Yes, and really, why would anyone tell the police what type of mind they have ? Especially not any hint of "by the way I am more clever than you, or your profession." Yet here I am...
@@sam1else274 "An oxymoron is a self-contradicting word or group of words". So "military intelligence" is an oxymoron, "jumbo shrimp" is an oxymoron, "Anne Frank's drum kit" is an oxymoron, etc. And this criminal definitely puts the "moron" in "oxymoron".
@@goombapizza6335 how is military intelligence an oxymoron? Is that particular grouping of words describing some shitty stereotype? What the fuck is military intelligence. If the military was ran by a bunch of dumbos the world would look quite differently. What ?!?!
Thanks! I'll remember that the next time I kill someone. I keep accidentally calling a lawyer and depriving people of content and enjoyment. My bad.. :(
That’s because of the dunning-Kruger effect im pretty sure. Most actual geniuses and intelligent people know enough to know they don’t know alot and thus are very hesitant to say they are intelligent. Dumb people are the opposite, and love to show off their “immense” intellect. Its really ironic.
Yeah, my ex girlfriend went on daily about how her mom and her therapist say she's actually a genius. Yet I'd constantly witness her try to handle day to day things and just fail lol.
One of the smartest kids I know has autism and Asperger's and is usually the smartest kid in the room but you also wouldn't believe all of the dumb shyt he does. I think he's too smart for his own good. He's a CNC programmer at the age of 22 and we all ask ourselves how someone so smart can be so fkin dumb. So I know this dude isn't as smart as he thinks he is.
I've got a buddy know knows he's an idiot, although he works in I.T., and says it all the time. I don't know how many sentences start off with, guess what I did? You know I'm an idiot so... That's honesty for ya.
Interrogators will go on and on asking the same retarded questions over and over again and lie to your face until they hear what they want to hear. They are scum and don't care about solving the actual crime. They want some bullshit ass confession from the first person who is weak enough to break down under pressure so they can lock somebody up and fulfill their fucking quota. Don't talk to fucking pigs. Just don't.
😂 At this point in time, I seriously think that I'd spontaneously laugh out loud hearing that line! I wouldn't be able to stop it from happening. ..which would make me look guilty AF!
@@thrillwillent i believe it's a tactic that gives the person the feeling that they can kinda lessen the blow of the charge by agreeing that they did do it but it was accidental. Kinda dumb but I guess in that kinda situation, ANY way to try to get out of the crime feels like an option.
@@jamisthebest123 Exactly. That’s exactly why they say that. Then they always claim that if you tell the truth that they can help you when in actuality they can’t. Only the D.A. & Judge can!..
@@maxim_mlThis is a total stretch....but maybe he views "exculpatory" as a word used primarily by law enforcement and is thus referring to police vernacular...?
@@maxim_ml vernacular means ordinary language. the language common people speaks. He is trying to say there is no need for police officer to explain what "exculpatory" means because he already knows.
@@serzel9134 no, no he didn't lol he should've use "vocabulary" in his context .. "my vocabulary is very good" .. Why? Because he claims that he is intelligent enough to understand what "exculpatory" means. However, he wasn't intelligent enough to understand that "vernacular" means "dialect spoken by the ordinary people in a particular country or region", which obviously doesn't fit in the same context. His intentions and what he should've said are different.
You can have a tested high IQ but it does not automatically make you rich and successful. If you have some extreme personality disorders, grow up in an abusive household or around petty criminals your whole childhood, you're bound to follow in the footsteps of those other people. The environment in which we grow in is very important factor as to where your life leads. Are you aware that psychopathic and sociopathic serial killers also have high IQ's? It takes intelligence and charisma to persuade your victims AND to be able to repeat the killings multiple times over. The smartest of killers hover around 130-170IQ. High intelligence is often not a blessing, many see it as a curse more than anything. Being simple with high tolerance for monotone existence is far more applicable for modern society that needs its cogs to run its industrial machinery.
That is absolutely ridiculous logic. I am a member of Mensa and have been since 2013 and have been tested twice by then one scoring an IQ of 153 And then on the second one which I took to see if I could get any higher I scored a bit lower at 151 So I decided to leave it there. I'm 35 now and as of June 18th of last year I'm also 10 years clean from fentanyl addiction which was done to me by a corrupt doctor who put me on medications that I didn't understand at the age of about 22. I was never a drug user before that and I spiraled out of control quite quickly. I did some things I'm not proud of too of course feel my addiction in moments where I wasn't able to acquire anything for quite a few days and I was charged with 27 felonies. It's the first and only time I've ever been in trouble. Hell I haven't even had a moving infraction or speeding ticket or even been pulled over for that matter for 15 or 16 years at this point. Committing those crimes has zero to do with The adequacy of my IQ. Call that being sad I know that people tend to hear that somebody has an IQ of 140 and things that they're geniuses which they are in that anything over that is simply genius but that's not the case and often confused or conflated. Just as there's a big difference between an individual who possesses an IQ of 140 and an individual who possesses an IQ of 110 there's also a significant difference between an individual at 170 and 140 and 200 and 170. Sure I Have a higher base intellect than 99.3% of the population if I remember correctly but somebody who possesses an IQ of 180 or 200 comparative to me is Godlike.
IQ says how fast you can solve problems and adapt to new situation, it says nothing about your ability or inability to commit crimes. Also, if he's a drug user, then his mental abilities might have decreased quite a bit since he had taken the last IQ test.
My favorite cop line is "We're just trying to give you an opportunity." It sounds so friendly and helpful. When really they want you to help them put you in prison.
I started watching interrogation videos back with the Chris Watts case. Even back then I would cringe at some of the comments the detectives use and just as a casual viewer I could spot a lot of the tricks and tactics the interrogators use and I am of average intelligence or just below. So if somebody of my limited capacity can see them working the person over why can't the person thats being interviewed see it? Its bizarre ... Or is it one of those things thats easy to notice when you're sat at home but completely different when you're in a tiny interview room feeling the pressure
@@laurarules3642 On one hand it's lack of knowledge. If you've never seen an interrogation before and are completely ignorant to the dishonest tactics cops use, it's very easy to see how someone could fall for their tricks. Especially if you were raised to believe that cops are the good guys. On the other hand, even if you know the tactics, when it's the rest of your life on the line, the impulse to try and avoid arrest and talk your way out of it seems to be very strong. That's why it's so important to be aware of all of this before you ever find yourself sitting across from a detective in an interrogation room and know that asking for a lawyer is the ONLY right move whether or not you are innocent.
@@laurarules3642 it's also you are watching from the a third person view in a non stressful situation. Much harder to pick up once your heart rate goes up, tho yea the questions are simple and repetitive on purpose, to get any type of rise out of someone.
Telling "he should put himself around better people" while being a murderer that's talking about his friend is actually extremely ironic ngl we can clearly all understand why the detective started laughing 😂
Well, it's the cops job which the guy being questioned has no real experience with. I wouldn't say the cop is smarter. All of us could probably outsmart people like Elon Musk in many things he has no experience in, but doesn't mean we're smarter overall.
IQ means little of it's not wielded well. The narrator mentioned "narcissism," which is a weakness they exploited. I've interacted with some incredibly intelligent people who were so obvious in their strategies and didn't work to hide their shifts in strategies. I'm not a psychologist, so I tend to just wonder at how little self-awareness they have.
@@ambermartin3961 Everyone is a narcissist to me or has intentions. I don't think anyone is really that good. Some but most have serious issues and probably shouldn't be talking shit about others and calling them anything.
@Eric Bogar correct in that the narcissists think they are but aren't really that good. That's why they can be outwitted by those who may have lower IQ but are trained to recognize and work with those who have manipulative or self-preserving traits.
Holy fuck, this detective belongs on a TV show, his lines are delivered perfectly. "Did I get you there? Feels like I got you there. Not even a bit of a smile?"
“I didn’t get you on that one? I feel like I got you on that one.” Perfect line delivery, like it came out of an episode of Seinfeld. It carries a similar vernacular, and vocabulary. This guy must now quickly discern how he could be useful to the White Supremacist gang he’ll seek to join in prison. Gangs don’t just ask people to raise their hand to join, and then appoint them to a leadership position. Gang leaders aren’t stupid. You have to be smart to control criminals. Who’s better at it than other criminals?
I paused the video when the detective was talking about the sympathetic reflex. This detective has incredible skills, when the killer said that's just for cops to cover their asses, immediately the detective brings it back and shuts the guy up. I am very impressed.
Very impressed with this detective. He was laser focused and inescapable. The suspect only thought he was smart because he always hung out with idiots who ultimately claimed him as one of their own.
id love to know how this dude was “impressive” if i were in that room id literally just start pissing on his his fuckin voice is annoying and he just seems pretty fucked to be around
100000%. Judges are JUST as much to blame as the criminals, if not worse, given their power. The only people who can afford to become judges are almost exclusively people who grew up with rich parents in affluent neighborhoods where they never experience the REALITY (not transcript) of crime. I'm not saying dumb jo-schmo's should be judges, but wayyy too many judges are letting a lack of life experience dictate sentencing, which only affects the middle and lower classes. We need a system to hold these judges accountable, and if shaming is not enough, we need punishment. They are legally capable of harsher and safer sentencing, but they CHOOSE to let criminals go until they KILL people.
no. the system that made him a worse criminal every time is whst must be held accountable. the US prison system does nothing to end crime, it encoursges it. make no mistake, it’s a for profit million dollar business. like every study ever has proven that short sentences that focus on rehabilitation work endlessly better than long sentences focusing on punishment. not only that, but your system creates worse people than it takes in. there’s so many theories behind it and studies that prove it, but one theory i’d like to mention is the self-fulfilling prophecy and one study is the standford prison experiment. normal people were given roles as criminals and guards in a prison, and they started becoming them. the experiment had to be ended prematurely because of the violence and mental suffering. criminals are made. almost all crime except crimes of passion are caused or atleast affectef by socioeconomic conditions. the cycle is started by socio-economic conditions and continued by prison. i recommend reading up on psychology, really gives you a different perspective.
so what would a normal person do? Just imagine you are there and you for some reason do not want to get a lawyer. Someone who looks similar to you just stole your cellphone and did somehing, they show you a video where there is someone who look similar to you a nd they say it is you. I think it is normal to say no it is not me only someone similar and when they told you your cell phone was there then you say it was stolen.
@@jozkomrkvicka7607 Theres tons of evidence against him, which obviously wouldnt exist, if he were innocent. So a normal person WOULD actually get a lawyer. Wouldve reported their phone missing and probably also told other people that this happened, which should be something significant in most peoples lives. Also wouldnt they lie to the police, since if everything is layed out clearly, theres no way youd get convicted for something there is literally no proof you did.
@@baghousetechnician9815as a lawyer. I will always recommend to report amythint you lose that can back track to you anytime. It protrects you from having bad time because justic system need faces, not guilty people.
@@changedmynamebcyallwouldnt..Intelligence includes being able to make good decisions, not just knowing facts. Going to a drug deal is not a good decision. He is not smart.
and telling stupid lies to someone expecting them to believe it is as the same as calling them an idiot. don't be surprised if they respond accordingly.
@susanivy3619Its not the more you know the less you want to know that makes you smart, in fact that is laziness in the search for knowledge. The saying is "The more you know, the more you dont know" because as you learn more, you learn the depths and nuances of which you could have never known without delving deeper. I don't think genius status is granted if you could not interpret this correctly, also people who call themselves "genius" or "smart" tend to be the most ignorant, just saying so you know how the majority of people perceive you.
He's probably determining his own IQ by the old saying, "You learn from your mistakes". He figures he learned something from every 'mistake' that he made, and given the amount of mistakes he made... He learned enough to become a genius - or something like that. 🤣🤣🤣
one thing i dont understand in these videos. i see people in comments defending criminals saying" why not ask for a lawyer"! why would anyone want a killer/criminal to get a lawyer to get away with crime? would someone explain that to me please?
Body language doesnt mean anything, people can act nervous while being totally innocent and calm while completely guilty. Body language is inadmissible in court and there is no specific way that body language affects everyone: someone with ADHD will be much more likely to shake or look around or fidget for example.
Yet another good reason to obey the law, prisons are full of people like Dave here. It's not so much the danger they may pose, but you have to listen to them, endlessly.
Agreed. If I was arrested and sent to prison for say, a few days for contempt of court, I'd be right back in front of the judge with charges of murder for killing a cell mate that wouldn't shut up.
No. It is the danger they impose. They kill other inmates and do all sorts of messed up stuff. Biggest reason to stay out because there's a lot of psychopaths in there
yes one word in particular you get really tired of hearing is fuck because it is fuckin this and fuckin that literally every other word you hear is fuckin and then you start talking like that too. It's horrible.
Incidentally, according to neuroscience, the cognitive process of intelligence, can’t necessarily function in the interest of general survival, unless guided by balanced levels of normal emotion. Emotion guides intelligence to a relavant sector of the potential decision field and adds perspective to the relative levels of importance of different details and activities. It might be fine for example to sit down and spend a lot of time finding the absolutely optimal way out of a tricky situation, but not if the situation is a lion charging you. Intelligence itself does not necessarily factor in a weighted hierarchy of relative importance. This explains why some people whose emotional lives may be skewed, abnormal or stunted will still come off strange in conversation regardless of their high IQ. There are for example things that a normal, empathetic person would respond to, in an emotionally, relationally, situationally intelligent way which an intelligent but stunted person would treat as an cool equation, not factoring in things obvious and normal to others with a broader sensibility.
I have tested at a fairly high IQ and consider myself a relatively intelligent person. I don't disagree with your statement, but I find with myself that I give people too much credit rather than underestimate them.
Contrary to what the cop says around 14:35, innocent people actually do tend to claim their innocence. The problem with it is that guilty people do the same. Even though in this case the person was guilty, this tactic is one that is used many times in false or coerced confessions. Never let a police officer confuse or twist your words if you really are innocent, and NEVER admit to anything you didn't do or that they aren't arresting you for. Always protest your innocence and ALWAYS call for an attorney.
did you want this guy arrested, yes or no? he wasn't talking to an innocent person. stop trying to act like you have an iota of experience with any of this
Wow the male detective really hit it out of the park on this one. The suspect couldn't help but defend his lies by divulging useful information, and from there he just kept looking worse and worse coming up with new reasons to explain why he didn't give up that information earlier.
@@lief3414 Nada. People are guilty until proven innocent. I have been accused of several things including r%ping my ex and selling drugs however because I'm autistic, have a slight stutter and have social anxiety so I'm constantly in flight or fight mode so no one believed me until several people came to my defense. My life could literally have been ruined (and to some extent has) because people lied and wanted to see me fail and I cant speak properly.
@@rockybullshite927 well that makes perfect sense. Someone messed with his vernacular, 5 days out of prison and just couldn’t let that slide, good for him for standing up for his beliefs. Hard to find these days.
that happened to me before, me and the other person ended up having a good laugh about it and then we planned to go rob someone else together and became friends.
The officer did an excellent job, impressive tactics to use when dealing with that type of personality disorder, he was able to seem genuinely respectful, and simultaneously just enough condescending to challenge the narcissists ego-to the point where the suspect had to struggle to not completely blow his weak attempt at having composure. The suspect is that guy who thinks they have a 200 IQ” …Because they surround themselves with people who don’t know or use words like “vernacular” in order to create situations where he is always the smartest crack head in the group.
Honestly judging by his speech and how he kept up with the detective he seemed smart enough to me, Idk. Maybe I'm stupid 😂 Obviously the biggest mistake was not shutting up tho ofc
What in this video gives you enough information to call this guy a narcissist other than the narrator stating that? Therapist spend a significant amount of time analyzing people before they make such assessments. It seems to me that a narcissist is nothing more than a person who over estimates their value in the eyes of others. We call that confidence
Sadly, he actually reminds me of my narcissistic mom. No matter what, there can never be any responsibility accepted; not even for a lie 2 seconds ago.
Narcissists all have very similar traits. They make it hard for people around them to love them sometimes. Hopefully though, your mom has a good heart deep down. Sometimes, knowing that is enough for you to overlook a person’s flaws.
narcissists don't have a good heart deep down, it's a fools errand to even hope, let alone search for one. And it's a good thing they make it so hard to love them, because you shouldn't even try to! They are toxic people that are only gonna drag everyone they can through their hell! The only correct way to deal with narcissists is to keep them away from yourself as good as you can, even if they're family members! Stay safe!
Right? He deserves his own reality show where he goes around being a detective. Would love to watch it. I thought the woman did a great job too, way better than I could do. I would be too direct and not manipulative enough. Who knows though, it seems like it would be a fun job.
In all fairness he has a slam dunk case with tons of evidence, statements etc lol. He didn't need to maneuver etc because all the facts have been laid out.
I agree only when it's violent predators! When it's nonviolent petty stuff I just feel like it's a complete waste of my tax dollars. But these violent a-holes are fun to watch squirm I agree!
the detective passed his intimidation check with the “your girlfriend’s going to be stupid enough to give us a fake alibi and she’s gonna get an accomplice charge” god damn that was hard
Yet the narrator by the end implies that he partly got the maximum penalty for not cooperating with the police, like that's the correct thing to do. Bs.
Never commit Crimes!!! Then you won't have to worry about getting a lawyer and paying them to act like their helping you but in the end your still phucked because you committed the crime. And if not your still phucked because it cost Money,time, freedom.
This detective is DAMN good at what he does. So chill. He tried so many times to make it as easy as possible. Like bruh it's checkmate let's end this lol
@@dannys9074 They didn't. They were pressuring him and hoping he'd either confess to it or tell them who did it. They knew for sure he was involved but probably not how much he was involved with.
I couldn't even understand this interview due to the complex vernacular that this guy has.. astoundingly intelligent to back yourself into corner after corner without your lawyer.
A guy in Texas was accused of a rape/murder. When he provided an airtight alibi, they charged him, too. Both spent 15(?) years in prison, before being exonerated by DNA. The prosecutor decided there was just a third suspect they never caught. Any investigator that threatens out of hand, to go after an alibi should be fired and investigated.
Would have he been better off if he had not said a single word to the police? What evidence could they possibly have had to charge him Unless he messed up during interrogation?
I was nearly killed by a police officer I startled by him having that “parasympathetic” response but his safety was on which he made sure to tell me how lucky I was because he “always” disengages his safety when he draws his firearm. This cop saying “it happens to police all the times” is just insane. It’s called trigger discipline! Don’t put your finger on the trigger and you won’t accidentally squeeze it when startled or scared. SMH.
A lot of police use Glocks, which have a trigger safety instead of a manual thumb safety. Super easy to fire in one smooth motion, or twitch, or "response" or whatever.
@@RobertBreckenridge13 Exactly. Had the cop that pulled the trigger while his pistol was aimed fight at my chest from two feet away had had a Glock, I’d have been toast. Instead he had a pistol with an actual switch safety which saved my life because he forgot to disengage the safety when he drew his pistol which he made sure yo let me know he never does.
That’s horrible dude I would’ve been so mad. If he shoots first, identifies threats second, then the entire point of a safety is mute is it not? Unless the point of his safety is to prevent misfires in his holster or something, what’s the point of even engaging the safety in the first place, nah that’s such a disregard for human life
@@masonfason8925 It really all just came down to trigger discipline. I don’t think he consciously meant to squeeze his trigger. He did as a reflex when I startled him. But that’s why trigger discipline is so important.
Well, high IQ doesn't mean intelligent. It just means quicker to grasp things. You can still grasp all the wrong things, just quicker than many other people.
Anyone with an IQ over 150 would immediately ask for a lawyer without hesitation. They're smart enough to know that no matter how smart you are, sitting in that room by yourself is moronic.
These interrogation videos have become my new favorite to listen to at work. So interesting. Good subject to build a channel on. Good job and keep it up!!
What got me was the real drama of it all ... Imagine how hard it must feel to find yourself the next day getting interrogated for beating a friend to death in drunken rage... Absolutely horrendous, I never want to know that feeling.
@@BruhbeChill Let's do something, I send you some of my blood, I tell you to put it on some items (like a knife, your pant etc), then I go on vacation and send an anonymous tip to law enforcements and you have 25 minutes to hide the evidence and what not. You'll never know when it will start, if you will have an alibi, at some point, you receive the package and the police is already 25 minutes away. Then I come back and you tell me how YOUR interrogation went! (also, hopefully I don't die during my vacation because this would turn into a real nightmare for you 😅) What do you say? You get the experience of the interrogation without the risk that goes with it. Fans of this channel get a cool new video, you get the thrill, I get a vacation and it's a victim-less crime, everybody's happy =)
There's an interview on my UA-cam channel with a kid that wanted to do a mass killing at my school who reminds me of this man. The kid in my audio recording also had grandiose ideas about himself - He believed he wasn't any kind of usual suspect and even bragged about how he could bench press 500 pounds (this kid was 120lbs soakingggggg wet). The minds of some people are so intriguing lol The ego is a hell of a thing.
How to handle any police interrogation (hell, this is how you handle ANY police INTERACTION): 1. Don't talk to police. Even if they ask you questions. Even if they give all the evidence in the universe. Just don't talk. Plead the 5th Amendment, specifically designed to give you the right to not have to talk to the police. 2. Ask for a lawyer. Then wait until someone saying they're now your lawyer arrives. You can tell him whatever happened, and have him talk to the police to get a summary. They're required to give the lawyer the info, AND it's illegal for a cop or anyone in this situation to pretend to be a lawyer. If they do that, the entire case (no matter how damning) can be thrown out. If they tell you something like "We'll get to that." then repeatedly ask "No I want my lawyer. I REFUSE to answer anything until I get my lawyer." They will ofcourse keep dancing around and stall, but it's YOUR responsibility to keep asking for your lawyer and say nothing else. 3. This changes in different places, but police can't hold you for longer than a certain time. Even if you're a suspect. IF they haven't formally arrested you (read you your Maranda rights and specifically told you you're under arrest), then you can ask if you can leave. Naturally, they will imply that you're not free to leave, while not specifically saying you're free. You then need to say it in plain English: "I believe I am free to leave, and you're choosing not to confirm or deny that I'm free to leave. So I'm now assuming I am free to leave unless you plainly tell me I'm not free to leave. Answer me now or I will leave." If they don't tell you you're free to leave, then stand up, and if they obstruct you from leaving, then do NOT fight back and create a "resisting arrest" charge that didn't exist. At that point it's clear that you're not free to leave. 4. Do NOT fight the cops. You fight the cops in court, NOT in cuffs. Be a better man and don't choose to act stupid and get these cops to manipulate you. The best course of action is to either work to get your lawyer, or shut the hell up. The cops will use social stigmas to intimidate you in to naturally feeling like you HAVE to talk or say anything, but this is the WORST thing you could do for yourself. Cops are the only people who not only have a monopoly on violence, but also can legally LIE TO YOU and get away with it (in the legal context). There's an entire book called "You have the right to remain innocent" which is written by an ex cop who explains, and provides, examples of people who were totally innocent, but got arrested and put in jail all because they talked, and some of their innocuous and innocent statements were spun against them. THAT is what police interrogators can use against you. So...shouldn't it make sense you give them NO ammo and instead just shut the HELL UP and NEVER talk to them?
I've always wondered about this, so if someone actually commits a crime do they tell their lawyer the truth about what happened? And that lawyer still defends them and helps them avoid charges?
Man this guy reminds me of a guy I used to work with when I was a teenager 😊working pot wash in a restaurant. He was in his 40’s (also working potwash for minimum wage) and would consistently tell me how smart he was and how he had a genius IQ but was evidently just insecure and slightly delusional.
A few things, a high IQ does not necessarily translate to seeming intelligence in all fields. (Movies constantly get this wrong, where the 'genius' character is able to learn a new field overnight or similar.) It is not uncommon for an extremely high IQ person to struggle with "common sense". Further, no matter how intelligent a person is, they do not have the same depth of experience that will be on the other side of the table. There's that fantastic quote from the "Don't Talk to the Police" video from the detective. A paraphrase being that you're being interviewed for the first, second or even third time, but he's done hundreds if not thousands of interviews; He's better at it than you.
Yes a mistake alot of people make is treating gifted intelligence kids with way too high of standards, people see a very smart kid and forget that their judgment and emotionality can still be very child like and normal .
One thing I’ve seen after watching a bunch of trials; in the interrogation they don’t need you to confess, they just need you to tell lies that they can prove are lies with evidence you don’t know they have.
@@ryanstanton5832 No I'm from the UK & we ask for a lawyer then speak to the police with the lawyer present, who advises you along the way, or a suspect can just say "No comment" throughout the interrogation then..
Yes, this is why you reserve youe right to remain silent and never say anything without a lawyer present. Maintaining your rights is never an admission of guilt
Just the fact that he's sitting in this room talking to these officers trying to outsmart them rather than simply asking for a lawyer makes him guilty in my book automatically. His rationale is he can outsmart these two officers and avoid even being implicated. He thinks he's going to walk away easy. Dunning-Kruger is strong with this one.
The detective guy in this interrogation, is one of the best I have seen💯 there’s not many that have the intelligence to make you look dumb in a polite way😂 it takes not only talent, but serious control over one’s emotions. Incredible to watch.
Yeah, the detective has pizazz, but he failed to accomplish what he entered the room for... a confession. Killer still faced justice in the end and that's good. Alas, the interrogation was just a waste of time for the three of them.
I must admit, 2 groups of tweakers meeting up at 3:40 am to rob each other is pretty entertaining to me. Obviously, someone losing their life for nonsense like this is heart wrenching, but if it is going to happen, A guy like this being put in jail is a good outcome.
Anyone who claims to have a high IQ, immediately outs themselves as a liar. NOBODY with an actual high IQ, would know that it's not a good idea to make such claims in the first place.
That's like being the smartest kid on the short bus, or saying you don't have a drinking problem because you know someone worse. This guy is no standard to judge skill by.
The part that's the most scary is that this guy reminds me exactly of my next door neighbor. Everything about the tactics he uses to the situation itself is completely spot-on. I just wish I didn't have to do so much damn work to incriminate him. The guy was my mailman and used my first and last name from my mailbox to stalk me online, harass me about online information, and then blackmail me saying that he was going to slander my name to my landlord in order to get him not to extend my lease (and brother housing is extremely tight around here), and threatened me with gun violence if I reported them for what he did. The guy beat on my door in the middle of the night on a work night trying to get me to come out and then started telling my neighbors about the type of mail I was getting while he was wasted. Worse off is then after I reported him to the post office, he tried to get a restraining order against me, posted a whole bunch of lies and bogus crap in the restraining order, and then made the same vague implications of shooting me in the courtroom. Forgot to mention he also lied to federal investigators saying that I was stalking/intimidating him while he was in his mail carrier? The dude would literally idle in my driveway for 10 to 15 minutes at a time while delivering his mail.
His first mistake was that he opened up his mouth and spoke words. His second mistake is that he thinks he is smarter than every one else. Third, he isnt smart enough to get away with anything let alone murder. Smh
"You keep using that word, I do not think it means what you think it means." I think the word he probably meant to use was "Vocabulary" when he became offended that the detective was explaining what words mean. The word "Vernacular" actually refers to a subset of a spoken language, kinda like a local slang or lingo. The irony here is that he will become accustomed to several new vernaculars from the various types of prisoners he's gonna live with.
He couldve tried to use word “vernacular” as in police terminology because hes talked to cops more times than my whole family tree. Thing with these “smart” people is they try to use big words which end up sounding dumb af. You can tell someones smart from the way they talk, not from the words they use.
Well, if totally stonewalling police in a serious interrogation and ending up assuring you're going to spend the rest of the life in prison is smart, then David Wright's intelligence is beyond genius. Well done, sir, _brilliant!_
The real smart people are interviews we will never see. They were discounted as a suspect and thus the interview will never be seen as important and shared
This is untrue, there are several factors involved in the succeed or failure of any action ever done, wisdom and intelligence only play a part, there are some things wich can't be controlled. In this case obviously he wasn't smart nor knowledgeable, but there are other cases in wich suspects get caught but stil make perfect interrogatories unlike this guy.
Oh I thought you were gonna show us an empty room for 20 minutes, as a 200 IQ killer would not have been caught. Edit: The guy was actually doing pretty good other than not asking for a lawyer, or fight for his freedom. Like it was his last ditch effort to tell the detectives. I'm not a liar, wehhhhh
There was a killer who was a member of MENSA, he threw a murder mystery party, and killed someone using the same methods. It was really difficult to catch him. Basically had an undercover agent live with him for a few months to just get a break in the case. I don't think they were 200+ but I think mensa requires a minimum of 160 to join.
A claim of having a high IQ and sitting in an interrogation room speaking to police without requesting an attorney is oxymoronic.
About a murder beef too...😬🤦♂️
Yes, and really, why would anyone tell the police what type of mind they have ?
Especially not any hint of "by the way I am more clever than you, or your profession."
Yet here I am...
@@sam1else274 "An oxymoron is a self-contradicting word or group of words". So "military intelligence" is an oxymoron, "jumbo shrimp" is an oxymoron, "Anne Frank's drum kit" is an oxymoron, etc. And this criminal definitely puts the "moron" in "oxymoron".
@@goombapizza6335 how is military intelligence an oxymoron? Is that particular grouping of words describing some shitty stereotype? What the fuck is military intelligence. If the military was ran by a bunch of dumbos the world would look quite differently. What ?!?!
Emphasis on the “moron”
Remember guys, keep talking, never ask for a lawyer! You got this! Keep giving us content. Thank you
Thanks! I'll remember that the next time I kill someone. I keep accidentally calling a lawyer and depriving people of content and enjoyment. My bad.. :(
@@rgs_goat-xb7wp as long as you don’t call them next time
😂
"this is your chance!"
We all want our 15mins, well with the way things are now 5mins. Thank you sir for abandoning your right to a lawyer for that 5mins.
He’s so smart that he talked about his crime on Facebook messenger. Genius!
Brilliant!
Cheers 🥂
Smart people don't use facebook at all.
If he had been smart, he wouldn’t have uttered a word to the police.
What a 400 IQ killer looks like
The fact he’s sitting in the interrogation room with them means he wasn’t intelligent enough to get away with it
Yup! That’s exactly what I said
They rarely are.
He's basically beans on toast
I’ve never met someone that says they’re a genius and actually is.
That’s because of the dunning-Kruger effect im pretty sure. Most actual geniuses and intelligent people know enough to know they don’t know alot and thus are very hesitant to say they are intelligent. Dumb people are the opposite, and love to show off their “immense” intellect. Its really ironic.
Yeah, my ex girlfriend went on daily about how her mom and her therapist say she's actually a genius. Yet I'd constantly witness her try to handle day to day things and just fail lol.
😀. Well put
One of the smartest kids I know has autism and Asperger's and is usually the smartest kid in the room but you also wouldn't believe all of the dumb shyt he does. I think he's too smart for his own good. He's a CNC programmer at the age of 22 and we all ask ourselves how someone so smart can be so fkin dumb. So I know this dude isn't as smart as he thinks he is.
I've got a buddy know knows he's an idiot, although he works in I.T., and says it all the time. I don't know how many sentences start off with, guess what I did? You know I'm an idiot so... That's honesty for ya.
Am I under arrest? No? Ok I’m out.
Am I under arrest? Yes? I won’t talk till I have a lawyer. /silence
It’s not hard.
This is the way.
Interrogators will go on and on asking the same retarded questions over and over again and lie to your face until they hear what they want to hear. They are scum and don't care about solving the actual crime. They want some bullshit ass confession from the first person who is weak enough to break down under pressure so they can lock somebody up and fulfill their fucking quota.
Don't talk to fucking pigs. Just don't.
Gimme a coke and send me back to my cell --Jeff, the actual genius.
@@MrVovansim amen
Don't talk and ask for a lawyer, even if you aren't under arrest. Cops can't lie about status, but do anyways.
If the detectives say to you “I don’t think you’re a stone cold killer…. maybe it was an accident” lmao you’re screwed 😩😂
😂 At this point in time, I seriously think that I'd spontaneously laugh out loud hearing that line!
I wouldn't be able to stop it from happening. ..which would make me look guilty AF!
Right. They ALWAYS say that. There must be an interrogation script..
or "I think you really are a good guy"
@@thrillwillent i believe it's a tactic that gives the person the feeling that they can kinda lessen the blow of the charge by agreeing that they did do it but it was accidental. Kinda dumb but I guess in that kinda situation, ANY way to try to get out of the crime feels like an option.
@@jamisthebest123 Exactly. That’s exactly why they say that. Then they always claim that if you tell the truth that they can help you when in actuality they can’t. Only the D.A. & Judge can!..
Having the video start with him mixing up vernacular and vocabulary was a really nice touch.
he didnt mix those words up. he intended to use vernacular and used it correctly.
@@serzel9134 care to explain?
@@maxim_mlThis is a total stretch....but maybe he views "exculpatory" as a word used primarily by law enforcement and is thus referring to police vernacular...?
@@maxim_ml vernacular means ordinary language. the language common people speaks. He is trying to say there is no need for police officer to explain what "exculpatory" means because he already knows.
@@serzel9134 no, no he didn't lol he should've use "vocabulary" in his context .. "my vocabulary is very good" .. Why? Because he claims that he is intelligent enough to understand what "exculpatory" means. However, he wasn't intelligent enough to understand that "vernacular" means "dialect spoken by the ordinary people in a particular country or region", which obviously doesn't fit in the same context.
His intentions and what he should've said are different.
33 years old, 35 misdemeanors, arson, and burglary! David sure has an IQ of 200.
20 actually
😂
😭🤣😭🤣
You can have a tested high IQ but it does not automatically make you rich and successful. If you have some extreme personality disorders, grow up in an abusive household or around petty criminals your whole childhood, you're bound to follow in the footsteps of those other people. The environment in which we grow in is very important factor as to where your life leads. Are you aware that psychopathic and sociopathic serial killers also have high IQ's? It takes intelligence and charisma to persuade your victims AND to be able to repeat the killings multiple times over. The smartest of killers hover around 130-170IQ.
High intelligence is often not a blessing, many see it as a curse more than anything. Being simple with high tolerance for monotone existence is far more applicable for modern society that needs its cogs to run its industrial machinery.
That is absolutely ridiculous logic. I am a member of Mensa and have been since 2013 and have been tested twice by then one scoring an IQ of 153 And then on the second one which I took to see if I could get any higher I scored a bit lower at 151 So I decided to leave it there. I'm 35 now and as of June 18th of last year I'm also 10 years clean from fentanyl addiction which was done to me by a corrupt doctor who put me on medications that I didn't understand at the age of about 22. I was never a drug user before that and I spiraled out of control quite quickly. I did some things I'm not proud of too of course feel my addiction in moments where I wasn't able to acquire anything for quite a few days and I was charged with 27 felonies. It's the first and only time I've ever been in trouble. Hell I haven't even had a moving infraction or speeding ticket or even been pulled over for that matter for 15 or 16 years at this point.
Committing those crimes has zero to do with The adequacy of my IQ. Call that being sad I know that people tend to hear that somebody has an IQ of 140 and things that they're geniuses which they are in that anything over that is simply genius but that's not the case and often confused or conflated. Just as there's a big difference between an individual who possesses an IQ of 140 and an individual who possesses an IQ of 110 there's also a significant difference between an individual at 170 and 140 and 200 and 170. Sure I Have a higher base intellect than 99.3% of the population if I remember correctly but somebody who possesses an IQ of 180 or 200 comparative to me is Godlike.
IQ says how fast you can solve problems and adapt to new situation, it says nothing about your ability or inability to commit crimes. Also, if he's a drug user, then his mental abilities might have decreased quite a bit since he had taken the last IQ test.
My favorite cop line is "We're just trying to give you an opportunity." It sounds so friendly and helpful. When really they want you to help them put you in prison.
I started watching interrogation videos back with the Chris Watts case. Even back then I would cringe at some of the comments the detectives use and just as a casual viewer I could spot a lot of the tricks and tactics the interrogators use and I am of average intelligence or just below. So if somebody of my limited capacity can see them working the person over why can't the person thats being interviewed see it? Its bizarre ... Or is it one of those things thats easy to notice when you're sat at home but completely different when you're in a tiny interview room feeling the pressure
@@laurarules3642 On one hand it's lack of knowledge. If you've never seen an interrogation before and are completely ignorant to the dishonest tactics cops use, it's very easy to see how someone could fall for their tricks. Especially if you were raised to believe that cops are the good guys. On the other hand, even if you know the tactics, when it's the rest of your life on the line, the impulse to try and avoid arrest and talk your way out of it seems to be very strong. That's why it's so important to be aware of all of this before you ever find yourself sitting across from a detective in an interrogation room and know that asking for a lawyer is the ONLY right move whether or not you are innocent.
@@laurarules3642 it's also you are watching from the a third person view in a non stressful situation. Much harder to pick up once your heart rate goes up, tho yea the questions are simple and repetitive on purpose, to get any type of rise out of someone.
“Hang tight” is my all time favorite because they know they messed up when that is said 😂😂
Giving you an opportunity to condemn yourself and save them some work.
The fact that he said he has a good "vernacular" when he meant "vocabulary" is wonderfully ironic
i mean it seems you dont know what vernacular means lololol what a buffon
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
So true! I'm surprised nobody else has caught that.😂😂
Vernacular - the language or dialect spoken by the ordinary people in a particular country or region.
So great, I love when ppl use a word they think makes them sounds smart, and it's the wrong word
Telling "he should put himself around better people" while being a murderer that's talking about his friend is actually extremely ironic ngl we can clearly all understand why the detective started laughing 😂
He is such a genius that the detective outsmarted him multiple times. Lol
Detective had a 201 IQ haha
Well, it's the cops job which the guy being questioned has no real experience with. I wouldn't say the cop is smarter. All of us could probably outsmart people like Elon Musk in many things he has no experience in, but doesn't mean we're smarter overall.
IQ means little of it's not wielded well. The narrator mentioned "narcissism," which is a weakness they exploited. I've interacted with some incredibly intelligent people who were so obvious in their strategies and didn't work to hide their shifts in strategies. I'm not a psychologist, so I tend to just wonder at how little self-awareness they have.
@@ambermartin3961 Everyone is a narcissist to me or has intentions. I don't think anyone is really that good. Some but most have serious issues and probably shouldn't be talking shit about others and calling them anything.
@Eric Bogar correct in that the narcissists think they are but aren't really that good. That's why they can be outwitted by those who may have lower IQ but are trained to recognize and work with those who have manipulative or self-preserving traits.
Holy fuck, this detective belongs on a TV show, his lines are delivered perfectly.
"Did I get you there? Feels like I got you there. Not even a bit of a smile?"
i could watch all his interrogations i swear
😂😂😂
He is on a TV show. U tube 😂
“I didn’t get you on that one? I feel like I got you on that one.” Perfect line delivery, like it came out of an episode of Seinfeld. It carries a similar vernacular, and vocabulary.
This guy must now quickly discern how he could be useful to the White Supremacist gang he’ll seek to join in prison. Gangs don’t just ask people to raise their hand to join, and then appoint them to a leadership position. Gang leaders aren’t stupid. You have to be smart to control criminals. Who’s better at it than other criminals?
I paused the video when the detective was talking about the sympathetic reflex. This detective has incredible skills, when the killer said that's just for cops to cover their asses, immediately the detective brings it back and shuts the guy up. I am very impressed.
Very impressed with this detective. He was laser focused and inescapable. The suspect only thought he was smart because he always hung out with idiots who ultimately claimed him as one of their own.
This is truth in many different ways
Yeah the 200 IQ guy in the room was definitely the detective.
@@geometricart7851exactly!
He hung out with people who thought very high of themselves and looked down upon normal people
id love to know how this dude was “impressive” if i were in that room id literally just start pissing on his his fuckin voice is annoying and he just seems pretty fucked to be around
David was allowed to get away with crimes since he was 12. The prosecutors and judges who let him go some 38 times must be held accountable,
100000%. Judges are JUST as much to blame as the criminals, if not worse, given their power. The only people who can afford to become judges are almost exclusively people who grew up with rich parents in affluent neighborhoods where they never experience the REALITY (not transcript) of crime. I'm not saying dumb jo-schmo's should be judges, but wayyy too many judges are letting a lack of life experience dictate sentencing, which only affects the middle and lower classes.
We need a system to hold these judges accountable, and if shaming is not enough, we need punishment. They are legally capable of harsher and safer sentencing, but they CHOOSE to let criminals go until they KILL people.
Do you need permission?
no. the system that made him a worse criminal every time is whst must be held accountable. the US prison system does nothing to end crime, it encoursges it. make no mistake, it’s a for profit million dollar business. like every study ever has proven that short sentences that focus on rehabilitation work endlessly better than long sentences focusing on punishment. not only that, but your system creates worse people than it takes in. there’s so many theories behind it and studies that prove it, but one theory i’d like to mention is the self-fulfilling prophecy and one study is the standford prison experiment. normal people were given roles as criminals and guards in a prison, and they started becoming them. the experiment had to be ended prematurely because of the violence and mental suffering. criminals are made. almost all crime except crimes of passion are caused or atleast affectef by socioeconomic conditions. the cycle is started by socio-economic conditions and continued by prison. i recommend reading up on psychology, really gives you a different perspective.
YT priv
It's about race. @@kaio37k
I love how the detective said he didn’t call him a liar, then called him a liar 😂😂😂
police aren't very smart, that's by design. But it's easy to catch someone in a lie when you already know exactly what happened.
That was an Epic bruising!😂
He's like look I didn't call you a bitch, bitch!
He’s no Jeff. Jeff is a legend
Jeff is awesome, I applaud him. Hopefully he's still alive.
The legend!
True! Jeff is the man! Love that he got his life together 💪
@Hasty Hill Farm and 4x4 He still posts videos on his channel and he appears to doing well!!! (Just my opinion and observation)
@@hastyhillfarmand4x480 I hope he's enjoying a soda lol
He's so good at coming up with wacky stories he never considered that a normal person wouldn't need 10 explanations for every detail
so what would a normal person do? Just imagine you are there and you for some reason do not want to get a lawyer. Someone who looks similar to you just stole your cellphone and did somehing, they show you a video where there is someone who look similar to you a nd they say it is you. I think it is normal to say no it is not me only someone similar and when they told you your cell phone was there then you say it was stolen.
@@jozkomrkvicka7607 Theres tons of evidence against him, which obviously wouldnt exist, if he were innocent.
So a normal person WOULD actually get a lawyer. Wouldve reported their phone missing and probably also told other people that this happened, which should be something significant in most peoples lives. Also wouldnt they lie to the police, since if everything is layed out clearly, theres no way youd get convicted for something there is literally no proof you did.
It's the 150 IQ, I'm telling you.
@MyCell91 no one reports a phone missing, unless they have insurance. Which 9/10 people dont.
@@baghousetechnician9815as a lawyer. I will always recommend to report amythint you lose that can back track to you anytime. It protrects you from having bad time because justic system need faces, not guilty people.
imagine claiming you have a high IQ in the interrogation room after deciding to participate in a drug deal/robbery 🤦🏼♀️
plenty of criminals are smart...
@@changedmynamebcyallwouldnt..Intelligence includes being able to make good decisions, not just knowing facts. Going to a drug deal is not a good decision. He is not smart.
Calling someone a liar when they're lying is actually respect for reality.
realest comment i ever seen
That’s what we do with Biden
@@tomdoran2447 Pointless reply
@@Preohhh so self-deprecating.
and telling stupid lies to someone expecting them to believe it is as the same as calling them an idiot. don't be surprised if they respond accordingly.
A true sign of intelligence is humility. The more you know, the more you know you dont know.
Yup its why they say the more you know the less you know.
This is called the Dunning-Kruger Effect and I love watching it unfold.
I think that was Aristotle who said that?
Not 100%,but was one of the smartest of his time for sure.
100%
@susanivy3619Its not the more you know the less you want to know that makes you smart, in fact that is laziness in the search for knowledge.
The saying is "The more you know, the more you dont know" because as you learn more, you learn the depths and nuances of which you could have never known without delving deeper.
I don't think genius status is granted if you could not interpret this correctly, also people who call themselves "genius" or "smart" tend to be the most ignorant, just saying so you know how the majority of people perceive you.
Now we all know exactly how to get under the skin of a narcissist. Use a word, then tell them what it means.
That's not what narcissism is bruv
@@SireneKalypso hes implying doing so is a blow to their fragile ego
Perfectly put!
"I'm being condescending, which means talking down to you."
@@SireneKalypso I think you need to read it closely bruv
Killing people and going to prison is definitely a sign of high IQ.
IQ of 20 maybe
200 had to be a typo as this "genius" never asked for a lawyer 😆
He's probably determining his own IQ by the old saying, "You learn from your mistakes". He figures he learned something from every 'mistake' that he made, and given the amount of mistakes he made... He learned enough to become a genius - or something like that. 🤣🤣🤣
I see, you don't go around the internet as much. Keep it that way.
@@eldie3d hahaha
one thing i dont understand in these videos. i see people in comments defending criminals saying" why not ask for a lawyer"! why would anyone want a killer/criminal to get a lawyer to get away with crime? would someone explain that to me please?
@@annakessler9372 cause nobody likes to see stupid ppl be stupid.
He did pretty good keeping his body language in check. I will give him credit for that.
Yeah, everything except his mouth lol
@@MathWithMozart lol was just about to say who needs body language when he's not stopped talkung- he's a complete fool... Lawyer up ALWAYS !!
i noticed his fingers flick when he tells a lie at least at some points
Apart from the twitchy hands, rigid body posture and staring at the interviewers. Apart from that, yeah, great job.
Body language doesnt mean anything, people can act nervous while being totally innocent and calm while completely guilty. Body language is inadmissible in court and there is no specific way that body language affects everyone: someone with ADHD will be much more likely to shake or look around or fidget for example.
Yet another good reason to obey the law, prisons are full of people like Dave here. It's not so much the danger they may pose, but you have to listen to them, endlessly.
Agreed. If I was arrested and sent to prison for say, a few days for contempt of court, I'd be right back in front of the judge with charges of murder for killing a cell mate that wouldn't shut up.
No. It is the danger they impose. They kill other inmates and do all sorts of messed up stuff. Biggest reason to stay out because there's a lot of psychopaths in there
yes one word in particular you get really tired of hearing is fuck because it is fuckin this and fuckin that literally every other word you hear is fuckin and then you start talking like that too. It's horrible.
@@williamrainville5794 .Yes, hell is place where you're stuck in an old VHS tape of Scarface that's rewound each fuckin day for eternity.
Yeah he should be jailed just on the basis of being a smart Alec!!
It is really easy to underestimate other people if you are "smart" (according to a IQ test).
If he is smart, he should have asked for a lawyer.
Incidentally, according to neuroscience, the cognitive process of intelligence, can’t necessarily function in the interest of general survival, unless guided by balanced levels of normal emotion. Emotion guides intelligence to a relavant sector of the potential decision field and adds perspective to the relative levels of importance of different details and activities. It might be fine for example to sit down and spend a lot of time finding the absolutely optimal way out of a tricky situation, but not if the situation is a lion charging you. Intelligence itself does not necessarily factor in a weighted hierarchy of relative importance. This explains why some people whose emotional lives may be skewed, abnormal or stunted will still come off strange in conversation regardless of their high IQ. There are for example things that a normal, empathetic person would respond to, in an emotionally, relationally, situationally intelligent way which an intelligent but stunted person would treat as an cool equation, not factoring in things obvious and normal to others with a broader sensibility.
If he was smart, he wouldn't have set up a robbery in a public place with cameras to begin with.
@@antoinelachapelle3405 There is a certain inherent mental handicap in the grandiose sense of self 😁
I have tested at a fairly high IQ and consider myself a relatively intelligent person. I don't disagree with your statement, but I find with myself that I give people too much credit rather than underestimate them.
@@johnspartan3405 My guess is that’s actually the more likely scenario and the other stuff has more to do with personality type …
Contrary to what the cop says around 14:35, innocent people actually do tend to claim their innocence. The problem with it is that guilty people do the same. Even though in this case the person was guilty, this tactic is one that is used many times in false or coerced confessions. Never let a police officer confuse or twist your words if you really are innocent, and NEVER admit to anything you didn't do or that they aren't arresting you for. Always protest your innocence and ALWAYS call for an attorney.
did you want this guy arrested, yes or no? he wasn't talking to an innocent person. stop trying to act like you have an iota of experience with any of this
@@toanotherplace Do you know how to read? I clearly said "in this case the person was guilty". I was referring to innocent people who falsely confess.
@@toanotherplacetf he's saying this tactic is misused to convict innocent people lol don't get it all twisted
@@KingoftheJiangl he's insulting the man putting a murderer away wtf is wrong with you
calm down grandma who cares
Wow the male detective really hit it out of the park on this one. The suspect couldn't help but defend his lies by divulging useful information, and from there he just kept looking worse and worse coming up with new reasons to explain why he didn't give up that information earlier.
Yup, it's like he found a tiny little lose thread and unraveled his whole defense.
What useful information did he divulge? How did they unravel his defense?
@@lief3414 Nada. People are guilty until proven innocent. I have been accused of several things including r%ping my ex and selling drugs however because I'm autistic, have a slight stutter and have social anxiety so I'm constantly in flight or fight mode so no one believed me until several people came to my defense.
My life could literally have been ruined (and to some extent has) because people lied and wanted to see me fail and I cant speak properly.
@@lief3414Watch the video
David single-handedly outsmarted the detective so good, he got sent to jail. take that detective!
Shout out to this detective for finding the right mental path through all this minefield of BS
It's these people's job to crack people. He cracked him like a pro though.
From the very start, I would have invoked my 5th Amendment right to remain vernacularless!!! 🤣🤣🤣
YES
Right? No vernacular, No Vocabulary, No Syntax, No Verbiage......Nada.
That's what a smart person would have done.
Facts
😂😂😂😂😂😂
Classic case of: if you’re the smartest person in the room, time to find a new room.
He definitely found a new room, all right and a new roommate😅
@@rockybullshite927 good point, maybe he’ll be able to share some of his vast knowledge and extensive vocabulary with his new “roommate” 🤣🤣🤣
@@tifa4594 don't play with that man's vernacular, he doesn't let that s*** ride..😬💀
@@rockybullshite927 well that makes perfect sense. Someone messed with his vernacular, 5 days out of prison and just couldn’t let that slide, good for him for standing up for his beliefs. Hard to find these days.
Dude got caught for every crime he ever committed and thinks he’s a genius! That ending was comedy 😂😂😂‼️
Doing crimes like this make you expendable.
Another stable genius with the best words getting locked up over a narcissistic ego.
Don't you hate it when you go to rob someone and find out they are trying to rob you?
Im ngl i would probably do the same thing he did but not being that dumb if someone tries it n pepperspray my boah
Hosea and Dutch be like
YES.
that happened to me before, me and the other person ended up having a good laugh about it and then we planned to go rob someone else together and became friends.
Please keep these up, they're so well put together & entertaining.
The officer did an excellent job, impressive tactics to use when dealing with that type of personality disorder, he was able to seem genuinely respectful, and simultaneously just enough condescending to challenge the narcissists ego-to the point where the suspect had to struggle to not completely blow his weak attempt at having composure. The suspect is that guy who thinks they have a 200 IQ” …Because they surround themselves with people who don’t know or use words like “vernacular” in order to create situations where he is always the smartest crack head in the group.
They?
"Smartest crackhead in the group." I like that.
Honestly judging by his speech and how he kept up with the detective he seemed smart enough to me, Idk. Maybe I'm stupid 😂
Obviously the biggest mistake was not shutting up tho ofc
"create situations where he is always the smartest crack head in the group" lol nice 1 m8
What in this video gives you enough information to call this guy a narcissist other than the narrator stating that? Therapist spend a significant amount of time analyzing people before they make such assessments. It seems to me that a narcissist is nothing more than a person who over estimates their value in the eyes of others. We call that confidence
He claimed to have a high IQ, he does not.
Two very strong interrogators. Impressively work as a team, too.
the other one was absolutely useless
“Impressively work” come on. English is NOT that hard.
@@Lurkspur (they) impressively work.
No he is just dumb
good cop bad cop
Sadly, he actually reminds me of my narcissistic mom. No matter what, there can never be any responsibility accepted; not even for a lie 2 seconds ago.
Narcissists all have very similar traits. They make it hard for people around them to love them sometimes. Hopefully though, your mom has a good heart deep down. Sometimes, knowing that is enough for you to overlook a person’s flaws.
@@smellybearc7411people like that use it to their advantage. There is a short honeymoon phase and then back to the cycle. You gotta cut out the rot
narcissists don't have a good heart deep down, it's a fools errand to even hope, let alone search for one. And it's a good thing they make it so hard to love them, because you shouldn't even try to! They are toxic people that are only gonna drag everyone they can through their hell!
The only correct way to deal with narcissists is to keep them away from yourself as good as you can, even if they're family members!
Stay safe!
I hope you are ok. 😮
@@onthego22 lots of therapy, but getting there!
So smart that he doesn't know to lawyer up, fricken genius
Fricken piss off ricky, I’m gonna go tell Lahey
the world works in mysterious ways, its not always A to B is right or everything has to go the way it is
With a record like his, how would you not have figured out by now to not talk and get a lawyer..
The more confident and vocal someone is about their intelligence, the less intelligent they probably actually are.
I can vouch cuz I usually try to make it seem like I’m the most ignorant person in the room. Keeps the spotlight off me
I can confirm because I kinda have an arrogance issue and usually get outsmarted in ways that humiliate me ruthlessly.
By the way, imagine 2 onions, heck, imagine 3 onions.
@@erikeriks wow. That was super insightful. Props
This detective is top tier … he doesn’t spew any bs … just tells it like it is … strings the cords of morality
Top tier and leos don't belong in the same sentence
Right? He deserves his own reality show where he goes around being a detective. Would love to watch it. I thought the woman did a great job too, way better than I could do. I would be too direct and not manipulative enough. Who knows though, it seems like it would be a fun job.
In all fairness he has a slam dunk case with tons of evidence, statements etc lol. He didn't need to maneuver etc because all the facts have been laid out.
He spews BS, like at 14:25
...and narcissists HATE seeing someone's moral compass on display because it provides them with evidence of the lack of their own.
Yeah bro what a genius literally murdered someone in view of multiple cameras. Truly one of the great intellectuals of our time
It’s so satisfying to see criminals get caught. This interrogator is incredibly good at his job.
I agree only when it's violent predators! When it's nonviolent petty stuff I just feel like it's a complete waste of my tax dollars. But these violent a-holes are fun to watch squirm I agree!
The interrogation had so much evidence involved a monkey could've made this guy crack
@@ryanboutr7756 You completely missed the point. Have another Busch Light can.
@@thegodofpez you're bad at shit talking
the detective passed his intimidation check with the “your girlfriend’s going to be stupid enough to give us a fake alibi and she’s gonna get an accomplice charge” god damn that was hard
Would've broke me instantly with that line, assuming I was actually guilty.
Honestly, it also might've broke me even if I was innocent...
You really sat here and quoted the detective and that’s not what he said 🤣🤣
@@taylord7261 not verbatim, but he did ma|
@@ASN_Radio Alt code Alt +75 creates a capital "K" and Alt +107 creates a lowercase "k"
@@ThomasHaxley not sure what that means. I'm on a chromebook. K is a somewhat common letter though, so I started using copy/paste from other places.
Never ever talk to the police, without your lawyer
That’s how you got busted? 😂😂
Yet the narrator by the end implies that he partly got the maximum penalty for not cooperating with the police, like that's the correct thing to do. Bs.
Never commit Crimes!!!
Then you won't have to worry about getting a lawyer and paying them to act like their helping you but in the end your still phucked because you committed the crime. And if not your still phucked because it cost Money,time, freedom.
Never answer questions from Police…. Guilty or innocent.
Why is there always this comment ?
This detective is DAMN good at what he does. So chill. He tried so many times to make it as easy as possible. Like bruh it's checkmate let's end this lol
To make a conviction as likely as possible you mean. Lol. Actually hes trying to make his job and the dA's etc as easy as possible.
To be honest I’m not even sure they knew it was him who pulled the trigger. He should have kept quiet
Attack ad-eminem and tu-quoque fallatio, this officer is moronic, you know it, and your arguments got exposed.
@@dannys9074 They didn't. They were pressuring him and hoping he'd either confess to it or tell them who did it. They knew for sure he was involved but probably not how much he was involved with.
Probably beats his wife
I couldn't even understand this interview due to the complex vernacular that this guy has.. astoundingly intelligent to back yourself into corner after corner without your lawyer.
A guy in Texas was accused of a rape/murder. When he provided an airtight alibi, they charged him, too. Both spent 15(?) years in prison, before being exonerated by DNA. The prosecutor decided there was just a third suspect they never caught.
Any investigator that threatens out of hand, to go after an alibi should be fired and investigated.
Texas is dumb -Patrick voice
Would have he been better off if he had not said a single word to the police? What evidence could they possibly have had to charge him Unless he messed up during interrogation?
I was nearly killed by a police officer I startled by him having that “parasympathetic” response but his safety was on which he made sure to tell me how lucky I was because he “always” disengages his safety when he draws his firearm. This cop saying “it happens to police all the times” is just insane. It’s called trigger discipline! Don’t put your finger on the trigger and you won’t accidentally squeeze it when startled or scared. SMH.
A lot of police use Glocks, which have a trigger safety instead of a manual thumb safety. Super easy to fire in one smooth motion, or twitch, or "response" or whatever.
@@RobertBreckenridge13 Exactly. Had the cop that pulled the trigger while his pistol was aimed fight at my chest from two feet away had had a Glock, I’d have been toast. Instead he had a pistol with an actual switch safety which saved my life because he forgot to disengage the safety when he drew his pistol which he made sure yo let me know he never does.
That’s horrible dude I would’ve been so mad. If he shoots first, identifies threats second, then the entire point of a safety is mute is it not? Unless the point of his safety is to prevent misfires in his holster or something, what’s the point of even engaging the safety in the first place, nah that’s such a disregard for human life
@@masonfason8925 It really all just came down to trigger discipline. I don’t think he consciously meant to squeeze his trigger. He did as a reflex when I startled him. But that’s why trigger discipline is so important.
You would think someone with a 150 IQ would know the difference between vernacular and vocabulary 😂
He was saying you don’t need to explain your vocabulary to him. As In he understands what was said
Yeah. Vernacular is using words common to a region. I don't think exculpatory is common to this region. Unless a lot of lawyers live there.
Well, high IQ doesn't mean intelligent. It just means quicker to grasp things. You can still grasp all the wrong things, just quicker than many other people.
The word vernacular works in that instance too, but I agree I think he meant vocabulary
@@skaruts lol. This is good. Could you be considered a genius if everything you happen to know turns out to be wrong?
Anyone with an IQ over 150 would immediately ask for a lawyer without hesitation. They're smart enough to know that no matter how smart you are, sitting in that room by yourself is moronic.
ah yes, just because someone have high IQ they automatically obtain that knowledge, very true words my friend
@@shiinondogewalker2809 who said “automatically”? Bro it’s a UA-cam comment, take a breath and calm down
@@NeonPixels81 my dude, it's a youtube comment, chill a bit please
@@shiinondogewalker2809 speak for yourself
@@NeonPixels81 good job, you solved my riddle
in a matter of seconds he goes from "not being cautious" because of "a referral from someone he trusts" to "distrusting almost everybody"
Wait wait wait, hold up, if he's 33 years old, how does he have felonies from 1999? This dude hit the ground running for sure.
That was in 2020,so hes 37/38 now and that makes sense
This detective is an artist!
"But David is having non of it, and has a plan to outplay the detectives." Us lesser IQ folk would call that asking for a lawyer.
😂😂😂 asap too 🤦🏾♀️🤷🏾♀️😂😂😂
I love the irony of how he says his 'vernacular is very good', when he actually should be saying 'vocabulary' given the context.
These interrogation videos have become my new favorite to listen to at work. So interesting. Good subject to build a channel on. Good job and keep it up!!
I listen on the way to work and going home sometimes feel like I be there
What got me was the real drama of it all ... Imagine how hard it must feel to find yourself the next day getting interrogated for beating a friend to death in drunken rage... Absolutely horrendous, I never want to know that feeling.
@@BruhbeChill Let's do something, I send you some of my blood, I tell you to put it on some items (like a knife, your pant etc), then I go on vacation and send an anonymous tip to law enforcements and you have 25 minutes to hide the evidence and what not. You'll never know when it will start, if you will have an alibi, at some point, you receive the package and the police is already 25 minutes away. Then I come back and you tell me how YOUR interrogation went! (also, hopefully I don't die during my vacation because this would turn into a real nightmare for you 😅) What do you say? You get the experience of the interrogation without the risk that goes with it. Fans of this channel get a cool new video, you get the thrill, I get a vacation and it's a victim-less crime, everybody's happy =)
I'm working graveyard desk job so this helps keeps the brain alert and awake 😂
There's an interview on my UA-cam channel with a kid that wanted to do a mass killing at my school who reminds me of this man. The kid in my audio recording also had grandiose ideas about himself - He believed he wasn't any kind of usual suspect and even bragged about how he could bench press 500 pounds (this kid was 120lbs soakingggggg wet). The minds of some people are so intriguing lol The ego is a hell of a thing.
How to handle any police interrogation (hell, this is how you handle ANY police INTERACTION):
1. Don't talk to police. Even if they ask you questions. Even if they give all the evidence in the universe. Just don't talk. Plead the 5th Amendment, specifically designed to give you the right to not have to talk to the police.
2. Ask for a lawyer. Then wait until someone saying they're now your lawyer arrives. You can tell him whatever happened, and have him talk to the police to get a summary. They're required to give the lawyer the info, AND it's illegal for a cop or anyone in this situation to pretend to be a lawyer. If they do that, the entire case (no matter how damning) can be thrown out. If they tell you something like "We'll get to that." then repeatedly ask "No I want my lawyer. I REFUSE to answer anything until I get my lawyer." They will ofcourse keep dancing around and stall, but it's YOUR responsibility to keep asking for your lawyer and say nothing else.
3. This changes in different places, but police can't hold you for longer than a certain time. Even if you're a suspect. IF they haven't formally arrested you (read you your Maranda rights and specifically told you you're under arrest), then you can ask if you can leave. Naturally, they will imply that you're not free to leave, while not specifically saying you're free. You then need to say it in plain English: "I believe I am free to leave, and you're choosing not to confirm or deny that I'm free to leave. So I'm now assuming I am free to leave unless you plainly tell me I'm not free to leave. Answer me now or I will leave." If they don't tell you you're free to leave, then stand up, and if they obstruct you from leaving, then do NOT fight back and create a "resisting arrest" charge that didn't exist. At that point it's clear that you're not free to leave.
4. Do NOT fight the cops. You fight the cops in court, NOT in cuffs. Be a better man and don't choose to act stupid and get these cops to manipulate you.
The best course of action is to either work to get your lawyer, or shut the hell up. The cops will use social stigmas to intimidate you in to naturally feeling like you HAVE to talk or say anything, but this is the WORST thing you could do for yourself. Cops are the only people who not only have a monopoly on violence, but also can legally LIE TO YOU and get away with it (in the legal context).
There's an entire book called "You have the right to remain innocent" which is written by an ex cop who explains, and provides, examples of people who were totally innocent, but got arrested and put in jail all because they talked, and some of their innocuous and innocent statements were spun against them. THAT is what police interrogators can use against you.
So...shouldn't it make sense you give them NO ammo and instead just shut the HELL UP and NEVER talk to them?
I've always wondered about this, so if someone actually commits a crime do they tell their lawyer the truth about what happened? And that lawyer still defends them and helps them avoid charges?
@@guyincognito.Yes, it doesn't matter if you actually committed the crime. It's the defense attorneys job to prove your innocence
Had no idea John Goodman was a police detective in his spare time, so talented
Nice, Took me 2 seconds after reading your comment
The detective constantly going "Did I getcha there?:D I feel like I gotcha there" after pointing out a lie is priceless lol
playing' the bad cop
He can use his impressive vernacular to describe his long stay in prison
All that fancy talk is going to make him very popular, I'm sure.
@@Tim_the_Enchanter prison story time has never been so riveting
Or to convince his roommates to stay away from his behind 🫢
Impressive vocabulary. He misused the word vernacular, as do most criminals. If he was so smart, he wouldn't even be a suspect.
It makes sense that he didn't ask for an attorney. There's no attorney or any for that matter that's smarter than him.
Man this guy reminds me of a guy I used to work with when I was a teenager 😊working pot wash in a restaurant. He was in his 40’s (also working potwash for minimum wage) and would consistently tell me how smart he was and how he had a genius IQ but was evidently just insecure and slightly delusional.
Most people with a,ut.ism are under-employed
Remember guys, never ask for a lawyer after you murdered someone during your drug deal you made on facebook.
A few things, a high IQ does not necessarily translate to seeming intelligence in all fields. (Movies constantly get this wrong, where the 'genius' character is able to learn a new field overnight or similar.) It is not uncommon for an extremely high IQ person to struggle with "common sense". Further, no matter how intelligent a person is, they do not have the same depth of experience that will be on the other side of the table. There's that fantastic quote from the "Don't Talk to the Police" video from the detective. A paraphrase being that you're being interviewed for the first, second or even third time, but he's done hundreds if not thousands of interviews; He's better at it than you.
IQ means almost nothing.
The only thing a high IQ says about you is that you're really good at taking IQ tests.
Yeah my mate is really smart in terms of knowledge but has like caveman levels of common sense
Yes a mistake alot of people make is treating gifted intelligence kids with way too high of standards, people see a very smart kid and forget that their judgment and emotionality can still be very child like and normal .
@@tac6044 IQ means you pass IQ tests really good.
Best possible defense is to not say a single word.
One thing I’ve seen after watching a bunch of trials; in the interrogation they don’t need you to confess, they just need you to tell lies that they can prove are lies with evidence you don’t know they have.
Facts
That's why it's better to lawyer up
You are talking like you are guilty
@@therealavolpe
@@ryanstanton5832
No I'm from the UK & we ask for a lawyer then speak to the police with the lawyer present, who advises you along the way, or a suspect can just say "No comment" throughout the interrogation then..
Yes, this is why you reserve youe right to remain silent and never say anything without a lawyer present. Maintaining your rights is never an admission of guilt
Just the fact that he's sitting in this room talking to these officers trying to outsmart them rather than simply asking for a lawyer makes him guilty in my book automatically. His rationale is he can outsmart these two officers and avoid even being implicated. He thinks he's going to walk away easy. Dunning-Kruger is strong with this one.
Question: "What should you not do during a police interrogation?"
Answer: "Participate"
I can’t stop picturing the investigator as tucker Carlson
If detective say “I know you’re not a killer” you’re going to jail
The detective guy in this interrogation, is one of the best I have seen💯 there’s not many that have the intelligence to make you look dumb in a polite way😂 it takes not only talent, but serious control over one’s emotions. Incredible to watch.
Come on, this wasn't hard to achieve.
@@markuss4133 Ok big man you probably forget how to tie your shoe laces.
@@JustapErson why the insult? You think this guy didnt look dumb all by his own?
Yeah, the detective has pizazz, but he failed to accomplish what he entered the room for... a confession. Killer still faced justice in the end and that's good. Alas, the interrogation was just a waste of time for the three of them.
@@markuss4133 bro that commenter just did to you what the detective did to the killer how're this dumb. Art imitates life
it’s so nice to hear a real human voice on this.
My dad was a barrister, worked for the State prosecutor and always said, " say nothing ".
I must admit, 2 groups of tweakers meeting up at 3:40 am to rob each other is pretty entertaining to me. Obviously, someone losing their life for nonsense like this is heart wrenching, but if it is going to happen, A guy like this being put in jail is a good outcome.
bunch o' tweakers with empty pockets in the parking lot spraying each other xD
Anyone who claims to have a high IQ, immediately outs themselves as a liar. NOBODY with an actual high IQ, would know that it's not a good idea to make such claims in the first place.
The smartest person in the room is the quietest. They know the smartest thing to do is act dumb
There’s nothing intelligent about allowing an interrogator to question you without an attorney.
These police are so nice to give him an opportunity to explain himself.
this detective is good at what he does...
But nothing brings out a confession like a good ol' ass-kickin'!
@@MrTruckerf Yes, especially false confessions lol
That's like being the smartest kid on the short bus, or saying you don't have a drinking problem because you know someone worse. This guy is no standard to judge skill by.
David: "Stop talking to me like a child!!!"
Cop: "Okay, whatever you say partner"'
He's a conversational genius!!!
"I was with another woman."
"For how long?"
"Not very long."
😂
Does no one request a lawyer? They even tell you at the start
His 200 IQ didn't need it😂
I guess the ones which do request a lawyer dont get a 22 minute interrogation video about them
I'm sure plenty of people do. We just don't get to see those interrogations because they never happened haha
Are you guys actually that dumb? We don't see people asking for a lawyer bc then it wouldn't make a good UA-cam video..
Why show the ones that request a lawyer. We get all the idiots 😊
The part that's the most scary is that this guy reminds me exactly of my next door neighbor. Everything about the tactics he uses to the situation itself is completely spot-on. I just wish I didn't have to do so much damn work to incriminate him. The guy was my mailman and used my first and last name from my mailbox to stalk me online, harass me about online information, and then blackmail me saying that he was going to slander my name to my landlord in order to get him not to extend my lease (and brother housing is extremely tight around here), and threatened me with gun violence if I reported them for what he did. The guy beat on my door in the middle of the night on a work night trying to get me to come out and then started telling my neighbors about the type of mail I was getting while he was wasted. Worse off is then after I reported him to the post office, he tried to get a restraining order against me, posted a whole bunch of lies and bogus crap in the restraining order, and then made the same vague implications of shooting me in the courtroom. Forgot to mention he also lied to federal investigators saying that I was stalking/intimidating him while he was in his mail carrier? The dude would literally idle in my driveway for 10 to 15 minutes at a time while delivering his mail.
You're....a guy, though, right? Was he trying to...have sex with you? I don't get it.
Your neighbor was also your mailman? Why did he get so worked up in the first place?
You need to end his existence
You shouldn’t of had sex with him then.
His first mistake was that he opened up his mouth and spoke words. His second mistake is that he thinks he is smarter than every one else. Third, he isnt smart enough to get away with anything let alone murder. Smh
At 4:00 he throws in black guy as possible suspect. I love how blacks get brought into interrogations when nobody in sight even has a black friend.
He's not smart enough to get away with anything besides his new clothes in jail 😂😂😂
This male interrogator is impressive, quick witted, articulate, concise, logical. Nice to see!
This investigator handled him well imo
"You keep using that word, I do not think it means what you think it means."
I think the word he probably meant to use was "Vocabulary" when he became offended that the detective was explaining what words mean. The word "Vernacular" actually refers to a subset of a spoken language, kinda like a local slang or lingo. The irony here is that he will become accustomed to several new vernaculars from the various types of prisoners he's gonna live with.
Period
He couldve tried to use word “vernacular” as in police terminology because hes talked to cops more times than my whole family tree. Thing with these “smart” people is they try to use big words which end up sounding dumb af. You can tell someones smart from the way they talk, not from the words they use.
@@valterstrumpiks7832 very true
Clearly.
Guy is peak Dunning-Kruger, actually a super dumb person cosplaying as intelligent
True wisdom comes from knowing how little you really know
The criminal with best collection of vernacular I have ever came across
Well, if totally stonewalling police in a serious interrogation and ending up assuring you're going to spend the rest of the life in prison is smart, then David Wright's intelligence is beyond genius. Well done, sir, _brilliant!_
The real smart people are interviews we will never see. They were discounted as a suspect and thus the interview will never be seen as important and shared
He's so smart that he thinks he doesn't need a lawyer
😂😂
When someone has to tell you how smart they are....they aren't.
This guy had more ego than sense
all the countless "criminals" with very high wisdom and intelligence, would never end up in this situation to begin with.
This is untrue, there are several factors involved in the succeed or failure of any action ever done, wisdom and intelligence only play a part, there are some things wich can't be controlled. In this case obviously he wasn't smart nor knowledgeable, but there are other cases in wich suspects get caught but stil make perfect interrogatories unlike this guy.
Your completed wrong. In fact it’s a well known trait of serial killers
Oh I thought you were gonna show us an empty room for 20 minutes, as a 200 IQ killer would not have been caught.
Edit: The guy was actually doing pretty good other than not asking for a lawyer, or fight for his freedom. Like it was his last ditch effort to tell the detectives. I'm not a liar, wehhhhh
He was good? Uh he basically just said he wasn’t at the scene when they had evidence he was
😂😂😂
There was a killer who was a member of MENSA, he threw a murder mystery party, and killed someone using the same methods. It was really difficult to catch him. Basically had an undercover agent live with him for a few months to just get a break in the case. I don't think they were 200+ but I think mensa requires a minimum of 160 to join.
Yea the moment he felt uncomfortable he should had just sayed 'i feel uncomfortable enough talking'.
@@roninsteel 140 I believe which is also considered the treshold for what's considered a 'genius'.