A Case With The Most INSANE Twist You've Ever Heard | Documentary

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  • Опубліковано 7 сер 2022
  • In today's true crime documentary, we're covering the case of Jerry Hobbs.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,8 тис.

  • @ragingredhead9555
    @ragingredhead9555 Рік тому +1847

    Those cops didn't just send a man to prison for murdering a child, they sent a broken father to prison to be probably assaulted by inmates once they found out what he was in for. And to have to pay for something you didn't even do for 5 whole years before it was looked into professionally is heartbreaking.
    I hope he is healing and is somehow able to live a happy life.

    • @thepossessor
      @thepossessor Рік тому

      Cops that do this aren't true cops, they're scum

    • @OverRule1
      @OverRule1 Рік тому +10

      Losing a child is traumatic but the money he was awarded will at least make things a little easier or else why bother to get the money in the first place bringing up those painful memories instead of just moving on

    • @nagini77
      @nagini77 Рік тому +104

      @@OverRule1 money cannot heal everything.

    • @shabba7829
      @shabba7829 Рік тому +63

      @@OverRule1 That will never make up for what he lost.

    • @dcsc1
      @dcsc1 Рік тому +55

      @@OverRule1 what a shallow comment. No amount of money EVER could replace and fix the torment of losing a child.
      I truly hope your comment doesn't reflect the type of person you are.. although sadly I have my doubts 😒

  • @friddevonfrankenstein
    @friddevonfrankenstein Рік тому +3083

    There should be a law against this. Cops lying and forcing confessions should be convicted for all the crimes that happened after they just picked a scapegoat and went with it instead of investigating further. Every rape, every murder is their fault and they should be charged as such. Charge them as if they committed the crime themselves. That'll do.

    • @HughWoo
      @HughWoo Рік тому +113

      It’s fine to lie to the suspects… framing them and forcing confessions should put them behind bars and have to spend the rest of their lives paying for the individuals comfort. When this happens it destroys every chance of a life afterwards. The same should happen to the officers/detectives.

    • @adiared4687
      @adiared4687 Рік тому +14

      there is ..

    • @friddevonfrankenstein
      @friddevonfrankenstein Рік тому +5

      @@adiared4687 Is there?

    • @robinmcinarnay7827
      @robinmcinarnay7827 Рік тому

      No interrogation should be allowed to take place without a lawyer, regardless of perceived guilt- 𝑬𝑽𝑬𝑹. They shouldn't be able to lie to suspects either. All they're doing is creating more and more victims. Meanwhile, the real assailant continues -𝘫𝘶𝘴𝘵 𝘭𝘪𝘬𝘦 𝘪𝘯 𝘵𝘩𝘪𝘴 𝘤𝘢𝘴𝘦- their violent attacks. Oh but it's just so reassuring to learn some of these corrupt ass prosecutors and dishonorable cops have continued unchecked/untouched, thriving in their careers as judges and high-ranking officers, respectively.

    • @gordonaliasme1104
      @gordonaliasme1104 Рік тому +11

      @@adiared4687 Your profound words have been noted.

  • @tracimckay9487
    @tracimckay9487 Рік тому +984

    Jerry was my big brother. This was not the end of his tragic story. They did break him. He was in and out of jail. Mainly due to drug charges. He never hurt anybody. He only hurt himself. He was in jail and suffered a stroke. The C.O.'s ignored his plea for help. He called our mom for help. It was after his second stroke that the C.O's finally took him to the the hospital. By the time he got to the hospital he'd had 4 strokes. He was in a vegetative state and passed a week later. The system broke him. I held his hand and read to him while he was dying in our arms. The system broke him 😔 😔 😔

    • @Pussinboots.2
      @Pussinboots.2 Рік тому +86

      Such a sad, tragic, unnecessary loss of life all around 😢 I am so sorry for your loss/losses. I cannot imagine the pain he felt, you all as a family felt and feel. He was self medicating obviously and you’re absolutely right. The system absolutely broke him. They shouldn’t be able to get away with what they have done to him and your family. If it were any one of us, we would be rotting in prison. No amount of money could bring back him or his daughter, him having to find his baby girl and her friend like that then being tormented, blamed, treated like a murderer and thrown away because they couldn’t do their jobs! This made me sick to my stomach, just thinking about what he went through, I have a 9 year old daughter, 4 year old son and one baby girl on the way. I cannot imagine. I don’t want to. They took the little that was left of him. He was crying out for help obviously in the way of self medicating/using drugs to cope and I can’t blame him! I would do the same! I can’t say I would do anything differently. Again, I’m so sorry for your loss😢 I’m sorry you had to lose your brother and that he was suffering so much without the help he deserved. They broke him, that piece of shit murderer broke him, the system broke him and to be honest, nothing but loss of innocent, precious life here. There has been no justice. Justice for your brother, is what we should be advocating for now, his story deserves to be told far and wide and not just be shoved aside. For you, for him, his daughter, your niece, your family and to make sure this doesn’t happen to anyone else or their families. 🖤 Sending lots of love, hugs and prayers your way🖤 I’m so, so , so sorry for way they have done to him and your family 😢

    • @kristenpayne2838
      @kristenpayne2838 Рік тому +42

      I am so sorry for your loss 🥺
      Unfortunately the victims of murder are rarely the ones that are put in the ground. May the system improve so as not to lose your brother’s life in vain. ♥️🇨🇦

    • @randomstuffszz452
      @randomstuffszz452 Рік тому +26

      That's so sad 😔, my eye is tearing up . God will deal with whosoever killed those babies and those horrible officers.

    • @35shirelle
      @35shirelle Рік тому +6

      😢

    • @mbc65
      @mbc65 Рік тому +18

      Wow. Freaking tragic.

  • @morganbarfield108
    @morganbarfield108 Рік тому +311

    I could tell when he first started reading his “confession” that he was innocent. You could tell it was almost painful trying to read it. My heart hurts for him to loose a child and then be coerced into confessing when you’re innocent.

    • @guywiththebottle
      @guywiththebottle Рік тому +4

      Nah, I think it can be painful enough to confess to something you actually did. I doubt they would have been able to tell from the confession. The method of coercion is likely where it went wrong.

    • @stfuplsok
      @stfuplsok Рік тому +1

      Morgan Barfield *lose

    • @awicked14good
      @awicked14good Рік тому +9

      Yes I agree with you. Not only that, he struggled with words( while reading his so called confession) that he would not have used, given his limited education.

    • @stewmeat92
      @stewmeat92 Рік тому +7

      When he said that when he grabbed his daughter to bring her home and the other little girl said let her go and pulled out a knife, my radar went up

    • @Erebus.666.
      @Erebus.666. 11 місяців тому +1

      Yeah, and the way he kept hiding his face as he was reading it. He was embarrassed just to be saying those things, but when they threaten to arrest the mother too, and keep interrogating for 24 hours, people will do most anything to make it stop.

  • @bryanrussell6679
    @bryanrussell6679 Рік тому +1141

    This shows why it's so important that the crime lab technicians should never have any involvement with the police officers or prosecutors. They can too easily influence the outcome of the results. Blind testing, meaning the technicians themselves don't even know who the people are involved in the case, is one way to try and weed out some of the corruption.

    • @Reddeadrobin1
      @Reddeadrobin1 Рік тому +33

      There are so many things that need to be changed in our judicial system. From more training for cops, blind lab testing like you said, cops not being able to lie/exaggerate during interrogations and judges actually FOLLOWING THE LAW and NOT THEIR FEELINGS!! Doing things the way they were meant to be done.

    • @darksparklez-IcU812
      @darksparklez-IcU812 Рік тому +6

      I thought most samples that are sent to labs are identified by numbers 🤷🏼‍♀️

    • @ColFlustered
      @ColFlustered Рік тому +12

      It just makes me think of the one lady in the Netflix documentary (that narrowed it down, right?) Who was friends with the police or prosecutor and would mark substances as drugs and narcotics without testing them because it made them like her.

    • @secretservices1317
      @secretservices1317 Рік тому

      absolutely

    • @elizabethsalvatore1633
      @elizabethsalvatore1633 Рік тому +1

      I disagree.

  • @dariennedykes678
    @dariennedykes678 Рік тому +370

    Someone reading a confession off a piece of paper always gives me false confession vibes honestly

    • @GhastlyCretin
      @GhastlyCretin Рік тому +19

      That's exactly what I thought.

    • @kmcghee143
      @kmcghee143 Рік тому +3

      Right!

    • @purabidaimary2207
      @purabidaimary2207 Рік тому +11

      Yah you can tell rightly hearing the confession from both the father and the killer. While the father confessed he was crying helplessly and the killer just describe all his horrible killings as some kind achievement he had made in life. There was so difference. I have seen in many cases where the killer cries and try to make other to sympathies with them but their fake emotions give them away

    • @guywiththebottle
      @guywiththebottle Рік тому +1

      It definitely doesn't look good as a genuine confession should be from himself.

    • @sandrathomsen1326
      @sandrathomsen1326 Місяць тому

      But they are to be written down after they confess verbally and read and agreed😅

  • @desertrose777
    @desertrose777 Рік тому +148

    I'm majoring in Criminal Justice and I've had 3 different professors (2 who were still detectives and one retired) tell me that if you are ever in an interrogation room; even if you are 100 percent innocent or 100 percent guilty you always ask for a lawyer. The reason? This exactly. Police can and will lie to you in interrogation rooms, there are some who just do not care about you and will do anything to close the case. It's disgusting that my main takeaway from these classes is how corrupt police truly are, and to hear it come from actual police officers. So lawyer up folks, it is your right.

    • @BigSplenda1885
      @BigSplenda1885 Рік тому +9

      He did ask for a lawyer.... they refused him one. What can you do then?? Livestreaming didn't exist back then, maybe today that would be your only hope (do it in secret so they don't yank your phone)

    • @leannedoyle1149
      @leannedoyle1149 Рік тому +3

      You don't need to college to learn that

    • @joutoob9
      @joutoob9 11 місяців тому +3

      If someone can't go to college but can watch youtube, after about 6 videos from this channel, they will see that one should always ask for a lawyer. It's annotated all over the videos here that police CAN legally lie to you during this interrogation.

    • @hannahp1108
      @hannahp1108 11 місяців тому +7

      @@BigSplenda1885 You stop responding. You sit there in silence. You keep repeating you want a lawyer. That's all you can do.

    • @X-pq7zu
      @X-pq7zu 9 місяців тому

      So true!!!

  • @cherylpa527
    @cherylpa527 Рік тому +73

    This is heartbreaking. I get that the cops thought he was guilty, but when the DNA evidence came to light, they should have immediately set him free. That poor man lost his daughter then had to lie and say he was the monster that did it 😢

    • @alee550
      @alee550 11 місяців тому +4

      Soooo sad. This is terrible

  • @nestorrodriguez177
    @nestorrodriguez177 Рік тому +823

    Just imagine how many innocent people have died behind bars and executed because of police detectives like those who interrogatied Jerry

    • @DubsOddyseeOG
      @DubsOddyseeOG Рік тому +13

      @@welsh.truth.dragon3914 That's the one I was thinking about after hearing this story

    • @jamierupert7563
      @jamierupert7563 Рік тому +5

      @@welsh.truth.dragon3914 yeah I saw that one too.

    • @sharonsmith4954
      @sharonsmith4954 Рік тому +4

      So sad

    • @LotsofLisa
      @LotsofLisa Рік тому +1

      What about all the other victims he killed afterward. The entire city of Zion should be bankrupt paying all those lawsuits from ALL those families.

    • @Rosemary-oe3zy
      @Rosemary-oe3zy Рік тому +11

      It isn't that many, only 456 people have been sentenced to death by false prosecution. Only 456....

  • @pumkinplays
    @pumkinplays Рік тому +943

    The fact that prosecutors wanted to seek the death penalty knowing that his confession had been coerced is...enlightening. How many prosecutors over the decades have done the same thing and how many truly innocent people have been knowingly put to death?

    • @Mephisto-ie2xg
      @Mephisto-ie2xg Рік тому +28

      Yes. How do they sleep at night? Because of "humans" like that, I very happily believe in karma.

    • @GudetamaSit
      @GudetamaSit Рік тому +64

      It's why I can't agree to the death penalty. Morally, I agree that some crimes deserve death, but it's too easy to get convictions wrong or force convictions.

    • @goody2shoes384
      @goody2shoes384 Рік тому +16

      No many since the death penalty is rarely handed down and then rarely carried out . .but it is crazy how cops make up their minds what happened and who did it and then do everything in their power to make that the outcome whether it is or not.
      And I'm always shocked how when prosecutors prosecute someone and put them away but then later get proof they were wrong the prosecutor will still fight to keep the person in jail. It is bizarre.

    • @pumkinplays
      @pumkinplays Рік тому +44

      @@goody2shoes384 Since 1978, 150 people on death row have been exonerated. Those are just the ones that were uncovered. How many more slipped through and got executed anyway? There have have been approximately 1400 executions in the US since 1978, and doubtless many of them were innocent. "Not many" is too many.

    • @OverRule1
      @OverRule1 Рік тому +8

      I seen a video of the amount of people put to death that were actually innocent. The numbers are quite high

  • @LadyAmdis
    @LadyAmdis Рік тому +25

    I had a teacher once tell the school resource officer I had confessed to murder to her. They waited until after Spring Break to question me, dragged me into the principal's office to interrogate me for 8 hours. I cried, I begged for my mom, I asked for water, food, to use the bathroom, and all they would say was I could have those things once I told them I'd done it. Wasn't given Miranda Rights. A minor asking for their parent/guardian is the same thing as 'I want my lawyer'.
    They kept saying if I admitted to it, nothing would happen, and I could go back to class, and I almost fell for it. But I stuck to the truth and eventually it ended. The Resource Officer lost his job over it, as did the teacher.
    What had I said to trigger this? 'I took self defense lessons a couple years ago, but I was told to be really careful about some of them, because I could kill someone if I'm not careful.'

    • @daftzilla
      @daftzilla Рік тому +4

      I once had a friend write me a note in class where he had dramatically written how he was so embarrassed about something ( i forgot about what now) that he could "just die!" The note was found when it fell out of my pocket and both he and i had to go see the principal and school counselor because clearly we were "suicidal" it was almost funny except they wanted to commit us and act like we were lunatics. Horrible experience. Sometimes teachers at school are pretty awful at jumping to conclusions. Thats horrendous that happened to you and im glad those people lost their jobs. The principal should have too

  • @Mark-Smeaton
    @Mark-Smeaton Рік тому +13

    False confessions are often hard to understand but I had an uncle who gave a false confession to axe-murdering his estranged wife - he said he did it under relentless police interrogation. He was one of the gentlest, least violent men you could ever hope to meet but the cops had made up their mind immediately. It turned out, a random homicidal maniac broke into the victim's home and she had the presence of mind to hit "record" on an audio tape recorder (and this was in 1975), immediately establishing the guilt of the real perp and her own horrific murder. The recording was found at the crime scene but initially missed, proving how quickly the cops had made up their mind about my Uncle.

  • @skreemqueen7520
    @skreemqueen7520 Рік тому +990

    This is outrageous!!!! How many times do you suppose this has happened but the person is never exonerated?! I think the officers who did this to Jerry should serve jail time !!!

    • @amybryant8813
      @amybryant8813 Рік тому +40

      It happens all the time. And in most cases, the actual criminal never gets connected to the crime that an innocent person is serving time for. The law changed to allow for cops to blatantly lie to people during interrogations. That desperately needs to be changed back.

    • @user-sb9zf7ro4m
      @user-sb9zf7ro4m Рік тому

      Everyday it happens
      Almost nothing goes to trial. They just scare people into pleading, even if they didn’t commit the crime. When you’re looking at 100 years, many people will plead to 5 years because 100 sounds way worse. Happens literally every single day in just America. People call the American justice system the greatest in the world. That might be true, but it isn’t a very high bar to measure against.

    • @rosalalie6417
      @rosalalie6417 Рік тому +1

      @@amybryant8813 A

    • @robinmccoy1411
      @robinmccoy1411 Рік тому +1

      @@amybryant8813 I'd love to see the statistics you're quoting here.

    • @titomaximus1377
      @titomaximus1377 Рік тому +3

      @@amybryant8813 no, it doesn't happen all the time

  • @MaximumRaxx
    @MaximumRaxx Рік тому +852

    Took me about one and a half seconds of listening to him read that 'confession' to know he'd been coerced. How are we supposed to side with justice when sometimes they're as bad as the criminals themselves?

    • @alihenderson5910
      @alihenderson5910 Рік тому +34

      Yes my thoughts exactly, so obvious.

    • @ricekk6670
      @ricekk6670 Рік тому +37

      Yeah the way he was clearly struggling through it gave it away. Such a sad story

    • @lesliebean4594
      @lesliebean4594 Рік тому +3

      Exactly

    • @trujillo71921
      @trujillo71921 Рік тому +14

      Yea same here. It's unreal I couldn't imagine knowing a man is innocent but forcing him to falsely admit to a crime he didn't do especially a crime such as murdering his own daughter and her friend. I couldn't live with myself knowing I had allowed that to happen.

    • @gram5963
      @gram5963 Рік тому +19

      Right! As soon as I heard that the police drafted the confession for him to read, I was like “Wait, WHAT?!” What that poor man went through/is continuing to go through is unfathomable.

  • @updownstate
    @updownstate Рік тому +7

    Thank you for informing your watchers about psychopathy and antisocial personality disorder. This is the first video I've seen mention anything about the diagnoses. My sister is a psychologist so I'm particularly sensitive about this.

  • @ntakovacj3644
    @ntakovacj3644 Рік тому +36

    I wonder if his wife believed that confession. I did a search and found that he had been arrested on drug charges after his release. I do hope that he has found some peace and balance in his life. He's a plain spoken man from a rough life who would have a hard time dealing with the calculations of these evil "law enforcers." and the life that followed once he was proven innocent.

    • @tracimckay9487
      @tracimckay9487 Рік тому +18

      No. He passed last year while in police custody. He had 2 massive strokes before they took him to the hospital. He suffered 2 more in the hospital. He passed a week later. He passed the day before his daughter's birthday. Hopefully they've found themselves in heaven 😔 😔 😟

    • @tracimckay9487
      @tracimckay9487 7 місяців тому +5

      I'm his sister. He passed away 2 years ago. He and his daughter are together now.

  • @GhastlyCretin
    @GhastlyCretin Рік тому +472

    Dear God, some of these comments. This guy was awake for 24 hours before he found the eyeless body of his 8 year old daughter. Then he was kept awake for another 24 hours, assaulted, humiliated, shown gruesome pictures and denied access to a lawyer.
    I've been awake for a few days straight a few times in my life and by day 2 you start to have little hallucinations and hear things. Your mind starts to shut down. You literally die if you don't sleep.
    It's almost unfathomable what this guy was going through psychologically.

    • @mischr13
      @mischr13 Рік тому +62

      I've been awake for days before and the slightest thing makes me crumble. Just recently I had to pack for a trip and only got about 4 hrs sleep in 38 hrs. as I was trying to make breakfast I burnt my toast and fell to the ground sobbing. I barely function. I can't imagine dealing w everything he did on top of it.

    • @snex000
      @snex000 Рік тому +22

      He wasn't denied a lawyer. He didn't ask for one. Never talk to cops. Always demand a lawyer IMMEDIATELY.

    • @mischr13
      @mischr13 Рік тому +52

      @@snex000 how do you know he wasn't denied a lawyer? "with zero evidence these cops didn't read his rights, beat him, forced him to stay awake, and forced a confession...but they'd NEVER cross a line like denying someone a lawyer" you're profoundly naive if you believe that. we don't have video footage of the interrogation because of these cops and you STILL have faith that they were abiding by the law. that's incredible.

    • @snex000
      @snex000 Рік тому +5

      @@mischr13 Nowhere was it claimed by ANY party that a lawyer was demanded and denied. You guys are just making shit up.

    • @moomyung9231
      @moomyung9231 Рік тому +19

      I've never had hallucinations from no sleep, though my bf last week said he was experiencing what you did after about 36 hours of no sleep. But your thinking is definitely dulled even after a day with no sleep, and your emotions can become more brittle.

  • @tashaturner4609
    @tashaturner4609 Рік тому +472

    That poor man! I can’t even imagine finding my kid dead with a whole in her head then being arrested and interrogated with no sleep for over 24 hrs....forced into a lie of a confession and then sent to jail!! My heart goes out to Jerry and his wife. ❤️ that must’ve lead to severe ptsd that he will have to live with....so horrific!

    • @swampophelia2098
      @swampophelia2098 Рік тому +2

      It’s hole not whole

    • @TroubleToby3040
      @TroubleToby3040 Рік тому

      @@swampophelia2098 😂🤣😂🤣😂🤦‍♂🤦‍♂🤦‍♂🤣😂🤣😂🤣

    • @autisticangell
      @autisticangell Рік тому +23

      @@swampophelia2098 I hope that made you feel good. No one would've ever cracked that code without you.

    • @MsStealYourDadAndMom
      @MsStealYourDadAndMom Рік тому +4

      I feel for him. I'm sure I'd give a false statement after all that, too. I get irritated, forgetful, all that after Ive had less sleep than that. I'm sure if I thought I'd finally get rest, sleep, whatever else after cops saying and doing all the stuff they do when interrogating people, I'd say whatever, especially if I thought there was no other way out.

    • @MsStealYourDadAndMom
      @MsStealYourDadAndMom Рік тому +3

      @@autisticangell I, for one, am thankful that person cracked the code as I would've never figured it out. It was too complicated for this simple country girl. That person needs an award. Thats some 200 IQ level shit, right there. I bet they've never even had to use the backspace button EVER.

  • @madalinewillard1529
    @madalinewillard1529 Рік тому +9

    That is absolutely disgusting!!! Making a poor grieving father confess to killing his daughter and her friend!! What do they hope to achieve? They could have put an innocent man in prison for life or even death and let the true perpetrator go free. They truly need to be convicted and sent to prison. This poor man will forever have some people that believe he did it. The only thing worse then losing your child to a murder would have to be being framed and blamed by not only police but your loved ones too. Plus he would have had a terrible time in prison being a crime against children. Even if they believed that he did do it, forcing a confession could ruin the case against him if he did do it which I don't believe.

  • @carsenhughes4389
    @carsenhughes4389 Рік тому +3

    My family is here and I was their age when this happened and drove by the spot almost every day. I will never ever forget this case… I’ve been looking for this case for years!!! I cannot believe I found this!!!

  • @marktaylor3630
    @marktaylor3630 Рік тому +174

    The problem is that the cops and the prosecutors won't admit to being wrong so you end up having to prove your innocence and it should never be like that

  • @justineseitzinger5340
    @justineseitzinger5340 Рік тому +517

    I honestly can't decide what's worse, refusing to allow a suspect their right to an attorney preceding an interrogation, the fact that detectives somehow had the authority to selectively pick and choose which DNA tests they wanted the lab techs to conduct and not conduct, the fact that they forced this father to view photos of his murdered daughter and her little friend, or the idea that they knowingly egregiously used physical force in order to get a suspect to confess to a crime - a crime in which law enforcement and the prosecutors were very well aware of DNA from an unknown male being found on the victims and intentionally turned a blind eye to that all-important evidence. Jeez, just so incredibly shameful and just plain wrong on so many different levels, it's beyond appalling. Not to mention the complete unwillingness on the part of the police dept and attorneys to admit their wrongs in this matter, and the total disregard for all innocent parties involved in this case it shows by refusing to do so. None of these people should have kept their positions, absolutely none.

    • @ampleoloruntogbe1434
      @ampleoloruntogbe1434 Рік тому

      @Bass Player wtf are you talking about with strict gun laws? This does happen to a lot of people, the only surprise here is that the man’s white. You never heard of the Central Park 5?

    • @ChuckChuckWood
      @ChuckChuckWood Рік тому +28

      @Bass Player What are you rambling about this has zero to do with gun laws FFS?

    • @ChuckChuckWood
      @ChuckChuckWood Рік тому +22

      Agreed, it's one thing to lead a biased investigation which results in an innocent man being convicted of the crime but it's the active cover-up that blows my mind, the fact that the prosecutor could refuse release even after the DNA exhoneration is unbelievable. I personally think there should be civil and possible criminal repercussions for this kind of disgusting self-preservation.

    • @BunnyLang
      @BunnyLang Рік тому +7

      Yep, and now SCOTUS changed the law that our Miranda Rights do not have to be enforced. What does that say?

    • @justineseitzinger5340
      @justineseitzinger5340 Рік тому +16

      @@ChuckChuckWood Right??? And just their behavior up until the very end, refusing to admit *any* bit of wrongdoing on their part... It makes the future look grim 😒

  • @Curlydafatboy
    @Curlydafatboy 10 місяців тому +3

    Props to this channel for revealing the very realistic and problematic issue of false confessions.

  • @tdurb0
    @tdurb0 Рік тому +5

    I’m amazed what people suffering a trauma will do.
    I can’t even begin to imagine what losing five years of your life, and the death of your daughter would do to a person. Poor bloke 😟

  • @joelmabrey2569
    @joelmabrey2569 Рік тому +434

    I can not imagine what this Daddy went through knowing he was innocent, but was so mentally broken about his daughter and her friend . Then having the police and prosecutor who are suppose to be there to help innocent people plotting against you the whole time . God Bless you brother and I pray you are still following the Lord .

    • @RageBaby587
      @RageBaby587 Рік тому +25

      That's why you should never talk to police without an attorney present.

    • @aeranchun2588
      @aeranchun2588 Рік тому +19

      ..so what happened to the stupid police and the prosecutors to make innocent father to murderer?

    • @joelmabrey2569
      @joelmabrey2569 Рік тому +9

      @@aeranchun2588 I was wondering the same thing

    • @joelmabrey2569
      @joelmabrey2569 Рік тому +11

      @@RageBaby587 It was said that he ask multiple times for an attorney, but they would not get one

    • @franciswhite4032
      @franciswhite4032 Рік тому +17

      As a criminal defense attorney, I have noticed that, generally, police and prosecutors do not try to solve crimes - they try to close cases. Once they settle on a theory of the case, they almost never let go.
      Never talk to law enforcement. If they think you are involved anything you sat will be construed to confirm your guilt.

  • @gidgemo1869
    @gidgemo1869 Рік тому +209

    If they refused his request for a lawyer, those police officers belong behind bars. That is a crime and anything he said after that (or anything he signed) should never have been used against him. Those cops are pure slime.

    • @frogblues
      @frogblues Рік тому +24

      When you take the sum of everything they did to him they deserve life in jail.

    • @MethodiousMind
      @MethodiousMind Рік тому +18

      Frog blues. I definitely agree with you. If they started a real investigation sooner they could’ve prevented more assaults and killing

    • @tonyprice2256
      @tonyprice2256 Рік тому

      You are correct. But those crooked cops, DA and judge get complete immunity no matter what they do! That is why this kind of thing happens over and over and over again! The very worst criminals on the planet or those that run this crooked system from the very top down!

    • @coyboybc
      @coyboybc Рік тому +9

      These cops should be doing life inside the worst prison ever ! In population

    • @zotha
      @zotha Рік тому

      These Cops are scum, the prosecutor is scum and his attorney should be disbarred for incompetence. How you could fail to get that confession thrown out is gross negligence

  • @hollyj1596
    @hollyj1596 Рік тому +2

    You guys are the best narrators on UA-cam! Bravo!

  • @drewishaf
    @drewishaf Рік тому +4

    It always blows my mind that someone would sit and be berated, humiliated, threatened, and intimidated by detectives rather than simply telling them "I refuse to answer any questions and demand to speak with my attorney." Repeating that statement and keeping your mouth shut will end the interrogation without having to endure a forced confession

    • @AnxietyQueen91
      @AnxietyQueen91 11 місяців тому +4

      It literally states that they denied his request for a lawyer, he did ask for one.

  • @basheerahadams2031
    @basheerahadams2031 Рік тому +258

    As a parent it's unimaginable to even think what Jerry went through as a father, having to read out what had happened to his little baby knowing he was completely innocent, tragic and so sad, I truly hope that the years passing, this family have thrived despite the tragedy.

    • @bumblebob5979
      @bumblebob5979 Рік тому +11

      He must have felt overwhelming guilt, depression and terror. And than the police started full head on brainwashing. So disgusting. Poor man. He must have been so proud of his daughter. What a horror! I cant imagine ;(

    • @terrypussypower
      @terrypussypower Рік тому

      Showing him the crime scene photographs was a truly sadistic thing to do. There’s just no excuse for that. It doesn’t matter whether they thought he was guilty, showing him those photos is clearly going to affect his mental state, and how can they trust the statements of someone who would then obviously be in a psychologically damaged condition?

    • @brookebryan4411
      @brookebryan4411 10 місяців тому +1

      You could tell while he was reading it the information was new to him, he was disgusted reading that confession, it's so sad to see how heartbroken he was while reading that.

    • @MaliohammadDesigns
      @MaliohammadDesigns 5 місяців тому

      yeah the moment I saw him reading instead of telling it by heart I knew something was wrong. Criminals can describe their crime without the help of a script @@brookebryan4411

    • @insertmisanthropicpun2738
      @insertmisanthropicpun2738 5 місяців тому

      @@brookebryan4411 My first thought at the beginning of the video was, "That guy's being coerced." Reading your own written statement to a camera strikes me as weird enough, but it was so super obvious that those were not his words, and even if that video was the second take, reading it once in a state of intense trauma compounded with sleep deprivation and torment wouldn't be enough for him to pull off an Oscar-winning performance the second time. You really could see him trying his damnedest to power through that hideousness. I'm just glad they apparently didn't have the "male DNA" at that specific time or else they'd probably have made him confess to that, too. Jesus Christ, man.

  • @MSevelynjacobs
    @MSevelynjacobs Рік тому +213

    Oh my God that poor man wasn't even allowed to go to his daughter's funeral. I can't imagine the emotional turmoil he went through. It's just too horrible, those cops have a lot to learn and I sure hope they're learning before someone else dies because of their mistakes. If they have went with that DNA they could have saved that young lady's life. God will have to forgive them, I doubt that many others will

    • @tonyprice2256
      @tonyprice2256 Рік тому +5

      100% truth

    • @brookestreeter8086
      @brookestreeter8086 Рік тому +6

      God will forgive them but In order to receive his forgiveness, they need to repent and honestly be remorseful for what they've done. Often times people see that some one has a criminal history and view that person as less than someone who doesn't.

    • @XavierIsraelMatamoros
      @XavierIsraelMatamoros Рік тому

      *If they have would have gone with that DNA...

  • @Caylynne_Murray
    @Caylynne_Murray Рік тому +9

    I rewinded this episode a few times simply because I kept missing why they moved from 2 girls to a different crime on a woman.. Only to find out that I might have been better off not knowing.. Absolutely heartbreaking ..Listening to him read that statement in the beginning already had me questioning things but damnit.. this one was tough

    • @Ceerads
      @Ceerads 11 місяців тому +1

      Yes, his tears seemed unusual for someone who’d killed two little girls.

  • @aliciagarza4706
    @aliciagarza4706 Рік тому +4

    Poor guy, so sad he had to endure all that pain and then have the cops make him confess to something he didn’t do.

  • @TimApple.
    @TimApple. Рік тому +186

    How do those scumbag detective's go through life knowing, and not caring, that they got a bullshit confession out of someone?!
    Their only goal is a confession at any cost so they can feel like badasses. Letting a monster loose to do it again. They should be punished.

    • @mongoose6685
      @mongoose6685 Рік тому +1

      If they belived him guilty, when should they have stopped the interrogation and call it a day? 2 hours, 6 hours? Maybe another hour and the killer would crack. Always easy to defend rights after the real killer is found.

    • @snex000
      @snex000 Рік тому +33

      @@mongoose6685 No, it's just always easy. Stop justifying cops who break their oath to the constitution.

    • @mongoose6685
      @mongoose6685 Рік тому

      @@snex000 Always easy? So after 10 minutes of interrogation, just let the killer of your kid go because he denied it? Yeah right bruh, you'd be the first one crying for justice with your blue hair.

    • @kellig.6819
      @kellig.6819 Рік тому

      Your so right. They let the real killer get away to kill again. Unimaginable!!!

    • @kellig.6819
      @kellig.6819 Рік тому +26

      @@mongoose6685 They actually had DNA and did not reveal that it was not Jerry's DNA!!!

  • @J.C...
    @J.C... Рік тому +593

    As a father who has buried his daughter and only child, my heart breaks for this man. What's left of it that isn't already broken, anyway. I couldn't imagine someone accusing me of murdering my child when she died. It was hard enough dealing with that alone. I'd likely have flipped out on the cops. I can guarantee you I wouldn't have falsely confessed, though.

    • @greendragon4058
      @greendragon4058 Рік тому +28

      Oh wow you. I know there's nothing I can say or do to ease the pain for you but I knew if it happened to me I'd be devastated I'm sending you many blessings to help you heal

    • @jipijur
      @jipijur Рік тому +28

      So sorry for your loss

    • @MSevelynjacobs
      @MSevelynjacobs Рік тому +59

      My deepest sympathy, but you really never know what you would do until you were in that position.

    • @ick.zosted
      @ick.zosted Рік тому +44

      I heavily sympathize w you & I'm so sorry for your loss, but sadly false confessions are way more common than you'd think & no one can guarantee they wouldn't falsely confess in any given situation until they've been through it.

    • @drewhempwood2113
      @drewhempwood2113 Рік тому +22

      @@MSevelynjacobs yeah it said they denied him a lawyer and hit him and likely threatened him further

  • @ellekay4758
    @ellekay4758 11 місяців тому +3

    This is absolutely DISGUSTING and inhumane on part of law enforcement!!!!

  • @moniquemay2010
    @moniquemay2010 Рік тому +6

    This story broke my heart. That poor father! Imagine what he must of suffered. He was innocent and found his child murdered and then forced into "confessing" killing her - 5 years!! I can't even imagine doing time for something I didn't do let alone for "killing my child"

  • @kimmcnatt6301
    @kimmcnatt6301 Рік тому +409

    Wow! That definitely took a turn I wasn’t expecting. Such a sick individual to do that to the little girls and the 2 women, I wouldn’t be surprised if there are other victims out there.
    So sad that Jerry was forced to give that confession, so glad he was exonerated. Thanks for sharing this story.

    • @kathiemahoney4261
      @kathiemahoney4261 Рік тому +3

      Same here!!! Thank God it worked out.

    • @kdizzle901
      @kdizzle901 Рік тому

      Yea he’s a fucking monster

    • @Ceerads
      @Ceerads 11 місяців тому +1

      And if the cops had investigated further, they might’ve found the real killer and saved the lives of the women he murdered (and who knows if there were others).

  • @kristinekemper2899
    @kristinekemper2899 Рік тому +306

    Amanda Snell was a friend of mine. She was the kindest, most generous person and those of us who knew her still miss her. She had such a heart for her work and she was taken from us too soon. She had her whole life in front of her. It was painful and sickening to listen to that horrible man describe what he did to her.

    • @tonyprice2256
      @tonyprice2256 Рік тому +21

      Absolutely heartbreaking. I am sorry for the loss of your sweet and beautiful friend.

    • @Ariel-ck9he
      @Ariel-ck9he Рік тому +10

      Wow I’m so sorry for your loss.

    • @ntakovacj3644
      @ntakovacj3644 Рік тому +17

      I'm sorry that your friend endured such a terrible death -- but did you watch the whole thing? You say that the "horrible man" described what he did to her -- but the confession was faked -- the murderer did not describe what was done to her -- I did read a statement from the lawyer who found the true murderer. This poor man confessed because he was in a weakened state -- he was taken for questioning after he hadn't slept for 24 hours and had just seen his dead daughter who had been brutally, sadistically, ritually stabbed to death. And he didn't sleep for ANOTHER 24 hours while the cruel cops created the confession he signed -- sleepless for 48 plus hours, having seen the children with even FACIAL stab wounds. I hope I've convinced you to watch the whole thing.

    • @kristinekemper2899
      @kristinekemper2899 Рік тому +40

      @@ntakovacj3644 I did watch the whole thing and I am referring to what her killer said. My heart goes out to the poor man who sat in prison for the terrible crime that he didn't commit- he is also a victim.

    • @chelleyd4020
      @chelleyd4020 Рік тому +17

      She isn’t talking about one of the two girls he was talking about the lady that went missing that the killer (Jorge)was also responsible for, not the innocent man that was framed, the explanation she’s talking about is not the innocent guy who was the sleep deprived and grief stricken father

  • @Julia-uh4li
    @Julia-uh4li Рік тому +6

    The knowledge that thousands, and more than likely, hundreds of thousands of men & women are unjustly living out their lives in prison right now is horrific. Not to mention the millions (?) world wide, who have already passed naturally or were executed when they were innocent souls all along is so heartbreaking and it really makes my blood boil. I cannot even begin to imagine being in their shoes. 🥺😭

    • @ma2870
      @ma2870 Рік тому

      Hundreds of thousands? Come on🥴

  • @bs-mt6oq
    @bs-mt6oq Рік тому +2

    New to the channel. You are a great story teller, it’s hard to imagine that this level of evil is out in the world

  • @iAmMarcellus
    @iAmMarcellus Рік тому +118

    This is why you never talk to cops without a lawyer, including interrogations. Even when you’re innocent. The cops aren’t here to help you.

    • @GhastlyCretin
      @GhastlyCretin Рік тому +13

      They denied him a lawyer though.

    • @nicoley8491
      @nicoley8491 Рік тому +5

      @@GhastlyCretin wow! That's so wrong! They did the same thing to Cory Bigsby who's son Codi is missing from his home in VA! They obviously believe he did something or knows something about his disappearance but that doesn't justify them denying him an attorney

    • @chelechele5871
      @chelechele5871 Рік тому +10

      @@GhastlyCretin You cannot be denied a lawyer. It is your Constitutional right. When taken in by police say, "I want to remain silent and want a lawyer." Repeat if necessary. Make it a statement and not a thought. Always speak to a lawyer. Make the police do their jobs.

    • @GhastlyCretin
      @GhastlyCretin Рік тому +18

      @@chelechele5871 Tell that to the cops that denied him a lawyer...

    • @Timmeh_The_tyrant
      @Timmeh_The_tyrant Рік тому +5

      The cops need some vigilante justice.

  • @me0101001000
    @me0101001000 Рік тому +201

    Anytime a story involves a child, I just can't control myself. I'm left feeling so sad, angry, hurt, and confused. Why would anyone want to do something like this? I just can't imagine it.

    • @QueenSugar72
      @QueenSugar72 Рік тому +16

      I concur. I would love 30 minutes in a room with people who harm children

    • @DiscipleOfHeavyMeta1
      @DiscipleOfHeavyMeta1 Рік тому +10

      Some people are so irredeemably depraved, they have lost their humanity and have become grotesque creatures.

    • @fugginrambo
      @fugginrambo Рік тому +5

      It really is staggering how many people kill or do other nasty stuff to kids. Is it because there's just more people on this planet, or is the percentage going up and up? It's the same with how many guys try to meet underage people over the internet. It's pure evil and disgusting!

    • @BarrywHiteFTW
      @BarrywHiteFTW Рік тому

      I know. He hurt his own little baby. Why?

    • @MOEWETTA23
      @MOEWETTA23 Рік тому +9

      @@BarrywHiteFTW You obviously didn't watch the whole thing..

  • @rmsiq148isstruggling3
    @rmsiq148isstruggling3 Рік тому +2

    Oh my, the pain he went through when he confesses those details... it breaks my heart

  • @davep7176
    @davep7176 Рік тому +2

    This poor man must be suffering so much every day.

  • @aioki_uchiha
    @aioki_uchiha Рік тому +72

    God this made me cry… imagine losing ur child and then getting wrongly accused of killing her, forced to confess to it and living with that thought every single day for 5 years 🥺 i hope Jerry and his whole family find peace, the system let them down… and bless the souls of the two lost angels 😔

    • @chevyforever4420
      @chevyforever4420 Рік тому +7

      Thank God the real killer was finally found otherwise this poor man could still be in jail

  • @everetsutton1377
    @everetsutton1377 Рік тому +57

    My god... It's stuff like this that makes you lose faith in the police system. How is still legal for police to assault suspects? I get that they thought he was the murderer, but jesus. I'm so glad he sued them, they were so insanely out of line.

    • @paulinejackson5861
      @paulinejackson5861 Рік тому

      Suspects are probably guilty, especially this sad excuse of a human being called Jerry. I have no doubt he was guilty, seems too convenient for them to pin the blame on Jorge. They deserved to be beat.

    • @x___3scap3r3ality___x6
      @x___3scap3r3ality___x6 Рік тому

      @@AmysAttitude 🤦🏼‍♀️

    • @x___3scap3r3ality___x6
      @x___3scap3r3ality___x6 Рік тому +4

      @@paulinejackson5861 literally tho stop projecting

    • @CoolJoshido212
      @CoolJoshido212 Рік тому +1

      @@paulinejackson5861 bad bait.

  • @SOPHIA-ig1ph
    @SOPHIA-ig1ph 10 місяців тому +5

    This is so enraging, and unfortunately it happens more often than you think. The worst part is that the justice system is loathe to admit they made a mistake so they rarely set things right even when there’s evidence proving their mistake. There needs to be more oversight and accountability over judges, prosecutors, and law enforcement.

  • @IanPatrickOfficial
    @IanPatrickOfficial 6 місяців тому +1

    The temerity of the investigator to ask "Is this YOUR statement Jerry?" @3:48.

  • @Timmeh_The_tyrant
    @Timmeh_The_tyrant Рік тому +54

    The cops and prosecutors who did this should get the death penalty. Period.

  • @Kec8687
    @Kec8687 Рік тому +62

    EWU Crew are the real MVPs. The narration and attention to detail is always on point. You guys put so much work and dedication into your videos, you’re amazing. 💚💚

  • @LostJedi26
    @LostJedi26 9 місяців тому +4

    @tracimckay9487 wrote a comment down below. Jerry was his big brother. Jerry's story is even more tragic than this video portrays.
    I am so angry and sad and heartbroken for him, his daughter, the entire family. Words can't express how deeply this upsets me.
    Law enforcement is horribly corrupt. This is terrifying in the worst ways. They broke an innocent father, wore him down until he cracked under their tactics. They should be held accountable--every last disgusting one of them.

  • @heatherbowlan1961
    @heatherbowlan1961 Рік тому

    Thank you for these great crime stories ,God Bless you beautiful , fr, Canada ❤

  • @ludovicusclericus
    @ludovicusclericus Рік тому +103

    WOW! Never thought I'd feel so much sympathy for a man who had a legitimately criminal past. Just wrong how they made him record a false confession.

    • @Afatgrandma
      @Afatgrandma Рік тому

      Fucking yikes @ ur comment. People with criminal histories are still people and the justice system is insanely corrupt. Check urself.

    • @snex000
      @snex000 Рік тому +7

      There's a reason this stuff was put into the constitution, ya know..

    • @karenamyx2205
      @karenamyx2205 Рік тому +19

      @@snex000
      Agreed.. even bad guys have rights. Also, just because you have a criminal past doesn't mean you are irredeemable.

  • @povertylevelphilanthropy1524
    @povertylevelphilanthropy1524 Рік тому +91

    I confessed and even plead guilty to something I didn’t do. It was easier for them to pull off than I ever imagined. My confession was the result of being told that it was the only option for me to be able to call anyone. I confessed thinking I could easily prove my innocence later. I just really needed help to get away from the police, at that moment. When I went to court, I had the evidence proving my innocence but I still plead guilty. Those evil crooks did everything they could to cut me off when I tried to talk about pleading not guilty. The judge was so intimidating and he finally lowered his voice and asked me if I wanted to get this over with and move on from it. I, of course, said yes. Before I knew what was happening, apparently, I plead guilty. I was so shaken that I just paid all the fees. Fortunately, it wasn’t for anything big but it proved to me how they work and just how messed up our system is. Btw, I’d never been in any kind of trouble before this happened. It happened bc I have Asperger’s and an employee at a local store thought I was being suspicious.

    • @H0neybee_
      @H0neybee_ Рік тому +11

      Thats fd up 🥺🥺🥺🥺

    • @jakdelaney3606
      @jakdelaney3606 Рік тому +5

      I am so sorry that happened to you,why didn't management stick up for you? This crap just gets worse and worse and it seems there is nothing we can do about it!

    • @povertylevelphilanthropy1524
      @povertylevelphilanthropy1524 Рік тому +11

      @@jakdelaney3606 management is who called the police on me bc I apparently had been shopping for too long. It was Good Friday and I had just left work. I was taking my time at the store bc I was waiting for my husband to get off work bc we were meeting at a restaurant to eat. It’s not like was just walking around looking either. I filled my cart up and spent over $100 on Easter basket stuff and other items we needed. When I went to put my vehicle in reverse to leave, 2 cop cars blocked me in and made me get out. They pulled everything out of my SUV and went through everything in it. I had been hiding all the Easter stuff in the back, as I bought it. I had already put the items I had just bought back there bc I didn’t want my daughters to see it. They went through all of it and then claimed that everything that was back there that I didn’t have a receipt for was stolen. I had been buying stuff for several weeks, at this point. I tried to explain it to them, and they didn’t even care that most of the items weren’t even sold by the store they said I had just stole them from. The items that the store did carry were brought back inside and the barcodes were compared. They didn’t match, bc I didn’t buy them from there. They still confiscated them and gave them back to the store they didn’t even come from. Over an hour into this, I had been degraded, scared, and spoken to like I was less than human. I had already tried to show them my Autism card that verifies that I’m Aspergic and gives specific instructions on how to handle the situation. I tried to give it to one of them after saying “this is just a misunderstanding bc I’m awkward, they just don’t know me in there” and he snapped back with “They don’t want to know you”. All I wanted was my husband. They took my phone and wouldn’t let me call for help. Finally, the female officer stepped in, after reviewing the security tape from my entire visit, and was “nice” to me. She said all I had to do was go inside and apologize and I could go home because that store didn’t even prosecute shoplifters. Hesitantly, I went in with them and said I was sorry, but they had to hassle me, through my tears, to say I was sorry for stealing, bc I knew I didn’t. The manager immediately said “I want to press charges” and I was handcuffed and taken to the jail. I now know that they were embarrassed because their investigation didn’t produce any evidence of me stealing anything. They needed me to “confess” so they didn’t have to let me go and walk away with their tails tucked. It was also obvious that one of them had some kind of relationship with the young manager who called them on me. This was in 2019. It will affect me for the rest of my life.

    • @Unstoppable_Unicorn
      @Unstoppable_Unicorn Рік тому +10

      @@povertylevelphilanthropy1524 Girl you need to get a lawyer, with your husband as support, and get this erased from your record! I’m so sorry you went through that!

    • @t4kfamily735
      @t4kfamily735 Рік тому +3

      @@povertylevelphilanthropy1524 I'm so sorry you had to experience that. From what I was taught early on is to "ask for a lawyer and shut up" or just say I plead the fifth. They legally cannot force you to speak without a lawyer present if you asked for one.

  • @lauriedavis5946
    @lauriedavis5946 Місяць тому

    i’ve seen this before. i especially appreciate that you posted it bc to someone who’s never even been pulled over (57 yrs) aka SHELTERED - stories such as this seemed
    to be like an urban legend. The police wouldn’t _REALLY_ do that? .. YES THEY WOULD - & DID! WOW it’s refreshing to know the TRUTH! 🤟🏻🕊️💕

  • @Therezumee92
    @Therezumee92 3 місяці тому

    Glad to see a video which reminds how often detectives trick and force confessions. Especially when they have a DNA yet they decide to still push just to close a case.

  • @Liberalism-is-a-mental-illness
    @Liberalism-is-a-mental-illness Рік тому +76

    Pretty terrifying to know that we have MANY Detective’s who actually don’t give a damn about justice or about catching the real killers & only care about getting confessions, in order to put another notch in their career belt. They don’t care who really did it or that they’re leaving sadistic killers out in public, as long as they get a confession from someone, ANYONE. To the pathetic Detectives who are like this, they don’t care about your dead child or loved one, they care about their status at work & they’re just so proud of themselves for being able to add another confession to their resume, to advance their careers, even if that means removing innocent parents from their children & putting them in prison for the rest of their lives.

    • @tonyprice2256
      @tonyprice2256 Рік тому

      Yes. And it is not by accident. It is by design. Everything is the way it is by design. The very worst criminals on the planet are those that run the system.

    • @Aztec339
      @Aztec339 Рік тому +2

      Yeah, and I hate that they can blatantly lie to you while saying, what kind of person are you? You have to admit the truth to live with yourself. All the while they can say they have your DNA when they don’t.

  • @breezus3928
    @breezus3928 Рік тому +76

    I just watched Mind Over Murder about the Beatrice Six, and now this crazy case! It's an absolute disgrace to humanity when police coerced confessions from people just to make their theory fit. They don't care about getting to truth; just about being right. All the while, the public is still in danger and the list of people traumatized in effect of the crime grows longer...

    • @lindseyyoung9149
      @lindseyyoung9149 Рік тому +1

      Where can one watch this? Sounds interesting.

    • @duchessbaby711
      @duchessbaby711 Рік тому +1

      @@lindseyyoung9149 it's a 6 episode documentary on HBO Max

    • @lindseyyoung9149
      @lindseyyoung9149 Рік тому +1

      @@duchessbaby711 Thank you for replying!

  • @alexisagostinelli3720
    @alexisagostinelli3720 Рік тому

    I grew up in the area, never heard of this investigation.. thank you for informing

  • @ajjennings9192
    @ajjennings9192 2 місяці тому +2

    This is so sad poor little girls and other victims and I feel so bad for the dad, how dare those cops and detectives do him so dirty while he is mourning his child 😥❤️

  • @kellig.6819
    @kellig.6819 Рік тому +52

    Jerry deserves more than 8 million!!! Lake County Illinois should be ashamed of themselves. Just no words for what these people did! So they were not even interested in catching the real killer.
    They don't deserve to be called prosecutors or police. I hope the detectives and the prosecuters were held accountable for what they did. Shameful.

    • @miggans21012
      @miggans21012 Рік тому +1

      He recieved 7 million.

    • @tonyprice2256
      @tonyprice2256 Рік тому

      No one was held accountable. The crooked cops, DA and judge get complete immunity no matter what they do! That is why this kind of thing happens over and over and over again! The very worst criminals on the planet or those that run this crooked system from the very top down!

  • @emperorofpluto
    @emperorofpluto Рік тому +134

    Horrifying to think that *Jorge literally got away with murder - while still at high school - and was at liberty for five years*
    Confessions made under duress are way too common - and almost always the result of investigating officers making assumptions instead of following the facts.
    *In this case Jerry's treatment was nothing less than a crime as well as an obvious attempt by police to pervert the course of justice*
    Another problem is that elected offices like District Attorney (that exist in non other country) politicise law enforcement and care more about closing cases than establishing justice

    • @rockon772
      @rockon772 Рік тому

      Well it was Jerry’s fault for confessing, if he made them do their jobs Amanda would still be alive

    • @mrsharpie7899
      @mrsharpie7899 Рік тому

      ​@@rockon772 This is bait

    • @Walczyk
      @Walczyk Рік тому

      @@mrsharpie7899 Jerry is guilty of being a huge for not learning to get a lawyer... He had been arrested so many times already why didn't he learn?

    • @bennu547
      @bennu547 Рік тому +1

      It’s torture. Plain and simple. And you don’t need to physically hurt anyone to do it. It’s all about breaking people to the point where they confess to make the torture stop

  • @CuriousGoodsJessica
    @CuriousGoodsJessica Рік тому +1

    That poor father, the trauma of finding your child like that, the guilt that you weren't there to protect her, I would lose my mind too. 😭

  • @jenniferchaney3019
    @jenniferchaney3019 Рік тому +1

    Thank You ❤️🙏😊

  • @ririimari
    @ririimari Рік тому +16

    That department should be held accountable for the woman's death who died as a result of them doing this; it allowed the real killer to hurt others.

    • @tonyprice2256
      @tonyprice2256 Рік тому +2

      The trouble is that these criminals get immunity no matter what they do!

  • @Danarchy3
    @Danarchy3 Рік тому +19

    “Reading the confession that the police wrote for him?” Uhhh what

    • @TammieR-B
      @TammieR-B Рік тому +1

      My thoughts too and that's only 2 minutes in😳

  • @freeanimals594
    @freeanimals594 Рік тому +3

    I can't even imagine what the father went through. He did get his Justice in the settlement, but it definitely was a horrifying experience for him to go through.
    I have been intrigued by what I like to call my murder shows. I know for a fact that they coerce suspects in terrible and brutal ways.
    Although I've never had any human children, I've had many pets. However, losing a human being, especially a child is something I understand is much worse.
    RIP too those who lost their lives and condolences to their family and friends.
    BTW, new subscriber!

  • @boringsomething9161
    @boringsomething9161 11 місяців тому +2

    The tragedy is that while the police and the prosecution were trying their best to get this innocent man executed, the real killer was left to kill more people. They took as much innocent life as they could. No better than any other murderer.

  • @evahc7506
    @evahc7506 Рік тому +136

    That "confession" video reminds me more of a Terrorist hostage video than a confession video.
    You can see his reluctance to read it and his emotion was too real at the thought of what happened to his daughter. People who commit these crimes against innocent kids might try to fake that emotion, but they are hollow by comparison. The video looks all kinds of wrong. I'm glad the truth came out.

    • @skyvision7363
      @skyvision7363 Рік тому +8

      I thought of Otto Warmbier. Over to this father. You could tell be him just reading the "confession" written by the police. Exhausted, devastated for his little girl and her friend. This is torture IMO. And I bet the detectives had their doubts. Look at the tragic case of "The west 'Memphis 3" A total disaster for the victims. 6 victims. 3 dead young boys. 2 in prison, and 1 on death row because of an utter bat shit investigation. The police department just wanted their hero status. The killer or killers are still out there or dead. 'After 18 years they took an Alford plea to be free. And they couldn't sue the state or county for wrongfully sentencing them. This is just one of the reasons I'm against the death penalty.

    • @V.e.r.a.
      @V.e.r.a. Рік тому +1

      The first couple minutes in watching that, I knew something wasn't right.

  • @wail0rd_
    @wail0rd_ Рік тому +13

    i just got out of school, i love watching about these cases on the bus! keep up the good work!

  • @beezer1225
    @beezer1225 Рік тому +1

    I remember when this happened.
    I lived in the neighboring town Waukegan.
    Crazy story.

  • @BurchMike1
    @BurchMike1 Рік тому +2

    Prime example that you should request an attorney no matter if you did or did not commit the crime.
    Those detectives should have been (and hopefully were) fired.

  • @lynnb5726
    @lynnb5726 Рік тому +47

    When you said the police drew up the 1st confession I knew that the guy was innocent. Please always ask for a lawyer.

    • @laurasteyn1939
      @laurasteyn1939 Рік тому +2

      Appare y he did and was denied

    • @paulinejackson5861
      @paulinejackson5861 Рік тому

      And rightly so that he is denied, the man is definitely guilty.

    • @samking2094
      @samking2094 Рік тому

      Right, police should never be allowed to write someone's confession for them...

    • @x___3scap3r3ality___x6
      @x___3scap3r3ality___x6 Рік тому

      @@paulinejackson5861 so you guilty too

    • @x___3scap3r3ality___x6
      @x___3scap3r3ality___x6 Рік тому

      @@paulinejackson5861 stfu and stop acting like you know everything. Just because you’re guilty of some crime doesn’t mean an innocent man is also guilty

  • @AlecCuellar
    @AlecCuellar Рік тому +11

    Just started, can't wait for the most insane twist I've ever heard

  • @xlnuniex
    @xlnuniex Рік тому +13

    This is exactly why you always request an attorney. Even if you didn’t do the crime you’re being accused of. Please remember this! You never know what life has in store for you. Be smart. It doesn’t matter if the cops tell you that requesting an attorney makes you look guilty. REQUEST AN ATTORNEY IMMEDIATELY

    • @joutoob9
      @joutoob9 11 місяців тому +1

      *did

    • @xlnuniex
      @xlnuniex 11 місяців тому

      @@joutoob9 No. I wrote it correctly. “Even if you didn’t do the crime…”
      There’s been numerous cases where an individual talks to the police, thinking that since they are innocent, they have nothing to worry about.
      Only to be charged with the crime they didn’t commit. Even being found guilty in court. And the “lucky ones” are able to prove their innocence after being locked up for years or even decades. It’s not worth the risk. So even if you want to help the police, always request an attorney immediately. Help yourself first and foremost. You can still answer questions with an attorney present. And requesting an attorney isn’t a valid reason for law enforcement to believe you’re guilty.

  • @GlitchPepe
    @GlitchPepe 11 місяців тому +3

    Poor Jerry what they did to him is absolutely horrible I hope he lives the rest of his life in peace

  • @devious187
    @devious187 Рік тому +154

    I'm starting to feel like interrogations and confessions made during these interrogations should automatically be excluded from court, way too many investigators have no clue what they're doing and simply bully the suspect until they get the answers they want. It just seems like too often someone is wrongly convicted of a crime based on a confession that turned out to be false.

    • @jenjayawearssocks
      @jenjayawearssocks Рік тому +19

      Oh no they know exactly what they are doing. They will do anything to get what they want out of someone. That’s why you stay silent.

    • @Rzo139
      @Rzo139 Рік тому +20

      @@jenjayawearssocks Yeah, but as he claimed, he was denied a lawyer and assaulted while being sleep deprived so being silent wouldn't get you far. It's pretty much just you against corrupt individuals.

    • @tessaducek5601
      @tessaducek5601 Рік тому +3

      It depends upon the interview.
      I do feel many are inexperienced and will lie and taunt the person .
      I hate the " I KNOW you did it !" Bull.
      With each person they speak to.
      But many are above board and will walk away when a lawyer is requested.

    • @snex000
      @snex000 Рік тому +5

      @@Rzo139 He wasn't denied a lawyer. He never asked for one. The second you ask for a lawyer, the interview must stop.
      Never speak to police. Always demand a lawyer IMMEDIATELY.

    • @sodamnsexy16
      @sodamnsexy16 Рік тому +5

      There at least needs to be a cap on how long an interrogation can be

  • @lisagoff2033
    @lisagoff2033 Рік тому +39

    So much missing, his statement said his daughter bit him... Where was the bite? Did they look for a wound? Surely this would have been used as evidence or his defense lawyers would pick up on it? Where was the knife the second child apparently pulled out? Absolutely disgusting that an innocent man was let down when an average person can see so many gaps.

    • @tonyprice2256
      @tonyprice2256 Рік тому +1

      And it's amazing that a highly educated DA and judge would actually go along with such a ridiculous story.

    • @searchingfornessie8410
      @searchingfornessie8410 Рік тому

      Yeah this video missed a lot. They also didn't talk about the circumstances of the girls deaths. Like was that guy praying on women to commit sexual crimes? Were children his intended target or was it a crime of opportunity.

  • @prophetloc365
    @prophetloc365 Рік тому +1

    As soon as I seen the way he was crying and reading the confession from the paper I knew something was strange . The cops that coerced him into confessing should serve time

  • @brittaniedunn6682
    @brittaniedunn6682 Рік тому +5

    I used to wonder how someone could be ralked into a confession until I got questioned about something I didn’t do. I knew what I’d said from the beginning was the truth, so I stuck with that. But I got back to my pod and called my cousin asking if I was home that night. He said I was. That let me know how simple tgey could’ve done that.

  • @lindseyyoung9149
    @lindseyyoung9149 Рік тому +56

    It's insane that the detail in his "confession" regarding the young girl having a knife wasn't questioned more. How common is it for a child that age to carry around a knife for crying out loud?! This whole case is so awful and it's disgusting how often this shit happens. The prosecutor and police, anyone involved, should've faced charges themselves! Justice system my ass.

    • @joeypinkpants5203
      @joeypinkpants5203 Рік тому +2

      Here in the UK, knife crime is off the scale, especially in London, kids carry knives like they would wear a watch! Its terrifying! USA have their gun crimes, we have the knives. 😔

    • @lindseyyoung9149
      @lindseyyoung9149 Рік тому +1

      @@joeypinkpants5203 Jeez... what a world we're living in huh? So sad!

    • @Reploidx9
      @Reploidx9 Рік тому +1

      @@joeypinkpants5203 Nowhere near the scale of gun crime in the US though.

    • @dharmallars
      @dharmallars Рік тому

      The idea that any police department would accept a confession where the motive for murder is self defense against two nine year old girls is just insane. Under any normal circumstance if a suspect claimed they killed a child in self defense they’d usually grill him harder to find out the real motive.

    • @jro9365
      @jro9365 11 місяців тому

      ​@dharmallars There is ZERO mention of him or anyone else claiming self defense, it was just a stupid detail, any normal thinking person would know better & that would have definitely made huge headlines if the phrase "Self Defense " had been mentioned at all.. media would have been alllllll over that & shouting it from the roof tops

  • @bunnyb1599
    @bunnyb1599 Рік тому +30

    The police that railroaded the father should be far from proud of themselves. They let a violent predator go (who went on to murder and assault other victims), whilst focusing all their attention on a broken father.

    • @samking2094
      @samking2094 Рік тому

      That's the sickest thing about these asshole policemen that don't do their jobs. Those police should face charges for any crimes committed by perpetrator's who have been allowed to continue with their crimes due to the police ineptitude and corruption.

    • @tonyprice2256
      @tonyprice2256 Рік тому

      Spot on. The crooked cops, DA and judge get complete immunity no matter what they do! That is why this kind of thing happens over and over and over again! The very worst criminals on the planet or those that run this crooked system from the very top down!

  • @danielabernathy6123
    @danielabernathy6123 Рік тому +3

    I’m glad they finally caught the real killer, and that Jerry was released. The detectives and prosecutors should really be fired, fined and jailed, especially since they all knew that his confession was false.

  • @wishmaster4089
    @wishmaster4089 Рік тому +2

    It makes you wonder how many innocent people are in jail or even put to death due to wrongful convictions and cops with an immediate bias, who disregard any evidence that doesn't match with what THEY think happened.

  • @DeepThought420
    @DeepThought420 Рік тому +40

    EWU Crew videos are always informative and entertaining while being terrible and sad at the same time! Thanks for the awesome content!

  • @_Pyroon_
    @_Pyroon_ Рік тому +26

    There should be a hard limit of something like 12-16 hours at most in interrogation. When you get beyond 24 hours you're entering the realm of torture and confessions under these conditions should have significant less weight.

  • @MrTee-hw7mp
    @MrTee-hw7mp Рік тому +1

    I’m not sure what’s worse. The psychological torture that leads to a false confession and incarceration of an innocent person or the doubling down by incompetent investigators who would rather keep an innocent person in prison than admit that they screwed up big time.

  • @clairenisbet5869
    @clairenisbet5869 Рік тому +8

    As an outsider (I live in the UK) it really concerns me the tactics police in America use in their interrogation. It also amazes me the amount of people who speak to the police and don’t lawyer up. Innocent or guilty, say no comment and get a lawyer. I would rather be suspected of being guilty than be sent to prison when I’m innocent for being coerced or beaten down into a false confession. These forced confessions and circumstantial cases happen way too often.

    • @Ceerads
      @Ceerads 11 місяців тому

      Yes, ALWAYS get a lawyer before talking with police.

  • @seandelap8587
    @seandelap8587 Рік тому +21

    Doing such a horrific thing to children words simply escape me about the evilness of it.

  • @threeblessings575
    @threeblessings575 Рік тому +18

    One of my clients many yrs ago spent 4 yrs from a false confession, he was eventually cleared . I asked why he would confess when he was innocent, he said he was mentally exhausted and just wanted the interrogation to end..

    • @tonyprice2256
      @tonyprice2256 Рік тому

      None of this is by accident. Things are the way they are all by design. The crooked cops, DA and judge get complete immunity no matter what they do! That is why this kind of thing happens over and over and over again! The very worst criminals on the planet or those that have created and run this crooked system from the very top down!

  • @LaceyTripp95
    @LaceyTripp95 Рік тому +1

    Interrogating someone for hours and hours can be so dangerous. What good does it do to potentially lock up an innocent person and simultaneously letting a murderer go loose.

  • @mataschmata
    @mataschmata Рік тому +2

    If they hadn't forced the confession, they could've arrested the actual criminal and prevented his future crimes.

  • @sadieireland7199
    @sadieireland7199 Рік тому +11

    My day is now made. Keep up the great work guys!!

  • @REDACTED1917
    @REDACTED1917 Рік тому +11

    And cops wonder why so many people don't like or respect them?
    SHIT LIKE THIS IS WHY!

  • @DETECTIVEBROOKSSTORIES
    @DETECTIVEBROOKSSTORIES 3 місяці тому

    nice job! very interesting

  • @casandrabullock9497
    @casandrabullock9497 Рік тому +6

    At the beginning of this when I saw the quick shot of the paperwork I saw Kathleen Zellners name and I knew someone was wrongfully convicted! Thank God for lawyers like her that expose coerced confessions and bad law enforcement. Innocent people really do go to prison sometimes and unfortunately are executed if they don't have a good team to expose the truth.

  • @-sweyn-9559
    @-sweyn-9559 Рік тому +13

    These are always so good.

  • @Ryuu_25
    @Ryuu_25 Рік тому +49

    I love your content so much, it's sad what these children had to go through, already can't wait for the next video. Justice will always prevail.

    • @Ryuu_25
      @Ryuu_25 Рік тому

      @@E-Kat No that isn't the reason why I like this content, I like the videos they make because it spreads awareness all around the world and it takes time and effort to make these videos and I appreciate the work put into this.

    • @karma4greedyslumlords490
      @karma4greedyslumlords490 Рік тому

      @@Ryuu_25 Justice doesn't ALWAYS prevail. Go sit down

    • @Ryuu_25
      @Ryuu_25 Рік тому

      @@karma4greedyslumlords490 I am sat down already.

    • @karma4greedyslumlords490
      @karma4greedyslumlords490 Рік тому

      @@Ryuu_25 Good. Stay there until rigor mortus sets in

  • @cigarettesmokingman9471
    @cigarettesmokingman9471 9 місяців тому +1

    Wanna know how to avoid being broken or coerced into a false confession? Ask for a lawyer immediately.

  • @Firecracker66
    @Firecracker66 Рік тому

    Thanks