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Did he MURDER 2 People and LIE about it?! Body Language/ Verbal Analysis of Criminal Interrogation! 

The Behavioral Arts
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Learn expert level behavior/body language analysis. Checkout the Interrogation Analysis of Alexis Avila (she threw her baby in a dumpster): • She THREW her BABY IN ...
Joshua Ramsawmy and Amelia Bissoon were charged with the murders of Cynthia Stack and her son, Sean Stack after having stolen 50 000$ from Cynthia's father. But what does Joshua's interrogation reveal about what really happened to Cynthia and Sean Stack?
Full Interrogation: • Successful Interrogati...
For Amazing Tips on Body Language Check out "The Definitive Book of Body Language" : www.amazon.com/Definitive-Boo...
TIMESTAMPS
00:35 Who is Joshua Ramsawmy
02:25 Interrogation of Joshua Ramsawmy
10:10 What do You Think Happened?
13:30 The Crossed Arm Misconception
19:20 Why the suspect failed
22:50 What do Crossed Arms Really Mean?
24:04 Expert Interrogation Technique
30:05 How to Catch a Liar
32:20 Can YOU Spot The Lie?
33:09 Why Was This Wrong?
#behavioranalysis #bodylanguage #liedetection #interrogation #interrogationanalysis #interrogationpsychology #psychology #howtocatchaliar #howtospotlies #thebehavioralarts #howtointerrogate #interviewpsychology #criminal #truecrime #criminalpsychology #pathologicalliar #truecrimeanalysis #verbalanalysis

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25 мар 2022

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Комментарии : 591   
@_just_browsing_
@_just_browsing_ 2 года назад
My ex was like this. I swear he believed his own lies. Will look you dead in the eye and lie with conviction. The main give away with ppl like this is that thier stories just don't make any sense.
@TheBehavioralArts
@TheBehavioralArts 2 года назад
Sounds like a pathological liar. Also sounds like it’s a good thing you got out of that
@ashleyhall5856
@ashleyhall5856 2 года назад
This is exactly like somonre in my life! Is there any way to teach a pathological liar to tell the truth?
@Ola-zv1fs
@Ola-zv1fs 2 года назад
Happened to stumbled over your material and I find it really interesting, thank you!!
@dragnfly138
@dragnfly138 2 года назад
My oldest son is like this. Good luck to his wife if he ever gets one.
@desireesullivan4533
@desireesullivan4533 2 года назад
@@TheBehavioralArts That is exactly what I was going to say. Pathological Liars believe their own spiel. Another thing I have seen during my time in law enforcement is that people who lie a lot, they have a certain amount of comfort with their body language until they are forced out of their comfort zone, then they crumble.
@MurielK18
@MurielK18 2 года назад
As a psychologist, I would never diagnose anyone without thoroughly testing and examining them. That being said, I have worked with a lot of psychopaths in a closed forensic psychiatric institution. And his ease in lying reminds me of some of the patients I worked with. They could lie to you without blinking, like saying they didn't illegally have a cellphone, while having one in their jeans pocket. It's the lack of conscience and the callous unemotional traits, that makes it so easy for them to lie. They don't experience guilt or shame the way normal people do. If they're not that intelligent on top of that, you get these weird, inexplicable contradictions seconds after each other. Or blatantly denying something that is impossible to deny. They are less sophisticated in their manipulations. So I totally agree with the sociopathic traits!
@drunksim
@drunksim Год назад
hello, could i please get your thought on this? i believe my adopted baby sister is a psychopath. in elementary she would always get in trouble for fighting and choking the other little kids. when she was a kid she would cut me and my other siblings hair while we slept. she had bed wetting issues until age 9- so she slept in the bathtub. she’s also always had a complicated relationship with animals (later in life her animals were taken away from her for abuse reasons) in highschool she was banned from our states school system and then she was kicked out of a rehab for giving drugs to the other patients. now shes in her early twenties and her birth family has rejected her. they say she’s tried to ruin all their lives and that she’s impossible to reason with. she has long lists of people she tries to call to get money or favors from- i hear from cousins etc “hey your sister called out of the blue. what’s going on?” stuff like that. also she’s a known pathological liar. what do you think? psychopath?
@CaitIsANerd
@CaitIsANerd 2 года назад
"Were either of her parents home?" "I think her mom was ... Her car was there" "Was she awake, did you talk to her?" "Yeah, I talked to her" Uhhhhh WTF
@TheBehavioralArts
@TheBehavioralArts 2 года назад
Loooolll 😂 exactly.
@Carlos4JC2009
@Carlos4JC2009 2 года назад
The comment I was looking for before I spent time making my own post.. how in the world is he saying it with a straight face.. 😂
@andreaross8751
@andreaross8751 Год назад
It’s jaw dropping when you hear it. Almost like his mental verbal coach was like, “Say you saw the mom. Her car was there.”
@veritasaequitas8024
@veritasaequitas8024 2 года назад
"What do you mean?" In my experience, this question is not only used to buy time. It can also indicate projection of manipulative behavior. Especially in response to a simple direct question. People who are used to playing mind games will usually have multiple motives behind questions and statements that they make. As such, they tend to instantly question the motives behind anything they perceive as confrontational or interrogatory.
@TheBehavioralArts
@TheBehavioralArts 2 года назад
Wow. What a great perspective. Absolutely love it.
@bonnieanderson429
@bonnieanderson429 2 года назад
Wow! I use this phrase all the time to clarify what someone is asking me. I am notorious for misunderstanding someone’s question so I tend to clarify before I respond. I hope I am not coming off as deceptive 🤦🏼‍♀️
@FrankGUNstein
@FrankGUNstein 2 года назад
@@bonnieanderson429 sounds like it’s part of your baseline, you’re ok ^^
@n0odles86
@n0odles86 2 года назад
@@bonnieanderson429 DW, I do this because I'm on the spectrum and tend to take things literally - so I've learnt to ask what someone means when they ask/give me instructions. It's part of who we are; our baseline.
@ash14737
@ash14737 2 года назад
I know my response is kind of late but….I agree with you to an extent; I constantly asked questions like this due to(my thoughts) me growing up with parents that was 99.9% under the influence of something. They would say something and then once I/we respond or react a certain way to what was said, later they’ll say things like that’s not what I meant or you know that’s not what I was saying! So I’ve been conditioned to get clarification on almost everything before I respond….! Keeps the confusion down
@lordvadermatt
@lordvadermatt 2 года назад
Found you during the Amber Heard trial and I’m so glad! You do such a great job breaking things down and explaining behaviors you see! This is very interesting!
@scrantonstrangler8301
@scrantonstrangler8301 Год назад
Me too! I ❤️ watching his content and I'm ready for him to come back!! Come back Spidey!!!
@christinecarmichael3253
@christinecarmichael3253 Год назад
I hope he is ok , come back !
@alloriana5983
@alloriana5983 2 года назад
I found your channel last week. You have such a wonderful teaching manner. You are so engaging, and break complex concepts down so well that I can follow and understand. I've learned so much from every video I've had time to watch. I don't yet feel I've learned enough to point out things in the videos you cover, but I had to leave you a complement. You've truly blown my mind. Thank you!
@whatissatire8698
@whatissatire8698 2 года назад
“Yes i think her mum was home her car was in the drive!” “Yes I talked to her mum” The cloak around him isn’t itself too much a bad thing! It makes him feel more comfortable and less defensive in verbals!
@lexieblais6845
@lexieblais6845 2 года назад
And IDK, but I think directly after the question is asked he says her dad. But at the same time he says "dad" the det. specifies the question. I think he says that…? It could be the mumbling and not awesome quality of audio. And yes for the burrito! I thought the same thing. If he feels more comfortable he can slip up… maybe?
@tonyashores8197
@tonyashores8197 2 года назад
First he said he thinks she was there ti then say yes she was there I talk to her .
@marlenathorvald
@marlenathorvald 2 года назад
I'll never understand why anybody especially guilty people talk to the cops without a lawyer
@Chereebers
@Chereebers 2 года назад
Hubris
@TimothyGod
@TimothyGod 2 года назад
@@Chereebers this
@FlowerChyld43
@FlowerChyld43 Год назад
@@Chereebers Yup.
@Cationna
@Cationna 2 года назад
I feel it would be absolutely fascinating to examine cultural differences when it comes to body language and verbal clues.
@thesingerintheshower
@thesingerintheshower 2 года назад
Agree 👍 👏
@lissettebonilla4882
@lissettebonilla4882 2 года назад
And how a trauma can change your behavior
@daCubanaqt
@daCubanaqt 2 года назад
I was wondering this same thing about language and if it changes body language and verbal clues.
@LordMondegrene
@LordMondegrene Год назад
Yes, especially after reading US cops saw a young foreign female as deceptive, because she would not make eye contact. In her culture, good girls NEVER looked a man in the eyes, as it would be brazen, or a challenge to their authority. So the cops tried to convict her of murder, because she was a good girl.
@QNoland
@QNoland Год назад
I’d imagine a lot of body language cues and insights are universal
@jumpingaxe3373
@jumpingaxe3373 2 года назад
The part that shocked me the most is when the man being interrogated was told his wife had accused him of being abussive and threatened to murder her family etc… He didn’t seem shocked or have any reaction. I have a girlfriend and if I was told she’s been going around talking about how abusive I am and anything similar to what was said in this clip I would be upset. I would either be tearing up or crying. And I would definitely have a full body reaction. Another reaction I could see myself having is disbelief and concern. Maybe id stay there and ask for a clip. But Iwould not be calm.
@TheBehavioralArts
@TheBehavioralArts 2 года назад
Absolutely agreed! I think that’s the reasonable response for anyone
@CyrussNP
@CyrussNP 2 года назад
You’d be a fool to believe anything an interrogator told you.
@mathsflash4957
@mathsflash4957 2 года назад
@@CyrussNP correct me if i'm wrong- but a lot fo the time aren't they required to speak the truth?
@inomad1313
@inomad1313 2 года назад
@@mathsflash4957 They are not legally required to be truthful.
@inomad1313
@inomad1313 2 года назад
@@mathsflash4957 Supreme Court case Frazier v. Cupp
@joseph.westbury
@joseph.westbury 2 года назад
Lots going on here, I'm sure I forgot some things that I thought of but here's what I got so far: he has his arms crossed which is very defensive, there seemed to be a bit of psychological distancing, he sometimes avoids the question and answers with a resume statement, his neck is exposed near the start which can be a sign of trust. I'm sure I missed loads but that's what i got so far
@Love-bl8om
@Love-bl8om 2 года назад
Answering a question with a question is a clear sign of lying.
@monicarodrigues985
@monicarodrigues985 2 года назад
@@Love-bl8om not always, people with difficulties on reading social cues (Autistic spectrum, anxiety disorders, victims of psychological abuse, among others) tend to repeat the questions or to ask what is the clear meaning of the question because they're afraid to get it wrong and be in trouble for that. I used to ask (I think I still do in stressful situations) because, growing up, questions often had a veiled meaning designed to get me in trouble no matter the answer. On the other hand, my son (Asperger's) asks because he has to make sure he got the meaning right. That's why establishing a baseline first is so important.
@heatherbryant4197
@heatherbryant4197 Год назад
@@monicarodrigues985 I completely agree. I have a tendency to ask questions in response to a question because my answer to their question is dependent upon their answer to my question... which also means that if they fail to answer my question, I can't answer theirs. Another common scenario I encounter is that people often don't say what they really mean, or attempt to glean the information they're looking for in some weird roundabout way, and I can tell what they want to know, but I'm not gonna positively reinforce convoluted communication by answering the question they meant to ask, yet failed to ask. So sometimes I'll essentially reverse engineer their question to figure out what they're trying to ask, then ask them to confirm that's what they meant. If I were to answer the question they asked literally, they would not be satisfied with the answer. I'm not autistic, so, yes, I know what they "meant," but I can be stubborn about getting people to say what they actually mean. Sometimes I don't have much tolerance for intentional ambiguity (built to backpedal), euphemism to save face or psychologically-disyance, beating around the bush, passive aggressiveness, and lack of accountability in communication. I prefer people to say what they really mean and own up to what they really mean. So if I don't show them the consequence of their word choice by answering their question literally, I will help them correct their question by asking something like, "Are you trying to ask me about xyz?" The other problem is when people ask loaded questions or questions that presuppose a false hidden premise. For example, "When did you stop murdering people?" or "Why do you hate me?" Of course most people would probably give an adamant denial as a kneejerk reaction, but it's also natural to respond to questions like these with another question, such as "What?" or "What makes you think that?" or "Did I hear you right?" As a matter of fact, loaded questions and bluffing are very commonly used interrogation tactics to catch people off-guard and make them question how much you know. I don't think there's anything wrong with asking for clarification, further information, or asking someone to call a spade a spade before you answer... so long as you do actually answer. But in my experience, a lot of people have such short attention spans that they forget about the question they asked you after one simple followup question (and sure, some people may use that to their advantage, but others, like me, will have to bring them back on track).
@Harriiness
@Harriiness 2 года назад
First impression: He did it. He's guilty. He's closed off, clearly lying, and not even shocked when he hears that his wife accuses him of abuse.
@katfromthekong414
@katfromthekong414 2 года назад
Whenever someone says "I would never..." instead of "I did not do...." I have major alarm bells ringing. And then the way he is disappearing more and more behind that blanket.... just all seems very deceptive
@imperfectcreations7075
@imperfectcreations7075 2 года назад
I feel like he’s got some counseling on surviving interrogations, keeping his arms crossed prevents those body queues, then asking for a blanket that NO ONE would drape over themselves like that. I feel like those arms crossed and the blanket are his techniques to avoid having his body language read.
@imperfectcreations7075
@imperfectcreations7075 2 года назад
@@jackoh991 that’s why he uses “baseline behavior”. Straying from their baseline, exhibiting a cluster of 3 or more deceptive behaviors gives the impression of lying. Spidey’s very adamant, it’s never *one* thing or *always* one thing. It’s when they stray from their baseline and cluster deceptive behavior 3 or more in a 5 second span.
@jperez3995
@jperez3995 2 года назад
@@jackoh991 Yep. That’s me, too. I’m always cold and drape a throw blanket around my front when I’m sitting with my back against something.
@PorcupineGirl
@PorcupineGirl 2 года назад
Because I have nothing worthwhile to add, here is the obligatory nod to the RU-vid algorithm. Oh, and thank you. I am consistently impressed and fascinated. Just WOW.🖤🖤🖤
@TheBehavioralArts
@TheBehavioralArts 2 года назад
Thanks so much 🤗
@RawkifyGravity
@RawkifyGravity 2 года назад
Okay, I need to say how much I am enjoying your channel! I have been watching another "expert" for a while but I didn't feel I was learning a whole lot. I have learned SO much from you in the last couple of days I have been watching your channel because you are clear when you speak, you describe WHAT the gestures mean, how to interpret them when they are grouped together, not just what they are, you are confident in your own observations, and you are a fantastic teacher. Thank you for your videos! PS Has anyone told you that you sort of look like Mark Ruffalo? (That's a compliment!)
@Slimspades
@Slimspades 2 года назад
I really enjoy listening to these interrogation videos once or twice before I actually watch the video.. I find you can piece together soooo much in just the tone alone- this includes also lack of tone. Really glad I found your channel, subscribed and excited to binge through these videos.
@melanieidir5007
@melanieidir5007 2 года назад
When he says “I think her mom” was there but a few statements later he says undoubtedly that he did talk to her. So why would he say he thinks she was there?
@hbee6939
@hbee6939 2 года назад
Really enjoying the channel. I’ve learnt so much already! Thank you
@TheBehavioralArts
@TheBehavioralArts 2 года назад
Thanks so much that’s so nice of you 🤗
@Love-bl8om
@Love-bl8om 2 года назад
Iam aswell learning alot
@katrinabarton1339
@katrinabarton1339 2 года назад
I love these videos, I am so glad I chanced upon them (thanks to the Will Smith slap). What's interesting is how much I am now aware of my own body language behaviour. I was chatting to a guy I liked and I was about to tilt my head and smile when I suddenly become uncomfortable and straightened my neck (and my back actually). I've also noticed that I flick my right wrist back and forth when I get really stressed, and how much I raise my eyebrows when greeting people. Fascinating!! Thanks so much for these videos, Spidey!
@annetteysquierdo
@annetteysquierdo 2 года назад
It feels good to see the length of this video 🤗
@TheBehavioralArts
@TheBehavioralArts 2 года назад
Thanks. That’s so nice of you to say 😊
@tr4shtw1nz67
@tr4shtw1nz67 2 года назад
Ngl I've been binging these darker topics you've covered. I love true crime, and it's sooooo interesting to see your analysis!!
@mattw3606
@mattw3606 2 года назад
One of the most valuable lessons I've ever learned doing this: never assume. You collect the data, observe the clusters, and make your conclusion.
@britanyh99611
@britanyh99611 2 года назад
First impression, he’s LYING. he couldn’t answer anything 🤦‍♀️
@collinbright3657
@collinbright3657 2 года назад
Love the game you play bud, when you say pause and say for us to make our assessment of the clip in the comments. I try not to think to much of the signs you point out afterwards and just go on a gut feeling. I really like this part of your videos though and look forward to the outcome of your analysis. Love it
@altastretton1768
@altastretton1768 Год назад
My new favourite pass time when i can't sleep. The content is fantastic!
@JustDiane71
@JustDiane71 2 года назад
These two are unbelievable; horrible people! I watched both his and her full interrogations a couple weeks ago. Love how you broke this down and all your points. So interesting when someone points out the body language and I can see the reason why my brain is saying this person is full of it! Thank you!! For anyone interested in this case the wife recently got into some trouble. There's body cam footage on yt just search her you'll find it. She's a piece of work.
@stephanieinlaw
@stephanieinlaw 2 года назад
Awesome video! So interesting to go through this interrogation. I did notice something the first time I watched the clips, and curious if this was a deception tell. When the detective asks him if the gun was loaded, he says “Yes, it wasn’t loaded.” While he was shaking his head no. I thought that was so inconsistent saying Yes, shaking head no, and answering it wasn’t loaded.
@TheBehavioralArts
@TheBehavioralArts 2 года назад
Oooooo interesting. Yeah disconnects between what we’re saying and physically doing can definitely be deception. I wouldn’t always jump on it alone, I wouldn’t jump on anything alone, but definitely more worthy
@gb2556
@gb2556 Год назад
Narcissists re write history in a glimpse of a sec and that’s what he is doing. Thank you for all you do!
@tronic24
@tronic24 2 года назад
This is great. thank you for the video.
@jayBeatzz
@jayBeatzz 2 года назад
Really glad that I’ve found this channel
@Guesswork01
@Guesswork01 2 года назад
Ive seen this interview before but I didn’t catch all the tiny nuances you pointed out. Great commentary!!
@Is_rose1234
@Is_rose1234 2 года назад
Geeeez this guy is all over the place I could go into it but others have said what I was thinking. This is a prime example of why you never talk to police without a lawyer. I think he didn't ask for a lawyer because it comes back to his narcissm of thinking he's a hero like he can handle this without help.
@ethoss2945
@ethoss2945 2 года назад
Or a prime example that u shouldn’t murder people???
@mason3307
@mason3307 2 года назад
My new favorite channel on the tube
@bardson
@bardson 2 года назад
Honestly I love this channel. I'm really into analyzing behavior and finding patterns but I never really thought about looking for actual signs so notoriously. And I've realized for me it only works because I know the people I'm dealing with. So I'm not confident enough to make my guesses about someone because I lack the observational skill to look at it but damn Once I feel confident I will definitely comment more! This is really exciting!
@amazingmusic5889
@amazingmusic5889 2 года назад
I am so glad I found this, or it found me..? Lol! Either way.. this stuff is right up my alley. If I had another lifetime to live.. I’d love to study behavior as a career! And I must say.. your videos and commentary and breakdowns is genius in my book! I’m definitely your newest fan! Oh.. you had me dying at ‘burrito’!! 💀😂
@Chichero-ee6ur
@Chichero-ee6ur 5 месяцев назад
Very interesting and educational! I am looking forward to more videos about pathological liars.
@teresaharrison9368
@teresaharrison9368 Год назад
You explain it exceptionally well, thanks
@joepfaff3464
@joepfaff3464 2 года назад
Very information and well done
@JonShade-fy2gm
@JonShade-fy2gm Год назад
“Jerry, remember… it’s not a lie if you believe it.” - George Costanza I think this is a perfect description of a genius pathological liar’s technique. There are such liars that exist. Pretty frightening.
@hcwoolfgmailcom
@hcwoolfgmailcom 2 месяца назад
"Not that there's anything wrong with that." (George and Jerry!)😊
@racheldray1057
@racheldray1057 2 года назад
I really love your stuff. I'm good at factual inconsistencies, but the behavioural stuff is much harder and really interesting to learn about. I don't think I will ever get it right.
@nochannel1276
@nochannel1276 2 года назад
Excited after seeing the notification
@tam2xtreme
@tam2xtreme 2 года назад
Amazing break down! I don't know if you play poker but I would love to see you break down one of the professional poker player's inconsistency in a video.
@looking4things669
@looking4things669 2 года назад
Love your channel!
@TheBehavioralArts
@TheBehavioralArts 2 года назад
Thanks 🤗
@HybRidChrome
@HybRidChrome 2 года назад
Very underrated video, it's super interesting for real Spidey!
@tapski1
@tapski1 2 года назад
Brilliant analysis
@annea6650
@annea6650 2 года назад
My initial reaction to the first clip was the use of his words, 'Straight Up." He got louder & appeared to have had a Eureka moment like "this might just work!" It almost reminds me of being a teenager and getting caught in some stupid activity I was involved in, then making up several spur of the moment lies to regain my mother's trust. (Rarely worked!) Now I'll watch your explanation. Very interesting videos! Thanks.
@justthinking2241
@justthinking2241 2 года назад
Soon as I found your channel and subscribed! Awesome content 🤓
@danafawadleh3160
@danafawadleh3160 2 года назад
Thank you now I have more info about this topic.
@alicelaybourne1620
@alicelaybourne1620 2 года назад
I never realized how much clearly seeing someone's face affected my ability to even listen to what was being said! My family calls me the human lie detector (so they work harder to lie...UGH), but I completely missed all of the outright lies in his story! I think I was looking at him so hard I could concentrate on the words.
@TheBehavioralArts
@TheBehavioralArts 2 года назад
Don’t feel bad at all. I think anyone would have had a hard time with this guy. He has very little guilt.
@ellacarter9863
@ellacarter9863 2 года назад
I know sameeee
@n0odles86
@n0odles86 2 года назад
As a mum, I am also the lie detector in the house. There are also lies told to see if they can deceive me. They're usually stupid ones, as the kids can be really silly (send them to the shop to get milk and bread, they come home "oh no, I forgot the milk" The only time they get me is when they tell me my husband has done something stupid - I truly believe those! He's the sort of intelligent person that is just bad at day-to-day stuff. The best one yet: "dad forgot the base for the kettle" - when we were moving house and I asked him to fetch the kettle lol - he was so insulted I believed it 😂
@victoriamcnerlin2072
@victoriamcnerlin2072 2 года назад
I Just found your channel on accident with the Depp- Heard case. In one of your videos you hit on something very key you said another of your viewers are empathy and I think that's why I was able to hit on so many deception. The passive aggressive nature of A violent crime your being questioned about is crazy to an emotional being like myself. I come from A long line of law enforcement and I've been extremely interested and have studied behavioral psychology, body language and psychological disorders because I suffer from ptsd from trauma and I think it's makes us almost eerily aware of danger so we don't experience it again.
@aquarius5920
@aquarius5920 2 года назад
I love love love your channel so much. I found it two days ago and I watched every single one of your videos. I'm obsessed, literally. I always knew and I think everyone does that body language gives away a lot but what I've learned from you is crazy, how much we give away without being aware of it at all. Can one give suggestions for future videos? If so, would you be interested in analyzing the interrogation video from Melissa Lucio? Thank you for your amazing content. Can't wait for more. 💚
@TheBehavioralArts
@TheBehavioralArts 2 года назад
Thanks so much Loraine! Glad you’re enjoying it 😊 I have the next few videos planned but I’m sure the day will come where I will need suggestions!
@PorcupineGirl
@PorcupineGirl 2 года назад
Yes, yes, absolutely YES! Here, here. 💯
@lethamae5669
@lethamae5669 2 года назад
I found you two days ago and can not stop watching you!! What did you major in, In college to become a behavioral analysis?
@f.b.jeffers0n
@f.b.jeffers0n 2 года назад
He mentions it here: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-_sCF0NxRvWA.html
@lbft100
@lbft100 2 года назад
I agree. His analysis is so much more intuitive and therefore more believable, than other experts.
@jadaallen5777
@jadaallen5777 2 года назад
Me too found him last night really great stuff.
@alismoran777
@alismoran777 2 года назад
Social Psychology
@advocate681
@advocate681 2 года назад
Im commenting as i watch..so sorry for so many..wow the interviewers got him to admit to being at the house AND speaking to the female vic. Great job! Especially not reacting to the admission..thus shutting down the suspect.
@alukuhito
@alukuhito 2 года назад
These videos keep reminding me of my ex-friend who was constantly denying things. Very weird guy. I could never figure out what was weird about him, and then it dawned on me that he denies the reality of so many aspects of his life. He would talk so seriously about something which was an obvious lie. He was always lying to himself.
@tsquare852
@tsquare852 2 года назад
My bf is like that.
@rachelsvideochannel
@rachelsvideochannel Год назад
Great analysis!💪 My question is, what creates these kinds of human beings? Are these people that constantly lie and lack guilt born this way? Or are they created due to health issues, mental issues and/or upbringing?🤔
@vanessahanns3211
@vanessahanns3211 Год назад
"Really, tell your face that" 😂 Perfect Spidey!! Love it 😂
@DrewPWebos
@DrewPWebos 2 года назад
This is why the "Establishment of controlled questions" is very important that way u can establish a norm. Once a "norm" is established you can see a shift in behavior as the interview/interrogation continues.
@jenean7374
@jenean7374 2 года назад
I’m commenting for you algorithms - I really like your channel.
@oliviabroughton5367
@oliviabroughton5367 Год назад
I’d love to see more about pathological liars on your channel! 🤗
@Love-bl8om
@Love-bl8om 2 года назад
Recently I discovered your videos on BA. I really enjoy what you teach .If most peoe would focus on these positive videos.We would understand more. Thank you😊
@Ola-zv1fs
@Ola-zv1fs 2 года назад
Happened to stumble across your material and I think its reallykkkkk
@matter-1516
@matter-1516 2 года назад
Long videos are nice! Are there any books that will help to understand the different types of personalities?
@TheBehavioralArts
@TheBehavioralArts 2 года назад
Absolutely! When you say types of personalities do you mean profiling behavior types? The more I know what you’re looking for the more I can recommend the right book 😊
@matter-1516
@matter-1516 2 года назад
@@TheBehavioralArts It seems so. For example, in the guy in the video you saw a narcissist.
@kristincofrancisco
@kristincofrancisco 2 года назад
I love these videos, as soon as the video starts he was rubbing his hands before he crossed his arms with I remembered you saying it's self soothing, he's not answering the question without telling a story which I've found people do when they are nervous, they just keep talking and about nonsense he doesn't answer any question straight
@tiffanycorbin9316
@tiffanycorbin9316 Год назад
Wow. So much happening here and some of it I don’t even understand if it’s significant or not. I understand that I’m way late with finding these videos and such but I’m trying to go into them as if it’s just been posted and not read the comments or anything before or during seeing them. What is mostly jumping out at me 8 minutes in though is 1- For some reason I’M embarrassed by the lies he’s telling and the story changing. 2- he’s trying SO HARD to come off as calm, like he’s not in the least bit worried. 3- he’s way too still. He’s really trying to not make any movement that would indicate he’s nervous and it seems like maybe he’s even heard of body language and signs that indicate someone is lying bc he’s making sure to control his tone, his hands, the rest of his body and he’s even trying to control his facial expressions. He’s not looking up or trying to recall any actual facts in this. He’s too worried about breaking eye contact or looking like he’s lying. He’s trying to come off as relaxed and unbothered but you can tell when the interrogator just tells him point blank that they know he was there or done something that there’s this initial “oh crap” moment before he changes his story. Every time the interrogator acts like they know he just did something innocently, he falls for it immediately just indicating in my opinion that that’s all he’s looking for is someone to believe he’s good and not the terrible person who could have committed this crime. He makes it a point to say no bone in his body is capable of killing anyone, in this respect I’d say that he’s heard someone’s family say that about someone who’d been accused of something violent but was actually innocent or believed to be innocent and he’s repeating that bc in his mind that statement said a lot about that person’s character and he believed it or seen others believe it.
@cathycox5224
@cathycox5224 9 месяцев назад
He said I think her mom was home & then seconds later he’s saying he talked to her that morning 😂
@andekay
@andekay 2 года назад
That is scary that people could have a complete lack of conscience
@unavoidablycanadian397
@unavoidablycanadian397 2 года назад
He was accused of murder? He acts like he was accused of taking two chocolates instead of one. His calm behavior is suspect to me.
@TheBehavioralArts
@TheBehavioralArts 2 года назад
Looolll. Nice
@houseofintent
@houseofintent 2 года назад
You should do more of these criminal interrogation analysis
@jamesnammack7535
@jamesnammack7535 2 года назад
I had a wife who was a pathological liar. She could not get five words out of her mouth without telling a lie or two. I was able to figure out her lies by thinking over what she had said, and it did not fit with other elements. But I could not figure out why I was not able to catch her in her lies on the spot. Then I finally saw why. Whenever she lied, she would never pause after the lie, but would instantly move on to some other comment. So my mind would follow the narrative of what she was talking about without giving any special focus to the lie. Even when I figured out why I was unable to catch her lying on the spot, I still was not able to catch her lying on the spot because of the way she would instantly move on the conversation to something else, and my mind followed the narrative instead of focusing on one part of it. I have never known anyone who could lie as skillfully as my wife, who is now my ex-wife, thank god.
@shoachiwarrior
@shoachiwarrior Год назад
When he was accused of being abusive. I saw a smile and a shrug of the shoulders along with the shaking of his head. The message I got. Was that quick smile brought him joy in the abuse, but at the same time, i agree with you the narcissist in him doesn't have guilt in being abusive, but it's a sick thing to see the smile.
@janeconti280
@janeconti280 2 года назад
You are so brilliant but classy that you put me to sleep. The pureness of your voice
@N8T1V3-5F
@N8T1V3-5F Год назад
What did it for me that hes lying is that he basically laughed off being called an abuser and killer by his girlfriend when he's at risk for going to jail for life from a "false" accusation
@AmandaSmith-77777
@AmandaSmith-77777 2 года назад
Haha "plant that mind virus..." love it! He watched your videos so he knew to cross his arms and ask for a blanket 😸
@TheBehavioralArts
@TheBehavioralArts 2 года назад
Hahahah
@ratbag113
@ratbag113 2 года назад
Been watching your videos after finding your channel accidentally. My ex is a lot like this: hero complex, inability to relay an account that is consistent and makes sense, points out what they’ve done and why they’re so great, changing the story when confronted, never taking responsibility. The calmness is which it’s delivered as well. Actually quite shocked over the similarities… Thank you for these videos, finding them very interesting as I have a background in forensics.
@graciehernandez1364
@graciehernandez1364 2 года назад
I just subscribed when I saw you do the Will Smith. I'm liking your videos.
@madisonkrug7916
@madisonkrug7916 2 года назад
Love these videos! so interesting to watch and fun to try and pick up as many hints as I can from the first part and then see you point out all the things i missed is crazy! Side note: I cant help but feel like you look like a couple people though ( Mark Ruffalo, Human Shrek, Uncle Ian from Alvin and the chipmunks when u had the soul patch LLOL!)
@meredithsickel2709
@meredithsickel2709 Год назад
Just as a footnote about the arms crossed…he’s not lying about being cold, interrogation rooms are absolutely FREEZING.
@camillemayers103
@camillemayers103 2 года назад
"How did that conversation with your sister come about?" All of a sudden the stream of conversation starts to stop and stutter while he makes up a story. He wasn't prepared for the question.
@liezl713
@liezl713 Месяц назад
It would have been so interesting if we would see her interview too, to see where she shows the clusters, and how their story differed, etc.
@leseanpayne2805
@leseanpayne2805 2 года назад
First Impression: "Do you have a gun?" "Do you mean like my normal guns or the murder weapon?"
@ShiruSama1
@ShiruSama1 2 года назад
well spotted
@hueyandmo
@hueyandmo 2 года назад
I think when the investigator says something like: "it was either you or her, and one of you is ruining the other's life by sending them to prison..." his response is telling. He says "it wasn't me", focusing on himself and his innocence, rather than being angry that his girlfriend betrayed him or lied about him. I think if he was innocent he would have been more upset in that moment. He seemed wierdly calm for most of the interview. Plus his story has holes. Saying he wasn't at the house and then changing it to that he was there but didn't meet the guy, and buying a gun but no ammo. I think he's guilty. I'm not sure what to think about the way he seems cool for most of the interview but gets animated with his hands later on.
@Mikipret
@Mikipret 2 года назад
Hey Spidey, thanks again for the great content!! You are a genius!! I thought I learned a lot, but I missed most of that. Just shows the difference experience makes!! I basically only caught inconsistencies in his story. If not for that I would not have had anything. The difference between how his arms were crossed initially and then the bulges later that showed his hands were in fists, completely blew my mind. You are so observant!! I noticed the initial crossed arms but then ignored it for the rest of the time... Hopefully won't make that mistake again. 🧐 Was the giant inconsistency the whole thing where... I think her mom, then her car was home, then she was up cause she goes to work at 7 and then, yeah I talked to her? I hope so else I missed it completely... 🙈 Thanks for the breakdown and all the details. Love your vids!! It's once again nearly 2am and I'm still watching your stuff. So good.
@amberd2268
@amberd2268 2 года назад
I love this vid
@zwelgje4798
@zwelgje4798 2 года назад
Hey Spidey, great start so far. The first thing I want to say that I love the interview so far and what a great interrogator. If I was in the same possition I wouldn't have come even close to the crumbling structure myself. I must admit that I've read some of the comments so my oppinion is influenced. The first thing I noticed was how his arms are sticked to his body for the most of the interview, and it feels like there isn't much of a interest on his side. It could be because of the temperature but I don't think so because he's wearing a shirt ( than again he got a blanked later on). There is a whole lot of story about him getting a gun, where I live almost no one had a gun, but not really the reason why he has one. And who buys a gun without bullits, that sounds very off to me. Like buying a car without wheels. And why throw it away if you just have it for a week. In the first clip there is a head shake and a nose touch. Second clip. The time and date not clear on his scope doesn't raise red flags for me. But he both switched his story about not being there and he sais a lot of her instead of Cyntias's name. Also I was there, not in the house so there is social distancing there. Third scene. You see a clear change in his behavior. Moving both his arms and selling his story. This is what happend. Point A. B and see. The gun taken by some black guy and getting 10k doesn't sound right and a good comment that was written in the comments is that he first said he trew the gun away, which one is true or neighter... Scene 4 He is pacifying his fingers, he is showing stress here. Later on putting his hands to his crotch as protection. A nice suggestive trap question about her parrents that he fell right in. Yeah she was there and knows all about. Scene 3 The most obvious change is the blanked covering his body and must have felt protective to him. When he was talking about his sister there was a "she was there " moment. It feels like a shift in blame. Overall: He isn't open about the situation, not commited to help, looks a lot to his down right which can indicate emotion. He tries to sell his story, not tell it. If he isn't guilty, he at least knows more than he is telling. Edit. The that "blows my mind" on being abusive sounds fake af. Now going to see the rest of the video.
@solangelatour8941
@solangelatour8941 2 года назад
Question : would a pathological liar perhaps be aware of body language indicators of deception and is purposely using crossed arms and/ or the blanket for this reason ?? Pathological liars are beyond mind boggling 🧠🧐🤯 Thank you for this amazing eye opening content 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
@kayleighclay4186
@kayleighclay4186 2 года назад
"I was just talking to her then I GUESS I left" ... WHAT! 😂
@SilverStudioRPG
@SilverStudioRPG 2 года назад
Knowing that interrogatories are allowed to lie about the evidence they have makes it much harder to find facts
@reggie3781
@reggie3781 Год назад
Amazing video! I always enjoy ur content and Im glad that i can better c ppls body language, the way words can be used and everything. I think only thing i wanna point out is that 4 example i have ADHD and most of my closest friends have ADHD/ADD too and i c that we all do things like: forgetting what we said (-> repeating things) and we also do quite a lot of sayin things completely differently, but if u would point out that (4 example) I said two diferent stories bout same thing, i would try explain u how my brain is workin with memory, attention and other stuff. SO WHAT I WANTED TO SAY😂.... sayin 'their intelligence is probably not their thing' or somethin (sorry dont remember how u said that exactly but it was quite similar message) just bcs they dont remember stuff is a bit rude ngl... but i am also not sayin that 'oh this is happening to me, i have ADHD, so he has ADHD too' ofc not! But i just wanted to point that out. This little detail is not changing that fact that i really enjoy ur content and its very helpful 4 a lot of ppl. Ive tried to write it in most constructive-like way (iykwim😅)
@tseveudire
@tseveudire 11 дней назад
Howard Stern is so good at interviewing people that he got a gig as an interrogator
@JLF201
@JLF201 2 года назад
When you commented that now we have a burrito, my first thought was that I didn't remember seeing them bring in food. 😊
@abiwilliamson468
@abiwilliamson468 2 года назад
Sometimes even deceptive behaviours that reflect genuine fear and worry can seem innocent or even compelling as to the character of the suspect.
@graciehernandez1364
@graciehernandez1364 2 года назад
I saw this interrogation on Crime Circus. Now I want to see you analyze it.
@oasisauto
@oasisauto 2 года назад
This guy is honest n saying the truth..
@siennamallon5732
@siennamallon5732 2 года назад
What caught my attention was when he was talking about when he was at Cynthia’s house and that he sat down and talked with her and he said “and then I guess I left”. The ‘and then’ makes me feel like he skipped over something.
@csunday24
@csunday24 2 месяца назад
I wanna scream every time he says "This, that, and the third".
@advocate681
@advocate681 2 года назад
I like the interviewr posture and the way he asks about the " innocent reason for being at the vics house..the "why" not the less decisive question. Giving the suspect a narrow locked in fact, but an opportunity for an out..save face. You know what i mean?
@psam7183
@psam7183 2 года назад
I am so happy i find this youtube channel. Wow you make amazing job, i love it. I know you from yesterday and i watch almost all your videos. Thank you for that, is very valuable content. I have tip for analyzing : Zlatan Ibrahimović
@squashieeeee8861
@squashieeeee8861 2 года назад
When he was talking about how he didn't have ammo for the gun I was very confused. Like how could he have shot his leg then? And I think the interrogator handled that moment he had that inconsistency in his story and played it very well. Not accusing but asking a question.
@heezypeasy8611
@heezypeasy8611 2 года назад
He shot himself in the leg with a gun he had previously owned and got rid of. The one he's talking about not having ammo for is one he had recently bought
@sugarwoofle6067
@sugarwoofle6067 2 года назад
One thing I noticed was every time he was called out on something, was that he would have this sort of nervous laughter that would happen. He would chuckle a bit and be like nah nah that's not true.
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