Part of it is nature and part of it is the environment. Some people are wired wrong and it isn't always the environment that is the cause. Just look at Ted Bundy. He came from a good home but he was a true monster.
It seems this is common. That's how many serial killers get away with it for so long. They target prostitutes, drug addicts who are typically transient, and people who are alone, have no one, and are in a vulnerable position. If you follow enough of these cases, this is pretty common. So sad. Their lives were hard enough
Back in those days?!? He was still murdering up until 2005. States have been linked since the late 1980s to early 1990s. WTF? Let me guess, you're a millennial who thinks the internet (and computers) didn't exist 40 years ago? The internet went live on Jan 01, 1980. Pick up a book. Computers were able to connect to each other (and national databases) in the late 1970s.
In America, there is this guy named Paulides who has been on the radio and written books about people who have seemingly vanished. A lot of these cases are not when the person is alone. A typical case is like a group of people are hiking and one of them stops to tie his boots the rest go on and about 2 minutes later they say, where's Fred; they go back and he's gone; they search for him all over; can't find him; then search parties can't find him etc. Sometimes they find bodies/skeletons; sometimes they find them alive far away from where they disappeared and they don't remember how they got there. Very strange. There is also still a serial killer still at large in the US that kills young guys; usually college age men. They find a body in unusual circumstances and some people think it is some kind of a cultish type thing. But the victims are usually athletic, strong, and handsome.
There was a serial killer arrested back in the eighties named Henry Lee Lucas. He began confessing to killings that only he would know the details of. Then he was used by police to clean a lot of murders up on the book by being asked leading questions. It turned embarrassing to the police.
This is the most valuable discussion ever made here. I admire the thoughtful statements and recognization of biases. Compassion for ALL people is the reflection of excellent character.
If you kill a random person in a random place, your chances of being caught are very small. Motive is the main factor is solving murders. No motive, no link to the murderer.
With advanced forensics, investigative techniques, and law enforcement communication between states VASTLY improved it’s not as easy to get away with murder as it once was. So while motive certainly still helps solve a murder, it’s far from the only tool detectives have at their disposal. But yeah, even with all that there are still many murders never solved. At least it’s not as easy to get away with as it was in the past.
Little claimed to be innocent of raping his victims, which he was charged with when he was booked with the 9s. When that Texas Ranger started interviewing Little, Little said he would confess to the murders if the rape charge was dropped. He then started describing almost 8 dozen murders.
@@johnfrench6564 I don’t know if it’s just one person. Last documentary I saw (Oxygen ran it, I think) theorized that it was a network of people on the dark web. I don’t know ? I’m sure it’s real for the victims and the families that haven’t got answers, justice, or closure.
There’s actually a bracelet that looks just like a charm bracelet. You can set it up, where you click the charm a certain amount of times and it sends your location to whoever you set it up to go to. I believe it’s also set up to click a certain amount of times and it sends your location to the police. I’ve bought a different kind of bracelet from the same company, it’s black and basically looks like a hair band or string or something. But it has a piece on it that can break glass, and it has a universal handcuff key on it too. I bought one for me, my mom and my sister. It’s unlikely I’ll ever have to use the key but the part that breaks glass is good incase your ever somewhere and you need to get out, you can use it to break a window, whether it be a shooting, fire or whatever. It also can break car windows, so if you wreck and need out, or to escape a situation. Or even in one of those situations where you see dogs or kids locked in a hot car. It can be useful for a lot. I wear it everyday
Currently listening to 'The Iceman' on Audible. Personal kills were over 100. He once kept a victim frozen for about 2 years, to disguise the time of death. It didn't work.
One thing is the financial cost of investigating, prosecuting and jailing crime. It costs $400k to prosecute a murder so 7/10 murders in Detroit go unsolved.
One of the leading serial killer experts, Peter Vronsky, wrote a book called Sons of Cain. He said that in his opinion, serial killers are prevented, not made. Basically, almost anyone can become a killer, it’s just social nurturing and normalization that prevents it.
I don’t believe that at all. It doesn’t make sense on an evolutionary scale. It’s instinct for most humans and all species to create and nurture life, not end it.
@@teresas8173 Doesn't make "evolutionary sense" to abort our children, but we're at 65 million and counting in the US alone. I was just passing along an expert opinion to add some context to the topic of the video. I'm not claiming to be an expert in either Criminology or Evolutionary Biology.
@@tylerbuckner3750 I always look at it like a cancer. Cancer can be caused by predisposition or external sources. It's appears at random but just like the body we get rid of it( meaning the people who can become killers never do weather due to environment or something else who knows but they live a normal life) or they become harmful to the body (society)
One thing to note when it comes to the armed robbery charge is that you can even go into a store without a gun, rob the place and walk out but if the thing you stole from that store was a gun, then your crime BECOMES an armed robbery simply because you decided to steal a gun.
Make sure u have a password with your kids. If there's ever an emergency and someone needs to get your kid they can give the password... Something easy they'll remeber, ours was potluck
Serial killers had it a lot easier in the 60s-70s because jurisdiction was a very odd beast with many police chief/sheriff's seeing it as their personal fief and there was a lack of interdepartmental communication.
When though Little has the most victim, I can name two series killers that make him look like a school boy, Carl Fisher and Panzram. Look them up, their history will give you nightmares.
Prostitution is legal in some of the counties of the State of Nevada. It's not legal in Las Vegas, however. I remember watching a show about the legal brothels in Nevada. The girls explained why they wanted to earn money with their bodies. Some said they loved sex, while most of the women stated that they had been sexually abused as children. When I was in my 20s, my friends said they wanted to go to Nevada to see a prostitute, but I never wanted to go because it didn't feel right. Years later, after seeing the interview mentioned above, I stopped going to strip clubs as well. No mater what the feminists say, I will never truly believe that a woman really wants to sleep with hundreds of guys in her lifetime. Men and women are wired differently and to believe otherwise is just dead wrong. Sadly, prostitutes are indeed considered the lowest of the low around the world, not just in America.
What they're not bringing up is that crimes against people from that strata of society are just harder to solve. There's more suspects, less documentation of their activities, the people they hang out with are less willing to talk to the police, they're often transient so their going missing is less suspicious, etc.
I have a feeling the reason that Police don't investigate some crimes as thoroughly or aggressively as others is more a result of the consequences stemming from making decisions as to the allocation of limited resources than it does bias or malice.
Have this conversation with your kids now. Get a password that you and your kids share. So if you have to send a stranger to get them, they will know that person is safe (or unsafe if they don't have the password) It's scary these days with Facebook. people share the picture and names of their children. Some rando could spot a kid and call their name, know the name of the parents, siblings, know the address, names of pet, the vacation they just got back from, all this to gain the trust of the child that they must be a friend and then they let that stranger take them. Talk to children now. the younger they are, the more vulnerable they are to being tricked.
A long arrest record without any consequences is THE problem here in the U.S. Most crimes are by repeat offenders. Had the justice system dealt with him early on some, perhaps many of his victims may have lived.
true the u.s.a. has a lot of problems with a crime-filled area. For example, taking up drug dealing would often buy you more than getting a minimum wage job in McDonald's. if we were to legalize weed this problem would be significantly diminished. If we decriminalize drug use we could stop gangs from having favorable businesses, like the bds in Chicago who were making 100,000 dollars a day for a period of time before collapsing due to their leader being arrested. if we invest in rehabilitation centers we could have more people in the workforce instead of ail which will increase of economy and help keep family's together since a lot of single parents are single parents due to a criminal parent being locked up.
A woman in America got killed like that, she had ordered an Uber and a car pulled up and she just got in. She didn't check the pick or license she just got in. Found her dead.
Is uber different in the U.K.? out here Canada when u order uber the app displays the drivers picture and gives you the cars make, model and license plate number.
The pin drop things happens with smart watches. You hit the alert and it sends a text and email to your designated contact. My Mrs accidentally sent me 2 from the shower this morning. But I could hear her singing so I ignored it
Dave mentioned early in this video "Why don't these killers find other serial killers and duke it out? " Actually there was a TV series here in the US that played on the cable channel Showtime called Dexter and that was the plot. The premise to the the plot is an orphan (Dexter) age 3, when his mother was brutally murdered with a chainsaw by drug dealers, right in front of him. Dexter ( played by actor Michael C. Hall) was adopted by Miami police officer Harry Morgan ( played by James Remar). Recognizing Dexter's trauma and the subsequent development of his sociopathic tendencies due to seeing his mother killed, Harry manipulated Dexter to channel his gruesome bloodlust into vigilantism, killing only heinous criminals who slip through the criminal justice system-basically seeking up rapist and serial killers to torture and kill. He finds most of the the victims to target because he as a day job working for the Miami PD as a criminal scene detective giving him access to DNA and criminal records. Series ran in the US from about 2006-2013
Just think of the ones that haven’t been caught. Not all these missing people are the victims of pedophiles and slave traders. Too many missing that are reported, and a lot that don’t get reported missing for years. That scares me more. The ones still out there
With that arrest record...he should have been locked up for life, long ago. Welcome to the stupid court system. England does the same thing. Some can’t be rehabilitated. He was one.
U ask y they always go for women and u could b right that there's a sexual element to it, but a factor could also b that most women would b easier to overpower than most men
Lol I think it’s funny that I’m in The hood in California watching sowm British dudes react to things 😂 I love this channel, you guys are definitely my blokes
He was born in 1940 . I can only assume the laws were more lax in many states until more modern times . esp. with the 3 strikes you're out law ... That's more modern .
Most of the murders would be the jurisdiction of the state the crime was committed, not the federal government. Three strikes, if a state has that law, would have to be three convictions in the same state. Also, those laws didn't really get enacted until the mid-late 90s.
If you look into it you will find that prostitutes and people on drugs (men and women) are frequently targeted by killers. It doesnt matter what color or sex they are they are all considered 'less dead' and get less attention and less effort
Not all serial killers are alike. Many have different eccentricities or goals. A good example is BTK. He evaded arrest after his trademark Bind Torture Kill method ended the lives of 10 people but over the years he just lived on in the community. He got married, raised a family, and was even a Cub Scout leader and was elected President of his church council and ran bible studies regularly. No one had a clue the same man who would direct congregations had murdered 10 people years ago and his family had no idea what he did in his sexual fantasies when he cross-dressed as his victims and cosplayed their last moments for sexual gratification. He was caught after writing letter's to the police and asking if it would better and safer to use floppy disks to send his threats. The police told him "sure" and then meticulously went through the data on the floppy disk and found that deleted files were still there from "Christ Lutheran Church" from a guy named Dennis. They drove to his house and saw the same vehicle seen in one of the videos of him dumping evidence. They later found his daughter and asked for a DNA test and confirmed that a "Familial Relation"s DNA was present at the site of one of the murders. When they went to arrest him, they asked him "Do you know why we're arresting you?" and he responded "I have a pretty good idea"
On his crime list you guys were wondering about if some were felonies theft can be a felony if it’s over a certain dollar amount and multiple dui’s can be also
Who says the first prostitutes were paid in cash? They could have been paid in food. Lot less dangerous to get your Mammoth steak that way versus having to actually kill it.
While it is unquestionably wrong to disregard victims dependent upon economic status and stuff, when a police department is already overwhelmed and they have to make decisions on where to put resources, i understand to a point that they might first focus on women and men that aren’t repeatedly putting their selves in positions where they are likely to die. It’s tough.
Unfortunately, the Justice system is damned if you do and damned if you don't. If the authorities put someone in jail on a bunch of petty crimes, people complain and riot that these people are being oppressed and in jail for no good reason. But if they are let go, and go on to do serious crimes, people complain and riot that the Justice system is to blame because they let such a person go. People will be upset about something no matter what. That being said, sure racism might have played a small part, but it was mostly classism. If it was a black senator, they would have made a fuss, but not for a white prostitute. Also, again, innocent people have been jailed by faulty eye witnesses. So you can't blame the authorities for not depending on eye witnesses, especially when they have no physical evidence. Damned if you, damned if you don't.
I just don't know how anybody can get in a stranger's car. I know most of these women were desperate in many ways but the one that left a birthday party and he gave her a ride . . . You can't trust anybody.
I believe there was research done that discovered the predisposition to become a serial killer in DNA. But, like you all said, nurture plays a part. A guy with the gene who is brought up in one of those hard knocks up-bringing becomes a serial killer. Meanwhile, someone with the gene with a loving family life turns out perfectly normal.
Cops call these crimes NHI aka no humans involved. Sadly not alot of people care about pros and streetwalkers. It's not just indifference though. It is near impossible to convict on a murder charge with no physical evidence and a witness who's a criminal themselves.
The saddest thing is that voters think the law stops people from doing what they want to do. Like killing and smoking pot and crossing borders and driving over the speed limit. Laws are not for deterrence. Laws are for uniform punishment.
I felt the same way about the caregiver who was looking after her handicapped mother. Glad Dave mentioned it. Her daughter must have been the world to her.
There’s definitely a link between his mother’s profession and the way he was brought up, and the victims he picked.
I was thinking that as well.
it’s very sick to think abt.. those women didn’t deserve that
crazy how mommy and daddy issues can stem into harming or hating one of those genders for decades
Part of it is nature and part of it is the environment. Some people are wired wrong and it isn't always the environment that is the cause. Just look at Ted Bundy. He came from a good home but he was a true monster.
@@angel1202003 yeah it’s just like the Coed killer he hated his mother because of how she treated him so he started targeting women
That’s the saddest thing, he targeted people who no one cared about. So most of those women disappeared and no one looked for them.
Smart tactic on his part but he did get caught tbf
It seems this is common. That's how many serial killers get away with it for so long. They target prostitutes, drug addicts who are typically transient, and people who are alone, have no one, and are in a vulnerable position. If you follow enough of these cases, this is pretty common. So sad. Their lives were hard enough
Back in those days, states didn't talk to each other, there wasn't a national database like there is now.
back in those days counties didn't talk to each other.
back in those days cities didn't talk to each other.
Surprising no one had cell phones.
Back in those days?!? He was still murdering up until 2005. States have been linked since the late 1980s to early 1990s. WTF?
Let me guess, you're a millennial who thinks the internet (and computers) didn't exist 40 years ago? The internet went live on Jan 01, 1980. Pick up a book. Computers were able to connect to each other (and national databases) in the late 1970s.
@@Birick Cell phones were in use by 1980.
In America, there is this guy named Paulides who has been on the radio and written books about people who have seemingly vanished. A lot of these cases are not when the person is alone. A typical case is like a group of people are hiking and one of them stops to tie his boots the rest go on and about 2 minutes later they say, where's Fred; they go back and he's gone; they search for him all over; can't find him; then search parties can't find him etc. Sometimes they find bodies/skeletons; sometimes they find them alive far away from where they disappeared and they don't remember how they got there. Very strange. There is also still a serial killer still at large in the US that kills young guys; usually college age men. They find a body in unusual circumstances and some people think it is some kind of a cultish type thing. But the victims are usually athletic, strong, and handsome.
that's well weird
Are you referring to the Smiley Face murder theory?...45 college age men who've been killed and left in or near water...
@@AJvsEverything Yes I believe so.
Usually a psychosexual aspect to many things and problems stemming from messed up childhoods.
There was a serial killer arrested back in the eighties named Henry Lee Lucas. He began confessing to killings that only he would know the details of. Then he was used by police to clean a lot of murders up on the book by being asked leading questions. It turned embarrassing to the police.
Was that who the film Henry was based on?
@@officeblokedaz I’ll be honest I have no idea what your conversation is about, just wanted to say hi Daz! ☺️🙌❤️
WaterKingAnonymous 👍🏻🙋🏻♂️
@@officeblokedaz yup
This is the most valuable discussion ever made here. I admire the thoughtful statements and recognization of biases. Compassion for ALL people is the reflection of excellent character.
Love this reaction btw, would love more content like this
Found the aspiring killer
@@larrymcjones 😂
They should pivot into a true crime channel
yess
If you kill a random person in a random place, your chances of being caught are very small. Motive is the main factor is solving murders. No motive, no link to the murderer.
With advanced forensics, investigative techniques, and law enforcement communication between states VASTLY improved it’s not as easy to get away with murder as it once was. So while motive certainly still helps solve a murder, it’s far from the only tool detectives have at their disposal. But yeah, even with all that there are still many murders never solved. At least it’s not as easy to get away with as it was in the past.
Little claimed to be innocent of raping his victims, which he was charged with when he was booked with the 9s. When that Texas Ranger started interviewing Little, Little said he would confess to the murders if the rape charge was dropped. He then started describing almost 8 dozen murders.
I second the Mr. Ballen reactions. But talking about the pusher, sounds a lot like the smiley face killer in the US.
Is the smiley face killer real?
@@johnfrench6564 I don’t know if it’s just one person. Last documentary I saw (Oxygen ran it, I think) theorized that it was a network of people on the dark web. I don’t know ? I’m sure it’s real for the victims and the families that haven’t got answers, justice, or closure.
There’s actually a bracelet that looks just like a charm bracelet. You can set it up, where you click the charm a certain amount of times and it sends your location to whoever you set it up to go to. I believe it’s also set up to click a certain amount of times and it sends your location to the police.
I’ve bought a different kind of bracelet from the same company, it’s black and basically looks like a hair band or string or something. But it has a piece on it that can break glass, and it has a universal handcuff key on it too.
I bought one for me, my mom and my sister.
It’s unlikely I’ll ever have to use the key but the part that breaks glass is good incase your ever somewhere and you need to get out, you can use it to break a window, whether it be a shooting, fire or whatever.
It also can break car windows, so if you wreck and need out, or to escape a situation. Or even in one of those situations where you see dogs or kids locked in a hot car. It can be useful for a lot. I wear it everyday
Currently listening to 'The Iceman' on Audible. Personal kills were over 100. He once kept a victim frozen for about 2 years, to disguise the time of death. It didn't work.
3:20 they actually don't go for women more often. That just makes the headlines more. Gacy, Dahlmer, and many others targeted men exclusively.
They were either gay or bisexual.
yeah, its almost always a sexual thing and most men are hetero, ergo female victims
This monster, Samuel Little, died just a couple months ago, December 2020.
What a last name for an absolute terror.
@@sweden7675 I know right.
Check out Canada's worst serial killer, Robert Pickton.
i watched a documentary about the iceman. he said the only kill that ever bothered him was a man he let pray before finishing him.
Love this one guys. Would be 100% down for more kinds of this sorta video
One thing is the financial cost of investigating, prosecuting and jailing crime. It costs $400k to prosecute a murder so 7/10 murders in Detroit go unsolved.
This was very interesting, definitely down for more mystery/crime reactions. Crazy, this guy just died Dec 30, 2020!
One of the leading serial killer experts, Peter Vronsky, wrote a book called Sons of Cain. He said that in his opinion, serial killers are prevented, not made. Basically, almost anyone can become a killer, it’s just social nurturing and normalization that prevents it.
I don’t believe that at all. It doesn’t make sense on an evolutionary scale. It’s instinct for most humans and all species to create and nurture life, not end it.
@@teresas8173 Doesn't make "evolutionary sense" to abort our children, but we're at 65 million and counting in the US alone. I was just passing along an expert opinion to add some context to the topic of the video. I'm not claiming to be an expert in either Criminology or Evolutionary Biology.
@@tylerbuckner3750 I always look at it like a cancer. Cancer can be caused by predisposition or external sources. It's appears at random but just like the body we get rid of it( meaning the people who can become killers never do weather due to environment or something else who knows but they live a normal life) or they become harmful to the body (society)
One thing to note when it comes to the armed robbery charge is that you can even go into a store without a gun, rob the place and walk out but if the thing you stole from that store was a gun, then your crime BECOMES an armed robbery simply because you decided to steal a gun.
Dave, you tell your kids now don't go with strangers and make sure you always remind them.
Make sure u have a password with your kids. If there's ever an emergency and someone needs to get your kid they can give the password... Something easy they'll remeber, ours was potluck
Especially Savile's involvement with Peter Sutcliffe
I enjoy your reactions and conversations! It's entertaining!
Serial killers had it a lot easier in the 60s-70s because jurisdiction was a very odd beast with many police chief/sheriff's seeing it as their personal fief and there was a lack of interdepartmental communication.
The pusher is Lewis, Lewis Brindley The Bristol Pusher
Been here since 14k also
When though Little has the most victim, I can name two series killers that make him look like a school boy, Carl Fisher and Panzram. Look them up, their history will give you nightmares.
One guy that always fascinated me was purple Aki...
You forgot to say “ 1 pound 50”
This was a great video guys but there always fantastic so no surprise
Prostitution is legal in some of the counties of the State of Nevada. It's not legal in Las Vegas, however. I remember watching a show about the legal brothels in Nevada. The girls explained why they wanted to earn money with their bodies. Some said they loved sex, while most of the women stated that they had been sexually abused as children.
When I was in my 20s, my friends said they wanted to go to Nevada to see a prostitute, but I never wanted to go because it didn't feel right. Years later, after seeing the interview mentioned above, I stopped going to strip clubs as well. No mater what the feminists say, I will never truly believe that a woman really wants to sleep with hundreds of guys in her lifetime. Men and women are wired differently and to believe otherwise is just dead wrong. Sadly, prostitutes are indeed considered the lowest of the low around the world, not just in America.
What they're not bringing up is that crimes against people from that strata of society are just harder to solve. There's more suspects, less documentation of their activities, the people they hang out with are less willing to talk to the police, they're often transient so their going missing is less suspicious, etc.
I have a feeling the reason that Police don't investigate some crimes as thoroughly or aggressively as others is more a result of the consequences stemming from making decisions as to the allocation of limited resources than it does bias or malice.
if your interested in the icemans story watch the 3 HBO specials where hes interviewed in prison, one was with a psychologist really good.
There’s a whole world of entertainment and educational subjects out there. Maybe we have serial killers behind us! Love your reactions!
Probably time to have that conversation with your kids!!
Have this conversation with your kids now. Get a password that you and your kids share. So if you have to send a stranger to get them, they will know that person is safe (or unsafe if they don't have the password)
It's scary these days with Facebook. people share the picture and names of their children. Some rando could spot a kid and call their name, know the name of the parents, siblings, know the address, names of pet, the vacation they just got back from, all this to gain the trust of the child that they must be a friend and then they let that stranger take them.
Talk to children now. the younger they are, the more vulnerable they are to being tricked.
A long arrest record without any consequences is THE problem here in the U.S. Most crimes are by repeat offenders. Had the justice system dealt with him early on some, perhaps many of his victims may have lived.
true
the u.s.a. has a lot of problems with a crime-filled area. For example, taking up drug dealing would often buy you more than getting a minimum wage job in McDonald's. if we were to legalize weed this problem would be significantly diminished. If we decriminalize drug use we could stop gangs from having favorable businesses, like the bds in Chicago who were making 100,000 dollars a day for a period of time before collapsing due to their leader being arrested. if we invest in rehabilitation centers we could have more people in the workforce instead of ail which will increase of economy and help keep family's together since a lot of single parents are single parents due to a criminal parent being locked up.
A woman in America got killed like that, she had ordered an Uber and a car pulled up and she just got in. She didn't check the pick or license she just got in. Found her dead.
We waz kangz n shit
Don’t forget he was doing this in the 50s and 60s before the internet. Police forces were not connected.
Little Woods, New Orleans LA exactly where I'm from.. lol
So, why am I suddenly crushing on Dave in a major way?
Prostitution is illegal in the US. Which is one of the reasons it is not regulated.
Is uber different in the U.K.? out here Canada when u order uber the app displays the drivers picture and gives you the cars make, model and license plate number.
No, we get the same information
In the words of Chance The Rapper. “Everybody Somebody’s Everything”
Please react to Michael Jordan Historic Bulls Mixtape
I’d love to see more serial killer video reactions
The pin drop things happens with smart watches. You hit the alert and it sends a text and email to your designated contact. My Mrs accidentally sent me 2 from the shower this morning. But I could hear her singing so I ignored it
Dave mentioned early in this video "Why don't these killers find other serial killers and duke it out? " Actually there was a TV series here in the US that played on the cable channel Showtime called Dexter and that was the plot. The premise to the the plot is an orphan (Dexter) age 3, when his mother was brutally murdered with a chainsaw by drug dealers, right in front of him. Dexter ( played by actor Michael C. Hall) was adopted by Miami police officer Harry Morgan ( played by James Remar). Recognizing Dexter's trauma and the subsequent development of his sociopathic tendencies due to seeing his mother killed, Harry manipulated Dexter to channel his gruesome bloodlust into vigilantism, killing only heinous criminals who slip through the criminal justice system-basically seeking up rapist and serial killers to torture and kill. He finds most of the the victims to target because he as a day job working for the Miami PD as a criminal scene detective giving him access to DNA and criminal records. Series ran in the US from about 2006-2013
Just think of the ones that haven’t been caught. Not all these missing people are the victims of pedophiles and slave traders. Too many missing that are reported, and a lot that don’t get reported missing for years. That scares me more. The ones still out there
With that arrest record...he should have been locked up for life, long ago. Welcome to the stupid court system. England does the same thing. Some can’t be rehabilitated. He was one.
Check out Mr. Ballen videos, best storyteller of unsolved disappearances.....he is an ex navy seal, they are short, not long!
U ask y they always go for women and u could b right that there's a sexual element to it, but a factor could also b that most women would b easier to overpower than most men
The juxtaposition of the serious subject matter and the cartoony animation is jarring.
I don't think i can finish it, it feel wrong.
You guys should react to some mr nightmare videos. He does some awesome horror stories.
It’s only in the state that has 3 strikes law. And it doesn’t carry over to other states. Not even the ones that had 3 strike laws.
3 strikes is a state-level rule. You can cross into the next state and commit a crime and be fine
Would love to see you guys react to some scary ghost videos!
I think most of those crimes took place before the three strikes law.
Lol I think it’s funny that I’m in The hood in California watching sowm British dudes react to things 😂 I love this channel, you guys are definitely my blokes
My god! Who has the energy to be a serial killer? It looks exhausting!
He was born in 1940 . I can only assume the laws were more lax in many states until more modern times . esp. with the 3 strikes you're out law ... That's more modern .
I'm sure killing women has to do with mommy issues. Molested? Abused? All his women were replacements for his mom, I'm sure.
Also has to do with choosing weaker prey.
28 states have some sort of three strikes law but none were in effect before 1994.
Most of the murders would be the jurisdiction of the state the crime was committed, not the federal government. Three strikes, if a state has that law, would have to be three convictions in the same state. Also, those laws didn't really get enacted until the mid-late 90s.
If you look into it you will find that prostitutes and people on drugs (men and women) are frequently targeted by killers. It doesnt matter what color or sex they are they are all considered 'less dead' and get less attention and less effort
We didn't have three strikes and you're out until the 1990s.
Not all serial killers are alike. Many have different eccentricities or goals. A good example is BTK. He evaded arrest after his trademark Bind Torture Kill method ended the lives of 10 people but over the years he just lived on in the community. He got married, raised a family, and was even a Cub Scout leader and was elected President of his church council and ran bible studies regularly. No one had a clue the same man who would direct congregations had murdered 10 people years ago and his family had no idea what he did in his sexual fantasies when he cross-dressed as his victims and cosplayed their last moments for sexual gratification. He was caught after writing letter's to the police and asking if it would better and safer to use floppy disks to send his threats. The police told him "sure" and then meticulously went through the data on the floppy disk and found that deleted files were still there from "Christ Lutheran Church" from a guy named Dennis. They drove to his house and saw the same vehicle seen in one of the videos of him dumping evidence. They later found his daughter and asked for a DNA test and confirmed that a "Familial Relation"s DNA was present at the site of one of the murders. When they went to arrest him, they asked him "Do you know why we're arresting you?" and he responded "I have a pretty good idea"
The only 3 strike rule Ik of is with DUIs.
On his crime list you guys were wondering about if some were felonies theft can be a felony if it’s over a certain dollar amount and multiple dui’s can be also
Prostitution is legal in Toronto Canada. Regulated, health check ups and vaccinated. Not sure about the rest of the country.
Who says the first prostitutes were paid in cash? They could have been paid in food. Lot less dangerous to get your Mammoth steak that way versus having to actually kill it.
I think the 3 strike rule is only in Cali
While it is unquestionably wrong to disregard victims dependent upon economic status and stuff, when a police department is already overwhelmed and they have to make decisions on where to put resources, i understand to a point that they might first focus on women and men that aren’t repeatedly putting their selves in positions where they are likely to die. It’s tough.
Thought for sure this would be about Kermit Grosnell.
I think theres a NETFLIX, or Amazon documentary about this guy.
Unfortunately, the Justice system is damned if you do and damned if you don't. If the authorities put someone in jail on a bunch of petty crimes, people complain and riot that these people are being oppressed and in jail for no good reason. But if they are let go, and go on to do serious crimes, people complain and riot that the Justice system is to blame because they let such a person go.
People will be upset about something no matter what.
That being said, sure racism might have played a small part, but it was mostly classism. If it was a black senator, they would have made a fuss, but not for a white prostitute.
Also, again, innocent people have been jailed by faulty eye witnesses. So you can't blame the authorities for not depending on eye witnesses, especially when they have no physical evidence.
Damned if you, damned if you don't.
Okay so now I know to hold off on subscribing lol 😆 thought I was subbed already oh well let's go 100K push!
I just don't know how anybody can get in a stranger's car. I know most of these women were desperate in many ways but the one that left a birthday party and he gave her a ride . . . You can't trust anybody.
Germany had the worst murderer of all time. No competition.
The black out ripper killed more than Jack the ripper but never talked about.
Reminds me of dexter..
To be fair....To be fair....To be fair....To be fair....To be fair....
Office Bloke Dave you should check out Rob Gavagan's video called Serial Killer Files on Richard Kuklinski it is an amazing video.
More Crime reviews!
the first currency was food.
One fish for one fuck?
OK!
I believe there was research done that discovered the predisposition to become a serial killer in DNA. But, like you all said, nurture plays a part. A guy with the gene who is brought up in one of those hard knocks up-bringing becomes a serial killer. Meanwhile, someone with the gene with a loving family life turns out perfectly normal.
You guys sould react to Lemmino videos
Cops call these crimes NHI aka no humans involved. Sadly not alot of people care about pros and streetwalkers. It's not just indifference though. It is near impossible to convict on a murder charge with no physical evidence and a witness who's a criminal themselves.
125k now!
You should check out Richard Kuklinski aka Iceman interviewed by a psychoanalyst.
my sisters phone texts an sos with the phone location if you triple tap the power button
Collectively one of them
3 strike laws didn't start till the 80s
The saddest thing is that voters think the law stops people from doing what they want to do. Like killing and smoking pot and crossing borders and driving over the speed limit. Laws are not for deterrence. Laws are for uniform punishment.
You guys should react to stories told on the story white under belly channel truly tragic stuff but powerful
Doing more The Dooo, H Mack, and Marcus Veltri will get you past 100k real fast!
I felt the same way about the caregiver who was looking after her handicapped mother. Glad Dave mentioned it. Her daughter must have been the world to her.