
Brandon Daniel - Cop Killer - Full Police Interrogation
Brandon Daniel - Cop Killer - Full Police Interrogation Daniel, now 32, is on death row for the murder of an Austin police officer in 2012. AUSTIN – The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has upheld the death sentence for a man convicted of fatally shooting an Austin police officer. APD Officer Jaime Padron responded to the Walmart near Interstate 35 and Parmer lane around 2:30 a.m. April 6, 2012 for a reported shoplifter. Brandon Daniel struggled with Padron before he shot and killed the officer. Daniel, now 32, was found guilty in February 2014 and sentenced to death. To whom it may concern, My name is Brandon Daniel, and I am writing this letter to you from prison. With police brutality once again in the news, and legal reform a hot topic of discussion, I’m writing to tell you about my legal case, in the hope that I might be able to spread awareness about a common but little known condition that is responsible for sending others to prison, and perhaps to leverage your platform to gain support as well. My case involves the class of anti-anxiety medication called benzodiazepines, and it is one of the clearest examples of something called Paradoxical Reaction. I am hoping that you can help me. Let me fill you in on my story. First, my background is relevant because it demonstrates that the event that led to my being here was not part of a pattern of behavior. I have no violence in my past, no felonies. I was a software engineer, I’m college educated, and I’m from a normal, middle-class home. Everything that happened that night was completely atypical and out of character. The event took place at Walmart, so it was all captured on surveillance videos. You can see me stumble around the store for twenty minutes, dropping items and running into displays. I was clearly disoriented. A police officer was called, and he confronted me, tackled me, and in the chaos of the moment I shot and killed him. The video shows how hectic the situation was, it clearly was not a thought out and intentional act. It took place in the span of 10 seconds. Subsequent blood tests revealed that I had 11 times the therapeutic dose of Xanax in my system, and these tests were taken seven hours after the event. With a half life of eleven hours, it is reasonable to assume that the amount of Xanax in my blood that night was extraordinarily high. Plus, as I later discovered, Asians metabolize Benzos faster than other populations and it stays in their systems longer. I am of Asian descent. In addition to all of this, I was interviewed by police immediately after the event, while I was still highly impaired from the medication. Again, this interview was captured on video, and one can clearly see that I am suffering from the classic symptoms of Benzodiazepines. I had amnesia, stating several times that I couldn’t even remember what day or time it was. I was confabulating, giving different accounts of what happened, none of which turned out to be accurate. And I was experiencing chemical submission, complying with the detectives leading questions against my best interest. All of these are common side-effects of the Benzodiazepine class of pharmaceuticals, which includes the date rape drug “roofies.” This aspect of my case sets me apart from other similar cases, I believe. My confused statements provide a window into my state of mind at the time, while in many other incidents we can only wonder what is going on in their mind. After all of this, while awaiting trial, the jailhouse doctors put me on a cocktail of antidepressants: Zoloft, Celexa, Remeron, etc. During this time, I had several suicide attempts and I spent most of the time in observation cells, nearly catatonic. It is my belief that this common, secondary use of pharmaceuticals to medicate inmates awaiting trial, renders them complacent and fairly useless when it comes to contributing to their defense. This results in inmates who are resigned to their fate, able to be easily railroaded by the legal system, regardless of the merits of their case. Since most people who are first entering jail are, understandably, depressed, they are all too willing to accept this ‘treatment’
30 Tammi 20242h 7min

Netflix American Nightmare Matthew Muller Prison Interview
Netflix American Nightmare Matthew Muller Prison Interview This is a jailhouse interview with Matthew Muller who was sentenced to 40 years in federal prison for kidnapping Denise Huskins - an incident Vallejo police once said she and her boyfriend had engineered. After a home invasion and kidnapping, a young couple's recounting of the events is too far-fetched for the police to believe. You'll never suspect the truth. Watch American Nightmare on January 17th, only on Netflix.
30 Tammi 202429min

Walgreens Shoplifter Goes Berserk On Police For Arresting Him
Walgreens Shoplifter Goes Berserk On Police For Arresting Him On April 20th, 2023. Officers were called to Walgreens in reference to a shoplifter who was giving staff a hard time & refused to leave. When officers approached the man, they noticed he had been drinking in the store, he then began to run from officers which turned his citation into charges. The man went crazy on officers for arresting him because he felt like he didn’t do anything wrong. This is the body cam footage of the events that followed.
30 Tammi 202423min

The Disappearance Of Heather Elvis - True Crime Documentary
The Disappearance Of Heather Elvis - True Crime Documentary Heather Elvis, a twenty-year-old woman, went out on her date on December 17th, 2013. At roughly 1:15 a.m., her date dropped her off. Heather received a call from a former flame, Sidney Moorer, using a payphone, according to the investigation. Heather had been having an affair with Moorer, who was married at the time and was 38 years old. Sidney cut all communication with Heather after Moorer's wife discovered the affair, however his wife Tammy continued to harass and threaten her. Heather called her roommate after receiving the call from Moorer, stating that he wanted to meet up with her. Heather's roommate urged her against going. The call lasted about two minutes and Heather's roomate never heard from her again. Heather's car was discovered two days after she was reported missing. It was parked sideways at the Peachtree Landing Boat Launch. None of her missing possessions, including her pocketbook, keys, and phone, were found while the car was locked. Heather was not located despite extensive searches of the ocean and surrounding terrain. Heather's travels were tracked by cell phone records that night, but they all ended at 3:41 a.m. While Sidney and Tammy denied having spoken to Heather, surveillance footage revealed that Sidney had contacted her the night she vanished. Between 3:36 and 3:46 a.m., traffick cameras captured an image of a truck, the same model and color as Sidney's, driving to and from the boat launch. The Moorers were shrouded in suspicion for a long period, but law enforcement was unable to compile enough evidence to press charges. However, on February 21, 2014, investigators served a search warrant on their home. Sidney and Tammy were both arrested and charged with kidnapping, murder, obstruction of justice, and indecent exposure at the conclusion of the search. A grand jury indicted Tammy and Sidney on counts of kidnapping in April of 2018. Tammy was sentenced to thirty years in prison in the end. When Sidney was found guilty in 2019, he received the same sentence. heather elvis body found,heather elvis,heather elvis kidnapping,true story,tammy moorer trial,sidney moorer retrial,tammy moorer,sidney moorer
29 Tammi 20241h 18min

The Dark Side of Hollywood
The Dark Side of Hollywood
29 Tammi 202429min

Little Emily’s Mysterious Disappearance: What Happened? True Crime Documentary
Little Emily’s Mysterious Disappearance: What Happened? True Crime Documentary Ep 1 - A three and a half-year-old child is reported missing. After a 20-day search, her body is found floating in Toronto harbour. Fibre evidence found throughout the child's clothes plays a crucial role in solving this crime and convicting a child killer. EP 2 - An Ottawa journalist champions early parole for a convicted murderer and in the tradition of a cheap romance novel, ends up falling in love with him. After he's released, the two move in together. Then she mysteriously disappears. Where else would suspicion fall but upon the ex-con lover? Ep 3 - An intruder breaks into a family home in a well-to-do Calgary neighbourhood. When he's confronted by the owner, the burglar stabs him to death. The killer flees leaving behind several smudged prints on a window that appear to be left by a pair of gloves. Can these help nail a murderer? Ep 4 - "Tragedy of Errors" focuses on the forensic skills of two blood spattering experts, who not only teach at the police college in Ottawa - but are still active in the field. The difference between academic knowledge and the reality of an actual crime scene is brought to life in this intriguing episode.
29 Tammi 20241h 32min

The Murder Network - A Serial Killer in Nazi Paris
The Murder Network - A Serial Killer in Nazi Paris France, 1942: A serial killer stalks the streets of Occupied Paris. Using the chaos of the war to his own advantage, psychotic doctor Marcel Petiot poses as a resistance operative and preys on those most desperate to flee the Nazi regime - Jews, underground partisans, and of course, criminals. As the body count rises, both the French police and the Gestapo race against time to bring him to justice.
29 Tammi 20241h 10min