I don't get why she kept trying to pile up the guilt onto someone who agreed to cooperate. Like, who does that? This was no interrogation of a killer suspect, the fire started for unknown causes and she only wanted to know names and he was someone who knew.
Thats what Im asking too, you can see he is really devastated over what happend and was ready to help to find out who killed all those people but she just kept guilt tripping him, no wonder he killed himself. To be honest I would blame the death on her because he would have been really useful to find out who caused the fire but she made him feel so bad that now he cant help anymore.
@Kimberlee Ponson he already felt incredibly guilty.The thing is, i'm not defending the man, what i'm saying is they were trying to extract more information from him, cornering the man to make him feel even more guilty leading to suicide did little to help. She was trying to ask for more info, this was not a suicide encouragement session.
@Kimberlee Ponson Despite his negligence he gave those kids somewhere protected them from the elements and a place where they could call home and rest, for practically little to no cost. Even if he was to get the building up to code the building was not zoned for residential use, thus if he was being strict most of those people would be living on the streets. The next thing they would be doing is chastising him for not selling to a large property developer so they can make more sky rise buildings to make a fortune. The woman should've been attempting to gain information but not at the expense of the man's mental state, there job is to take care of people, console them, not push them towards suicide.
Her words pushed him over the edge. The mob already made him feel guilty but hearing it from emergency services too, the ones that are supposed to be professional about it, that must have made his mind up
Can we agree that woman pushed the dude to suicide? Like she didnt need to keep guilt tripping and blaming him like she did. I dont doubt he would have done it anyway, but she escalated the time it took for him to do it
Shot in the middle of the night and then I was going to get a little bit of a bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold
This could be a very accurate representation of someone commiting suicide. By the time someone was even slightly suspicious, he had already pulled the trigger. Too late man...plus this character seemed like he genuinely wanted to help those kids. Knowing he was responsible for those lives + being continuously guilt tripped and bashed definitely contributed to that decision
Did that woman really need to guilt trip the guy? He was already feeling immensely guilty, was she trying to drive him to suicide? I can only see the clips, did she get called out or punished in the slightest? It feels like she should.
@Kimberlee Ponson I disagree with you to certain extents. 1) Yes, he was guilty to certain points. 2) They needed help from him so keeping him calm and as focused as possible would be benefitial. 3) It was easy to see that he was upset and taking the deaths of those people to heart, even I managed to see that. Yet she still pushed, kicked and clawed at a broken man. My take is that had she not pushed him that far, he might still live and they might have had a stronger clue on who the guilty is. She acted unprofessional and should be warned if not even fierd. She is not the judge, jurry or executioner. I belive even the US have the phrase "Innocent untill proven guilty". However here a professional, keept on pushing and kicking on a already broken person who feelt inmeasurable remorse of his actions. He is partialy guilty as I mentioned above, however he was not the reason as to WHY it started to burn, just that it got as bad as it did. Id say "involonteary manslaughter" as worst as he did not do anything tdangerous towards them. However, his negligence made it possible for the fire to get that bad. So while guilty of having faulty safety standards he is not the main culprit here. Her actions were not justified in the slightest specially so early on without any proof what so ever as to what actually happend. It is HER fault that they might have lost a important witness/clue in him.
Ikr. She was supposed to be unbiased, the guy was clearly upset and feeling guilty already, she should've just asked questions trying to get info out of him while keeping him calm and focused
It's the fact that Boden obviously knew that she was pushing too hard when he told her "easy", yet she still had to get in one last dig. I don't know if he would have still done it earlier on in the conversation but that last comment seemed to be the final nail in the coffin.
that girl who was interviewing the guy was way to harsh, i understand he let a bunch of kids stay in a building that wasn’t safe but she put a lot of pressure on the guy by saying it was all his fault
I agree even though what the dude did was wrong he admitted that it was a mistake and that he would try to make it better. What she did was completely unprofessional
Kimberlee Ponson Point was more that she kept pushing even when the rest could tell he didn’t need pushing. Casey wouldn’t have even said that if he could tell he was suicidal. Once he could tell the guy was in a bad place and feeling guilty he never said anything else. I put no blame on her what so ever, she was being a bit dickish, but considering the situation I can understand it. However the people decided to party there, so as much as he is to blame for allowing it, to flat out say the blood is on his hands is also wrong. The only person whose truly to blame was the arsonist. I was more joking about the fact that she said the deaths are on him even though more people than he wanted went to a party, and that an arsonist one was the one who burned the place down on purpose. So by that logic his suicide is on the people talking down to him even though someone else decided to kill. He made a mistake, like she did. But again it was a joke because she was being a dick even though he clearly meant well, it was a horrendous mistake and he was more than willing to accept any punishment. He was already complying She is supposed to be unbiassed.
i feel bad for him he was trying to help some kids and now every one was hating on him and they drove him to suicide for something that wasn't really his fault
I feel so bad for the man who shot himself he didn’t need to end his life and it’s not his fault that those people died because it’s his dads factory so technically it’s his dads fault R.I.P and please no one end their life because there’s a lot more to live and he will be missed
How can human being be so heartless I hope she's satisfied because obviously that's what she wanted. I know it's a shows but it show you how humans can
@Kimberlee Ponson I can't say no to what you're saying about how would I feel if this happened to me, but there was no reason for her to try to hold him accountable because he had already had hisself accountable. he was ready and willing to help any way possible he regretted is action so nobody didn't need to push down further what he has done and furthermore he did not cause this to happen if you watch the clip you see that it was set up by somebody
@Kimberlee Ponson But it was illegal to have people there even of it wasn't up to fire code. He was basically running a homeless shelter. Almost anyone can stay here for the tiny cost of keeping the building standing because being inside anything is a lot better than being homeless in Chicago. He was doing a service that the city failed to provide. In the end it's the cities fault for not combatting homelessness.
Honestly? it kind of upsets me when they said they couldn't see the signs. the man walked into a crowd of grieving people and didn't even defend himself when he was punched, then during the conversation before he went to the bathroom, you could see the self loathing in his eyes. i just knew the second he asked to used the bathroom that he would not be coming out of it alive. he had some serious regret about the entire incident and it was very obvious. someone should have escorted him to the restroom or something.
She was acting out of line. As soon as he asked to go to the bathroom, I knew he was going to shoot himself. If she hadn't been so occupied with making him feel like he caused the fire, she probably would have realized what was about to happen. Or better still, it wouldn't have happened. What was the birading supposed to accomplish? He was already cooperating and writing down the names. What more did she expect? With her attitude, she has no buissness in investigation, much less dealing with people.
@@Nicolas_Valentin I cant watch it bc i live in The Netherlands so it would be nice to get this on Netflix so dont get agressive there are people who do want it.
Honestly, I feel terrible for him. That woman shouldn't have put all that guilt on him. I'm sure she knew he was actively cooperating. That's messed up
This is the fastest I've ever clicked a youtube video! I've been waiting for this to come out for a while to carry on from the other videos on this tragic fire! ❤️❤️
When that property owner commited suicide, I can see reasons why. The crowd that was at the scene hate him. And that inspector woman? She pushed him too far. So technically, they murdered him mentally in my opinion.
If I was among the crowd, I would defend him because I can tell that wasn't his fault to begin with. Even if I grieved over a loved one hurt or die during that fire, I would still.
Why you would treat a human who clearly cared like that is beyond me in todays world especially. He is the antithesis of people who use others. He had no real money to update the building and thought he'd let other less fortunate people have a home and shelter. One that THEY should also care for.
Exact type of case / fire happened in Romania-Bucharest in a club called Colectiv, fixed the same problem: the place did not have authorization and there were no emergency exits If you want you can search on Yt (Romania Colectiv) and then look for the reasons and you will see
While not 1:1 accurate when it comes to the details, this reminds me of a similar fire in the Philippines in a club called Ozone. What made the Ozone fire even worse imo is that most of the people who died were fresh graduates, their friends and families.
im from croatia and i cry every night bc i want to see casey,he is awesome and i love him soo muchh,i never see him bc he live in australia but i love him so much🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
The way the lady and the people treated the guy is another good reason why people in society are strongly incentivised from compassion. Good folks take the fault for bad people.
two things. 1:The first step should have been to clear his pockets 2:they should've sent someone to the bathroom or at least suspected that something like that can happen
People are awful man. That guy died believing it was his fault those kids died when all he did was try to help them and everyone blamed him for their kid's stupidity.
Was he personally responsible for their deaths? Didi he set the fire that killed them? If he did not, why keep harping on the tragedy for no good reason unless you have proof that he actually did it? Sure, the building was not up to safety standards. But the crux of the matter is that he allowed those who died to seek shelter in the building. He had no way of knowing what was going to happen. Sometimes having a kind heart just is not worth it.
That lady agent needs to get fired. I know that everything is really intense and emotional. Did a lot of people die? Yes. Did he not follow the building code? Yes. BUT you haven't established that he's guilty either. You are professionals. You cannot drive a man to death. It's not as if he intentionally set the place on fire. Yes he was negligent but didn't you hear him? He was trying to provide cheap housing to those in need. The court will determine if he was guilty of Arson. It was not her call to make. If a Human's right officer was there, she would receive an earful.
Charlie Thomas that's actually really sad that that was your reaction! 😥 Do you mind me asking what country you live in? I'm asking because I live in Australia and even though there are still registered and black market guns around, gun violence is really not common at all... so I can't even begin to comprehend what you life must be like for you to duck when that happened 😕 I didn't even flinch!
I don't get why she kept trying to pile up the guilt onto someone who agreed to cooperate. Like, who does that? This was no interrogation of a killer suspect, the fire started for unknown causes and she only wanted to know names and he was someone who knew.
Thats what Im asking too, you can see he is really devastated over what happend and was ready to help to find out who killed all those people but she just kept guilt tripping him, no wonder he killed himself. To be honest I would blame the death on her because he would have been really useful to find out who caused the fire but she made him feel so bad that now he cant help anymore.
@Kimberlee Ponson he already felt incredibly guilty.The thing is, i'm not defending the man, what i'm saying is they were trying to extract more information from him, cornering the man to make him feel even more guilty leading to suicide did little to help. She was trying to ask for more info, this was not a suicide encouragement session.
@Kimberlee Ponson Despite his negligence he gave those kids somewhere protected them from the elements and a place where they could call home and rest, for practically little to no cost. Even if he was to get the building up to code the building was not zoned for residential use, thus if he was being strict most of those people would be living on the streets. The next thing they would be doing is chastising him for not selling to a large property developer so they can make more sky rise buildings to make a fortune. The woman should've been attempting to gain information but not at the expense of the man's mental state, there job is to take care of people, console them, not push them towards suicide.
Kimberlee Ponson you don’t choose suicide mental health isn’t a choice or an option. He knew what he did so she didn’t have to constantly remind him.
Kimberlee Ponson you don’t choose suicide mental health isn’t a choice or an option. He knew what he did so she didn’t have to constantly remind him.
Her words pushed him over the edge. The mob already made him feel guilty but hearing it from emergency services too, the ones that are supposed to be professional about it, that must have made his mind up
Funny 😡
@@shun_914 ✨😍😤❤️Tmemojoe
Rkdmo
Can we agree that woman pushed the dude to suicide? Like she didnt need to keep guilt tripping and blaming him like she did. I dont doubt he would have done it anyway, but she escalated the time it took for him to do it
He wasn’t even at fault either.
JakeShaw16 he was half at fault, having no clear exit signs or sprinklers, but I do agree that he did not cause the fire.
@@kylae5140 ya but they also couldve been like no i dont want to live here its to unsafe.
@@joshuareid3060 It would still be legally against the law
W
I dont think this was handled right. That woman didnt have to pile all the guilt on him.
@Frederica Bimble why are you protecting the women so much?
@@wolfy4734 because she's hot
Hyper_11 im pretty sure you dont know what a show is.
I don’t think she handled it the best but if you are hurt you are gonna be upset and sometimes you can just lose it
Shot in the middle of the night and then I was going to get a little bit of a bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold and a little bit of a cold
This could be a very accurate representation of someone commiting suicide. By the time someone was even slightly suspicious, he had already pulled the trigger. Too late man...plus this character seemed like he genuinely wanted to help those kids. Knowing he was responsible for those lives + being continuously guilt tripped and bashed definitely contributed to that decision
It was almost as if there was no warning signs, again, an accurate representation.
Is anyone else just bing watching these through quarantine 😂
Meee
@@sonja7404 meeeeeee and what was that thing behind the sofa
Meee
Meee
Yh I love this stuff in quarantine
Her lack of professionalism results to a man killing himself...
It was the guilt of the thought that he was at fault. Mainly the mob attacking him made it all start.
I honestly think he would’ve killed himself anyway, but still, that’s no excuse for her abysmal behaviour.
Natalia Arlovoskaya I agree
guilt goes so far as to him wanting to make it right, he said that himself. she killed him, it was no guilt.
Did that woman really need to guilt trip the guy? He was already feeling immensely guilty, was she trying to drive him to suicide? I can only see the clips, did she get called out or punished in the slightest? It feels like she should.
It’s acting you imbecile
@Kimberlee Ponson I disagree with you to certain extents. 1) Yes, he was guilty to certain points. 2) They needed help from him so keeping him calm and as focused as possible would be benefitial. 3) It was easy to see that he was upset and taking the deaths of those people to heart, even I managed to see that. Yet she still pushed, kicked and clawed at a broken man. My take is that had she not pushed him that far, he might still live and they might have had a stronger clue on who the guilty is. She acted unprofessional and should be warned if not even fierd. She is not the judge, jurry or executioner. I belive even the US have the phrase "Innocent untill proven guilty". However here a professional, keept on pushing and kicking on a already broken person who feelt inmeasurable remorse of his actions. He is partialy guilty as I mentioned above, however he was not the reason as to WHY it started to burn, just that it got as bad as it did. Id say "involonteary manslaughter" as worst as he did not do anything tdangerous towards them. However, his negligence made it possible for the fire to get that bad. So while guilty of having faulty safety standards he is not the main culprit here. Her actions were not justified in the slightest specially so early on without any proof what so ever as to what actually happend. It is HER fault that they might have lost a important witness/clue in him.
Ikr. She was supposed to be unbiased, the guy was clearly upset and feeling guilty already, she should've just asked questions trying to get info out of him while keeping him calm and focused
It's the fact that Boden obviously knew that she was pushing too hard when he told her "easy", yet she still had to get in one last dig. I don't know if he would have still done it earlier on in the conversation but that last comment seemed to be the final nail in the coffin.
@Frederica Bimble she still made him suicide.
that girl who was interviewing the guy was way to harsh, i understand he let a bunch of kids stay in a building that wasn’t safe but she put a lot of pressure on the guy by saying it was all his fault
I agree even though what the dude did was wrong he admitted that it was a mistake and that he would try to make it better. What she did was completely unprofessional
with how the woman kept going, I hope someone points out his death is on her. Same logic she used.
Kimberlee Ponson Point was more that she kept pushing even when the rest could tell he didn’t need pushing. Casey wouldn’t have even said that if he could tell he was suicidal. Once he could tell the guy was in a bad place and feeling guilty he never said anything else.
I put no blame on her what so ever, she was being a bit dickish, but considering the situation I can understand it. However the people decided to party there, so as much as he is to blame for allowing it, to flat out say the blood is on his hands is also wrong. The only person whose truly to blame was the arsonist.
I was more joking about the fact that she said the deaths are on him even though more people than he wanted went to a party, and that an arsonist one was the one who burned the place down on purpose. So by that logic his suicide is on the people talking down to him even though someone else decided to kill. He made a mistake, like she did. But again it was a joke because she was being a dick even though he clearly meant well, it was a horrendous mistake and he was more than willing to accept any punishment. He was already complying She is supposed to be unbiassed.
@Frederica Bimble The tenants chose to live in an unsafe building so they would pay less you moron.
Kimberlee Ponson he wasn’t at fault tho. One of the tenants made a fire device thing.
@Kimberlee Ponson r//wooosh
@@dalastdefenderofvirgins7314 what?
Bruh, it wasnt that guys fault completely. It's called personal responsibility and those tenants had it too.
He owned the property so it was his responsibility to keep the building up to code.
i feel bad for him he was trying to help some kids and now every one was hating on him and they drove him to suicide for something that wasn't really his fault
If Boden was telling me to calm down I’d be calm before he opened his lips he has the voice the looks and the personality to enforce business XD
When you hear is true English accent he owns. It makes it a load better
@@sharkbiscuittfrr
The woman who went to invetigate how the fire started looks like an older version of Velma from Scooby Doo
I feel so bad for the man who shot himself he didn’t need to end his life and it’s not his fault that those people died because it’s his dads factory so technically it’s his dads fault R.I.P and please no one end their life because there’s a lot more to live and he will be missed
R.I.P
Ye shut up
BOB BOB uhh y would u say shut up?
BOB BOB y would you even say that
Bob bob has ligma
Love this show in fact I love all the Chicago shows(med,fire,pd and justice)
Morwenna Turner yes, they have.legal drama type.
Too bad, it didn't receive the same popularity as the other three.
The only one who didn't forget about justice
CARRRMMM DOWWWN!!! EVERY BARDY JUS' CARRMM DOWWN!!
Lol that's Boden for you
Random and partly unrelated but.... I miss Otis.
Kelsey Alers oh yeah he was my favourite :(
How can human being be so heartless I hope she's satisfied because obviously that's what she wanted. I know it's a shows but it show you how humans can
@Kimberlee Ponson I can't say no to what you're saying about how would I feel if this happened to me, but there was no reason for her to try to hold him accountable because he had already had hisself accountable. he was ready and willing to help any way possible he regretted is action so nobody didn't need to push down further what he has done and furthermore he did not cause this to happen if you watch the clip you see that it was set up by somebody
@Kimberlee Ponson guilt tripping him and cornering him is the complete opposite of her job lmao.
@Kimberlee Ponson But it was illegal to have people there even of it wasn't up to fire code.
He was basically running a homeless shelter. Almost anyone can stay here for the tiny cost of keeping the building standing because being inside anything is a lot better than being homeless in Chicago. He was doing a service that the city failed to provide. In the end it's the cities fault for not combatting homelessness.
Honestly? it kind of upsets me when they said they couldn't see the signs. the man walked into a crowd of grieving people and didn't even defend himself when he was punched, then during the conversation before he went to the bathroom, you could see the self loathing in his eyes. i just knew the second he asked to used the bathroom that he would not be coming out of it alive. he had some serious regret about the entire incident and it was very obvious. someone should have escorted him to the restroom or something.
She was acting out of line. As soon as he asked to go to the bathroom, I knew he was going to shoot himself. If she hadn't been so occupied with making him feel like he caused the fire, she probably would have realized what was about to happen. Or better still, it wouldn't have happened. What was the birading supposed to accomplish? He was already cooperating and writing down the names. What more did she expect?
With her attitude, she has no buissness in investigation, much less dealing with people.
Exactly
did anyone else jump so hard when you heard the shot
Use this as a get this on Netflix button
¥
No
Uh no fuck off
Celyn Bevan Jones were can I watch a full episodes
@@Nicolas_Valentin I cant watch it bc i live in The Netherlands so it would be nice to get this on Netflix so dont get agressive there are people who do want it.
@@Amy-sk8zj I do want it on Netflix but they're not doing this for amyone else but the likes.
"Are there any exits in there?"
"Hes not going anywhere"
He can exit in a body bag.
When the fight broke out I was like is this my school
One of my favorite scenes with Voight has always been when he thanks Boden, you could see how grateful he really was.
There is something about Boden when he raises his voice and makes that growl noise. so cool featire to have in his voice.
Damn this is emotional
Honestly, I feel terrible for him. That woman shouldn't have put all that guilt on him. I'm sure she knew he was actively cooperating. That's messed up
Yes he so trouble right now
Not gonna lie that gunshot made me jump in my seat, was not expecting that AT ALL.
This is the fastest I've ever clicked a youtube video! I've been waiting for this to come out for a while to carry on from the other videos on this tragic fire! ❤️❤️
Love this show
When that property owner commited suicide, I can see reasons why. The crowd that was at the scene hate him. And that inspector woman? She pushed him too far. So technically, they murdered him mentally in my opinion.
If I was among the crowd, I would defend him because I can tell that wasn't his fault to begin with. Even if I grieved over a loved one hurt or die during that fire, I would still.
Was it just me or did anybody notice Erin Lindsay I think that’s her name
This episode was released when Erin was still on the show
i did
@@sophiecrawley7825 that's what I want to know. I wonder what year this was from.
@jesse Stephens. It was made in 2017
@@Sulleey thanks. 😊
the way they gave us a way to set up a fire
6:08 does anyone else only recognize him from The Mandalorian?
Why you would treat a human who clearly cared like that is beyond me in todays world especially.
He is the antithesis of people who use others.
He had no real money to update the building and thought he'd let other less fortunate people have a home and shelter.
One that THEY should also care for.
I love watching these vids x
when chef started shoutin “calmmmm downnn” i was creasing😂😂
can we all agree that it was that red head's fault
Love Chicago Fire 😍😍😍
Prerequisites of being in charge of a Chicago emergency service: Have a raspy voice
hears bang
me: what was that
sees body with bullet hole
me : omg
hole you mean?
This was the shittest comment I’ve read
@@akagame8660 yes sorry
@@SpAceProductions100 DONT BE A JERK
his brains was on the wall with the blood👁👄👁✋🏾
yo this is so cool
I'm surprised Alexa is a captain considering her "professionalism" in this clip
I love how Boden just keeps screaming CALM DOWN 😂 I feel like with his voice and his presence it might actually have an effect on the people
I would be kind of intimidated if he screamed at me like that. He has great presence and is very dominating in this kind of moments. Gotta love Boden
Ok you know the drill
1 Cruz
2 voight
3 Boden
4 Casey
5 Shane
6 Dawson
7 dr Choi
8 Maggie
9 dr manning
0 whoever you want
Maggie
Casey
maggie!!
Casey
Sorry boden
There’s Too Much Death And Hatred In The World.
Grief or not - you DON’T have the right to assault others you decide to blame!
Hi I am a really big fan it's really amazing
Exact type of case / fire happened in Romania-Bucharest in a club called Colectiv, fixed the same problem: the place did not have authorization and there were no emergency exits If you want you can search on Yt (Romania Colectiv) and then look for the reasons and you will see
While not 1:1 accurate when it comes to the details, this reminds me of a similar fire in the Philippines in a club called Ozone.
What made the Ozone fire even worse imo is that most of the people who died were fresh graduates, their friends and families.
That lady’s unprofessionalism is real...like I get that shes pissed off about the situation but it’s not like the dude wasn’t feeling guilty enough...
im from croatia and i cry every night bc i want to see casey,he is awesome and i love him soo muchh,i never see him bc he live in australia but i love him so much🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
Why do you cry!?!
THE LITTLE GIRL CRYING AT THE BEGINNING. THAT DROVE ME TO TEARS
"he's not going anywhere"
except for heaven
Hang on, is no one gonna talk about the fact they just gave instructions on how to light a fire?!
The way the lady and the people treated the guy is another good reason why people in society are strongly incentivised from compassion. Good folks take the fault for bad people.
two things. 1:The first step should have been to clear his pockets
2:they should've sent someone to the bathroom or at least suspected that something like that can happen
5:25 I've never heard gunshots outside of TV so tell me why I thought that was some aggressive bubblewrap
*can i just hug the little girl holding the sign*
Love ur series
Adoro Chicago DP, não perco nenhum episódio 💓
i just clicked on this video and it makes me sad the second i watch it 😢
5:58: What? Carl Weathers is here?
Casey is just badass he ran into that fight before any of the cops did to break it up and get him out
What was the thing in the floor behind the couch
Amazing
What was that thing behind the couch.
JakeShaw16 it was a device that started the fire. The factory fire was arson
Lily Somerset ohh damn
Questions end in a question mark!! 😐😐😐
Imagine being that news Camaraman during that fight
Who thinks boded could be a badass cop
Boden
The woman helping severide explore is such a mood, and that woman interviewing is the reason for the suicide, someone must tell her that
What episode and season in this
So heartbreaking to see this😢
Why does the property owner remind me of ryhan Reynolds
Is it just me or does the women who was investigating with severide remind you of Edna from the incredibles 😂
People are awful man. That guy died believing it was his fault those kids died when all he did was try to help them and everyone blamed him for their kid's stupidity.
As a captain in the CFD it triggers me so much that they say that Hubble is a Lt. She is actually a captain, in the series she never was a Lt.
You guys are still alive I thought this was fineshed a long time ago
Was he personally responsible for their deaths? Didi he set the fire that killed them? If he did not, why keep harping on the tragedy for no good reason unless you have proof that he actually did it? Sure, the building was not up to safety standards. But the crux of the matter is that he allowed those who died to seek shelter in the building. He had no way of knowing what was going to happen. Sometimes having a kind heart just is not worth it.
I love bodens voice
casey checking his pulse :'']
It ended up not being the landlord's fault anyway. It was arson
He does share some blame, no sprinkler system, the building wasn't up to code.
That lady agent needs to get fired. I know that everything is really intense and emotional. Did a lot of people die? Yes. Did he not follow the building code? Yes. BUT you haven't established that he's guilty either.
You are professionals. You cannot drive a man to death. It's not as if he intentionally set the place on fire. Yes he was negligent but didn't you hear him? He was trying to provide cheap housing to those in need.
The court will determine if he was guilty of Arson. It was not her call to make. If a Human's right officer was there, she would receive an earful.
emergency services do everything they can to help people
is erin back its really confusing me
Ohhh thanks it got me confused
Funny😡
So sad 😞
when i heard the gunshot i jumped
Apollo Creed As Mayor. That's Cool.
Ngl I honestly feel bad for the man😪 man I have such a big heart 😂♥️
Was surprised to see Greef Karga there on the scene
The news ruin everything... Always the wrong spot, the wrong time
I just knew that was going to happen 😭😭
Who else jumped out of their seat when they heard the gun shot
Am I the only person that actually ducked down with them when I heard the gunshot 😂😩
Charlie Thomas that's actually really sad that that was your reaction! 😥 Do you mind me asking what country you live in?
I'm asking because I live in Australia and even though there are still registered and black market guns around, gun violence is really not common at all... so I can't even begin to comprehend what you life must be like for you to duck when that happened 😕
I didn't even flinch!
Guys its a show, chill 🤦🏽♀️
This is why sometimes I feel sad but relieved at the same time
Burning Renzo the Fire Truck of fire station 15. frhgthbvgh
The girl that was asking him questions made him do what he did
that wig at 2:23
Finaly what took so long chicago official