Captured By True Crime
Captured By True Crime
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Видео

Gladys MacKnight: Hatchet Murderess [P1] Puppy Love (1936)
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.3 месяца назад
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The Lizzie Borden Trial: Hatchet Murderess? (1892)
Просмотров 32 тыс.Год назад
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The Julia Wallace Murder: Who Is Mr Qualtrough? (1931)
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.Год назад
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The Edith Thompson Case: Adulteress And Murderer? (1922)
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.Год назад
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Norman Thorne: The Chicken Run Murder (1924)
Просмотров 569Год назад
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Florence Maybrick: The Pretty Poisoner (1889)
Просмотров 326Год назад
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Steinie Morrison: The Clapham Common Murder (1911)
Просмотров 267Год назад
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Комментарии

  • @kellyjacquin715
    @kellyjacquin715 21 день назад

    Very well done! I enjoyed it eminsley!

  • @PatrickFoley-vf3lr
    @PatrickFoley-vf3lr Месяц назад

    I managed a store in New Bedford, Mass, in the early 80's, and when I prosecuted shoplifters, it was in the same courtroom as the Borden trial, and they were all guilty just like Lizzy.

    • @CapturedByTrueCrime
      @CapturedByTrueCrime Месяц назад

      It is awesome that you were in the same courtroom as the Borden trial.

    • @Mike232-j2p
      @Mike232-j2p Месяц назад

      Lizzie wasn't guilty

    • @PatrickFoley-vf3lr
      @PatrickFoley-vf3lr 29 дней назад

      @@Mike232-j2p I bet you also think OJ was innocent and Robert Blake and Robert Wagner.

  • @p_nk7279
    @p_nk7279 2 месяца назад

    A very entertaining retelling of the incidents!

  • @DebraRakestraw
    @DebraRakestraw 2 месяца назад

    I think it was planned in advance and others were in on it. Uncle John, Emma, Bridget, William the illegitimate son of Andrew.

  • @DebraRakestraw
    @DebraRakestraw 2 месяца назад

    Two coincidences; 1. Uncle John shows up the night before 2. Emma happens to be gone

    • @sarahholland2600
      @sarahholland2600 Месяц назад

      I think Lizzie asked him to come to intercede re the rows over money that had resurfaced over Andrew gifting a home & money to Abbys half sister a year before. Andrew was about to turn 70. The sisters were worried if he passed , the 7 years younger widowed Abby would leave them destitute. Average life expectancy back then was late 40's. For the times, Andrew was v much on borrowed time. Uncle John prob got politely told to mind his own business & Lizzie snapped, as she'd already failed at her attempt to buy prussic acid ( cyanide) the day before.

  • @troib9003
    @troib9003 2 месяца назад

    Guilty

  • @mylamberfeeties875
    @mylamberfeeties875 3 месяца назад

    Was not hot it was actually average the prosecutor tried to mislead people, or to lazy to research, but in fact the local newspapers reported the weather daily, also the maid was not feeling well had thrown up early that morning so saying she was going out or planning to is inaccurate, she wanted to rest

    • @sarahholland2600
      @sarahholland2600 Месяц назад

      The temp reported in the Fall River Daily Record that day was warm. Up to 76degrees in the afternoon. See previous post from another commenter .

  • @PPA-vl3cu
    @PPA-vl3cu 3 месяца назад

    Innocent

  • @Lucky2beme
    @Lucky2beme 3 месяца назад

    Lizzie Borden got away with the crime paid for a great attorney. She got what she paid for reasonable doubt.

  • @Lucky2beme
    @Lucky2beme 3 месяца назад

    Lizzie Borden and her sister had a million reasons to form the coup as you can see they ended up with Andrew Bordens millions they were obvious to Mrs Borden they disliked the stepmother and they disrespected the house maid as well. Interesting that Emma was missing during the murders--sooo telling regarding the possible coup between the sisters.

  • @Lucky2beme
    @Lucky2beme 3 месяца назад

    Lizzie Borden wanted her fathers wealth💰 bottom line

  • @user-eb1on5lx3v
    @user-eb1on5lx3v 3 месяца назад

    Was lizzies sister emma involved

  • @user-eb1on5lx3v
    @user-eb1on5lx3v 3 месяца назад

    Did lizzie kill her parents

  • @user-hx1jf3ll8p
    @user-hx1jf3ll8p 3 месяца назад

    The book by Arnold Brown explains it all.Imo. A very good book. Informative and accurate. I don't want to spoil it in case someone wsnts to read it.

  • @VelenteVelente
    @VelenteVelente 3 месяца назад

    Lizzie Borden innocent by johnny from Lisbon Portugal

  • @elainetwum3465
    @elainetwum3465 4 месяца назад

    Weather report, Thursday, August 4, 1892, according to the U.S. Signal Service at 7 a.m. 67 and 2 p.m. 83 and 9 p.m. 75 Weather report until Thursday night, August 4, 1892. Fair, preceded by coast showers today, warmer Thursday, variable winds. Herald office temperature 8 a.m. 66, 12 Noon 72 and 2 p.m. 76 Highest 78, Lowest 63 Fall River Daily Herald

  • @shirleyredd6107
    @shirleyredd6107 5 месяцев назад

    She was not pregnant what a miscarriage of justice

  • @shirleyredd6107
    @shirleyredd6107 5 месяцев назад

    I did not mean to comment

  • @bridgettehutton646
    @bridgettehutton646 5 месяцев назад

    Lizzy is guilty as hell😮😮😮!!

    • @WyattRyeSway
      @WyattRyeSway 4 месяца назад

      Agree. People put forth the illegitimate son, Emma, Dr Bowen, Bridgette, Uncle John etc. Lizzie is the only viable suspect but legally…..not guilty.

  • @michaelc3051
    @michaelc3051 5 месяцев назад

    I came here after re-watching the case on the ‘They Got Away With Murder’ channel. Subscribe to that excellent channel, if you have haven’t already. Yeah, I think Wallace murdered his wife. If he didn’t, who did? There is no other plausible suspect. He set it up meticulously and brilliantly.His motives are unknown: perhaps he just couldn’t bear being around her any longer, but I think he did it.

  • @carmichael3594
    @carmichael3594 6 месяцев назад

    You have Michael maybrick picture there, and not that of James maybrick. You should really do research of the pictures for the right identity of the person you are talking about👍

    • @CapturedByTrueCrime
      @CapturedByTrueCrime 5 месяцев назад

      Thanks for pointing out the error! I got the right picture now.

  • @bronte333
    @bronte333 8 месяцев назад

    Outstanding analysis of this case. I learned some new tidbits.😊

  • @susanverhoeven4962
    @susanverhoeven4962 8 месяцев назад

    Extremely well done.

  • @LittleImpaler
    @LittleImpaler 8 месяцев назад

    The history of nursery rythems are dark.

  • @deborahdodge818
    @deborahdodge818 9 месяцев назад

    I am captivated by the narrator’s acting and voice! Excellent!

  • @deborahdodge818
    @deborahdodge818 9 месяцев назад

    The writer is beyond talented. Gorgeous work!

  • @shirleydelehanty3466
    @shirleydelehanty3466 10 месяцев назад

    You have a very good way of presenting a story. Maybe you can do a story on the real murderer, Andrew Borden's illegitimate son, who murdered them over money. He wrote a letter of confession, which the Fall River police still have. If Lizzie hadn't gone out to the barn to eat pears, she may have become a victim herself. She was found not guilty, because she never murdered anyone.

    • @mtheinvincible4156
      @mtheinvincible4156 10 месяцев назад

      Lol

    • @CapturedByTrueCrime
      @CapturedByTrueCrime 10 месяцев назад

      Thanks for posting the comment! I will have to do some research on the details you have provided, and maybe there will be a part two.

    • @shirleydelehanty3466
      @shirleydelehanty3466 10 месяцев назад

      Arnold Brown's book answers all questions. I would love to hear you do a program on it.

    • @CapturedByTrueCrime
      @CapturedByTrueCrime 10 месяцев назад

      Are you referring to the following Arnold R. Brown book - Lizzie Borden: The Legend, the Truth, the Final Chapter released on January 1st 1991?

    • @shirleydelehanty3466
      @shirleydelehanty3466 10 месяцев назад

      Yes. Answers all questions. When you understand the real agenda. All the rest makes sense. William Borden was a mentally unstable young man who wanted to be recognized by his father and to have an inheritance settled on him. Abby refused to let her husband recognize him because she would have been the object of ridicule throughout fall river. Andrew agreed to settle money on him. Andrew was trying to arrange an private calm meeting with this young man. He tried to remove all the females out of the house to keep it private and calm. Emma, who never traveled anywhere in her life was in Rhode Island. Lizzie tried to lure Bridget away with a fabric sale. Andrew tried to get Abby out of the house with a visit to a sick friend. Uncle John had gone down at 6am, opened the cellar door, and brought the young man up to his bedroom where he was to wait for Andrew to come back in time for their meeting. Unfortunately Abby had to change her dress to leave the house, and her dresses were stored in a closet in the guest bedroom. She went and meet William. She probably said the wrong thing and he killed her. He carried a hatchet on a string around his left shoulder. He used to talk to it like it was a pet or a friend. When Andrew returned and Bridget had trouble opening the door and started cursing, the laughter she heard from upstairs was his. She assumed it was Liszt because she did not know there was anyone else in the house. Lizzy left the house to give her father his requested private time with his son. He had gone that day to the bank and returned with a large amount of cash. He was attacked in a sitting position on the couch, facing his killer. The blood spatter measure by 2 doctors went five feet up the wall. There was no sideways blood spatter. His hands were balled into fists. Common defensive posture. It was a blitz attack. He may not have even got a word in before he was killed. He left out the cellar door, killing Abby's cat on the cellar stairs on the way out. Lizzy came in the cellar and locked it and went upstairs and found her father dead. Called for Bridget. She did not know Abbey was dead. When Uncle John came and heard about the deaths, he asked Lizzy, What happened? The meeting went badly wrong. Lizzy did not want William Borden caught because she did not

  • @jennyhirschowitz1999
    @jennyhirschowitz1999 Год назад

    Admirable narration…… compelling. Thank you. Miss Jenny

  • @peternovellie6409
    @peternovellie6409 Год назад

    Well told and well researched. The storyline follows several other videos on the case that have appeared over the past few years. Edith the gifted, misunderstood, innocent fantasist. Yes, it was a terrible miscarriage of justice. It makes us empathise with Edith to the point of overlooking the incredible folly of the relationship she cultivated with her lover. She was so immersed in her self-centred love fantasy that she failed to see what a sensible, mature woman should have seen from the start of the affair. Her lover-only just out of his teens-could become a danger to her husband, to himself and to her. She love bombed him. He was the love of her life; she didn’t want to lose his love and live. She repeatedly made it his responsibility to somehow find a way for them to be together. ‘Think for me do.’ ‘I want to leave everything to you darlingest boy.’ ‘You really must do something this time.’ ‘Find me a job abroad.’ ‘Be jealous so that you will do something desperate.’ She did nothing to quit her marriage. Their future was all up to Freddy. Let’s put aside the murder charge and look at her words in the context of a romantic relationship. They are recognised indicators of an anxious, self-centred, manipulative love-devoid of genuine care and empathy. We can deplore Edith’s conviction, but justice systems have improved. Toxic relationships continue. It helps to recognise the warning signs.

    • @CapturedByTrueCrime
      @CapturedByTrueCrime Год назад

      That was well said! My thanks and appreciation for your attention to the details. You spoke very clearly and eloquently about the topic.

    • @LindaMoon-xq1qm
      @LindaMoon-xq1qm 2 месяца назад

      Spot on 😊

  • @Ch-qx2om
    @Ch-qx2om Год назад

    Excellent!

  • @moviemonster2083
    @moviemonster2083 Год назад

    Interesting story, but I would have preferred a narrator with a bit more maturity and gravitas. I got the feeling I was listening to a teenager give a report for a high school English class or an act for a Drama class.

  • @sup3rkangkong
    @sup3rkangkong Год назад

    just randomly stumbled upon your channel, love the focus on 1890s to the 1930s true crime, my favorite historical period. definitely wish the youtube algorithm promote your stuff to more viewers. if you ever run out of topics, I've got some case suggestions from the same time period if you're not already familiar with them: the Molineux case of 1899, the William Rice (founder of Rice University) murder case of 1900, the Arthur Warren Waite case of 1916, The Swope family poisonings of 1909, the Brides in the Bath case of 1915, Hall Mills case of 1922, just a few interesting cases off the top of my head

    • @CapturedByTrueCrime
      @CapturedByTrueCrime Год назад

      Thank you very much for taking the time to post a comment! I'm hoping the RUclips algorithm will eventually promote my content to more viewers. I greatly appreciate all of your suggestions for true crime cases for the time period my channel will concentrate on! If you have more ideas, please feel free to post as much as you can think of here. I will do research and prepare the next stories to upload.

  • @ezecomfort9464
    @ezecomfort9464 Год назад

    It's really great video.I have watched it many times and am very excited about it

  • @bhujelmilan8869
    @bhujelmilan8869 Год назад

    The plot of the story is quite good and unique. Your voice is very suitable for this story

  • @SONUKUMAR-sq5hk
    @SONUKUMAR-sq5hk Год назад

    I really like your story telling, it makes the story much more interesting. Is there a part 2