Brandon Daniel - Cop Killer - Full Police Interrogation

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’

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Haunting 911 Emergency calls

Haunting 911 Emergency calls

Haunting 911 Emergency calls

24 Dec 202440min

David Anthony FULL Jail Calls | Murdered Estranged Wife and Disposed of Her Body

David Anthony FULL Jail Calls | Murdered Estranged Wife and Disposed of Her Body

David Anthony FULL Jail Calls | Murdered Estranged Wife and Disposed of Her Body In March of 2020, Gretchen Anthony began sending texts to family and friends telling them she had tested positive for Covid-19. There was still so much unknown about the virus as the entire world began shutting down. Her family became highly concerned when they couldn’t get her on the phone. Many of the texts from Gretchen were filled with poor spelling and grammar. Then she stopped sharing her phone location with her 12 year old daughter. The last text anyone received from Gretchen said she was being transferred to a CDC covid site and would be placed on a ventilator, unable to communicate. After a wellcheck at her home by law enforcement, it became clear that someone was using Covid as an alibi to cover up a horrific crime

24 Dec 20242h 27min

Man Kills His Mom has SEX with Her Body - The Most DISTURBING Interrogation You'll EVER Hear

Man Kills His Mom has SEX with Her Body - The Most DISTURBING Interrogation You'll EVER Hear

Man Kills His Mom has SEX with Her Body - The Most DISTURBING Interrogation You'll EVER Hear Guess I Lost My Virginity to a Corpse: The Kevin Davis Murder Case Davis bashed his mother's head in with a hammer Summary: Corpus Christi resident Kevin Davis strangled his mother before hitting her in the head with a hammer, splitting her skull. Davis then ‘swirled’ her brain around before sexually assaulting her corpse. Davis was sentenced to life in prison for the crime of a mom who he described as “The best.” In 2014, Kevin Jazrael Davis argued with his mother, 50-year-old Kimberly Hill, in the Corpus Christi, TX, apartment he shared with her and his sister, Destinee. On May 26, Davis called 911, reporting that he’d just murdered his mother. Once at the police station, then 18-year-old Davis vividly detailed the day’s events, sometimes with a smirk on his face. What he told detectives was gruesome and shocking: Kevin admitted bashing \Hill’s head with a hammer, swirling her brain around, and then, sexually assaulting her corpse. "I'll Kill My Mom Instead" On the morning of March 27, 2014, Davis, bored and frustrated with life, told his mother he did not like people and that he wanted to commit suicide. Obviously caught off guard by the statement, Hill allegedly told her son that she could not stop him if that was what he wanted to do. Kevin later told police hearing this from his mother enraged him. It was then he decided to take her life. As Hill sat on the couch in the living room, Davis came up behind her, attempting to strangle her with a cord. Hill began screaming. Kevin panicked, retrieved a hammer, and began bashing in his mother’s skull. Davis struck his mother in the head with the hammer at least 20 times, splitting her skull in the process. Davis then retrieved a kitchen knife and used it to insert inside his mother’s head wound. He swirled her brain around “to make sure she was dead,” Kevin claimed and then inserted his hand inside the wound. He would tell detectives during a taped interrogation that his mother’s brain felt like “putty.” Kevin then dragged his mother’s lifeless body to her bedroom and raped her corpse. When he finished the sadistic act, he went to a neighbor’s house, saying he just killed someone and needed help. The neighbor dialed 911. This is the interrogation of Kevin Davis. Man Kills His Mom has SEX with Her Body The Most DISTURBING Interrogation You'll EVER Hear True Crime Podcast 2024 Police Interrogations, 911 Calls and True Police Stories Podcast

24 Dec 202431min

Military Officer Serial Killer Russell Williams -Police Interrogation and Confession SHOCKING

Military Officer Serial Killer Russell Williams -Police Interrogation and Confession SHOCKING

Military Officer Serial Killer Russell Williams -Police Interrogation and Confession SHOCKING Bob McKeown deconstructs the interrogation and shocking confession of Russell Williams. From his initial denial to the full declaration of guilt, the fifth estate deciphers one of the most compelling and distressing confessions in Canadian criminal history with the help of people who know the art of interrogation better than anyone else. Investigation and arrest Jessica Lloyd, 27, had vanished on January 28, 2010. Investigators identified distinctive tire tracks left in snow near her home. One week after her disappearance, the Ontario Provincial Police conducted an extensive canvassing of all motorists using the highway near her home from 7 pm on February 4, 2010, to 6 am on the following day, looking for the unusual tire treads. Williams was driving his Pathfinder that day — rather than the BMW he usually drove — and an officer noticed the resemblance of his tire treads. These were subsequently matched to the treads near Lloyd's home. On February 7, 2010, the CFB Trenton base commander was at his newly built home in Ottawa, where his wife lived full-time and he lived part-time, when he was called by the OPP in Ottawa and asked to come in for questioning. During the 10-hour interview he confessed to the numerous crimes of which he was later convicted. Early the next morning Williams led investigators to the woman's body in a secluded area on Cary Road, about 13 minutes away from where he lived. Williams was also charged in the death of Corporal Marie-France Comeau, a 37-year-old military flight attendant based at CFB Trenton, who had been found dead inside her home in late November 2009. Along with the murder charges, Williams was charged with breaking and entering, forcible confinement, and the sexual assault of two other women in connection with two separate home invasions near Tweed, Ontario in September 2009. According to reports, the women had been bound in their homes and the attacker had taken photos of them. Williams was arraigned and remanded into custody on Monday, February 8, 2010. The Canadian Forces announced that day that an interim commander would soon be appointed to replace him (Dave Cochrane took over 11 days later), and removed his biography from the Department of National Defence website the following day. Hours after the announcement of Williams' arrest, police services across the country reopened unsolved homicide cases involving young women in areas where Williams, a career military man, had previously been stationed. According to news reports, police began looking at other unsolved cases based on a full statement that Williams gave to police. A week after his arrest, investigators reported that, along with hidden keepsakes and other evidence they had found in his home, they had matched a print from one of the homicide scenes to his boot. In addition to the four primary incidents, the investigation into Williams includes probes into 48 cases of theft of women's underwear dating back to 2006. In the searches of his Ottawa home, police discovered stolen lingerie that was neatly stored, catalogued, and concealed. In April 2010, Williams was placed on suicide watch after he tried to kill himself by wedging a stuffed cardboard toilet paper roll down his throat. Confession On February 7, 2010, Williams was interrogated at Ottawa Police Service headquarters by Detective Sergeant Jim Smyth, a member of the Ontario Provincial Police's Behavioural Sciences Unit. The interview started at 3 p.m. and by 7:45 p.m. he was describing his crimes. The interrogation lasted approximately ten hours. Excerpts of the confession were shown in court at Williams' sentencing hearing on October 20, 2010. In the confession, Williams gave details of his crimes, including the sexual assaults in Tweed and 82 break-ins and thefts. Some of them occurred in Ottawa homes within walking distance of his Orleans, Ontario home where he lived with his wife. Other break-ins and thefts occurred in Belleville, and in Tweed, where the couple had had a cottage since 2004. He also told police where they could find evidence, including hidden keepsakes, inside the Ottawa home. The couple had moved to a new house two months before he was interrogated by police. He told Detective Sergeant Jim Smyth where police could find the thousands of images he took of Lloyd and Comeau and the two women he sexually assaulted. He then identified on a map where he dumped Lloyd’s body. A video of the interrogation was made available to the public and was posted online by several newspapers and on YouTube.

24 Dec 202457min

I was the last surviving hostage, held captive for over 2 years - (Reddit Ask Me Anything)

I was the last surviving hostage, held captive for over 2 years - (Reddit Ask Me Anything)

I was the last surviving hostage, held captive for over 2 years - (Reddit Ask Me Anything)

23 Dec 202416min

20 Killers. 16 Executed, 3 Given Life Sentence, And One Ed Kemper.

20 Killers. 16 Executed, 3 Given Life Sentence, And One Ed Kemper.

20 Serial Killers - Last Words and Interviews 20 Killers. 16 Executed, 3 Given Life Sentence, And One Ed Kemper. This is a compilation of convicted serial killers last words or interviews before execution or death. This video is meant for educational purposes only. Thank you for watching! Viewer discretion for distressing content.

22 Dec 20241h 19min

Doctor Death: Britain's Worst Serial Killer (True Crime Documentary)

Doctor Death: Britain's Worst Serial Killer (True Crime Documentary)

Doctor Death: Britain's Worst Serial Killer (True Crime Documentary) Britain’s biggest serial killer was a doctor, Dr Harold Shipman. Unsuspected for many years, Dr. Shipman selected his victims from his patient list. There were clues, but who in the community would believe that a doctor would kill his patients? Suspected of killing over 350 people during his career, it was clumsy attempts at forging the will of one of his victims in his own favour that alerted the police and led to his arrest. Found guilty at his trial and jailed for life, Dr Shipman committed suicide never accepting his guilt. Criminal Methodology Shipman carefully selected his victims, targeting elderly women who trusted him as their doctor. He would visit them at home or administer lethal injections during routine consultations, claiming they had died of natural causes. In many cases, Shipman falsified death certificates and medical records to cover his tracks, citing heart failure or other common ailments as the cause of death. Shipman was also known to manipulate his victims’ wills, forging documents to make himself the beneficiary of their estates, further demonstrating his calculated and predatory behavior. Key Events Leading to His Arrest The Murder of Kathleen Grundy (1998): Shipman's last known victim, an 81-year-old widow, raised suspicion after her daughter, Angela Woodruff, discovered a forged will leaving all of Grundy's estate to Shipman. An autopsy revealed lethal levels of morphine in her body. Police Investigation: Police exhumed several bodies of Shipman’s patients, finding consistent evidence of morphine overdoses. His records showed a pattern of deaths shortly after visits, often with fabricated medical histories. Arrest: Shipman was arrested in September 1998, and further investigations revealed an alarming number of deaths under his care. Trial and Conviction Shipman stood trial in October 1999, charged with 15 counts of murder and one count of forgery. In January 2000, he was found guilty and sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. The trial was one of the most high-profile in British history, shedding light on the systemic failings that allowed Shipman to go undetected for so long. Shipman's Death Harold Shipman died by suicide in January 2004, hanging himself in his prison cell at Wakefield Prison. His death, though a relief to many, denied families further answers and accountability. Legacy and Impact Shipman’s crimes led to widespread reforms in the UK’s medical and legal systems, including: Tighter regulations on death certification Improved oversight of medical practitioners Greater scrutiny of controlled substances like morphine His case is a chilling reminder of how unchecked power and trust can be manipulated for evil. Numerous documentaries, books, and podcasts have explored Shipman’s crimes, solidifying his place as one of history’s most notorious serial killers.

22 Dec 202447min

Samuel Little: The Most Prolific Serial Killer In U.S. History - In His Own Words

Samuel Little: The Most Prolific Serial Killer In U.S. History - In His Own Words

Samuel Little: The Most Prolific Serial Killer In U.S. History - In His Own Words Tonight on Prime Crime: Part 1 of a special two-part episode. We delve into the story of the most prolific serial killer in United States history, Samuel Little. In Part 1, we explore the killings themselves, how he escaped justice for so long, and his recorded confessions. We also speak with three of the people who actually interviewed Little, and what he had to say was frightening. #SamuelLittle #SerialKiller Best True Crime Stories Podcast 2024 Police Interrogations, 911 Calls and True Crime Investigations

22 Dec 202423min

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