How Hunting A Serial Killer Actually Works | How Crime Works | Insider

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  • Опубліковано 31 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 690

  • @oblivious-owl6914
    @oblivious-owl6914 Рік тому +1363

    I'm glad that you went out of your way to say that the traits society has associated with serial killers- narcissism, sociopathy, etc- don't make someone a serial killer or evil. People are way too quick to link traits with being a horrible person when most people are just plain people

    • @bigphatwalrus102
      @bigphatwalrus102 Рік тому +82

      Narcissists and phychopaths are at best unpleasant to be around

    • @nivyan
      @nivyan Рік тому +42

      Anecdotal, but I grew up in a high-middle class family and met many rich men and women during my childhood. If you're the owner of a company over a certain size, you can't succeed without being a psychopath - it's literally a requirement, or you won't be able to cut the same corners and make the same business decisions that's available to the others.

    • @Just.Kidding
      @Just.Kidding Рік тому +46

      @@nivyan that's so not true dude, the ability to divorce decision making from emotion doesn't meant you _have no_ emotions. That's just a good skill for anybody to have. And it's doubly untrue because not every company cuts every possible corner. It's one thing to say it's a general help and another thing completely to talk in such extremes.

    • @nivyan
      @nivyan Рік тому +15

      ​@@Just.Kidding I'm talking more influential than that - to the point separating decisions from your emotions/life is impossible, and doing so would be the definition of a psychopath. That's the point.
      I'm not saying everyone is like this - that'd be an idiotic assumption - but they *need* people like that in certain positions, or have such vast success that it doesn't matter to begin with.

    • @Unknowngfyjoh
      @Unknowngfyjoh Рік тому +9

      It's because everyone thinks they're an expert because they watch True Crime shows.

  • @nathanwilliams4974
    @nathanwilliams4974 Рік тому +1177

    I don't understand all the hate. This guy was fantastic to listen to. I especially appreciated how he talked about police fixating on an individual and trying to fit evidence to that narrative.

    • @albal20051
      @albal20051 Рік тому +1

      He sold names of suspects to newspapers, he asked for money in return for interviews regarding Jimmy Saville and he took money from Michelle Mone to make an "investigation" defending her and her husband stealing millions from the NHS. He is a disgrace.

    • @newgabe09
      @newgabe09 11 місяців тому +10

      Yes, as happened with the Yorkshire Ripper.

    • @kevinabrahams3135
      @kevinabrahams3135 4 місяці тому +2

      Spot on

    • @KasumiRINA
      @KasumiRINA 2 місяці тому +16

      The editing is ATROCIOUS, I understand they remove the questions so it sounds like he's bragging unprompted (when he really mostly answers what they asked), but just look at the ending, he doesn't finish paragraph and video cuts abruptly, in the middle there's tons of rapid cuts and splices that just have no pauses in-between, did they try to squeeze the most text into limited time frame for retention?

    • @bchearne
      @bchearne 2 місяці тому +4

      It’s the internet, domain of the insecure troll

  • @1shotlegend
    @1shotlegend Рік тому +2047

    From what I'm gathering from the comment section. "Dude talks about ego while having a big ego". He's being interviewed about a topic he knows well, at the same time he's talking about his credentials to show validity to the viewer about his experience. Pretty basic stuff.

    • @LOLHICRONO
      @LOLHICRONO Рік тому +109

      the average youtube commenter is a bit...special

    • @jackwalker9492
      @jackwalker9492 11 місяців тому +16

      From a guy whose screen name is LEGEND! LMAO

    • @healthyb-fu5zd
      @healthyb-fu5zd 10 місяців тому

      This guy is a prick. Everyone can see it.

    • @MichaelMcCann98
      @MichaelMcCann98 9 місяців тому +5

      @@LOLHICRONOthe projection is real with this one

    • @sultanabran1
      @sultanabran1 9 місяців тому +22

      he's answering questions, and those questions haven't been included for us to hear in this video. he could well have been asked specifically about certain cases, or credentials.

  • @malcs286
    @malcs286 9 місяців тому +328

    The hate in this comment section is so undeserved, yeah he didn’t need to bring up that he was a sports captain or whatever but you can’t honestly say that detracted from his insight on serial killers. The guy’s an expert at what he does and he’s answering every question he gets asked in great detail.

    • @bambiholmes
      @bambiholmes 7 місяців тому +27

      but why not bring it up, though? he's talking about his life, about how this work has affected him, about what could've gone different for him, i don't see the fault in that…but that's just my opinion, of course

    • @ImAtLevel53
      @ImAtLevel53 6 місяців тому +6

      @@bambiholmeshe mentioned it because he was asked if he had any regrets and that’s his biggest regret. He is one of the best investigative journalists out there. He has an excellent team working for him, and he is helping the family of Jay Slater in Tenerife

    • @bambiholmes
      @bambiholmes 6 місяців тому +7

      @@ImAtLevel53 well, I think STILL there's nothing wrong with his answer, it's his life and he's being candid about it, he's not saying anything bad, his mind went there and that's all

    • @mathildewilliams9608
      @mathildewilliams9608 Місяць тому

      100%!

  • @Khroniclas
    @Khroniclas 4 місяці тому +74

    Glad that a detective admits to body language being bs. I feel like body language can tell you some small basic things like emotion, but some people act like body language can tell you literally everything about a person and it just sounds like pure pseudoscience the way people describe it.

    • @KasumiRINA
      @KasumiRINA 2 місяці тому +2

      If people actually read Paul Ekman instead of going through a course of "experts" they'd know exactly that, Telling Lies explains how most body language descriptions make no sense and only think you can sometimes read is what emotion person feels, and whether it's fake, not WHY - I don't think anyone would argue against the fact telling a false smile is often possible, right? It's mostly about the eye muscles. But all these "he looked into LEFT corner that means..." are total BS.

    • @sergek8
      @sergek8 2 місяці тому

      Exactly!

    • @annalucy89
      @annalucy89 Місяць тому

      Agreed! It's mostly just bullshit UA-camrs who pretend like they know everything about "body language" when it's more often than not just basic body language than anyone could display when in distress.

    • @CC3193
      @CC3193 Місяць тому +4

      I have anxiety & ADHD, so I think my own natural, everyday body language could make me appear as nervous or ‘shifty’ (by the standard body language expectations) if I were questioned by detectives about something, even if I’m completely innocent of anything & have no knowledge. My body language might be a bit different at times, but it’s due to being neurotypical.

    • @kerrywillow
      @kerrywillow Місяць тому +2

      ​@@CC3193 this. No matter how hard I try to control my non-verbal cues. My anxiety would just kick in and override everything

  • @dracolithe4450
    @dracolithe4450 Рік тому +511

    My friend's brother is a a detective for the Metropolitan police and he has been left with PTSD, terrible mood swings. He once had a crossbow pointed at his head as he had to talk someone down. It's an oppresive job to do

    • @guineapigshavetakenovermyl6602
      @guineapigshavetakenovermyl6602 Рік тому +24

      thanks to him and his work for our safety

    • @GamesCooky
      @GamesCooky 9 місяців тому +10

      The risk of developing PTSD is much bigger among police officers. The sort of stuff they have to deal with is going to take a toll on their mental health.
      The police get a lot of criticism, and not enough appreciation.

    • @jena.alexia
      @jena.alexia 6 місяців тому +5

      We sometimes forget they are real people. I used to live opposite a cop who responded to a scene where a child had died. She was only a toddler and he held her in his arms. He never recovered and had psychotic episodes after that, walking up and down the street either in a trance or talking to himself and yelling at imaginery people. He eventually moved out. I hope he got help.

    • @the_local_bigamist
      @the_local_bigamist 2 місяці тому

      The Met are scum. Look into Stephen Lawrence, Daniel Morgan, the 100s of people (mostly people of colour) they harass each year and the massive corruption at higher echelons between organised crime and the funny handshake club of which most police it seems are members. What was the latest big scandal with the Met? The last I can think of was Wayne Couzens, who abducted, r*ped, tortured and murdered that poor innocent young woman. After that, the WhatsApp group chats which were leaked by various groups of officers talking about r*ping, murdering, torturing women, their racist rhetoric and I think that this started with the unit which Couzens served in but it was a massive shitstorm. But they are often called the "biggest gang in London" and with good reason. The most well armed too. This is pretty much the same for all police forces.

    • @SallyAnn-y8p
      @SallyAnn-y8p Місяць тому +1

      @@GamesCookywell I suppose they know how Sarah Everards family feel he cannot have ptsd how can they be affected when they work along side some serious violent criminals and call them friend and colleague?

  • @marshallteach9006
    @marshallteach9006 Рік тому +976

    At the end he's saying "it's not about me" but the video is full of "I did this", "I made that connection", "the police got it wrong but I didn't", I can't say I sensed humility from him during this interview.

    • @stuungar3390
      @stuungar3390 Рік тому +87

      Agree 100% with both of you, this bloke is really bad at profiling and common sense. Good thing he's now a journalist frontman as opposed to being a real detective

    • @LudiCrust.
      @LudiCrust. Рік тому +184

      The best cops & detectives are the ones with similar traits to the criminals themselves. I studied criminal psychology in college and wrote my thesis on this subject. The best example I can think of for you to compare is the undercover cops that infiltrate gangs & organized crime. If you’re a regular Joe you are not going to be able to blend in with type A personality biker gang members etc. -no one is that good of an actor. You’d show fear/anxiety etc. and your body would betray you never mind the entire psych aspect.

    • @damienholland9432
      @damienholland9432 Рік тому +194

      So people can't talk to you about their accomplishments because then they're not humble?

    • @stuungar3390
      @stuungar3390 Рік тому +28

      @Damien Holland - he was dissing the police force as being incompetent, and inferring that he knew it all, when it was the other way around. People who are talented, tend not to boast.

    • @marshallteach9006
      @marshallteach9006 Рік тому +68

      @@damienholland9432 All I can say is that I've watched dozen of videos like this one and he's the first expert that I find arrogant. There's no "we" in his stories, it's like he did it all by himself, and he only mentions the work of others in order to criticize it and make himself look better.

  • @nobodyatallvallejo3672
    @nobodyatallvallejo3672 Рік тому +231

    11:30 compared to those JCS clone interrogation videos where like a suspect blinks and the narrator is like "here the suspect blinks which indicates that he's feeling the stress of lying. Most people blink on a regular basis, but it's incriminating that the suspect chose to blink at this time to deceive the interrogator."

    • @johnwhyte1488
      @johnwhyte1488 Рік тому

      It is now a well established fact that no one single ‘negative’ indication of body language during interview/interrogation is indicative of deception.

    • @AverageNerd8
      @AverageNerd8 Рік тому +23

      Yeah plus you can be nervous when answering questions it does not mean your lying imagine being on the hot seat and being interrogated it causes all such of things plus you can have some signs of lying but not actually Lying that's why they need knowledgeable not just these "detectives"

    • @lo0nyt0onz
      @lo0nyt0onz Рік тому +4

      There are variables for interrogation. Alot of training in psychology helps in determining what body language says and what they say. They use purposeful techniques to provoke reactions. Not everything means something, but some things are Indicators. I think JCS goes overboard some times with every detail but overall their trying to get Information from somebody that dosent want to give it. So its accurate and real at least

    • @natatatm
      @natatatm 7 місяців тому +10

      Unfortunately even JCS depended on some body language "science" that's not backed by actual rigorous research. Highly recommend munecat's video on the subject of body language "experts" and how almost all of it is completely bunk pseudoscience.

    • @nobodyatallvallejo3672
      @nobodyatallvallejo3672 7 місяців тому +1

      @@natatatm I'm watching her video on sovereign citizens. She's awesome! Thanks for the recommendation.

  • @mathildewilliams9608
    @mathildewilliams9608 Місяць тому +11

    Mark Williams-Thomas is a true expert in his field. I search for his videos on UA-cam and am delighted when a find another gem. 🎉

  • @ickess
    @ickess Рік тому +1246

    What’s really funny is I hear so much about serial killers in the US that it almost sounds foreign to hear about them in other countries.
    *edit not funny haha but funny like odd. My wife gives me a hard time for using that word in this context all the time

    • @blksheep176
      @blksheep176 Рік тому +103

      Foreign literally means other countries, so that’s probably why

    • @HauntedOne666
      @HauntedOne666 Рік тому +25

      There are lots of them in other countries though lmao

    • @ickess
      @ickess Рік тому +9

      @@blksheep176 yeah, thought about saying no pun intended but decided against it haha

    • @austinduke8876
      @austinduke8876 Рік тому +1

      ​@@ryanodonnell455 You think the US has 3.3 million active serial killers? The actual number is much closer to 50.

    • @hansolowe19
      @hansolowe19 Рік тому +1

      Maybe it's lead? 🤔

  • @nightmrj
    @nightmrj 11 місяців тому +52

    my dad grew up in leeds and not only does he tell me stories of having to walk to collect my grandma and her sister from work as a young boy to protect them from the ripper but the park near his home eventually became the park that saville's house backed onto and he saw him when he was a kid multiple times

  • @kimnoir
    @kimnoir Рік тому +179

    A lot of people are talking saying this guy being interviewed but lets not forget that this is chopped and edited. The producers also ask some specifically wordered questions.

  • @ayaqmasak264
    @ayaqmasak264 Рік тому +138

    When he said "no one intimidate me", that's some aura right there

    • @sarahrosen4985
      @sarahrosen4985 Рік тому +14

      Watch the interviews with the British female prison head. She's amazing and also says that no one intimates her.

    • @NSGrendel
      @NSGrendel 5 місяців тому

      ​@@sarahrosen4985 She's credible.
      I've worked with middle class wonks like this and people in police behavioural research. This guy sweats, "pick on me at boarding school, my I'll tell my mummy" energy.
      Have lived with a few people who hurt people by choice. Cardigan boy is clearly intimidated by the situation. Bear in mind the British police force is literally the intellectual dumping ground for British middle class people who are simple. No wonder they can't catch anyone.

    • @bchearne
      @bchearne 2 місяці тому +1

      It’s a professional requirement. You can’t be police and a wimp

    • @CatharticSense
      @CatharticSense Місяць тому

      ​@@bchearnebeing intimidated isn't a wimp. Fear is a great motivator. But if it's your job to work with intimidating figures you can't let fear guide you.

  • @flyingpiggie979
    @flyingpiggie979 Рік тому +250

    “Evidence is key for me”
    I would hope so…

    • @unholy1771
      @unholy1771 Рік тому +59

      You have no idea how many cops pride themselves in their "intuition"

    • @booker0110
      @booker0110 8 місяців тому +16

      Taken out of context. He was explaining how the police get fixated on a hunch. Maybe you skipped that, didn’t get that?

    • @calebrobinson3144
      @calebrobinson3144 Місяць тому

      Way to ignore context to get a little ego boost on youtube comments lmao

    • @blazaybla22
      @blazaybla22 8 днів тому

      I think what it speaks to is that media have given people this idea that serial killers are caught by detectives “getting inside their heads” and that’s completely skewed how the public thinks about investigations that are mainly resolved on the basis of things like knocking on every door on the block to talk to neighbors, going through hours of security camera footage, and carefully examining metadata, as opposed to the sort of psychological profiling that rarely breaks cases open but, to be fair, does make for more compelling film and television.

  • @reasonablyskeptical
    @reasonablyskeptical Рік тому +177

    good on him for telling people body language "expertise" is bullshit

    • @marksprinkle
      @marksprinkle 8 місяців тому +5

      I mean, it works for me at the poker table (in combination with other factors). It's easy to tell when someone is being deceptive or trying to soothe their nerves while lying. You start rubbing your neck and guzzling water, I'm onto you.

    • @messrsandersonco5985
      @messrsandersonco5985 7 місяців тому +3

      It's only BS if you're not an expert. Desmond Morris did a lot of damage to the theory of body language because he focused on only one behavior at a time while experts looks for 'clusters' as well as microexpressioms. These are still used today to interrogate terrorists (foreign and domestic) and not just serial killers, and are especially if an element of torture is involved because that's considered an extreme form of psychopathy. Serial killers and mass murderers usually look like ordinary people on the outside but experienced detectives develop a 'spidey sense' which is likely to be an unconscious reading of non-verbal signals.

    • @aryanegouvea
      @aryanegouvea 7 місяців тому +11

      Pseudocience that typical people try very hard to sell. I'm 34 years old and neurodivergent with some stereotipias and handom steams... i don't look people in the eyes, i don't like when they scream at me.. sometimes I don't talk when I'm tired... (I have a totally commom life, a masters degree and a stable job). But I guess I would be considerer guilty after 1 minute of interrogation after all that ahha :/

    • @OCFHS
      @OCFHS 6 місяців тому +2

      It's just a tool like any other, the issue is people think it happens like in the movies or tv shows. Also you'll always get grifters pushing the bullshit for easy money from gullible people.

    • @julieb.5860
      @julieb.5860 2 місяці тому

      so many people have the attitude of, 'since i've never experienced it it must be bs' about anything they don't like. that's called being close minded. you should be proud, because you can learn so much by having an opinion based on....nothing, really.

  • @Zip_yermouth
    @Zip_yermouth Рік тому +82

    If anyone is interested in the topic, I highly recommend Eric Hickey's Serial Killers and their Victims. It was the core book for my lectures in Criminal Psychology. Easy read, very understandable.

    • @ScoobyDoozy
      @ScoobyDoozy Рік тому

      Legend, thanks for the recommendation mate!

    • @guitarslim56
      @guitarslim56 9 місяців тому

      It's not a video.

    • @Khroniclas
      @Khroniclas 4 місяці тому

      Thanks for the recommendation indeed

  • @Deady4u
    @Deady4u Рік тому +133

    I think that serial killers just don't deserve to be put back into society and society doesn't deserve to have monsters lurking amongst them

    • @bahatch94
      @bahatch94 11 місяців тому

      ever seen no country for old men? flip a coin...

    • @Lord_Sully
      @Lord_Sully 10 місяців тому

      Who does think that they should be put back into society? Lol not in America anyway

    • @NithinJune
      @NithinJune 9 місяців тому

      tf why 😂

    • @NithinJune
      @NithinJune 9 місяців тому +3

      the governments role is not punitive it is rehabilitative. The states job isn’t to punish people it’s not make them better

    • @Lord_Sully
      @Lord_Sully 9 місяців тому

      @NithinJune prisons main role is to keep society safe from criminals and crime.... like serial killers.

  • @natatatm
    @natatatm 7 місяців тому +8

    I'm glad he brings up the incompetence of the Yorkshire ripper case. Went into this video very skeptical when he said he worked on that one bc of how badly the police handled the investigation.

    • @troyonplanet
      @troyonplanet 6 місяців тому

      Beg to differ on that one - it was a totally different time with no DNA, no computers to cross reference data and the crimes occurred across different regions - me thinks the police didn’t badly handle it, but rather they were overwhelmed with the amount of information and no way to process it accurately

    • @natatatm
      @natatatm 6 місяців тому +7

      @@troyonplanet they spent more time unfairly profiling the victims than they did making an accurate profile of the ripper. He came up in police interviews NINE times and was still only caught by chance bc they wouldn't expand their suspicions outside of a profile that was completely wrong (based on the idea that he was specifically targeting prostitutes which was also wrong). It was absolutely incompetent and a really important demonstration of how police bias can tank a case.

    • @troyonplanet
      @troyonplanet 6 місяців тому +1

      @@natatatm playing devils advocate, criminal profiling of serial killers was virtually unknown in the UK when Sutcliffe was at large and yes he was interviewed multiple times - however, the police forces paper based records system was hopelessly inadequate in having any form of cross referencing. Plus their was never any strong evidence on which they could have charged Sutcliffe based on any of those interviews. I’m sure there would have been dozens of males who would have been interviewed on multiple occasions during the Ripper investigations. As a form of comparison, Gary Ridgeway committed 48 homicides in Washington state in the USA between 1982 and 1998 and was not arrested until 2001 when DNA evidence conclusively tied him to several of the murders - yet the police in Washington never copped the vigorous criticism that the Yorkshire police received - yet Ridgeway killed over 3x as many women over nearly 20 years - and his victims were all sex workers from the same area.

    • @KasumiRINA
      @KasumiRINA 2 місяці тому

      People need to understand that police failures are not called enough, the worst case I remember is a Soviet serial killer with local persecution so incompetent they jailed dozens of innocent men for his crimes, one of which was actually executed for crimes he didn't commit. That's why death penalty is insane: do you trust cops to always be right?

  • @ellemarr7234
    @ellemarr7234 Рік тому +18

    I try to watch everything featuring Mark Williams-Thomas. Thanks for this upload 🙏

  • @rasputin924
    @rasputin924 Рік тому +30

    0:23 Kinda amazed that you guys know about Chikatillo, notorious serial killer in the USSR (the first one to be actually convicted of it, if I remember correctly), love this channel, cheers!

    • @ronblack7870
      @ronblack7870 Рік тому +3

      these days he would be in wagner

    • @davishorowitz6594
      @davishorowitz6594 8 місяців тому

      If you're a Timesuck fan then you definitely know who he is and his "soft shame cock"

    • @KasumiRINA
      @KasumiRINA 2 місяці тому

      @@ronblack7870 their regular army now also hires convicted murdeers and if they survive, looses them free back home, usually with predictable results. The worst is kids forced to worship paedos who got pardoned because they went to do crimes in another country as heroes.

    • @julieb.5860
      @julieb.5860 2 місяці тому

      there was a tv movie with Steven Rea, Donald Sutherland, Max Von Sydow and Jeffrey DeMunn in 95, and of course those of us who have even a minimal interest in the field knew about Andrei Chikatilo as soon as it was publicized. Very notorious, even here in the USA.

  • @Jaelismyhomegirl
    @Jaelismyhomegirl 5 місяців тому +39

    So many comments about how the speaker is “not humble”. Who cares? Being humble is jot a requirement for accomplishing things, and this guy is telling is about something he knows well. I’d much rather listen to someone who’s interesting than someone who’s humble.

    • @bchearne
      @bchearne 2 місяці тому +6

      Totally agree. If you’ve worked hard all your life to develop skills, take some pride in it!

    • @Wayte13
      @Wayte13 7 днів тому

      Mediocre people fixate on humility because they hat being reminded of their mediocrity.

  • @PalmelaHanderson
    @PalmelaHanderson Рік тому +151

    I know there's a criminal justice definition of a "serial killer," but I think there is also an additional colloquial qualification of a serial killer - that a serial killer does not kill for profit or practicality (at least as a primary motive). They kill out of compulsion or desire. The reason I think that qualification is useful is that it distinguishes what most people picture when they hear "serial killer" vs. people like gangsters or hitmen who have killed dozens of people, but only ever killed out of anger, for profit, or to protect themselves (in their own minds). Sammy Gravano confessed to 19 murders as a mafia hitman, but no one would refer to him as a serial killer.
    If you ask 1000 people to describe a serial killer, none of them are going to think of the gangster. They're going to think of the person who kills because of compulsion or desire. Someone who doesn't really gain anything from the crime, they just do it because they like it or feel compelled to do it.

    • @topsuperseven7910
      @topsuperseven7910 Рік тому +17

      Yes but this is also a problem when a distinction is made where there is no difference in criminality. You are speaking like far too many today around 'motive and feelings' as if these matter the most to society or even matter at all. One night a woman is murdered by a man who simply wanted to see he felt anything thrilling and didn't feel a thing. Across town a woman was murdered over a drug debt but not to somehow get the money back but to see if her death struck fearful compliance into other debtors.
      What our society needs to worry about is that either man, both men, they have crossed a line into criminal murder. That they walk around and can and would do such a thing if they so desire.
      and here is something to consider. years ago I was watching one of these reality show 'follow along with cops' shows like '48 hours' or whatever it was.
      - police respond to two dead bodies outside a gas station in a notoriously dangerous neighborhood in a US inner-city. Someone has shot dead a prostitute and a pimp in cold blood and it quickly leads to notorious 'bloodcrip' gang member Tyrone 'Ratchet' Williams.
      Ohhhh he is quite a suspect. Ratchet, 38 has spent 17 of his 20 adult years in and out of prison including kidnapping women, attempted murder of a woman, manslaughter of a woman and wait there's more,
      not only is he officially known to have killed two women but Ratchet is strongly linked to the murder of no less than 5 others in the Bloodcrip drug wars and revenge and gangland world.
      The ONLY reason they caught Ratchet was because witnesses in 'The Hood' started tipping off police (rare very rare) as they said Ratchet had gone so crazy that everyone was terrified of him now. Even the gang was disassociating with him because and he was killing anyone.
      In this case, the reason why he murdered the two? They had 'disrespected him'.
      This was mentioned by several blurred out witnesses and calls that they all knew he'd killed that woman earlier that month because she didn't want him to be her pimp and he didn't like that.
      Ratchet is strongly believed to have killed 15 people over his 38 years of living.
      The episode wraps up with a slam-dunk conviction of 3 murders and ongoing investigations and charges on several more.
      Here's my question:
      Why isn't Ratchet Williams considered a "Serial Killer" like any other?
      Why not?
      What is the difference and more than that, what is the difference to our people, our society, to the public?
      What's the difference to public safety?
      If your answer is just sorting out little twists of his feelings and what psychological motives he wrestled with then that's just not as important as to what they actually do.

    • @Cretan1000
      @Cretan1000 Рік тому +4

      This sounds bad, but I think there should be a distinction made between people who are in the game and those who aren't. If you are heavily involved in the mafia and you get murdered over business, I don't think it should be punished the same as being murdered randomly. Everyone in the game knows the risks and choses to accept them for money.

    • @topsuperseven7910
      @topsuperseven7910 Рік тому +7

      @@Cretan1000 why wouldn't tehre be a harsher penalty for those who have a premeditated murder threat and even worse they murder each other for money and business. Why, if anything, isn't that even worse than a random passion driven murder?
      Even worse, they actually think they could supersede murder laws and make their own above-the-law rules in their own separatist justice system? Why not even more penalty for that?
      and all of that only covers the idea of 'punishment and penalty'
      i understand 90% of the internet thinks prisons or death penalty or only for punishments instead of the practical point of not letting them be at large in public spaces but if you're only talking penalty then I don't see why the Mafia mobster isn't, arguably, deserving more of a penalty?

    • @zatannazatara552
      @zatannazatara552 Рік тому +5

      this is such an insane thing to say because why on earth should it matter that one was paid and one wasn't? The act of taking a life, a fellow human regardless of how justified and/or logical you believe the motive is still an act that profoundly changes a person for the worse. Mafia members despite whatever fantasy you'd like to believe, kill for pleasure, they enjoy it, they enjoy exerting their power and their dominance over someone, they are serial killers, the serial there is important. You wanting there to be a distinction and other people in this thread going...oh my god yes you're in the game so you know the rules all that means is that you have sympathy for one type of victim and not the other. And that's a very very dangerous road to go down, put down the Godfather book, turn off Narcos realise they are all as bad as the other. Sammy Gravano is a serial killer btw he's just not a famous one, or rather he's not famous for being one but i bet the families of the people he killed would describe him the same way Ted Bundy's victims did, merciless, cruel, sadistic and evil.

    • @KaladinVegapunk
      @KaladinVegapunk 10 місяців тому +3

      ​@@zatannazatara552pretty sure they aren't making a moral judgement or saying one isn't as bad..they're purely talking classification. The hitmen and mob killer absolutely is just as brutal and horrific, it's just not the same motivation and category of killer.. obviously.

  • @georgiam.3957
    @georgiam.3957 9 місяців тому +10

    Saying that they lost so many cases by cross contamination, is so true and it's usually the cops fault cause they don't take as much caution as forensics experts. Cops responsible for crime scenes should be competent enough to do the job as many of them cannot stomach it and have often puked on crime scenes or contaminated the place by not wearing protection

  • @ImAtLevel53
    @ImAtLevel53 6 місяців тому +6

    Mark is a brilliant person, he helps so many people. Nothing but respect for him

  • @nicholasdumon5579
    @nicholasdumon5579 Рік тому +51

    I hope friends & families of the victims effected by cases getting colder and colder find some sense of understanding how detectives go about there investigation whether it be here or an other authoritative source.

  • @ClichéGuevara-2814
    @ClichéGuevara-2814 Рік тому +85

    People aren't all monsters, but all monsters are people.
    It's a complicated world.

    • @tyrannosaurusflex3698
      @tyrannosaurusflex3698 Рік тому

      Yep. The world is only a bad place because of bad people.

    • @mattenten
      @mattenten Рік тому

      So deep

    • @TheLilikprasaja
      @TheLilikprasaja Рік тому +1

      Scooby doo amen to that

    • @shaggyfeng9110
      @shaggyfeng9110 Рік тому

      Simple math problem...

    • @zaneplatt3533
      @zaneplatt3533 11 місяців тому

      I find it so funny when people try to sound cool by writing nonsensical statements like this. 😂

  • @onlyme219
    @onlyme219 Рік тому +8

    Fascinating and very frightening

  • @colincresser3405
    @colincresser3405 Місяць тому +1

    Absolutely Brilliant man !

  • @billydiesel8520
    @billydiesel8520 Місяць тому +1

    "We've lost a lot of cases by a lack of continuity" **jumpcuts to middle of next sentence**
    4:26

  • @anna.augustinova
    @anna.augustinova Рік тому +9

    Every time there was a new chapter and the sound of tape played, to me it sounded more like a chainsaw and given the topic of the video, I always imagined a guy using that saw to kill someone.😬

  • @tonyd9067
    @tonyd9067 Рік тому +52

    JCS would be proud

    • @TeatroGrotesco
      @TeatroGrotesco Рік тому +1

      JCVD might be proud as well.

    • @nm7358
      @nm7358 Рік тому +9

      Except that the guy argues that people like JCS are crap, because it's all in hindsight. All this body language stuff is rubbish.

    • @UriahElroy666
      @UriahElroy666 Рік тому

      Who's JCS?

    • @aislingsibeallyons3416
      @aislingsibeallyons3416 Рік тому +1

      ​@@UriahElroy666 Jim can't swim it's a famous UA-cam channel

    • @user-hu8fn2jp5v
      @user-hu8fn2jp5v Рік тому

      ​@@nm7358 ive always thought it was rubbis, but its still entertaining

  • @marycahill546
    @marycahill546 10 місяців тому +1

    Very interesting information. Thank you.

  • @jake5773
    @jake5773 Рік тому +77

    "You can always get someone to talk."
    Suspect : "I want a lawyer."
    "You can almost always get someone to talk."

    • @nm7358
      @nm7358 Рік тому +19

      Not everywhere does it force the police to stop the interview, the US is not the whole world. In Canada you're given a phone to call a lawyer to get the legal advice you are entitled to, then brought back to the interrogation room and the interview continues. Same with the right to silence; the police can continue to question you, for hours even, despite you exercising your right to remain silent by stating you'll not answer to questions. You have to invoke it again and again until the police decides they are wasting their time.

    • @shaggyfeng9110
      @shaggyfeng9110 Рік тому +3

      They would talk to you for hours till your lawyer show up. You think you can keep your cool and be silent for hours?

    • @kameronjones7139
      @kameronjones7139 Рік тому +4

      ​@@nm7358 you just proved his point about not getting everyone to talk

    • @kameronjones7139
      @kameronjones7139 Рік тому +1

      ​@@shaggyfeng9110do think it is torture or something? It isn't hard to not say anything

    • @Lowlandlord
      @Lowlandlord 9 місяців тому +1

      @@kameronjones7139 And yet so many people do feel a need to say something, even when explained before hand they should say nothing.

  • @julieb.5860
    @julieb.5860 2 місяці тому +1

    this is so interesting. i just wonder....if any budding serial killers are using it as a primer of what to consider when planning and executing these crimes. i'm sure there are, because apparently serial killers are very interested in other serial killers at times, and do searches, in which case this title as well as any others would pop up in their feed.

  • @Heartwing37
    @Heartwing37 Місяць тому +4

    This dude is staring demons in the eyes. I don’t expect him to have stellar mental health, but I appreciate the work that he’s doing.!

  • @UncaughtKillers
    @UncaughtKillers Місяць тому +2

    00:20 The way this detail is incorporated is so seamless and clever!

  • @mammamiia08
    @mammamiia08 Рік тому +86

    "Do they intimidate me? No. No one intimidates me." 👀

    • @isaactl
      @isaactl Рік тому +19

      Huge lie.

    • @booker0110
      @booker0110 8 місяців тому +2

      @@isaactlno. I know people who can’t be intimidated.

    • @marksprinkle
      @marksprinkle 8 місяців тому +6

      @@booker0110 people who aren't afraid don't need to tell you they're unafraid.

    • @KasumiRINA
      @KasumiRINA 2 місяці тому +1

      @@marksprinkle unprompted? Yes. He was directly asked, what was he supposed to asnwer, "I am shaking in my boots from big bad Joe "axefoot" the fingernail sniffer?"

    • @TiananmenSquirrel
      @TiananmenSquirrel 2 місяці тому +1

      What a narcissist

  • @darrenmurray861
    @darrenmurray861 Рік тому +7

    On the mental health front; coaching youth rugby has been amazing for my mental health.

    • @le_th_
      @le_th_ 26 днів тому

      Did you have PTSD from dealing with serial killers? When he says his mental health has been at rock bottom for a few years, he is very likely talking about PTSD and that is a horse of a very different color if so.

  • @little.tricks
    @little.tricks 10 місяців тому +7

    They're doing a real disservice by not having a national database.

  • @MizusawaSatsuki
    @MizusawaSatsuki 26 днів тому

    0:38 love the line

  • @bechaupt865
    @bechaupt865 Рік тому +46

    Many of Peter Sutcliffe's victims were not sex workers. Prejudice from the police on this was one of the reasons the investigation was so ineffective. If you want to learn about the PS case from someone who actually knows what they are talking about listen to the first season of the podcast Crime Analyst by Laura Richards. Her experience makes this ex-dectective look like a jumped up boy scout.

    • @Brearo
      @Brearo Рік тому

      Yes we’ve all seen the ripper

    • @elgatonegro1703
      @elgatonegro1703 Рік тому +7

      Exactly. This chap obv means well and I wouldn’t want to drag him too much, but like ‘sophisticated profiling techniques’ were and remain a huge problem with the Sutcliffe investigation; surely one could see how wilfully naive you’d have to be to be like ‘yeah but that was before, now our sophisticated profiling is free from misogyny and super effective’

    • @Brearo
      @Brearo Рік тому +7

      @@elgatonegro1703 he was not a Yorkshire ripper detective, he investigated him 25 years later when he already admitted murders, pretty easy to investigate a murderer who’s happy to admit everything ffs

    • @georgelane6350
      @georgelane6350 Рік тому +7

      To be fair, he said that the first five victims were sex workers, which is true. He then said that the police didn't believe that they had a real victim until the sixth victim, who was not a sex worker. That is him saying that the profiling was misogynistic: he is saying the Police didn't believe sex workers were full people and admonishing them for it.

    • @RubberStamp-qz4qg
      @RubberStamp-qz4qg 8 місяців тому

      1 victim wasn’t a pro
      But she was dressed like one and probably looked like one

  • @alcapone1486
    @alcapone1486 Рік тому +200

    If there was a "I'm all about show off" competition, this guy would be a gold, silver, and bronze medals holder.

    • @clubbizarre
      @clubbizarre Рік тому +16

      So there is narcissism. He might be a serial killer himself.

    • @oneontumetse7900
      @oneontumetse7900 Рік тому +5

      @@clubbizarrethis comment made me laugh lol

    • @Julia-lk8jn
      @Julia-lk8jn Рік тому +36

      ​@@clubbizarre overused term. Just pointing out your own achievements isn't even close to making somebody a narcissist.

    • @Julia-lk8jn
      @Julia-lk8jn Рік тому +38

      Looks like that at first, but I think the editing has a lot to do with it. There are a lot of very short sound bites going "I did this" or "My work was instrumental in ..." .
      But those are spliced in, maybe because whoever cut them in wanted for him to look more impressive.
      I'm the bits where his answers are left to speak for himself, he comes across very differently: focused on the process much more and on his own part in it mich less.

    • @eugenechun4140
      @eugenechun4140 Рік тому

      How do you know it's not an act?

  • @StrikerSashi
    @StrikerSashi Місяць тому

    Why was there footage of some random guy on Twitter? Surely, that should be blurred out?

  • @fashunpuss6279
    @fashunpuss6279 2 місяці тому +1

    Relates to Bryan kohberger and Idaho 4 case.

  • @AC-ie8mt
    @AC-ie8mt Рік тому +2

    Thank you for your life long work. ❤

  • @joeylowell293
    @joeylowell293 6 місяців тому

    Hi question, you say the five-pound note could have led to the York Shire ripper but i would like to know how? he could have bought something and then that 5-pound note could have changed hands again. How do they know that that five pound note went to Peter? I see how they could have tracked it to the company but i don't know how they can go father with it.

  • @JesseLopez-s1k
    @JesseLopez-s1k 7 місяців тому +2

    Très informative. Merci

  • @selenaclarke
    @selenaclarke Місяць тому

    regarding there not being a national data base for killers. NZ developed such a product around 2014, that was supposed to be available for sale to law enforcement internationally

    • @le_th_
      @le_th_ 26 днів тому

      Just because it is for sale doesn't mean they'll buy it. I mean, the US had one since 1967. Yet NZ didn't have one until 2014. Different countries do things differently.

  • @meu02136
    @meu02136 Рік тому +78

    My man talking about ego after saying no one in the world intimidates him

    • @danitho
      @danitho Рік тому +15

      Yeah .... There's so much about him that's pretty sus ngl lol

    • @mammamiia08
      @mammamiia08 Рік тому +8

      I think there's something about some people become good investigators by being able to think like the criminals they investigate. They understand them. I think this guy is one of them. Might be why he can give some creep vibes, but the strong difference is that he made different choices and knew right from wrong.
      Edit: I wrote this before I got to the part where he talks about his mental health. I'm more convinced now that he's one of those who can understand serial killers and to be able to do that but still have empathy, that must take a heavy toll on anyone. With his bad mental health and the knowledge/stories he got from the worst of the worst - no wonder he talks like the world is resting on his shoulders!

    • @danitho
      @danitho Рік тому +2

      @@mammamiia08 Only correction: we *hope* he's made the choice to do the right thing. I don't think he's the type to commit a crime, but there are cops and investigators who are also criminals.

    • @HauntedOne666
      @HauntedOne666 Рік тому +2

      ​@mammamiia08 lmao hes not gonna be a killer he just understands it well and everyone is human and has similarities.

    • @HauntedOne666
      @HauntedOne666 Рік тому

      ​@@danitho has he been convicted or charged with anything ?

  • @conormurphy4328
    @conormurphy4328 Рік тому +2

    Hmm tracking and recording somebody as a private citizen sounds like it should be incredibly illegal

    • @JoeyP946
      @JoeyP946 11 місяців тому +1

      sounds like stalking and as far as I know stalkers never get stopped until it's too late

    • @KasumiRINA
      @KasumiRINA 2 місяці тому

      @@JoeyP946 oh noes poor serial killers getting stalked, who would think of the rights of Bronson "Nostril Ripper" Johnson.

    • @JoeyP946
      @JoeyP946 2 місяці тому +1

      @@KasumiRINA lmao your illegal actions might be the reason a man like that walks, as none of it would be admissible in a court.

  • @Noyb.265
    @Noyb.265 11 місяців тому +1

    Fix the sound pops

  • @OldestHouse
    @OldestHouse Рік тому +12

    such nice listening him talk!

  • @nUmBskulLL
    @nUmBskulLL Рік тому +29

    "no one intimidates me"
    Ok dude 😂 calm down

  • @sarahbirdcage7814
    @sarahbirdcage7814 Рік тому +112

    Talking about ego..how big is this man’s? When he exposed Jimmy Saville’s crimes, he was all over the news obviously but complimenting himself on what a good job he had done and that everyone should admire him because he good ex-police detective…me, me, me. Who’s the narcissist again!?

    • @ongbonga9025
      @ongbonga9025 Рік тому +16

      He might be a narcissist or he might just be trying to promote himself so he can get TV work and sell books.

    • @slumpmachinegaming
      @slumpmachinegaming Рік тому +23

      I love it when people completely miss the point. This is an idiotic take lol.
      Edit: one person murders people routinely, and one stops serial killers. Am I wrong?

    • @shaggyfeng9110
      @shaggyfeng9110 Рік тому +5

      Is there any other way to say what he said?

    • @AzizDoufikar2280
      @AzizDoufikar2280 Рік тому +9

      Ok can you suggest the "proper" way to tell his accomplishment

    • @dabtican4953
      @dabtican4953 Рік тому +2

      @@slumpmachinegaming What does your edit have to do with anything? No one refuted that he is responsible for putting some serial killers behind bars. He still comes off as rather narcissistic

  • @zappababe8577
    @zappababe8577 Рік тому +7

    16:36 Talking about the impact it had on his mental health, I've often thought that Police get to see the shitty side of humanity far more often than the rest of us. Not at all surprised that it had a very bad impact on his mental health. It's good that there are still people who want to go into the Police force, if I saw what he had to see on just one day of his job, it would probably destroy me mentally. I give massive respect to those strong and brave enough to do that job.

  • @Q3hero
    @Q3hero 13 днів тому

    0:23 is that Red Forman??

  • @reallyvictor
    @reallyvictor Рік тому +2

    Thank you for that first statement he made, peoppe overuse and miss-use the term serial killer. There is spree killers, mass murderers, etc. and no one uses those terms, they think all SKs are the same by definition or by basic acts; it's deeps than that.

    • @le_th_
      @le_th_ 26 днів тому

      The irony of YOU misusing a word in your post. There ARE spree killers, mass murderers, etc. People misuse words all the time, just like you did.

  • @erikab9604
    @erikab9604 Рік тому +14

    "No one intimidates me"
    And that....intimidates me 😂

  • @James_Bowie
    @James_Bowie Місяць тому +1

    It's well known that psychopaths will try hard to feign some form of insanity. They well know that being incarcerated in a hospital is their way out of incarceration when they become "cured".

  • @Kaice88
    @Kaice88 Рік тому +27

    the US criminal justice system isnt set up for restorative justice and I dont think they are even ready to hear that. we have a long way to go and even though this man works in the UK, its awesome to hear that people who are this aware work in these type of jobs. it restores some faith in some sort of criminal justice system.

    • @monkeytennis8861
      @monkeytennis8861 Рік тому +4

      The US justice system is utterly laughable

    • @AverageNerd8
      @AverageNerd8 Рік тому +1

      On a side note one thing I have noticed is that if they have DNA they can convict off that if they don't have a time line or something else and that's why some people get charged unjustly

    • @Just.Kidding
      @Just.Kidding Рік тому +2

      Yeah the guy who opens up by saying "that guy was faking schizophrenia! I know it! It's impossible to be schizophrenic if you have psychopathy!" Isn't exactly the poster child for restorative justice

    • @le_th_
      @le_th_ 26 днів тому

      @@Just.Kidding lololol He needs to do a basic Google search for psychopathic schizophrenia. They can be wicked, wicked, murderous people.

  • @echorz
    @echorz Рік тому +3

    Well thanks for the tips, good luck catching me!

  • @mammamiia08
    @mammamiia08 Рік тому +8

    When you have faced and talked with the worst of the worst, you talk like the world is resting on your shoulders 💔

  • @stuungar3390
    @stuungar3390 Рік тому +2

    I highly recommend Pat Brown criminal profiler, she has a youtube channel

  • @Sinn0100
    @Sinn0100 9 місяців тому +1

    Interesting... we do have national databases here in the states that can be used to track crimes/suspects/ect. NCIC.

  • @paulavance5096
    @paulavance5096 Рік тому +10

    HOW is it legal to put tracking devices, listening and recording devices in someone's home or car or whatever? I have never thought it was right for any government official to lie, cheat, steal and do what could only be perceived to be corrupt if a civilian who isn't an employee of the government did the exact same thing.

    • @SusanBryantInsomniacBookworm
      @SusanBryantInsomniacBookworm Рік тому +4

      The police are allowed to lie to you.

    • @paulavance5096
      @paulavance5096 Рік тому +4

      @@SusanBryantInsomniacBookworm yes but my question was why or how is it legal for them to do so.

    • @georgelane6350
      @georgelane6350 Рік тому +10

      They need a warrant to do so. They can only do so if they reasonably suspect you are committing or have committed crimes and a judge signs off that the evidence that informs that suspicion is adequate

    • @JoeyP946
      @JoeyP946 11 місяців тому +1

      @@paulavance5096 well that's pretty simple, for example, if they lie in the interrogation room about having good evidence against you and they claim you'll go to prison for a long time, you might be more likely to co operate and give information.
      that's why there's only 1 word you should ever say to the police and that's "lawyer"

    • @Elizabeth-n3v2u
      @Elizabeth-n3v2u 3 місяці тому

      Think about the utter impossibility of investigating things like organized crime if law enforcement was not allowed to be deceptive. Anything requiring an undercover cop would be automatically out the window, and organized crime, conspiracies etc would be pretty much impossible to take down.

  • @rowanmurphy4986
    @rowanmurphy4986 9 місяців тому +2

    1:59 I was infact able to demonstrate that he was infact not schizophrenic (mental illness that needs to be treated in a hospital) and infact demonstrated that he was a psychopath (mental illness that needs to be treated you guessed it in a hospital) give me a break

  • @ajchurchill
    @ajchurchill Рік тому +2

    Audio is mastered way too low. Great content though

  • @DamianWilliams-ww9sx
    @DamianWilliams-ww9sx 3 місяці тому

    One thing I'm curious of, and I don't work in law and order nor have any experience in the field but.............from the introduction, he mentions identifying the suspects but shouldn't the evidence collection be first and that lead to identifying suspects rather than identifying a suspect first and then trying to collect the evidence to prove guilt? This seems to my naive mind a very flawed way of doing things. He later in the piece talks about the police becoming fixated on a suspect and why sometimes there is a miscarriage of justice, these two ideas seem to me to go hand in hand.
    Perhaps I'm over thinking this but I always believed that the process was find the evidence, follow the trail of where the evidence leads and gradually weed out candidates. It seems like if you've already got a suspect in mind then the natural reaction would be to fit the evidence to the suspicion? Wouldn't this way of operations compromise the police by having an agenda or preconceived notions that affect the operation?

  • @joshua6244
    @joshua6244 Рік тому +9

    He says you identify a suspect and then look for evidence to convict them. Isn't that the wrong way round and leading to wrongful conviction?

    • @imgrindin
      @imgrindin 5 місяців тому

      sooooo you're basically saying- if you cant find something at the crime scene immediately, give up hope, dont look into anyone else?
      Sometimes you have to develop a thing called motive, and once you find that, you can look for evidence.
      grfo

    • @joshua6244
      @joshua6244 5 місяців тому +1

      @@imgrindin I am not at all saying that which you attribute to me.

  • @jojjeoskarsson784
    @jojjeoskarsson784 3 місяці тому

    Its kind of strange how you can say that Sinclair and Tobin is responsible for more murders then they are convicted for, but you think Barry George is innocent of killing Jill Dando and you know this for a fact.

  • @otw2fyb
    @otw2fyb Рік тому +2

    A lot of time luck has to do with catching predators for example the Yorkshire Ripper

  • @johndyson4109
    @johndyson4109 28 днів тому

    Doesn't INTERPOL have an international data base on murderers even if the cases are unsolved? Also in the United States they have a National data base of suspects at large who have committed murder even through they have not been convinced yet...?

  • @MrNommerz
    @MrNommerz 8 місяців тому

    While I really don't think this guys interview was offensive in any way (After all, it is an interview, of course he's going to talk about himself and the cases???) I do agree he kind of showcases the personality style that was shown in The Wire for detectives where a lot of detectives view solving cases as an intellectual challenge and an unsolved case is an affront to their pride. This guy strikes me as that kind of thinker. It makes sense though, I'm sure the majority of police feel prideful about their work since at least on paper their work makes the world a better place (and I agree that far more often than not, it does).

    • @florinivan6907
      @florinivan6907 7 місяців тому

      This is only valid in countries with something akin to a liberal justice system with the accused having rights including the right to defend himself in court with all the means available to him. In countries were due process is nonexistent the cops are the problem. Because in those countries cops simply pick and choose who they want to lock up. Based sometimes on even personal vendettas. If you're lucky that is. If not they'll just suicide you. And guess what most countries in the world fit that description. And even developed countries often show a temptation towards ignoring basic rights. The cops for most of humanity are an instrument of opression. They're basically the armed force of the elite in that country tasked with keeping the masses under control. And even were they're not there's always that temptation to emulate the north korean style of policing. Its always there.

  • @darthnihilus2729
    @darthnihilus2729 Рік тому +22

    Man's a badass; talk's about connecting all these killers to various cases like it's nothing.

    • @DaRadicalCavy
      @DaRadicalCavy Рік тому +6

      Easy when they are dead or dying in prison lmao

    • @HauntedOne666
      @HauntedOne666 Рік тому +3

      Serial killers dont kill random people even if they talk about them negatively

  • @colonelkurtz2269
    @colonelkurtz2269 7 місяців тому +1

    Russell Williams in Canada is a masterful interview by the detective. Sadly, Canadian justice is a joke.

  • @James_Bowie
    @James_Bowie Місяць тому +3

    Is it really necessary to have that totally irrelevant and distracting noise (presumably of a vintage slide projector) every time you put up a slide? Lose it!

  • @jfasuba495
    @jfasuba495 9 місяців тому

    A highly evolved human...you are a beautiful person Mark. Everyone SHOULD want help society heal and move forward but only SOME actually do. You are an Inspiration. My Thanks to You

  • @Berwomfra
    @Berwomfra 24 дні тому

    Thanks Mark for your insight. Interesting stuff!

  • @JustsomeSteve
    @JustsomeSteve Рік тому +7

    Wait what?
    Putting listening and/or tracking devices in a house or a vehicle of another person is "on the right side of the law as an individual"?

    • @iamme625
      @iamme625 Рік тому

      I mean, you can get warrants to do it. It's not like he snuck in in the middle of the night and bugged someone's phone like in a James Bond movie or something.

    • @JustsomeSteve
      @JustsomeSteve Рік тому +1

      @@iamme625 But you can't get a warrant as an individual or can you?
      I get that the state can sometimes do it but it just sounds illegal to do it as an individual.

  • @suekay5782
    @suekay5782 2 місяці тому

    I suspect that it was a good thing for the World that you did not go for the Rugby, you have applied yourself, your life, with amazing impact. You are owed so many Thank yous.
    It does seem that the true Heros in the Police are never appreciated/acknowledged by the people they save and protect.

  • @astaridjatmiko8187
    @astaridjatmiko8187 Рік тому +6

    it must be nice to have a job where people perceive you as the way you are

  • @all3ykat79
    @all3ykat79 Рік тому

    Maybe you would be able to recover some if you came here to New Zealand for a holiday...

  • @lucastrask2838
    @lucastrask2838 Рік тому +11

    His descriptions of the way they hunt for people, bug them, use cameras etc. reminds me that he is in the UK, where the people are subjects. Ninety percent of what he says he does would be tossed out of court in the US.
    When I was in the UK a couple decades ago I watched police do things to people that would have gotten them years in prison in the States.
    Weirdly, even in the most stringent police states murder exists.
    Even in maximum security prisons no one is safe from a crazy person.

    • @nm7358
      @nm7358 Рік тому +3

      And yet you need a licence there to listen to short-wave radio.

    • @monkeytennis8861
      @monkeytennis8861 Рік тому

      What a load of drivel

    • @shellybelly1071
      @shellybelly1071 12 днів тому

      ‘The people are subjects’ you are literally living in an oligarchy. Like father like son I guess hahahah

  • @lordofthehouseofstormcrows8615

    Balls of solid rock, this feller here. Keep up the great work sir! Thank you

  • @sideoffries8389
    @sideoffries8389 Рік тому +1

    the Katy Perry meme at 6:58 💀

  • @thabangdiswane6503
    @thabangdiswane6503 9 місяців тому +7

    Dudes been patting himself on the back the whole episode, damn chill, giving off narcissistic vibes

  • @murrayeldred3563
    @murrayeldred3563 25 днів тому

    EXCELLENT INTERVIEW.

  • @darkredrose7683
    @darkredrose7683 8 місяців тому

    Excellent documentaries but WHY do we have to listen to this sound 00:42-00:44 for SO MANY TIMES? It's horrible...and it's the same for all your videos. Please stop it :( Thank you anyway.

  • @khurramkhurshed9427
    @khurramkhurshed9427 Рік тому +1

    Interesting information

  • @Gotrek7
    @Gotrek7 Рік тому +8

    "I have no medical background, but I am absolutely sure he wasn't schizophrenic."

  • @chrissythomas505
    @chrissythomas505 6 місяців тому

    I watched this video years ago on this channel 3 years ago on my UA-cam page that I’m on now.

  • @usernextuser5385
    @usernextuser5385 Рік тому +6

    Thomas was born in 1970, so how could he work on the Ripper case who was caught in 1980.

  • @kemon3733
    @kemon3733 Рік тому +25

    Ego, yes he does. Effectiveness, yes he also does. I'd rather have an effective egotistical cop than an ineffective and humble cop.

    • @AzizDoufikar2280
      @AzizDoufikar2280 Рік тому +1

      True.People got mad in the comment section for his attitude and I don't know why.

    • @Boristheborat
      @Boristheborat Рік тому +2

      Ego has no place in people being sentenced to a life in jail. It's facts and facts and no ego whatsoever.

    • @pinkdiamonds9137
      @pinkdiamonds9137 11 місяців тому

      That sounds reasonable, but unfortunately it doesn’t work that way. If you have a large ego, which this man clearly does, it’s naive to think that will not leak into his work and influence his investigative techniques and conduct. Police who aren’t egotistical are often pushed to employing unethical and illegal tactics in order to catch who they suspect is the perpetrator, out of frustration and pressure to close cases. Imagine that, plus the need to protect one’s ego and perceived reputation when you think so highly of yourself and your abilities. Also, it is very easy to manipulate people and push buttons when they have fragile egos; not a great weakness to have when interviewing and dealing with criminals.

  • @itsmmmeagan
    @itsmmmeagan 3 місяці тому +6

    How did so many of you get so bothered by the sports captain comments? He’s telling you how/why het got into his field. Chill out.

    • @le_th_
      @le_th_ 26 днів тому +1

      Lots of insecure people in the world, especially men around sports ineptitude.

  • @stevieb3432
    @stevieb3432 9 місяців тому

    Very interesting stuff. One thing that I have to say is that comparing the UK to the US is unfair and makes no sense. The UK is literally the size of maybe 2 states. I hear the argument all the time in debates, unless you are talking about the entirety of Europe, from the UK to Ukraine, compared to the US, the argument is invalid. Otherwise, great video.

  • @michaelhill6451
    @michaelhill6451 7 місяців тому +5

    In the U.K., the worst kind of cereal killing they have involves corn flakes.

  • @michaelhealy3638
    @michaelhealy3638 9 місяців тому +1

    Loves himself.

  • @carrained
    @carrained 7 місяців тому

    I can't even imagine the things he would've had to have seen in his career, I know parts of some of these cases but the details he must be haunted by... I hope he sleeps well at night knowing that he helped put horrible people in prison.

  • @LewisGibson-yu2my
    @LewisGibson-yu2my 5 місяців тому +1

    It's worth noting, if anyone reads this far, Private Eye (UK news journal) has covered this guy many times and his supposed skills in investigating. He's all mouth and no trousers - he "investigated" Nicola Bulley's disappearance - his exact quote on the main theory, that she had fallen into the river was "this is looking more and more unlikely.... the other two options, in my opinion, become increasingly more likely: that she left of her own free will, or a third party was involved.... with the flow of the River Wyre at the time only being very slightly higher and faster, it is still not enough to drag a fully clothed fit and healthy person far downstream" - she was found of course, 1 mile downstream, having fallen in and drowned. See also Jay Slater missing. He talks the talk, he doesn't walk the walk as a PI

    • @julieb.5860
      @julieb.5860 2 місяці тому

      maybe he knows but doesn't do. maybe he's like the rest of us, hit sometimes, miss most of the time.

  • @Pe6ek
    @Pe6ek Рік тому +2

    So full of himself! Everyone is wrong but him!
    This is typical of intelligent people.

    • @monkeytennis8861
      @monkeytennis8861 Рік тому

      And typical of thick people like you that you make such nonsense claims

    • @seungminwhatisyourproblem
      @seungminwhatisyourproblem Рік тому

      No its typical of the unintelligent.

    • @JoeyP946
      @JoeyP946 11 місяців тому

      a smart person knows how much he doesn't know..