Anyone who has witnessed a pyschotic break will know how frightening this mustve been for him. Its one of the scariest feelings watching someone you love suffering like that, and knowing that if they come in contact with police, it could end very badly. These officers deserve every bit of praise they get for not escaliting this situation. Well done officers! ❤
I've been witness to, and been through a psychotic break. It's horrific, even though you logically know that no one will hurt you, you feel like everything around you could turn on its head at any moment. I'd compare the feeling to sitting in a room with a ticking bomb, however you don't know how much time is left on the countdown, and you would accept any answer, no matter how illogical, if it meant that the bomb would be defused. The stress is so bad that it's physically painful. I feel horrible for the parents in this story, they genuinely tried, however sometimes there's just nothing you can do. May they rest in peace, and hopefully their son will get the help he needs
This is so true. I have a friend who had a mental breakdown. He got kicked out of his house and stayed with me and my fiance, his parents couldn't take the rambling and incoherent changes in mood. Me and my partner felt bad so we let him stay with us. Multiple times we woke up to him standing at the foot of our bed, talking to us while we were asleep. When we locked our bedroom, he would just stand outside the door and talk through the crack between the door trim and the actual door. I was scared but also didn't want to abandon him. He began getting irate and thinking I, specifically me, had been plotting against him. After a couple days, we had to feel like shitty friends who called his parents to let him know he needed to go to a hospital. His parents called the cops and had them sent to us. When I tell you I was terrified for his life when they came, it was because of how out of control he'd gotten. I thought they might shoot him because he was so erratic. It was TERRIFYING. He's a great person and didn't deserve to go through that(especially not be hurt or be shot because he's not in control of his emotions). This stuff really changes someone's brain and makes them ill.
@@rosemaryus-ct6151I feel for you. It is an endless cycle. It’s so hard to manage - a full time job. I have a fam member who also suffers from this. So difficult to help her bc she refuses to stay on her meds. Each time she slips her mania is worse, and we don’t get her fully back. She currently is off her meds and likely will be Baker Acted soon. It breaks my heart. When on meds she is such a joy - a lovely, productive, functioning young lady - without meds she is far, far worse then the man in this vid. I hope you sucess with your child, and please take care of yourself as it can wear you down caring for others.
Most of them are not crazy though. This guy went through years of extreme child sex abuse. He was passed around by his father to get promotions at the UN. 99% of schizos are the result of extreme child abuse.
The officer that pulled him over should be an instructor on how to not escalate a situation. His tone of voice was so calm and reassuring. It very easily could have ended differently if the officer approached him with hostility and tried to flex on him.
I worked some years in a mental health care facility as an educator. I believe that having to deal every day with people with mental illnesses like schizophrenia, manic depression, paranoia (and so on) can teach A LOT on how to listen, talk and connect with people in general. I was fortunate enough to work in a good environment with good professionists around, and i would also say good persons before calling them patients: some of them willing to heal, some stuck in their illness but fighting everyday to be comprehended and to live their lifes. It was hard and emotionally\mentally challenging, and after some years i've had enough and quit: i tell myself i did especially for the long shifts (12hrs) and the lack of support to us workers. Anyway, i believe that this kind of job and type of experiences could educate law forces like police, especially since in mental health structures there are no deadly weapons involved (maybe sometimes unluckyly by chance), you have to face and deal with problematic mentally ill people on dayly bases, and you can really learn to listen\communicate\act and see situations clearer. Ah, and last but not least: keep calm! :)
That’s an excellent point. If he had rolled up acting in the typical macho control freak manner we often see in these videos it could’ve turned ugly fast. He’s the kind of law enforcement officer that we need way more of. It scares the heck out of me to think that there are people like this out there loose among the public and we have no idea who or where they are. I think this goes back to the 80’s when they closed all the mental health asylums and we stopped taking people like this out of the general population. There’s a trial program somewhere that has mental health counselors accompany cops on certain calls. I think that’s a great idea because they can’t be trained to handle everything and be good at all of it. As a side note I think the job of LEO has become much more than we should expect the average person to do as effectively as he did. They’re supposed to be able to handle driving really fast, weapons mastery, physical endurance, mental health support, family counseling and everything in between all without showing any personal bias. It seems like we’re setting them up to fail and when the wrong type of personality becomes LE, it’s a recipe for disaster. I apologize for rambling on these are just my two cents you can spend them any way you like. 🤜🏻🤛🏻
@@kimberlysparks3824 I agree with your view, sure a man can't be trained or be expected to handle every possible scenario people can make up. Some jobs are harder on the worker's life than what most think. Also here in Italy asylums were abandoned in the eighties (the "Basaglia law" which declared their closure, dates 1978)
Totally caught me off-guard! No wonder it's the most replayed moment of the video! I've watched it more than a dozen times now and I'm still howling hahahahahaha
> "he works for the UN?" > "worked, he worked, he's dead now i killed him" > "you killed him too?" > "i killed him" > "where's he at" > "uh, he's dead" > "okay" the delivery of this section feels like dialogue from some Pythonian comedy skit lol
The cops handled this perfectly. The officer that pulled him over did an excellent job listening to him and speaking kindly and clearly to keep him calm. Great job.
You son of a gun! You got me @11:17. Did you add that to make sure we were still awake? I'm glad you still got a sense of humor after posting all of these. GG my dude.
My sister has schizophrenia and props to these officers for seeing the situation for what it was and didnt escalate it further. Its terrifying not being able to control the turmoil in your brain and you can see how scared he is. Truly a tragedy for all sides in this situation. I pray for his own peace and peace for all of the other people involved in this situation. These cops are prime examples of how psychiatric incidents should be handled,thank you to the channel for putting this story out there ❤
This guy sounds exactly like my sibling before being diagnosed with schizophrenia. He would sit and think for hours "remembering" events that happened even though they never did and believed people in our family were conspiring against him and trying to kill him. He believed people wanted him medicated so that he would forget details of these so-called "memories" and that his mind was finally clear and he knew the truth. It was truly terrifying seeing this happen to him suddenly at the age of 28 after the loss of our mother.
Did he ever snap out of it? Realize none of it was true? My ex best friend went into psychosis and thought I was planning horrible things against her. I'm glad I got out of the friendship before anything bad happened, but I often wonder if she ever had a moment of clarity and realized that I loved her and meant no harm 😢
@@mamaniknik sometimes they do. my dad had psychosis from drugs. he knows most of the stuff was his own mind, but he still believes some of the stuff about my mom that isn’t true. it rlly just depends
@@mamaniknik I haven’t spoken to him about any of it because I don’t want to trigger anything but after getting care and being medicated his actions have shown that he doesn’t believe in those ideas.
My son has schizophrenia, these police officers handled this well. People dont understand how many people live in our country who are walking the very them line between sanity and insanity. Medication is imperative to keeping them successfully sane. My heart breaks for Robert and his parents. He didnt choose this disease. His brain broke.
It is unfortunate that society is forced to walk amongst the mentally insane, hoping they take their medicine. They need to be asylumed. A friend is schizophrenic, he's in his 40's and he's very dangerous off his medicine. He too believes people are drugging him
@@Arthurian. there needs to be another option in between asylum commitment and jail. Assisted outpatient treatments is a successful form of treatment, that is what my son is participating in and he is doing great. You just need to understand these diseases can attack anyone and they should not be punished for becoming ill or diseased, that's insane to me. Punishing people for becoming ill.
@@jatca1 I don't need to be subjected to their psychosis for refusing treatment, which is inevitable for schizophrenia. I'm not deserving of being an innocent victim because you think your insane child is harmless. Sorry, asylums are the only way to keep them from harming society.
I am so proud of how the police handling this situation with genuine concern and compassion. This video should go out to every police department to use in their training on how to handle a traffic stop. My heart goes out to Robert, he was so scared but so cooperative with the police. I hope he gets the help he so deserves.
Bless these cops for handling this poor man with care and respect. Schizophrenia is a devastating disease and sometimes ends up with someone getting hurt or killed. It's a heartbreaking situation that literally is out of everyone's control. The only way some of these sufferers can live any sort of normal life is in an institutional setting. I hope he was/is being cared for while he's dealing with the realization that he murdered his parents. Such a horrible tragedy.
I played guitar for a guy for a short time & I think he was very troubled too. He'd said, one time when we were drinking and recording, that he was concerned about his thoughts about wanting to know what people's insides looked like. I told him that everyone has intrusive thoughts but you just can't let them win. That was the last time I saw him. I hope he found help and is doing better.
It's sad to see. I'm schizophrenic too and had an episode like this before I was diagnosed and medicated. While you're in psychosis you will fully believe people are trying to hurt you, trick you, and it's like living through a nightmare. I'm lucky I didn't hurt anyone, but I understand why he would in this mental state.
This officer is a gem. All most of us need is to be listened to but especially someone in an episode. He says “ok” “right” “yeah” in a compassionate and real way.
The absolute fear in his voice, while still being respectful and compliant with the officers was heartbreaking. I almost wanted him to be a jerk so I could dislike him, but his behavior showed that he was terrified but was feeling safe now that the officers were caring for him. Imagine wearing body armor every day, as a civilian, because you just knew you were going to be shot at any moment. I hope this man will get the help he needs. Kudos to the officers for their compassion and calm demeanor which made the man feel safe.
@@tarrahbarker24 Yes of course I am sad for his parents, but I chose to post about an illness I have firsthand knowledge of. It didnt mean I have no empathy for their loved ones. Please don't read more into it than there is.
The patience they showed this man with what clearly was a state of severe mental instability was phenomenal. This officer knows how to read people well he knew that this arrest needed to be handled delicately.
This is a heartbreaking case! The initial officer knew as long as he stayed calm & continued to just talk to Robert, things wouldn't escalate. He could see a man who was afraid & wanted help. That fart though... I know it felt good to let that out! Thank you for keeping that in EWU!!!
I think the officer who stopped him and whose voice is on the recording did an amazing job of remaining calm, and by extension kept the suspect calm and cooperative. No aggressive speech, no yelling, no confusion. I think this police officer should be commended for a job well done.
It's good to see the police treat him with respect and acknowledging he's not well. It's sad that it seems his parents struggled with him his entire life to have such a sad outcome
You think you would have an easy time with a severely schizophrenic adult man? As someone who's known many people suffering that, if you think you could do better you are sorely mistaken
@@chrism4008Where’d that come from? He said it’s sad and they must’ve struggled. Where did he say or even imply the parents failed or he’d do better? 🤦♂️
Great response from the officers, very professional and didn’t let emotions overwhelm them. I rarely have pity for killers, but I can’t help but feel bad for this guy. Schizophrenia is a hell of a disease.
Yeah I very rarely feel bad for murderers, but there are legitimate circumstances where someone is mentally unwell and really doesn't know what they're doing. Those people need help and compassion, especially if they come out of their mental break and realise what they've done
@@heygoodday8879 You are either not old or mature enough to understand the point. Murder is bad. It's the worst thing somebody can do and this guy did murder two of them, his parents. It's an awful unbeiable tragedy. I'm not even that progressive like many European states and frnkly our own Canada, and think most murders should qualify for a life sentence, and many man slaughters (like drunk driving and killing somebody) should have harsher panishments. Like I don't like how many first degree murders in places get a 20-25 year or less. This being said, this dude is the definition of an an insane person. Everything about him. He doesn't sound drunk or high( not an expert on this dep to be honest) and the way he confesses to his crime is chilling. Our heart goes to the two victims but this dude is sick and he needs care. When and if he should be let out it is not up to me. Wow I'm high and ranted for a bit
It's sad. And it's next to impossible to get help for it unless you have done harm to someone or yourself. And hope it's not to late when it comes to harming yourself. The medication for it is brutal and you need so much support/money to get help for it. It's insane.
The fact you have compassion for a killer is why you aren't a killer. It's what makes us human and makes them monsters. This person was particularly ill, and needs help, not jail time. But we also cannot let them out to kill again.
This is real psychosis. With the interpretations of half heard conversations and strange noises as people talking bad and plotting against you. When you are in a bad spot it is so hard to see what is real and not. Stay strong, my friends. You are not alone. We are survivors together. You are here for a reason.
@@emmaberry9047 it's a fascist dog-whistle that anyone high up in the UN and medical industries are Jewish agents plotting... something? Once you start digging into what these people believe the less sense it makes.
He may have been telling the truth. UN troops in Haiti and Sudan have been accused of sexual abuse of children. In 2004-2007, according to an internal UN report, over 100 UN soldiers were sent home for their involvement in a "sex ring", but none were charged.
That’s extremely sad. It’s very hard to cope with a siblings mental health issues alone but to also have to possibly grieve them in your type of situation is even harder. I hope he gets the support he needs and I hope you don’t feel guilt along the way because some things are just not in our control
Thanks for explaining the terms and procedures - and doing it with respect. Makes videos like this so much more worthwhile than ones that are just the video, then everyone forms their own story and opinion with no facts. The comments in the thread are thoughtful and people are having informed discussions. It’s very refreshing on the internet these days!
Just because there is no evidence of past abuse of a person in their 50's doesn't mean it didn't happen. Plenty of people have histories of abuse that aren't known
I've only had one patient with schizophrenia and it was early onset childhood schizophrenia. To this day, nothing has scared me more. It's truly terrifying how real the delusions are to them, and it can be very difficult sorting out what is real and what is not in their lives. I really feel for him and the reality he has to face when he's out of the state he is in.
If they refuse to take medication, they deserve to be locked up in a psychiatric hospital for the rest of their days. I have a psychology degree, but you can’t convince me otherwise.
@@BoringOatsas long as the provider keeps the name confidential, there’s no ethical violation with HIPPA. How often do you comment on things you have no idea about??
There is never any evidence for child abuse that isn't photographic when it's told by an adult. I hate when people say "there is no evidence to support this accusation", abuse is rarely purely physical, there is rarely evidence. Kids don't call the police on their parents when abused, they internalise it as their fault. Schizophrenia is suffered mostly by child abuse survivors with PTSD. I believe him about the parents abusing him. A psychotic break can sometimes be a minds attempt to escape a painful reality. Death of a loved one is another big trigger for schizophrenia as its extremely traumatic to lose someone permanently.
He was so compliant with the compassionate officer, this just makes me feel so sad for other people struggling with and/or experiencing genuine mental illness/psychosis like this man
I know, right? He's clearly an intelligent man who is seriously affected by his illness. And kudos to those officers -- they were kind and respectful despite having a killer on their hands.
Why do you decide it's a mental illness over that what was happening could possibly have happened to him. You can't make an informed decision without all the facts.
@@alexisalexander9037 Oh I can very well do as I please thank you. In addition, I have a mental illness too. Ostensibly, this man has a cerebral malaise... You're dismissed.
My ex-girlfriends sisters husband committed suicide last year bc he's been struggling with schizophrenia for a long long time. He left a taped suicide note explaining why he did it. Which basically amounted to that he was exhausted from the voices in his head constantly talking and telling him to do scary shit all the time. He felt that he was putting his family in danger. So in his mind he neutralized the threat, which was sadly himself.
I had a distant cousin that I lived with whose parents worked at the Pentagon and was convinced that they had used her for experiments and the level of her psychosis really taught me a lot. I wonder how many children of government employees are suffering similar illnesses. I suppose their jobs only fuel the fire of the overactive mind😕
I have a friend who’s daughter is schizophrenic. She had problems her whole life and was finally diagnosed around 14 or 15. Her parents have been through hell taking care of her. She sees shadow figures like you see in horror movies. She also hears voices. Each has a name. One is good but the other is evil and tells her to do bad things. I know of several times she’s attacked them with knives, scissors, forks, etc. They lock it all up but she finds a way. I went with them the first time she had to be admitted and it was an incredibly difficult thing for her mom to do. Since then, she’s a regular at the local mental hospital. She’s 25 now and manages the best she can but she’ll never be able to live on her own. The hardest thing has been finding a drug that will help her. She’s on heavy anti-psychotics and the side effects are awful. Schizophrenia is a terrifying illness and my heart aches for his parents. For him as well, as I doubt he would’ve hurt them in his right mind.
I was diagnosed after high school with schizophrenia. Except, at the time, I was living on another continent, already diagnosed with acute depression and anxiety, smoking pot, and otherwise on a downward spiral. I was already mixing together the pot and my meds for the two previous diagnoses, so my mind was already not in a great state as I described my symptoms to the doctor at the time. He prescribed me risperidone to take along with what I was already taking. Being on those meds was one of the worst, and most prolonged, experiences of my life. It wasn't until years later, until after I had stopped taking all of the medications I'd been prescribed, did I truly begin to feel as if I was healing mentally. The treatment can sometimes be worse than the symptoms. Granted, I was never actively trying to harm anyone during this time, and I certainly never had any named voices in my head telling me what to do, so it could just be I was misdiagnosed. Still, I hope she gets the help she needs, be it through lighter medicine, or active therapy.
@@robertoclaux8654 Hearing voices and seeing things that other people can't is pretty much the hallmark of schizophrenia, so if you don't have either of those symptoms it's highly likely you were misdiagnosed. (Been hearing voices for about 10 years here.)
His father DID work for the UN. UN troops in Haiti and Sudan have been accused of sexual abuse of children. In 2004-2007, according to an internal UN report, over 100 UN soldiers were sent home for their involvement in a "sex ring", but none were charged.
Well no shit. You got good Ole Ronnie boy to thank for closing all the state hospitals where people like this were sent to get the treatment they needed. Its a shame that now that they've honed in the proper treatment for these disorders the government will no longer pay for it. Yep good Ole conservative hero ron, doubled the homeless population by closing those hospitals and doubled the prison population through mandatory minimums in the failed war on drugs. Oh and the cherry on top kicked off hyper inflation. Don't get me wrong I don't like democrats either but every once in awhile there comes someone so bad at their job you kind of got to take a moment and stand in awe.
well he is a monster. if he felt safe around police he just could have told them that his parents are evil beforehand, instead of doing brutal things to them. and if he wanted to end them for his safety because in his reality they were evil, he still wouldnt have needed to tazer and beat his mom or put his dads head in a dumpster
@@denjua1The thing with mental illness, especially this bad, your rationing is not the same as theirs. "They wouldn't have" "Shouldn't have" are things that- for the most part, they don't think about in psychotic states. It's not black and white like that, and it's a lot more than he just thought his parents are trying to hurt him. Is he a monster? That's up to debate. Is mental illness like this that black and white like your comment? No.
I was going to say something similar to this. What he's saying isn't that outlandish to me, especially after researching cases like the Franklin Coverup (which was not a hoax). He exhibits clear signs of mental illness, but I'm not so sure that some of the stuff he was accusing them of wasn't the cause of it.
My mom has schizophrenia. She's a musician too. But shes never actually played any instruments or sang any songs. I found out over the years a great number of people with schizophrenia or related mental illness that cause the patient to enter a state of psychosis in intervals end up becoming "musicians." This is due to the delusions.
As someone who suffered from four bouts of psychosis, I want to say thank you for compassion. I don’t remember half of what I did but the other half I do. And it’s absolutely terrifying. I could’ve done anything to anyone and was lucky I got taken seriously like this chap. Hugs to you.
I have zero sympathy. None. At all. A mentally delusional man murdered his own parents in cold blood. His mental state never concerns me. Lock up this obvious psychopath forever. The insanity plea should not exist either.
It's a shame mental health care especially in the United States is very poor and if it was better his family would still be alive and he would have been given help he needs
@@markhusseymh1What do you mean? This man had doctors and was prescribed medication that he stopped taking. I understand and agree that medical treatment can always get better, it’s not perfect. But how is this the mental health fields fault? Again, he has doctors and had been on meds that he decided to stop taking. I don’t know anything about his family life, or who he had around him to notice what happened… it’s a possibility he had been doing great on his meds and then all of the sudden decided to stop taking them and before anyone noticed, he had this episode. Not everything is “the systems” fault.
If he was willing to tell the truth about killing his parents it’s believable that what he said about the abuse would be true also. And being brainwashed to forget and then all of a sudden coming the point in his life where he remembered must be intense and unimaginable. Who knows..
This is heartbreaking, my husband suffers with mental illness and has had more minor bouts of psychosis. Having him lose his independence and get involved with the police are nightmares for me. Im really glad these police didnt escalate anything and were respectful to him.
@@CEO_of_Unpopular_Opinions you act like love and loyalty don't exist. There would be consequences I would be leaving him alone, I would lose my connection with his family, and my heart would be broken. I met him and fell in love with him before his disorders manifested fully, he was there for me during hard times and when I married him I said in health and sickness. I meant those vows and wouldn't leave him to suffer alone. That said if he ever harmed me or was disloyal to me it would be different. But he loves and respects me so I do the same for him. I'm part of support groups with many women like me who live with spouses that suffer from mental illness but want to be there and make it work. We aren't that rare, and as long as the man is trying to help himself by getting treatment and loves the woman it can work.
@@river8760 Clearly you have NO clue what kind of pressures and stressors I live with, and what field of work I am involved in. Thanks for your input though. EnjoYour day.
All of these officers were incredibly professional, which is why I was absolutely blown away when the cop planted some of his own evidence in the car during the search. EDIT: For reference - 11:17
I have a son like this, he has all these symptoms, false memories, grandiose hallucinations, and the sadness about his family. He is combative with the guards at his jail and me. He is escorted with guards in protective gear, almost like swat officers. It is so very sad, and demoralizing to have a child like this. I know in half of my mind that he could harm us someday. The other half of my mind believes he could be ok if he could heal his brain with nutrition, vitamins, meds, therapy, etc. But it could never ever be a sure thing, so I don’t fight for him to “get helP”. Or be realeased any more. He needs to be in a compasionate therapeutic medical setting, pretty much for the rest of his life. He was my baby. He was so funny, well loved, a musician and thespian. He could play any instrument he picked up, which is a sign of intelligence. I love him and will always love him. God bless this man even in his terrible state.
Psychosis is such a terrifying thing, I’ve been in a drug induced psychosis and I barely remember what I was doing, but my parents told me I lashed out when my mother woke my up late in the afternoon, I screamed curses and I tried to grab onto my mother and attack her, I was convinced she wasn’t real and a hallucination, as I experience derealisation and disassociation, and I extremely paranoid, I was hallucinating and tempted to hurt both myself and my family, my father had to pull me back and I was admitted to a hospital, and put in rehab for my drug addiction and mental illnesses, it really terrifying to not be in control of your self and actions
My uncle has Schizophrenia. He spent a lot of his youth in prison. When he got out in his late 30s he lived behind us. He was diagnosed with Schizophrenia while in prison. He was the most gentle man you would ever meet unless off his medication. When he was off his medication he would come outside all hours of the night screaming and raving towards people that weren't there. He would call my siblings and I names of old guards that treated him poorly in prison and tell us he would kill us. My siblings were so scared of him, but I never felt fear towards him. He is currently in prison again. I feel so sad for him.
The police response and handling of the bizarre situation is commendable. Clearly a man experiencing a deep psychosis with terrible consequences. Respect from Ireland.
Good cop. Totally deescalated the situation. So many cops would have screwed this up. This officer was PROFESSIONAL! The others were too. Dealing with this unhinged man in the best way they could. Ohio must have higher standards for their officers, better training, and far better educated. I don't know who you are but thank you for doing your job so well. You make people proud of the police and coming from me that's unusual to hear.
Yeah, this same situation but in Florida may have gone differently. I believe police should have some understanding of different mental illnesses and how best to approach as well as mental health for the police. As men we tend to bury our emotions deep inside and not talk about it. Letting it build to unhealthy levels that could lead to really bad outbreaks are seemingly nothing.
Me as well* My opinion is that ALL individuals paid to uphold the*Law, Must be trained as Well as those who are trained into our "3-Letter*Agencies" Those in possession of the Power that allows one to carry a weapon, and dictate that control Over Anyone, must have exemplary character, judgement, and ethics*
There are a lot of cases where children were trafficked to high profile political figures in Europe, and if his father worked for the UN for all those years, it seems perfectly plausible that this happened to him for his father’s political gain and without anyone else’s knowledge. And even with the best intentions, if his mother didn’t know, and she was a mental health professional, she would have also seen his world falling apart and assuming that he needed treatment and sent him away, or in his mind, “locked him up and drugging him,”without actually acknowledging that trauma. The crime even plays out the projection, with him removing his mother’s body from the house and putting it in a box, and the fact that most of the rage was seemingly aimed at his father
I feel so bad for him when he says he has great memories of being married but isn't sure if it's true. I have bipolar disorder and I've had psychotic episodes...even now in my stable state, the most difficult thing is having insight into your own illness because it just makes it so, so sad to realize you aren't right and moreover, cannot trust your own brain.
i believe he said he had 'vague' memories of being married in high school. it's probably one of his delusions. i hope u have someone u trust to help u get by.
I'm really surprised that he felt so comfortable and safe with the police. Lot of times people will think that the police are in on them being "stalked" or threatened when they're in psychosis. For this poor guy it seems that they were the only people that made him feel safe at all.
That proves he was a victim of his parents. People have no idea what it's like to fight for your life and its effects on people. Nobody remains calm and collected.
He felt safe from the PTSD his parents caused with their evil abuse. He even stated nefarious things were done to him. He was likely a victim of satanic ritual abuse (SRA), sadly. I believe every word he shared.
That comes from years of parents that rely on police help in their daily lives at work, telling their children that if they have a problem they should go to the police. as for the comments claiming abuse and Satanic rituals 😂, you'd demonise the police so that the victim would be too afraid to go to the police for help. That's a common tactic I encountered when I worked with abused kids, a distinct lack of trust because they were conditioned into believing both the police wouldn't believe them, and would lock them up for lying.
My diagnosis/labels are; *Acute paranoid schizophrenia *Psychotic delusional episodes *Aspergers (Higher functioning Autistic) Those are the ones that stuck! Ummm, yea it's difficult a strong mother certainly helped me! I'm actually a user representative for the East Dorset mental health team I sit at the table for the board of governors and all sorts, it's interesting I could probably be convinced to eat half of them very easily (is that funny, did I learn humour yet?) and yet they listen to me, I'm pretty sure wood pigeons are the real enemy now I know that's probably not reality but I still believe it and doctors still listen to my recommendations, they think I'm crazy haha... Pretty sure my point can only be that mental health treatment is broken, but we are trying, they are, we, me...😮 Stay safe and keep smiling people...
I have a brother with schizophrenia and he’s also got paranoid delusional thoughts. He attempted to kill my parents, luckily it didn’t work. It’s so hard to get your adult loved one the help that they need unless they have committed a crime. My brother was let out of jail in 2020 for a Covid compassion release because of overcrowding. He ran and hasn’t been arrested since. He’s the scariest person I know in real life.
Those ffffing covid compassion releases. Scariest man I know kept getting out of jail thru covid quarantine. Super violent and delusional but they never keep him inside.
All of these comments are so heartwarming, and I tend to agree with everything said about Robert. I hope he gets all the helps he needs. With that being said, is no one going to talk about how HILARIOUS it was when he made it sound like something crazy was going to happen when he said “the officer did something completely unexpected” and cuts to him ripping a huge fart 🤣🤣 I laughed out loud omg
I couldn't be a cop. No fricking way this wouldn't bother me to no end. I grew up with a homicide detective. Lived in his home for weeks sometimes. His son was my best friend. He got really angry once. When he investigated a child killing. He hugged us both very hard for no reason, I thought anyway. His wife told us why later. No way I could be this strong of a man.
Yeah and he was a homicide detective. These guys are patrol officers or beat cops and have to face this. We need people to be more compassionate, both the police and the people who judge them
@@TheLikenessOfNormal Uncle Sandy was a rock. He showed me how a real man conducts himself. Tall, silent, compassionate and strong. My dad, not so much.
My dad was a paramedic in Camden and Philly. To me, he might as well have been an accountant. He never talked about his jib and we never asked. After 12 years he went back to doing electric. Many years later he told me he couldn't deal with losing kids. My dad was cold as ice, and it only took 12 years to break him. I have so much respect for our first responders, now as an adult. My dad really was my hero. He was a medic and fireman for the town we lived in and every time I was a pile of broken bones needing to get scraped off a soccer field, the ambulance would come flying onto the field and he'd be out the door before it stopped. I knew he loved us, his own kids, but never in my life have I heard anyone accuse him of being a kind man. I never would have guessed he had a soft spot for kids.
I know right?? I don't remember the last time I've laughed my lungs so empty with tears running down, seriously :'DDDDD just so unexpected, getting so emotional over the case first and then this happens
I feel incredibly bad for him. People can hate, and blame all they want but unless you have a mental disorder you have NO clue what it's like to be a victim in your own mind. My heart breaks for him, his deceased family. One of my friend's aunts lost her fight to schizophrenia, even with meds it became too much and she decided it was time to give up. Even bipolar disorder can be very rough, my brother has it and would always stop taking his meds. I remember my mother asking him why and he said because they make you numb. He said it was better to feel negative emotions than nothing at all.
My son's added problems were without a doubt caused by meds for autism. The pharmaceutical business cares nothing about a lot of what they've caused. And this legalized marijuana bull 💩
I friend of mine was bipolar with schizophrenia. He frequently would think he no longer needed meds and would stop them and relapse. He, too, said the meds made him numb and he hated it. He ended up shooting himself in the head after telling family to come get his guns because he was hearing voices. He was such a wonderful person and didn't deserve that struggle. No one does.
This makes me want to cry. He knows the truth when he is on his meds but every time he is off of them he thinks this is the truth. I can hear the fight in his mind. Poor guy
@@emmettdonkeydoodle6230 The man deliberately stopped taking his medication to treat his schizophrenia and these heinous action's are a direct result of him not wanting to take his medication which makes him responsible for these actions even though he was delusional while commiting said crimes he was still in his right mind when he decided against taking his med's which means he can't be trusted and the fact that they implied he could possibly be released with condition's if he show's signs of getting better is just beyond me, these people are to dangerous to be kept in the general population, they need to be put in a straight jacket and padded room for life sorry not sorry.
I like this officers original call for help. I have a pet peeve on my dept and some neighboring depts where officers want to give a full deposition of their need for help. At a critical moment, knowing you need help is all that’s needed so you can focus on the threat at hand. So this officers transmission, “57 get here NoW” is perfect! IMO.
This is so sad and difficult 😔 the murders were so so brutal. My heart breaks for these parents. He clearly wasnt in his right mind throughout any of this though too. I hope he ends up somewhere that he can find stability where he is safe and everyone else is safe from him
You can tell this guy is truly frightened by everything he's experiencing, both in the real world and in his psychosis. I know I would be, if I was questioning pretty much the reality of what I was seeing, hearing, feeling etc. So glad that the officers seemed to understand that and treat him with the dignity he needed to feel more safe
Yeah his illness is basically amplifying everything around him not just the real things but the fake things as well. It sounds horrible. He feels like everything is out to get him
Very sad and tragic case. I have to admit though, I got a chuckle out the one point where said this to a police officer happily living in this area of Ohio: "I've never seen anything so atrocious as this area of Ohio! My god! I can't believe that this country is like this. I can't believe it! It scares the living shit out of me!"
I feel so bad for this guy. Prison isn’t the answer, but neither are regular mental institutions. Psychiatrists and psychologists have no idea what they’re doing. They seldom agree among themselves
This is heartbreaking to watch. His paranoid schizophrenia is so immediately apparent. I hate seeing how people’s poor mental health can drive them to such tragic extremes 😞 just such a sad story for everyone involved
It's so immediately apparent, yet half the comments here literally believe his delusions completely. Makes me worry about the IQ of half the population...
@@leahflower9924 It's incredibly difficult to fake pyschosis. There's leagues and hoops of evaluations you have to go through. I'd be damned if you could find a case where it worked.
I came to the same conclusion. As someone who has been in (relatively) close association with three people suffering from Schizophrenia - one a distant relative, and two others, I immediately realized the nature of this poor guy's problem. It's really crazy - I believe that dealing with mentally affected people is possibly one of the scariest and most troubling situations to have to deal with - for family members and caregivers alike. The general public have absolutely no idea what a nightmare of a problem Schizophrenia is, for the sufferers, and those who are close to them.
My cousin did the same thing to my aunt. It was obviously very sad, traumatizing, and confusing but mental health is a real thing and when someone is this ill, the possibilities are terrifying & unspeakable…and it’s truly heartbreaking. Unfortunately the result can be this kind of nightmare. And it is so sad for *everyone* involved. 😢
Nice to see officers understand and be compassionate with his mental illness and how to handle the situation properly. Schizophrenia is so heartbreaking. 😢
I love that dispatcher’s attitude.
“I’ve got a guy here who says he’s killed his parents.”
“Lovely”.
that and the 'big fart' was gold
@@user-eo7jf3lb9f Relief!
@@user-eo7jf3lb9fI live around here and if i ever get pulled over by that dude im mocking him so harddddd
@@h3ck774 please record that 😂😂😂
6:10
The much needed comedy break where the officer “rips a big fart” was well timed!
Probably shouldn't have laughed
as loud as I did when that happened.
It’s a nice little bit of comedy in what is a pretty chaotic and strange confession
😂😂😂😂
I thought Robert did that
@@kemp10 I think it was him
Anyone who has witnessed a pyschotic break will know how frightening this mustve been for him. Its one of the scariest feelings watching someone you love suffering like that, and knowing that if they come in contact with police, it could end very badly. These officers deserve every bit of praise they get for not escaliting this situation. Well done officers! ❤
When he started listing everything he had in his inventory, I lost it. Straight out of reno 911!
Just imagine how frightening it must have been for the parents
Exactly what I said about my autistic son!!
I've been witness to, and been through a psychotic break. It's horrific, even though you logically know that no one will hurt you, you feel like everything around you could turn on its head at any moment. I'd compare the feeling to sitting in a room with a ticking bomb, however you don't know how much time is left on the countdown, and you would accept any answer, no matter how illogical, if it meant that the bomb would be defused. The stress is so bad that it's physically painful.
I feel horrible for the parents in this story, they genuinely tried, however sometimes there's just nothing you can do. May they rest in peace, and hopefully their son will get the help he needs
This is so true. I have a friend who had a mental breakdown. He got kicked out of his house and stayed with me and my fiance, his parents couldn't take the rambling and incoherent changes in mood. Me and my partner felt bad so we let him stay with us. Multiple times we woke up to him standing at the foot of our bed, talking to us while we were asleep. When we locked our bedroom, he would just stand outside the door and talk through the crack between the door trim and the actual door. I was scared but also didn't want to abandon him.
He began getting irate and thinking I, specifically me, had been plotting against him. After a couple days, we had to feel like shitty friends who called his parents to let him know he needed to go to a hospital.
His parents called the cops and had them sent to us. When I tell you I was terrified for his life when they came, it was because of how out of control he'd gotten. I thought they might shoot him because he was so erratic. It was TERRIFYING. He's a great person and didn't deserve to go through that(especially not be hurt or be shot because he's not in control of his emotions). This stuff really changes someone's brain and makes them ill.
This breaks my heart. My paranoid Schizophrenic brother sounded like this many times. It's a horrible life.
i was married to a schizophrenic and one of our children turned schizophrenic when he hit puberty. it was very difficult.
@@rosemaryus-ct6151I feel for you. It is an endless cycle. It’s so hard to manage - a full time job. I have a fam member who also suffers from this. So difficult to help her bc she refuses to stay on her meds. Each time she slips her mania is worse, and we don’t get her fully back. She currently is off her meds and likely will be Baker Acted soon. It breaks my heart. When on meds she is such a joy - a lovely, productive, functioning young lady - without meds she is far, far worse then the man in this vid. I hope you sucess with your child, and please take care of yourself as it can wear you down caring for others.
Most of them are not crazy though. This guy went through years of extreme child sex abuse. He was passed around by his father to get promotions at the UN. 99% of schizos are the result of extreme child abuse.
@@rosemaryus-ct6151 your house must of had enough pills to Sedate a whale 🐋
God bless
The officer that pulled him over should be an instructor on how to not escalate a situation. His tone of voice was so calm and reassuring. It very easily could have ended differently if the officer approached him with hostility and tried to flex on him.
I thought the same thing. Obviously an intelligent officer!
@@gsand07 just humain
I worked some years in a mental health care facility as an educator. I believe that having to deal every day with people with mental illnesses like schizophrenia, manic depression, paranoia (and so on) can teach A LOT on how to listen, talk and connect with people in general. I was fortunate enough to work in a good environment with good professionists around, and i would also say good persons before calling them patients: some of them willing to heal, some stuck in their illness but fighting everyday to be comprehended and to live their lifes. It was hard and emotionally\mentally challenging, and after some years i've had enough and quit: i tell myself i did especially for the long shifts (12hrs) and the lack of support to us workers. Anyway, i believe that this kind of job and type of experiences could educate law forces like police, especially since in mental health structures there are no deadly weapons involved (maybe sometimes unluckyly by chance), you have to face and deal with problematic mentally ill people on dayly bases, and you can really learn to listen\communicate\act and see situations clearer. Ah, and last but not least: keep calm! :)
That’s an excellent point. If he had rolled up acting in the typical macho control freak manner we often see in these videos it could’ve turned ugly fast. He’s the kind of law enforcement officer that we need way more of. It scares the heck out of me to think that there are people like this out there loose among the public and we have no idea who or where they are. I think this goes back to the 80’s when they closed all the mental health asylums and we stopped taking people like this out of the general population. There’s a trial program somewhere that has mental health counselors accompany cops on certain calls. I think that’s a great idea because they can’t be trained to handle everything and be good at all of it.
As a side note I think the job of LEO has become much more than we should expect the average person to do as effectively as he did. They’re supposed to be able to handle driving really fast, weapons mastery, physical endurance, mental health support, family counseling and everything in between all without showing any personal bias. It seems like we’re setting them up to fail and when the wrong type of personality becomes LE, it’s a recipe for disaster. I apologize for rambling on these are just my two cents you can spend them any way you like. 🤜🏻🤛🏻
@@kimberlysparks3824 I agree with your view, sure a man can't be trained or be expected to handle every possible scenario people can make up. Some jobs are harder on the worker's life than what most think.
Also here in Italy asylums were abandoned in the eighties (the "Basaglia law" which declared their closure, dates 1978)
11:22 Being a avid true crime fan hearing “he did something completely unexpected” usually is something intense but this was the complete opposite😂
Totally caught me off-guard! No wonder it's the most replayed moment of the video!
I've watched it more than a dozen times now and I'm still howling hahahahahaha
1st time I've heard intentional campy-ness on this channel!😂
@@maxguerra6588what the heck is campy-ness. I'm just curious lol is like a term for a joke?
@@clikked7343 ya it basically means goofy. Like the old Adam west batman was a campy show
@@clikked7343definition of campy is “deliberately exaggerated and theatrical in style, typically for humorous effect”
> "he works for the UN?"
> "worked, he worked, he's dead now i killed him"
> "you killed him too?"
> "i killed him"
> "where's he at"
> "uh, he's dead"
> "okay"
the delivery of this section feels like dialogue from some Pythonian comedy skit lol
Hahha I laughed @ this. Thank you.
Might sound dumb but the officer was making sure he stated Cleary on body cam that he killed them
The cops handled this perfectly. The officer that pulled him over did an excellent job listening to him and speaking kindly and clearly to keep him calm. Great job.
When he comes out of this psychosis, it's going to be very difficult for him to come to terms with what he's done. Tragic for everyone involved.
You can't reason people like him out of their delusions.
Very sad stuff.
probably skitzo
@@democratsarepedos go back to your bunker.
@@democratsarepedosUN is corrupt and nothing but warmongers...peace organization my ass... evil
"As the officer searches the vehicle, he does something COMPLETELY unexpected..."
I almost spit out my milk.
OMG!! The cop ripping a big fart cracked me up. 😂😂😂
Did you really drink milk at that time?
@@Alen725 Milk is good anytime!
@@Thunderbyrd. Oh hi fellow milk enjoyer.
Lmmfao I am dead. I swear j was like how tf nobody heard that
You son of a gun! You got me @11:17. Did you add that to make sure we were still awake? I'm glad you still got a sense of humor after posting all of these. GG my dude.
My sister has schizophrenia and props to these officers for seeing the situation for what it was and didnt escalate it further. Its terrifying not being able to control the turmoil in your brain and you can see how scared he is. Truly a tragedy for all sides in this situation. I pray for his own peace and peace for all of the other people involved in this situation. These cops are prime examples of how psychiatric incidents should be handled,thank you to the channel for putting this story out there ❤
This guy sounds exactly like my sibling before being diagnosed with schizophrenia. He would sit and think for hours "remembering" events that happened even though they never did and believed people in our family were conspiring against him and trying to kill him. He believed people wanted him medicated so that he would forget details of these so-called "memories" and that his mind was finally clear and he knew the truth. It was truly terrifying seeing this happen to him suddenly at the age of 28 after the loss of our mother.
Did he ever snap out of it? Realize none of it was true? My ex best friend went into psychosis and thought I was planning horrible things against her. I'm glad I got out of the friendship before anything bad happened, but I often wonder if she ever had a moment of clarity and realized that I loved her and meant no harm 😢
Are you still in contact with your sibling? What happened to him? Was he able to become medicated, keep a job, stay high functioning?
@@mamaniknik sometimes they do. my dad had psychosis from drugs. he knows most of the stuff was his own mind, but he still believes some of the stuff about my mom that isn’t true. it rlly just depends
My brother also has schizophrenia, it's such a horrible thing :(
@@mamaniknik I haven’t spoken to him about any of it because I don’t want to trigger anything but after getting care and being medicated his actions have shown that he doesn’t believe in those ideas.
My son has schizophrenia, these police officers handled this well. People dont understand how many people live in our country who are walking the very them line between sanity and insanity. Medication is imperative to keeping them successfully sane. My heart breaks for Robert and his parents. He didnt choose this disease. His brain broke.
It is unfortunate that society is forced to walk amongst the mentally insane, hoping they take their medicine. They need to be asylumed. A friend is schizophrenic, he's in his 40's and he's very dangerous off his medicine. He too believes people are drugging him
@@Arthurian. there needs to be another option in between asylum commitment and jail. Assisted outpatient treatments is a successful form of treatment, that is what my son is participating in and he is doing great. You just need to understand these diseases can attack anyone and they should not be punished for becoming ill or diseased, that's insane to me. Punishing people for becoming ill.
@@jatca1 I don't need to be subjected to their psychosis for refusing treatment, which is inevitable for schizophrenia. I'm not deserving of being an innocent victim because you think your insane child is harmless. Sorry, asylums are the only way to keep them from harming society.
😱🙏💖🇬🇧
@@DaleAl-lg4ul the unfortunate truth right there.
I am so proud of how the police handling this situation with genuine concern and compassion. This video should go out to every police department to use in their training on how to handle a traffic stop.
My heart goes out to Robert, he was so scared but so cooperative with the police. I hope he gets the help he so deserves.
Bless these cops for handling this poor man with care and respect. Schizophrenia is a devastating disease and sometimes ends up with someone getting hurt or killed. It's a heartbreaking situation that literally is out of everyone's control. The only way some of these sufferers can live any sort of normal life is in an institutional setting. I hope he was/is being cared for while he's dealing with the realization that he murdered his parents. Such a horrible tragedy.
The " he does something completely unexpected" caught me off guard. xD
ruclips.net/video/LJS5rVvfG38/видео.html&ab_channel=klaudorino
He wasn't wrong either
Sounded wet 😂
I hope the officer checked his drawers after that doozie.
Omg how are more people not talking about this 😂😂😂
Great job by the officers for treating this man with respect, letting him talk and not subjecting him to ridicule or force. Well Done.
I agree, Great job!!!
Yeah it’s amazing how well things go when you do what’s asked of you 😂
He killed two innocent people who cares how cops treated him ….something’s wrong in this world…people care about feelings more then their lives 🤦♂️
they never read him his rights. you might as well be applauding himmler
lol Big leap you took there mate smdh@@marcus576
I feel so much pain for this man. He needs help and he seemed so genuinely scared and upset and just wanting to help the officers.
I played guitar for a guy for a short time & I think he was very troubled too. He'd said, one time when we were drinking and recording, that he was concerned about his thoughts about wanting to know what people's insides looked like. I told him that everyone has intrusive thoughts but you just can't let them win. That was the last time I saw him. I hope he found help and is doing better.
It's sad to see. I'm schizophrenic too and had an episode like this before I was diagnosed and medicated. While you're in psychosis you will fully believe people are trying to hurt you, trick you, and it's like living through a nightmare. I'm lucky I didn't hurt anyone, but I understand why he would in this mental state.
I'm so. sorry you are dealing with this.💙
Did weed bring on the schizophrenia?
Wow that’s tough. I’m glad you’re recovering/recovered
Its so crazy that you ask if its because of the weed. That sent shocks down my spine because I know what you are talking about. WOW
@@kingcosworth2643are you mental
This officer is a gem. All most of us need is to be listened to but especially someone in an episode. He says “ok” “right” “yeah” in a compassionate and real way.
Ok
Right
Yeah
@@lysolosyl must have been eating at McDonalds
@@lysolosylthat shart was so wet!!! Lol 🤣🤣🤣
"Are you a survivalist?"
"No, im a musician."
That got me . 😂
I’m impressed at how kind they are.
The absolute fear in his voice, while still being respectful and compliant with the officers was heartbreaking. I almost wanted him to be a jerk so I could dislike him, but his behavior showed that he was terrified but was feeling safe now that the officers were caring for him. Imagine wearing body armor every day, as a civilian, because you just knew you were going to be shot at any moment. I hope this man will get the help he needs. Kudos to the officers for their compassion and calm demeanor which made the man feel safe.
Heartbreaking, for him?? 😳🧐🤔The families for sure! 😥
@@tarrahbarker24 Yes of course I am sad for his parents, but I chose to post about an illness I have firsthand knowledge of. It didnt mean I have no empathy for their loved ones. Please don't read more into it than there is.
@@ZooZoo293I absolutely understood what your comment meant ❤
@@RaccoonNation Thank you!
Mental illness is debilitating for all involved. Poor guy. His parents also didn't deserve that. I'll never judge things I don't have facts to.
The patience they showed this man with what clearly was a state of severe mental instability was phenomenal. This officer knows how to read people well he knew that this arrest needed to be handled delicately.
Yes. Good cop.
these cops deserve a medal, in my area they tazze or even shoot a senior citizen for not adhering to their directions for simply jay walking.
This is a heartbreaking case! The initial officer knew as long as he stayed calm & continued to just talk to Robert, things wouldn't escalate. He could see a man who was afraid & wanted help.
That fart though... I know it felt good to let that out! Thank you for keeping that in EWU!!!
I think the officer who stopped him and whose voice is on the recording did an amazing job of remaining calm, and by extension kept the suspect calm and cooperative. No aggressive speech, no yelling, no confusion. I think this police officer should be commended for a job well done.
It's good to see the police treat him with respect and acknowledging he's not well. It's sad that it seems his parents struggled with him his entire life to have such a sad outcome
You think you would have an easy time with a severely schizophrenic adult man?
As someone who's known many people suffering that, if you think you could do better you are sorely mistaken
@@chrism4008 Go and argue with your parents or something kid. Noone said anything about what your arguing about. Go to bed. Do the dishes or something
@@chrism4008Where’d that come from? He said it’s sad and they must’ve struggled.
Where did he say or even imply the parents failed or he’d do better? 🤦♂️
@@chrism4008No one said that.
@@intelnerd It says 4 replies (when I only see 3). I think he is probably responding to some person's comment that has since then been removed.
Great response from the officers, very professional and didn’t let emotions overwhelm them. I rarely have pity for killers, but I can’t help but feel bad for this guy. Schizophrenia is a hell of a disease.
Yeah I very rarely feel bad for murderers, but there are legitimate circumstances where someone is mentally unwell and really doesn't know what they're doing. Those people need help and compassion, especially if they come out of their mental break and realise what they've done
You wouldn't be saying that if it's ure parents he killed lock the sicko up
@@heygoodday8879 You are either not old or mature enough to understand the point. Murder is bad. It's the worst thing somebody can do and this guy did murder two of them, his parents. It's an awful unbeiable tragedy.
I'm not even that progressive like many European states and frnkly our own Canada, and think most murders should qualify for a life sentence, and many man slaughters (like drunk driving and killing somebody) should have harsher panishments. Like I don't like how many first degree murders in places get a 20-25 year or less.
This being said, this dude is the definition of an an insane person. Everything about him. He doesn't sound drunk or high( not an expert on this dep to be honest) and the way he confesses to his crime is chilling. Our heart goes to the two victims but this dude is sick and he needs care. When and if he should be let out it is not up to me.
Wow I'm high and ranted for a bit
It's sad. And it's next to impossible to get help for it unless you have done harm to someone or yourself. And hope it's not to late when it comes to harming yourself. The medication for it is brutal and you need so much support/money to get help for it. It's insane.
The fact you have compassion for a killer is why you aren't a killer. It's what makes us human and makes them monsters. This person was particularly ill, and needs help, not jail time. But we also cannot let them out to kill again.
This is real psychosis. With the interpretations of half heard conversations and strange noises as people talking bad and plotting against you. When you are in a bad spot it is so hard to see what is real and not. Stay strong, my friends. You are not alone. We are survivors together. You are here for a reason.
Dad worked for UN and mother worked in psychiatry department of a "major hospital" I'd bet all my belongings that Robert is telling the truth.
Same
Anyone find out if they're from the tribe?
same
What does that mean?
@@emmaberry9047 it's a fascist dog-whistle that anyone high up in the UN and medical industries are Jewish agents plotting... something? Once you start digging into what these people believe the less sense it makes.
My brother... is diagnosed schizophrenia. In prison - accused of attempted murder. This makes me cry. The weight. So hard to cope.
He may have been telling the truth. UN troops in Haiti and Sudan have been accused of sexual abuse of children. In 2004-2007, according to an internal UN report, over 100 UN soldiers were sent home for their involvement in a "sex ring", but none were charged.
That’s extremely sad. It’s very hard to cope with a siblings mental health issues alone but to also have to possibly grieve them in your type of situation is even harder. I hope he gets the support he needs and I hope you don’t feel guilt along the way because some things are just not in our control
@@helenaBeau 😊 I'm trying. I shouldn't have put this out there. But I'm not a "comment deleter" once I've said it. **Shrugs**
@@ZacchaeusNifongit's okay to delete a comment. You don't owe any of us something personal.
I do love how professional these officers act and how they treated this guy with a mental illness.
that was a professional fart
He professionally ripped ass
@@matieking 😂😂😂 came to say the same lol
@@matieking😮😮😮😮😮 9,tv2r
This guy's not Tony Timpa
Thanks for explaining the terms and procedures - and doing it with respect. Makes videos like this so much more worthwhile than ones that are just the video, then everyone forms their own story and opinion with no facts. The comments in the thread are thoughtful and people are having informed discussions. It’s very refreshing on the internet these days!
Just because there is no evidence of past abuse of a person in their 50's doesn't mean it didn't happen. Plenty of people have histories of abuse that aren't known
I've only had one patient with schizophrenia and it was early onset childhood schizophrenia. To this day, nothing has scared me more. It's truly terrifying how real the delusions are to them, and it can be very difficult sorting out what is real and what is not in their lives.
I really feel for him and the reality he has to face when he's out of the state he is in.
Wait until see deal with somebody on PCP
If they refuse to take medication, they deserve to be locked up in a psychiatric hospital for the rest of their days. I have a psychology degree, but you can’t convince me otherwise.
how often do you talk about your patients on youtube videos?
@@BoringOatsas long as the provider keeps the name confidential, there’s no ethical violation with HIPPA. How often do you comment on things you have no idea about??
@@Sniperboy5551 You need to take your medication.
"I have vague memories of being married in highschool but im not sure if thats true" has me in tears
that one broke my heart too. he was so sincerely honest with this statement.
Mind control ain’t no joke…
And who knows what crap he was subjected to🫣
@@itsallgood2875he has schizophrenia..
@@itsallgood2875 I'm worried about what your brain has been subjected to.
@@mikeb6085 all the government “projects”…. Project Mocking Bird, Project Looking Glass, Project Monarch..
Look for yourself~
There is never any evidence for child abuse that isn't photographic when it's told by an adult. I hate when people say "there is no evidence to support this accusation", abuse is rarely purely physical, there is rarely evidence. Kids don't call the police on their parents when abused, they internalise it as their fault.
Schizophrenia is suffered mostly by child abuse survivors with PTSD. I believe him about the parents abusing him. A psychotic break can sometimes be a minds attempt to escape a painful reality. Death of a loved one is another big trigger for schizophrenia as its extremely traumatic to lose someone permanently.
"The officer searches the car and does something unexpected" **rips a big fart**🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
He was so compliant with the compassionate officer, this just makes me feel so sad for other people struggling with and/or experiencing genuine mental illness/psychosis like this man
He seemed that he was finally safe in the custody of the police.
I know, right? He's clearly an intelligent man who is seriously affected by his illness. And kudos to those officers -- they were kind and respectful despite having a killer on their hands.
@@josi4251 Absolutely 💛🤗
Why do you decide it's a mental illness over that what was happening could possibly have happened to him. You can't make an informed decision without all the facts.
@@alexisalexander9037 Oh I can very well do as I please thank you. In addition, I have a mental illness too. Ostensibly, this man has a cerebral malaise... You're dismissed.
My ex-girlfriends sisters husband committed suicide last year bc he's been struggling with schizophrenia for a long long time. He left a taped suicide note explaining why he did it. Which basically amounted to that he was exhausted from the voices in his head constantly talking and telling him to do scary shit all the time. He felt that he was putting his family in danger. So in his mind he neutralized the threat, which was sadly himself.
that's so sad, omg.
I can respect that.
Very brave man 😔 I respect that.
So heartbroken to hear this...😢
@@freeherenow52can you explain what you mean?
This is very sad for his whole family including him, he was obviously terrified and well done to the police for the way they handled the situation.
I had a distant cousin that I lived with whose parents worked at the Pentagon and was convinced that they had used her for experiments and the level of her psychosis really taught me a lot. I wonder how many children of government employees are suffering similar illnesses. I suppose their jobs only fuel the fire of the overactive mind😕
You ever think "what if she's telling the truth"?
I have a friend who’s daughter is schizophrenic. She had problems her whole life and was finally diagnosed around 14 or 15. Her parents have been through hell taking care of her. She sees shadow figures like you see in horror movies. She also hears voices. Each has a name. One is good but the other is evil and tells her to do bad things. I know of several times she’s attacked them with knives, scissors, forks, etc. They lock it all up but she finds a way. I went with them the first time she had to be admitted and it was an incredibly difficult thing for her mom to do. Since then, she’s a regular at the local mental hospital. She’s 25 now and manages the best she can but she’ll never be able to live on her own. The hardest thing has been finding a drug that will help her. She’s on heavy anti-psychotics and the side effects are awful. Schizophrenia is a terrifying illness and my heart aches for his parents. For him as well, as I doubt he would’ve hurt them in his right mind.
I was diagnosed after high school with schizophrenia. Except, at the time, I was living on another continent, already diagnosed with acute depression and anxiety, smoking pot, and otherwise on a downward spiral. I was already mixing together the pot and my meds for the two previous diagnoses, so my mind was already not in a great state as I described my symptoms to the doctor at the time. He prescribed me risperidone to take along with what I was already taking. Being on those meds was one of the worst, and most prolonged, experiences of my life. It wasn't until years later, until after I had stopped taking all of the medications I'd been prescribed, did I truly begin to feel as if I was healing mentally. The treatment can sometimes be worse than the symptoms. Granted, I was never actively trying to harm anyone during this time, and I certainly never had any named voices in my head telling me what to do, so it could just be I was misdiagnosed. Still, I hope she gets the help she needs, be it through lighter medicine, or active therapy.
I see them too but I don't have schizophrenia it happens cause of my epilepsy I hallucinate and hear things and see things that aren't there
@@robertoclaux8654 Hearing voices and seeing things that other people can't is pretty much the hallmark of schizophrenia, so if you don't have either of those symptoms it's highly likely you were misdiagnosed. (Been hearing voices for about 10 years here.)
His father DID work for the UN. UN troops in Haiti and Sudan have been accused of sexual abuse of children. In 2004-2007, according to an internal UN report, over 100 UN soldiers were sent home for their involvement in a "sex ring", but none were charged.
@@ianwalton284or he was likely an mk ultra victim by his own parents.
I feel so horrible for him. I don't think he's a monster, I just think he is mentally unwell. So sad for him and his family.
Well no shit. You got good Ole Ronnie boy to thank for closing all the state hospitals where people like this were sent to get the treatment they needed. Its a shame that now that they've honed in the proper treatment for these disorders the government will no longer pay for it. Yep good Ole conservative hero ron, doubled the homeless population by closing those hospitals and doubled the prison population through mandatory minimums in the failed war on drugs. Oh and the cherry on top kicked off hyper inflation. Don't get me wrong I don't like democrats either but every once in awhile there comes someone so bad at their job you kind of got to take a moment and stand in awe.
well he is a monster. if he felt safe around police he just could have told them that his parents are evil beforehand, instead of doing brutal things to them. and if he wanted to end them for his safety because in his reality they were evil, he still wouldnt have needed to tazer and beat his mom or put his dads head in a dumpster
@@denjua1 You sound like you could probably use a little mental help yourself.
@@denjua1The thing with mental illness, especially this bad, your rationing is not the same as theirs. "They wouldn't have" "Shouldn't have" are things that- for the most part, they don't think about in psychotic states. It's not black and white like that, and it's a lot more than he just thought his parents are trying to hurt him. Is he a monster? That's up to debate. Is mental illness like this that black and white like your comment? No.
@@denjua1 and it's easy for people who haven't been in, or experienced someone like this to say what should've been done.
The dog is going “dammit! Let me at him! I wanna bite somebody!” 😂😂
I'm pretty sure he's telling the truth the things that the higher uppers are involved in is just mind blowing and devious
I was going to say something similar to this. What he's saying isn't that outlandish to me, especially after researching cases like the Franklin Coverup (which was not a hoax). He exhibits clear signs of mental illness, but I'm not so sure that some of the stuff he was accusing them of wasn't the cause of it.
@@danblakeslee3570 yeah, seems like a victim of sra. If they're "chosen ones" I would say he's telling the truth.
“are you a survivalist?” “No I’m a musician”💀
Same thing 😂
Yeah, I liked that too.
Half expected him to drop his SoundCloud tbh
My mom has schizophrenia. She's a musician too. But shes never actually played any instruments or sang any songs. I found out over the years a great number of people with schizophrenia or related mental illness that cause the patient to enter a state of psychosis in intervals end up becoming "musicians." This is due to the delusions.
a compass
As someone who has worked in the mental health profession and has dealt with people who suffers like this man is, this is heart breaking.
As someone who suffered from four bouts of psychosis, I want to say thank you for compassion. I don’t remember half of what I did but the other half I do. And it’s absolutely terrifying. I could’ve done anything to anyone and was lucky I got taken seriously like this chap. Hugs to you.
I have zero sympathy. None. At all. A mentally delusional man murdered his own parents in cold blood. His mental state never concerns me. Lock up this obvious psychopath forever. The insanity plea should not exist either.
It's a shame mental health care especially in the United States is very poor and if it was better his family would still be alive and he would have been given help he needs
@@markhusseymh1What do you mean? This man had doctors and was prescribed medication that he stopped taking. I understand and agree that medical treatment can always get better, it’s not perfect. But how is this the mental health fields fault? Again, he has doctors and had been on meds that he decided to stop taking. I don’t know anything about his family life, or who he had around him to notice what happened… it’s a possibility he had been doing great on his meds and then all of the sudden decided to stop taking them and before anyone noticed, he had this episode.
Not everything is “the systems” fault.
agreed!
If he was willing to tell the truth about killing his parents it’s believable that what he said about the abuse would be true also. And being brainwashed to forget and then all of a sudden coming the point in his life where he remembered must be intense and unimaginable. Who knows..
Those officers were amazing. They treated him with respect and managed the situation so it didn't escalate.
Its amazing that even though hes in his own world and admitting to murder hes still respectful and helpful
That was because he fought for his life.
This is heartbreaking, my husband suffers with mental illness and has had more minor bouts of psychosis. Having him lose his independence and get involved with the police are nightmares for me. Im really glad these police didnt escalate anything and were respectful to him.
Damn! Wish i could find a woman who'd tolerate my craziness.
In Australia, they just shoot them.
Old women, Aborigines etc ... just shoot.
@@CEO_of_Unpopular_Opinions you act like love and loyalty don't exist. There would be consequences I would be leaving him alone, I would lose my connection with his family, and my heart would be broken. I met him and fell in love with him before his disorders manifested fully, he was there for me during hard times and when I married him I said in health and sickness. I meant those vows and wouldn't leave him to suffer alone. That said if he ever harmed me or was disloyal to me it would be different. But he loves and respects me so I do the same for him. I'm part of support groups with many women like me who live with spouses that suffer from mental illness but want to be there and make it work. We aren't that rare, and as long as the man is trying to help himself by getting treatment and loves the woman it can work.
@CEO_of_Unpopular_Opinions Speaking of unpopular options...
🙏🕊️🔥❤️ I'm sorry for the trials of life you must be going thru. May God help guide you in your troubled times and give you the strength you need.
I was glued to this one… just wow
GREAT job by the officers to stay calm and LISTEN to him. This help keep the whole interaction calm.
Such respect for the officers, such sadness for Robert. What a tragedy.
Nah ACAB and scum
He took a break to piss on Ohio. I admit, I laughed haha, altho yea, mental issues are hard to go on with...feel bad for the dude..
Yea huge respect for that fart.
Officer: "This guy just admitted to killing his parents."
Dispatch: "Lovely." 👺
Any way you try to spin her response..."Lovely" is profoundly inappropriate and insensitive.
@@kimberlychelen9890She was being sarcastic and they deal with a ton of crap and stress, she did nothing wrong.
@@river8760 I commented, using the words, inappropriate and insensitive. Never used the word "wrong"... that is your word.
@@kimberlychelen9890 Your point? Clearly you don’t work in a field where you’re inundated with stressors like this.
@@river8760 Clearly you have NO clue what kind of pressures and stressors I live with, and what field of work I am involved in. Thanks for your input though. EnjoYour day.
I really appreciate how clear headed and kind your comment section always is
Awesome channel. Love the little drops of dry humor every so often. “holy smokes indeed”
All of these officers were incredibly professional, which is why I was absolutely blown away when the cop planted some of his own evidence in the car during the search.
EDIT: For reference - 11:17
I'm dead 😂😂😂😂💀
Was he fired for doing so?
@@lostsoul3353it was a long, loud fart lol
😂😂😂😂😂😂
😮
this guys got the most perfect voice for these type of videos
I agree👍
@@rockyvandeven491 Sounds like an old 80s crime mystery reenactment show rather than a youtube channel
It's the"Scream voice". Love it.
They should put his name in the description. JCS used to.
@@mollyram2997 what's the "scream voice"?
Oh shit! That fart caught me completely off guard
I'm 34 years old! How are farts still so funny?!?! 😂 The narration leading up to that cop shitting his pants has me dying!!!
The officer saying you’re safe now😢❤ respect for the compassion even though he committed a horrendous act
I have a son like this, he has all these symptoms, false memories, grandiose hallucinations, and the sadness about his family. He is combative with the guards at his jail and me. He is escorted with guards in protective gear, almost like swat officers. It is so very sad, and demoralizing to have a child like this. I know in half of my mind that he could harm us someday. The other half of my mind believes he could be ok if he could heal his brain with nutrition, vitamins, meds, therapy, etc. But it could never ever be a sure thing, so I don’t fight for him to “get helP”. Or be realeased any more. He needs to be in a compasionate therapeutic medical setting, pretty much for the rest of his life. He was my baby. He was so funny, well loved, a musician and thespian. He could play any instrument he picked up, which is a sign of intelligence. I love him and will always love him. God bless this man even in his terrible state.
Same here, my son just shot him self on the 4th, 35 years old, awful
WOW 😳
@@tarottime3219My condolences for your loss.
@@tarottime3219 so sad to hear this, I really wish you all the best, so hard to deal with and accept. It’s definitely an illness.
sorry, how do you know this guy is having "false memories". If hes telling the truth about the abuse, it would explain his mental state pretty well.
Psychosis is such a terrifying thing, I’ve been in a drug induced psychosis and I barely remember what I was doing, but my parents told me I lashed out when my mother woke my up late in the afternoon, I screamed curses and I tried to grab onto my mother and attack her, I was convinced she wasn’t real and a hallucination, as I experience derealisation and disassociation, and I extremely paranoid, I was hallucinating and tempted to hurt both myself and my family, my father had to pull me back and I was admitted to a hospital, and put in rehab for my drug addiction and mental illnesses, it really terrifying to not be in control of your self and actions
My uncle has Schizophrenia. He spent a lot of his youth in prison. When he got out in his late 30s he lived behind us. He was diagnosed with Schizophrenia while in prison. He was the most gentle man you would ever meet unless off his medication. When he was off his medication he would come outside all hours of the night screaming and raving towards people that weren't there. He would call my siblings and I names of old guards that treated him poorly in prison and tell us he would kill us. My siblings were so scared of him, but I never felt fear towards him. He is currently in prison again. I feel so sad for him.
The police response and handling of the bizarre situation is commendable. Clearly a man experiencing a deep psychosis with terrible consequences. Respect from Ireland.
Medication never works he would kill again. Insanity plead should never let him release.
@@sareng2005 that's not how it works
100th Like! 🙌🇨🇦
@@sareng2005tell me you know nothing about criminology, without telling me:
Good cop. Totally deescalated the situation. So many cops would have screwed this up. This officer was PROFESSIONAL! The others were too. Dealing with this unhinged man in the best way they could. Ohio must have higher standards for their officers, better training, and far better educated. I don't know who you are but thank you for doing your job so well. You make people proud of the police and coming from me that's unusual to hear.
As a society, we need to recognize that cops like this put their pants in the line of fire every time they rip ass like that. You gotta respect it.
Yeah, this same situation but in Florida may have gone differently. I believe police should have some understanding of different mental illnesses and how best to approach as well as mental health for the police. As men we tend to bury our emotions deep inside and not talk about it. Letting it build to unhealthy levels that could lead to really bad outbreaks are seemingly nothing.
Me as well* My opinion is that ALL individuals paid to uphold the*Law, Must be trained as Well as those who are trained into our "3-Letter*Agencies" Those in possession of the Power that allows one to carry a weapon, and dictate that control Over Anyone, must have exemplary character, judgement, and ethics*
There are a lot of cases where children were trafficked to high profile political figures in Europe, and if his father worked for the UN for all those years, it seems perfectly plausible that this happened to him for his father’s political gain and without anyone else’s knowledge. And even with the best intentions, if his mother didn’t know, and she was a mental health professional, she would have also seen his world falling apart and assuming that he needed treatment and sent him away, or in his mind, “locked him up and drugging him,”without actually acknowledging that trauma. The crime even plays out the projection, with him removing his mother’s body from the house and putting it in a box, and the fact that most of the rage was seemingly aimed at his father
I was looking for a comment like this one. It may be hallucination... but what if it's true?! This sort of thing has happened before.
pointing out the fart was the best
I feel so bad for him when he says he has great memories of being married but isn't sure if it's true. I have bipolar disorder and I've had psychotic episodes...even now in my stable state, the most difficult thing is having insight into your own illness because it just makes it so, so sad to realize you aren't right and moreover, cannot trust your own brain.
i believe he said he had 'vague' memories of being married in high school. it's probably one of his delusions. i hope u have someone u trust to help u get by.
I'm really surprised that he felt so comfortable and safe with the police. Lot of times people will think that the police are in on them being "stalked" or threatened when they're in psychosis. For this poor guy it seems that they were the only people that made him feel safe at all.
That proves he was a victim of his parents. People have no idea what it's like to fight for your life and its effects on people. Nobody remains calm and collected.
He felt safe from the PTSD his parents caused with their evil abuse. He even stated nefarious things were done to him. He was likely a victim of satanic ritual abuse (SRA), sadly. I believe every word he shared.
That comes from years of parents that rely on police help in their daily lives at work, telling their children that if they have a problem they should go to the police. as for the comments claiming abuse and Satanic rituals 😂, you'd demonise the police so that the victim would be too afraid to go to the police for help. That's a common tactic I encountered when I worked with abused kids, a distinct lack of trust because they were conditioned into believing both the police wouldn't believe them, and would lock them up for lying.
@@alexisalexander9037
Or it just proves he *believed* he was a victim of his parents.
You must have had a good family life to think that. There are trauma-based reactions that are extremely obvious.@@GeorgiaGeorgette
This channnels ability to make me giggle is just mwauh. The random humor breaks no matter how short always perfect
I believe everything this guy said about his father is probably true, these elitists are evil!
yup!
Schizophrenia is absolutely the saddest illness. I have much compassion for all patients and their families.
Yeah,right.
I agree as well. It's very sad to see and often very difficult or impossible to help
My diagnosis/labels are;
*Acute paranoid schizophrenia
*Psychotic delusional episodes
*Aspergers (Higher functioning Autistic)
Those are the ones that stuck!
Ummm, yea it's difficult a strong mother certainly helped me!
I'm actually a user representative for the East Dorset mental health team I sit at the table for the board of governors and all sorts, it's interesting I could probably be convinced to eat half of them very easily (is that funny, did I learn humour yet?) and yet they listen to me, I'm pretty sure wood pigeons are the real enemy now I know that's probably not reality but I still believe it and doctors still listen to my recommendations, they think I'm crazy haha...
Pretty sure my point can only be that mental health treatment is broken, but we are trying, they are, we, me...😮
Stay safe and keep smiling people...
@@EZ-D-FIANTwood pigeons?
@@FellowGamerFunTawny Eastern wood pigeons. They're the worst! 😂
I have a brother with schizophrenia and he’s also got paranoid delusional thoughts. He attempted to kill my parents, luckily it didn’t work. It’s so hard to get your adult loved one the help that they need unless they have committed a crime. My brother was let out of jail in 2020 for a Covid compassion release because of overcrowding. He ran and hasn’t been arrested since. He’s the scariest person I know in real life.
Those ffffing covid compassion releases. Scariest man I know kept getting out of jail thru covid quarantine.
Super violent and delusional but they never keep him inside.
All of these comments are so heartwarming, and I tend to agree with everything said about Robert. I hope he gets all the helps he needs. With that being said, is no one going to talk about how HILARIOUS it was when he made it sound like something crazy was going to happen when he said “the officer did something completely unexpected” and cuts to him ripping a huge fart 🤣🤣 I laughed out loud omg
The cop ripping off a huge fart proves he's a human being...lol.
I couldn't be a cop. No fricking way this wouldn't bother me to no end. I grew up with a homicide detective. Lived in his home for weeks sometimes. His son was my best friend. He got really angry once. When he investigated a child killing. He hugged us both very hard for no reason, I thought anyway. His wife told us why later. No way I could be this strong of a man.
Yeah and he was a homicide detective.
These guys are patrol officers or beat cops and have to face this.
We need people to be more compassionate, both the police and the people who judge them
@@TheLikenessOfNormal Uncle Sandy was a rock. He showed me how a real man conducts himself. Tall, silent, compassionate and strong. My dad, not so much.
My dad was a paramedic in Camden and Philly. To me, he might as well have been an accountant. He never talked about his jib and we never asked. After 12 years he went back to doing electric. Many years later he told me he couldn't deal with losing kids. My dad was cold as ice, and it only took 12 years to break him. I have so much respect for our first responders, now as an adult. My dad really was my hero. He was a medic and fireman for the town we lived in and every time I was a pile of broken bones needing to get scraped off a soccer field, the ambulance would come flying onto the field and he'd be out the door before it stopped. I knew he loved us, his own kids, but never in my life have I heard anyone accuse him of being a kind man. I never would have guessed he had a soft spot for kids.
The officer farting and the narration leading into it was fantastic 😂
I know right?? I don't remember the last time I've laughed my lungs so empty with tears running down, seriously :'DDDDD just so unexpected, getting so emotional over the case first and then this happens
i really thought he was gonna say something but nope, he shit him self
Was it the officer who farted????
@@Rondawwg yep
Taco bell
“This part of Ohio is atrocious” 😂
I think this man is competent from that statement alone
😂👍
that fart he ripped was nothing more then amazing 😂😂
I feel incredibly bad for him. People can hate, and blame all they want but unless you have a mental disorder you have NO clue what it's like to be a victim in your own mind. My heart breaks for him, his deceased family. One of my friend's aunts lost her fight to schizophrenia, even with meds it became too much and she decided it was time to give up.
Even bipolar disorder can be very rough, my brother has it and would always stop taking his meds. I remember my mother asking him why and he said because they make you numb. He said it was better to feel negative emotions than nothing at all.
My son's added problems were without a doubt caused by meds for autism.
The pharmaceutical business cares nothing about a lot of what they've caused.
And this legalized marijuana bull 💩
I friend of mine was bipolar with schizophrenia. He frequently would think he no longer needed meds and would stop them and relapse. He, too, said the meds made him numb and he hated it. He ended up shooting himself in the head after telling family to come get his guns because he was hearing voices. He was such a wonderful person and didn't deserve that struggle. No one does.
This makes me want to cry. He knows the truth when he is on his meds but every time he is off of them he thinks this is the truth. I can hear the fight in his mind. Poor guy
He beheaded his father and stuffed his mother in a box, yeah poor guy.
@@user-kp3zx3db3kYes, poor guy. What he did was horrible, but when you are in psychosis you essentially aren’t in control of yourself at all.
@@emmettdonkeydoodle6230 The man deliberately stopped taking his medication to treat his schizophrenia and these heinous action's are a direct result of him not wanting to take his medication which makes him responsible for these actions even though he was delusional while commiting said crimes he was still in his right mind when he decided against taking his med's which means he can't be trusted and the fact that they implied he could possibly be released with condition's if he show's signs of getting better is just beyond me, these people are to dangerous to be kept in the general population, they need to be put in a straight jacket and padded room for life sorry not sorry.
I like this officers original call for help. I have a pet peeve on my dept and some neighboring depts where officers want to give a full deposition of their need for help. At a critical moment, knowing you need help is all that’s needed so you can focus on the threat at hand.
So this officers transmission, “57 get here NoW” is perfect! IMO.
As the officer is searching the vehicle he does something completely unexpected 😂
Damn that officer must have been waiting forever to let that one rip
Wet
Taco Smell from Taco Bell.
😂😂😂
Underrated comment
I felt that “oh lovely” to my core 😅
*For the love of God someone tell the doggo it's gonna be okay*
This is so sad and difficult 😔 the murders were so so brutal. My heart breaks for these parents. He clearly wasnt in his right mind throughout any of this though too. I hope he ends up somewhere that he can find stability where he is safe and everyone else is safe from him
You can tell this guy is truly frightened by everything he's experiencing, both in the real world and in his psychosis. I know I would be, if I was questioning pretty much the reality of what I was seeing, hearing, feeling etc. So glad that the officers seemed to understand that and treat him with the dignity he needed to feel more safe
Yeah his illness is basically amplifying everything around him not just the real things but the fake things as well. It sounds horrible. He feels like everything is out to get him
Very sad and tragic case. I have to admit though, I got a chuckle out the one point where said this to a police officer happily living in this area of Ohio: "I've never seen anything so atrocious as this area of Ohio! My god! I can't believe that this country is like this. I can't believe it! It scares the living shit out of me!"
That part got me rollin’ hahahaha
I'm from Ohio and he ain't lying 🤣
That part got me good. In his delusions, a moment of clarity
@@DuhLikeTotally facts lol
Lmao I busted out in that moment too.
THE FART?? HELLO. Was not expecting that 💀
I feel so bad for this guy. Prison isn’t the answer, but neither are regular mental institutions. Psychiatrists and psychologists have no idea what they’re doing. They seldom agree among themselves
This is heartbreaking to watch. His paranoid schizophrenia is so immediately apparent. I hate seeing how people’s poor mental health can drive them to such tragic extremes 😞 just such a sad story for everyone involved
It's so immediately apparent, yet half the comments here literally believe his delusions completely. Makes me worry about the IQ of half the population...
@@mikeb6085thats youtube comment section for you
It is hard to say because sometimes mentally disturbed or psychopaths or people who commit revenge killings can fake psychosis
@@leahflower9924 It's incredibly difficult to fake pyschosis. There's leagues and hoops of evaluations you have to go through. I'd be damned if you could find a case where it worked.
I came to the same conclusion. As someone who has been in (relatively) close association with three people suffering from Schizophrenia - one a distant relative, and two others, I immediately realized the nature of this poor guy's problem. It's really crazy - I believe that dealing with mentally affected people is possibly one of the scariest and most troubling situations to have to deal with - for family members and caregivers alike.
The general public have absolutely no idea what a nightmare of a problem Schizophrenia is, for the sufferers, and those who are close to them.
My cousin did the same thing to my aunt. It was obviously very sad, traumatizing, and confusing but mental health is a real thing and when someone is this ill, the possibilities are terrifying & unspeakable…and it’s truly heartbreaking. Unfortunately the result can be this kind of nightmare. And it is so sad for *everyone* involved. 😢
💔
I'm so sorry.
Nice to see officers understand and be compassionate with his mental illness and how to handle the situation properly. Schizophrenia is so heartbreaking. 😢
My heart goes out to people who have schizophrenia. I can’t even imagine what they go through🥺