This was a heartbreaking story. I first listened to the audio only while driving. I was so enthralled with how amazing this story was that I watched the video after getting home. I was so immersed with the timeline and description of the details that when I actually watched it, everything was exactly as I pictured it. Fantastic job but what a sad story for such an amazing couple who were tragically victims who definitely were stellar members of their community. Very sad
This was my grandmothers best friend… Sherry was an amazing person who brought the most BEAUTIFUL energy every time she’d come around… crazy to see this case pop up on TH-cam so many years later
I just finally found a video coverage had been made about a double murder that happened in 2002 in my small home town, with one of the victims a HS classmate. Nice to see some visibility and telling the story of the victims.
That hurts my heart for your Grandmother. To think that what made her most beautiful is what ended up being the reason for this. It’s incredibly unfair.
@@krisvanalleni just saw the interrogation from a girl i know that killed a little girl she was babysitting. the opposite. blew my mind. her name is kirstie flood.
Her husband taking the scissors out and covering her in his jacket is beyond heartbreaking. I can’t believe he had to be the one to find her. He cared about HER more than preserving the crime scene. Putting the jacket over her just ripped my heart out
but if she had still been alive, pulling out the scissors could have caused fatal bleed...you NEVER remove anything like that. It might just save a life, that 'instrument' could be stopping a major bleed
@@elainemarten2147it’s important that people know this but I’m sure the husband didn’t. I would’ve done the same thing before I knew about that bc I thought it actually helped to remove whatever it is. But he also could’ve known that it was too late to save her..
@@elainemarten2147 True! I think he was aware she was dead (it's been a sec since I saw this video) but I always tell people, never remove a stab weapon. I worry about this weirdly specific situation way too often lol because not everybody knows
Yeah never remove anything but in this case it wouldn’t of made a difference. Her the body was cold & rigour mortise had begun so there was no chance of her being revived. The heart cannot be restarted & she would’ve been completely brain dead at that point which is why the husband was refusing to attempt CPR. The police also confirmed rigour had begun so they didn’t attempt anything either. I feel terrible for the husband I would’ve lost it at the dispatcher. I’m surprised they weren’t listening to him at all.
@MollyMoneys if he had told the dispatcher that she was already stiff she would have stopped trying to make him try CPR. Honestly, from listening to the 911 call I assumed he's the one who killed her
Yep, it's like they are trained to not respond to emotions, but in the WRONG way. There IS a way to be sensitive without being "cold", and this dispatcher failed at that. ✅
I think these dispatchers are trying to extract information. If they are actually talking to the killer, then the killer might slip up and say something condemning. A lot of the time the killer calls trying to set an alibi. Also, the killer might still be in the area and the dispatcher would need to extract that information as well. Plus, it must be real difficult for any human being to discuss violent murder. I would never fault the dispatcher. They are the ones that send help and try to help us.
Right. Because doing a professional job, trying to get as much information as possible, and wanting to help solve crimes is ridiculously annoying. Grow up.
@eh-i1841 Okaay,but she already asked if he is alone .+She is not a LE..The husband even said I'm over this!! Some are awesome but Lots loose their jobs after,bad ones..People need HELP..ASAP.
Except that part where he disregarded the request for an attorney and subtly manipulates the suspect with a passive aggressive threat by mention of jail
I don’t think so - he was so obvious in the interrogation trying to make him confess I was embarrassed how obvious he was talking non stop - the dna convicted him not great detective work - I understand how bumpy your road has been blah blah - I know ur life has been hard - I actually switched off then - he was making me cringe - thinks he’s inspector clouseau shutup already!
In regards to the dispatcher continuously advising the guy to give CPR after he is already alerted her that his wife is cold to the touch and dead, I'm always perplexed how this is even advisable since giving CPR could contaminate potential evidence
I understand what you are saying, but I assume potentially saving a life is more important than possibly inadvertently destroying evidence. I imagine the thinking is that authorities know a 911 caller in this situation is experiencing complete sensory overload and is in a state of shock. They can't necessarily be counted on to make rational decisions. All of that along with the fact they are most likely not a medical professional, nor have they ever seen a dead body, the most prudent thing would be to attempt CPR/chest compressions. I'm sure there have been plenty of situations where someone thought a person was beyond help but ended up surviving. OF course, the opposite also happens like in this case, where it is blatantly obvious that it is far too late, as well.
@@567dirt8910 he couldve implicated himself thats the point. left dna right there n detectives and prosecutors are heree to find the truth their here to convict people
you cant be serious, you think prosecuting a case is more important than preserving life, I can't stand youtube comments on these type of videos as if you guys know more than the departments that fine tune the Reponses dispatchers give. smh
@@jomolandthere was no sarcasm in my voice at all. Not sure how you read anything different in what I said. I agreed with the commenter that the detective did “amazing work” because the suspect was NOT trying to confess to anything!! 😒 🤨👀
There are a LOT of men out there VERY SCARED when realizing one day the police may be knocking on their door with DNA proof of their involvement in a crime. They should be scared. VERY SCARED.
@@kristilicea1472 well….it appears to be a retail establishment. Shes a Book owner, she works in a book store……what her private collection contains is irrelevant. She’s working in a bookstore. I’m a book collector….lol….I get it.
she following protocol, some callers are in a state of shock so operator needs to ask the questions again in case caller is not thinking clearly. Not all callers are in a right state of mind at the time.
yea this happened to me. I found someone in rigor mortis. I told them he is stiff but they still wanted me to do cpr. Fortunately the ambulance came in like a minute.
@@HolyRalphamaleEmpire-lh7kb Okay, champ. My sister is a 911 dispatcher. I'll go with her experience over some weirdo on the internet. Aside from THE OBVIOUS (providing emergency assistance), they have multiple objectives.
@@elagamingrayz4685 That is not what was happening…DISPATCH IS HORRIBLE AND NEEDS TRAINING. She was doing nothing but (OFC INNOCENT BEFORE PROVING GUILTY) insulting that man period…
@@dennessabradythe dispatcher doesn't know that because she's not there to see. She is trained to get the caller to be safe as well as help them save a life wherever possible.
@@xscottishsoulx320 Luv, i am far from DENSE and YOU obviously weren't listening. She literally wasn’t stating anything in regards to making sure he was safe ETC expect saying once or twice (is the person still there) and that’s definitely not making sure one is safe. The dispatcher continuously advising him to give CPR after he is already stated OVER AND OVER to her that his wife is cold to the touch and dead…LITERALLY WAS INCONSIDERATE AND NEEDS MORE TRAINING ON STALLING A SITUATION. My comment went completely over your ahead. The frustration in his voice and the annoying everyone else felt besides you 😒 and you still felt that's what she was doing etc?!?🤣 SMH LETS JUST AGREE TO DISAGREE ON THIS ONE AND END THIS WITH "You have a nice day luv" ....
I grew up with Sherry's granddaughter in the 90's and 2000's and although we were no longer friends when this happened, it's something I'll never forget. She was a very kind and sweet woman anytime i saw her. ❤❤
That call was nearly 15 years ago lol there was another dispatcher on the line as well. Maybe she was being trained or supervised. Hopefully she got better at her job in 14 yrs since then.
I've called 911 a lot, this is typical dispatch. No empathy, just facts. ✅ Not saying I agree with it, but it is very typical. It's not her fault, I'm sure she was following her training.
Interesting how he said he wouldve turned himself in but hed built so much for himself in his life, wtfabout sherry? The life she built with her husband? 🙃
everyone's bching and moaning about the 911 operator, everyone's blatantly ignoring how disgusting and deplorable this man is. he deigns to sit there and say he thinks he's a decent person, that he doesn't see himself as a monster, getting loaded up on sympathy and empathy from the interrogator. meanwhile, his victim has been dead and humiliated for 10 years. there is no true justice in this world. we're living in a giant tragic cosmic joke.
@@flannelpillowcase6475I think it was just the interrogator's technique--he knew that if he was soft with his words and used a gentle approach, the murderer would open up and talk more.
I don't think she did a bad job. She has to do everything to get help to the victim. And since the caller isn't a medical professional the operator has to rely on their training, not the caller. If anything, it's usually suspicious when the caller doesn't want to help the victim.
Close, but I give that title to the operator who laughed at a young scared woman who was in a flood in her car and told her she was overreacting while she drowned.
Actually, I’ve heard much worse. Husband was pretty clear and sure of his wife’s condition. Husband acted pretty normal and I bet he was in shock between questions.
It's bad enough that the poor guy lost his wife in the most dreadful of circumstances, then he has to deal with the most awful 911 operator. It's unreal.
@@lesleyhughes3174They don’t have to answer questions they could input on the computer themselves from the information provided. Everybody knows that when a body is cold to touch the person is long dead.
He doesn’t consider himself a monster?! Then says “ I tried to cut her throat” after stabbing her in the chest, head and torso 15 times. Trying to r@pe her after she asked him “are you ok?” He is a monster!
To everyone giving the operator grief - it is almost ALWAYS advisable to perform CPR until EMS arrives and determines a death. There are few cases is which you do not want to move or touch a body. You could save a life by keeping or restarting someone’s heart function. The dispatcher also has no reason to believe that his diagnosis is right. In this moment flowing with panic and emotions, someone could very easily be wrong.
I agree! She had to advise him to do CPR as she is not on site and he is no medical professional. Also this call could later be used to determine if he was willing to safe his wife's life. This time the caller was innocent but we heard a lot of calls where it was the murderer calling and they might give away useful information.
She was clearly reading from a list of questions. They need to train better on how to pivot in these situations. Giving CPR instructions when somone says the person is dead is wild.
@@lizardog No. She may have done it "by the book" but that doesn't make it professional. If you frustrate the grieving widower so badly he has to HANG UP ON YOU, you're NOT doing your job professionally. Period.
@@CherryGryffon There are cases where the caller is saying the same things as this man, except the victim is not yet lost. If there's even a 1% chance that the victim is still recoverable, it's worth urging the caller to perform CPR. Hurting the feelings of the caller is an unfortunate byproduct of occasionally SAVING SOMEBODY'S LIFE.
I’m surprised the officer didn’t let him explain why he thought he was brought in? He said he had a thought…..maybe he would have open the door to another unsolved crime as well.
They have to tell them why they are being arrested for one, for two, it's a technique to approach someone saying that they know it's you, it doesn't give the perp the chance to deny it upfront.
if interrogators just blamed and accused perps of stuff, we would get nowhere. A main tactic is to butter up the suspect in order to build trust, which is what this statement did
I heard a case once where the landlord had been investigating a smell coming from the apartment and found the tenant in the fridge and the 911 operator wanted him to do CPR. They have the same script they use for every call it seems, regardless of whether it's appropriate or not. It's appalling to listen to some of them.
I lived in Salt Lake City during this time. It was so sad that it took such a long time to get him. Her family did a great job keeping the public interest and pushing for answers. This detective was amazing.
This is an example of a 911 operator who's following official protocol while ignoring the facts on the ground. Sometimes a person's dead and that's all there is to it - no amount of CPR will bring them back, and you don't have to be a medical professional to recognize it.
I see how the detective got him to admit to the crime and “sign” the letter to the family while he was feeling remorseful. I think this was a tactic more about getting his confession written and signed rather than just “apologizing to the family”. Great detective…caring and professional!
Thanks to all the DNA scientists who care and are finding some justice, you all are amazing. So sorry to the family and friends that had such an amazing woman ripped from their lives.
Seriously, I can't imagine doing that to anybody, let alone a nice bookstore owner just trying to enrich her community. Some people are irredeemably broken.
I know this detective’s been working this case for a long time but sitting in that chair across from him I may have just confessed just to get him to quit talking.
@@crabstick250 Total technique. I think they are trained well to "read the room" and he pulled the empathy card because this a-hole needed to hear it. And he got the result they needed/wanted. Even got a signed confession with the "letter to the family." If that was actually a real thing, they could have told him he could take time to think about what he wanted to say versus 'here's a pen and paper', write it now.
He's not as great as you think. Very risky & self indulgent methods. He did not read him his Miranda Rights before Adam's confession ( because hed hadn't yet arrested him), meaning the first time Adam got chance to get a word in edgeways it's legal sincerity is null & void & inadmissible in court. He's just plain lucky that Adam reiterated his guilt POST the rights being read. Had Adam changed his mind & swiftly regretted or spoke to his lawyer in the interim things could have turned sour. I fully comprehend the Reid Technique but this detective over egged the pudding with his liberalism. Unnecessarily risky.
@@LoveLee-h6lno there was still a point fs… but not after he started. then he might as well. he was basically hung from beginning but def still a point in an attorney. always.
- it's just a bad thing all around, but a lot of us have had bad things happen to us when we were younger and have not chosen to abuse innocent bystanders. There's help available.
Dispatcher had no way of knowing she was dead. All she had was a voice on the phone telling her that. She did a very professional job dealing with an understandably distraught caller.
That 911 call operator is woeful! She doesn’t actually listen to the information that he’s giving her, just continues with a list of no longer relevant questions and instructions… how damaging.
He NEVER said , and understandably in shock, that THE HOME IS THE BUSINESS....Dispatchers solve 79% of the case on the phone... statistically ..the recording is Invaluable...perhaps added question, is anything of value taken, usually brings on many answers as the word VALUE, ALSO refers to the human, humane aspect
@@belindavandyk6128 She did her job professionally. The "husband" was just a voice on the phone. Dispatcher had not idea if he was telling the truth or not. She did her job.
@@belindavandyk6128yeah and 85% of statistics quoted are made up on the spot, pulled straight from the behind. This one included. There's no way of knowing the actual number but it's clear that people make the numbers up at will all the damn time. So why bother when there's no reason anyone should believe your number?
What a horrible act. He could have walked by the book store and excelled to spite his upbringing. He was clearly capable of controlling his emotions when he needed to. So so very sad. Forever.
I don’t understand why getting an attorney is suspicious. Being in a store for 45 minutes and not finding the body is kinda suspicious, imho, and I think he knows it.
I don't go looking for corpses in a maze of book shelves every day. 45 minutes is not that long I sit on the toilet for 45 minutes as leisure 😂 Theres nothing suspicious about getting a lawyer
You don't have any idea anything about this it took them until just recently to solve it and it happened in 2010 she had a lot of very valuable books in her store
In a bookstore such as that, an interested person could _very easily_ pass 45 minutes on a single aisle of laden bookshelves. If one has arrived for an appointment, one is unlikely to explore far from the designated point of contact -- thus reducing the chance to find a body in a backroom.
He probably had a life growing up that sucked , but you are still responsible for your actions , especially at age 19 .. Considering what he did , I believe Life without parole is an appropiate sentence ...
@@Juke582 - I think you may be on to something Juke . I guess they choose that road and depending how long they stay on it , the more psycho they become ? Have a great day Juke
@@Juke582that is the dumbest most ignorant sentiment I have ever seen..... today. Psychopathy is not something people choose and if you paid attention in school you know that
@@chadpittman3025makes no difference whether or not the police have a suspect dead to rights caught, one should never ever ever EVER self-incriminate when speaking to the police. Better still, no one should ever speak to the police without legal representation present. Has nothing to do with this case but innocent people are incarcerated all the time because they talked to the police thinking they had nothing to hide and it wouldn't matter, then some crooked POS cop who just wants to close the case and get a raise is able to use their words against them to make a case and get a conviction. Happens all the time
Investigator knows how to read people and was able to speak to him sympathetically. He hit him in the emotions and got the information he wanted. Probably the only one who has ever talked to him like a normal person. Unfortunately he did a horrible cold hearted thing and will be in jail for the rest of his life.
Sure I didn't like how the dispatcher handled that moment but does anyone else find it super odd how everyone hates on her more in the comments than the actual murderer in this case?
He was in foster care but they said he had an Armani belt? And he talks about killing Sherry but nothing about the assault. The evidence shows it happened.
So you think a kid in foster care can’t receive gifts? He could have got that belt from a relative, from his foster family, or maybe he saved money and bought it himself. There are countless ways a kid in the system could come to own an Armani belt.
This is such a ridiculous way of thinking. It's a lot like when people say so " they got tattoos but they can't afford their rent ". As if the two have anything to do with each other,
lol "im not here to trick you" ...continues to try to trick him into a motive for premeditation, tricks him by making HIM feel like the victim, and tricks him all the way into signing a written confession
"As detectives became less accusatory, the vendor was cooperative, providing his clothing, palm prints, and DNA." @10:17 Yeah, it's almost like if you just ask straightforward questions without blaming and lying to each person you interview, they'll have more respect for you and want to help you out with your investigation...
How do you really know people????? He doesn’t come across to be someone so mentally deranged and evil. He killed her and talks as if he was making a sandwich. No feelings of empathy for another humane.
This is so very sad, the dispatch process is absolutely ridiculous, the husband having to find his wife and the guilt he must have went through. Adam’s confession was difficult because his emotions humanized him. We don’t nearly enough get confessions nor do we see any emotions. This story was a lot of sadness. So happy those officers never gave up and brought comfort to the families.
How could that woman get a job as a 911 operator? After being told the victim is dead 3 or 4 times she tells him to do CPR. And then after being told several times again that the victim is dead she keeps on telling him to do CPR. Someone please give that 911 women a hearing aid and some brain cells.
Love the fact that the Deactivated Detective is so fed up and tired Working on this case for 5-6 plus years and just takes over the conversation and sets up what's going to happen 😂
First he says he's been by the store a few times but never went in.....then 4 minutes later says he'd never noticed the store until that day. Interesting...
How do they never lawyer up? I wouldn't speak to the cops without counsel when I'm innocent, yet alone if I knew I were guilty. She's already dead, there is no urgency to talk.
EXACTLY. even tho he was already cooked. still always a smart decision to get an attorney. he just gave the most detailed and solid, signed, confession.
Because he felt guilty and he wanted to get it off his chest. Not everyone who commits a crime is a calculating manipulative psychopath. He also pled guilty in court.
@@SE013yep some people, very few, are willing to not waste everyone’s time once caught. He’s a coward, and a monster for what he did. I want to say at least he had enough decency to tell the truth when he got caught, but I don’t want to say a thing positive about this person.
Bro honestly the way the operator clearly made him more stressed with 90000 questions after he said shes COLD. Why does it matter how much blood there is? You want me to freaking weigh the blood out? Unnecessary af.
Amazing detective. And the thing about his being there because his foster/adopted family had gone on vacation without him.... Gross. Why would a foster/adoptee family do that???? That would totally depress anyone. It would make an adopted kid feel like garbage though. What a tragic story all around.
Happens all the time to foster kids. Many times they are treated like pests. I’ve seen it with my own eyes. And then we expect these children to grow up, become adults and be “normal”. It’s insane.
If he was a foster child at the time, his family is required by law to leave him behind anytime they leave the county. Foster children, without a judge's court order - which is nearly impossible to obtain - aren't permitted to leave the county at any time.
My brother and I were adopted in the 1940s. Our adoptive parents regularly went on vacation without us leaving us at home with my mother's mother or a live-in housekeeper. We both have had successful lives, now retired.
@@CatholicHousewife2017that is simply not true! I helped a lady who Fosters children and we took the kids on vacation all the time and we traveled out of the county for church events and field trips! We only hd to tell the SOCIAL WORKER in advance and give her the location.
@moneyisviscous perhaps rules are different in different places? We were in Northern CA & Foster Families were required to get a Judge's permission in Court in order to leave the County, State or Country with a Foster Child.
@@lindaholtzhausen1539but he did & should have taken responsibility to raise his son or insist he be placed for adoption as a newborn rather than be exposed to the ongoing abuse which eventually landed him in Fostercare & eventually Adopted as an older child.
Yea well I’m sick of women violence against men. It’s happening at an alarming rate, and increasing DRAMATICALLY when compared to men committing violence against women.
The dispatcher needs training sooooo bad . Clearly he’s in distress telling you she’s dead yet you are asking him about CPR & all these unnecessary questions. Nobody has time for that !
The first ten minutes of the interrogation, Pender gives a speech of B.S., basically saying that if Adam tells his story, he will get a break in court. Then, Pender flatters him into life without parole! Nice! Also, he wants the smallest details, just in order to guarantee a conviction!!
2:42 I know they have to advise the caller to make life-saving attempts....But continuously asking a man to do CPR on a corpse that is in rigamortis is WILD.
From watching many of these cases, the husbands' 911 calls are usually a dead giveaway that they were the culprits. This case tricked me because the husband sounded guilty, but it turns out he wasn't the killer.
Detective: "We know you did it. We have all the proof we need." Perp: "I did it. It was me." Detective: "Now, if you could tell me everything in excruciating detail, that would be great." Why are these details needed? It's not going to trial.
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This was a heartbreaking story. I first listened to the audio only while driving. I was so enthralled with how amazing this story was that I watched the video after getting home. I was so immersed with the timeline and description of the details that when I actually watched it, everything was exactly as I pictured it. Fantastic job but what a sad story for such an amazing couple who were tragically victims who definitely were stellar members of their community. Very sad
This was my grandmothers best friend… Sherry was an amazing person who brought the most BEAUTIFUL energy every time she’d come around… crazy to see this case pop up on TH-cam so many years later
I just finally found a video coverage had been made about a double murder that happened in 2002 in my small home town, with one of the victims a HS classmate. Nice to see some visibility and telling the story of the victims.
That hurts my heart for your Grandmother. To think that what made her most beautiful is what ended up being the reason for this. It’s incredibly unfair.
I am so sorry to hear of your families loss. This is so tragic 😢
So sorry! 😢 it’s sad
@@krisvanalleni just saw the interrogation from a girl i know that killed a little girl she was babysitting. the opposite. blew my mind. her name is kirstie flood.
Her husband taking the scissors out and covering her in his jacket is beyond heartbreaking. I can’t believe he had to be the one to find her. He cared about HER more than preserving the crime scene. Putting the jacket over her just ripped my heart out
but if she had still been alive, pulling out the scissors could have caused fatal bleed...you NEVER remove anything like that. It might just save a life, that 'instrument' could be stopping a major bleed
@@elainemarten2147it’s important that people know this but I’m sure the husband didn’t. I would’ve done the same thing before I knew about that bc I thought it actually helped to remove whatever it is. But he also could’ve known that it was too late to save her..
@@elainemarten2147 True! I think he was aware she was dead (it's been a sec since I saw this video) but I always tell people, never remove a stab weapon. I worry about this weirdly specific situation way too often lol because not everybody knows
Yeah never remove anything but in this case it wouldn’t of made a difference. Her the body was cold & rigour mortise had begun so there was no chance of her being revived. The heart cannot be restarted & she would’ve been completely brain dead at that point which is why the husband was refusing to attempt CPR. The police also confirmed rigour had begun so they didn’t attempt anything either. I feel terrible for the husband I would’ve lost it at the dispatcher. I’m surprised they weren’t listening to him at all.
@MollyMoneys if he had told the dispatcher that she was already stiff she would have stopped trying to make him try CPR. Honestly, from listening to the 911 call I assumed he's the one who killed her
That dispatcher was ridiculously annoying!.
I noticed that most dispatchers carry on like this, they might need retraining or to be trained
Yep, it's like they are trained to not respond to emotions, but in the WRONG way. There IS a way to be sensitive without being "cold", and this dispatcher failed at that. ✅
I think these dispatchers are trying to extract information. If they are actually talking to the killer, then the killer might slip up and say something condemning. A lot of the time the killer calls trying to set an alibi. Also, the killer might still be in the area and the dispatcher would need to extract that information as well. Plus, it must be real difficult for any human being to discuss violent murder. I would never fault the dispatcher. They are the ones that send help and try to help us.
Right. Because doing a professional job, trying to get as much information as possible, and wanting to help solve crimes is ridiculously annoying. Grow up.
@jenniferedwards1752 Aww, that's cute.
How many times does the husband have to say, " SHE'S DEAD, SHE IS COLD TO THE TOUCH." WHY did she INSIST on starting CPR?? 🤦🏻♀️
I have always found 911 operators extremely unhelpful in cases of a real emergency.🤯😡
OMG..poor man,that despatcher should be arrested," Do you know who did this"😮 Wrong Job...
@@Ronnie-lu7uoHe might have known.Sometimes people are threatened.They have to ask questions.
@eh-i1841 Okaay,but she already asked if he is alone
.+She is not a LE..The husband even said I'm over this!! Some are awesome but Lots loose their jobs after,bad ones..People need HELP..ASAP.
I guess cuz I used the word “irritating” … this free speech or lack there of is becoming
R I D I C U L O U S ! 🇨🇦
That detective is a class act!!! His style is amazing! He showed empathy, but he was very thorough!
Except that part where he disregarded the request for an attorney and subtly manipulates the suspect with a passive aggressive threat by mention of jail
That crossed my mind too@lanahaxer . But he had already confessed so it's kinda gray.
I don’t think so - he was so obvious in the interrogation trying to make him confess I was embarrassed how obvious he was talking non stop - the dna convicted him not great detective work - I understand how bumpy your road has been blah blah - I know ur life has been hard - I actually switched off then - he was making me cringe - thinks he’s inspector clouseau shutup already!
@@89helybelyI was like "is he gonna take a breath?!"
Shew! Rambling to me
In regards to the dispatcher continuously advising the guy to give CPR after he is already alerted her that his wife is cold to the touch and dead, I'm always perplexed how this is even advisable since giving CPR could contaminate potential evidence
I understand what you are saying, but I assume potentially saving a life is more important than possibly inadvertently destroying evidence. I imagine the thinking is that authorities know a 911 caller in this situation is experiencing complete sensory overload and is in a state of shock. They can't necessarily be counted on to make rational decisions. All of that along with the fact they are most likely not a medical professional, nor have they ever seen a dead body, the most prudent thing would be to attempt CPR/chest compressions.
I'm sure there have been plenty of situations where someone thought a person was beyond help but ended up surviving. OF course, the opposite also happens like in this case, where it is blatantly obvious that it is far too late, as well.
@@567dirt8910 he couldve implicated himself thats the point. left dna right there n detectives and prosecutors are heree to find the truth their here to convict people
You'd be surprised. There's been many cases that a person is assumed dead and brought back by CPR
For real!! This dispatcher would've made me lose my friggin mind even further than it was by finding my spouse stabbed to death!!! Wtf...
you cant be serious, you think prosecuting a case is more important than preserving life, I can't stand youtube comments on these type of videos as if you guys know more than the departments that fine tune the Reponses dispatchers give. smh
the detective that took over this case did amazing work to find him
Him, diligence, and DNA expertise
So sad though
That’s what I came to say. Has me wanting to confess to nothing
@@y_e_i8213wait is that sarcasm in your comment ? I took the commenter as saying he did a great job.
@@jomolandthere was no sarcasm in my voice at all. Not sure how you read anything different in what I said. I agreed with the commenter that the detective did “amazing work” because the suspect was NOT trying to confess to anything!! 😒 🤨👀
So glad Earl got to see justice before the end of his days!
“She’s dead”. ‘Okay, is she still breathing?’ “She’s dead.”‘Okay. Do you want to do CPR?’ 😮
not wanting to do things like cpr is an indicator of.... bum bum bum.... MURDER
Listen!
Absolutely nuts
Great detective. Pleasant, not aggressive and his friendly chatty demeanour was the reason the killer confessed. Great work.
The DNA journey to identify the killer is an adventure itself. Much respect to the geniuses exposing the trail of monsters of yesteryears
There are a LOT of men out there VERY SCARED when realizing one day the police may be knocking on their door with DNA proof of their involvement in a crime. They should be scared. VERY SCARED.
ROBBING a bookstore is laughable. Poor dear. Book owners are dear, loving people. Just terrible crimes. Sad for both families.
Not her bookstore she had one of a kind bookstore her books were worth a lot of money but you'd have to know where they're kept
@@kristilicea1472 well….it appears to be a retail establishment. Shes a Book owner, she works in a book store……what her private collection contains is irrelevant. She’s working in a bookstore. I’m a book collector….lol….I get it.
I can't believe the questions 911 operator was asking?! She isn't an investigator!!
@@winkieblink7625 You should try to read more of the books you collect.
it was obviously her husband.
Which part of cold and dead don’t this operator get ? 🤬
she following protocol, some callers are in a state of shock so operator needs to ask the questions again in case caller is not thinking clearly. Not all callers are in a right state of mind at the time.
The part where they want to document an answer & ask it again, even multiple times, in order to see if their story changes.
yea this happened to me. I found someone in rigor mortis. I told them he is stiff but they still wanted me to do cpr. Fortunately the ambulance came in like a minute.
They have protocols for a reason. Whether you like it or not.
@@HolyRalphamaleEmpire-lh7kb Okay, champ. My sister is a 911 dispatcher. I'll go with her experience over some weirdo on the internet. Aside from THE OBVIOUS (providing emergency assistance), they have multiple objectives.
“Let’s do cpr”
“She’s cold”
“So you don’t want to do cpr?”
That dispatcher was horrible
Well what if the person calling is lying. The more questions the better. She could be gathering evidence for the court.
@@elagamingrayz4685 That is not what was happening…DISPATCH IS HORRIBLE AND NEEDS TRAINING. She was doing nothing but (OFC INNOCENT BEFORE PROVING GUILTY) insulting that man period…
@@dennessabradythe dispatcher doesn't know that because she's not there to see. She is trained to get the caller to be safe as well as help them save a life wherever possible.
@@xscottishsoulx320 Luv, i am far from DENSE and YOU obviously weren't listening. She literally wasn’t stating anything in regards to making sure he was safe ETC expect saying once or twice (is the person still there) and that’s definitely not making sure one is safe.
The dispatcher continuously advising him to give CPR after he is already stated OVER AND OVER to her that his wife is cold to the touch and dead…LITERALLY WAS INCONSIDERATE AND NEEDS MORE TRAINING ON STALLING A SITUATION.
My comment went completely over your ahead. The frustration in his voice and the annoying everyone else felt besides you 😒 and you still felt that's what she was doing etc?!?🤣 SMH
LETS JUST AGREE TO DISAGREE ON THIS ONE AND END THIS WITH "You have a nice day luv" ....
I grew up with Sherry's granddaughter in the 90's and 2000's and although we were no longer friends when this happened, it's something I'll never forget. She was a very kind and sweet woman anytime i saw her. ❤❤
Someone fire that 911 operator immediately! How did she get that job? I’m shocked.
That call was nearly 15 years ago lol there was another dispatcher on the line as well. Maybe she was being trained or supervised. Hopefully she got better at her job in 14 yrs since then.
Why?
Why fire her?
I've called 911 a lot, this is typical dispatch. No empathy, just facts. ✅ Not saying I agree with it, but it is very typical. It's not her fault, I'm sure she was following her training.
Yes she just kept blabbing!
By far the best detective work I've ever seen... The dna testing and familial path tracing was absolutely incredible.
And the sneaky way he got a written confession under the guise of penning an apology to the family. This detective knows his stuff.
Interesting how he said he wouldve turned himself in but hed built so much for himself in his life, wtfabout sherry? The life she built with her husband? 🙃
everyone's bching and moaning about the 911 operator, everyone's blatantly ignoring how disgusting and deplorable this man is. he deigns to sit there and say he thinks he's a decent person, that he doesn't see himself as a monster, getting loaded up on sympathy and empathy from the interrogator. meanwhile, his victim has been dead and humiliated for 10 years. there is no true justice in this world. we're living in a giant tragic cosmic joke.
@@flannelpillowcase6475I think it was just the interrogator's technique--he knew that if he was soft with his words and used a gentle approach, the murderer would open up and talk more.
Worse 911 operator ever!
Unfortunately, not unusual. I speed past all 911 calls on true crime videos in order to avoid becoming infuriated.
I don't think she did a bad job. She has to do everything to get help to the victim. And since the caller isn't a medical professional the operator has to rely on their training, not the caller. If anything, it's usually suspicious when the caller doesn't want to help the victim.
Close, but I give that title to the operator who laughed at a young scared woman who was in a flood in her car and told her she was overreacting while she drowned.
@@ReadingRambo152not it isn’t not when the person is fkn dead & cold & in rigor mortis then no it’s not suspicious 🤦🏻♀️
Actually, I’ve heard much worse. Husband was pretty clear and sure of his wife’s condition. Husband acted pretty normal and I bet he was in shock between questions.
The 911 operator is terrible.
like always
That 911 operator was ridiculous
She was following protocol.
@qsita she doesn't listen!
It's bad enough that the poor guy lost his wife in the most dreadful of circumstances, then he has to deal with the most awful 911 operator. It's unreal.
They have a list of things they have to ask. Unfortunately.
@@lesleyhughes3174They don’t have to answer questions they could input on the computer themselves from the information provided. Everybody knows that when a body is cold to touch the person is long dead.
It's usually the spouse and maybe they didn't want him to leave
Be quiet it’s her job his swearing and tone to her was not warranted upset or not it’s not her fault …..
@StupidPurpleUnicorn they want to document an answer. Truth is pretty consistent. Lies don't hold up to scrutiny.
The way that they were able to trace the dna all the way back through the perpetrators lineage is crazy!
Same way they found the lady who threw her newborn baby in the woods like 40 years later
How many times does the husband have to say she's dead?! Who trains these 911 operators?
Ernestine?
People smarter and less judgemental than you are apparently
He doesn’t consider himself a monster?! Then says “ I tried to cut her throat” after stabbing her in the chest, head and torso 15 times. Trying to r@pe her after she asked him “are you ok?” He is a monster!
Absolutely she was kind to him,asking if he was alright then he does that to her.Nothing but a evil monster
Straight up
That dispatcher was HORRIBLE.
To everyone giving the operator grief - it is almost ALWAYS advisable to perform CPR until EMS arrives and determines a death. There are few cases is which you do not want to move or touch a body. You could save a life by keeping or restarting someone’s heart function. The dispatcher also has no reason to believe that his diagnosis is right. In this moment flowing with panic and emotions, someone could very easily be wrong.
Listening is a key part of the job and she wasn't hearing him at all. No excuses.
I agree! She had to advise him to do CPR as she is not on site and he is no medical professional. Also this call could later be used to determine if he was willing to safe his wife's life. This time the caller was innocent but we heard a lot of calls where it was the murderer calling and they might give away useful information.
She was clearly reading from a list of questions. They need to train better on how to pivot in these situations.
Giving CPR instructions when somone says the person is dead is wild.
Dispatcher had no way of knowing the voice on the phone was telling her the truth. She did her job very professionally.
@@lizardog No. She may have done it "by the book" but that doesn't make it professional. If you frustrate the grieving widower so badly he has to HANG UP ON YOU, you're NOT doing your job professionally. Period.
@@CherryGryffonTHAT!
@@CherryGryffon There are cases where the caller is saying the same things as this man, except the victim is not yet lost. If there's even a 1% chance that the victim is still recoverable, it's worth urging the caller to perform CPR. Hurting the feelings of the caller is an unfortunate byproduct of occasionally SAVING SOMEBODY'S LIFE.
I’m surprised the officer didn’t let him explain why he thought he was brought in? He said he had a thought…..maybe he would have open the door to another unsolved crime as well.
I thought the same thing. It's hard to believe this was the only time.
They have to tell them why they are being arrested for one, for two, it's a technique to approach someone saying that they know it's you, it doesn't give the perp the chance to deny it upfront.
People know when someone is past dead. Asking someone to do cpr on a dead person is terrible. What an annoying lady.
She did her job professionally. All she had was the word of a voice on the phone that the body was "cold."
@@lizardog The word of the self-professed HUSBAND on the phone. She contributed to traumatizing the poor man.
“You have your whole life ahead of you.” SHERRY DID TOO! HE TOOK THAT AWAY FROM HER!! 😡
He’s using the tactic to empathize with the suspect to get him to open up.
if interrogators just blamed and accused perps of stuff, we would get nowhere. A main tactic is to butter up the suspect in order to build trust, which is what this statement did
What's your point? Beyond stating the obvious, that is.
You are clearly naive and/or dense. The interrogator's job is to elicit the truth from a suspect. Rapport is critical. Nothing else matters.
As a legal transcriptionist, transcribing for the state courts of Oregon, I’ve heard quite a few 911 calls … this one was over the top terrible!
I heard a case once where the landlord had been investigating a smell coming from the apartment and found the tenant in the fridge and the 911 operator wanted him to do CPR. They have the same script they use for every call it seems, regardless of whether it's appropriate or not. It's appalling to listen to some of them.
I lived in Salt Lake City during this time. It was so sad that it took such a long time to get him. Her family did a great job keeping the public interest and pushing for answers. This detective was amazing.
This is an example of a 911 operator who's following official protocol while ignoring the facts on the ground. Sometimes a person's dead and that's all there is to it - no amount of CPR will bring them back, and you don't have to be a medical professional to recognize it.
I see how the detective got him to admit to the crime and “sign” the letter to the family while he was feeling remorseful. I think this was a tactic more about getting his confession written and signed rather than just “apologizing to the family”. Great detective…caring and professional!
Thanks to all the DNA scientists who care and are finding some justice, you all are amazing. So sorry to the family and friends that had such an amazing woman ripped from their lives.
Its crazy this could happen at that time of morning in a place as wonderful and peaceful as a book store 😭
Seriously, I can't imagine doing that to anybody, let alone a nice bookstore owner just trying to enrich her community. Some people are irredeemably broken.
Best detective I've ever seen in an interrogation, wow!
He hasn’t stopped talking yet!
@@deborahsunflower939 i was just thinking that as Im watching. It may be a technique...
I know this detective’s been working this case for a long time but sitting in that chair across from him I may have just confessed just to get him to quit talking.
@@crabstick250 Total technique. I think they are trained well to "read the room" and he pulled the empathy card because this a-hole needed to hear it. And he got the result they needed/wanted. Even got a signed confession with the "letter to the family." If that was actually a real thing, they could have told him he could take time to think about what he wanted to say versus 'here's a pen and paper', write it now.
He's not as great as you think. Very risky & self indulgent methods. He did not read him his Miranda Rights before Adam's confession ( because hed hadn't yet arrested him), meaning the first time Adam got chance to get a word in edgeways it's legal sincerity is null & void & inadmissible in court. He's just plain lucky that Adam reiterated his guilt POST the rights being read. Had Adam changed his mind & swiftly regretted or spoke to his lawyer in the interim things could have turned sour. I fully comprehend the Reid Technique but this detective over egged the pudding with his liberalism. Unnecessarily risky.
He literally talked this man through the entire confession. He should’ve asked for a lawyer.
There’s no point asking for a lawyer when he already confess into killing her He probably needed to get it out his chest hiding it all those years
he even signed it😂
@@LoveLee-h6lno there was still a point fs… but not after he started. then he might as well. he was basically hung from beginning but def still a point in an attorney. always.
Sherry had a horrific death. Poor woman.🕊️
very skilled Detective talked the perpetrator into NOT getting a lawyer!
I dont blame him for hanging up the phone. I hate when im asked a trillion questions and they all sound the same
- it's just a bad thing all around, but a lot of us have had bad things happen to us when we were younger and have not chosen to abuse innocent bystanders. There's help available.
What a world we live in.
She's dead, despatcher asks is she breathing? Wtf!
No shes now a zombie and trying to eat me.
At 2:51, would have been helpful to put the timestamp to get ur message across
@@NakaidaBeauzec *DISPATCHER
@@unknownuser6757 ok Karen
Dispatcher had no way of knowing she was dead. All she had was a voice on the phone telling her that. She did a very professional job dealing with an understandably distraught caller.
Love how everyone is more focused on the dispatcher than the MURDERER.
Because she was SUPER annoying
They get distracted and miss the point of focus🙄
He cried when he realized his life was done. No remorse. Never a word about Sherry or how she felt.
Obviously
@yagirltones8748 do you feel better about yourself now lol
@@MissAlissaxXOP did say something pretty inane lol
@@MissAlissaxXdo you? What a pointless question
@@imvandenh hahahaha
It seems he took his frustration out on this poor woman and brutally murdered her and now is going to prison.
It would appear so
Ya think?! I thought he was going to six flags
That 911 call operator is woeful! She doesn’t actually listen to the information that he’s giving her, just continues with a list of no longer relevant questions and instructions… how damaging.
Its scary how tactless that dispatcher was, feels like she needs a new job asap
I hated her condescending tone when he repeated for the second time that it was a bookstore.
@@ChipsTheOrigamiLemonSHE SAID WHERE IN THE BOOK STORE. Dispatch are supposed to stay calm and she did her job. Better than being a bitxch
He NEVER said , and understandably in shock, that THE HOME IS THE BUSINESS....Dispatchers solve 79% of the case on the phone... statistically ..the recording is Invaluable...perhaps added question, is anything of value taken, usually brings on many answers as the word VALUE, ALSO refers to the human, humane aspect
@@belindavandyk6128 She did her job professionally. The "husband" was just a voice on the phone. Dispatcher had not idea if he was telling the truth or not. She did her job.
@@belindavandyk6128yeah and 85% of statistics quoted are made up on the spot, pulled straight from the behind. This one included. There's no way of knowing the actual number but it's clear that people make the numbers up at will all the damn time. So why bother when there's no reason anyone should believe your number?
How do we know he hasn’t killed again since this?
DNA 🧬
What a horrible act. He could have walked by the book store and excelled to spite his upbringing. He was clearly capable of controlling his emotions when he needed to. So so very sad. Forever.
I don’t understand why getting an attorney is suspicious. Being in a store for 45 minutes and not finding the body is kinda suspicious, imho, and I think he knows it.
I don't go looking for corpses in a maze of book shelves every day.
45 minutes is not that long I sit on the toilet for 45 minutes as leisure 😂
Theres nothing suspicious about getting a lawyer
You don't have any idea anything about this it took them until just recently to solve it and it happened in 2010 she had a lot of very valuable books in her store
In a bookstore such as that, an interested person could _very easily_ pass 45 minutes on a single aisle of laden bookshelves. If one has arrived for an appointment, one is unlikely to explore far from the designated point of contact -- thus reducing the chance to find a body in a backroom.
@@ForageGardenerdon't ur legs fall asleep?
@@u.synlig💥👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
He probably had a life growing up that sucked , but you are still responsible for your actions , especially at age 19 .. Considering what he did , I believe Life without parole is an appropiate sentence ...
Yes! People choose to be a psycho!
@@Juke582 - I think you may be on to something Juke . I guess they choose that road and depending how long they stay on it , the more psycho they become ? Have a great day Juke
@@Juke582that is the dumbest most ignorant sentiment I have ever seen..... today. Psychopathy is not something people choose and if you paid attention in school you know that
investigator tricked him into a written admission of guilt LMAO
He knew he was busted so he just gave up the beans
I don't think so...
Agree 💯 👍,altho detective was excellent,,,@@chadpittman3025
@@chadpittman3025makes no difference whether or not the police have a suspect dead to rights caught, one should never ever ever EVER self-incriminate when speaking to the police. Better still, no one should ever speak to the police without legal representation present. Has nothing to do with this case but innocent people are incarcerated all the time because they talked to the police thinking they had nothing to hide and it wouldn't matter, then some crooked POS cop who just wants to close the case and get a raise is able to use their words against them to make a case and get a conviction. Happens all the time
Investigator knows how to read people and was able to speak to him sympathetically. He hit him in the emotions and got the information he wanted. Probably the only one who has ever talked to him like a normal person. Unfortunately he did a horrible cold hearted thing and will be in jail for the rest of his life.
Sure I didn't like how the dispatcher handled that moment but does anyone else find it super odd how everyone hates on her more in the comments than the actual murderer in this case?
He was in foster care but they said he had an Armani belt? And he talks about killing Sherry but nothing about the assault. The evidence shows it happened.
So you think a kid in foster care can’t receive gifts?
He could have got that belt from a relative, from his foster family, or maybe he saved money and bought it himself.
There are countless ways a kid in the system could come to own an Armani belt.
This is such a ridiculous way of thinking. It's a lot like when people say so " they got tattoos but they can't afford their rent ". As if the two have anything to do with each other,
Armani exchange is the outlet version of Armani. We’re not talking big $$ here.
lol "im not here to trick you" ...continues to try to trick him into a motive for premeditation, tricks him by making HIM feel like the victim, and tricks him all the way into signing a written confession
exactly.
Hence the reason you ask for an attorney , always.
Maybe this guy actually felt guilty, him not telling the whole truth about what he did to her is telling though.
That murderer must really hate women talk about over kill
isn't it bizarre that Sherry was his only victim?
"As detectives became less accusatory, the vendor was cooperative, providing his clothing, palm prints, and DNA." @10:17
Yeah, it's almost like if you just ask straightforward questions without blaming and lying to each person you interview, they'll have more respect for you and want to help you out with your investigation...
Caller : She is dead just get here
911 Dispatcher : So you don’t want to do CPR ?
Lol wtf
How do you really know people????? He doesn’t come across to be someone so mentally deranged and evil. He killed her and talks as if he was making a sandwich. No feelings of empathy for another humane.
That therapist has zero intuition
Listening to that 911 call was frustrating.
This is so very sad, the dispatch process is absolutely ridiculous, the husband having to find his wife and the guilt he must have went through. Adam’s confession was difficult because his emotions humanized him. We don’t nearly enough get confessions nor do we see any emotions. This story was a lot of sadness. So happy those officers never gave up and brought comfort to the families.
57:43 bro. U’r no hero. U were a coward for ten years, and u’ll remain one until ur last breath. U WERE AND ARE NOT A VICTIM REGARDING THE MURDER(S)
How could that woman get a job as a 911 operator? After being told the victim is dead 3 or 4 times she tells him to do CPR. And then after being told several times again that the victim is dead she keeps on telling him to do CPR. Someone please give that 911 women a hearing aid and some brain cells.
Mona? 666? You are ignorant
@MyLyricalMuse No she's not.
@@MyLyricalMuseWhy do you say such a thing! that’s ignorance!
Love the fact that the Deactivated Detective is so fed up and tired Working on this case for 5-6 plus years and just takes over the conversation and sets up what's going to happen 😂
how many times does a man have to tell you his wife is dead for you to belive him geez
*believe
@@January. spelling police lol
That call handler is a total robot, and so insensitive! She has all the tact and diplomacy of a ten-pound lump hammer. How did she even get that job?
First he says he's been by the store a few times but never went in.....then 4 minutes later says he'd never noticed the store until that day. Interesting...
How do they never lawyer up? I wouldn't speak to the cops without counsel when I'm innocent, yet alone if I knew I were guilty. She's already dead, there is no urgency to talk.
EXACTLY. even tho he was already cooked. still always a smart decision to get an attorney. he just gave the most detailed and solid, signed, confession.
Because he felt guilty and he wanted to get it off his chest. Not everyone who commits a crime is a calculating manipulative psychopath. He also pled guilty in court.
@@SE013exactly
@@SE013yep some people, very few, are willing to not waste everyone’s time once caught. He’s a coward, and a monster for what he did. I want to say at least he had enough decency to tell the truth when he got caught, but I don’t want to say a thing positive about this person.
This detective is amazing! Got the confession verbally and in writing!
Bro honestly the way the operator clearly made him more stressed with 90000 questions after he said shes COLD. Why does it matter how much blood there is? You want me to freaking weigh the blood out? Unnecessary af.
Amazing detective. And the thing about his being there because his foster/adopted family had gone on vacation without him.... Gross. Why would a foster/adoptee family do that???? That would totally depress anyone. It would make an adopted kid feel like garbage though.
What a tragic story all around.
Happens all the time to foster kids. Many times they are treated like pests. I’ve seen it with my own eyes.
And then we expect these children to grow up, become adults and be “normal”. It’s insane.
If he was a foster child at the time, his family is required by law to leave him behind anytime they leave the county. Foster children, without a judge's court order - which is nearly impossible to obtain - aren't permitted to leave the county at any time.
My brother and I were adopted in the 1940s. Our adoptive parents regularly went on vacation without us leaving us at home with my mother's mother or a live-in housekeeper. We both have had successful lives, now retired.
@@CatholicHousewife2017that is simply not true! I helped a lady who Fosters children and we took the kids on vacation all the time and we traveled out of the county for church events and field trips! We only hd to tell the SOCIAL WORKER in advance and give her the location.
@moneyisviscous perhaps rules are different in different places? We were in Northern CA & Foster Families were required to get a Judge's permission in Court in order to leave the County, State or Country with a Foster Child.
Another perfect example of why Fathers are important IN a child's life. ✅
He was not supposed to have a child, he was still in school!
@@lindaholtzhausen1539but he did & should have taken responsibility to raise his son or insist he be placed for adoption as a newborn rather than be exposed to the ongoing abuse which eventually landed him in Fostercare & eventually Adopted as an older child.
However, not having a dad does NOT mean a child will do this at 19.
@alison4316 very true, though it does increase the risk.
This dispatcher is so infuriating!!!
Wth?!
Please fire the 911 operator. She's obviously not able to comprehend what "she's cold" and "she's dead" means. Holy crap.
it's standard protocol.
Billiards and Books. That's a novel combination.
We had a store here in rural Northern California in the early 90's. Called Books and Tattoos. :-)
That was clever play on words on your part.
I see what you did there 😄
His mother was concerned about him being just a number in the system, so he goes out and purposely decided to become another number in the system
Everyone is already commenting about the operator but wow. She's borderline trolling at that point.
Crazy dispatcher! She's cold. She's dead! Do CPR? Come on!!!!
Great detective work to solve this cold case.
I'm so sorry, but the 911 call was like something out of a farce.
That despatcher was shocking....absolutely shocking..no empathy. 😢😢😢
Sick of male violence against women, misogyny
The only reason women do less violent crime is because they are weak and have different capabilities 😂
You should be sick of violence in general you weirdo
Fun fact, XX-XX relationships have the highest levels of D.V
Yea well I’m sick of women violence against men. It’s happening at an alarming rate, and increasing DRAMATICALLY when compared to men committing violence against women.
I’m sick of breaking violence down to identity politics when all violence is bad!
The dispatcher needs training sooooo bad . Clearly he’s in distress telling you she’s dead yet you are asking him about CPR & all these unnecessary questions. Nobody has time for that !
The first ten minutes of the interrogation, Pender gives a speech of B.S., basically saying that if Adam tells his story, he will get a break in court. Then, Pender flatters him into life without parole! Nice! Also, he wants the smallest details, just in order to guarantee a conviction!!
2:42 I know they have to advise the caller to make life-saving attempts....But continuously asking a man to do CPR on a corpse that is in rigamortis is WILD.
From watching many of these cases, the husbands' 911 calls are usually a dead giveaway that they were the culprits. This case tricked me because the husband sounded guilty, but it turns out he wasn't the killer.
This dispatcher needs better training. Ridiculous! Poor man
The guy they arrested, Adam, was NOT who I expected.
Who did you expect?
@@imvandenhHim to look like the picture they drew.
He shows up bloody and with a cut hand to his therapy session and his therapist doesn't notice 🤔
She is cold .. 911 operator let me give you cpr instructions wtf
🤯
That 911 call was traumatic. She needs better training.
Flawless interview, they make it look so easy.
That cop needed to stop talking! He was basically creating the murderer's defense!
Thank you! He talked so much!!!
There is not a safe place anywhere. A decent area, a quiet bookstore, and this happened there. My prayers are for the family of the innocent victim.
There never was a safe place. Killers come from every background and socioeconomic level. This is not hard to understand. Evil doesn’t have one “type”
Detective: "We know you did it. We have all the proof we need."
Perp: "I did it. It was me."
Detective: "Now, if you could tell me everything in excruciating detail, that would be great."
Why are these details needed? It's not going to trial.
Detective is so sly…asking for a letter of remorse to family is actually a signed confession.
Crazy how everyone is focusing on the 911 dispatcher and not the dude that killed her.
I had heard of this case, but never much about the doer. TY for posting the interview.
What a tragic waste all around.