I remember this episode, Swan did it - his first conviction was correct, albeit not ideal. Swan was kind of a sleazy guy but acted like he was smarter and better than anyone else in the room. In the end, to his utter shock, Ben was more than a few steps ahead of him, and sent him right back to jail- this time without a ‘get out of jail free’ card. I can still see Swan’s face in the final scene, when he realizes he’s lost- Ben outsmarted him. Swan had made it clear in previous scenes he had absolutely no doubt he would be convicted again. Ben was right about Swan- the first trial may have been lacking, but that did not mean Swan was innocent. Ben used the truth to convict Swan again. (I love it when smug characters realize they just lost the game they thought they were playing- and instead end up being played. Sweet justice.)
"In the states.... very...few..." Even the actors and actresses who have maybe 1 minute of screen time are killin' it! She looked looks so .. sad and disappointed saying that as if the States have horrible taste in clothing and buttons... This show was incredible. And still relevant today. So good
L&O had the good fortune of being filmed in NYC. That meant they had some of the admittedly best theater actors in the world to pick and choose from for bit parts. I read somewhere that many actors who up to that time had exclusively worked in theater got their SAG cards on that show and casting was a challenge because most of the people auditioning were just so spot-on, it was hard to choose.
@@-greenheat- the court serpentis waves now libertarian democrats are not used uo be publixc germany until Trump government, germany copied new york business spokane and McMartin ctrimerape denial not in such ordered numbers of important authority,...in Getmany the Satanist keeps the serpentis and the Z invests in Gaycouples for purplepink, the White industries keeps the cashwashing and all after all organized the eallstreet internatipnal money will be unimportent by family ownings anyway, so result is legal crime in masses or mind manipulation, twisted will follow and violence and crime will be justified, civil war the final result as outbreak of punishment system, BAU, drive im the corner, trap in the corner , drive to death organize the solution, organized crime....
@@purplefood1 Its not sexism. They were already looking for a man so thats the frame of thought they were in. Thats the whole benefit of having someone with fresh eyes check your work, consider things you mightve missed for focusing too hard.
@@shihoblade it's a sort of sexism, but a very subtle one. I don't watch this show a lot, but isn't the older detective married? Probably got a new coat or suit from his wife himself at some point or the other. It's easy to say "yeah they were just on a different train of thought" but it also kinda shows what memories stick; Your wife giving you clothes? Appreciated, but quickly forgotten. You going out and ordering a new blue blazer for your husband every two years because God knows you're sick of seeing him in the old black one and if it weren't for you you bet he'd walking around in a potato sack? That's very present in your mind. Two smart men working together, and yet both overlooking something so common. They didn't consciously or malisciously not think of that, but that's exactly why having people with backgrounds as diverse as possible pays off.
@@TheyMadeMePickAName not really. They were looking for a man so they are initially looking for male brokers. It's that simple. Easy to miss but not sexist
@@TheyMadeMePickAName I dont think you know what sexism means. What you described is just perspective. And That seems extra to me. When you find a womans purse at a crime scene no one thinks "lets look for guys who have bought this type of purse becaise it may be a gift from a boyfriend". You directly look for the woman who owned the purse. Thats just common sense.
Just wanted to take a sec to thank you for posting these videos. Law and Order was my favorite show of all time and I find myself bingeing on these because I can't afford to buy the videos. Thanks so much! I have Year One and I think I have worn that dvd out! Someday I will make a present to myself of the complete series. Until then... I have you. Thanks! :)
I asked above, but I will ask you, if Philip Swan was sentenced to life in prison for murder, how was he out of prison so they could arrest him at the end of this video? I've never seen this episode.
Love the tried-and-true apprehension technique of yelling at the suspect a minimum of a hundred feet away so they can get a headstart on running. It's very sporting.
Absolutely one of the all-time greatest procedural crime dramas ever!I've been watching Law & Order since the 1990's and never tire of watching to this day.(Some of my friends have even served as extras on several episodes!)How about a reboot of the original franchise, please???
@@pepsiguy52883 Yeh them as well... I think both teams are top tier! They should've crossed NYPD with LAO once in a while. That would have been awesome!
Zeljko Ivanek (Swan) appeared several times in Law & Order and Law & Order: SVU as one-off characters, and in crossover episodes as his character ADA Ed Danvers from Homicide: Life on the Street
Wow, that's the most youthful I've ever seen Zeljko Ivanek look! Full head of hair and everything! By the end of the '90's he was rocking the receding hairline look that he has rocked ever since.
BAU is a actually more than law court ethicals, more not or how to get away with murder but stay murder and serve the purge....irreversible, visible, irresistible...and stay unexecuted for use until activated....
Ah! Briscoe and Logan, the best ever cop pair in L&O (With the second best cop pair being Briscoe and Green). Since Stone is the ADA and his assistant is Claire Kincaid (Played by the lovely Jill Hennessy) this must be from the fourth series of L&O.
I'd put Lenny & Rey Curtis as 2nd best pairing, Ed Green maybe a tie for 2nd.. After Briscoe, Logan, Curtis & Kincaid left, things deteriorated too much
I just realized that the doctor Logan's talking to would return to L&O years later as a defense attorney in several episodes. I just watched him in an episode with Lupo and Bernard on an illegal immigrant case.
Please upload the next part. I am dying to know if the skeleton they found was the woman's father or if that was her father they found in the car. Oh I am so curious!
I love watching these clips and trying to figure out the case they were based on, especially since they often add padding to distract you. This one nearly had me stumped, but I think I got it when they described Swan's scam. It's the Billionaire Boys Club, right?
nineteen96 I remember this episode, at the beginning the guy won a re-trial for a murder conviction to be overturned and the jury found him not guilty, he went ahead and sued Ben Stone personally for 10 million dollars. The rest of the episode is him trying to connect him to a murder which as seen in this clip he got what he wanted
nineteen96 he did get sued, he was reacting to the trial result with his assistant and his boss and a officer came in and served him with a multi million dollar lawsuit
Fun fact, the victim in this episode was named after a coworker of mine, the tv/film prop master Russell Bobbitt. He's been the prop supervisor on every Marvel movie since the first Iron Man.
Lenny has no trigger discipline. Not afraid to put a gun to his temple when removing ear protection at the gun range and not afraid to point a gun at his partner.
I realize that this isn't the entire episode but I thought that it was a snippet from it. Were scenes cut-out in the middle of this? At one point they refer to Swann being in prison and then it shows him being arrested at home - they never showed his acquittal which must have happened in-between.
Sean Breheny They seem to cut together the scenes that tell the basic storyline in ten minutes or less. They leave out any other part of the episode that didn’t have pertinent information to the storyline (House, MD does the same thing)
I think what is happening was that Swann went to prison for another murder (of the woman's father), but then was rearrested after he had been released for another crime.
Rewatching these older episodes it's kind of sickening watching the police threaten everyday people so casually. "Obstructing justice will get you a select number...around your neck"
well... there's a 30 minute gap between the scene change at 5:51, basically Swann (who was representing himself "pro se") was granted by a new trial by the appeals court because of the inconsistencies between the original trial and the location of the body, and was aquitted after Russell Bobbit disappeared and his previous testimony was supressed, as well as Swann's inmate William Doyle's testimony being discredited due to previously commiting purjury in another case. After the aquittial Swann sued both the state and Stone personally for $10million, but Stone and Kincaid were able to conclude that Russell Bobbit was actually murdered by one of Swann's ex-inmates who was released on parole, and Stone managed to get the name George Mezlansky from Doyle after Stone threatened to show up at his parole hearings every month, which leads to the scene starting from 5:51.
Virsavia T they also said the murder happened in '84, right? Maybe there wasn't a whole lot of tissue left to ID with? I'm not entirely sure how long that would work past death though.
@@SmilyLily1996 They could have used bone tissue, if there was not enough soft tissue left. Bodies can be identified (and they do get identified) decades since they've been buried, by DNA of their bone tissue.
And a lot of guest appearances on the Law and Order franchise, and 24, and Oz. One cannot call himself a fan of tv shows if Zeljko Ivanek hasn't appeared
It always kills me when citizens just hand over information for nothing. Detectives: We'll hit you with obstruction of justice. Man: Well fuckity you, bring me a warrant that'll do!
"slitting his throat"...red flag right there, slitting a throat is hard to do intentionaly unless your using something super sharp like a ginsu knife...esophagus, windpipe, muscle...just too much in the way to do it as easy as the movies make it look like (instead of running the knife across to "slit" you should stab sideways multiple times to make multiple holes)
Wouldn't it be easier to stab behind the victim at the base of the skull above his neck? I've read about this technique. You push the knife at the base of the skull and twist. Not being a smart a$$, just wanting knowledge.
@@sempermilites87 Absolutely, it would probably even work better as your getting more power/penetration on the thrust. but unless the victim is not moving or you have great aim, you might miss. In Hollywood at least your usually grappling the target, either to keep them quiet, or steady the neck for the knifework
@@Biorythym The book I read this from was, "Without Remorse," by Tom Clancy. In the novel, John Kelly was going after drug dealers/pimps and he was able to sneak up behind one of the guys and use this technique. He stated it's more quick, clean, and quieter than slitting the throat. You get lots of blood and since you've severed the victims windpipe you will also get load gurgling noises. Not to mention the victim is still alive. The other technique sorta switches the body's "off switch."
I remember this episode, Swan did it - his first conviction was correct, albeit not ideal. Swan was kind of a sleazy guy but acted like he was smarter and better than anyone else in the room. In the end, to his utter shock, Ben was more than a few steps ahead of him, and sent him right back to jail- this time without a ‘get out of jail free’ card. I can still see Swan’s face in the final scene, when he realizes he’s lost- Ben outsmarted him. Swan had made it clear in previous scenes he had absolutely no doubt he would be convicted again. Ben was right about Swan- the first trial may have been lacking, but that did not mean Swan was innocent. Ben used the truth to convict Swan again. (I love it when smug characters realize they just lost the game they thought they were playing- and instead end up being played. Sweet justice.)
"In the states.... very...few..."
Even the actors and actresses who have maybe 1 minute of screen time are killin' it! She looked looks so .. sad and disappointed saying that as if the States have horrible taste in clothing and buttons...
This show was incredible. And still relevant today. So good
L&O had the good fortune of being filmed in NYC. That meant they had some of the admittedly best theater actors in the world to pick and choose from for bit parts. I read somewhere that many actors who up to that time had exclusively worked in theater got their SAG cards on that show and casting was a challenge because most of the people auditioning were just so spot-on, it was hard to choose.
Or maybe the sense to not waste $300 each in the 90s on fucking buttons....
@@-greenheat- compenny sirpenthis
@@-greenheat- the court serpentis waves now libertarian democrats are not used uo be publixc germany until Trump government, germany copied new york business spokane and McMartin ctrimerape denial not in such ordered numbers of important authority,...in Getmany the Satanist keeps the serpentis and the Z invests in Gaycouples for purplepink, the White industries keeps the cashwashing and all after all organized the eallstreet internatipnal money will be unimportent by family ownings anyway, so result is legal crime in masses or mind manipulation, twisted will follow and violence and crime will be justified, civil war the final result as outbreak of punishment system, BAU, drive im the corner, trap in the corner , drive to death organize the solution, organized crime....
@@runarrikeborn7517 Take your medication schizo
“They convicted him without the body that’s how guilty he was” .....Bruh
It is fucked up that they did that but he actually was guilty
@@missaniebananie6473 Yep -- the daughter wasn't wrong!
He said "I killed him" over and over, and that's how it happened.
corpus delicti...
'It was Mr Bones'
'Who maybe got the jacket from his wife'
- Why Anita Van Buren was Chief Lt
It's actually kind of mental they didn't think of that. Imagine getting away with murder because the detectives were sexist?
@@purplefood1 Its not sexism. They were already looking for a man so thats the frame of thought they were in. Thats the whole benefit of having someone with fresh eyes check your work, consider things you mightve missed for focusing too hard.
@@shihoblade it's a sort of sexism, but a very subtle one. I don't watch this show a lot, but isn't the older detective married? Probably got a new coat or suit from his wife himself at some point or the other. It's easy to say "yeah they were just on a different train of thought" but it also kinda shows what memories stick; Your wife giving you clothes? Appreciated, but quickly forgotten. You going out and ordering a new blue blazer for your husband every two years because God knows you're sick of seeing him in the old black one and if it weren't for you you bet he'd walking around in a potato sack? That's very present in your mind. Two smart men working together, and yet both overlooking something so common. They didn't consciously or malisciously not think of that, but that's exactly why having people with backgrounds as diverse as possible pays off.
@@TheyMadeMePickAName not really. They were looking for a man so they are initially looking for male brokers. It's that simple. Easy to miss but not sexist
@@TheyMadeMePickAName I dont think you know what sexism means. What you described is just perspective. And That seems extra to me. When you find a womans purse at a crime scene no one thinks "lets look for guys who have bought this type of purse becaise it may be a gift from a boyfriend". You directly look for the woman who owned the purse. Thats just common sense.
*"Yeah, ya swim with sharks, bring Band-Aids."*
~ Det. Lenny Briscoe; philosopher
Fuck a bandaid go do if you get bit by one 😂 swim with sharks better bring a surgeon
Another classic from the writers, producers, directors and actors. What a series. 20 years in the making.
Just wanted to take a sec to thank you for posting these videos. Law and Order was my favorite show of all time and I find myself bingeing on these because I can't afford to buy the videos. Thanks so much! I have Year One and I think I have worn that dvd out! Someday I will make a present to myself of the complete series. Until then... I have you. Thanks! :)
You can always try used video bookstore in your town and ebay ✍🏻🎬
Or go to your local library and see if they have an inter library loan system…that’s how I’ve been able to watch Law and Order DVDs.
One of my favorite episodes. Well written, well acted, well directed, and well executed. You can't do better than that.
I asked above, but I will ask you, if Philip Swan was sentenced to life in prison for murder, how was he out of prison so they could arrest him at the end of this video? I've never seen this episode.
@@odysseusrex5908 paroled maybe???
6:10 let's take a moment to admire how undramatic this was and how it was all in one take. And it all happened in less than 12 seconds
Love the tried-and-true apprehension technique of yelling at the suspect a minimum of a hundred feet away so they can get a headstart on running. It's very sporting.
Absolutely one of the all-time greatest procedural crime dramas ever!I've been watching Law & Order since the 1990's and never tire of watching to this day.(Some of my friends have even served as extras on several episodes!)How about a reboot of the original franchise, please???
Imagine law and order on a premium network. That would take the show to entire different level.
SFC. ColdWar That's what L&O U.K. Was for.
REBOOT ! REEBOOT !
Nothing will ever be as good as the original!
YOU GOT YOUR WISH!
It is so beautiful to see those buildings
I love seeing young actors as extras / small roles on L&O. Its almost like everyone gets a shot.
My god Briscoe and Logan were the best cop partners on any crime show ever
Nypd blue Andy and Bobby
@@pepsiguy52883 Yeh them as well... I think both teams are top tier! They should've crossed NYPD with LAO once in a while. That would have been awesome!
Benson and stabler was pretty close
Vic Mackey and Ronnie smith
@@midu4783 Ronnie Gardocki
Tailor: “You know in the eighties you know people had a different attitude about money…”
Logan: “I wouldn’t know, I didn’t have any.”
Who are you Dr. Haberdashery?😂😂😂😂😂
Brooke Jimenez 🤣😆😂😅
How are they all such great actors??? 😍
Zeljko Ivanek (Swan) appeared several times in Law & Order and Law & Order: SVU as one-off characters, and in crossover episodes as his character ADA Ed Danvers from Homicide: Life on the Street
He's one heck of an actor. Good guy or bad guy.
L&O seems to be really good at recycling actors for different roles;).
He's good at playing evil or shady characters.
@@nicholasmaude6906 True, and by all accounts, like many actors who play villians or shady characters, off screen he is a really nice guy.
He was Andre Drazen on 24 too. And the governor in Oz
Wow, that's the most youthful I've ever seen Zeljko Ivanek look! Full head of hair and everything! By the end of the '90's he was rocking the receding hairline look that he has rocked ever since.
I love Jerry Orbach!
Still one of the best episodes they ever did. And Philip Swan was one of the best antagonists in the 20 year history of the show.
In polite society we don’t call people by their first names, I’m not your colleague and I’m certainly not your friend.
Impeccable writing.
no crime show can beat this one.
BAU is a actually more than law court ethicals, more not or how to get away with murder but stay murder and serve the purge....irreversible, visible, irresistible...and stay unexecuted for use until activated....
Facts
Monk?
Columbo was my favorite until Law & Order came along.👍
Greatest tv show of all time. Bring it back!!!!
0:51 I swear that line was amazing these two did the job so well almost thought it was real.
I miss this show!!
This is one of the few times you see Stone so disheveled. This case really got him rattled.
Ah! Briscoe and Logan, the best ever cop pair in L&O (With the second best cop pair being Briscoe and Green). Since Stone is the ADA and his assistant is Claire Kincaid (Played by the lovely Jill Hennessy) this must be from the fourth series of L&O.
I'd put Lenny & Rey Curtis as 2nd best pairing, Ed Green maybe a tie for 2nd.. After Briscoe, Logan, Curtis & Kincaid left, things deteriorated too much
'Realtors. Good candidates for shallow graves.' 😄
People had a different attitude to money
I wouldn't know I didn't have any
And this is why old comedy is the best
This is my favorite LandO episode.
This was a pretty random recommendation.
There's episodes on prime and I'm obsessed
Brisco and Logan were the best combo in Law and Order.
The one episode I don’t remember! More please? 😎🤭😍
It was a good one. This guy was slimy and tried to screw Ben Stone over.
"If life is a journey, then life's greatest tragedy not having enjoyed the trip"
In case anybody's wondering.
One of L&O’s best episodes.
No one ever stops working while talking to cops in NYC
It's a busy city.
They say it's the city that never sleeps
I’m not from there, but isn’t that true to life?
I love how the doctor in this episode is lawyer in another episode
I just realized that the doctor Logan's talking to would return to L&O years later as a defense attorney in several episodes. I just watched him in an episode with Lupo and Bernard on an illegal immigrant case.
Soon as I saw the actor at the I knew...yeah, he usually plays villains, he's guilty 🤣
Mr. Bones wild ride
When you swim with sharks, bring Band-Aids
Hello Valentines folks ❤❤❤. Love you guys ok 👍 😊
I love how the first thing a lawyer comes out with is what's the deal what about honour amongst thieves
I forgot just how good this show really was.
Ohhh that little smirk he gave at the end. Guilty!!!
Please upload the next part. I am dying to know if the skeleton they found was the woman's father or if that was her father they found in the car. Oh I am so curious!
That was Russell Bobbitt, the witness who testified against Swan in the original trial.
I love watching these clips and trying to figure out the case they were based on, especially since they often add padding to distract you. This one nearly had me stumped, but I think I got it when they described Swan's scam. It's the Billionaire Boys Club, right?
Morale? If you wanna do a murder - do it YOURSELF, so nobody can snitch upon you. :D
His suit costs less than $300? Ahhh, inflation...
$300 for just the two piece jacket and pants isn’t unreasonable even today.
I miss watching them on tv
Oh this episode, the guy they arrested sued Ben Stone for millions
idts 😕
nineteen96 I remember this episode, at the beginning the guy won a re-trial for a murder conviction to be overturned and the jury found him not guilty, he went ahead and sued Ben Stone personally for 10 million dollars. The rest of the episode is him trying to connect him to a murder which as seen in this clip he got what he wanted
@@Transitfan93 Yeah, but he was never sued
nineteen96 he did get sued, he was reacting to the trial result with his assistant and his boss and a officer came in and served him with a multi million dollar lawsuit
@@Transitfan93 No he didn't. He never had to pay anything. Just shaddup, old ass
Great episode...
Do Americans still call each other "pal"? I love the ways cops speak in old tv shows.
Very rarely. Its rather antiquated at this point.
Yes - it's a euphemism for "asshole" or "idiot."
A bit! It's definitely a little antiquated, but I and many others I know use "pal".
mswaggydog It’s a bit old fashioned but it is used occasionally. Nowadays, I’d say “dude” or “guy” would be more appropriate to the cop context
Pal is usually sarcastic or joking
Fun fact, the victim in this episode was named after a coworker of mine, the tv/film prop master Russell Bobbitt. He's been the prop supervisor on every Marvel movie since the first Iron Man.
I wish the would release the original seasons.
Lenny has no trigger discipline. Not afraid to put a gun to his temple when removing ear protection at the gun range and not afraid to point a gun at his partner.
When your gun is either airsoft or unloaded its not a big deal
"I wouldn't know I didn't have any"
As a demo derby guy and junk car lover I personally would be freaked if I found a human skeleton in a old car trunk.
Funny, this is why they actually have individual serial numbers for any piece of metal.
Are you gonna do clips of season 3 and 5?
how i L O V E that british accent :) :)
I wish Richard Brooks and Dan Florek stayed for a couple more episodes after Season 3.
I wish law and order never got cancelled.Law and order was a really good show but when Jerry Orpach died the show went downhill
There was talk about a L&O revival a few years ago, wonder what happened...
It was a old show but still wish they did not cancelled it every show is gonna get cancelled soon.But still I wish it did not get cancelled
Jerry Orbach was one of my favorites in the show.
"I could have made my case without Doyle."
"Yes, but you didn't."
Thought that ME was Mark Ruffalo. Looked and even sounded like him.
What season,and episode is this???
Season 4 episode 8. They have it in the description
...Dr. Haberdashery...😂😂😂
You have a cop in a shooting stance with a gun pointing at your head and you try to RUN?
It's exhausting that like half of the episodes they advertise on TH-cam to be on peacock, aren't actually on peacock.
I realize that this isn't the entire episode but I thought that it was a snippet from it. Were scenes cut-out in the middle of this? At one point they refer to Swann being in prison and then it shows him being arrested at home - they never showed his acquittal which must have happened in-between.
Sean Breheny They seem to cut together the scenes that tell the basic storyline in ten minutes or less. They leave out any other part of the episode that didn’t have pertinent information to the storyline (House, MD does the same thing)
I think what is happening was that Swann went to prison for another murder (of the woman's father), but then was rearrested after he had been released for another crime.
What are you, a Dr of Habadashery
they remade this episode in the uk with iain glen playing Zeljkos character.
there was one with james fox playing a drug addicted doctor which was an obvious take on the law and order ep about the drunk doctor.
Rewatching these older episodes it's kind of sickening watching the police threaten everyday people so casually. "Obstructing justice will get you a select number...around your neck"
I...LIKE it!
Based on a real button shop in NYC😎
Everyone was so young.
IIRC Swan showed up a couple of times in the series. One of the most memorably sinister/sleazy villain performances in the whole franchise.
Money markets were 16 percent...fuckin a...man I wish I had money in the 80's
the doctor looks like jerry seinfeld
I thought it might be Robert/Alexis Arquette. But I'm wrong.
@0:50 Anyone else notice the 4th amendment violation under threat of arrest for "obstructing an investigation"?
I don't believe I've ever seen this full episode, but if Philip Swann was convicted and sentenced to life in prison for murder, what was he doing out?
well... there's a 30 minute gap between the scene change at 5:51, basically Swann (who was representing himself "pro se") was granted by a new trial by the appeals court because of the inconsistencies between the original trial and the location of the body, and was aquitted after Russell Bobbit disappeared and his previous testimony was supressed, as well as Swann's inmate William Doyle's testimony being discredited due to previously commiting purjury in another case. After the aquittial Swann sued both the state and Stone personally for $10million, but Stone and Kincaid were able to conclude that Russell Bobbit was actually murdered by one of Swann's ex-inmates who was released on parole, and Stone managed to get the name George Mezlansky from Doyle after Stone threatened to show up at his parole hearings every month, which leads to the scene starting from 5:51.
@@Coadz95 I see, thank you.
Curious how they've got only a pin in the knee to identify the body, not DNA. The episode was filmed in 1993. DNA profiling was already in use.
The episode takes place in the same year it was filmed right? I probably sound stupid
@@dusksunsetio6042 Yeah, I suppose so. It's not a period drama.
Virsavia T they also said the murder happened in '84, right?
Maybe there wasn't a whole lot of tissue left to ID with?
I'm not entirely sure how long that would work past death though.
@@SmilyLily1996 They could have used bone tissue, if there was not enough soft tissue left. Bodies can be identified (and they do get identified) decades since they've been buried, by DNA of their bone tissue.
Missing persons cases wouldn't have been collecting toothbrushes for DNA in 1984.
So there wouldn't be anything to match to in 1993.
Zeljko Ivanek from Madam Secretary!
And a lot of guest appearances on the Law and Order franchise, and 24, and Oz.
One cannot call himself a fan of tv shows if Zeljko Ivanek hasn't appeared
It always kills me when citizens just hand over information for nothing.
Detectives: We'll hit you with obstruction of justice.
Man: Well fuckity you, bring me a warrant that'll do!
The Billionaire Boys Club murder, I assume?
Money markets used to be at 16%?!
This is based on Joe Hunt.
THANKS FOR THE INFO !!!!!
Ashoikie Saunders
Don’t yell.
@@miniena7774 Needed to yell...we're far apart and I was very appreciative.
@FRANCO PEREZ but he killed someone
@FRANCO PEREZ Except for you know the list that said kill Ron Levin
I don't think they read your rights while they're arresting you, I think they do it when they have you in the room and you sign a paper.
I have a problem with the negotiating scenes. No lawyer would allow a client to give information without agreeing in principle to a deal first.
The episode is so old. No DNA to compare the daughters DNA with the body. No serial number on the pin to compare records to...
He’s canceled now
Right, old guys wore women's tailored high-end cashmere jackets in the mid 1980s. Haha.
They always joke about how much money they dont make from their job lol
'But the CD..?'
Big Bill Doyle just laid a Big Bill Coil
"Since money markets were at 16%." Wow, 16%. All it takes is $150k to live off the interest.
law and order right now
when a cop threaten you they are almost always lying
When they threaten you, it's because they should.
This was before DNA. i remember these days....how much technology in solving crimes, identifying bodies has changed everything
6:22
"slitting his throat"...red flag right there, slitting a throat is hard to do intentionaly unless your using something super sharp like a ginsu knife...esophagus, windpipe, muscle...just too much in the way to do it as easy as the movies make it look like (instead of running the knife across to "slit" you should stab sideways multiple times to make multiple holes)
Wouldn't it be easier to stab behind the victim at the base of the skull above his neck? I've read about this technique. You push the knife at the base of the skull and twist. Not being a smart a$$, just wanting knowledge.
@@sempermilites87 Absolutely, it would probably even work better as your getting more power/penetration on the thrust. but unless the victim is not moving or you have great aim, you might miss. In Hollywood at least your usually grappling the target, either to keep them quiet, or steady the neck for the knifework
@@Biorythym The book I read this from was, "Without Remorse," by Tom Clancy. In the novel, John Kelly was going after drug dealers/pimps and he was able to sneak up behind one of the guys and use this technique. He stated it's more quick, clean, and quieter than slitting the throat. You get lots of blood and since you've severed the victims windpipe you will also get load gurgling noises. Not to mention the victim is still alive. The other technique sorta switches the body's "off switch."