdoing, plus his cooperative behavior.
I would think so too but maybe he didnt have anyone to back up his story and since it wasnt too recent there may have been no cameras to check out his story.
Yeah, and he passed polygraph which is funny because If you fail then it’s totally legit if you pass then “oh it’s not always right”…. 🙄
@@shaynevaughn3164 he's not a stranger though.. that's his point
Were they married thought they were just dating but I have bad hearing lol
@@diaryofarealmom3264 the legitimacy of polygraph tests might have been different at the time where this case took place, but today the results of a polygraph cannot be used as evidence in a court of law. However, they are still used for reasons such as study the persons behaviour and just a way to get the person to reveal things that _can_ be used in court
It’s pretty alarming how often the police believe with all certainty that they know who committed the murder and then it turns out they were completely wrong. How many people have had their lives ruined by overzealous/incompetent law enforcement officers who just wanted to convict someone; not necessarily the perpetrator.
It’s unfortunately way to common. When they believe they have the answer they need, they make any clues fit to match the narrative they’ve created
Well, it’s not officers who usually the burden rests on. It’s prosecutors, people in the office who are in cahoots.
All of them need to be held accountable and be punished severly, instead of giving excuses like "oh its very easy to make a mistake given the situation"....utter morons. Innocent till proven guilty always.
It is even far worse than that. When the police focuses on the wrong guy and put all focus on finding all evidence that supports their wrong ideas the cops are leaving out a lot of evidence and many lines of investigations are simply not done. People are not interrogated, witnesses not heard and things like phone records and stories not checked.
In the end due to their incompetence and laziness the cops can say in the end that there are no other suspects. Who else could have done it. Trying to make it sound like they just can't find the evidence t put the obviously guilty person behind bars. But of course there are no other suspects and no evidence pointing anywhere else because they made a point to not check any of that. The cops literally handled the case on purpose in such way that nobody else can be found guilty.
And you as a taxpayer pays all this. The killer goes free with no worry on his mind and will kill again. The victim and their families don't get any justice and a wrong person's life is ruined on purpose. The cops know he is innocent but have to keep going to save their own face. In addition to incompetence and laziness it is even more about pure dishonesty.
@@xAnimelovvvvverx I mean it was the 80’s and there was no dna testing this is the only way they could really do it. Luckily nowadays it doesn’t happen as often as people would say it does but I bet it still happens. I agree, anybody who prosecuted and sentences an innocent man to jail with no enough evidence should pay a price.
I still remember reading about the case about the drunk moose. Happy that everything was resolved in the end.
But the trauma of losing his wife and then being ostracized by his neighbors and society, poor man 😢
And yet you thought the same !
@@shaunlevant323 Thought what?
@@guppidoris even you thought he’s the one who committed this crime 🤷🏻♂️ ryt ?
@@shaunlevant323 I don't know how you came to that conclusion, but no I didn't because I waited till the case was solved and waited until they would convict him or not.
But I don't remember reading about that he had to move because the outraged from the neighbors believed that he did it.
The sad part with Swedish media/news that I have noticed more and more. Is that they cover a story intensely a day or two and then radio silence, the notifications from their phone apps stops. Sometimes I have to google to see what happened.
I'm sorry if you misunderstood me, but Innocent until proven guilty, right?
P.S I'm using Grammarly to write this because English isn't my native tongue, but I hope this answer helped the misunderstanding.
@@shaunlevant323 literally did not.
Hands down the best narrator ever . This man should be narrating everything
He and Morgan Freeman
Do you like the female narrator? I like the males voice so much it kk da cringe when it’s her turn 🤔
@@DammnDeejay whatever your last couple of words were and whenever you were just trying to say was more cringe than a female voice.
For real bro there's some annoying narrators on true crime channels but this guy is great
@@tatertot4208 yea I seen that typo but Im just like……………..”fuxk it” 🤣
To lose 50 pounds, crack your skin, have burrs in your feet, covered in poison ivy rashes, and covered in bug bites to get out of a misdemeanor charge that you would get probation for? Hell, let her have that one… lol.
Yeah I'll give people that it's a strange situation, but that seems extreme
I think they did drugs, thought she had overdosed and was dead so they left her for dead. The one guy tried to blame it on his friend for some reason?!?! I am sure she could survive in the wilderness for that amount of time, water is basically all you need and a little bit more but the bugs sun were probably beginning to get to her and she was probably just so confused where she was
Not even probation just a fine most likely.
that's a woman on a mission 😂
That’s well put! I was thinking the same thing. My goodness. She looked awful after all of that. Over a piddly misdemeanor lol 😂
I couldn’t have guessed I would ever in my life hear “a drunken murderous moose” was responsible. My heart goes out to her poor husband who not only lost his wife, but had all his friends and neighbors turn on him.
For starters, it wasn't winter when this happened - it was early September. Lofthammar is in the southern part of Sweden and it does not snow there at that time of year. Second, it wasn't a "drunken murerous moose" but probably a young bull that got mad at the dog barking. It is believed that Agneta tried to scare the moose away, but she did not succeed and was attacked instead. The police theory was that the husband had run her over with a lawnmower because the length of the lawnmower blades matched the length of some of the injuries she had. However, very sad story 😞
Never trusted loose LOL
I just discovered this channel 2 days ago and after binge watching all the videos, to see a new video just uploaded made me happy 🥰 love this channel and the narrators voice
No way I literally just found this video and channel right this second
Check out their main channel.... The binge can continue!
Best channel ever. This guy and the woman are the best
It’s a very good channel. Even the two hour long videos are well worth a watch. Enjoy!
I don't see why the architect ex was ever a suspect, based on the phone call to her boyfriend, the man in her apartment was a stranger, she would have said if it was someone she knew, especially the ex, and there was no evidence against him except that he was her ex-boyfriend, I hope that's not a crime or I'm in trouble.
They showed complete tunnel vision in that one.
Right. All parties involved in seeking justice were overzealous dunces. The only thing Sheila has to her credit is persistence. Besides that, she literally chased an innocent man and accused him of a crime he didn’t commit for years. What qualifies her to open up her own investigation company and help other solve other cases when she hasn’t even solved the one she was chasing for forever? Without dna, nobody would’ve found the actual criminal.
It is scary that law enforcement can be so suspicious of someone, simply because the person survived something awful. So it's like surviving is criminalized.
I watch a lot of true crime and “survivors” are often found to be the murderer. So, yeah it sucks to be suspected when you are innocent, but it is too common a scenario to not investigate fully.
There are a LOT of cases like that where the survivor is accused of something. People pray for their safe return but when they actually return they’re shunned.
All because she had a misdemeanor charge pending. Do they really think she went to the lengths of stranding herself out in the woods just to get out of it? Starving herself to lose 50 lbs. and sustaining poison ivy rashes and bug bites? Those officers were damn incompetent.
They were not suspicious "simply because they survived". They were suspicious due to extenuating circumstances and perceived inaccuracies in the person's story, as anyone would be.
Aren't you precious. There's plenty of cases of false kidnappings staged by the "victim" themselves. In most of those cases people don't immediately go "UR A LIAR", it's when the "victim" tells a story that's completely at odds with reality that eyebrows get raised. I think the theory that she was just whacked out of her mind on meth and then found her legally blind self in strange woods is probably the most likely, though. I feel like if she was trying to get out of her own legal responsibilities she wouldn't have purposefully set up a situation where she was waiting for herself to be declared dead while wandering naked in the woods and subsisting on basically nothing. But who knows, maybe she would. People have done stupider things.
I feel so bad for Russel :( good thing he was able to flee US and get his degree, I can't imagine how terrible it would have been if he had lost his schoolarship because of a crime he didn't commit
ALSO INGAMAR!!! The man lost his wife, was ostracized AND went to jail!! BECAUSE OF THE CRIME OF A MOOSE!!! I hope he is better now, that was surely a hellish experience for him and his family
We're going to have to start getting these elk off the streets and into the drunk tank. Lol
@@jc.1191 imagine how much trouble cops will have detaining all the drunken moose resisting arrests and their disorderly conduct
Man, when someone fails a polygraph test it's immediately assumed they are guilty. However when one PASSES the test it is seems to not be so important. In this case they just scrambled to then find some dirt on him. Hmmm...
I haven't finished the story yet so I don't know if he is guilty or not. It just doesn't seem right how polygraphs are used in this way.
They aren't admissable in court so it really doesn't matter either way. They are just looking for or trying to force a confession.
Polygraphs can be easily manipulated and aren’t even admissible in court, and the police often lie and tell people they’ve “failed” to try to coax a reaction. The guy who invented them even said they shouldn’t be used for police investigations, yet they use them today because they can manipulate a suspect with them. If you refuse to take one, because they’re not scientific and not admissible, they’ll assume you’re guilty and manipulate you with that, they just shouldn’t be used at all by police.
Jeffrey Dahmer passed a polygraph test. They're notoriously unreliable, and can't be used as evidence in a court of law.
@@DefinitelyNotBender they aren’t admissible, but they still matter. If someone “fails” one it can give the police departments adequate reason get tunnel vision, and divert resources and manpower solely on that person. Not to mention sway public opinion. If an innocent person fails one it can lead to other suspects and clues being overlooked or ignored.
@@hollyhayes9640 gary ridgway passed a polygraph in his murder spree then was eliminated as a suspect and continued killing. the amount of derailed investigations has to outweigh any benefit they have
It has been so cool watching the evolution of this channel. I've been here from the beginning and I mean back when we were exploring abandoned houses and trying to help solve missing persons cases. What a glow up!
I like these videos but still miss Bob and Emma. They do still occasionally pop up but not much.
15:44 well, no. Because the gurl clearly said she let a stranger in to use her bathroom. If it was Russell who EVERYONE knew, she would have said Russell.
You find the best most shocking cases! Me and my husband are hooked on your videos and bond over them every time you upload a new one &’ I tell him he’s like “ don’t watch them without me “ lol
I could listen to this narrator's voice all day long. I LOVE (EXPLORING WITH U)! Thanks EWU for another great video glad they got to the bottom of this case. Also just subbed to EWU history cool channel thank you for all your hard work and dedication 👏
*EXPLORE WITH US *
For real it's like optimus prime reading a story lol
@@vcall6121 Yes they're (Explore with us); and I love Exploring with them 💕
@@PhatBoi011 lol so true 👍
@@TroenderTass noo not even
i don't understand why people are so ready to call lisa a liar. you can see from the photos shes in very rough shape, her skin being rough and dry and her feet being covered in wounds and all that. like, she was legally blind and quite possibly didnt have very much information on the woods so even if theres clues to get out of there, im not surprised that she didnt realize it. then the people saying she shouldnt have been able to survive off berries and mushrooms while being legally blind, theres tons of way more amazing survival stories of people surviving with less so i really dont understand why theyre so quick to blame her.
Last year a pilot got lost in the Amazon forest and was rescued 36 days later. He ate what he saw the monkeys eat because he assumed it was not poisonous and drank stream water. So it's not so surprising that Lisa survived this long 🤷♀️
And if they drugged her, she was probably really disoriented for the first few days and then continued being disorientated due to dehydration and famine. Also, how would she have even known they dropped the case if she was stuck in the wilderness with nothing, like, it makes no sense. And every direction looks the same in a forest, especially when you can only see blurry greens and blues.
@@Sanas_Shy_Language "how would she have even known they dropped the case".
She would've known if she was holed up in some motel, hiding and planning her woods story.
That's what the police were suspiscious of. That she pretended to be in the woods
@@bearnecessiteespolio5359 yeah i get that, i just kind of doubt it because it seems difficult to fake the condition she was in
@@scrappydudes1783 you said "how would she have even known, if she was in the woods"
Everyone needs a friend like Shelia, we all deserve to have someone that’s got out backs.
One that claims to see ghosts of their dead friend and obsessively attempts to get the wrong person locked up for decades despite having literally no evidence of them being guilty? Sure, I guess we all need a crazy friend.
@@StrewthSeeker Exactly. And when the victim called her boyfriend, she said "a STRANGER asked to use my bathroom". Surely, she would've called the guy "Russel" if it was him.
What evidence did the police have on this guy that they decided to haunt him for so long? Probably nothing.
The last one is so sad… imagine losing your wife, then being shunned by your whole county
There was a case where police just took the wrong appartement in a big building... They went to the wrong floor. The lady living there was shunned so bad, she had to move out only because a mistake of the police... it's scary how easy people jump to conclusions...
His voice is up there with Morgan Freeman. Great narration. Love this channel.
better than morgan freeman…
The 2nd case. She told her boyfriend over the phone 'a man asked to use the toilet', not Buchannan asked to use the toilet.
Enjoy how you don't take an hour to tell a story. You cover the key points &very easily conveyed. Cheers.
The investigators actually believed the husband mangled his wife with the mower. Her body just in a horrific state when found, completely mutilated. And mooses are dangerous and can attack if they feel threatened, which some can become just by the presence of humans. I have countless of stories where people had to climb up in trees and so on, stuck there for hours because the pissed off moose has been on the ground. I myself was chased by a moose while on horse back, and boy did we run fast home. Not an animal you'd like to have an encounter with all alone in the woods 😂 I'm Swedish so quite familiar both to the case and to the Swedish mooses 🤭
@@queenpondue101 because one word has Latin language roots one has Germanic language roots
Lol, *mooses*
Damn those moose LOL
Seriously? There would have been SO MUCH EVIDENCE if it was done with a mower. Literally impossible to hide. I have always known moose to be aggressive and deadly, not an unlikely scenario at all! Just strange they didn't notice tracks if it was snowy? Utter incompetence
I can’t get enough of your videos!!! ur voice is addicting and the stories are so fascinating !
It's sad how we think we have socialized public safety, but so many cases don't get solved until a private investigator (as in paid out-of-pocket) gets involved.
The problem is that, the investigators that are funded by government, typically have a gigantic pile of cases. They have a limited amount of time that they can devote to a single case. Not to say they don’t care, but how do you choose which case takes priority? If you were missing your child and I was missing my sister, who do we devote the time for if we are in the same area?
A private investigator will usually only have 1 or 2 cases at a time and devote their entire time to that particular case.
I hope this particular private investigator learnt something from her false
intuition which began her on this journey. If she had researched her friend's neighbors maybe she would have found the real killer.
@@lifewithcryschelle9822 I get that, I just think it shows that the government should fund more detectives (maybe cut some traffic cop positions, ha).
@@MrStringybark What story are you talking about? Angela? Her friend Sheila didn't become a p.i. until long after her friend's murder, and the killer was not a neighbor, just a guy who followed her home from the bar. Nobody witnessed him so the only way it was ever going to be solved was the advancement of DNA analysis. Until then, suspecting the guy 'Russell' was perfectly good intuition. There was nothing to prove he did it but nothing to prove he couldn't have done it either.
@@audreymuzingo933 I thought I heard during the video that police discovered later on that he lived in the same building. I went back and listened to it again but I am wrong.
But back to Shiela and her obsession. You believe there is such a thing as "perfectly good intuition" even though it is utterly wrong and despicable.
I suspect there were a lot of people like you in the crowd at the Salem Witch trials yelling that your intuition tells you these are women are witches, burn them.
I can't get enough EWU! I love The Ravens voice! Thank you for the awesome videos!
I’m hooked too. Lol 😂😘
For that last story, it is obvious to me that whoever wrote that has not been face to face with a Moose in Rut. Moose are normally fairly docile creatures that just don't care unless they are mentally compromised or in Rut. If you consider the proverbial "going from 0-100 real quick," these creatures can go to 1000. There are stories of them requiring entire coordinated teams to simply sedate and capture them. When being hunted, they aren't a joke either and require group coordination as well. Moose are absolutely terrifying. A tragic story indeed.
I'm in some of the same situation medically...I could have survived on the woods for a month but probably not find my way out. I'd try to head toward the sound of traffic but you can go in circles in the woods without noticing pretty easily
Fr I would easily get lost
No
about 2 years ago I went into a little forest not that far from my home and went downhill to a spot next to a stream as I did for years and that night at around 10 pm I left without my friends and got lost for about 2 hours even tho it normally takes 10 minutes to get out. I was was freaking out and had left my anxiety meds at home. It's very easy to get lost in the forest especially at night !! PS: Awesome video !!!!!!
Wait why did you bring your friends into the middle of the story when they weren't in the story to begin with at all
I'm sorry but i highly doubt that you suffer from anxiety, because if you did... The very thought of being in the woods at night alone would cause just about anyone to have a panic attack! So we are to believe that someone who's taking medication for anxiety just willingly walked into the forest at 10 pm all alone?! Your story seems a bit bogus, it would make a bit of sense if you were drunk or on drugs that particular night.
@@childrembirgit5020 I agree cause I have anxiety bad and I don’t ever get that bold unless I’m drunk or high
@@childrembirgit5020 bro not everyone's anxiety is the same. You know that... Right?
Like?? Some people like being outside in the forest bc it's just calming or peaceful to them.
I am not one of those people, but you know. It does happen.
@@meghanhixon3241 well stated meghan :)
I'm so upset that I didn't know that EWU has another channel. I don't know how I missed this. But I'm so glad I found it. As usual, brilliant narration, exceptional research and extraordinary story-telling.
I didn't know either. They should mention it on their main channel.👍☮️
But now you still have a lot of vids to watch 😜
It's pretty new.
@@sonnypate6808 what is the main channel?
@@missbraindamage Explore With Us . 👊👍
"Legally blind" does not mean she is blind. It means she has bad enough eyesight to be judge blind. 20/200 or 20° of sight, means you're legally blind
Well theres degrees of legally blind, regardless though a legally blind person would have alot of trouble getting around since they're legally blind. Idk for the state she's in but in mine legally blind means even with glasses your vision is still really bad
@@miss_chrissy, that's exactly what I said.
Not quite. It means that *with all corrective lenses in*, your vision is at or worse than 20/200. Not that your vision without correction is 20/200. Since she didn’t have her glasses with her, it means her vision was significantly worse than the 20/200.
@@lizzit917, THAT'S EXACTLY WHAT I SAID! What the hell is it with you people who have to dissect a comment that gets the point out there, without going into the fine details.
Was she lost for a few days because she was deemed legally blind? YES! Did I say legally blind doesn't mean you're completely blind? YES!
So what's the point of giving any more detail other then "legally blind doesn't mean you're completely blind"
Do you beat dead horses? Cause you sound like you beat dead horses.
@@awakenotwoke8580 That's absolutely not what you said. What you said is that legally blind is 20/200 sight, which is not the case.
Yeah, what is it with us actually legally blind people who correct people who are wrong about what legal blindness is, gosh why would we do that? Why would we want to correct the misconceptions people like you leave all over the place that makes things harder for us?
Do you often speak incorrectly about topics you clearly know nothing about and then get pissed when the community that topic refers to corrects you? Cause you sound like you do.
I love this narrator’s voice! A perfect combo of soothing and mysterious
Moose related deaths are actually something we are warned about a lot up in the Rockies. They're huge and incredibly scary!
Russell took that exceptionally well, dude is way more mature than most.
Yo, my grandpa also done this and he regrets it. This person come and said that they are a friend of my aunt. They also said that they had an appointment and agree to meet up there. To our surprise, my strict and very distrust grandpa let them in, but only on the terrace. He was alone in this house, so he just do what he always do on daily basis. Not even once suspicious of this person. Not long after that, this person says that they want to used the bathroom. He let them in! And then, they excuse themselves to went home.
My grandpa doesn't realise it until night come, when he checked his wallet in the closet. He lost about RP. 6.000.000. Idk how much it is in USD, but this is a lot of money in our country. We just feel grateful and relieved that nothing more happened to him. That person luckily didn't harm my grandpa.
God I love your voice, it keeps me engaged. Certain voices lose my attention no matter how hard I try to listen. Thanks for all the great videos
Hi Nancy how are you doing,?
Angela met Russell at the bar, but during her phone call to her boyfriend, she said a strange man knocked on her door. Shouldn't have this detail been enough to clear Russell, because Angela would have recognized Russell if it was really him?
I've been here with this UA-cam channel. Raven your voice never gets old. It's so calming.
On the last case, how good was that moose at hiding evidence?! Do we know if that poor woman was the only victim of this moose? Because I'd hate to believe that the police in that area are so incompetent that they couldn't differentiate between a homicide and an animal attack!
Maybe her husband was a moose hunter? And that moose was getting revenge for the murder of his wife from hunting season the year before? I don't know, but these questions NEED answered!
I love this narrators voice and his sarcasm.
Absolutely loved every story! Thank you for never disappointing!
wait a minute your telling me a blind woman avoided eating poisonous berries by not eating the bright colored ones? and no one found that odd, could she feel the colors or smell how bright the colors were thats insane to me.
She may be legally blind, but not totally blind. Blind enough that it handicaps most or all aspects of her life, but has enough vision to still see colors, shadows, and/or outlines
The majority of people considered ‘blind’ have some vision.
i was laughing when i saw an elk as a suspect and pouring an alcohol drink. 😅 i love this EWU channel and this narrator. keep it up. 💪
Lisa - you can totally live a month on berries and mushrooms for a month as long as you have water.
I am nearly legally blind, and I would not be able to see power lines or signs in a forest. I can see the difference between dark and light, and bright colors, but no details. I would probably run into thin trees.
I would not be able to see berries and mushrooms unless I ran into them.
I hope the people who ran the guy out of town were all deeply ashamed of themselves when they learned she was killed by a moose
The only thing Sheila has to her credit is persistence. Besides that, she literally chased an innocent man and accused him of a crime he didn’t commit for years. What qualifies her to open up her own investigation company and help other solve other cases when she hasn’t even solved the one she was chasing for forever?
20 MINS JUST ISNT ENOUGH GRACE OF YOUR BEAUTIFUL VOICE/STORY TELLING!!!! I LOVE THESE BUT I WOULD LOVE MORE IN DEPT OR LONGER VERSIONS, 30/40+ MINS OF CONTENT IS PERFECT.
Give Lisa a break, come on, she would not have gone into a forest and nearly died on her own.
Seriously! Plus all of her exposure injuries and losing over 40lbs. I just don’t believe she faked all of that. I think a combination of starvation, dehydration, and near-blindness led to her going in circles and being unable to recognize any trail markers she may have come near. No one would go through such a harrowing ordeal to avoid something so meager by comparison.
It reminds me of the case of poor Denise Huskins. She was kidnapped, but cops didn’t look for her because they didn’t believe her boyfriend’s story and accused him of murdering her, even though he’d clearly been beaten and drugged. When her attacker later let her go, cops were so embarrassed about having insisted so hard that she’d been murdered that they then accused her of faking her own kidnapping. Even after they caught the guy who kidnapped and assaulted her, some people still accuse her of staging the whole thing!
@@bistitchualbee More articles were written on the case - police concluded she *was* high on meth and got lost, and the other two guys were drugged out with her. They argued over a murder that never happened because all 3 were high on meth. She didn't fake being lost, she was high on meth and got lost, and still to this day tries to "prove" it wasn't the obvious.
Her story was BS - not the survival, but how she got there.
Notification came and immediately watching! Thank you EWU!! :)
These cases actually made me think there's a lot of innocent people in prison, not necessarily a lot, but there's definitely a few.
the last 2 stories really hit me. R.I.P Angela and R.I.P Agneta❤️
Your foreshadowing and clues you leave is is off the charts. Thank you
Cops: "The berries she said she ate don't grow here"
Intelligent person: "she's legally blind and was drugged, she could easily be mistaken"
Cops: "her story makes no sense, she must have been on Meth intentionally"
Intelligent person: "one of the first things she said is she was drugged. Her abusers even thought one or the other killed her. Admitting to guilt that they gave her the drugs."
Cops: "there were trails and power lines she could follow"
Intelligent person: "again, she's legally blind and was drugged"
Cops: "She was hallucinating"
Intelligent person: "she was drugged"
Cops:
Intelligent person: "Stop trying to blame the victim"
Cops: "We're trying gather revenue for the state, that's our job"
Exactly, every exact thing about her story makes sense. Being so dehydrated and hungry skin cracks and 50 pounds is lost in a such a short time isn't the most likely way to get out of a robbery charge she could've plead on.
@@AliValentine143 yep, they just wanted to get one more conviction under their belt to get more funding from the state. Gotta secure those bonuses to their paychecks.
If you guys read articles from 2017-2018, you'd have known police stated meth was involved and her story fell apart. All 3 adults showed signs of meth use, including her.
@@AliValentine143 🙄 See what happens when you get involved in meth circles?
@@cassidylynn6203 Her story doesn't check out and cops said such. She was using before those two men even came along, and was suspected of robbing the store with them. The only victim she is is a victim of her own dumb actions. Also, how do you forcefully drug someone with meth, hm? Surely needles would have been found? None were. She willingly used. Get over it, her story is full of it.
god i love this channel thank you for all the hard work you do
EWU, I’ve been a fan for a long time; since the days when you’d go out exploring on foot. Those were fun and very enjoyable (especially since I used to live in the SW desert, so it was nice seeing it again), but I also love these explorations into different crimes. I just discovered your EWU history channel (I’m always late to the party) and am very much looking forward to those videos! The Raven has a fantastic narration voice, by the way. He has always been my favorite.
Just an idea, but I hope you might consider doing a paranormal channel / theme someday. I feel EWU’s awesome creativity combined with the Raven’s voice would fare excellently with paranormal topics. Plus, many true crime fans are also paranormal fans. Phenomenon such as glitches, night crawlers, time slips, skinwalkers, ET’s, cryptid and elemental encounters, and more, EWU would do fantastically with; especially topics that aren’t covered as often, like glitches instead of ghosts (though hauntings are still fun). Check out Nuke’s Top 5, Beyond Creepy, and Paranormal Rising for inspiration when you get a chance if you feel up to it. Again, it’s just an idea from a fan, but it’s because I think so highly of your work!
Not be a jerk but I have never met anyone who are true crime fans and paranormal fans. Most true crime fans like facts and evidence that lead to real things. Paranormal ghost hunter and cultural stories about sea monsters and hauntings aren't part of the real world nor factual. It's like saying astronomers are also into astrology.
There are a lot of paranormal channels already on UA-cam that might interest you.
@@stevorobo692 Actually, there are people such as myself who like both. I like science, history, true crime, and mythology/folktales, paranormal, ghost stories, to name a few interests. I have friends who are the same. One can enjoy fact-based subjects and fictional ones, too. And, no, you’re not being a jerk. You haven’t met the right sort of people yet. 🙂
@@joanhoffman3702 Thank you, Joan! I enjoy the very same, including mythology / folklore! May I recommend the channel Scary Fairy Godmother? She has some pretty neat stuff over there, pertaining to folklore, including a pretty cool interview with a Dr. Simon Young who specializes in certain folklore (and also has a fantastic accent, if I might add :). Scary Fairy Godmother is great to listen to while driving, crocheting/knitting, or just relaxing. Despite the name, much of her content is not scary at all. To the contrary, a lot of it is quite nice!
@@stevorobo692 I never said “all.” I never even said “most.” I believe the particular word I used was “many,” and this is true.
Both crime and paranormal events pertain to mysteries, so they have that in common, among other things, which I enjoy this aspect of, as do quite a number of people I know.
Just because we don’t understand the paranormal yet, doesn’t mean it isn’t real. One day science will prove what and where it comes from, like everything else so far. No one said you have to like it, least of all, me.
@@stevorobo692 clearly you’re unfamiliar with buzzfeed unsolved and it’s massive success…
I have been waiting all day for this! I saw my notification at work. Lol. Now time for some true crime EWU Style!!
This channel deserves millions of subscribers 👌💯😁 they are just the best , very good content you can never get tired of !!
I love you guys. Can't get enough. I even watch your videos at home when I get off from work.
😱 Wowcher head spinning is right, especially the last one, may the victims rest in peace, 🙏 great video thanks raven🖤
raven’s voice is everything !!
Hm. You never explained if they found and arrested the moose?
"Yeah the legally blind woman definitely stayed in the forest naked with no food or her medication until the point where one more day would have killed her to avoid a $500 fine." - the police.
Methinks they have been getting into that sweet evidence locker stash of the good stuff before starting their working days.
you guys are the best true crime channel i’ve ever watched. you always cover stories i haven’t heard of before and the narration is always clear so i rarely need to turn on subtitles. and when i do, they’re detailed and well written. keep it up EWU
By FAR, the best channel on You Tube❣️
You arrest the guy before you even got test results back. "Some experts" need to learn to not jump to conclusions before test results come back. The sheer incompetence of police in these videos is astounding. It's not even blinders, but straight up blindfolds. Too much insinuating, not enough detecting.
Love your videos!! Keep up the great work 👍
it's first time ever that I hear the term 'nonsecretor' ..and my mom was head of a blood testing lab all her life !
absolutely scary to think the woman who tried her best to have a man locked up for life or exterminated start her own investigative firm to help other people because of her stellar skills..
i am absolutely blown away by that. i mean, at least she took her dues and apologized to him but her detective work was not exactly something to brag about
discovered this channel recently, love it!
This just goes to show how dangerous it is to assume someone is guilty without any evidence. The human mind is so inclined to confirmation bias, they'll start to become fixated on a suspect for no good reason.
Wow. I just looked at Sheila’s Without warning private investigator website and it’s just amazing how this all turned out for her. She’s helped hundreds of families reopen and investigate cold cases. I’m just so happy to see it. 🥰 RIH Angela.
I don't know why the cops and Angies friend Sheila continued to think it was the architect guy. She said to her boyfriend that "some guy" asked to use her bathroom. She knew the architect guy so if it was him she would've said his name not "some guy."
19:58 The tone of this channel is almost unwaveringly serious, so when I saw a moose in a suspect lineup, I giggle-snorted. 😂
SAME!!!🤣
In the end, Angela’s boyfriend was still blamed, this time by the killer, who said he didn’t intend to kill her but stabbed her to keep her quiet when her boyfriend knocked on her door. How horrible.
What the narrator forgot to mention is that she was trying to make her boyfriend jealous all night trying to drag him out for the night. She even invited a dude that they both knew wanted her to threaten her boyfriend to come out. Being a shitty girlfriend isn’t doesn’t warrant the karmic justice of death tho
The first case where everyone’s doubting her story.. are we just going to ignore the fact she lost 50 LBS!.. and the two men accused the other of killing her! The second detail in particular makes ZERO sense if she had faked this
Love watching these videos for the voice over
Yes! I love when Ravon is narrating!!!
Wait so you're telling me in story #2 that everyone completely ignored the fact that the lady straight up told her boyfriend on the phone that it was a random guy and then proceeded to harass that guy with no evidence for like 20+ years. Yikes
Yeah a little suspicious that he didn't try to any further than knock and then call the police. If I had the same information I would've busted a window or kicked the door down.... If I hadn't already driven the car into the front door. If the attack happened while he was out there as suspected maybe she would still be alive
That photo lineup in the last case was very helpful…top notch production skills.
When a creepy weirdo knocks on your door at 2 am to use the bathroom?
I love the this guy's voice. Especially when he uses sarcasm lol. Love his narration! ❤️👍🏻
SHIELA WASAKI is the friend that we all want and need, what a true badass!!!!!
Sheila is such an mvp! What a friend! ❤️
She and her community college may have been studying to become a Radiology Technician, but she was NOT anywhere near being a Radiologist.
Yeah..was going to point this out.Not many people realise that a Radiologist is a Doctor who specialises in Radiology, While a radiographer (XRay tech) takes the x-rays for the Radiologist to read.
That elk in the lineup, oml I had to pause the video it made me unexpectedly burst out into laughter
Damn Im happy for Russell that he didnt get wrongly convicted and lose his future, other Russells on this channel havent been so lucky
A drunken elk. Hahaaa!! That takes the cake. 😂
The voice is just so smoothing to listen to🥰 Weldon EWU 👏🔮
Narrators voice is perfect for these videos. Thanks for upload you guys, hope youre having a great day.
In the USA we know moose are deadly. Even if they are not drunk they are dangerous.
they’re really not that dangerous as long as you respect them.
@@sagasjogren2994 I beg to differ. North American moves are straight out gangster.
Please ladies dont ever ever let someone you dont know inside your home.
Help to accuse and stalk innocent people??? Are you kidding me?? She shouldn’t be allowed anywhere near investigations!
Agreed
Why did the police and Sheila think it was Buchanan? She'd spent the night partying with him, but called her boyfriend saying a "strange man" had knocked on her door aksing to use the bathroom.
It makes no sense to blame Buchanan unless you think the boyfriend lied about what she said...but then, if it was Buchanan and not the boyfriend, why on earth would he lie for Buchanan, a man he didn't know?
Sheila ultimately got them to open the case back up, but she also ruthlessly harassed an obviously innocent man. Dallas police suck equally for sharing her delusions...but then, them being terrible is par for the course.
It’s amazing how incompetent some police departments can be
Amazing and depressing
Y'all did it again great video keep up the awesome work
Why would they suspect Russel when the victim stated on the phone to her boyfriend that a creepy guy had knocked on the door? She didn't name Russel, so it implies the creep was a stranger?
Or was Russel a non secretor and they figured the creep knocking and maybe Russel coming over after that was an option? weird.
In the mid 80’s and early 90’s before cell phones etc… my husband worked nights and weekends ( he was a Chef) I had a guy knock on my door two nights in a row saying “I know it’s just you and your young son are alone, I am going to come in when you least expect it …. “. I called the police and they said “we can’t do anything until something happens!” my husband asked one of his friends to come over and stay with me and our son until he got home from work. The friend stayed during the nights my husband worked for about two months, the guy never came back, thank God.