💥Did AJ ARMSTRONG Kill His Parents? Expert Analysis
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- Опубліковано 30 чер 2024
- Did AJ Armstrong Really Kill His Parents? Expert Behavioral Analysis from top body language and behavior specialists reveals key insights into this controversial case. Thank you to our Sponsor, Aura. Click the link for a 2 week FREE trial: aura.com/tbp
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Antonio Armstrong Jr also known as AJ Armstrong is a 24-year-old American man who was convicted of murdering his parents, former NFL players Antonio Armstrong Sr. and Dawn Armstrong, in their Houston home in 2016. He was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole after 40. Year.
Nothing in the broadcasts constitutes legal, medical, financial, or professional advice, nor does any communication on this site create any form of professional, privileged, or confidential relationship. The opinions contained in this publication reflect and represent the views and opinions of each of the individual speakers and are not the views or opinions of anyone else. All statements by the individuals in the broadcast reflect and represent their personal opinion only, based on their years of experience and study in their respective subject matters of experience and education, and, in the case of any opinion voiced in this particular publication, are based solely on the reference materials published therein. The opinions represented are just opinions, and do not intend to represent any factual claims about any specific individual, directly or inferentially, and should be understood as such. Copyright and all rights reserved.
The Behavior Panel comprises the world's top body language and behavior experts: Scott Rouse, Mark Bowden, Chase Hughes, and Greg Hartley. They analyze behavior and body language in videos of public interest. This non-partisan group aims to educate and entertain, focusing on nonverbal communication, deception detection, behavioral analysis, statement analysis, interrogation, and resistance to interrogation. Through careful examination of gestures, expressions, linguistics, and cultural context, they reveal truths and deceptions. The Behavior Panel is prominently featured on The Dr. Phil Show and has its own show on the US TV Network, Merit Street Media.
Chapters:
00:00 AJ Armstrong Body Language Analysis
0:41 Analysis of AJ Armstrong's body language post-conviction and prison adjustment
09:17 Adjusting to new environment after years of isolation
18:40 Detecting behavioral patterns in high-stress situations
27:23 Doubts about innocence due to story inconsistencies
36:49 Behavioral analysis shows changes in communication patterns
45:52 Incidents involving fire and confusion about gasoline at Armstrong home
55:14 Analysis of suspect's demeanor and potential innocence
1:04:37 Analysis of behavior resembling murder suspect tactics
1:14:23 Analysis of response to questions about emotions
1:24:29 Suspect's language implies police evidence planting
1:33:27 Doubts about evidence integrity during tragic event
1:43:43 AJ Armstrong ensures sister's safety after parents' incident
1:53:05 Analysis of alarm system flaws and motion detectors in Armstrong house
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Thank you for doing AJ Armstrong! I asked for it twice! Thanks! ❤
Ditto
The only ads that I don’t ff through are the ones with Chase 😊 🔥🔥
O ooo iii
As Mark Bowden would say, I have no idea who this is.
Me too!😂
Same 😂
Me also😂
😂😂😂😂 ❤
Me neither ..but I can tell guilty as hell !
If he could go back, he would have asked for an attorney? Maybe go back a bit further and not kill your parents, buddy.
@@thereisnoninadria ...and why would he have needed an attorney??
@@lisasimon5498
He wouldn’t need one.
@@thereisnoninadria .... If he hadn't been guilty.
8 year olds PLAY with matches NOT 16 year olds.
I had a crazy friend who always wanted to play with matches when we were 12.
Not 8 but 16 is too old lol
@@veeeds same!!
I believe he did.
Here’s what I found to be so very scary about the true crime episode I watched regarding AJ. The phone company reported AJ’s phone being used for ambient light during the time of the crime. You know when you pick up your phone during the night to make sure you don’t trip over the dog, or crack a toe on furniture? You don’t have to turn the flashlight on, just pick it up for the screen to give a little light! Your phone company can trace it. Crazy, right?
Very scary
👁
Whoa, didn’t know that 👁️ for sure they can watch us if they need to.
I thought he was innocent, but now…I see the lies.
Your parents didn’t “pass away” they were murdered.
The texts from his Mother were revealing.
Endless lying. And she didn’t know why.
He presents with signs of being a psychopath.
The most psychopathic thing about this guy is that he thinks people believe him.
Sees someone in a mask running away and forgets to mention it on the 911 call.
Guilty AF
I knew his parents. They owned the gym I went to. I mostly dealt with his mom, Dawn. She was a nice person. She used to brag on AJ. It’s so sad that he killed them in cold blood in order to be with his GF. He reminds me of Erin Caffey who tried to kill her whole family and burned the house down. Killed her siblings and mom. Dad survived. Same lack of affect. Psychopaths.
They've did an episode on Erin Caffey, it's a beaut.
Hmmm wonder if you really did know them or just commenting on UA-cam
@@Evilunclephilyfn
Hmmmmmmm what difference does it make to you?
@@jessiefrye3045 same question applies to you
Of course he did. He knew he was in trouble with them. No one else except his sister was in the house that night. He tried to blame it on his older 1//2 brother, who had an alibi. He wrote some stupid letter “from the criminals” and left it on the counter. And he admitted to stealing his dad’s gun. Cops were not buying his story the night of the murder. The only reason there’s still publicity is because, from that very night, he played his card. Then his defense team all played their card to the media and, of course,the media wouldn’t touch it. Tragic story of a boy who had 2 parents in the home, who were successful and paid for him to go to private school, and who disciplined him. There’s a thousand or more kids just in Houston who would give anything have parents like that. But he threw it all away bc of his pride and immaturity. Tragic.
After hearing gun shots and seeing a masked man you never check on your parents? This guy is such a bad liar. Playing with guns and fire in the house? No feelings? Pychopath.
On the 911 call he didn’t say he heard gunshots. He said he heard gunshots in his parents’ room. If you’re in one room in a multilevel home and you hear gunshots, are you gonna know where the shots came from?
I haven’t t heard any about this case other than the 911 call and TBP right now. The other things I noticed on the 911 call were his lack of emotion or fear. He also said he has no door on his room. I’m seeing some issues here
I cannot get enough of this team! Went to see them in Vegas for the conference...I love Scott so much as he reminds me of myself, being a strong empath fascinated by psychopathy. Each gentleman has a unique skill set that gives and gives.... Chase provides us with brain science put into layman's terms. His examples and explanations make me think he's a born teacher. Mark is brilliant at spotting meaning in things most people wouldn't. And Greg is the most concise speaker, and can process information so rapidly it makes me jealous...he's direct and can come across as scary to people but his eyes show deep kindness.
This friend, if he was a friend, would have come forward to corroborate his story without needing to be asked. There is no friend.
Exactly
His "friend" could be his current wife
@@Evilunclephilyfn Why wouldn't she come forward to keep him out of jail? 🤔
@@carolynnanctildesign considering they have a child together it's probably him protecting her...she'd get in trouble as she gave a different story to police and on the stand
@@Evilunclephilyfn If he has nothing to hide and his story is true, the one person who'd speak for his truth and freedom would be his wife.
The most surprising part of this video was learning that Greg’s aunt was murdered by her husband.
Same, and the way he casually brought it up while they were talking about something completely different
The BIG GRIN after interviewer queried about "the friend" was very telling.
I believed he was innocent or I should say I wanted him to be.
After his statement about not wanting to have the friend testify, that is such BS, an innocent person would do everything in their power to prove their innocence. Absolutely ridiculous!
Guilty as charged.😢😢😢😢
How many times does A.J mention being 16 at the time of the murders, and specifically says "16 year old kid" in reference to himself. Makes me wonder if he thinks he can excuse his behaviour away as he was "just a kid". He did it with the fire and playing with the gun excuses too.
An innocent man has never been so comfortable with false incarceration, isolation & with the fact that the vanishing perp who killed his parents is still out free!
💯
Love your tangents Scott..don't change, you're great
I watched the bloopers at the end about 10 times...more please fellas :) Have learnt so much from this channel, there is no other group of experts as this anywhere, thanks for the knowledge...and entertainment!!
Love the behaviour panel. My favourite lines fron the panel: -
Mark: "i have no pre knowledge of this case...."
Greg: "excellent display of the grief muscle...."
Scott: "Typical psychopath"
Chase: "Tan daddy" (still dont know what that is? 😂
"Me shooting off g*ns (at 16), was just me being a kid." Wow, when we were growing up as kids (in the 60s/70s), firing off weapons was not part of our extra curricular activities...Times sure have changed...
I distinctly remember many guns around the house growing up in the early-80s. None locked up but we KNEW not to touch them. My Dad made it very clear and we KNEW not to play with them and mind our father. I don’t know what has happened to create such a disconnect between children and their parents in some instances to cause such an egregious lack of respect and discipline. But, to your point, we just didn’t play with guns growing up.
@@22ergie I don't think so, I don't think this is a common occurrence in the youth of today.
@@NicolaMaxwell Wow, all one has to do is watch even LOCAL news over there in the US to see the reality...
@@22ergie I don't watch mainstream media, haven't for ten years. Not starting now.
@@NicolaMaxwell I don't blame you!
One more thing. He calls his parent's murder, "the incident." That is troubling to me. If that had happened to my parents I would call it "the day my parents were murdered!"
also when he said 'when my parents 'passed'' which is more softening language. The guy seems so emotionless, it's freaky
@@barrywalls7175 It's that creepy smile followed by "I can't tell you that Rowan." Side note: I read the murder weapon was left on a table. It happened to have a silencer on it yet A.J. said he heard gunshots. Also there was a note that said something like I've been watching you for a long time. This note was left along side the gun. I'm not buying what AJ is selling..
I think if my parents were murdered I would use the word murdered, not my parents "passed".
He doesn't say my parent's murder he calls it "the incident".
As a paramedic, no two families have reacted the same way after a death, murdered or otherwise. Plus, he's institutionalized now. At 16, he lost his will to fight in the 1st 24 hours of jail. He's heard all the stories of the injustices and how innocent people are forgotten about so "this is how things work so.." he has accepted he's not getting out. He's not mad and knows he has to be compliant. Prisoners must adjust or they die. He's adjusted to his new life, whether he's guilty or not. His mannerisms are proof of that, in my opinion.
Good comment
Thank you for saying this… I get tired of being pounced on in the comments but there’s so much nuance to why he at this point in the interview and his life would be responding the way he did and you highlighted most of them. I would also suggest that he understands the odds that he now has to face and some of his terminology is coming from the fact that he would like one day possibly parole and sacrificed the harder battle of his innocence to hopefully his compliance gaining freedom.
I’ve unfortunately witnessed ones that have been institutionalized and also look like him that react the same way….
I agree. I think the panel are not taking any of this into account. Also, not everyone deals with stress the same way, and not every culture/micro-culture/ethnic group/human deals with events the same way. Someone's personality can change a lot of their behaviour. If he had been vehemently protesting his innocence, the panel would probably say that means he's guilty, too.
It really bothers me how many people in these comments are just freely diagnosing him as a psychopath etc. He was a 16 year old child, and he's adjusted to the fact that he's there, and trying to just exist in this new very corrupt, highly racialised situation.
Interesting, i just went straight to guilty bc he is so calm and friendly thanks
Perfectly said. @@brittmyzone8agarden
He mentioned the murder of his parents as "the incident". Talk about distancing.
Would you want to be close to the memory of your parents being killed?
I feel so sorry for Josh. He didn't deserve the false attention that was focused on him. Given the interviews that the Grandmother gave, it wouldn't surprise me if she came up with the notion to put all the blame on Josh given he wasn't a blood relative to her. IMO, AJ is where he belongs. There is nothing normal about shooting a gun inside a house just for fun. Nor is starting a fire outside your parents bedroom. AJ had two parents that loved him and were trying to steer him in the right direction. Sad that he couldn't see that nor did he appreciate it. Sad that there is no remorse shown for his actions. All JMOO.
Lazarus: gee, it was so long ago.
Armstrong: I was young
I'm not even half way through, but I have to comment on shooting guns in the house - I was just being a normal 16 year old kid. Starting a fire in the house - I was being a goofy kid. Huh? Talk about minimization. These things are not normal by any stretch.
16 year olds playing with matches???? Maybe an 8 year old, but 16?
Even playing with a gun and acting like he didn’t know what guns do at 16 is strange.
Omg!!! Scott “season four, episode seven”…. The look on Chase’s face was priceless!!!
i know, right? yes scott really is that amazing!!!
Why would you not want the only person who was in the room with you to clear your name about the gunshot?? No innocent person would say "nah, i dont want to bring them into it".. I would be BEGGING them to speak on my behalf.
Especially a kid. Kids will do nearly anything to shift the blame to someone else when they get in trouble.
He is trying to show how it's possible he did not do it without denying he did it. The more he speaks, the worse it gets.
Should have just asked him why did you kill your parents
It caught my attention when he described “this freind” as an innocent bystander. Which seems like the unsaid part was he himself was not an innocent bystander. Or he’d say something like, “an innocent bystander like me and look how it worked out for me”
Not wanting to disclose the person who could prove that he wasn’t test firing beforehand is bizarre!
Because he knows that person does not exist
@@Sam-gv6loOr--he knew what AJ intended to do, and so he did not want to bring him into the trail as a witness. Perhaps the guy preferred to remain silent….if he exists….
@@daragreen7295or she... aka his current wife
If you take away the volume, one would have no idea that he was in prison for killing his parents. No emotion whatsoever. Discussing a book or some day in his memory…..nothing to suggest his situation. Psychopath!
An innocent person would be interested in the true killer being found or that the true murderer is walking free. It appears he's not worried about this because he knows the killer is in prison.
Watch how he goes from "just a kid doing kid things" to respectable family father who has to protect his child. Laughable.
Yeah, every 16 year old shoots a gun in the floor all the time 🤔
He never talks about how he did act, let alone what he was feeling.
The way he refers to what someone else in that situation would do makes me think of what you have said about psychopaths trying to do what they think is normal for people, but they can’t know what’s normal-bc they’re not.
There are a lot of things he “will never accept,” but he’s open to the idea his dad had something to do with a prostitution ring?
Hearing a murderer talk about having to protect his wife and his son, from his innocent brother, after he killed his own parents, who were trying to protect their family, is chilling surreal. Also, hearing him talk about his parents blood, with ZERO emotion, chilling.
I'm not saying he's innocent or guilty, just curious.
I have a couple of questions:
1.what if he's undiagnosed autistic? And that's why he doesn't mind being alone, or his stoicism, etc.
2. How do you prove something you didn't do? Wouldn't there be no evidence?
3. Could he have been in shock? Everyone reacts to chaos and death differently, right?
He probably 'froze' emotionally at age 16; that's the age he sounds like as he talks.
I kept drifting off when this guy spoke and waking up when the panel did😂 Took me 4 hours to watch this one!😱😂
Omg, I’ve fallen asleep on this guy two or three times, too!! 😂 then mark or chase wake me up😜
@@teresev1435 😂😂 Least it's not just me!
🤣🤣🤣…🥱😴💤
Fire starting is an indicator of psychopathy in children. 16 is not a little child but I'd like to know if that was a pattern that hasn't been revealed yet.
Great one guys!👊 Now I gotta go chg my shirt...spewed Dr. Pepper all over it when Chase told us about his Nickelback tattoo!😅😆🤣 Love his humor so much!☺️
He sounds like he’s just masking his true bad boy self, Like a playa…At 16 playing with matches, guns. He was just a disaster waiting to happen!
How did he convince someone to marry him and have a baby while being on trial for murder 😕
Exactly; WTH? Wasn’t he incarcerated at 16? How does he have a wife and child; HOW?
I think there are many women to write to imprisoned men and end up being in love with them. I can’t begin to understand how women could can do that-but they do! Conjugal visits???
She's his high school sweetheart. The story is he spent a lot of time with her the weeks _before_ the murders.
He psychologically distances himself playing with and shooting a gun IN the house, but referring to " you hear about kids playing with guns a lot nowadays, but it was just normal thing for me back then". WHAT? Shooting at trees or something might have been trying out a found gun, but shooting Inside the house? Never normal in a home.
Wait, did I miss something? This kid was a father of 2 at 16 years old? I agree with all of you, and I appreciate Scott's foreign language education of what bs stands for. 😂😂😂😂😂
No, he had two mistrials. It took years to convict him. He was out during the trials and married his girlfriend.
You missed alot
Why is it taking so long to get you guys up to 1 million subscribers? I've been here only 2 years, so I would welcome any input.🤷🏽♀️🎭
It's 931 now and it will be 927 tomorrow. All because of the Sabe video. Many get demonetized for even speaking about such creatures. Their existence is not even supposed to be mentioned! A.I knows this and punishes the channel by messing with the sub count.
They lost a lot of viewers because they didn't do a show on the Dr Phil- Trump interview . Made them look like they are Dr Phils puppets.which wasn't a good look. For many their credibility went out the window..
@Yo-xn9od What is it that everyone(in US), makes everything about Trump? Very odd behaviour
@@LaraCross512what is the Sabe video?
@@janet5846 I'm not American. My complaint has nothing to do with the election. I expect a man the calibre of Dr Phil to do a hard hitting interview on any politician . I expect when the fans of tbp ask for a show on the subject over and over again to do their job, Keep their fans happy. Hence they lost support of many fans..
When he says, “I hadn’t touched a gun in forever!” Well, two seconds earlier he said he misfired a gun in his room. Hmmmmm. 😂
Being a goofy kid playing with matches, playing with guns, he's evil. Who does those things at 16, the psychopath.
Exactly. He’s so psychotic that he doesn’t realize that stuff ISN’T normal.
What?? I still played with fireworks and making small booms with it when I was 15-16.. or was it 13-14.. isn’t that normal? It was normal here
I'm bothered by him saying he was just playing around with a gun. How many 16 year old boys just play around with a loaded gun in their house, shoot it, and act like that's no big deal? After all this time, he still doesn't acknowledge the seriousness of firing a loaded weapon in his house and dismisses it as typical behavior of a 16 year old. By all accounts, he was raised in a good home with loving parents. There is no way this guy thought that this behavior was normal, especially not by his mom and dad. I wonder if there were other incidents with him but the parents were just trying to handle it behind closed doors. Maybe the parents had enough and were threatening to send him to Military school or a program for troubled teens.
Ad break every 5 minutes is ridiculous and downright menacing at this point!
🤔 He starts off saying, "I can understand why the jury reached their verdict " then ends with, " I don't understand why the found me guilty." I'm paraphrasing, i watched this very interview last night when i got the notification informing us what would be discussed tonight bcoz i had absolutely no knowledge of this case (not covered in my country etc)
No joke, no exaggeration 90-ish seconds in my skin crawled. Kid's empty.
Same... there's an arrogance even in the initial mask
@@lindsayborror4048 agreed
This is a case from my hometown, Houston. His parents were beautiful and he had a wonderful upbringing. His father was a HS coach and his mother worked in the school system as well, I believe. His father may have also been a precious pro FB player, not sure. He always claimed his older brother did this crime. Trial went on forever!
They also owned a gym in Bellaire. Father was an Aggie then went to Miami Dolphins. If memory serves me, he didn’t have a long football career. I think his Dad was also a pastor too. Wonderful people.
He practically said he did it. “It was just a 15 yo kid playing around with a gun”. He sounds like a sociopath?
The subtle shift in his voice when he tells the story about the friend…..liar. Heard it all my life in people who lie…..listen closely.
just by watching his demeanor and some held up grinning while he’s giving specific scenarios “made up by the police”, you can tell he is a big liar. His lack of interest about addressing finding the real perpetrator(s) is a big red flag as well.
He hasn’t been locked up since he was 16. He was on house arrest for awhile. He even got married and has a child.
Lol are you free if you're on house arrest?
@@Evilunclephilyfn he said he was in segregation. The Behavior Panel was discussing if he was in segregation since he was 16. I said he wasn’t locked up since he was 16. House arrest is NOT segregation. He was free enough to not only get married. But he was also free enough to have sex and conceive a child with his wife. There is a HUGE difference between being locked up in jail, especially in segregation, and being on house arrest.
@@elizabethfischer5636 the point is you're not free if you're on house arrest. Having sex at home is nothing to do with being free lol so silly.
@@Evilunclephilyfn NO the point is that he was not locked up. There is a HUGE difference between being locked up in segregation and being on house arrest. They were talking about him being in segregation. Being in segregation is being locked up. I NEVER said he was free. In fact I said he was on house arrest. You are able to visit family and friends whenever you want. You are able to have sex with your girlfriend whenever you want. You are able to marry her and have a baby with her. As long as it happens at your home. Have you ever heard of any of that while being locked up in segregation in a Texas jail? You can't even do any of that while in a regular pod in a Texas jail.
Can't wait to watch! Absolutely love you guys! 😊
“I love my brother” says Harry as he eviscerates his family in the press. This guy’s a bloody liar too.
More distancing language: the murders were 'the incident'. Uses passive voice 'that being shot through the floor'. Also 'that'. To Mark's point, the voice change - I think that AJ probably was matching the interviewer's and mimicking his voice...until the refusal to name 'the friend.' If he confesses, he loses financial and emotional support that he's probably receiving in prison.
I’ve just noticed that he mentions that “how big this case is” at least twice. I think that’s an unusual thing to say if you’re innocent. It’s almost like he likes to think this case is a big deal. It feeds his ego.
I requested this a long time ago. Thank you guys🎉🎉🎉
I've never heard of AJ Armstrong, so I'll do some googling homework before 17:30. Thanks for all you & your team do.
Don't waste your time. He's guilty.
He also gave creepy smile during “I’m not going to to tell you”
"I'm not going to tell you that Devone"......NOW THERE'S SOME DUPERS DELIGHT!!!! That smile. Seems to be the ONLY emotion displayed.
This guy is as scary as Erin Caffery
If he's neurodivergent would not make a difference in his response? Would it change much since he was 16? What is his parents raised him extremely strictly and encouraged him to be very polite? He may not have been allowed to complain and had a strong respect for authority.
Yes, he came from a good family and went to a very expensive private school. I haven't heard anything about him being neurodivergent. But if he was, from 16 to 24 he'd have learned how to "mask" I imagine he would have been brought up to be well mannered and polite. The details I've read described his family as * The All American Family *
That's true. Often neurodivergent people see authority as not to be questioned. My young adult neurodivergent son witnessed a crime and even when he was interviewed the police said it's a good thing he was a witness because he presented very oddly and would have been suspect.
Soon as I heard him stumble around phrasing his mother, I instantly thought she was the root reason for the murder. The father was likely "collateral damage" because he knew his dad would either protect the mother or he couldn't feel the shame if his father knew he took the mom's life.
And after hearing the audio of the first interview and how he speaks of his mom, I'm even more inclined to believe the prime target - who he had the issue with - was his mother. Perhaps girlfriend related? That's my first though.
They aren't saying how a 16 yo should've acted; they're saying how a 16 yo would've acted if he was innocent.
This smooth, always calm and personable sugar coated demeanor when talking about killing is something I've seen with a select few veterans telling me about war stories.
Combine it with no ability to eye smile with a big mouth smile, forced humor or laughter where disproportionate or inapplicable and inappropriate and I've found it's gonna be an antisocial personality disorder case. I got that vibe from him essentially instantly.
Dont have to watch anymore after he said he never wanted to involve his friend being there. This guy is guilty
With the door question, didn't he just admit to already knowing that his parents are dead? because the alternative would to go and help, try to see if there is any chance of saving them...
I’m so excited! I requested this a little while back! I can’t wait to hear what you all have to say about it
This case keeps blowing my mind. Initially I was shocked at the flimsy evidence he got convicted on, but now I'm just shocked at how obviously full of BS this kid is. Guilty as charged in my opinion.
Absolutely spot-on, Scott. I think little AJ is a psychopath too. I'd like to know how he was with small animals, too, or if he wet the bed! He's definitely in the right place. Best wishes from Cornwall. X
This guy is so guilty. Word salad is all that comes out of his mouth. No indignation.
Wait, am I missing something? He was a goofy kid doing goofy stuff AND he has a wife and kid, what?
Putting this out there. No one wears a ski mask in Houston, TX.
its amazing how you guys can see those small details of a person and get that much info! you should try doing a body language analysis on Yolanda Saldivar, kinda a old case but its coming up again definitely recommend looking into it!
“Friendly and comfortable lying” psychopath from tx with southern hospitality
His tone reminds me of the boy that killed his sister and was interviewed, Paris Bennett. Same tone and inflections. I think he is a psychopath, his stories fail, because he doesn't have normal emotions so fails at pretending.
I’m so glad you guys did this one! I felt bad for this kid when it first happened but I see so much now that I didn’t see then. Thanks guys!
Same with me. I actually questioned if the older brother did it when I originally heard about it. Not now.
Wow this was a case i was obsessed with ..thanks so much for this upload!!!!❤
I'm 72 and my mom loved "Columbo"......she died in 2003...she would be 102yrs ikd today... Time goes very fast after 60.... Lol.....i suggest u'all accept no matter what happens you're going to get old...
33:33 Ugh his voice completely changes. It’s like he’s an empty vessel - all the activity is round the mouth and there’s nothing in the eyes. It’s as if something else momentarily enters that vessel and then exits leaving whatever he is, or some other aspect of him if he’s the same entity, to come back through.
Hilarious Mark--“let’s talk about the masked man; he had a mask..”. 😂
Smartest thing he said.😂
Greg-I love your explanation of the stakes of an innocent person vs a guilty person. Thank you!
Dang it, I missed the live yesterday! Grateful for being able to watch it today though.
@The Behavior Panel I am so grateful for all of you guys! I’ve learned so much from all of you and Chase is wonderful to look at!Hands down, my favorite UA-cam channel!!
It’s never live. They have only done one live and that was ten onths ago.
First he says he's been in a cell most of his life, and is experienced with the system and process. Then he says being in the back of the cop car rattled him and he wasn't able to handle it. Sorry, can't have it both ways.
You nailed it!
Idk if hes guilty but in general it should be law that prosecutors can only bring a case to trial 2x if the 2nd one is a mistrial too they shouldnt be able to bring the case a 3rd time unless they have new evidence
Just before the 1:00:28 mark,he says something about how they decided he was guilty and then says “but…..” and I swore he was going to say “but I’m innocent.” And he didn’t. That was so telling to me.
A great many wrongfully imprisoned people were convicted for not showing “appropriate” emotion- everyone has different ways of expressing emotion and it can never be justified to prove innocence nor guilt
Seriously, as someone who shows very little emotion, I sure hope I never get accused of murder! In the grip of serious emotion, I shut down on the surface. It's all going on inside.
@@jaelzionNah. You're cool. Don't ask me how I know but I just have a feeling. But I believe it's always best to ask for an attorney if, God forbid, you're in a situation where you need one.
We need to change the law, after two missed trials a prosecution shouldn’t be able to bring the case to trial again unless there’s new evidence warranting it otherwise they can just keep doing it until they finally find a jury that convicts
You want to change the court rules because your family murderering hero got convicted? He wasn't found "not guilty". It means 1 juror didn't vote guilty. Yes they can retry a case with mistrials.
He referred to the murder of his parents as “the incident”?