@@-Zer0Dark- that's the truth. I started shaving my head in my early thirties. if you keep on waiting, it's like you are in denial. and looks horrible. lol
They had little. A shoe print and tire marks. A good attorney would have a field day with those. But interrogator used those little to make him confess in 30 minutes.
I know right, I think he must if thought ohh well I've been got, " which he really hadn't been got at all, the interagator lied about what evidence and the actual strength of evidence they had against him" which wasn't enough to pin these crimes on him or arrest him for, But he didn't realise any of that, So he wanted to get it all over with, He told the investigator absolutely everything, Every detail, Maybe he wanted to end his behaviour himself.
I always think about how I'd do in these interrogations. Then, I remember, I'm not going to murder anyone. Honestly makes life so much more stress free Thank you everyone still telling me I can be falsely accused and convicted the first 200 replies weren’t enough to get that message through
I don't know, there are a couple of videos on here of people who also didn't commit crimes who were arrested and/or convicted after sloppy interrogations. If you're innocent that's all the more reason to call a lawyer instead of submitting to an interview.
He's a military man. He's trained to be cool and collected. Or at least appear so. It is fascinating how open and honest he is though. On first watch I interpreted it as his conscience. But I think, also, he knew he was done because he had all kinds of stuff on his hard drive. His crimes seemed like crimes of impulse which steadily escalated. If there was an iota of planning involved he wouldn't have picked women/houses that literally encircled his military base lol. It was like he wanted to get caught. And he didn't seem the genuinely sociopathic type who wanted to get caught for the infamy. He seemed like he had a genuine problem. It's something a lot of men can relate to but wouldn't admit it. Most men have dark sexual thoughts at times, and the internet is a big driver of them.
He's military. It's very unusual. Among other things, he has decided to overcome his cowardice for the greater good. He knows exactly what the investigation needs from decades of filling out reports. Most killers are civilians, and don't have that kind of training or discipline. It doesn't mean he's a good person, just he's decided to do the right thing, and his military training is a part of what makes this interrogation so compelling and weird.
I believe it’s a demon or evil spirit that pushes them to do it, like I don’t think it’s truly them. Like a month or two ago when they found that guy at an amusement park loaded with guns, he killed himself but before he wrote on the wall “I am not a killer” so I believe no body truly wants to do it and that’s it’s just something trying to live through them
@@shylow3833that sounds just like every killer's excuse for doing what they did. if they are aware enough to know they aren't controlling themselves, they would seek help or turn themselves in, but they don't say anything about that until they are caught.
Him describing the scene in the basement with the cat is perhaps one of the most chilling and terrifying things I’ve ever heard. It’s so surreal it sounds straight from a horror movie.
I bet the cat knew something wasn't right, but perhaps it didn't know whether to go and warn it's owner, or to just keep an eye on the creepy guy to make sure he didn't try anything. I can't imagine how terrifying it would be to think you're home alone, safe, only to discover a man hiding in your basement.
Isn't it? A woman would never feel safe if she looked at these videos. An open window in her basement that she prob forgot about and then her cat killed her!! When he sprang out at her, that woman would have felt disbelief & terror!
@@TheMusicalStylingsofBrentBunn I can answer that: because they have rings through their noses, which are connected to their horns. Horny material doesn't evaporate.
This is still the most remarkable interview of a murder suspect on youtube or anywhere else. The steady, intelligent, persistent line of questioning of such a high status individual, resulting in a full on-camera confession, has got to be something that happens once in a lifetime.
There's a reason for all of that and that is he could take the guilt anymore. He is far from a psychopath, thinks first about his wife's well-being (under extreme stress, which make it clear he didn't ask about her on purpose of being perceived better or getting a lighter sentence), he's nervous and shows signs of inner regret. Video was of course cut in a way that makes him look as bad as possible for not causing a moral dilemma, but the most terrifying thing is that, leaving what he did aside, he is a normal, intelligent person and decent person who you'd never guess for something like this. Just shows there's evil in all of us and what we do is our choice, not our fate. I don't doubt for a second he doesn't know why he did what he did.
This is a great one. I would say the Chris's Watts interview is on par with this; yes Watts was not a high profile individual, but the case certainly was. In both cases, skilled interviewers broke the deadlock
Don't agree. Williams was given a choice. Confess. Or we toss your house where Wlliams knew they would find the evidence to convict him. To spare his wife he confessed. Any detective could have got that confession.
The "Call me Russ, please" at 28:25 is such an interesting moment to me... I really cant help but wonder why he said that. This man has gotten used to being adressed as Colonel by everybody, and the interogator strategically uses his name Russel as a way to deliberately strip away his confidence. It works, so, the mere use of his full, first name without honorifics is a legitimate ego-dissolver for him. And yet, in this moment, as his mind is racing and he is weighing the options he has left, he suddenly says "Call me Russ, please." Im so fascinated. Why is asking the investigator to essentially call him a friendly nickname, a valuable enough thing for him to say, that he decides to break his own silence and disrupt his thought process to do it? Is he trying to combat his nerves by connecting with Jim? Is he trying to manipulate his way out of the situation? If so, why didnt he seem to run further with it? What was going through his mind at that moment? Did he just want to say ANYTHING to break the silence? Why did he choose to say THAT then, when the entire opening of this video makes it clear that he's probably not someone who'd love to be called a nickname by an investigator UNTIL THIS MOMENT? Why didnt he just break the silence with an "I dont know"? No matter what the answer is, and what he was thinking, i think theres something interestingly human about it.
I think it was a response to the psychological torment of realizing his life was over. In that moment you need some sense of familiarity and warmth to tether you to the world. I think him asking to be called Russ was just him wanting someone to resemble a friend.
Honestly, i think i agree with you. @@_illustrate_ Jim's interrogation style (here at least) is pretty friendly. Russel is probably very aware that everyone close to him will be repulsed by him when they find out what he's done to those women, and on top of that he'll go to jail and be stripped of all accolades. But for now, Jim's there. "Yeah, sure, he's interrogating me, but he's being pretty friendly and kind about it." Its not a stretch of the imagination to think Russel may want to capitalize on that affable warmth that Jim is so willingly extending to him, and pretend they're sort-of friends for a moment. It lets him take a mental break from being in an interrogation room, and from everything that'll come after it: a fate that's completely out of his control now, but also entirely paved by his own actions, and therefore his own fault.
He told his wife he'd be back for dinner and just over an hour later she gets a call letting her know that her husband is under arrest for being a serial rapist/murderer. That's got to be a mood killer.
A moment of silence for that detectives kids. Who never got away with anything...... Ever..... All jokes aside that was a master class in interrogation
This guy is a genius, he got a confession of multiple rapes and murders from an airforce colonel in just over one hour. By the time he finished he pretty much solved the case with not a single request for a lawyer. Incredible interrogation technique.
Naw, he was garbage. Total and utter garbage. A 3 year old could do a better interrogation. What he should have done was confuse him a little more. You sir need to learn what a real interrogation is.
@@ibrokeintourhouseandstoleu5453 This is in no way a justification for this detectives poor manipulation skills, he was rash, loud, uncultured and in serious need of some good old fashioned professionalism. I'm not so devoid of common sense that I can't dictate whether or not his skills in mental deterioration is biased or in this case; Just.
@@LexieEclectic I feel like the timestamps in the video are usually correct, so the interrogation most likely just went on for another 9 hours if what you say is true and they were there for 10 hours
Exactly lol, idk about Canada laws, but homie should’ve just asked for a lawyer and not answer anything 😭I don’t agree with him but like dude come on 😂
Yeah, the only reference people have of interrogations of this size are from films, where they have to fit everything into a 5-minute scene. However, I've also seen other interrogations, and whilst they're all quite impressive, this interrogator trumps all the others. In fact, I have definitely seen him in another interrogation where he is just as impressive.
35:45 this is the first time you see the detective freak out. Russell tells this really intense story about the cat staring and then looks detective in the eye. Detective is like, holy fuck, and has to take a sip of his drink.
If you watch very carefully, you will see that the interviewer began mirroring the pervert’s posture. He waited a long time before beginning to do this, and eventually did so twice. Then he changed his posture completely to one that neither had used: a contemplative stance. Almost immediately the sick pervert EACTLY MIRRORED HIM!!! That was the moment the investigator turned the game, and the pervert decided it had no way out. In truth of course the investigator had bluffed about the strength and value of the tyre and footprint evidence, as well as the DNA from the first victim. Plus, they had no idea where the second victim’s body was. Had he lawyered up and said nothing, there was at that point insufficient evidence to convict. It convinced itself it was over, and convicted itself in it’s head! But it wasn’t very smart. It hunted in its own back yard. It had some very odd, very prolific trophy perversions. It kept evidence that would have linked it to the crimes. Despite all its evil depravity, the pervert had several weaknesses. One was it’s dependence upon its wife. It needed her on side for what it imagined would be the next stage. For some reason, this was the most disturbing case. The confessions offer NO real explanation for the real motives. Those desire/revenge/hate questions are inconclusive. The investigator is a genius. He saved lives for sure. The revelations at the end about entering children’s bedrooms suggests the direction the crime spree could have gone had it not been stopped. Excellent work.
That won't fix further serial killers / serial rapist ... we have to change and adapt society so we fix these kinds of behaviors. Im a optimist, we can fix things for the better of mankind ;). Hopefully so. To prevent these we must study the whole lifetime of these people so we can prevent such things happening from now on, I think it might be a good field of study for future jobs, good thing don't you think? because just hoping hell for someone who already committed these acts won't help any further.
@@athlonz2007 I believe psycho or socio-pathology isn't a "nurtured" trait, it is instrinsic to a certain % of the population and you cannot fix this naturally occuring phenomenon, you can only put measures to prevent the potential damage.
Maxime Boivin From what I’ve read psychopathy is nature, born into it. Their brains work differently. Sociopathy is nurture, it is something made by trauma. There’s a quote “Psychopaths are bred, sociopaths are made” or something along those lines
@@dingdong1456 oh no in the US they literally IQ test all incoming police officers and if you score high you are not allowed on. they admit to this openly and claim it is because they worry high IQ people will get bored and quit after undergoing costly training. LMAO
Yea cause I’m not gon lie he had a good chance if he just got a lawyer. He walked in the station ready to confess detective could’ve just looked at him for an hour.
I've met military guys and police officers whose common sense were NOT there at all. It always made me wonder how the hell he/she were able to be soldiers/cops. As far as the soldier goes, someone told me.... Well everyone needs pawns. He was probably a pawn who's friends all died around him so there was no one to promote but him. Never forgot how cool that sounded lol.
I've seen this before but I rewatched a bunch of your videos because they are so well done. Just have to say this is one of the best detectives, as far as his entire interrogation process, that I've seen in an interrogation video.
I can't imagine the rush of adrenaline a detective must get after hearing a simple phrase like "got a map?" when they've finally broken a suspect down enough to confess. It has to take nerves of steel for his hands not to shake handling the binder to get what he needs out for him to give up that crucial information.
i can only imagine the sheer terror of checking your basement on what would be a normal day only to see a figure lurking in the corner, what an absolute monster.
Agree, absolute worst nightmare. I just wanted to also comment re yt police shutting this channel down 8 months ago. Can't believe it. I found the missing end part of this interview on CBC news channel so how do they get to post explicit material but this channel gets taken down?
@@ksc743 jcs is sort of about how these people are people, and how they react to these extreme situations. meanwhile youtube encourages exploitative and sensationalized entries in the same genre with channels like explore with us.
@@obscure.reference are you saying there are far worse channels on yt that are still up and running? Because that I can agree with. I think JCS posed some kind of threat to LE. Why else would they do this to him. I'm a sensitive soul (but not where murderers are concerned) and never found any of his content offensive.
This all may have never come to light if it wasn't for the one guy who came forward with a hunch about that vehicle he miraculously remembered seeing parked in the field near her house.
You would be surprised how many killers are caught by pure chance, the only reason Dahmer was caught was because he used a different brand of handcuffs than the police. Tracy Edwards didnt originally want to press charges, he just wanted to go home but since the police could not remove the cuffs they went back to Dahmers apartment and since Dahmer did not know where he put the key as he would remove the cuffs by chopping off his victims hands, the police forced their way inside to search.
@@lowhp_comic After way too many murders. All the reasons that made it possible for him being stopped right now seem like luck. His potential next victim, which we'll never know is a very lucky person
I have a crappy job and live in a crappy Apt. I could never understand how someone with a great job a house and a summer house could give it all away to harm others? I would do anything to save a stranger!
I'm never going to be able to forget that the reason this happened is because he "saw her in her house". A day later he was in her home. The day after that she was dead. She had done nothing wrong, they'd never met, she was just in her home. She was just living and someone saw her, and that was what led to her death. I can't fathom how truly awful this is.
The intent of man’s heart is only ever continually. We think there’s a difference between us and him, there isn’t. That’s the condition of every human heart, unbelievably wicked and corrupt.
@@TwentyTwoThirtyThreeI mean considering the fact that I’ve never murdered or raped anyone I do genuinely believe that you are wrong in that. I hope you can heal your heart
@@Kimberlymarielee You’re right, you’ve never actually done it. But those intentions are in your heart. God sees all. Ever been mad at someone else and enraged towards them? In Gods eyes you are guilty of murder. Ever lusted after a woman that wasn’t your wife? You already committed adultery with her in your heart.
I see what you’re trying to say, but you should always ask for a lawyer if you’re ever called in for questioning. Police and detectives will always try to make it sound like it’s suspicious to ask for them whether you’re innocent or not
imho not really that smart, "since i haven't done anything wrong i would need a lawyer to tell me how to proceed from there, specially if i might get accused of something i didn't do" would be more than enough to brush off a sentence like that
wow. that is a serious skill to be able to tell a person that they can 'walk out of here whenever they want, totally don't have to say anything and have the right to legal counsel'... and a short while later, got them willingly confessing to murders!! incredible
ice la honk not really williams pretty much confessed once he knew he was caught to minimize the damage on his wife he was a gift for the interegator really,made him look very good.
ice la honk lot of it seems to also be posturing too. Like, “Hey, you can leave, quitter, but there’s no shame in quitting. You can stay, or go, it’s all up to you.”
It's crazy how the investigators always use the same BS "I'm your friend, it's beyond my control, I need your confession to help you, blah-blah" and it actually works waaay more often than not.
The part about that woman finding him in the basement because she was wondering what her cat was looking at is straight out of a horror movie.. my heart goes out to these women. ❤
@@Halal_Dan what?! Get out of here with your nonsense. Imagine if you had more than 2 brain cells rattling around that empty head of yours, then you wouldn’t be typing misogynistic nonsense on the internet.
@@Halal_Dan nice bait. Hope you're not Muslim based off your name because to respond to tragedy like this is un-Islamic. Don't bother responding to my comment because the one who judges your deeds is Allah SWT, who makes it very clear how women should be empowered by Islam and how men should treat them.
@@Halal_Dan Brother, what you are doing is victim blaming. It's a flawed rationalisation, one that mustn't be encouraged. You shift the blame from the perpetrator to the victim, voiding responsibility to the transgressor. The victim was in her own home, where crime is low, how could she possibly anticipate a psycho coming into her home and strangling her? It's just implausible to take into account of someone coming into your home and killing you, because these things are left to circumstances outside of our control. Just like how you'll never anticipate your own death until near the hour. There's nothing this person could have done to anticipate this and therefore not live by herself as you say to afford her the safety you propose. Even if she had someone, whose to say he wouldn't have waited for an opportunity to make sure she was alone or that the murderer kills the husband? If you're that paranoid in life, you may as well lock yourself up in an underground bunker for the rest of your life... Even then you never know. You see my point? Maybe the person you were replying to was harsh in their wording, and I get what you're saying, it just comes across as callous and unnecessary. Maybe your cadence was lost on me through being only text, so you probably meant well, idk.
Sad, if she had three trained to bite and kill suspects with three big German Shepherds she would be alive today. The trained German Shepherds after biting the suspect in the face and arms and legs would give police his DNA. If he went to a hospital to treat the dog bites. Then the hospital would then have his DNA that he left in the victim's house. This would have meant ; No alibi. Now he is where he belongs in prison. Other big BUBA'S are enjoying seeing him dance around in women's under wear.
Lord almighty I can’t even fathom the fear those girls felt.. I hope this guy receives some good “prison justice.” The fact he doesn’t have to feel the fear and pain his victims felt just isn’t not fair 😡
He tried to kill himself by stuffing a toilet paper roll in his throat after writing a suicide "letter" in mustard on his cell wall. He's not doing so good.
Just like you said, he certainly will in prison. He’s got that baby face and cowardly demeanor despite being in the military… don’t worry Bubba will fit him into the schedule 😉
Former law enforcement officer here: The detective's phrasing of "your vehicle drove up to the side of the house" and "your boots walked up to the back of the house" was brilliant. Not a direct accusation but leading to the only logical conclusion that he was guilty.
I’ve watched a lot of these, and it never gets old. The slow build up to the direct confrontation. Any innocent person would immediately deny and get upset being accused like that, but I’ve seen time and time again that most of the guilty people just casually respond. Like you literally just got accused of murder that also goes directly against your alibi and you have almost no reaction? Lol
best question he asked was, "inside or outside?" which he can immediately ascertain that either she's still alive and kidnapped, or he murdered her. Basically that question hammered the final nail in his confession.
One of the many things that stands out to me in this interrogation is his description of Corporal Marie-France Comeau’s murder. How absolutely terrifying for her. She’s in her home trying to coax her cat out of the basement one night. The cat is fixated on something and won’t move. Marie comes downstairs, notices the cat is staring at something, goes closer and sees a man with a torch hiding in the corner, who then attacks her and ties her up. That is horror movie-level terror. Glad this monster is locked away. RIP Marie-France.
I think I speak for the whole JCS fan base when I say I would love to see an episode on Paul Bernardo. It would be so interesting to see your takes on it
"Wanna know anything in particular?" That was creepy... it's like when a normal person gives up trying to keep a secret and can't be bothered anymore, except this is a 'person' who is also a detached murderer.
Yeah man I literally paused the video and took a 10 minute break. Maybe it’s just projecting my own disgust on the interrogator, but I could have sworn he “broke character” and was taken aback by that question as well (shown in how he asked the question directly after Russel’s creepy question). What a sick fuck
Yeah. That moment he showed in true colors the psycopath inside him for the frist time to another person that not his victims. He was hoping to do this more times before being caught but was eager to describe everything and confess. Since the beginning he nodded yes to the investigator, because his mind was far away and couldnt think of denying but processing that was it, the time had come to confess.
Everyone saying detached but I see a lot of emotion in him. He’s clearly ashamed of his actions. He’s looking down and sounds and knows he did something wrong. He probably just thinks that he’s already caught and at least has honor in him to “do the right thing”.
Imagine going into your basement looking for your cat and finding someone waiting like that. It makes me sick knowing how scared those women must have been.
Never heard of him. I can't find anything about him on Google. Even the narrator says he wasn't a world renowned expert. He just printed off the copies.
Thank you so much! I watched the interrogation without commentary...and had an extremely difficult time understanding exactly who he is, what the crimes were and how he was caught.
The reason that occurred is because the detective actually did a really good job of not directly naming the crimes. He would say things like missing people, the situation at hand, these situations, etc. The reason that is useful is it tries to avoid priming the other person's mind with all the expected negative connotations of heinous crimes. It makes it almost feel like the detective is asking him to admit to a much lesser crime. You get the sense the crime is incredibly serious. At the same time, there are moments where the detective almost makes it sound like he is just asking for him to admit to stealing some candy and his reputation is all that is at stake.
he is so disconnected to the terror he inflicted on his victims. He actually slept with a bound victim next to him in the bed. These poor women went through hell and then he disposed of them like throwing trash in a bin.
@@pikachupowers i think it depends on the prison in question and whether or not the criminal in question will make friends once there, but i feel like life in supermax without parole and plenty of solitary is far greater punishment than death, which would relieve him of any consequences
This man honestly scares me. Seeing how calm he is while confessing to brutally murdering/violating these women is chilling. Wow. My heart goes out to his victims and their families.
@Tracy Howard-Allison your missing the most craziest part, that lady that he worked with once. He knew from the first time he seen her he was going to kill her. Let that sink in.
One hour and he had the Colonel singing like a choirboy! Excellent work by this interrogator. One predator less roaming around. Well done to all involved.
@@joii_j No, it's after the "crossroads" moment during the interrogation. Notice his behavior prior to the examination of his boots. He is arrogant and relaxed; yet, any possible anxiety seemed to tell on him by the way he chewed his gum. After the examination his breathing pattern is different, more strained; he begins to sigh periodically; his arms are crossed; his posture is more rigid and stressed; I think he must have swallowed the aforementioned gum...sighhhhhhh
@@mgal6234 Definitely relieved, he probably had so much anxiety and racing thoughts about thinking of excuses, the fact that he can just tell the truth now is a weight of his shoulders.
This was an absolute masterclass by Sgt Smyth. I was polite professional and fact based. He played Russell like a fiddle. This is impressive ai that Russell was a senior military officer who had to be trained to dodge interrogation questions. However, Russell did not help himself by showing up to the interview in the same shoes and the same truck he used in the crimes
Russell was ready to confess the moment he sat down lol. He gave no resistance whatsoever and didn't lie about anything or evade anything. He also knew he was cooked because his hard drive was full of massively incriminating evidence, as well as DNA evidence and God knows what else. He made no effort to conceal his tracks. His crimes were clearly impulse crimes and he seemed to know he had a problem. The interrogator was good but it was a layup.
I wouldn't describe that as an easy confession, since the interrogator used an artful mastery of his technique for an intense hour to coax the man into confessing.
He didn’t seem to be the sort to assert his authority. Many military officers are little more than bureaucrats, who, despite the authority their rank affords them, are nevertheless unaccustomed to exercising the sort of command over subordinates that, say, your typical infantry NCO does. Orders are dispatched from their ranks in a very impersonal/detached fashion.
GSTAL005 I wasn’t referring to the benefits of his rank, but the means by which he exercised his authority - you know, the interpersonal dimensions that are relevant to his psychological profile and the case in question. It’s one thing to become accustomed to people affording you praise, pageantry, and respect. That typically leads to arrogance. It does not, however, manifest or amplify authoritarian traits - which are usually ingrained in people’s personalities before they put on a uniform.
Whoever is the narrator on this video is the greatest. I could sincerely listen to you listing out the ingredients to Cocoa Puffs and I would be in bliss. Love the work!
The bloodthirt of this Ace is amazing, to shortcircuit that quickly then go on a calculated spree , and though it gave him time to think about his actions returned again and again to complete his mission.
@Jac K I'd rather look at my lawyer everytime an interrogator asks me any question. I'd act like I'm guilty on all questions. That's essentially how you combat a poly right
@Jac K I'm a law abiding citizen but im also a spooky fuck, if i ever get accused they're definitely gonna think im guilty bc of how i look and act, so i think staying quiet and lawyering up is a good takeaway too.
Never talk to ANYONE without a lawyer. They use your pride and arrogance against you because you think you can outsmart them. Never, ever, talk...guilty or innocent. Don't talk.
I keep thinking that when Marie-France first saw her CO in the basement, she must have wondered what he was doing there. I wonder at point she thought she was going to die. It is a tragic case. One cannot imagine the fear she went through - the anguish, the mental torture, not to mention the physical violations of her body. Nobody can imagine the suffering that poor woman went through. It really is hard to imagine how a person can do this to another person.
He's just psychologically pressing him with power, you can find similar footage where an interrogator would employ this same tactic, but on an innocent suspect, or if the suspect goes hard in denial. And such footage usually also shows how bad these cops really are when stuff goes beyond regular interrogation practices they learned during their 2 days special agent courses. They lose temper and go into very agressive confrontations very fast.
Amazing that concerned citizen was so alert that he payed attention to a strange vehicle parked haphazardly in a field. Being aware of his surroundings changed the course of this investigation! Good job on his part.
im always gazing around when I drive looking to see if things are out of place or different. It is just something I do. Many people are so tunnel visioned it honestly baffles me.
They need to bring his barber in for questioning as well
LoL
the colonel's nickname was Patch
At that age where old dudes try desperately to hold on to a rapidly-fading youth, no matter how goofy it looks. lol
Time for a straight-shave.
@@-Zer0Dark- that's the truth. I started shaving my head in my early thirties. if you keep on waiting, it's like you are in denial. and looks horrible. lol
@@-Zer0Dark- HaHa Luckily Michael Jordan and Bruce Willis made it fashionable.
The witness who noticed a parked truck is the reason he got caught.
& not asking for a lawyer
Eventually he would have been caught some other way i am sure. Dude was cocky af
Caught before anyone else was killed, at least.
There's always someone or something watching 😂
He was done regardless, I think. He had all kinds of incriminating stuff at his home and on his computer. @@josephmcbrien7646
This is a masterclass in interrogation. The detective absolutely smashed it.
I can't believe that this clown wore the same shoes to the copshop.
When the interrogator said, "I put my best foot forward for you here, bud" 🤣legend
Masterclass in bation
They had little. A shoe print and tire marks. A good attorney would have a field day with those. But interrogator used those little to make him confess in 30 minutes.
Jim is literally the best. He is fantastic in his other interrogation too of Michael R. A complete savage.
He looks down and thinks.... "Oh shit i wore my raping shoes today"
You win. Best comment to the episode!
I know right. what a jackass
This reads like Norm Macdonald's joke about OJ's lucky stabbing hat.
Raping shoes, lol 🤣💀
I'm dead 🤣
This channel is like attending a very interesting class where I dont have to do anything
Lol
Funny!
Not only that it's like a class I didn't sign up for, yet in few months I'll become a novice interrogator.
Do you always steal comments for thumbs up likes on UA-cam orrr?...
EdMcStinko hella😂
Dude chewed that gum into cement.
I'm here to party lol tcap great show
“Put this on tv, I’ll sue”
this is the cleanest best pleasurable comment.
@@searchingforpennies not this guy that's Cody green he's another tcap legend
You’re lookin for a pedaphiler, IM NOT!
I’m here to party!
Haircut alone deserves jail time
😂😂😂😂
😂😂😂😂 I’m weak
thought the same
you think he cut his hair like that lmao? man is clearly balding
@@ThePainkiller9995 ya think!?
Wow this Detective is on a whole new level. He sounds like a therapist but goes in ruthless.
It's basic interrogation lol
@@joshfrench6426 "Staphan, waaa ?"
Like watching a cat gently play with a mouse...
@@joshfrench6426The nuances and strategy the detective uses in the interrogation is more than “basic”. It’s quite impressive.
To be real, just being straightforward and honest is the best way to get the truth out of anyone
"Where is she?" "Got a map?" Jesus Christ, man didn't even blink.
JooseMunkee @37:57
He was trained to respond, always respond. He wasn't trained to think. Thats how this interview went south so fast
@@braxma12 i was thinking the same thing
Seems proud of it
I know right,
I think he must if thought ohh well I've been got, " which he really hadn't been got at all, the interagator lied about what evidence and the actual strength of evidence they had against him" which wasn't enough to pin these crimes on him or arrest him for,
But he didn't realise any of that, So he wanted to get it all over with, He told the investigator absolutely everything, Every detail, Maybe he wanted to end his behaviour himself.
I always think about how I'd do in these interrogations. Then, I remember, I'm not going to murder anyone. Honestly makes life so much more stress free
Thank you everyone still telling me I can be falsely accused and convicted the first 200 replies weren’t enough to get that message through
@@Pessoa3530 Or just don't murder anyone.... Jfc.
I don't know, there are a couple of videos on here of people who also didn't commit crimes who were arrested and/or convicted after sloppy interrogations. If you're innocent that's all the more reason to call a lawyer instead of submitting to an interview.
Murders usually say that decades before committing the murder
there must be some guilty secrets in your life!
@@nigel4776 It looks like you may be projecting your own guilt.
It will always blow me away how normal, cool, collected, open and honest these psychopaths appear to be. Terrifying.
He's a military man. He's trained to be cool and collected. Or at least appear so.
It is fascinating how open and honest he is though. On first watch I interpreted it as his conscience. But I think, also, he knew he was done because he had all kinds of stuff on his hard drive. His crimes seemed like crimes of impulse which steadily escalated. If there was an iota of planning involved he wouldn't have picked women/houses that literally encircled his military base lol. It was like he wanted to get caught. And he didn't seem the genuinely sociopathic type who wanted to get caught for the infamy. He seemed like he had a genuine problem.
It's something a lot of men can relate to but wouldn't admit it. Most men have dark sexual thoughts at times, and the internet is a big driver of them.
He's military. It's very unusual. Among other things, he has decided to overcome his cowardice for the greater good. He knows exactly what the investigation needs from decades of filling out reports. Most killers are civilians, and don't have that kind of training or discipline. It doesn't mean he's a good person, just he's decided to do the right thing, and his military training is a part of what makes this interrogation so compelling and weird.
I believe it’s a demon or evil spirit that pushes them to do it, like I don’t think it’s truly them. Like a month or two ago when they found that guy at an amusement park loaded with guns, he killed himself but before he wrote on the wall “I am not a killer” so I believe no body truly wants to do it and that’s it’s just something trying to live through them
thats dumb@@shylow3833
@@shylow3833that sounds just like every killer's excuse for doing what they did. if they are aware enough to know they aren't controlling themselves, they would seek help or turn themselves in, but they don't say anything about that until they are caught.
Him describing the scene in the basement with the cat is perhaps one of the most chilling and terrifying things I’ve ever heard. It’s so surreal it sounds straight from a horror movie.
Seriously, nightmare fuel
I bet the cat knew something wasn't right, but perhaps it didn't know whether to go and warn it's owner, or to just keep an eye on the creepy guy to make sure he didn't try anything. I can't imagine how terrifying it would be to think you're home alone, safe, only to discover a man hiding in your basement.
Isn't it? A woman would never feel safe if she looked at these videos. An open window in her basement that she prob forgot about and then her cat killed her!!
When he sprang out at her, that woman would have felt disbelief & terror!
I watched this video 4 years ago, and that scene never left my head.
I was about to comment about the same thing.
Man, I love not being in prison.
it's easy too
don't commit crimes
In other news, water is wet.
@@JarvisBaileyVA Then why haven't all the water buffaloes evaporated?
@@TheMusicalStylingsofBrentBunn
I can answer that: because they have rings through their noses, which are connected to their horns. Horny material doesn't evaporate.
@@sgtpepper91 that doesn't work for thousands of people... there's a reason the united states has such a preposterously high conviction rate.
Watched this entire thing and I really couldn’t stop staring at the top of this man’s head
that bald patch wouldn’t even be visible if he grew his hair out a couple of centimetres
So I'm not the only one 😂
Haha, i was looking for that comment
I’m so glad I’m not the only one
it said ☯️
This is still the most remarkable interview of a murder suspect on youtube or anywhere else. The steady, intelligent, persistent line of questioning of such a high status individual, resulting in a full on-camera confession, has got to be something that happens once in a lifetime.
There's a reason for all of that and that is he could take the guilt anymore. He is far from a psychopath, thinks first about his wife's well-being (under extreme stress, which make it clear he didn't ask about her on purpose of being perceived better or getting a lighter sentence), he's nervous and shows signs of inner regret. Video was of course cut in a way that makes him look as bad as possible for not causing a moral dilemma, but the most terrifying thing is that, leaving what he did aside, he is a normal, intelligent person and decent person who you'd never guess for something like this. Just shows there's evil in all of us and what we do is our choice, not our fate. I don't doubt for a second he doesn't know why he did what he did.
This is a great one. I would say the Chris's Watts interview is on par with this; yes Watts was not a high profile individual, but the case certainly was.
In both cases, skilled interviewers broke the deadlock
Don't agree. Williams was given a choice. Confess. Or we toss your house where Wlliams knew they would find the evidence to convict him. To spare his wife he confessed. Any detective could have got that confession.
@@thenetnet5556 how did they get the shoe prints? He surrendered them willingly to the interrogator.
@@randomlyfactual1943..He was wearing them at this interview, and agreed to let them examine them
The "Call me Russ, please" at 28:25 is such an interesting moment to me... I really cant help but wonder why he said that. This man has gotten used to being adressed as Colonel by everybody, and the interogator strategically uses his name Russel as a way to deliberately strip away his confidence. It works, so, the mere use of his full, first name without honorifics is a legitimate ego-dissolver for him. And yet, in this moment, as his mind is racing and he is weighing the options he has left, he suddenly says "Call me Russ, please." Im so fascinated. Why is asking the investigator to essentially call him a friendly nickname, a valuable enough thing for him to say, that he decides to break his own silence and disrupt his thought process to do it? Is he trying to combat his nerves by connecting with Jim? Is he trying to manipulate his way out of the situation? If so, why didnt he seem to run further with it? What was going through his mind at that moment? Did he just want to say ANYTHING to break the silence? Why did he choose to say THAT then, when the entire opening of this video makes it clear that he's probably not someone who'd love to be called a nickname by an investigator UNTIL THIS MOMENT? Why didnt he just break the silence with an "I dont know"?
No matter what the answer is, and what he was thinking, i think theres something interestingly human about it.
I think it was a response to the psychological torment of realizing his life was over. In that moment you need some sense of familiarity and warmth to tether you to the world. I think him asking to be called Russ was just him wanting someone to resemble a friend.
Honestly, i think i agree with you. @@_illustrate_ Jim's interrogation style (here at least) is pretty friendly. Russel is probably very aware that everyone close to him will be repulsed by him when they find out what he's done to those women, and on top of that he'll go to jail and be stripped of all accolades. But for now, Jim's there. "Yeah, sure, he's interrogating me, but he's being pretty friendly and kind about it." Its not a stretch of the imagination to think Russel may want to capitalize on that affable warmth that Jim is so willingly extending to him, and pretend they're sort-of friends for a moment. It lets him take a mental break from being in an interrogation room, and from everything that'll come after it: a fate that's completely out of his control now, but also entirely paved by his own actions, and therefore his own fault.
@@Bean-hz8jo agreed
Maybe it was a plea for mercy. Which he didn’t give the women and which he didn’t deserve.
Russ is the killer alter ego
He told his wife he'd be back for dinner and just over an hour later she gets a call letting her know that her husband is under arrest for being a serial rapist/murderer. That's got to be a mood killer.
LOL
day completely ruined
Yikes
The vibe is gone
Imagine your husbands interrogation footage going down in history on UA-cam
"You're obviously very intelligent Colonel." ...wears same boots from crime to interrogation lol
It's part of the game to compliment them...
@@DA-to6gi Ego up, baby.
@@Vindsvelle If you want to know someone, give them power or in this case, the sense of control.
In fact, most people don't control sh"t in they're life's, not even killers...
Lol
A moment of silence for that detectives kids. Who never got away with anything...... Ever.....
All jokes aside that was a master class in interrogation
The noise the microphone makes every time the table is knocked adds even more suspense
Its called microphone makes noise technique...:D
This guy is a genius, he got a confession of multiple rapes and murders from an airforce colonel in just over one hour. By the time he finished he pretty much solved the case with not a single request for a lawyer. Incredible interrogation technique.
Naw, he was garbage. Total and utter garbage. A 3 year old could do a better interrogation. What he should have done was confuse him a little more. You sir need to learn what a real interrogation is.
@@cravenblade2965 hahahahaha
@@cravenblade2965 and you sir need to learn how to spell.
@@nemo9540 You can't tell me how to spell. I am smart. You sir, are an uneducated buffoon.
@@ibrokeintourhouseandstoleu5453 This is in no way a justification for this detectives poor manipulation skills, he was rash, loud, uncultured and in serious need of some good old fashioned professionalism. I'm not so devoid of common sense that I can't dictate whether or not his skills in mental deterioration is biased or in this case; Just.
He got the confession, location of the body, and a handshake from the suspect all in less than an hour. That takes serious skill.
Having an overconfident fool as a subject for your interview helps too, though.
Apparently this interview went on for 10 hours. This video is edited.
@@LexieEclectic I feel like the timestamps in the video are usually correct, so the interrogation most likely just went on for another 9 hours if what you say is true and they were there for 10 hours
Not to compliment Russ, but he isn’t as stupid as other criminals. He knew it was pointless and probably felt relief confessing to everything.
@@M15CH13F How was it pointless? They had basically nothing on him before he started talking.
The ending chills me more than if he had said he enjoys it. He genuinely can't explain or give reason to his behaviour.
How the fuck was this dude able to enter 80+ house property during daytime without being seen?
Bruh this man literally bluffed a murderer into a confession with zero solid evidence, like WTF?!?!
Exactly lol, idk about Canada laws, but homie should’ve just asked for a lawyer and not answer anything 😭I don’t agree with him but like dude come on 😂
Why you don't talk to cops (even if you have done nothing wrong)
That’s what he gets. Good thing he got caught.
Jim Smyth is the goat
He was invited to the interview too. So he went there out of his own volition. He's pretty dumb.
This is the first time I realized that interrogating someone is actually quite an art form.
Ashley Garden same...same lol...
A lot of it, maybe not necessarily in this one, is actually very theatrical
Yeah, the only reference people have of interrogations of this size are from films, where they have to fit everything into a 5-minute scene. However, I've also seen other interrogations, and whilst they're all quite impressive, this interrogator trumps all the others. In fact, I have definitely seen him in another interrogation where he is just as impressive.
It’s amazing!
@@cgopie1 this detective is quite good at his job
This was the best of the best of the best, here. Never, have I seen a more beautifully well executed interrogation in all my life!
35:45 this is the first time you see the detective freak out. Russell tells this really intense story about the cat staring and then looks detective in the eye. Detective is like, holy fuck, and has to take a sip of his drink.
Or he was just thirsty
This dude seen the worst of the worst. I don’t think he’s freaking out lol
I felt like I needed a lawyer to watch this video with me.
lol
Hahaha good one bro
Lol too funny
Police interrogators are fascinating
Top comment
Jim: “We’ve seized your balls and locked them in this bag. Oh, we also shot your dog”
Russell: “Mm, mhm”
I broke out laughing at work reading this comment. Well done.
LMFAOO
💀
LMFAO, ACCURATE.
Mh mhmm and chewing gum haha
I think when he said "it's getting out of control " really resonated with the suspect, because his actions had gotten out of control.
I can’t imagine how the investigator must feel when he finally gets him to break. A mix of horror and relief
it caught me off guard when he said "got a map?"
bruh
Yeah that was a kick the nuts I was like “OH SHIT!”
If you watch very carefully, you will see that the interviewer began mirroring the pervert’s posture. He waited a long time before beginning to do this, and eventually did so twice. Then he changed his posture completely to one that neither had used: a contemplative stance.
Almost immediately the sick pervert EACTLY MIRRORED HIM!!!
That was the moment the investigator turned the game, and the pervert decided it had no way out.
In truth of course the investigator had bluffed about the strength and value of the tyre and footprint evidence, as well as the DNA from the first victim. Plus, they had no idea where the second victim’s body was. Had he lawyered up and said nothing, there was at that point insufficient evidence to convict. It convinced itself it was over, and convicted itself in it’s head!
But it wasn’t very smart. It hunted in its own back yard. It had some very odd, very prolific trophy perversions. It kept evidence that would have linked it to the crimes.
Despite all its evil depravity, the pervert had several weaknesses. One was it’s dependence upon its wife. It needed her on side for what it imagined would be the next stage.
For some reason, this was the most disturbing case. The confessions offer NO real explanation for the real motives. Those desire/revenge/hate questions are inconclusive.
The investigator is a genius. He saved lives for sure. The revelations at the end about entering children’s bedrooms suggests the direction the crime spree could have gone had it not been stopped. Excellent work.
@@G58 I too watched the video.
Finn Nostromo 😭😂😂😂
@@overdrive1224 lmao
This interrogator is so good I almost admitted to it
oh shit lmao!!!!
😂😂😂
Right!? Got a confession in less than an hour!
Well damn😂😂😂😂
I know omg I’m over here clapping him on
I've come back to this a few times and I think it's one of the best videos on UA-cam ( certainly the best in this genre)
This is the #1 most amazing and skillful interrogation of a serial killer you're every going to see.
“Subsequent to his conviction, his uniform was burned, his medals were destroyed and his vehicle crushed and scrapped.”
Good!
That won't fix further serial killers / serial rapist ... we have to change and adapt society so we fix these kinds of behaviors. Im a optimist, we can fix things for the better of mankind ;). Hopefully so. To prevent these we must study the whole lifetime of these people so we can prevent such things happening from now on, I think it might be a good field of study for future jobs, good thing don't you think? because just hoping hell for someone who already committed these acts won't help any further.
@@athlonz2007 A certain percentage of the population will always have an appetite for blood. There's not a lot you can do about that.
@@athlonz2007 I believe psycho or socio-pathology isn't a "nurtured" trait, it is instrinsic to a certain % of the population and you cannot fix this naturally occuring phenomenon, you can only put measures to prevent the potential damage.
Maxime Boivin From what I’ve read psychopathy is nature, born into it. Their brains work differently. Sociopathy is nurture, it is something made by trauma. There’s a quote “Psychopaths are bred, sociopaths are made” or something along those lines
His wife should’ve kept the car right?
Will never cease to amaze me how someone could be so high ranking and yet not immediately ask for a lawyer. I'm glad he didn't though
You don't get promoted for thinking in the military ;)
Not saying that everyone there is dumb, but it surely helps sometimes.
@@dingdong1456 oh no in the US they literally IQ test all incoming police officers and if you score high you are not allowed on. they admit to this openly and claim it is because they worry high IQ people will get bored and quit after undergoing costly training. LMAO
@@dingdong1456 for enlisted yeah, officer’s gotta have some brains
Yea cause I’m not gon lie he had a good chance if he just got a lawyer. He walked in the station ready to confess detective could’ve just looked at him for an hour.
I've met military guys and police officers whose common sense were NOT there at all. It always made me wonder how the hell he/she were able to be soldiers/cops. As far as the soldier goes, someone told me.... Well everyone needs pawns. He was probably a pawn who's friends all died around him so there was no one to promote but him.
Never forgot how cool that sounded lol.
I've seen this before but I rewatched a bunch of your videos because they are so well done. Just have to say this is one of the best detectives, as far as his entire interrogation process, that I've seen in an interrogation video.
I can't imagine the rush of adrenaline a detective must get after hearing a simple phrase like "got a map?" when they've finally broken a suspect down enough to confess. It has to take nerves of steel for his hands not to shake handling the binder to get what he needs out for him to give up that crucial information.
i can only imagine the sheer terror of checking your basement on what would be a normal day only to see a figure lurking in the corner, what an absolute monster.
That poor cat was probably terrified too
Agree, absolute worst nightmare. I just wanted to also comment re yt police shutting this channel down 8 months ago. Can't believe it. I found the missing end part of this interview on CBC news channel so how do they get to post explicit material but this channel gets taken down?
@@Xpwnxage thats why dogs better than cats
@@ksc743 jcs is sort of about how these people are people, and how they react to these extreme situations. meanwhile youtube encourages exploitative and sensationalized entries in the same genre with channels like explore with us.
@@obscure.reference are you saying there are far worse channels on yt that are still up and running? Because that I can agree with.
I think JCS posed some kind of threat to LE. Why else would they do this to him. I'm a sensitive soul (but not where murderers are concerned) and never found any of his content offensive.
This all may have never come to light if it wasn't for the one guy who came forward with a hunch about that vehicle he miraculously remembered seeing parked in the field near her house.
You would be surprised how many killers are caught by pure chance, the only reason Dahmer was caught was because he used a different brand of handcuffs than the police. Tracy Edwards didnt originally want to press charges, he just wanted to go home but since the police could not remove the cuffs they went back to Dahmers apartment and since Dahmer did not know where he put the key as he would remove the cuffs by chopping off his victims hands, the police forced their way inside to search.
They would have searched the field i guess. Imagine if it had rained and the prints were washed out tho.
What if Colonel changed his vehicle tyres.
I bet it would have surfaced sooner or later, he seemed like he was getting increasingly cocky so he would have slipped up
@@lowhp_comic After way too many murders. All the reasons that made it possible for him being stopped right now seem like luck. His potential next victim, which we'll never know is a very lucky person
I have a crappy job and live in a crappy Apt. I could never understand how someone with a great job a house and a summer house could give it all away to harm others? I would do anything to save a stranger!
Refreshing new angle. I had watched the interview four hundred times, and this video helped me learn more about the case❤
get a life
His hair is trying to escape the interrogation room lmao
Ok of all the hair jokes I didn’t laugh at, this one got me 😂
Alot of it made the escape
I’m dead😂🤣😭😭💀
Years of wearing different twat hats
CTFUP!!!
I'm never going to be able to forget that the reason this happened is because he "saw her in her house". A day later he was in her home. The day after that she was dead. She had done nothing wrong, they'd never met, she was just in her home. She was just living and someone saw her, and that was what led to her death. I can't fathom how truly awful this is.
The intent of man’s heart is only ever continually. We think there’s a difference between us and him, there isn’t. That’s the condition of every human heart, unbelievably wicked and corrupt.
@@TwentyTwoThirtyThreeI mean considering the fact that I’ve never murdered or raped anyone I do genuinely believe that you are wrong in that. I hope you can heal your heart
@@Kimberlymarielee You’re right, you’ve never actually done it. But those intentions are in your heart. God sees all. Ever been mad at someone else and enraged towards them? In Gods eyes you are guilty of murder. Ever lusted after a woman that wasn’t your wife? You already committed adultery with her in your heart.
@@TwentyTwoThirtyThree I see. I’m sorry you feel that way. We are created in his image and we are loving and kind and beautiful just like he is.
@@TwentyTwoThirtyThree If we're that in the eyes of your sky daddy, he's a pretty dumb and incompetent god. Leave religion out of this you fruitcake.
That hair is a crime in itself.
Crime against humanity
The silent minutes go by and it is so gut wrenching
"Is there any reason you want to see a lawyer now ?" Such a clever way to put it
only just clicked how smart that is
I see what you’re trying to say, but you should always ask for a lawyer if you’re ever called in for questioning. Police and detectives will always try to make it sound like it’s suspicious to ask for them whether you’re innocent or not
@@phoenixfeatherr yeah true that but in this case its very fortunate he didnt
imho not really that smart, "since i haven't done anything wrong i would need a lawyer to tell me how to proceed from there, specially if i might get accused of something i didn't do" would be more than enough to brush off a sentence like that
Hows Ray doin these days rick?
wow. that is a serious skill to be able to tell a person that they can 'walk out of here whenever they want, totally don't have to say anything and have the right to legal counsel'... and a short while later, got them willingly confessing to murders!! incredible
There was a lot of bluffing going on too, but Russ was a psycho.
That was prime detective and interrogation work.
He wanted it to END.
ice la honk not really williams pretty much confessed once he knew he was caught to minimize the damage on his wife he was a gift for the interegator really,made him look very good.
ice la honk lot of it seems to also be posturing too. Like, “Hey, you can leave, quitter, but there’s no shame in quitting. You can stay, or go, it’s all up to you.”
It's crazy how the investigators always use the same BS "I'm your friend, it's beyond my control, I need your confession to help you, blah-blah" and it actually works waaay more often than not.
In the U.S., cops are allowed to lie to you.
@@Lee-fi4vo The interrogator lied to the suspect in this video.
@@Lee-fi4voi think this is in canada
Jcs is like a friend who only tells you something about them only when you directly ask them about it. Amazing
It’s so bizarre how much he cares about his wife’s feelings, but not the women he kidnapped, brutally raped, and murdered.
Seems to be a common theme with married serial killers.
He has no empathy for them because they arent important to him or his life, it's basically empathetic narcissism if that's a thing
Not a man
Right? It's presumed that psychopaths feel no empathy or remorse yet he conveyed that for his wife...
But also how much could he really care about his wife... if he actually wanted her not to suffer he wouldn’t of done that crap. He needs to fry.
The part about that woman finding him in the basement because she was wondering what her cat was looking at is straight out of a horror movie.. my heart goes out to these women. ❤
@@Halal_Dan what?! Get out of here with your nonsense. Imagine if you had more than 2 brain cells rattling around that empty head of yours, then you wouldn’t be typing misogynistic nonsense on the internet.
@@Halal_Dan Imagine if less men were serial murderer rapists, women should live with as many people as they fucking want, nice try victim blaming cunt
@@Halal_Dan nice bait. Hope you're not Muslim based off your name because to respond to tragedy like this is un-Islamic. Don't bother responding to my comment because the one who judges your deeds is Allah SWT, who makes it very clear how women should be empowered by Islam and how men should treat them.
@@Halal_Dan Brother, what you are doing is victim blaming. It's a flawed rationalisation, one that mustn't be encouraged. You shift the blame from the perpetrator to the victim, voiding responsibility to the transgressor.
The victim was in her own home, where crime is low, how could she possibly anticipate a psycho coming into her home and strangling her? It's just implausible to take into account of someone coming into your home and killing you, because these things are left to circumstances outside of our control. Just like how you'll never anticipate your own death until near the hour. There's nothing this person could have done to anticipate this and therefore not live by herself as you say to afford her the safety you propose.
Even if she had someone, whose to say he wouldn't have waited for an opportunity to make sure she was alone or that the murderer kills the husband? If you're that paranoid in life, you may as well lock yourself up in an underground bunker for the rest of your life... Even then you never know. You see my point?
Maybe the person you were replying to was harsh in their wording, and I get what you're saying, it just comes across as callous and unnecessary. Maybe your cadence was lost on me through being only text, so you probably meant well, idk.
Sad, if she had three trained to bite and kill suspects with three big German Shepherds she would be alive today. The trained German Shepherds after biting the suspect in the face and arms and legs would give police his DNA. If he went to a hospital to treat the dog bites. Then the hospital would then have his DNA that he left in the victim's house. This would have meant ; No alibi. Now he is where he belongs in prison. Other big BUBA'S are enjoying seeing him dance around in women's under wear.
Lord almighty I can’t even fathom the fear those girls felt.. I hope this guy receives some good “prison justice.” The fact he doesn’t have to feel the fear and pain his victims felt just isn’t not fair 😡
He tried to kill himself by stuffing a toilet paper roll in his throat after writing a suicide "letter" in mustard on his cell wall. He's not doing so good.
Just like you said, he certainly will in prison. He’s got that baby face and cowardly demeanor despite being in the military… don’t worry Bubba will fit him into the schedule 😉
@@mpicazio23 Look at his crimes, he'll probably enjoy it
People who go to prison on skin beefs definitely feel fear.
So distracted by the continental divide in his hair
I can *not* stop looking at it!
Former law enforcement officer here: The detective's phrasing of "your vehicle drove up to the side of the house" and "your boots walked up to the back of the house" was brilliant. Not a direct accusation but leading to the only logical conclusion that he was guilty.
You might enjoy Jim Smyth on the behaviour panel 👍
True. Very little details but still important. He really did a perfect job here.
I’ve watched a lot of these, and it never gets old. The slow build up to the direct confrontation. Any innocent person would immediately deny and get upset being accused like that, but I’ve seen time and time again that most of the guilty people just casually respond. Like you literally just got accused of murder that also goes directly against your alibi and you have almost no reaction? Lol
Yeah, gotta make sure to keep clarifying "alleged car/boots/etc"
best question he asked was, "inside or outside?" which he can immediately ascertain that either she's still alive and kidnapped, or he murdered her. Basically that question hammered the final nail in his confession.
This dude drank coffee with a mouth full of gum. What a psychopath.
💀💀💀
Some men just wanna watch the world burn
Praise the sub
I've done that... Shit am I a psychopath?
I do it all the time. It's like mint coffee.
One of the many things that stands out to me in this interrogation is his description of Corporal Marie-France Comeau’s murder. How absolutely terrifying for her. She’s in her home trying to coax her cat out of the basement one night. The cat is fixated on something and won’t move. Marie comes downstairs, notices the cat is staring at something, goes closer and sees a man with a torch hiding in the corner, who then attacks her and ties her up. That is horror movie-level terror. Glad this monster is locked away. RIP Marie-France.
I think I speak for the whole JCS fan base when I say I would love to see an episode on Paul Bernardo. It would be so interesting to see your takes on it
"Wanna know anything in particular?"
That was creepy... it's like when a normal person gives up trying to keep a secret and can't be bothered anymore, except this is a 'person' who is also a detached murderer.
Yeah man I literally paused the video and took a 10 minute break. Maybe it’s just projecting my own disgust on the interrogator, but I could have sworn he “broke character” and was taken aback by that question as well (shown in how he asked the question directly after Russel’s creepy question). What a sick fuck
BollywoodBonanzaB I was thinking the same think like he had the audacity
Yeah. That moment he showed in true colors the psycopath inside him for the frist time to another person that not his victims. He was hoping to do this more times before being caught but was eager to describe everything and confess. Since the beginning he nodded yes to the investigator, because his mind was far away and couldnt think of denying but processing that was it, the time had come to confess.
Everyone saying detached but I see a lot of emotion in him. He’s clearly ashamed of his actions. He’s looking down and sounds and knows he did something wrong. He probably just thinks that he’s already caught and at least has honor in him to “do the right thing”.
Right. Like I just made lentils. It’s an easy recipe. Want it?
Imagine going into your basement looking for your cat and finding someone waiting like that. It makes me sick knowing how scared those women must have been.
Russ: "Surprise, muthafucka!"
Monsters exist.
I'd of been scared too if I found my car in the basement
@@Faithinhim7 lol, fixed it.
@@ItsMeUrDaad you expect everyone to walk around in their own houses with a loaded pistol in hand 24/7?
Unbelievably horrifying. As a woman, you would know he was there to rape and murder you.
He is a revolting human.
His poor victims and Their families.
Its rereshing af how once he finally gives in, he just completely openly shares the whole truth. Hes a monster, but you gotta respect the honesty.
Um no, the term the jig is up comes to mind. Why respect his honesty? hell, Ted Bundy was honest eventually.
It's one of the best interrogations I've seen, and it's many. Sorry for the victims and their families.
If it wasn't for world-renowned forensic expert John Norman, this guy would still be out running free.
His work in the Nike Necrophile case of 1997 is epic
gotta love john norman.
Never heard of him. I can't find anything about him on Google. Even the narrator says he wasn't a world renowned expert. He just printed off the copies.
Good Boy Buddy ...that’s the joke. The detective was bluffing.
@@RuminatingWizard LOL. Exactly
The detective did a number on the Williams. Bullshited his way to a confession in barely an hour.
I can't even imagine the stress and anxiety taken off Jim's shoulders when he heard the words "Got a map?" I mean. You got him. Amazing work.
I don't think I would have been able to resist doing a big fist pump at that point.
Closure for the families of the victims
The detective played it so cool to keep him talking. "Let me see what I got here, I might have something," like it's no big deal.
all in less than an hour
Hope he got a fat bonus and a raise
That gum he’s chewing should be considered a victim as well. Christ.
😂😅
Thank you so much! I watched the interrogation without commentary...and had an extremely difficult time understanding exactly who he is, what the crimes were and how he was caught.
The reason that occurred is because the detective actually did a really good job of not directly naming the crimes. He would say things like missing people, the situation at hand, these situations, etc. The reason that is useful is it tries to avoid priming the other person's mind with all the expected negative connotations of heinous crimes. It makes it almost feel like the detective is asking him to admit to a much lesser crime.
You get the sense the crime is incredibly serious. At the same time, there are moments where the detective almost makes it sound like he is just asking for him to admit to stealing some candy and his reputation is all that is at stake.
Definitely got his money’s worth out of that gum
and the flashlight
Lol
Haha! 🤣
Well said!
😝
he is so disconnected to the terror he inflicted on his victims. He actually slept with a bound victim next to him in the bed. These poor women went through hell and then he disposed of them like throwing trash in a bin.
lucy hanna he is a fucking animal and deserves the best treatment in the prisons, make sure this story is told to all the others in there wtf
@@Justicesdad prison is a waste of tax money and resources better to just dispose of people like him
fascinating right?
@@pikachupowers i think it depends on the prison in question and whether or not the criminal in question will make friends once there, but i feel like life in supermax without parole and plenty of solitary is far greater punishment than death, which would relieve him of any consequences
Lucy he wore the pantie
All dress up
He.was hurting inside
Cottage had him for years
The.safety was the pantie lust man.demons can have you.
We need part 2 right away!😮
Kudos to the detective involved here, very masterfly done sir👍
He is a literal walking nightmare to every woman out there.
Kita Heard yep I’m about to start replacing all my doors and windows and installing security cameras
kam2020
What kind of hairdo is that?
@@bettyg319 it's called the Yep, Nope,,lol
@Jennifer 6strings glad to see you survived the stroke to post this!
This man honestly scares me. Seeing how calm he is while confessing to brutally murdering/violating these women is chilling. Wow. My heart goes out to his victims and their families.
@Tracy Howard-Allison your missing the most craziest part, that lady that he worked with once. He knew from the first time he seen her he was going to kill her. Let that sink in.
@* VENOM * I'm more scared of the guy who raped and brutally murdered women than the guy doing his job
Krystal Mead I mean civilian deaths make up the most casualties of wars I think these ppl are very desensitized
@@angelnumber2002 Yeah flying planes es for the queen he sure knows about war casualties
Remember being a child and being scared of monsters? This guy is definitely one of them. There's nothing scarier than a psychotic human.
One hour and he had the Colonel singing like a choirboy! Excellent work by this interrogator. One predator less roaming around. Well done to all involved.
the first words out of Russels mouth should have been “I want to speak to a lawyer”
Honestly this entire channel is a lesson in why talking to cops is a bad idea
The guilty never do it
So you wanted a murderer to go free? What a horrible human being you are
Absolutely! Those right are yours. Many men and women have died defending those rights. NEVER speak to LE without legal counsel.
seen another interview with this detective talking about this case. the lawyer wouldn't have helped. They were all over him already.
This interrogator is just... *chef's kiss*
He truly did amazing
@@ms.artichokecheesepizzawst3239 calm down women ,its just a man's job.
Diksa wtf lol
@@diksa366 Why don't you youtube "bad interrogations". There are terrible ones.
Lol he's amazing
Little did "Russ" know at the time of this interrogation, that his wife would one day be able to view it on UA-cam.
i think the worse thing is that the families of victims can see the footage
This wasn't shown in court?
@@IvanIvanov-qx5oz I think he pleaded guilty, so the case didn't go to trial.
Surya yes he did
Ex-wife ✊🏾
That little tuft of hair in the front is the real crime here.
We're all headed that way brother, unless we die young
IT’S A RARE FORM OF MALE PATTERN BALDNESS, YA FOOL!
@@groinBlaster31hell nah man I’m either shaving it or going to turkey. Can’t play this game right here
Definitely my favorite interrogation. It's chilling when he knows he's trapped and asks "got a map?"....
Michael Saunier I concur! VERY CHILLING!!
No, it's when he says "Call me Russ" lol🤣
He almost seemed relieved or is it just me?
@@joii_j No, it's after the "crossroads" moment during the interrogation. Notice his behavior prior to the examination of his boots. He is arrogant and relaxed; yet, any possible anxiety seemed to tell on him by the way he chewed his gum. After the examination his breathing pattern is different, more strained; he begins to sigh periodically; his arms are crossed; his posture is more rigid and stressed; I think he must have swallowed the aforementioned gum...sighhhhhhh
@@mgal6234 Definitely relieved, he probably had so much anxiety and racing thoughts about thinking of excuses, the fact that he can just tell the truth now is a weight of his shoulders.
When he pulled out those search warrants in succession it was like he was pulling a fatal move in Yu-Gi-Oh
Lmao. He brought the head arms and legs of Exodia to the table and a trap card as well
This comment made me realize that EVERY INTERROGATION IS A GAME OF YU-GI-OH.
I love this comment, thank you.
Russel shouldve said those cards are banned in competetive play
Instead of d-d-duel!! it was j-j-jailtime!
This was an absolute masterclass by Sgt Smyth. I was polite professional and fact based. He played Russell like a fiddle. This is impressive ai that Russell was a senior military officer who had to be trained to dodge interrogation questions. However, Russell did not help himself by showing up to the interview in the same shoes and the same truck he used in the crimes
And the whole not asking for a lawyer once they started pressing him, and then guilty silence thing 😂
Russell was ready to confess the moment he sat down lol. He gave no resistance whatsoever and didn't lie about anything or evade anything. He also knew he was cooked because his hard drive was full of massively incriminating evidence, as well as DNA evidence and God knows what else. He made no effort to conceal his tracks. His crimes were clearly impulse crimes and he seemed to know he had a problem.
The interrogator was good but it was a layup.
Yeah this is the best channel amongst all!! I hope you make a new one soon
Only a Canadian would shake the hand of a detective who just worked him for an hour to get a pretty easy confession.
I wouldn't describe that as an easy confession, since the interrogator used an artful mastery of his technique for an intense hour to coax the man into confessing.
Thanx, Buddy. Alrighty, Guy...
It was easy because they had evidence
“Sorry you’re arrested for murder. Sorry”
@@rangernolen6026 he did a good job.
Artful mastery, idk.
"Call me Russ" Exercising the last bit of power he has left...
Jesse Hall so damn true 🤣
I was thinking the same at that point yes very much so.
He didn’t seem to be the sort to assert his authority. Many military officers are little more than bureaucrats, who, despite the authority their rank affords them, are nevertheless unaccustomed to exercising the sort of command over subordinates that, say, your typical infantry NCO does. Orders are dispatched from their ranks in a very impersonal/detached fashion.
Stoogs that's what i thought too
GSTAL005 I wasn’t referring to the benefits of his rank, but the means by which he exercised his authority - you know, the interpersonal dimensions that are relevant to his psychological profile and the case in question. It’s one thing to become accustomed to people affording you praise, pageantry, and respect. That typically leads to arrogance. It does not, however, manifest or amplify authoritarian traits - which are usually ingrained in people’s personalities before they put on a uniform.
Whoever is the narrator on this video is the greatest. I could sincerely listen to you listing out the ingredients to Cocoa Puffs and I would be in bliss.
Love the work!
Yeah. We all miss him and his voice. His channel is … Kizzume
The bloodthirt of this Ace is amazing, to shortcircuit that quickly then go on a calculated spree , and though it gave him time to think about his actions returned again and again to complete his mission.
All that I’m learning through this channel is never to talk to an Interrogator without a lawyer
@Jac K I'd rather look at my lawyer everytime an interrogator asks me any question. I'd act like I'm guilty on all questions. That's essentially how you combat a poly right
@Jac K well, breaking the law by mistake happens too. Obviously not for such serious matters as rape robbery or murder
@Jac K I'm a law abiding citizen but im also a spooky fuck, if i ever get accused they're definitely gonna think im guilty bc of how i look and act, so i think staying quiet and lawyering up is a good takeaway too.
Also don’t rape people, that’s a good start and a lot cheaper than a lawyer.
Never talk to ANYONE without a lawyer. They use your pride and arrogance against you because you think you can outsmart them. Never, ever, talk...guilty or innocent. Don't talk.
Note to self: Never wear murder shoes to a police interrogation
Nikki Dolce Planning to murder someone or just dumb as a doorstop, are you?
LOL!! hone those serial killer skill mate!!!
@@Hallands. You should always be planning to murder someone.
I mean, never actually _do_ it. But it's good to have contingencies ;).
melhupby What utter nonsense...
Either that or don't wear your murder shoes to the muder
How a man in his position can get in this situation is boggling. He’s a successful Colonel. Amazing!
Sick minds don't change because of a job
Remember if you did it or didn't do it: shut your mouth and get a lawyer.
Unless subconsciously you want it to end.
The whole cat/basement scene is straight out of a horror movie...poor woman
I keep thinking that when Marie-France first saw her CO in the basement, she must have wondered what he was doing there.
I wonder at point she thought she was going to die.
It is a tragic case. One cannot imagine the fear she went through - the anguish, the mental torture, not to mention the physical violations of her body.
Nobody can imagine the suffering that poor woman went through. It really is hard to imagine how a person can do this to another person.
Horrifying
Some times truth is stranger than fiction.
Jessica Fig he videotaped taping her to death
Not to mention the other poor woman who woke up to find him in her bedroom.
You can thank the man driving home from work that noticed his suv parked in an unusual manner this man knew something was wrong here!
I know! It's incredibly lucky he noticed it. More women would have been harmed if this guy hadn't been caught.
They probably would have searched the surrounding area of her home.
Warmgun Warmgun if he would have stopped by to make sure things where okay he could have saved a life
Mikey Tello ......yes if only he had a look around he may of saved her.
@@mikeytello2878 You mean, if the murderer didnt kill her she would still be alive? dont put that on an innocent bystander.
This detective could sell me an extended warranty for a car I don't even own.
The level of discomfort I feel just watching this makes darn sure that I'd be the worst criminal ever. I'd roll over instantly.
Hahahaha, his body language spoke volumes..
Not much else you can do when they've got the evidence they've got .. he's fucked 6 ways to sunday
@@michaelrenight4641 He also did not once deny or refute anything!
Same.
Me: "I don't remember doing it but I must have done it if the police arrested me."
This guy performing the interrogation is so good, I was almost ready to admit to committing the crime myself.
Lol so true the guy was masterful.
He's just psychologically pressing him with power, you can find similar footage where an interrogator would employ this same tactic, but on an innocent suspect, or if the suspect goes hard in denial. And such footage usually also shows how bad these cops really are when stuff goes beyond regular interrogation practices they learned during their 2 days special agent courses. They lose temper and go into very agressive confrontations very fast.
Lol
Thats the idea.
😬📸
Im so glad this video is back.
homie said
fight ❌
flight ❌
freeze ✅
Amazing that concerned citizen was so alert that he payed attention to a strange vehicle parked haphazardly in a field. Being aware of his surroundings changed the course of this investigation! Good job on his part.
If only we had more people like this phoning in their neighbors to police...
That and the fact that he noticed a strangely parked vehicle in a field at 3 AM is also remarkable
im always gazing around when I drive looking to see if things are out of place or different. It is just something I do. Many people are so tunnel visioned it honestly baffles me.
@@geronimo5537 unless you re in a communist/facist state
And most likely saved lives