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Detective Outsmarts 164 IQ Killer in Triple Murder Case

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  • Published on Mar 7, 2026
  • A cunning detective outsmarts a killer with a 164 IQ in this gripping true crime interrogation breakdown. Twenty-year-old Thayne Ormsby - who brutally murdered three people in rural Maine - thought his genius-level intellect could hide his guilt. But as investigators deploy strategic interrogation tactics, even this confident triple murderer starts to falter. This video delves into a tense interrogation room showdown, where seasoned detectives use principles of interrogation psychology to chip away at Ormsby’s lies, ultimately drawing out a chilling confession
    Witness how law enforcement turns the tables on a suspect who believed he was always one step ahead. From building rapport to strategic silence, every question, pause, and reveal is carefully orchestrated to crack the case and expose the truth behind the brutal triple murder and its cold-blooded perpetrator. This interrogation breakdown offers an intense look at real interrogation tactics and the criminal psychology that brought a 164 IQ killer to justice, making it a must-watch for true crime enthusiasts and anyone fascinated by interrogation and confession dynamics. In the end, even a 164 IQ wasn’t enough to outsmart seasoned detectives armed with patience and cunning
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Comments •

  • @tirkentube
    @tirkentube 6 months ago +13297

    if you're 300 miles away from the crime and detectives wanna talk to you, they're definitely already onto you.

    • @This_guy77
      @This_guy77 5 months ago +953

      lol if they start the interview off reading you your rights, it’s probably time to lawyer up.

    • @Bruno12-g3w
      @Bruno12-g3w 5 months ago +12

      @This_guy77😂😂

    • @apenni62467-e
      @apenni62467-e 5 months ago +69

      They know with 100% certainty that you're involved!

    • @lilreeskii
      @lilreeskii 5 months ago +1

      @This_guy77 Lmfaoooo

    • @MICHELLE-MTM
      @MICHELLE-MTM 5 months ago +49

      Shush 🤫 he was only there to give a statement and to co-operate 🤣🤣😩😭

  • @jacsmith2217
    @jacsmith2217 5 months ago +8361

    Anytime you hear “What do you think should happen to this person ” you’re cooked buddy 😂

    • @cryst4llover847
      @cryst4llover847 5 months ago +135

      Dudes writing his own fate at that point

    • @polishpat95
      @polishpat95 5 months ago +86

      Exactly! Whenever you hear that, you know the detectives KNOW that he did it.... 😅

    • @patricksergent8390
      @patricksergent8390 5 months ago +1

      For real

    • @Heyyymorgann
      @Heyyymorgann 5 months ago +7

      Yerrrr cooked buddy 😂😂😂

    • @ovo_faygss1440
      @ovo_faygss1440 5 months ago

      @polishpat95nice education buddy…. They actually use that tactic on people all the time to prove innocence… but because you are so highly uneducated you didn’t know this 😂

  • @VDmedina910
    @VDmedina910 4 months ago +2272

    the detective is so good im starting to think im the murderer

  • @luxury.707
    @luxury.707 2 months ago +1169

    “I’m a visual person, can you show me how you’re guilty?” 😭😭😭

  • @cr7neymar908
    @cr7neymar908 5 months ago +9348

    No one with a 160 IQ talks to the cops for 45 minutes without a lawyer

    • @averytokar-jv1vh
      @averytokar-jv1vh 4 months ago +312

      Having an IQ test done and scoring high doesn't have anything to do with his complexes and the desire to appear innocent. Shit, that doesn't even guarantee that this person is extremely smart. This test is just a unit of measure but is subject to change at any given time.

    • @postverifiedlifestyle
      @postverifiedlifestyle 4 months ago +167

      @averytokar-jv1vh
      Thank you bro 😭 IQ tests can be generally correlated with intelligence but being smart when it comes to pattern recognition and being a smart human in general are very different

    • @artphotognh
      @artphotognh 4 months ago +39

      Whatever IQ test this kid took, that said he was 164 IQ, needs to be thrown out as worthless. He's above average IQ (which isn't saying much), but no genius.

    • @saradees9392
      @saradees9392 4 months ago +1027

      Most extremely smart people are incredibly street dumb. They also think they're smarter than whoever they're talking to and can outsmart them.

    • @TylerMartin-cs9xy
      @TylerMartin-cs9xy 4 months ago +148

      ​@saradees9392street smarts isn't an actual thing. His ego just took over. IQ measures how fast your brain works.

  • @longlivecrow
    @longlivecrow 5 months ago +2821

    "I didn't do it."
    "You're a cool dude!"
    "I did it."

    • @stumack9755
      @stumack9755 4 months ago +79

      He's the Devil kiling a 10 yr old!

    • @Yuumzi
      @Yuumzi 3 months ago +62

      flattery goes a long way, i remember a boss
      tap tap shoulder "how its going"
      i felt amazing
      tap tap shoulder "great work"
      i felt like a dog recieving a treat lol

    • @yourself4382
      @yourself4382 3 months ago +39

      @Yuumzi or when a teacher says "that's a good question"

    • @TheTilitus
      @TheTilitus 3 months ago +6

      3 billion iq move!

    • @chejulian6092
      @chejulian6092 2 months ago

      Basically

  • @baronmeduse
    @baronmeduse 6 months ago +6896

    Detective: You're not under arrest and can leave at any time.
    Suspect: Okay I'll stay and answer questions without a lawyer and incriminate myself.

    • @runningriot6399
      @runningriot6399 6 months ago +188

      It’s makes for a riveting watch for sure but that kid was done before he ever walked into the room. They had every piece of evidence they needed to convict him before he ever said a word.

    • @NG-cf7zh
      @NG-cf7zh 6 months ago +133

      @runningriot6399no they didn’t, the detective was blowing smoke in a lot of the parts (“we’ve got your DNA on the bottle”)

    • @Kyle-wd7xl
      @Kyle-wd7xl 6 months ago +4

      No my favorite comment of the day

    • @isaacgutierrez372
      @isaacgutierrez372 5 months ago +129

      That’s why they say his 164 IQ because dude really thought he just going tell his little story and they were gonna send him on his way..😅

    • @michael-4k4000
      @michael-4k4000 5 months ago +34

      Why do we think he has a 186 IQ? Where can you see the test results?

  • @franticallyfaith
    @franticallyfaith 2 months ago +653

    The fact that the dad took his last breaths knowing he couldn’t protect his son from this monster, and knowing that the son watched his dad die and knew what was coming for him, tried to hide…. This guy doesn’t deserve to waste any more oxygen.

    • @Ping0479
      @Ping0479 Month ago +6

      We need Shariah law of Islam

    • @natureslullaby
      @natureslullaby Month ago +19

      ​@Ping0479ew no

    • @MamberiPaulKeyah
      @MamberiPaulKeyah Month ago +3

      ​@Ping0479some people accepts the death penalty until it's their innocent ass on the noose, while most people reject the death penalty until they meet pure evil like this one.

    • @donnabobona8633
      @donnabobona8633 Month ago +1

      ​@MamberiPaulKeyah For me, it was having a paid killer in my home that changed my views on the death penalty. Before I was pro d penalty but after finding out a person I worked with and had been in my home I felt living the rest of your life in prison was better punishment than giving them an easy out.

    • @bbjaan1
      @bbjaan1 Month ago +3

      @natureslullaby you don’t even know what Shariah Law is. You’d be a lot safer in the US with it, but it seems like you’re okay with your corrupt, broken ‘justice’ system.

  • @stephm0
    @stephm0 3 months ago +2450

    Triplemurderersayswhat?
    -What?
    -We got him let's wrap this up.

  • @ir8nh8
    @ir8nh8 6 months ago +4922

    This detective is so good, he’s making ME nervous 😂

    • @victoryT_T
      @victoryT_T 6 months ago +94

      You're being suspicious

    • @simrdownmon6431
      @simrdownmon6431 6 months ago +121

      No way thos kid has a 164 IQ. He's a sociopath splits easy to lie but he couldn't remember when he lied and couldn't think fast enough to explain them away. I would be surprised if his IQ isn't well below average.

    • @glowindark64
      @glowindark64 6 months ago +4

      Speak on it queen 👸 👏 🙌 ✨️ 😤 👌 👸

    • @victoryT_T
      @victoryT_T 6 months ago +3

      @simrdownmon6431 hmmm goood point !!

    • @victoryT_T
      @victoryT_T 5 months ago +1

      @MiningTheUniverse :O detective is at least sexy imo after what he has done

  • @TheZealo
    @TheZealo 5 months ago +1551

    Bro left a half empty beer bottle full of his DNA at the scene and you wanna say hes a genius that thought he committed the perfect crime? Cmon man, dont click bait.

    • @RenanFelician
      @RenanFelician 5 months ago +74

      I'm glad I fell to that bait tho, great and unique human interaction there

    • @coofai
      @coofai 4 months ago +29

      a video like this makes people 10k or more

    • @Shivoham2243
      @Shivoham2243 3 months ago +4

      ​@RenanFelician 💯

    • @pinklemonade6597
      @pinklemonade6597 3 months ago +53

      Not saying he is or he isnt but having a high iq doesn’t necessarily mean that you’re automatically a genius on every front. He could very well have a high iq and still make stupid decisions. I think him being a narcissist probably doesn’t help either overconfidence can ruin you.

    • @daviduuț
      @daviduuț 3 months ago +4

      Thats the thing, he THOUGHT he did the perfect crime, but he was wrong, so wrong.

  • @tsmith4719
    @tsmith4719 2 months ago +84

    As soon as police start asking how many gears my bike has I’m walking out of there lol.

    • @Michael-g4l3g
      @Michael-g4l3g Month ago

      But not without handcuffs

    • @tsmith4719
      @tsmith4719 Month ago +7

      @Michael-g4l3g he could’ve walked out of there until he incriminated himself. That’s how you know once they start asking stupid questions. They really don’t have anything on you and they’re just trying to get you to slip up.

    • @aaroncall5274
      @aaroncall5274 Month ago +9

      Dude the moment they start messing with me saying dog and Doug im leaving. There playing mind games lol

    • @iwasnotlongforthisworld
      @iwasnotlongforthisworld 12 days ago

      ​@tsmith4719I mean they had his dna

  • @Phaeton-gu2so
    @Phaeton-gu2so 6 months ago +3586

    There us no such thing as a “routine chat” with a detective in an interrogation room. 😂

    • @Yamom2323
      @Yamom2323 6 months ago +78

      Facts. Guilty or innocent, if it’s to the point you’re in an interrogation room, ask for a lawyer.

    • @Moto-Hobo
      @Moto-Hobo 5 months ago +105

      No kidding. "164" IQ, but he doesn't realize he's the main suspect. I guess that's what a psychopath is, though.

    • @em_a_je
      @em_a_je 5 months ago

      ​@Yamom2323 why ask lawyer ? why not ask forgiveness from Allah ? you dont believe Allah ? He forgive everyone who ask forgiveness.. jail or not it doesnt matter, the most important = happy in heaven or burn in hell.. dont say you dont fear hell if you fear jail

    • @screech5247
      @screech5247 5 months ago +56

      @Moto-Hobotoo blinded by the ego thinking he got away with it

    • @pdubs1575
      @pdubs1575 5 months ago +9

      @Yamom2323
      I agree. If you know you did it, then you’ve got two choices, give up and just admit, or get a lawyer. Because you are not in the room just by chance!

  • @luckydmaestro
    @luckydmaestro 5 months ago +1608

    I hear the detective has 165 IQ

  • @adrianmasters250
    @adrianmasters250 3 months ago +1046

    This is an example of a serial killer being caught after their first kill, he absolutely would have done this again and again

    • @Roy-McBride75
      @Roy-McBride75 2 months ago +14

      True

    • @peace8634
      @peace8634 2 months ago +3

      Very true.

    • @nicholaspeter3259
      @nicholaspeter3259 2 months ago +8

      Detective made a crucial mistake though. The killer said he already had it out for him but the detective never asked why.

    • @AJ3RDAMAN232
      @AJ3RDAMAN232 2 months ago +42

      @nicholaspeter3259 wasnt really important at the time, theyre just trying to get him to say he did it at that point, they can go over motive afterwards which im sure they did

    • @bboykiddblack
      @bboykiddblack 2 months ago

      The usual suspects

  • @chilled99
    @chilled99 2 months ago +45

    If you’re in an interrogation room it isn’t routine - you’re the routine

  • @Aang_Man
    @Aang_Man 2 months ago +601

    Nothing is scarier than completely random acts of violence against someone offering help.

    • @Pacman1330
      @Pacman1330 2 months ago +31

      Humans are scary man.

    • @Sewejaartjie
      @Sewejaartjie 2 months ago +38

      @Pacman1330 Psychopaths and narcissists are scary - and maybe some people in the middle of psychosis. Normal people aren't scary.

    • @beatrixkiddo7569
      @beatrixkiddo7569 Month ago +13

      @Sewejaartjieyeah but you dont know who’s who

    • @vladImir-p7n1q
      @vladImir-p7n1q Month ago +17

      @Pacman1330 sin and lawlessness within ones heart is scary. We need Jesus. He can free you from your torment too.. just as he did in my life

    • @theparadigmshift74
      @theparadigmshift74 Month ago +7

      ​@vladImir-p7n1qtrue dat! The wages of sin is death. All have fallen short of the glory of God, but Jesus came to save sinners

  • @MainCharacterVibez
    @MainCharacterVibez 5 months ago +1048

    Before the liar could come up with a lie the detective was already on to the next question. He stressed me and the criminal out. I couldn’t keep up.😂😂

    • @GTA6Trendsetter
      @GTA6Trendsetter 5 months ago

      of course you're on the criminals side

    • @brojoe44
      @brojoe44 5 months ago +19

      I got annoyed when he said "I walked there in the heat" continued on about visiting only once, and then said "I combined the both but I rode there on my bike" like uhh which is it? "I only been there once" yeah ok?

    • @CT2507
      @CT2507 4 months ago +65

      Definitely a good tactician. Like he was surrounding the killer with jabs from all directions, and when he sensed a weak spot he would hone in and go deep, but only for a short time and then quickly leave to attack from a different direction. Slowly but surely wearing him down. Was pretty awesome to observe.

    • @GoobyGoobg
      @GoobyGoobg 2 months ago

      😂😂

    • @freetheworld001
      @freetheworld001 2 months ago +4

      Lol yep. This dude is also only 20 years old and he used that to his advantage. He's not a child but he's YOUNG and doesn't know anything. It's very easy for the detective to be in control here.

  • @thomasneal7126
    @thomasneal7126 5 months ago +588

    That detective should be used to train other detectives how to interrogate a suspect. This was a master class in all aspects.

    • @No_tears22
      @No_tears22 5 months ago +2

      Detective is actually pretty aggressive and his intentions are readable. If factors were limited, he'd be EZ.

    • @abdurrahimturker5479
      @abdurrahimturker5479 4 months ago +19

      @No_tears22 I'm pretty sure the detective knows how aggressive he can get interrogating a suspect depending on the amount of evidence he has

    • @unscrupulousyou
      @unscrupulousyou 3 months ago +5

      I'd say assertive, not aggressive, which was needed here to control, and stepped up when the suspect was unraveling. All with the undertone of I'm your friend and what you did was pretty impressive. Masterful.

  • @TheKane2305
    @TheKane2305 2 months ago +20

    "you're responsible for this right?"
    "I won't say"
    😂😂😂😂😂

  • @jamesconnor6644
    @jamesconnor6644 6 months ago +1805

    You misspelled 64 IQ.

    • @floridamanfishes9085
      @floridamanfishes9085 5 months ago +143

      He so smart he told everything. A true mastermind

    • @Ty-17
      @Ty-17 5 months ago +19

      iq =/= social prestige

    • @chrisivan_yt
      @chrisivan_yt 5 months ago +1

      😂😂

    • @wheel631
      @wheel631 5 months ago +27

      LMAO and if he is that smart he probably should have realized it might be kind of hard to get away with a triple murder

    • @oliviervillaret1674
      @oliviervillaret1674 5 months ago +4

      that's the question I was asking myself

  • @wendydeeds6423
    @wendydeeds6423 5 months ago +523

    Pro tip: If your meeting with the police starts out with them reading your Miranda rights “as a formality,” it’s never a formality.

    • @chillndude
      @chillndude 5 months ago +9

      don’t they always have to read you your rights even if you’re innocent?

    • @wendydeeds6423
      @wendydeeds6423 5 months ago +26

      @chillndudeThey usually read you your rights if you are in custody and being questioned. When you are coming in voluntarily and agree to talk, they don’t have to read them. They only do it when they have reason to believe you are involved.

    • @Moodaaah
      @Moodaaah 5 months ago +30

      @chillndude I’m in law enforcement so I can tell you that if you come in to just talk as in just an interview, we don’t have to read rights since you’re not in custody or detained. If you incriminate yourself in the interview, then we’d have to read you your rights before you further incriminate yourself. If you choose to continue talking that’s on you and anything you say will be used against you. So in short, once you’re detained or arrested, reading your rights will occur.

    • @Thiyumi03
      @Thiyumi03 5 months ago +1

      Ok buddy got it

    • @RenanFelician
      @RenanFelician 5 months ago +62

      pro tip: never ever murder anyone

  • @BoeBinsky
    @BoeBinsky 5 months ago +513

    “Yes I understand the 5th amendment”
    *yaps for hours and incriminates himself*
    👏👏👏👏

  • @robinbank5
    @robinbank5 2 months ago +19

    I'm doubting this guy has anywhere near a 164 IQ. 😆🤣😂😅

  • @BOM.DavidWK
    @BOM.DavidWK 4 months ago +194

    “I know everything… and soon you’ll know… it’s a little dance we’re doing… but you know that I know”

    • @Not_WalterBlack
      @Not_WalterBlack 2 months ago +8

      I loved that part so much. Dudes soul left his body as soon as the detective said that.

  • @J.W1180
    @J.W1180 5 months ago +2464

    “What do you think we would do if we found the bad guy?”
    “Well you would probably read him his rights…”
    Bruh..😂

  • @davemart3913
    @davemart3913 5 months ago +627

    Bro knew the little kid was there before he killed everyone. What a psychopath.

    • @cartergomez5390
      @cartergomez5390 5 months ago +1

      Can’t even listen 🎧 to this cause I’m half asleep 😴

    • @findsel2swaggy
      @findsel2swaggy 5 months ago +30

      Literally heartless

    • @Heyyymorgann
      @Heyyymorgann 5 months ago +73

      Literally saddest fucking thing knowing that little boy was hiding behind the door 🥹

    • @YamborghiniHigh98
      @YamborghiniHigh98 5 months ago +33

      imagine the kid hearing the knife enter the skins and hearing the pain screams of the victima, just horrific bro

    • @davemart3913
      @davemart3913 5 months ago +26

      @YamborghiniHigh98I was thinking the same thing. That poor kid and family. I don’t understand why this guy will get 300 year sentence and live the rest of his life without ever really suffering. He should be buried under the jail.

  • @JoeG15
    @JoeG15 2 months ago +63

    I genuinely cannot wrap my head around “and soon you’re gonna know that I know that you know that I know.” Maybe I’m just a mere simpleton but this is probably the most impressive detective work I’ve ever seen

    • @janniehansen482
      @janniehansen482 Month ago +9

      Sounded like Rachel & Phoebe, knowing about Monica & Chandler..

    • @GtotheK
      @GtotheK Month ago +4

      ​@janniehansen482 elite ball knowledge right there

    • @Raymanfan86sk
      @Raymanfan86sk 4 days ago +1

      i get it. had to close my eyes and pause the video for a sec

  • @VanessaKittredge
    @VanessaKittredge 5 months ago +1695

    I went on a job interview the other day and I was nervous and my voice was shaky a few times. This guy is guilty of triple homicide being interrogated by a seasoned detective and he’s as cool as can be. Evil.

    • @Milan-y1j
      @Milan-y1j 5 months ago +72

      physcopath

    • @jamestillman3150
      @jamestillman3150 5 months ago +31

      I thought the same thing. He is impossibly calm

    • @fllf3078
      @fllf3078 5 months ago +17

      Practice more. You can train the fear out.

    • @Cesarthinksclear
      @Cesarthinksclear 5 months ago +81

      Not really. His answers are overcompensating in the first couple minutes. He talks to much and his guilt is on his face

    • @drakemoreland9787
      @drakemoreland9787 5 months ago +14

      ​@Cesarthinksclear thats just opinion and speculation nothing based about what you said

  • @Wisdomio
    @Wisdomio 3 months ago +582

    “I didn’t want to be confused with biker gangs that’s why I didn’t say I had a pedal bike” real 164 IQ stuff going on here

    • @GlobalTravelWithMe
      @GlobalTravelWithMe 3 months ago +7

      Lmaooooo

    • @joeltorres2439
      @joeltorres2439 2 months ago +1

      🤦‍♂️🤣

    • @donavoncash7739
      @donavoncash7739 2 months ago +7

      If he has a 164 IQ I have a 300 😂. Maybe he's smart with numbers. I mean you're going to leave your DNA in the house. That's the opposite of high IQ

    • @Wisdomio
      @Wisdomio 2 months ago +2

      @donavoncash7739 you don’t have a 300 idiot 😂

    • @Propcow
      @Propcow 2 months ago +4

      @Wisdomio I saw it it’s legit

  • @Dizzy_86
    @Dizzy_86 6 months ago +381

    I LOVE how in the first bit of the video you can't even see the detective and end of the video he's a foot away from that loser

    • @VILL4IN-1
      @VILL4IN-1 6 months ago +21

      Yes it’s a common interrogation technique to establish control and so on.

    • @BABBASTICKY
      @BABBASTICKY 6 months ago +13

      You LOVE that?

    • @BraveMike42
      @BraveMike42 5 months ago +47

      ​@BABBASTICKYyeah? You're watching the same thing we are. Quit trying to play morals on your high ground.

    • @myishenhaines1706
      @myishenhaines1706 5 months ago

      @BABBASTICKYLoving great technique that catches a murderer is perfectly normal.

    • @nacho5801
      @nacho5801 5 months ago +2

      ⁠@BABBASTICKY i love it too 😛

  • @maddisonbrown8679
    @maddisonbrown8679 2 months ago +14

    OG is so smooth. MAking his ass draw on the whiteboard self reporting himself HAHAHAH

  • @NickLDN25
    @NickLDN25 3 months ago +60

    That's just a 90 IQ guy with delusional self-confidence.

  • @VektorEpsilon
    @VektorEpsilon 6 months ago +808

    If the detective starts with "What kind of person do you think would do this?", just confess. You're already cooked.

    • @omarshariff06
      @omarshariff06 6 months ago +67

      Or when they ask “What do you think should happen to the person that did this?”

    • @Jinka1950
      @Jinka1950 5 months ago +3

      Stop it. You’re crackin me up

    • @Taytayyyk
      @Taytayyyk 5 months ago

      Like it’s over buddy !!💀😂

    • @mrnobody1457
      @mrnobody1457 5 months ago

      They ask that to everyone

    • @phillipspr77
      @phillipspr77 5 months ago +16

      Just dont voluntarily get questioned by police without a lawyer period.

  • @NeutralPalacePlayPlace
    @NeutralPalacePlayPlace 4 months ago +573

    It’s a characteristic of the killer to try to help find the killer 😂

    • @DarkflameEmperor
      @DarkflameEmperor 3 months ago +22

      Reminds me of the wife who continued to go to the police and try to figure out why the burglar who killed her husband hadn't stolen the car keys that were on the desk next to her husband but instead went up the stairs and ransacked the place to find odds and ends.
      She was all confused why the burglar had acted unlike a burglar would.

    • @Bepis1984
      @Bepis1984 3 months ago +20

      Light Yagami realy be like.

    • @mc-snack3316
      @mc-snack3316 3 months ago +4

      Typical ace attorney murderer

    • @GregoryErnhardt
      @GregoryErnhardt 3 months ago +8

      Like people who steal your sh*t and help you look for it lol

    • @adrianabarrios1202
      @adrianabarrios1202 2 months ago

      To control the narrative

  • @Decmatee
    @Decmatee 2 months ago +11

    It's crazy how composed he was to begin.

  • @j-ferrell144
    @j-ferrell144 4 months ago +629

    I have watched hundreds of these videos, that interrogator was by far the best I have ever seen… and it’s not even close

    • @codycast
      @codycast 3 months ago +9

      You really watched hundreds of these types of videos? I didn’t even realize there were hundreds of them out there.
      Then again, I’m not sure what I watched recently. That would cause RUclips to put this in my feed.

    • @codycast
      @codycast 3 months ago +4

      Also have any good ones you can recommend that are not AI generated? I hate these AI generated videos.

    • @saltyfish7626
      @saltyfish7626 3 months ago +16

      @codycast bro this video is not AI generated

    • @Juicegoatedfr999
      @Juicegoatedfr999 3 months ago +10

      He was very impressive, the whole time I was watching I was in awe of his talent

    • @4everMayito
      @4everMayito 3 months ago +1

      ​@codycast How is this AI lol. Even the voice is a person.

  • @rolltru
    @rolltru 6 months ago +324

    Detective keeps stealing "got him" glances at his partner lol

    • @Rolobubba
      @Rolobubba 5 months ago +4

      Timestamp?

    • @koeit7981
      @koeit7981 5 months ago

      ​@Rolobubbajust watch it you'll see them lol they r pretty funny when u realize. It happens alot when he is at the white board

    • @jn00ght
      @jn00ght 4 months ago +9

      @Rolobubba31:29 after he turns away to the white board

    • @highlandspeaker
      @highlandspeaker 4 months ago +11

      @Rolobubba also 8:30 when he throws his face in his hands.
      @rolltru i thought the same thing

    • @sfcSpidey
      @sfcSpidey 2 months ago +2

      @jn00ghtyeah saw that look was definitely “can you believe this !?” Look

  • @CrimeSceneReport247
    @CrimeSceneReport247 6 months ago +837

    The way the detective chipped away at every detail-the mower type, the dogs’ names, even whether the cigarette filter was brown or white-was genius. He slowly boxed Thane in until the truth had nowhere left to hide.

    • @mattbattaglia4694
      @mattbattaglia4694 5 months ago +68

      I think he was also showing him that he will not miss a single detail. Shake his confidence that he can outsmart him

    • @patricksergent8390
      @patricksergent8390 5 months ago

      ​@mattbattaglia4694yeah ur rite shake his cage a lil break his confidence in his own lies

    • @CJSopranoYT
      @CJSopranoYT 5 months ago +42

      Makes them lose track of the narrative that they’re spinning, sidetracking him with details that should be easy to answer for someone who’s not constantly concealing details and crafting a fake story. It’s hard to stay consistent in high pressure situations with curveball questions like these. Also turns the temperature up and makes mistakes pop up

    • @ggbellz
      @ggbellz 5 months ago +13

      Yes it’s a known tactic ! The way i’ve heard it described from a former secret service agent was to try it on little kids… who ‘stole a cookie out of the cookie jar’ type of incident.

    • @KellyKemp-i1q
      @KellyKemp-i1q 3 months ago +5

      Does anyone know this detective's name, I would watch him all day if I could

  • @Perth63915
    @Perth63915 Month ago +43

    I am retired METPOL (London) detective; this officer is A1 on the money with his interview technique; this skill is not easy and is (these days) a dying trade; props to him, excellent

    • @snowflake4656
      @snowflake4656 16 days ago +1

      It’s not difficult, he has all the info, in a position of power. Simple tactics used here, typically low IQ people fill these jobs.

    • @MM-Iconoclast
      @MM-Iconoclast 14 days ago

      Yes, the detective was excellent. And thank you for your service to the public.

    • @Frogtastic1
      @Frogtastic1 8 days ago

      Agreed. As soon as he wanted him to confess, he basically puts his hand on his shoulder & says (in so many words/attitude) "you did it & you're gonna tell me about it right now" & BOOM, flipped.

  • @clarkmeyer7211
    @clarkmeyer7211 5 months ago +801

    17:25 so this is an interesting trick you can use if you think someone is lying to you. If you instantly switch from an accusatory statement to something completely different basically dropping the topic you'll get one of two responses. Innocent people jump back to the topic to clear their name because they don't want that statement left as is. However a guilty person feels relief being pulled away from that subject so they will easily drop the topic without a moments hesitation. Notice how the officer changes topic after literally saying he lied and instead of saying hold on I didn't lie or this is the reason why I said it this way, he immediately jumps on to this new topic to get away from the fact that he was caught in a lie.

    • @brojoe44
      @brojoe44 5 months ago +25

      nice catch, this suspects really bad at his story lmao

    • @jamesmiller6829
      @jamesmiller6829 5 months ago +30

      Yea that doesn't always work lmao

    • @clarkmeyer7211
      @clarkmeyer7211 5 months ago

      ​@jamesmiller6829no shit sherlock. Every technique in interrogations and cross questioning isn't 100% consistent. What's next, you gonna mention he grass is green and the sky is blue? Thank you so much for that absolutely useless information.

    • @kit2130
      @kit2130 4 months ago +13

      Only in situations where that person would care. Like in a failing marriage with apathy they checked out a while ago & don’t give af what you think anymore.

    • @clarkmeyer7211
      @clarkmeyer7211 4 months ago +2

      ​@kit2130it's definitely applicable tk the situation but even interrogations force the situation in order to get these responses. Most interrogation setups are centered in the room away from corners to prevent the person in question from feeling a defensive comfort. Even the cliche of the light in the face is to help make the suspect feel isolated and out in the open to make them find their own defensive comforts which are usually tells that they are lying. For instance being out in the open is more likely to make them cross their arms when they don't want to admit to something or when they are lying. Many of these practices are to improve your chances at getting the truth but they are 100%.if they were 100% then police could just throw them in prison if they found them guilty.

  • @AJX-2
    @AJX-2 3 months ago +74

    "I'll be straightforward because there's no reason I can't"
    this dude is toast

  • @wellshoot
    @wellshoot 3 months ago +70

    “To be honest I’d be shocked if I were under arrest” yeah we got him

  • @ClaireQuinn566
    @ClaireQuinn566 Month ago +8

    That Detective is brilliant at keeping track of all the details and running circles around this evil monster.

  • @kaydenstegman4439
    @kaydenstegman4439 5 months ago +312

    I love the way as soon as he gets him in some type of lie or slip, he immediately moves onto something else in a hurry. The way he progressively ramps up the intimidation is so good

    • @Thumopolis
      @Thumopolis 3 months ago +10

      It’s really not anything special. Just a STUPID kid that had way too much experience lying to mommy and her not calling him on his bullshit and no experience dealing with police so he thought he could talk his way out of suspicion.

    • @Syk00o01
      @Syk00o01 3 months ago +5

      @Thumopolisthe detective does really well opening him up in the beginning by being super nice and acting like he believes him, then starts slamming and getting increasingly more aggressive to crack him.

    • @isaiahd9947
      @isaiahd9947 2 months ago +3

      Yeah I feel like he does it to stop him from shutting down. They act like buddies to try to keep the person they’re interrogating there and talking, once it feels like they’re getting pushed too hard the suspect might shut down, so changing the subject seems like I good way to distract them while keeping the tension

  • @42k78
    @42k78 2 months ago +280

    Oh, so he killed everyone for no reason. This makes me want to be around people even less.

    • @steveswartout3852
      @steveswartout3852 2 months ago +7

      As if it could get worse.

    • @axelarias2671
      @axelarias2671 2 months ago +1

      Thats sad😞

    • @Bucs87
      @Bucs87 2 months ago +3

      He wanted to see how good he was at killing 😳

    • @bobbygetsbanned6049
      @bobbygetsbanned6049 Month ago +15

      I feel like we didn't get the full story, he said he had it out for him, but didn't explain why, and then Bob helped cover it up, like he was more involved that we know about. Pretty crappy video.

    • @TonyN98
      @TonyN98 Month ago +5

      There’s a reason for everything. Serial k*llers do it for pleasure. It’s not hard to understand when you realize millions of people do it too, they just call it “hunting” and pretend it’s a sport

  • @JayNei22
    @JayNei22 5 months ago +1172

    These fake “IQ” killer titles are so lame and incredibly FALSE.

    • @fllf3078
      @fllf3078 5 months ago +27

      It'll be ok

    • @chrisbrown4539
      @chrisbrown4539 5 months ago +18

      @fllf3078 It's actually either "okay" or "OK" (both capital letters), so, technically, you're wrong.

    • @CrunP
      @CrunP 5 months ago +32

      ⁠@chrisbrown4539did you enjoy writing that? Would you feel better having written that or not? Do people--in general-- enjoy your presence?

    • @chrisbrown4539
      @chrisbrown4539 5 months ago +16

      @CrunP I'd say that I felt roughly neutral about it (neither joyful nor sorrowful), not that I owe you an explanation.
      I think my motive was eliciting exactly what you gave me (for the shits and giggles of it) -- a serious response (with a subtle undertone of superiority) to a reply from me that didn't have an ounce of seriousness to it. It's not like it's a big deal or anything, I've been known to misread sarcasm at times, too. We probably all have at one point or another. I think we'll survive it, yeah?
      As to your other psycho-analysis inquiry (isn't it fun to assume the role of someone else's psychiatrist?), there are a non-zero number of people who appear to enjoy my presence, or they're at least really good at faking as if they do -- which basically works out to the same from my perspective (isn't it?), so all's good in da neighba' hood.
      How' bout y'all (is "y'all" always plural? I looked it up, and it seems as if it can simply mean "you," as a singular person)?
      Is ewe gud in da hood?
      Feel free to not be serious with me, or you can keep being serious. Your choice (I'm fine with it, either way).

    • @CrunP
      @CrunP 5 months ago +7

      ⁠@chrisbrown4539the reasoning behind my comment was entirely based on the assumption that you were being serious. This stemmed from the fact that not many people go that far to grammatically correct someone on youtube. Usually its the "you're" correction. So all things considered, i apologize for getting that wrong. Wtf is with ur response tho? like u took this wayyy to seriously

  • @BTCGorilla
    @BTCGorilla 2 months ago +14

    So this is where that 6-7 thing came from 😂😂

  • @jarelleforbes9249
    @jarelleforbes9249 4 months ago +82

    31:30 the cops face of relief when he realizes he finally broke him and he’s abt to tell everything you need to know

  • @AymeeNJackVlogs
    @AymeeNJackVlogs 5 months ago +248

    I like how at the start, the detectives said “what was I doing again?” Quite a lot, making his own IQ seem so much lower to give this guy the upper hand straight away, which I think ultimately helped in the confession at the end

    • @chupathingy6626
      @chupathingy6626 5 months ago

      Absolutely, set the scene for the suspect to be SURE “I’m WASY smarter than this guy, I’m in control”.

    • @jaymethodus3421
      @jaymethodus3421 3 months ago +16

      Yea tbh I used to be an overly egotistical smart person and in hindsight it frightens me how truly ignorant I was to other people's ability to read me like a handwritten book

    • @FutureDeep
      @FutureDeep 3 months ago +3

      Classic Columbo strat.

    • @AymeeNJackVlogs
      @AymeeNJackVlogs 3 months ago +5

      @jaymethodus3421it’s always the better idea to be the quiet person in the room. Learn everyone else and read them like the handwritten books. Don’t allow anyone to read you. Sometimes you just can’t help it but if you can, do.

  • @truth_powers
    @truth_powers 5 months ago +225

    The fact that he said you would have to be “greedy” to kill people tells you a lot about psychopathic psychology

    • @nikid3690
      @nikid3690 3 months ago +28

      Yeah! I noticed that. It stood out to me as unusual.
      As if its something positive or desirable like eating a few too many sweets. Instant red flag

    • @lokanoda
      @lokanoda 3 months ago +10

      I thought that referred to stealing after the killing

    • @SudotheNomad
      @SudotheNomad 3 months ago

      Right like a thief.

    • @ErwinWertwijn
      @ErwinWertwijn 3 months ago +2

      Interesting take, I think I'm too innocent --> I didn't consider the sentence to mean what you understand it to mean.

    • @MrBananaMag
      @MrBananaMag 3 months ago +9

      No… it tells you a lot about SADISTIC traits.. kinda shitty to call psychopaths murderers when it’s 1 In 100… it’d be like calling autistic kids sexual offenders, imagine the outrage then? Because obviously that’s ridiculous.

  • @alexispalacios1725
    @alexispalacios1725 2 months ago +69

    1:15 say cold one more time

  • @mystic_mirage1
    @mystic_mirage1 3 months ago +126

    This is the type of kid who could totally blend in as a cool popular person which makes him more scary.

    • @Rumi-x8r
      @Rumi-x8r Month ago +10

      Are you serious? He's pretentious, smug, and all round insufferable

    • @julesghoulzz
      @julesghoulzz Month ago +19

      @Rumi-x8rexactly the type that would fit into the more popular crowd lmao

    • @dilligafzilla
      @dilligafzilla Month ago +9

      ​@Rumi-x8r you ever been to real life bro?

    • @tsmuff
      @tsmuff Month ago +4

      I kept thinking that the whole time. And how scary it is to me that the elderly couple he stayed with look so normal too and know he murdered a child and yet helped him cover it up!

    • @mystic_mirage1
      @mystic_mirage1 Month ago

      @julesghoulzz exactly

  • @j.e.t.v4016
    @j.e.t.v4016 3 months ago +59

    The only thing that fits together perfectly is the truth. Doesn't matter how smart you are.

    • @dougie6157
      @dougie6157 3 months ago

      💯💯honesty is everything

    • @jeffweston9743
      @jeffweston9743 Month ago +1

      Luke 8:17 For there is nothing hidden that will not be disclosed, and nothing concealed that will not be known or brought out into the open

  • @valicourt
    @valicourt 6 months ago +559

    “Why did you kill him?” “Don’t know, he was just trying to help me.”
    Beyond sad

    • @davemart3913
      @davemart3913 5 months ago +106

      What a psychopath. He should’ve gotten a dang lawyer but I’m glad he didn’t.

    • @Dan-q6v1v
      @Dan-q6v1v 5 months ago +13

      One has to be careful with the usual suspects.

    • @Tater4200
      @Tater4200 5 months ago +8

      ​@Dan-q6v1v you must not be a first 48 hours fan hu? 😂

    • @1Jason
      @1Jason 5 months ago

      @Dan-q6v1v13/50

    • @NocheHughes-li5qe
      @NocheHughes-li5qe 5 months ago +2

      @davemart3913 He's not a psycho.

  • @Rwissam1987
    @Rwissam1987 2 months ago +9

    These criminals are not only evil, they're also so dumb! Talking to the police without a lawyer?! He could have stopped the conversation and left at any point, but he put himself into prison, which he deserves!

  • @semperfi1042
    @semperfi1042 3 months ago +240

    That detective is incredible. Ton of respect. Dont find too many like him anymore. That man was solving crimes back before cell phones and video footage at every corner. 🤝

    • @Amy-wy1gd
      @Amy-wy1gd 2 months ago +6

      For real, I was impressed. I watched one the other day where the female detective just aggressively accused everyone and berated an innocent pregnant teenager whose baby daddy had been murdered. Then the case got solved because some random woman called in saying the girls brother had told her via email that their mother had done it! Case closed, bang up job detective! If Thane had been up against this woman he would have got away scott free, ridiculous.

    • @nickdrums-zi8ep
      @nickdrums-zi8ep Month ago +4

      There were cell phones and video cameras in 2010…

    • @Djellowman
      @Djellowman Month ago +1

      Provide evidence of the claim that "Dont find too many like him anymore".

    • @shaneo83
      @shaneo83 Month ago

      @Djellowman Good luck finding sufficient evidence to prove a negative of that magnitude. Pretty sure the onus becomes on you to find someone with a similar style. It's super rare.

    • @Djellowman
      @Djellowman 27 days ago

      @shaneo83 Nah. Don't find too much evidence like that anymore.

  • @tatonkapeach
    @tatonkapeach 5 months ago +215

    This investigator has total dad vibe. I couldn’t lie to him if I wanted to. Lawyer up dude. No one lies to dad

    • @DrGeorgeAntonios
      @DrGeorgeAntonios 5 months ago +7

      Well said.

    • @GreatEver-b7g
      @GreatEver-b7g 5 months ago +3

      Fr he could've just stfu😂

    • @redgrengrumbholdt2671
      @redgrengrumbholdt2671 5 months ago +3

      @GreatEver-b7g He wants, just like many psychopaths, to be caught. He wants people to know what he's capable of.

    • @TheForsakenRonin
      @TheForsakenRonin 4 months ago

      @redgrengrumbholdt2671 is that your “professional” diagnoses? 😂 lemme guess, your highest level of education was a high school diploma, and have absolutely no background in psychology and you are basing this on some other RUclips video that told you this.., or basic murder porn documentaries.. lol. Why on earth would he want to be caught and want the police to know what he’s capable of? You really think all psychopaths think and behave the exact same? Cmon now. That alone shows me you know nothing about psychology, mental illness, or even basic human sociology and interaction.

    • @Fantastic_Maggie
      @Fantastic_Maggie 3 months ago

      So true 😂😂

  • @leavesofgold3479
    @leavesofgold3479 4 months ago +181

    A good interrogator is cooler than any celebrity. Really cool to watch.

  • @StringDriver
    @StringDriver 2 months ago +25

    19:34 164 IQ? Where’s the proof of that? This guy falls straight into the manhole in the street the detective lays in front of him. This detective is flipping him around like a hamburger in a pan.

  • @GekoPish
    @GekoPish 5 months ago +487

    This interviewer (NOT THE ONE YOU SEE ASKING THE QUESTIONS) is one of the finest interrogaters I have seen online. He is also the guy that broke that School shooter Nikolas Cruze. Can tell by his voice. He is as slick as they come. Kudos. His name for reference is John Curcio BSO Homicide detective.

    • @JanetSmith900
      @JanetSmith900 5 months ago +25

      There's one who interrogated Leticia Stauch. He was an FBI agent. He was incredible.

    • @greeksdorok
      @greeksdorok 5 months ago

      I see it this way hes only as good as his suspect. Scammers target retards because they dont know anybetter. This guy can be defeated with 1 word. "Lawyer".

    • @ashleyproostentousalwa
      @ashleyproostentousalwa 5 months ago +5

      Heyy which video?

    • @GekoPish
      @GekoPish 5 months ago +3

      I am talking about the one that is off camera most of the time.

    • @GekoPish
      @GekoPish 5 months ago +7

      @ashleyproostentousalwa Who you asking ? If you want the Cruz one I am sure its called something like ''This is what a person pretending to be mentally ill looks like''

  • @1997CARDSxx
    @1997CARDSxx 5 months ago +44

    This is so sickening… he murdered a child and didn’t even think twice about it

  • @Green_Establishment
    @Green_Establishment 5 months ago +101

    Title should be renamed: “When a 98 IQ Murderer meets a 165IQ detective.”

    • @ThePetricore
      @ThePetricore 3 months ago +1

      I got a 165 on an online IQ test. Bow before me plebs!

    • @user-mb4gi1ec1b
      @user-mb4gi1ec1b 2 months ago

      ​@ThePetricoreI got 180, take a seat Cretin.

    • @johng4093
      @johng4093 29 days ago

      ​Are you in prison too?

    • @sethother8012
      @sethother8012 20 days ago +1

      I don’t doubt he has an IQ of 164. But the only thing an IQ test measures is how well you write IQ tests. A person doesn’t fail an interrogation because their brain is weak, they fail it because their heart is weak. An interrogator doesn’t need to engage in a chess match, he just needs to seek out remnants of goodness in the killer, because that goodness will rat him out in the end. Once he broke down emotionally, it was over no matter what his IQ is.

  • @TziMmys79
    @TziMmys79 2 months ago +5

    This detective is one of the smartest person I have ever watched. It's a blessing for us that he is doing this job.

  • @YDreams93
    @YDreams93 3 months ago +75

    Out of all the interrogation videos i watched this detective stands out

    • @Amy-wy1gd
      @Amy-wy1gd 2 months ago +4

      Oh yeah, i wish there was a channel just for his cases 😂

    • @DynastyInferno
      @DynastyInferno 2 months ago +2

      Wait until you watch the ones for Stephen macdonald. STAYVUN!

    • @Arete37
      @Arete37 Month ago +1

      The detective remembers the tiniest details that the murderer has said.

  • @FenderBender-dn4lj
    @FenderBender-dn4lj 5 months ago +1098

    Detective says calmly with a chuckle: “It’s a little dance that we’re doing, but you know that I know”
    Savage delivery

    • @DynastyInferno
      @DynastyInferno 2 months ago +5

      He could have been a slight of hand magician with that patter and small talk. Artisan.

    • @wesleybongiorni2092
      @wesleybongiorni2092 15 days ago

      How you don't completely fold after that I have no idea

  • @mikealman9259
    @mikealman9259 4 months ago +115

    This detective is the best interrogator I've ever seen!
    He knows exactly when to interrupt him an get him flustered.
    1st class 👌

  • @grace-x3s5g
    @grace-x3s5g 2 months ago +5

    Was not expecting this to be in a town I’ve visited many times, 20 minutes from where I grew up…

  • @diekky4187
    @diekky4187 5 months ago +42

    Detective's memory >>>>>>>>>

  • @jb8801
    @jb8801 5 months ago +466

    He can't be much of a genius if he's answering the cop's questions. Never talk to the cops.

    • @wheel631
      @wheel631 5 months ago +34

      Thought he could talk his way out of it - nope

    • @Tee33465
      @Tee33465 5 months ago +17

      Thinking he’s too smart to be tricked.

    • @sedmidivka
      @sedmidivka 5 months ago +18

      unless you're guilty in that case, don't worry, you're the smartest person in the room and definitely can convince the detectives. just keep talking

    • @JacobVargas-k4y
      @JacobVargas-k4y 5 months ago +5

      @sedmidivka exactly. I don’t condone lying to detectives or murder haha but NOT wanted to answer questions would arise more suspicion then smoothly answering the questions and alleviating the detectives suspicion. Obviously that didn’t go very well…

    • @Weex62
      @Weex62 5 months ago +7

      Even smart people have social troubles. Especially when they think they can outsmart anybody and get away with anything.

  • @donclrt
    @donclrt 4 months ago +33

    When he said “greedy” it was already a done deal

    • @GoobyGoobg
      @GoobyGoobg 2 months ago +1

      Fr first word he thinking is GREEDY 😭

  • @chocolatte8803
    @chocolatte8803 27 days ago

    I love how this detective makes him talk in circles and then point out the contradictions

  • @sebastianwhalin743
    @sebastianwhalin743 4 months ago +44

    Man that was a skilled interrogation. The constant questions always circling back to the same basic questions over and over in between the very crucial ones. It would confuse anybody of his motive.

    • @celesterehage8155
      @celesterehage8155 2 months ago +2

      Imagine being his child and trying to hide that you snuck out one night 😂 wouldn’t stand a chance

  • @superpurplemoon
    @superpurplemoon 6 months ago +59

    Now that's an interrogation!

  • @blizzy718
    @blizzy718 6 months ago +195

    Might be the best detectives! Their attention to details are unmatched

    • @russellpetty179
      @russellpetty179 4 months ago +2

      If you like this, check out the Russell Williams interrogation if you haven’t already.

    • @blizzy718
      @blizzy718 4 months ago

      ​@russellpetty179 much appreciated will.take a look

  • @jcclarkeru
    @jcclarkeru 2 months ago +7

    "You know that I know" was some good drama

  • @kaydenstegman4439
    @kaydenstegman4439 5 months ago +51

    “What do you think should happen to the person who did this”
    Me : “idk man you should ask them, best of luck. I need my lawyer”

  • @matthewpinson4208
    @matthewpinson4208 6 months ago +214

    This detective is 🔥🔥🔥 he ain't no amateur!

    • @-XxM.DxX-
      @-XxM.DxX- 6 months ago +3

      Yes he is. He’s only been on the job for 3 months

    • @jasonkenny9559
      @jasonkenny9559 5 months ago

      @-XxM.DxX-swear? How do you know this?

    • @-XxM.DxX-
      @-XxM.DxX- 5 months ago

      @jasonkenny9559yes

    • @w.kamaranjoku1712
      @w.kamaranjoku1712 5 months ago +7

      @jasonkenny9559he is just messing with you. That detective has years of experience.

  • @ashat438
    @ashat438 3 months ago +662

    37:15 bro was ahead of his time

  • @johnhatfield1070
    @johnhatfield1070 Month ago +1

    “I don’t answer questions.”

  • @Pepenthez
    @Pepenthez 5 months ago +46

    I love how the kids up there on the whiteboard like he’s teaching a class on how he has absolutely no alibi whatsoever.

  • @AverageGuy87-r7k
    @AverageGuy87-r7k 5 months ago +57

    That detective was razor sharp with the questions. He had dude all twisted up in his lies 😂

    • @grandchampion7275
      @grandchampion7275 2 months ago

      I mean he already had all the evidence and DNA. He just prepared a couple questions that would lead to obvious lies.

  • @alanalas6970
    @alanalas6970 5 months ago +38

    “You know that I know”. He’s getting to him psychologically and has no idea.

  • @spirited-rose
    @spirited-rose 2 months ago +1

    Jeez my heart started racing halfway through

  • @jburde26
    @jburde26 5 months ago +37

    if a detective ever asks you “what do you think should happen to the culprit?” … you’re probably the culprit

  • @imMatt93
    @imMatt93 4 months ago +14

    This guy is insane. Hes so calm and collective its evil and terrifying..

  • @ARCHIEJORDAN23
    @ARCHIEJORDAN23 5 months ago +48

    Bro asks was I getting coffee?? 🤨☕️

    • @Missstrish
      @Missstrish 5 months ago

      Or a joint!! Definitely IQ of 164

    • @oliviaw.2842
      @oliviaw.2842 5 months ago +10

      It's a tactic used by detectives to make them seem dumb/incapable. This is to increase the criminal's confidence

  • @crnrshtTV
    @crnrshtTV 2 months ago +3

    So skilled....getting him into small lies and brushing it of fast then going into very much detail about things that aren't important so his brain is can't keep up and remember....very impresive ❤

  • @hansdampf640
    @hansdampf640 5 months ago +16

    if that guys iq is 164,mine is over 9000

  • @natebeattie8945
    @natebeattie8945 5 months ago +219

    164 IQ is a ridiculous claim. That's 4 standard deviations. Pretty sure mr youtube over here just smacked the top of his keyboard when creating the thumbnail

    • @dharmaniche
      @dharmaniche 5 months ago +18

      I thought the same. It’s higher than Einstein. It’s just an attention grab, which I’m not too upset about as the poor victims deserve recognition. Hopefully hyping up the killer with insane numbers like this isn’t necessary in the future.

    • @Fleijah
      @Fleijah 5 months ago +10

      It's rare but he may well have scored it on a test, even if he didn't ever really achieve anything extraordinary. People try to judge IQ based on achievements but those aren't necessarily related

    • @theunknown2352
      @theunknown2352 4 months ago +8

      ​@FleijahAlthough it's true that IQ and achievement are often meaningfully disconnected, there are almost always indications of intelligence in people who breach the 2 standard deviation level on iq tests (164 is 4sd). This guy provides no indication of possessing anything beyond average intelligence, at best. Frankly, I'd be very surprised if he could crack 110.

    • @RustyAngel101
      @RustyAngel101 4 months ago +9

      I know someone with about that IQ. Amazing pattern recognition, arrogant, assumed he knows more than anyone else in a room, and is oblivious to his own blind spots. He also has low social awareness and zero street smarts.
      This killer could have a 164 IQ and still be this stupid. Arrogance makes them believe they can talk their way out of it.

    • @welhynole4082
      @welhynole4082 4 months ago +3

      Even geniuses can be terrible lying under pressure. It’s not like hes solving a problem. But a genius wouldn’t leave dna evidence. Especially 3 beer bottles on the counter and you know 1 is yours

  • @hue1083
    @hue1083 6 months ago +141

    He was doomed from the moment his parents named him thayne. They sounded out the name, wrote it down and said good enough!

  • @jlynnwb
    @jlynnwb 2 months ago +1

    Narcissism can make you believe you're smarter than everyone else in the room.
    I love how the cops corner him then change the conversation

  • @lesleymay6757
    @lesleymay6757 5 months ago +19

    That's why I'm sooo selective who comes to my house. Creepy af

  • @kendog508
    @kendog508 5 months ago +17

    *164 IQ killer.. *doesn’t realize they’re building a case against him

  • @danny79538
    @danny79538 4 months ago +23

    There are some really sick people in this world

  • @benhollingsworth4378
    @benhollingsworth4378 2 months ago +1

    Every time I see one of these videos I just cannot imagine there are people out there that will willingly talk to the police without an attorney.

  • @verbridgeexteriorsolutions1213

    How can anyone who has committed such a crime remain so calm during questioning..? Insane!

    • @PalmBeachFlorida24
      @PalmBeachFlorida24 5 months ago +73

      How? I'll tell you how. Psychopaths have no empathy. None. They operate in the world on a different spectrum a split reality. In fact, they despise those who are empathetic.
      Lacking shame and feeling no empathy means they have no remorse for harm. None.
      They are excited to harm, harm regulates their ego. Psychopaths bend others into a reflection of their choosing. Maligned and narcissistic, they prey on people who aid and help others =people who have high empathy. Kind people. Who preys on kind people? Demonic people.
      In my observation, their only true human emotion is the need for praise. Praise regulates their ego and keeps them from acting out the harm. Twisted, right? Beware of people who demand praise.
      In my experience working with psychopaths, I've yet to met one that IS insane. They're more Jekyll and Hyde / schizophrenic than insane.
      Psychopaths are intentional, not insane. Their harm is deliberate and constructed.
      Peace.

    • @PakSuyono-c4f
      @PakSuyono-c4f 5 months ago

      ​@PalmBeachFlorida24SO,,,YOU ALREADY KNOW THE MIND PSYCHOPATH,,,,INTERESTING👀

    • @jona7200
      @jona7200 5 months ago +7

      @PalmBeachFlorida24very very interesting observations

    • @dermotgodfrey1454
      @dermotgodfrey1454 5 months ago

      Compartmentalize.

    • @golfinguru11
      @golfinguru11 5 months ago +8

      ⁠@PalmBeachFlorida24I suspect I work with one and it’s pretty terrifying, particularly because I’ve seen them “mold” others around them to be more callous and apathetic to the well-being of others. I’ve also told them in so many words that I don’t like them because I see who they truly are, which has made my life easier because they leave me alone (for now). On the other hand, if they ever see me as a threat I fear what they’d do.

  • @deanhps
    @deanhps 5 months ago +111

    If he’s 164, I’m about 250

  • @TomCurtis-p1x
    @TomCurtis-p1x 6 months ago +212

    This interrogator is one of the best I’ve seen. This kid had no chance. He should’ve just kept his mouth shut and lawyered up.

    • @richardgreen62
      @richardgreen62 6 months ago

      He shouldn't of done it I'm the first place..scum of the earth I'd say he was

    • @Reallythough
      @Reallythough 5 months ago +4

      No money for a lawyer probably.

    • @nadyafromrussia
      @nadyafromrussia 5 months ago +20

      @Reallythough I wish there would be such thing as being entitled to ask for an attorney even without charge...

    • @BonkedMedia
      @BonkedMedia 5 months ago

      @Reallythoughhe could get a public defender

    • @oliviaw.2842
      @oliviaw.2842 5 months ago +16

      We WANT these psychopaths to get caught! They should never keep silent because these crimes need to be found out. Weird comment but very common lol

  • @Noraider15
    @Noraider15 2 months ago +1

    Remind me to never ask to use the restroom, unless Im positive I have to use it.