Because it demonstrates bad actors, we as flawed human beings all love to believe that we can change and so can anyone, but we must also recognize there are those that claim they have changed while masking their true motivations.
“This episode promoted the idea that one thing was certain: Sheldon would never commit a serious crime again.” “Now moving to the timeline of the crime” Haha what a hilarious delivery 😂
I watched something about a guy who defrauded France of billions of dollars. When he was on trial, he went on a pilgrimage to talk to the pope about the oppressiveness of the markets. These dudes are clowns
And claim racism when the judge that sentenced them is the exact same race as them. Hell, there were numerous red flags here that anyone should have recognized. Too bad Joe still has some left wing Kool-Aid to purge from his system.
The US has 4% percent of the world’s population, but 22% of the world’s prisoners; see Stevenson (2022). Hipplewitz, L., 2022. Punishment vs. Rehabilitation: A Discourse on American Prison Reform & Comparative Analysis to Swedish Incarceration. Stevenson, B., 2019. Why American Prisons Owe Their Cruelty to Slavery
That remark he made just let me know this dude doesn't know Jack about gang or prison life but most normal people don't they believe whatever movies or mainstream media tells them about it when in reality most gang members or convicts who are alpha super aggressive violent individuals usually do whatever they want and nobody challenges them or say anything to them so he probably did go and nobody did shish to him.....
The Innocence Project has never had a problem going to bat for obviously guilty, evil, people. This isn't going to change anything; everyone paying attention already knows they are a bunch of grifters, and everyone not paying attention will continue giving them the benefit of the doubt.
"The United States has a current recidivism rate of 70% within 5 years (U.S. Prison Population, 2019)." I guess it becomes 100% after some more years. Recidivists must never be released back into society. How much pain will be necessary for society to understand that?.
Many US States bar felons from associating with one another, especially when on parole. idk if Sheldon was, but regardless...he associated with such and that was the outcome. (probably murdering him over some trivial BS which is usually the case).
It never ceases to amaze me that parole board after parole board is lured into the same trap. They are often impressed by the changed behaviour of the prisoner, without considering the change circumstance in which the prisoner lives. For example a car thief can not steal cars, a rapist can not rape women and a safe breaker can't rob safes because there are no cars to steal, no women to rape and no safes to rob. These changed behaviours are because there is no opportunity to indulge in the behaviour that led to them being incarcerated. Once released all the old temptations are back in play, old habits die hard and we on the outside are not surprised when they re-offend.
Johnson yells "I'm innocent" as he is being led out of the police department. He must think everyone will buy his schtick one more time. Some things never change.
@@robertshepherd3832 I think it’s because some percent of the population always will. There’s a sub Reddit that still has people who believe Jesse Smollett is innocent. Like to this day, they think he did nothing,wrong
Back in '86 when I was 12 years old a dear friend of mine who was 13, was kidnapped, rpd & murdered by a guy who was also released from jail early due to "good behavior". If he was in jail like he should have been, she would still be here. It is infuriating.
Yes, the system is broken. The sentencing judge said he should not be paroled before 41 years. The system disregarded that and paroled him after 20-something. Now another person is dead.
Thank you, Dr Grande. My sister is a corrections officer in a pre-trial facility. She states that the majority of the offenders are in jail on drug related offenses. We have a friend in jail who is currently waiting for a plea deal or trial. He has a history of meth addiction and assault convictions. He was out of jail for about a year and was doing well. He started slipping back into his old drug habits and ended up assaulting his girlfriend. He is being charged with attempted murder. He is hoping for a light sentence. We have our doubts about his ability to change. It truly is sad and a waste.
I’m genuinely curious, and I don’t mean this as an insult, but why would you be friends with someone like that? Aren’t you worried that he’s going to harm you or your family to get drugs? I’m not saying you should turn your back on a friend who needs help. But as someone who’s dealt with mental illness and addiction in my family, sometimes you have to place your own safety above everything else. Sometimes the most compassionate thing to do is go no contact and let them hit bottom.
People can change, but the change has to come from themselves and it has to be genuine and it usually has to come from personal tragedy or reflection. The result is that while it's *possible* for people to change, it's extremely unlikely. Because the biggest issue most people have most of the time is a lack of self-reflection.
@@MimiRAM0NE I could see how the majority are there for drug-related charges, but that doesn't mean they are ALSO there for OTHER charges. The person in the OP is a perfect case in point. He was probably there after receiving a conviction related to meth, but what he was REALLY there for was his convictions for violent crimes. Unless you are hauling around a serious amount of dope, they're not going to lock you up on drug charges. The people rotting in a cell are there for violent crimes that they most likely picked up while possessing, using or selling drugs.
@thisisgonnabegoodiknowit9413 This case is pretty egregious but there's video of a man dragging a dead body down the sidewalk in broad daylight. Looks like murder, right? It was not. The man had not killed the person and was simply relocating the already-deceased body he'd come upon by chance in an abandoned house, IIRC.
@@gatewaysolo104he has an old video with his bloopers. It's very wholesome and he laughs and smirks when delivering his infamous humorous lines. You should look for it
Which raises the question of why he just has a blonde wig lying around. Was he an actor? Did a paramour leave it behind? Did he just like being pretty in his free time?
Really? That’s what really disappointed me, this being the first video I’ve watched of his. It felt less like professional analysis and more like him trying to be clever and snarky. Sounds like a lot of his stuff is this way then. I was hoping for more.
Cry me a river on the bad childhood excuse🤨 Millions of us had worse. Terrible how he got out & did that, rare do people change. Excellent points again. Thanks Dr G😊💕💕
Does everyone who smokes get lung cancer? If not, does that mean that smoking doesn't contribute to lung cancer in smokers? I'm sorry you were abused, but I would think it would make you more aware of how that can damage people.
@@themysteryofbluebirdboulevard Not sure what that has to do with anything bluebird blvd. If you are aware you are also aware behaviors are CHOICE. Period.
@@themysteryofbluebirdboulevard Not at all but I am spiritual. You make the oddest accusations & assumptions. You sound like someone who always likes to be right or win. Good luck with that too & your sarcasm. Ps a religious person would excuse bad behavior by saying Satan was involved/made them do it so you're dead wrong on everything you said.
Everyone is not the same though. Facts are that some survive unspeakable childhood trauma because they are an individual that was able to. Humans are not all the same, so their abilities will vary through no fault of their own, as it relates to trauma.
“Like a dog that returns to his vomit, a fool does the same foolish things again and again. People who think they are wise when they are not are worse than fools.” Proverbs 26: 11-12
“The lucrative illegal drug distribution industry” 😂 What a fancy way of saying he was a dealer. I’m going to add that to my mental list of Grande-isms.
There were lots of jobs during that time. Lookouts could make thousands a week as kids. There were also people who only bagged up and other administrative tasks. Some organizations brought in hundreds of thousands or millions a week. You literally need workers besides dealers to manage that
When I worked in a county jail decades ago, I spoke to some inmates who seemed so calm, and rational only to later read of them committing the most unspeakable crimes. At first thought, "Naw, couldn't be the same guy!"
A few body parts in a fridge and u guys jump the gun and act like his whole redemption act was a scam.... So now all good sheldon did gets written off cuz va few more chopped up bodies? That's a tough standard
3:35 "...one thing was certain. Sheldon would never commit another serious crime again. Now moving to the timeline of the crime." That's my favorite line in this video lol Aw man, someone already made this comment...glad I'm not the only one who caught that one lol
Just remember the innocence project was founded by an attorney who represented OJ Simpson. That tells me all I need to know about these “angels” they get released from prison….
@Barbieinawheelchair like The Minority Report with precrime. I'm sure there are brain scans that are done on these people but usually posthumously. They have different centres of the brain light up. It costs too much money though apparently, but imagine how much it could save long term
@@stitchingshenanigans3917 they used a double entendre… a pun… or play on words. “Mixed race” is a being used like homonym - one set of words spelled one way, but with two meanings. The two meanings are “mixed race” as a mix of ethnicities, and also “mixed race” as literal activities you might see at an athletic field day event. More examples of that type of race are potato sack race, track and field race, three legged race, blindfold race. I just taught this concept and more as a hip-hop educator who specializes in rap. The most uses we found was for the word “tap”. It can mean finger tap, tap that ass, tap resources, tap water, tap healing modality, tap in like check in with someone. 6 meanings, one word written with one kind of spelling. Get it?
Dr grande is throwing unprecedented amounts of shade in this latest one and I AM HERE FOR IT!!!! That murderer is the epitome of a wolf in sheep's clothing, such scary stuff. OMG I have never laughed so hard at one of your episodes and I have seen them all😊
Thank you for covering this Dr. Grande. I'm hoping that Joe Rogan and his staff will be more careful about evaluating guests in the future. I'm also hoping Josh Dubin takes a long look in the mirror and thinks hard about who he's helping. If Sheldon wasn't released from jail, his former 'colleague' may still be alive.
"In April of 2008, my son was arrested for accidentally killing a Columbia graduate student while trying to impress a group of shallow friends who taunted, egged and dared him to attack the Asian man. Fast forward, my son eventually pled guilty to his recklessness and ignorance; however, the media had a field day on all the popular news channels, for my son was only 14-years old at the time of the incident." "I was incarcerated at the time. Sadly, my father - my son’s grandfather - had just completed a lengthy prison stint at a notorious prison...." And there was a crowd of folks who talked to Sheldon Johnson and mistook him for a kind and compassionate innocent victim of the institutionally racist system.
I've noticed some "prison TH-camrs" on here talk about their life as a criminal with pride as if it was honorable. Unsurprisingly, they appear to be falling from grace as of late. They tell the world about the growth they've achieved and insert themselves into the community as some kind of role model, all while having learned nothing. They glorify their crimes and then follow it with "don't do this at home, kids." I know a few *actually* reformed criminals in my personal life, most of them were in gangs, and they don't look back on their transgressions with fondness. Nor do they minimize their wrongdoings. They learned really important lessons as human beings, and they do their best to take all of the bad and channel it into something good. They seriously and concisely denounce that lifestyle, and they're honest about the real world consequences of their actions. Their focus isn't on themselves, it's on those they hurt. If they share their stories, they refuse present them in an attractive light because they know how easily people can be influenced and they care. People like this, and a few others here on youtube, don't care about that. They're still playing the victim, addicted to the attention it brings from those of us who choose to afford them the benefit of the doubt. It's just... sad, I suppose. It results people becoming callous because they don't want to be fooled again in the future. It only fortifies that element of distrust that keeps us all divided because no one wants to get hurt. There are so many people out here truly turning their lives around and trying their damnedest to make things right, but no one is willing to give them a chance. Meanwhile, this guy is out here killing people after bitching on a podcast about how unfair the system is. .... I've reached the point in this comment where my ADHD has entered the chat and I've forgotten where I'm going. I guess my point is that it's just sad to me that people like this, in just one interview, can undo the repartitive work that so many reformed individuals have dedicated their lives to. I don't hold it against Joe Rogan, he couldn't have known what would unfold. But I'm positive that this experience will ensure that the many voices of those who are truly doing good in the world will go unheard, because no one with an established platform will be willing to take the chance. It's such a shame.
“One thing was certain: Sheldon would never commit another serious crime again…Now moving to the timeline of the crime…” You slayed me again, Dr. G- pun intended.
The thousands of criminals I have seen in 40 years of law enforcement have had one thing in common : Every single one was a liar. - J. Edgar Hoover, FBI Director 1935-1972
A constant turning lead him right back to where he started. Thanks Dr G for the insightful analysis. I mostly form my own options before listening to your thoughts, but you never fail to provide new ideas to ponder!
Yea, It sounds like these 2 were lovers while they were incarcerated together , and something just went awry that day. Dismembering someone is a great deal of work , and that had to be some passion behind that. 🤔
Another terrible story is that of the man who became a family annihilator- *twice.* (The first time, I think he was sent to a psychiatric institution.) That was around the 1970s. Yet another awful re-offender- in prison for having hacked off a girl's arms and left her for dead in some woods- was released as an elderly man. Someone shows up at the guy's house, and he's on his couch, stabbing a dead woman. Then there was that Eastern European man who wrote books in prison, whom everyone was petitioning to have released, and when he was, he traveled to the U.S. to continue his killing career, now moonlighting as a successful author. ~ All just crazy cases, worth checking out! ~
The name of the teen who was maimed was Mary Vincent. She was hitch-hiking when Lawrence Singleton gave her a ride. He not only raped her but indeed chopped her arms off. Left for dead, she somehow survived by remaining very calm and decreased her blood flow. Singleton was paroled after only 8 years in a California prison. Sheldon Johnson has an incredible skill for the con. It's up to Obama force level. If he had not chosen a criminal career path, he could very well be the Governor of New York if not the President. He's that smooth.
@@marleylove510 Maybe you can help me remember another one: This was also 1970s era. It involved a college fling between two women. After the breakup, one of the women started living in a crawl space under her ex's house, banging on pipes to scare her, and also listening in on her phone conversations (so she could show up whenever the ex made plans). It was among the creepiest stalking stories I had ever heard, but I only once saw a true-crime program about this, and it was awhile ago.
@@michaelcanty4940 I couldn't believe they released that man (who maimed Mary Vincent)! And then she has to hear that he's out again?! That was horrendous. (Sheldon Johnson was a name I'd forgotten, but his story stuck with me, it was so unusual.)
Usually I don't because he makes fun of the victim or people with mental health issues when he covers them. He should stick to videos like this were no one cares if the focus is made fun off.
I saw part of the Joe Rogan interview. I loved the part where he said he decided to give being good a try. And then he actually said if it didn't work out he could go back to being bad! He actually told Joe Rogan and the Innocence lawyer that if there wasn't something in it for him in being good, he'd just switch. Apparently he decided there wasn't enough worth in being good. He should get the death penalty but it probably isn't an option.
Why do some want to take the Rogan podcast down? It is what it is. An interview where the interviewee was dishonest. Happens every week on Meet the Press.
I’d just like to say that I’ve avoided watching your videos Because I watched one quite a while ago and I turned it off and after that I never watched any other clips or videos. But I’m glad I watch one of your videos last week and I give you another chance, You content is straight to the point and you have a dry sense of humour and rather witty lol I think I’ll check out a few more videos see what I’ve been missing 👍🏼
Dear Dr Grande, the dry humor was sensational. Sheldon, a career criminal with no conscience. A great episode with great moral underpinning. Simply, a leopard does not change their spots.
This whole episode was bizarre. Rogan talking about problems with the justice system and using this guy as an example for it, but absolutely nothing about this guys story made me think "He shouldn't have been in prison" or that anything about locking him away was wrong. The only problem with the justice system related to this case that I can see is that he ever got out again.
"As if criminal charges are airborne, strike innocent people like missile." 😂😂😂 Dr. Grande should be awarded this year's Mark Twain Prize for this gem of a line.. 😂😂😂
What's sad is how this could negatively impact the chances for pther inmates who are eligible for similar programs. Many prisoners with extensive criminal record, even including violent crimes, have been successfully reformed and do not go on to reofrend when they are released early. Many go on to elad productive lives and to engage int heir communities in a positive way.
Yeah, we need to give them a chance to reoffend, who cares about those that may get hurt, or those that follow the law and expect reasonable safety. Violent crimes should never be paroled, especially those where the person says things like "he didn't get hurt just roughed up a little". They can work on leading a productive life from a jail cell
Many are calling for this JRE episode to be taken down. I say leave it up, as an example of how such people cannot be trusted.
Why?
Cause ppl are stupid, they think taking the EP down is gonna change anything @@Cinder_311
@@Cinder_311 Why what ? Why take ti down or why leave it up ? He answers your second question.
Because it demonstrates bad actors, we as flawed human beings all love to believe that we can change and so can anyone, but we must also recognize there are those that claim they have changed while masking their true motivations.
Maybe considered a racist video based on the criminal's demographic?
Sheldon turned his life around 360 degrees!
*Sheldon did a 180 & a 180... **_but not necessarily in that order._* 🙃
🤭
Hahaha
180
Twice!
😂
“This episode promoted the idea that one thing was certain: Sheldon would never commit a serious crime again.”
“Now moving to the timeline of the crime”
Haha what a hilarious delivery 😂
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
I was about to comment exactly that. I played it back to make sure I heard it right 😅
🤣🤣🤣
how he does it so dead-pan is beyond me.
He nails it every time 😂
It should be a red flag when people who attempted murder paint themselves as a victim of society.
Most black people consider themselves victims of society 😂
🚩🚩🚩🚩Murder a red flag. I agree. You are correct.
learn to read. @@kiahpeace9090
I watched something about a guy who defrauded France of billions of dollars. When he was on trial, he went on a pilgrimage to talk to the pope about the oppressiveness of the markets.
These dudes are clowns
And claim racism when the judge that sentenced them is the exact same race as them. Hell, there were numerous red flags here that anyone should have recognized. Too bad Joe still has some left wing Kool-Aid to purge from his system.
Killing is one thing, but dismembering is on a whole different level.
Not exactly you got to clean up your own mess buddy..
It all depends on what size of cooler you can buy!
it depends on the order, being dismembered first is worse
All you have to do is look at this dude and you can tell he's not right.
Actually, the killing is plenty bad enough on its own. Remind me to never make you mad.
Never should have been released!!
We can say that clearly with the benefit of hindsight.
The US has 4% percent of the world’s population, but 22% of the world’s prisoners; see Stevenson (2022).
Hipplewitz, L., 2022. Punishment vs. Rehabilitation: A Discourse on American Prison Reform & Comparative Analysis to Swedish Incarceration.
Stevenson, B., 2019. Why American Prisons Owe Their Cruelty to Slavery
@@Diamonddavej Some don't want rehab It's a notch on their belt Some do work to make changes An indivual decision
Dats waycist tho!
@@Diamonddavej The poor criminals! Maybe you could let them live in your neighborhood...?
"Most gangs are not known for their generous retirement plans" - oh, that's crisp!
Gold😂
That remark he made just let me know this dude doesn't know Jack about gang or prison life but most normal people don't they believe whatever movies or mainstream media tells them about it when in reality most gang members or convicts who are alpha super aggressive violent individuals usually do whatever they want and nobody challenges them or say anything to them so he probably did go and nobody did shish to him.....
@@Kureoner...if you need a gang to feel important you certainly aren’t alpha.
As soon as I saw the thumbnail I started speculating about what could be happening in a situation like this.
😂😂😂😂😂
You didn't start diagnosing anyone did you? Hope not.
@@alemswazzu definitely not.
😂
Josh Dubin beat his chest claiming this guy was wronged. A little egg on the face of the innocence project.
*An ostrich egg 🥚 of course.* 🙃
Is this the same group that wants to free Scott Peterson?
Josh Dubin: An egg?! An egg is WHITE! That’s RACIIIIST! Why not a black egg? Injustice!
The Innocence Project has never had a problem going to bat for obviously guilty, evil, people. This isn't going to change anything; everyone paying attention already knows they are a bunch of grifters, and everyone not paying attention will continue giving them the benefit of the doubt.
I knew your email was first name last name
Never underestimate the ability of these kinds of people to bullshit.. you can't believe a word that comes out of their mouth
Not a single damned word.
"The United States has a current recidivism rate of 70% within 5 years (U.S. Prison Population, 2019)."
I guess it becomes 100% after some more years.
Recidivists must never be released back into society. How much pain will be necessary for society to understand that?.
of course..they play the game of saying what people want to hear. In prison, that's the best way to get paroled.
@@justmeagain7Also, being in prison for years tends to destroy what little humanity these people ever had!
Many US States bar felons from associating with one another, especially when on parole. idk if Sheldon was, but regardless...he associated with such and that was the outcome. (probably murdering him over some trivial BS which is usually the case).
It never ceases to amaze me that parole board after parole board is lured into the same trap. They are often impressed by the changed behaviour of the prisoner, without considering the change circumstance in which the prisoner lives. For example a car thief can not steal cars, a rapist can not rape women and a safe breaker can't rob safes because there are no cars to steal, no women to rape and no safes to rob. These changed behaviours are because there is no opportunity to indulge in the behaviour that led to them being incarcerated. Once released all the old temptations are back in play, old habits die hard and we on the outside are not surprised when they re-offend.
Yes this
100%
What else amazes me is how easily fooled parole boards are. They must be staffed by the same people as Soros DAs.
Very well put.
Well, one part of your analysis is wrong. Rapists can rape again in prison when they claim to be a man to get moved to a women’s prison 😳
1 thing was clear that sheldon would never commit a violent crime again... annnd moving to the crime
Style.
Best transition ever 😂
Johnson yells "I'm innocent" as he is being led out of the police department. He must think everyone will buy his schtick one more time. Some things never change.
@@robertshepherd3832 I think it’s because some percent of the population always will. There’s a sub Reddit that still has people who believe Jesse Smollett is innocent. Like to this day, they think he did nothing,wrong
Back in '86 when I was 12 years old a dear friend of mine who was 13, was kidnapped, rpd & murdered by a guy who was also released from jail early due to "good behavior". If he was in jail like he should have been, she would still be here. It is infuriating.
I'm sorry that happened. 😢💔
@@fashiharz8584 thank you. I appreciate that ❤️
She was a really sweet girl.
Her name was Tina Severns.
We all miss her dearly.
Sheldon mentioned the system was broken. Yeah, thanks for confirming that with the gross slice and dice. 🙄
Yes, the system is broken. The sentencing judge said he should not be paroled before 41 years. The system disregarded that and paroled him after 20-something. Now another person is dead.
Thank you, Dr Grande. My sister is a corrections officer in a pre-trial facility. She states that the majority of the offenders are in jail on drug related offenses. We have a friend in jail who is currently waiting for a plea deal or trial. He has a history of meth addiction and assault convictions. He was out of jail for about a year and was doing well. He started slipping back into his old drug habits and ended up assaulting his girlfriend. He is being charged with attempted murder. He is hoping for a light sentence. We have our doubts about his ability to change. It truly is sad and a waste.
I’m genuinely curious, and I don’t mean this as an insult, but why would you be friends with someone like that? Aren’t you worried that he’s going to harm you or your family to get drugs?
I’m not saying you should turn your back on a friend who needs help. But as someone who’s dealt with mental illness and addiction in my family, sometimes you have to place your own safety above everything else. Sometimes the most compassionate thing to do is go no contact and let them hit bottom.
People can change, but the change has to come from themselves and it has to be genuine and it usually has to come from personal tragedy or reflection. The result is that while it's *possible* for people to change, it's extremely unlikely. Because the biggest issue most people have most of the time is a lack of self-reflection.
Drug related charges are usually pleaded down from violent charges.
@@MimiRAM0NE I could see how the majority are there for drug-related charges, but that doesn't mean they are ALSO there for OTHER charges. The person in the OP is a perfect case in point. He was probably there after receiving a conviction related to meth, but what he was REALLY there for was his convictions for violent crimes. Unless you are hauling around a serious amount of dope, they're not going to lock you up on drug charges. The people rotting in a cell are there for violent crimes that they most likely picked up while possessing, using or selling drugs.
Allegedly, but also really.
Let’s not jump to conclusions!
Who among us doesn’t have body parts in their home??
Yes, actually
Fellow Norm fans.
@thisisgonnabegoodiknowit9413
This case is pretty egregious but there's video of a man dragging a dead body down the sidewalk in broad daylight.
Looks like murder, right?
It was not.
The man had not killed the person and was simply relocating the already-deceased body he'd come upon by chance in an abandoned house, IIRC.
@@This_gonna_be_good_I_know_it Me. Not yet anyway. There's still time.
“Remembering time somehow descended into a dismembering crime” 😂 love your humor always
I'm not sure how he keeps a straight face
☠️
Gold!!! 😂
@@gatewaysolo104he has an old video with his bloopers. It's very wholesome and he laughs and smirks when delivering his infamous humorous lines. You should look for it
@gatewaysolo104 Because he's a sociopath. Explains his humour too.
My mind went to E.T. When it showed him wearing a blonde wig.
E.T. phone home
🤣 yes, that’s hilarious!
"BeeEEeE GoOOOOOd."
@oceancat0450 - 🤣😆😁
😂😂😂
I agree the system is broken. Proven by the fact that this psycho was let out early.
The sword cuts both ways but whatever fits your narrative
@shameronstar7220 no, it doesn't. Tis a singled bladed sword.
Your mythical narrative is part of the problem.
@@Chris-d6m6o Oh hush! troll lol
@@Chris-d6m6othe fact that what he said went so far over your head is hilarious
@@shameronstar7220🤡
The blonde wig though 😂
He thought it's a clever disguise but it was like he had a lamp on his head
@@Ratzfourtyfour for real 😭 he thought he was a genius
I think Sheldon had a split personality. The blonde wig was one his alter egos.
Which raises the question of why he just has a blonde wig lying around.
Was he an actor? Did a paramour leave it behind? Did he just like being pretty in his free time?
Lovely on Sheldon!
Dr. Grande’s dry humor is my favorite. I may start wearing a mask s as to not ‘catch’ any charges, I had not realized they were airborne.
Now this is a comment that deserves a Grande heart.
@@LaniLanilei ❤️
You might want to try wearing something that actually prevents catching something that's airborne.
Really? That’s what really disappointed me, this being the first video I’ve watched of his. It felt less like professional analysis and more like him trying to be clever and snarky. Sounds like a lot of his stuff is this way then. I was hoping for more.
Cry me a river on the bad childhood excuse🤨 Millions of us had worse. Terrible how he got out & did that, rare do people change. Excellent points again. Thanks Dr G😊💕💕
Does everyone who smokes get lung cancer? If not, does that mean that smoking doesn't contribute to lung cancer in smokers? I'm sorry you were abused, but I would think it would make you more aware of how that can damage people.
@@themysteryofbluebirdboulevard Not sure what that has to do with anything bluebird blvd. If you are aware you are also aware behaviors are CHOICE. Period.
Oh. You must be religious. Good luck with that
@@themysteryofbluebirdboulevard Not at all but I am spiritual. You make the oddest accusations & assumptions. You sound like someone who always likes to be right or win. Good luck with that too & your sarcasm. Ps a religious person would excuse bad behavior by saying Satan was involved/made them do it so you're dead wrong on everything you said.
Everyone is not the same though. Facts are that some survive unspeakable childhood trauma because they are an individual that was able to. Humans are not all the same, so their abilities will vary through no fault of their own, as it relates to trauma.
"The episode promoted the idea that one thing was certain, Sheldon would never commit another serious crime. Now moving to the timeline of the crime"
We have a saying in my country: The goat tends towards the mountain.
Which country would that be? I've never heard that phrase before
Dagestan
“Like a dog that returns to his vomit, a fool does the same foolish things again and again. People who think they are wise when they are not are worse than fools.” Proverbs 26: 11-12
@@clownrituals587 mm preach ❤️✝️
@@clownrituals587i like the KJ version: “a fool returns to his folly like a dog to his vomit.”
“The lucrative illegal drug distribution industry” 😂 What a fancy way of saying he was a dealer. I’m going to add that to my mental list of Grande-isms.
I work for the IDDI. Has a nice ring to it and no one would think to ask.
Definitely a new favorite. Right up there with "clothing challenged."
Unauthorized Automobile Reposession Industry
Illicit Large-Sum Bank Withdrawls
Jewelry Store Display Clearing Scheme
Independent Pharmaceutical Salesman
There were lots of jobs during that time. Lookouts could make thousands a week as kids. There were also people who only bagged up and other administrative tasks. Some organizations brought in hundreds of thousands or millions a week. You literally need workers besides dealers to manage that
When I worked in a county jail decades ago, I spoke to some inmates who seemed so calm, and rational only to later read of them committing the most unspeakable crimes. At first thought, "Naw, couldn't be the same guy!"
They were never chill, but definitely cold blooded
Psychopaths
I went to a psych ward with a guy who was fucked up but “nice”
Got them socio / psycho path vibes
Every time I see a cactus, I think of Dr. Grande. 🌵🙂
I think of prickly plants
I am glad that they are not really candles.
🌵
😂✅️🌵
I recently got a tattoo of a cactus, just from watching his videos.
Everyone wants to believe in a redemption story but they’re usually just fiction.
"Trust but verify."
A few body parts in a fridge and u guys jump the gun and act like his whole redemption act was a scam....
So now all good sheldon did gets written off cuz va few more chopped up bodies? That's a tough standard
"Their remembering time turned into a dismembering crime". 😂 Dark comedy at it's finest.
Oh that’s just golden Dr. G -“It appears as though their remembering time somehow descended into a dismembering crime.” 🤣
I think his victims were more victimized than he
You're probably right.
3:35 "...one thing was certain. Sheldon would never commit another serious crime again. Now moving to the timeline of the crime."
That's my favorite line in this video lol
Aw man, someone already made this comment...glad I'm not the only one who caught that one lol
Just remember the innocence project was founded by an attorney who represented OJ Simpson. That tells me all I need to know about these “angels” they get released from prison….
Barry Scheck?
@@lionessatthegate Yea Barry, and one other attorney named Peter Neufeld.
Yeah it's a shame we can't x ray the human mind and spirit to see what's really in there and if it's changed
@Barbieinawheelchair like The Minority Report with precrime. I'm sure there are brain scans that are done on these people but usually posthumously. They have different centres of the brain light up. It costs too much money though apparently, but imagine how much it could save long term
@@Barbieinawheelchairshame we can violate the most intimate privacy there is and, presumably give that tool to all governments.
I’ve been wanting Dr.G to cover this… insane story. Always love to hear the Grande take on the sitch!
I dont know how you keep it together Dr Grande 😂 during these vids!
Turned 180⁰ twice 😂 you crack me up
"both his parents were deaf" I guess his parents never got to appreciate a shout out for Sheldon, should that rare event ever even happened.🤣
Hahahaha gReAT jOkE!
Sheldon was a child that literally was never told no... makes sense for sure🤨
when his parents argued, their fingers go a mile a minute!
"Catch charges" 😂 Shady people I know use language like that. Like, "I lost my apartment." No, it lost you because you didn't pay your bills.
I would as where did it go and if someone else found it.😂
He's going to catch a death penalty if keeps up with this stuff.
@@ImNotaRussianBot HA!
Quotas dont always help
The rephrasing to avoid accountability. Listen to politicians and they do the same
All prisons are filled with totally innocent people; or at least severely misunderstood. If you don´t believe me - ask their mothers!
Joe got played! 😂
Pretty easy to do 😂
@@fsabot19022 yeah I stopped listening to him when he sold out to Spotify
Doesn't take much, the man's a fool.
Can't be that hard. He thinks Andrew Tate is a good role model for his own kids.
Joe's a nimrod, with no clue about subjects he pontificates on.
This guy has the best voice ever, for bed time stories...Even if the story is about murder.
Once upon a time there was a murder of....
He's my go to TH-cam personality when I really need to fall asleep. Extremely soothing and calming voice.
@@ManChan-w5p
Crows that sat on a wire watching a cat that was…
@@brianmelody8930 He's better than Bob Ross?
I like to listen to cryptid stories for bed. Dr G is what I put on for a nap 😅
Bravo! Dr. Grande
You are informative and yet sophisticatedly amusing. A rare quality
My parents were mixed race too, dad liked the 100 meters and mom preferred the egg and spoon.
😹🫶🏾
I don't understand
@@stitchingshenanigans3917 they used a double entendre… a pun… or play on words. “Mixed race” is a being used like homonym - one set of words spelled one way, but with two meanings.
The two meanings are “mixed race” as a mix of ethnicities, and also “mixed race” as literal activities you might see at an athletic field day event. More examples of that type of race are potato sack race, track and field race, three legged race, blindfold race.
I just taught this concept and more as a hip-hop educator who specializes in rap. The most uses we found was for the word “tap”. It can mean finger tap, tap that ass, tap resources, tap water, tap healing modality, tap in like check in with someone. 6 meanings, one word written with one kind of spelling.
Get it?
@@OaklandMind No I really don't anything to do with that "rap" mess or hip-hop and ai am completely OUT
@@OaklandMindonly some white people find stuff like that funny. It's really not
Dr grande is throwing unprecedented amounts of shade in this latest one and I AM HERE FOR IT!!!! That murderer is the epitome of a wolf in sheep's clothing, such scary stuff. OMG I have never laughed so hard at one of your episodes and I have seen them all😊
Thank you for covering this Dr. Grande. I'm hoping that Joe Rogan and his staff will be more careful about evaluating guests in the future. I'm also hoping Josh Dubin takes a long look in the mirror and thinks hard about who he's helping. If Sheldon wasn't released from jail, his former 'colleague' may still be alive.
They won't .
they are black they wont
How is anybody supposed to know the guy was gonna dismember someone? The guy had done his time..
@@tylersays- Don't know much about recidivism rates do you ?
"...Sheldon would never commit another serious crime again....
Now moving to the timeline of the crime"
Lmao Dr Grande got em
Joe Rogan should've waited till March 8th to try and get an interview with Sheldon about how he turned his life around.
Maybe he can get another now that he's changed his life around again
I don’t think there’s ever been a more perfect moment for Dr Grande to say, ‘…Now moving to the timeline of the crime”!👏🤣👍👍
You know there's going to be trouble when you have someone's head and body parts in your refrigerator.
His friend’s refrigerator
He has definitely proven that the criminal justice system is broken.
And that The Innocence Project is a fraud
Dr grandes dry humor and monotone delivery gets me every time
I love when Dr. Grande doesn’t hold back on his analysis 😂
"In April of 2008, my son was arrested for accidentally killing a Columbia graduate student while trying to impress a group of shallow friends who taunted, egged and dared him to attack the Asian man. Fast forward, my son eventually pled guilty to his recklessness and ignorance; however, the media had a field day on all the popular news channels, for my son was only 14-years old at the time of the incident." "I was incarcerated at the time. Sadly, my father - my son’s grandfather - had just completed a lengthy prison stint at a notorious prison...." And there was a crowd of folks who talked to Sheldon Johnson and mistook him for a kind and compassionate innocent victim of the institutionally racist system.
It's called a "Con Game" for this very reason.
I've noticed some "prison TH-camrs" on here talk about their life as a criminal with pride as if it was honorable. Unsurprisingly, they appear to be falling from grace as of late. They tell the world about the growth they've achieved and insert themselves into the community as some kind of role model, all while having learned nothing. They glorify their crimes and then follow it with "don't do this at home, kids." I know a few *actually* reformed criminals in my personal life, most of them were in gangs, and they don't look back on their transgressions with fondness. Nor do they minimize their wrongdoings. They learned really important lessons as human beings, and they do their best to take all of the bad and channel it into something good. They seriously and concisely denounce that lifestyle, and they're honest about the real world consequences of their actions. Their focus isn't on themselves, it's on those they hurt. If they share their stories, they refuse present them in an attractive light because they know how easily people can be influenced and they care. People like this, and a few others here on youtube, don't care about that. They're still playing the victim, addicted to the attention it brings from those of us who choose to afford them the benefit of the doubt.
It's just... sad, I suppose. It results people becoming callous because they don't want to be fooled again in the future. It only fortifies that element of distrust that keeps us all divided because no one wants to get hurt. There are so many people out here truly turning their lives around and trying their damnedest to make things right, but no one is willing to give them a chance. Meanwhile, this guy is out here killing people after bitching on a podcast about how unfair the system is. .... I've reached the point in this comment where my ADHD has entered the chat and I've forgotten where I'm going. I guess my point is that it's just sad to me that people like this, in just one interview, can undo the repartitive work that so many reformed individuals have dedicated their lives to. I don't hold it against Joe Rogan, he couldn't have known what would unfold. But I'm positive that this experience will ensure that the many voices of those who are truly doing good in the world will go unheard, because no one with an established platform will be willing to take the chance. It's such a shame.
Interesting comment thank you, didn't know that was a thing on TH-cam
You consistently produce great quality amusing videos!! Fantastic you have found something you are wonderful at and can share it with us!
“One thing was certain: Sheldon would never commit another serious crime again…Now moving to the timeline of the crime…”
You slayed me again, Dr. G- pun intended.
The thousands of criminals I have seen in 40 years of law enforcement have had one thing in common : Every single one was a liar.
- J. Edgar Hoover, FBI Director 1935-1972
Hoover would know from personal liar and deception experience.
J. Edgar Hoover is a legendary scumbag so definitely show no deference to his sense of morality.
Hoover-the guy who tried getting MLK to off himself.
Yeah…hoover is NOT someone you should be quoting 😩
Ah yes sweeping generalizations about an entire group. Always the hallmark of wisdom and integrity.
A constant turning lead him right back to where he started. Thanks Dr G for the insightful analysis. I mostly form my own options before listening to your thoughts, but you never fail to provide new ideas to ponder!
So great! I laughed, I cried, I stood up and cheered- but especially laughed a lot😂 Thanks Dr Grande!
Yea, It sounds like these 2 were lovers while they were incarcerated together , and something just went awry that day. Dismembering someone is a great deal of work , and that had to be some passion behind that. 🤔
I doubt that! He’s just a cold, calculating, murderer. He wanted to hide the body more easily, so he dismembered it.
Another terrible story is that of the man who became a family annihilator- *twice.* (The first time, I think he was sent to a psychiatric institution.) That was around the 1970s.
Yet another awful re-offender- in prison for having hacked off a girl's arms and left her for dead in some woods- was released as an elderly man. Someone shows up at the guy's house, and he's on his couch, stabbing a dead woman.
Then there was that Eastern European man who wrote books in prison, whom everyone was petitioning to have released, and when he was, he traveled to the U.S. to continue his killing career, now moonlighting as a successful author.
~ All just crazy cases, worth checking out! ~
Damn, I must follow tru crime a lot, because I’ve heard of every one of these stories.
Add Ed Kemper. He was released after mur*ering his grandparents.
The name of the teen who was maimed was Mary Vincent. She was hitch-hiking when Lawrence Singleton gave her a ride. He not only raped her but indeed chopped her arms off. Left for dead, she somehow survived by remaining very calm and decreased her blood flow. Singleton was paroled after only 8 years in a California prison.
Sheldon Johnson has an incredible skill for the con. It's up to Obama force level. If he had not chosen a criminal career path, he could very well be the Governor of New York if not the President. He's that smooth.
@@marleylove510 Maybe you can help me remember another one: This was also 1970s era. It involved a college fling between two women. After the breakup, one of the women started living in a crawl space under her ex's house, banging on pipes to scare her, and also listening in on her phone conversations (so she could show up whenever the ex made plans). It was among the creepiest stalking stories I had ever heard, but I only once saw a true-crime program about this, and it was awhile ago.
@@michaelcanty4940 I couldn't believe they released that man (who maimed Mary Vincent)! And then she has to hear that he's out again?! That was horrendous.
(Sheldon Johnson was a name I'd forgotten, but his story stuck with me, it was so unusual.)
Dr. Grande is one of the best doctors out there. I love his humor, he cracks me up.
Usually I don't because he makes fun of the victim or people with mental health issues when he covers them. He should stick to videos like this were no one cares if the focus is made fun off.
Hello Dr Grande and Everyone from Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada 🇨🇦. Those Meds are pretty heavy duty.
I saw part of the Joe Rogan interview. I loved the part where he said he decided to give being good a try. And then he actually said if it didn't work out he could go back to being bad! He actually told Joe Rogan and the Innocence lawyer that if there wasn't something in it for him in being good, he'd just switch.
Apparently he decided there wasn't enough worth in being good. He should get the death penalty but it probably isn't an option.
Why do some want to take the Rogan podcast down? It is what it is. An interview where the interviewee was dishonest.
Happens every week on Meet the Press.
I’d just like to say that I’ve avoided watching your videos
Because I watched one quite a while ago and I turned it off and after that I never watched any other clips or videos.
But I’m glad I watch one of your videos last week and I give you another chance,
You content is straight to the point and you have a dry sense of humour and rather witty lol
I think I’ll check out a few more videos see what I’ve been missing 👍🏼
We appreciate how well you've articulated your insights, Dr Grande. You'll always have our support no matter what.
Your delivery is impeccable 😂 thank you for these videos
Early paroled convict arrested for murder. This is my shocked face 😐
Attempted murder.
@@Fx_Explains 👍
Another great breakdown Dr Grande, ngl i loved the few facetious remarks, deserved.
Those that only see victims fail to see the murderous psychopath sitting right in front of them...
I was gonna comment and ask for this to be covered. Glad it's being covered. Such a ridiculous situation.
Yet another example of how the justice system fails to protect our society over and over again.
You cracked me up many times in this one! Incredible analysis Dr!
It would be nice to see Dr. Grande's analysis of Joe Rogan on his elevation of this killer
Dear Dr Grande, the dry humor was sensational. Sheldon, a career criminal with no conscience. A great episode with great moral underpinning. Simply, a leopard does not change their spots.
Presentation is perfect as always 🌵🌵🌵
This whole episode was bizarre. Rogan talking about problems with the justice system and using this guy as an example for it, but absolutely nothing about this guys story made me think "He shouldn't have been in prison" or that anything about locking him away was wrong. The only problem with the justice system related to this case that I can see is that he ever got out again.
0:33 thank you for explaining everything up front... Dude is clinically insane
Absolutely one of the funniest Dr Grande videos I've seen so far. 😂
"As if criminal charges are airborne, strike innocent people like missile." 😂😂😂 Dr. Grande should be awarded this year's Mark Twain Prize for this gem of a line.. 😂😂😂
This was well done. Sincere and insightful.
The man is guilty.
Hi Dr. Grande,
Excellent analysis. As always I learn something new from your videos.
He looked in his blond wig like Britney Spears escaping paparazzi in 2007 😂
I always say
"Everyone can say they've changed but not everyone can prove they've changed."
Thank you for this excellent analysis.
In every instance, Sheldon minimizes his own guilt, and excuses the actions he does admit to as being someone else's fault.
Just imagine you’re a police officer and you discover a torso and foot in a container. Your life is forever changed
This video is a work of art. Thank you Dr Grande!
What's sad is how this could negatively impact the chances for pther inmates who are eligible for similar programs. Many prisoners with extensive criminal record, even including violent crimes, have been successfully reformed and do not go on to reofrend when they are released early. Many go on to elad productive lives and to engage int heir communities in a positive way.
Yeah, we need to give them a chance to reoffend, who cares about those that may get hurt, or those that follow the law and expect reasonable safety. Violent crimes should never be paroled, especially those where the person says things like "he didn't get hurt just roughed up a little". They can work on leading a productive life from a jail cell
Man 😂 You are a clever guy AND funny as hell. Listen to your Videos nonstop since i found your channel ! Thank you
The jokes in this particular commentary were absolutely hilarious. 😆😆😆😆
You are the best Dr. grande. Thank you!!! I love your videos.
"Their "remembering time became a dismembering crime."". You are a stone cold rapper Dr. Grande!! 😅😂
He became an excellent example anyway.
Yess king go off
Damn
@@seamusmoran4776close 💯
Damn
Damn
Damn
Great narration and elegance in speech 👌👏👏👏
Spraying the teacher with a fire extinguisher 🤣🤣 former teacher me cackling
Thank you Dr grande. Love the coverage on this story.