What happens When Evil Cops Try To Get Away With Murder? Thank you to RedTreeCrime for giving us permission to use the first interrogation: / @redtreecrime Subscribe to them!
@@practicallyVGthe first one possibly cuz he said “who else did i hurt?” Then proceeded to say smthing abt how “sometimes he hears voices” or smthing along those lines
William wasn’t trying to hurt himself. If he were, he would have bashed his head on the edge of the table not the flat top of the table. It was all for show. He knew exactly what he did.
I feel ya'. It's always drives me nuts when monsters intentionally kill people, including little kids, then claim or fake unaliving themselves. So fake, if they wanted to get that done, it's easy peasy. They are just entitled, dramatic, narcissists.
Once cops start interrogating you, you HAVE TO ask for a lawyer. Intimidation tactics often work on criminals but can induce false flags in an innocent person.
"The cops were probably relieved when he finally asked for a lawyer" .... That's from this video. Not once ever have I heard that sentiment from a LEO. This is Bush league bullshit.
@@archangel3to be fair, they had absolutely everything they needed. Him finally asking for a lawyer is a sign that his temper tantrum is almost over and that they don’t have to deal with him anymore.
For sure. Having ASD, I'd absolutely go through the overexplaining: I overexplain everything simply because I can't figure out what details are and aren't important, and I want to give all details possible if I'm asked a question. I was surprised when I heard that actually makes someone seem guiltier.
@@finnjay6149What’s ASD? I seem to do a similar thing, but I just always figured it’s because I’m dumb, lack the skill to effectively articulate my thoughts due to being mostly deaf my entire life - so finding some exchanges to be stressful - assuming I didn’t explain things clearly. I doubt I have it. But I’m just curious ~
Matthew is a monster. The fact that he still hasn’t been charged is insane. On the other note. She has full custody of her kids now which is amazing. After fighting for them through all this horrible things she went through.
The Matthew Boynton case is quite sickening in that he still hasn't been charged with his wifes attempted murder. Everyone was so eager to put it down as attempted suicide despite her telling anyone who would listen that it was her husband that did it and the evidence was significant. He also won a $200k settlement with the city for wrongful dismissal. The balls on this guy.
@@kokikoda8203 That's exactly what it is. As I said, his grandfather was sheriff or police chief - it's been a while since I saw the video on it. They did everything they could to make sure the kid walked and he did. Pure unadulterated corruption.
Yeah cause ex's don't do that stupid shit all the time cops to Drs .. As someone who's worked with this stuff I'm telling you this is par for the course on like z50% of break ups ..who knows what happened that night its a of scene and there's evidence both ways .. The more you look into the case the more you will be baffled by the texts on suicide matching up to be truthful to other ppl hearing the bangs or 2 shots ..Baffling .. He is a pettie ex though but sho knows about the rest
Anyone who tries to get away with outright murder is a horrible person, but to also be a person of authority, in a position of power, and ABUSE it is beyond horrible.
@@leukdagen11 very true, in most countries someone who murders a officer on the job receives a harsher sentence so it should be the same the other way around
The fact that Jessica will never receive any justice is heartbreaking. I can’t imagine being her and ever feeling safe again knowing that scum bag can get away with anything he wants because of corrupt cops. This country blows.
@@bigfatpostermanI am assuming that their problem with the US is that it enables police corruption or creates systems which enables police corruption and places protecting criminals who are cops above protecting citizens
Matthew just sent from Jessica's phone thats she was kiloing herself, which permits him to let police officers think that she tried to kill herself while insteas he did send this message from her phone so that he can shoot her (and missed btw)
Worst part of the second case was, her husband tried to kill her and when she woke up, they wouldn't believe her when she said she didn't try to commit suicide. Because of the "suicide attempt" her ex husband, the one who tried to kill her, got custody of their two kids and moved in with his mistress right away. I mean how suspicious can one be? He and the mistress broke up and he moved on to another lady. This lady was the one who found the bag and reported it to police. Good woman. In the end, she got her kids back, thankfully. But no justice was ever served.
"While cops are here to help and protect citizens..." Uh, no, the supreme court ruled cops are to uphold the law and aren't "required" to protect citizens. Something _EVERYONE_ needs to remember.
In our school district they have replaced the school mental health workers with uniformed cops that have undergone some mental health training. Absolutely absurd. I’m sure a lot of kids won’t seek the help they need. Just having them in uniform is enough to discourage them. My son in law says “Cops are paid to be suspicious.”
@@yvonneeasterno one that whose work is helping with mental health can be trusted anymore, they will just tell you you have whatever mental illness you say you do
Had received Swat Training and was Former Army Ranger will be very hard to catch, massive manhunt. Two minutes later crashes car and on way to hospital. Love the cop who said to him "we take care of you now".
Here's a hot tip: If you're actually innocent and think you've just been called in to help with background information on a long-cold case, then cops start framing questions in ways that you know (being a cop yourself) are designed to link you to the crime itself, you're going to have all 3 of the "signs" that the last clip attributes to guilt: Faster breathing as adrenaline is unexpectedly pumped into your blood, defensive language because you know you didn't do it, and erratic movements because of panic at the sudden realization of what's going on. I'm not saying she wasn't guilty, but I am saying that all these so-called behavioral analyses are hugely unreliable as indicators of anything.
Yes, I agree! I am a person who would show all the signs of quilt when pressured a bit! So I seriously hope I never get into any situations where I am falsely accused of anything!!! I can not believe how much these "confessions" of a body language is used as an evidence!
It’s mind boggling how someone can commit murder and then go on to live a completely normal life, even pursue a career in law enforcement and be very successful at it, catching people like themselves (Stephanie is like the real life female Dexter). These Wolves live among us and no one knows who they are.
We do know who they are. They wear badges and carry instruments of violence for the sole purpose of harming civilians, they ride in armored vehicles and helicopters, the state protects them from the consequences of their actions and repeatedly proved they have no duty to protect you. They are all wolves. Just because one of them doesn't bite doesn't change what they are, what they are equipped for, and why they exist.
10 месяцев назад
@@user-di4cr4tf2mhe is talking about the last one.. The woman
Even more so, killer doctors. Imagine saving some people and killing others for the most arbitrary reasons. That boggles my mind more than killer cops.
Thank the judge, jury, prosecutors and the judicial system, and the police officers and forensics teams that secured the conviction. They played a much bigger part in it.
Her lawyer likely told the jury about all the good she did as a detective, and solving murders or crimes. That probs why it wasn't life. The thing I find more sad are there are victims who get no justice at all.
Some additional information for the last case: - There were already indications back then that Stephanie Lazarus might be involved but like in the second case it seems the police "were looking out for their own". - Also, by the time of the 2009 interview the detectives already had the DNA proof from a thrown away cup which they matched to the one from the bite mark. The question for her willingness to DNA testing was just for poking a reaction at that point.
Asking her for a dna test at that point was just giving her a last chance to prove her innocence. They did the first test with a discarded cup and there is always a chance that a result from a contaminated sample like that may be inaccurate. It's easy to scoff at that after the fact knowing that she was really guilty, but remember it's better to have them double or triple check someone's guilt when they can than throwing anyone in jail as soon as they have something against them. Also good to mention that the cop who happened to be in charge of the investigation back when the crime had happened was Stephane herself, so it's more of a case of her looking out for herself than anything else. She was investigated as soon as another cop took over the case, which ended up taking years due to the case being archived back when she was in charge of it.
I'm glad that now more than half a million people know about these scumbags. Maybe even the case of the second one will be reopened and justice can still be served.
It’s so wild how an investigator could murder someone. How the hell do you maintain your sanity, especially when you’re interrogating other people for the same thing.
I guess that's exactly how you maintain sanity, by drowning out the thoughts in your mind by focusing on work; who knows, maybe she was such a good detective because she was so focused on investigations in order to clear her conscience
Less than you think. You morons never seem to understand that there are far more good cops than bad cops. It’s just the stories of bad cops doing wild shit are more interesting than the stories of good cops genuinely helping people so you hear less of the latter.
Poor Sherri Rasmussen's father helped her pick out that Condo for safety reasons. He also knew that Stephanie would go to the hospital that Sherri worked at and stalked her. When he told the cops to check out Stephanie's where abouts, the Cops dismissed him. Sherri even hid evidence in the freezers and files. Thank God for the DNA from the bitemark on her breast that came back to frame Stephanie for her death. I think Sherri's Dad died before she got justice. Such a sad story of such an amazing life, that sVed so many patients, with the work that Sherri did. 🙏 ❤ RIP
Both of Sherri's parents were alive in 2009 when Stephanie Lazarus was caught. They were both alive in 2013 when they lost the LAPD lawsuit they filed. Sherri's dad died in 2020 in Tucson Arizona, although I have no further information on her mother.
I like your spin on the criminal investigation analysis genre. Shorter segments for each case allow you to showcase a few similar cases and compare them instead of going in-depth on every step of a single investigation. Quality content!
People like you blow my mind, as someone who has been arrested and in police raids, I still respect law enforcement. Society would collapse without them, I dare you to keep that same attitude in a time of crisis dickhead.
@@ClickClack_Bam Good? Yeah, good at being psychopaths. I watched a video today where cops tore a man’s leg off. They literally ripped his leg from his body. They were called out to a domestic violence call…a NON VIOLENT call. As they were trying to cuff him, they decided to tackle/throw/body slam him to the ground. In the body cam footage, the man’s blood loss is immediate and profuse…and a cop actually puts all of his body weight with his knees ON THE VERY LEG they just destroyed. Rigoberto Barrientos…goggle this name. He is the victim. It happened in Zapata County Texas. But you are sorta right…people are terrified…of the very people that WE THE PEOPLE pay AND the blatant hate they have for the general public. Personally, as far as me and mine go…we will NEVER call the cops for help. Ever. If someone breaks into our home, they will be sorry. VERY SORRY. And THEN maybe we’ll call them. To come clean up the mess. Because that’s all they’re good for…they come AFTER the fact. And me or my family will count on people who are minutes away 😂here only seconds count. ETA: You know what they charged him with? “Resisting arrest”. You can’t resist something that isn’t even happening. They never told him he was under arrest because they didn’t have anything to charge him with. The deputies think he got a little smart-mouthed with them, so that’s why they cuffed him. And I hope every cop involved in the arrest goes to prison and out in general population. And HOPEFULLY they’ll run into someone they helped put away. 😂
Pretty ironic to say that considering you would never say that right in front of a gang member 😂 typical internet troll. Pray u never get locked up bud. You'd be surprised how easy it is.
Pretty ironic to say that considering you would never say that right in front of a gang member 😂 typical internet troll. Pray u never get locked up bud. You'd be surprised how easy it is.
The detectives choose the interrogation room because weapons are not allowed in the room and it was a bit of subterfuge to disarm her prior to questioning. Lazarus was a textbook psycho.
7:45 Worth noting for anyone that is trying to learn anything useful from these videos: Overexplaining is ALSO a trauma response. Particularly if there was abuse. Victims feel the need to justify every thought feeling and action, so they talk defensively. This isn't rare and it's why interrogating is a difficult skill. So many "lying behaviors" overlap with trauma responses, neurodivergence, and distress. (Not that it wasn't a lie from this guy, but it's useful the know)
@@angry_Australia It's why it is very dangerous to be suspected of a crime when your neurodivergent. The cops are not trained on autistic, schizophrenic, panic or anxiety attack, OCD, ADHD, or disassociated body language. They are only trained on the body language of neurotypical liars.
the only word you need? attorney. get someone in there who actually wants to protect you legally and emotionally! unless you’re a dirty cop, then you can incriminate yourself all day ✌️
@@Buzzzy-bee "Worth noting for anyone that is trying to learn anything useful from these videos" and "Not that it wasn't a lie from this guy, but it's useful to know". Reading comprehension. It's important.
That's only the people that wants to hate them, they will use the few cases of corrupt cops to pretend all cops are bad, but they are hypocrites, they should hate everyone because there is a small % of bad people for everything, lawyers, women, men, kids, anything
I so deeply hope Matthew Boynton gets whats coming to him and Jessica gets her babies back. He is absolutely out of control. He thought he would kill her and grandpa would make it all go away. He is a horrible humab being and this is what being a spoiled brat mixed with nepotism creates. Sickening. I hope he suffers daily. 😊
@@hazyhalfmoon Karma is very real, everything in life is connected. It may not be him specifically but somehow his family or kids and future will be affected. Whether he gives a shit consciously is on him. The more negative things you do in life the higher chance something bad will occur, you cannot continuously get away forever and your peace at mind gets lost forever. Just like the last case, 23 years later and boom went the dynamite.
I appreciate these videos so much. These monsters need brought to justice. But it’s so hard not to give a dislike when you watch these monstrous acts in the video. Thank you so much for bringing this to light we DESERVE properly trained officers.
I knew a girl that got into a traffic altercation. The policeman used the database to look up her information and started turning up at her house. This was in the UK. Utter creep. I had to stay at her apartment for weeks.
I was stalked for months by a copper who arrested me (nothing serious i just lost a train ticket) It was weird as F tho, like i would leave my flat and he would be sat in his car staring at me. I was only 18 to 19 at the time and it was quite scary
Right. This guy had all of the reactions an innocent person would have and they twisted it all around. With all of the life and experience I’ve had witnessing health and mental problems, the guy that crashed his car really could have not known this happened. Look up hepatic encephalopathy. I’ve seen it. He may not have even known any other than his own name till many hours later. Terrifying. And does not show up on mri or routine hospital blood work. They would have to know to be looking for it. If your loved one is acting strange, confused, falling, angry for no reason: get all of their blood/ medication levels checked/ get thier blood oxygen and carbon dioxide levels checked/ get their troponin levels checked. ppl don’t suddenly turn into jerks for no reason. Look how the other cops were rubbing his back trying to calm him down. They wouldn’t do that to someone they didn’t care for strongly. Which implies he was normally a kind and caring person. You do this for someone you feel would do it for you, and both of the other cops were acting this way towards him. That really makes me think something is very wrong here. All of that, combined with his posture in the videos, the seeming lack of coordination. This is the first true crime video where I’m not satisfied that the bad guy got his due. I’m completely convinced he killed her, but all of the footage makes me think that he may actually have had no idea, and could have come around sometime in the hospital or even in the police station. Scary thought.
what's crazy is the amount of men and woman who murder their spouses over the most petty things......... money... an affair....... or an argument. get a divorce!
Most people who are overly emotional when they're informed they've killed someone and act as if it's all a big surprise to them are rarely upset about who they killed, buy more about the fact their lives are essentially over and if you're a cop, means your time in prison will be even harder as they'll probably put you with sex offenders for your own safety.
There is a concept in Christianity, and probably in Psychology as well I just don't know the terminology there, of "Godly Sorrow" and "Wordly Sorrow". Where the one "Godly Sorrow" means to feel sorrow for the actual act, in this case "sin", that you have committed and a desire to turn away from that. And the other "Wordly Sorrow" means you only feel sorrow because your "sin" has resulted in real actual consequences that impact your life negatively. I only share because your comment I think is spot on. It's hard for us, on the outside looking in, to know for sure. But I suspect that a lot of criminals caught and sentenced for their crimes and show "sorrow" are in fact only feeling sorrow for themselves and not for the crimes they have done.
Yep! It can more often than you think be the one you'd least suspect! Like Hercule Poriot once said, "you think little old ladies don't commit murder?"
Why wouldn’t Stephanie’s DNA already be taken since she works for the police department? I guess I thought everyone in LE had to give their DNA to be in the force?
Maybe they needed a warrant to formally check her dna? The way they actually got her dna was by covertly retrieving her saliva from a cup she had thrown away
They'd already obtained her DNA prior to the interview anyway. It was obtained surreptitiously, via a drink container they recovered from a rubbish bin. She'd been under surveillance for some time prior to the interview. They only asked for a sample to see how she'd respond.
@@Astrussytrue, especially nowadays with everything going on and how cops are so hated. It’s a tough job and all the bad cops out there make it a lot tougher on the good ones who actually do wanna help people
15:25 Stephanie Lazarus was actually sentenced to 27 years _to life_ behind bars on May 11, 2012. This means she will be up for parole after 27 years in 2039, but 1st-degree murder and her being a cop at the time will prolly see her parole being denied (year after year,) regardless of good behavior.
I’ve noticed that in many of these cop interrogations and stressful situations the cops sincerely attempt to calm situations by telling suspects to “relax” which comes off as authoritarian, coercive and as an ultimatum. Almost any other tactic is better than saying “relax” to someone. It’s almost always used by people who think they are superior, in a position of power or both. There are tons of better alternatives but just saying “I understand that you’re upset” would set an enormously better dynamic.
well, all criminals commit the crime thinking they'd likely get away with it, regardless if they have badge. i mean, even when you walk up to a child stealing an ice cream bar at night, they jump in fear because they didn't expect to get caught. The badge really has nothing to do with it because everyone generally thinks they will get away with it.
@@tor13128they don’t care, cops bad and all that childish bullshit. Nevermind the fact there are far more killers than killer cops, same with good cops and bad cops. If they were all scum like these morons think then society wouldn’t even function.
1st guy clearly had a drinking problem. Gets drunk and later finds out what he does. I have family like this. You black out and do things totally based off emotions and just find out what you did when you sober up.
This is the first comment I’ve seen as a reasonable explanation. I was thinking hepatic encephalopathy. same appearance and reactions without the alcohol. They didn’t say there was illicit drugs or alcohol in his system. it could have been a regular daily medication build up or accidental double dose.
@@neptunedawn7121EXACTLY. Go watch the recently released drunk in public arrest of: Olivia Taylor-Washek She can NEVER live down her moment, but at LEAST she DIDN'T kill anybody. You'll see her proposition to "bang" the Police. Act like she's prettier than everyone else. She berates the Police. The whole time the Police are trying to get her to call somebody to come get her so they don't have to arrest her. She won't comply & they end up having to arrest her. Then she flips out on THAT!
@douglalala I think he is referring to a video where a guy is escaping through the roof of an enclosed room. In the video you can see him slowly escaping up while the cops are trying to get him from the ground
@@rainy50117 good explanation but i'm talking about the video where the suspect *straight up* jumps out the roof while he's still in handcuffs IN AN INTERROGATION
"The cops were probably relieved when he finally asked for a lawyer." You just played yourself. There isn't a law enforcement officer on the planet that would be happy if a suspect asked for a lawyer.
Can you imagine getting away with murder for 23 years and then having to go to prison after you're pretty sure you got away with it? That might be worse than just doing the time from the start.
Reminds me of the small Az. town I lived in. The police chief's wife was shot 6 times with his service revolver, four of them fatal, yet it was determined that she committed suicide. He was police chief until his retirement.
4:20 or he crashed to have a reasonable explanation for defensive wounds. Being in law enforcement, he knew he couldn't run, but he knew that plenty of cops have been able to get away with murder.
With the Boynton case, why couldn't they just get a warrant for both their phones? The text records would've proved that the alleged suicide threat was either fake or never happened. And why didn't they realize that no man is this calm when his wife has just been found bludgeoned.
Im pretty sure that as soon as the cops mentioned Sherrie, Stephanie would have known straight away they were onto her! She panicked. She thought she'd never be caught. Wrong! That's what is so kool about DNA.
Jessica Boynton was shot, they were trying to say that she did it herself and of course she didn't. She didn't die. So thats why there were no murder charges.
Yeah that’s very inaccurate reporting there, it’s widely reported she was shot, I’m not sure where the part about the hospital not finding an entry wound comes from.
Stephanie began getting defensive over the case before it was even suggested that she might be a suspect for it, which is a huge flag since why would she think shes a suspect if she was innocent. In all honesty if she was innocent it'd be even more reason for her to want to solve the case given it was one of her "Close friends" wife and that she had dated him prior
Yeah Matthew just sent from Jessica's phone thats she was kiloing herself, which permits him to let police officers think that she tried to kill herself while insteas he did send this message from her phone so that he can shoot her (and missed btw)
There isn’t a single profession on the planet that requires you “pass” an IQ test, whatever that means seeing as there is no way to fail an IQ test. It’s a point of measurement and also isn’t totally indicative of a persons intelligence. Your comment is actually kinda ironic lol
On the contrary, they do IQ test cops, but they are specifically looking for average IQs. The official reason being they want cops to be relatable to average members of the community. The real reason being they want cops dumb enough to blindly obey orders.
I love in the second one he’s explaining all the apparently obvious workout things he keeps in his bag to a guy who ( like me) has never seen the inside of a gym.
There is a good line from a tv show that, I think, best describes this. " villans who twirl the mustaches are easy to spot, Those who clothe themselves in good deeds are well camoflauged.". This lie, I think, explains why some of these cops get past the screening.
I do good deeds all the time, am I now a secret bad guy? I grew up serving the poor. I openly confessed everything I ever done. Jesus protects me. I hate those who camo themselves with fake good deeds.
While some credit would be nice, and often they are the first to request the footage in question. At the end if thr day they didn't film the interrogations themselves. At the end of the day it's just using footage of public officials at work. It's not really copyright able. If it'd a dick move or not is up for interpretation
Serious issues with the Lazarus case: If she was known to investigators as the prime suspect, and target, then she should have been Mirandized before questioning. This, of course, is if any of the recorded interrogation was used against her in court. However, if they brought her in to book her based on the DNA evidence, then the arrest ruse could be perceived as a fishing expedition. Shoddy police procedure, either way.
There were specific legal exceptions involved; among other things, the Lazarus 1st interview was technically "police surveillance", not "police interviewing" (situationally similar to why police are not required to Mirandize a drug dealer before filming them consent to a hand-to-hand narcotics buy). There were other legal variables as well covered elsewhere.
No you don’t need to mirandize before questioning if said person is not under arrest. Once the cuffs went on, that’s when Miranda rights need to be read. Before arrest, officers usually try to make sure they have evidence to back up the arrest.
@@alenkacoz1977 Govt. officials (e.g. lawyers, judges, legislators) virtue signal that govt. is reluctant to do certain things (things like criminals do e.g. end people's lives) and want to show that govt. is merciful (like criminals don't e.g. end innocent people's lives) and want to show that govt. is generous (like criminals aren't). But, the stifle any thought for the future welfare of innocent people when they release murderous psychopaths back onto the public, often with way less than 27 years of incarceration (sentences often reduced by early release, reduction of sentences by various legal or administrative actions etc.).