When The Detective Is Actually The Killer

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  • Опубликовано: 2 фев 2025

Комментарии • 9 тыс.

  • @AdamDguitars
    @AdamDguitars Год назад +14555

    I’ve never seen someone act more guilty without openly admitting they’re guilty

    • @joaquimrodriguez8961
      @joaquimrodriguez8961 Год назад +41

      I've never heard of

    • @Brandibb
      @Brandibb Год назад +262

      It's comical and creepy at the same time

    • @Hashquatch
      @Hashquatch Год назад +337

      This is exactly how everyone here would act. When you know you’re facing the rest of your life behind bars no matter how prepared you are with interrogations like she is, your heart rate goes crazy, panic sets in and you’re fucked, almost all interrogations are resolved by you telling on yourself, not the detective outwitting you. The only people who get through these calm are the ones not scared to do time or the ones smart enough to only say the word “lawyer”

    • @rp12053
      @rp12053 Год назад +7

      @@Hashquatchfacts

    • @MrRedberd
      @MrRedberd Год назад +10

      @@joaquimrodriguez8961 It's a video

  • @rydz656
    @rydz656 Год назад +16174

    Sucks it took an entirely new generation of cops to catch her.

    • @asafoster7954
      @asafoster7954 Год назад +400

      Can't imagine why hahahaha. ACAB

    • @carminegalante4925
      @carminegalante4925 Год назад +662

      Just goes to show how the police as a whole is getting more professional and ethical as generations pass.

    • @the2dudes1
      @the2dudes1 Год назад +358

      ​@@carminegalante4925Slowly (very slowly) but surely

    • @busdriverguy
      @busdriverguy Год назад +238

      Yeah but there will always be officers like Lazarus

    • @jeffreygoss8109
      @jeffreygoss8109 Год назад +246

      @@busdriverguyand officers that cover for them

  • @terencehennegan1439
    @terencehennegan1439 Год назад +5156

    The two detectives had nerves of steel, to conduct an interview of this magnitude in such a laid back manner is commendable. She didn’t have a clue she was being targeted.

    • @carpediem4512
      @carpediem4512 Год назад +218

      She sure did. Don’t forget she was a detective. Women lie effortlessly. Pay attention.

    • @liverpool379
      @liverpool379 Год назад +157

      Idk she was pretty clued on mate, any belief she had was pure hope that this wasn’t happening

    • @TheSCPStudio
      @TheSCPStudio Год назад

      ​@@carpediem4512 awww did someone hurt you? Humans in general suck. Gender has nothing to do with the ability to lie. Most of the leaders in the governments are men and they lie incessantly. Come on now, grow up.

    • @paddyodriscoll8648
      @paddyodriscoll8648 Год назад +125

      Of course she knew, hence her spazmatic response…

    • @shotty2164
      @shotty2164 Год назад +191

      She 100% knew. The only reason she kept talking is because she figured she was smarter than them, and thought she’d gotten away with it for 25 years, and she’d weasel her way out of this too. What kept her talking g was the hope that she was correct in this assessments. She wasn’t.

  • @docadams7099
    @docadams7099 8 месяцев назад +2645

    I gotta say she has amazing health and memory for someone who's lived over a million years.

  • @NotKD35
    @NotKD35 Год назад +6891

    For an experienced detective she sure can’t handle herself under pressure! She was rambling and just blatantly obvious she was uncomfortable

    • @kincaid77160
      @kincaid77160 Год назад +269

      Yeah she panicked. She was already screwed, I guess, with the dna and search warrant. But she should have done the I AM A SENIOR OFFICER HOW DARE YOU SONNY and LAWYER NOW things.

    • @joaquimrodriguez8961
      @joaquimrodriguez8961 Год назад +66

      wouldn't you? Thinking nobody will figure it out, I mean I'd be pissing in my pants at that point. Smh.

    • @wesleyorange8133
      @wesleyorange8133 Год назад +76

      @@kincaid77160 The thing is she wasn't screwed. All she had to was admit they hated each other and fought several times, she could have included "Yeah, I even bit her once." And she would have been free.

    • @Snippet-1
      @Snippet-1 Год назад +128

      ​@@wesleyorange8133those bites were caused by the person who killed her. There was also the DNA, motive, erratic behavior.

    • @penskepc2374
      @penskepc2374 Год назад +106

      She probably didn't even think about this anymore. I bet it felt like a dream or happened in a past lifetime.

  • @RomaArmyMensRights
    @RomaArmyMensRights Год назад +17957

    This woman’s eyes could pierce through the devil himself.

    • @MrJC1
      @MrJC1 Год назад +159

      Lmao.... uhhh.... yeah. You were top comment for me. But i know that the order is different for different people. So maybe youtube AI knows that id be looking for this comment. And i was... i really was.

    • @TimApple.
      @TimApple. Год назад +116

      Shelly, Sherry, Samantha...
      (facial expressions galore)
      It's been like a million years, guys (hard scoff)
      What's this all about?
      (If only she knew a police detective)

    • @TheNinnyfee
      @TheNinnyfee Год назад +86

      Right? How could she even enter police academy?

    • @schadiel-ghorayeb479
      @schadiel-ghorayeb479 Год назад +13

      roma brosky

    • @akunakii3782
      @akunakii3782 Год назад +191

      yae....her face changes 100 times in one minute....like she trys to put all her masks to match this confusing situation....and it looks so strange

  • @vinsanity982
    @vinsanity982 Год назад +14712

    Hats off to the detectives for solving a million year old case.
    Edit: Wow, thx guys. I think this my PR for comment likes lol

  • @age_of_reason
    @age_of_reason 7 месяцев назад +1315

    She had the same computer for 10 yrs and never deleted her browsing history in that time. That's crazy too.

    • @pranavrathi9656
      @pranavrathi9656 5 месяцев назад +108

      For the authorities, there are ways to get ur browser history after u delete it :) Never feel safe. Although having the same computer is surprising true lol

    • @keishawilliams7546
      @keishawilliams7546 5 месяцев назад +27

      That computer should have been long gone

    • @Laborchet
      @Laborchet 4 месяца назад

      @@pranavrathi9656nah. Not If you properly destroy the hard drive

    • @kasey9067
      @kasey9067 4 месяца назад +33

      And the diaries! She still had them going back years which completely gutted her denials.... not smart.
      Those bug eyes and weird facial contortions are beyond bizarre.

    • @kasey9067
      @kasey9067 4 месяца назад +3

      ​@@pranavrathi9656 Really?!!? I didn't know that but it makes sense.

  • @mrmalicious4421
    @mrmalicious4421 Год назад +6622

    Great job for those 2 detectives for looking into one of their own. That was courage.

    • @KimVerhaaff
      @KimVerhaaff Год назад +107

      It probably did. It really shouldn't though. All this was there 20 years ago. She should have atleast been actually interviewed

    • @joaquimrodriguez8961
      @joaquimrodriguez8961 Год назад +83

      No it's not , it's their job!

    • @mrmalicious4421
      @mrmalicious4421 Год назад +235

      @@joaquimrodriguez8961 i know its their job, but many cops ‘protect their own’ from shit like this. Its messed up how many cops get away with this kind of shit.

    • @TheArmchairrocker
      @TheArmchairrocker Год назад +34

      It's what any reasonable person would do. You have a woman being harassed by a known subject who then winds up murdered and they just ignored it for 25 years. Not courage. Everyone who worked with her had retired or moved on.

    • @joaquimrodriguez8961
      @joaquimrodriguez8961 Год назад +16

      @@mrmalicious4421 If their good folks like you and I, they report any wrongdoing. they're risking their career's if they don't... not to mention their freedom.

  • @billpearson6106
    @billpearson6106 Год назад +12684

    I was an LAPD police officer and the backstory is everyone in the department knew she had murdered that woman and they covered up for her like they do so many other cops who murder people.
    Her mistake was pissing off one of the higher-ups which is why they reopen the case.

    • @TesterBoy
      @TesterBoy Год назад +2282

      Wow! That’s material for a whole other documentary.

    • @joegreen2750
      @joegreen2750 Год назад +83

      👍

    • @alexiscolby9415
      @alexiscolby9415 Год назад +1226

      I actually wondered about that when watching this video, especially the part where the narrator claimed that crime in LA had calmed down a bit enough to free up some extra time + resources to allow to re-open some cold case files. When has LA reduced in crime levels even if crime ebbed and flowed in a pattern we are still talking about Los Angeles - it just seemed like they had assigned someone to rework that cold case and get her. Sadly though, it wasn't about justice it was about some higher-up getting pissed off and wanting revenge, maybe she didn't toe the line or something or got a little too big for her boots or maybe she wanted that higher-ups job - she's evil but that superior is even more evil and corrupt. It must of been so difficult working in that kind of environment - the PTSD must of been real.

    • @draconian8994
      @draconian8994 Год назад +7

      So the police has cultivated a rife culture of covering up for each other. No wonder many crime cases go cold after years of commitment: they are those commited at the pleasure of law enforcers.

    • @sherricaroberts783
      @sherricaroberts783 Год назад +57

      Wow

  • @stunytsuR
    @stunytsuR Год назад +1738

    The way she keeps saying it was a million years ago makes me think she remembers everything like it wasn't a million years ago

  • @RyanN880EP
    @RyanN880EP 7 месяцев назад +789

    I was a Georgia Corrections officer, 1994-2005. When we attended the academy in 1994 EVERY cadet had to give a DNA sample to be kept on state record. It should be a requirement for any law enforcement school in the country to do.

    • @sedakuday610
      @sedakuday610 7 месяцев назад +20

      I understand 👍🏻 but DNA 🧬s are fairly new. Back in 80s, they couldn't able to use at investigations..

    • @lihanou
      @lihanou 6 месяцев назад +4

      This happened before tho.

    • @Gonken88
      @Gonken88 5 месяцев назад +4

      Can't believe people agree to that.

    • @Lilacwinedine
      @Lilacwinedine 5 месяцев назад +4

      I would be so afraid someone would use or abuse that information one day... Theres a lot of corruption, pseudo science like lie detectors, etc... I would not rest well and i dont mean that that im secretly a criminal, a lot innocent people in jail.

    • @Kukaahi
      @Kukaahi 5 месяцев назад +6

      @@Lilacwinedine "You have nothing to worry about if you have nothing to hide." A Nazi told me that when they were looking to see if I had anyone hidden in my home. I'll never forget that. Too bad the younger generation isn't learning from our experience.

  • @pokemcnmaster
    @pokemcnmaster Год назад +10041

    The woman she killed was so so beautiful and full of life. It makes me sad that some bitter cop killed her and got away with it so long.

  • @ingaz6565
    @ingaz6565 Год назад +6666

    A few details left out here. First the bite mark. It was assumed the burglar was male but biting is rarely done by men, biting, hair pulling etc are most often signs of a female attacker. Also Stephanie Lazarus had taken the day off on the day of the murder, something that should have raised eyebrows. Furthermore the 3 shots fired were muffled by a rolled up blanket which is how no one heard the shots. This shows a planned attack. Also 2 bags of evidence went missing as the case was being reviewed back when it first happened, which could only have been done by someone with internal access to the evidence room, a police officer. And finally the only item actually missing from the home that day was the marriage license the young couple had recently applied for. Why in the world would a burglar take such an item? Either way, im glad they finally caught her, justice served late is better than no justice at all.

    • @devong7124
      @devong7124 Год назад +351

      If they would of used Common Sense! And Listened!! Did the Husband even Suspect his Friend? The first question usually asked; WHO would want to hurt/ killer her? Who did she have any problems with?

    • @whocares_bear
      @whocares_bear Год назад

      The LAPD most likely knew she killed Rasmussen but covered it up because they didn't want it getting out that one of their own did it. Until 2009 when those 2 detectives were sneaking around gathering evidence from that case. Notice how they had to keep their investigation quiet to avoid backlash? Completely corrupt.

    • @whocares_bear
      @whocares_bear Год назад +241

      ""Also 2 bags of evidence went missing as the case was being reviewed back when it first happened, which could only have been done by someone with internal access to the evidence room, a police officer.""
      LOL she was too dumb to remove the DNA evidence.

    • @Potjandorie
      @Potjandorie Год назад +158

      @@whocares_bear Perhaps DNA wasn't really used as evidence yet, back then

    • @vast14
      @vast14 Год назад +114

      Gunning for your high ranking officer is a double edged sword though. If you could nail them, good. But if you fail, it would be a lot of trouble for you as an investigator. At least that's how I see it.

  • @caitroseco6752
    @caitroseco6752 Год назад +5783

    It’s an injustice that the cops who helped her cover this up were not also charged

    • @thecoondog56
      @thecoondog56 Год назад +157

      for sure ,who do you think lost,..or misplaced the files and evidence

    • @daytonasayswhat9333
      @daytonasayswhat9333 Год назад +22

      Another internet know it all.

    • @liamjennings7380
      @liamjennings7380 Год назад +280

      @@daytonasayswhat9333if youre siding with the people who hid a murderer maybe rethink your positions

    • @daytonasayswhat9333
      @daytonasayswhat9333 Год назад +33

      @@liamjennings7380 i’m not “siding” with anyone. I know about as much as this case as you do. I’m just not the idiot, pretending like they do know everything. what do you do for a living? I bet it has nothing to do with this and you aren’t qualified to comment on any of it.

    • @rlawrence9838
      @rlawrence9838 Год назад

      If there was no dna evidence to make it stick at the time, and she knew how to stage it to make an alternative look implausible, AND she could of made it up about being contacted at the time by someone, to assume a cover up is a bit of a stretch...I mean obviously she covered it up herself but to assume other cops just let her kill a lone young newly married woman in her home and kept it secret for her for decades...I mean what was she doing? Chucking them an occasional counterfeit Rembrant from the back of a truck?...If any evidence had suggested that, many, John Rutin himself, the victims family etc would've sought justice for it I've no doubt. (and this video only mentions why they came to doubt burglary later not why they originally concluded it.)

  • @magiccheetos420
    @magiccheetos420 6 месяцев назад +397

    Dude, I feel so bad for Sherri.
    Imagine that heartdropping, gutwrenching, feeling of seeing crazy ass Stephanie standing in your house while you’re home alone, after the literal YEARS of stalking, harassment and torment. She probably felt so fucking terrified, especially with the way Lazarus’s eyes bulge and the way her mouth moves, just really over-the-top and creepy facial expressions.. Also the fact that Stephanie gave her a very brutal, violent, hateful death. Then Stephanie gets to continue her life for 30 years, get married, travel, live life like nothing happened AS A COP.
    Straight of a fuckin nightmare.
    Rest In Peace Sherri Rasmussen, it’s just not fair.

    • @conniekaye5633
      @conniekaye5633 5 месяцев назад

      Should have cut ties with her loser husband

    • @Elegant_Sausage
      @Elegant_Sausage 3 месяца назад +13

      So totally unfair!!! And psycho Stephanie didn’t even end up with Jon … married some other dude and travels the globe. Wt actual F

    • @henrywallacesghost5883
      @henrywallacesghost5883 2 месяца назад +4

      I just hope they looked into her arrest record and see if any shady crap happened with the arrested individuals.

    • @mr.anderson3288
      @mr.anderson3288 12 дней назад

      Women are not fit to be police officers at all. They are way too emotional and passional which makes them more prone to mistakes, they may bring sexual tension and romance to the police force environment which is type of drama that wouldn't even exist if male exclusive, they lack the body strength to subdue suspects which make them more fearful for their lives and thus more prone to opening fire when they shouldn't.

  • @dioris8
    @dioris8 Год назад +1268

    That interrogation was perfect. She didn’t know what hit her. Every time she’d pick up a scent they would distract her with something else. Perfect.

    • @izzyk9-
      @izzyk9- Год назад +59

      The questions were expert

    • @James-rn6lo
      @James-rn6lo 6 месяцев назад +8

      She knew the detectives were on to her ,what other reason would they take her to the interview room , it was not for tea and cakes.Anyone with a bit of sense would know that right away. Anyway the detectives got there man,or woman .

    • @3kdeadsouls412
      @3kdeadsouls412 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@James-rn6look so then if she knew about what she was there for then why did she have to confess every thing especially the clues that will make her look like the prime suspect

    • @muck001
      @muck001 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@James-rn6loshes head detective. She would have stayed silent

    • @henrywallacesghost5883
      @henrywallacesghost5883 2 месяца назад

      That's whatvI liked about Columbo. The suspect thought I'm fooling him and he would turn around and say "One more thing."

  • @dominiquealaska7490
    @dominiquealaska7490 Год назад +2956

    I absolutely love how the detectives explain she’s free to go and then officially two minutes after she walks out they begin the official process of detaining her😂

    • @shotty2164
      @shotty2164 Год назад +255

      Lol she was free to go, but not free to leave.

    • @brianmacpherson4913
      @brianmacpherson4913 Год назад +79

      @@shotty2164 a true to life Hotel California 😁

    • @evepane2925
      @evepane2925 Год назад +15

      They do that all the time. 😂😂😂😂😂

    • @lolabunny1157
      @lolabunny1157 Год назад +3

      @@shotty2164 😂😂😂

    • @louisehroncich281
      @louisehroncich281 Год назад +5

      Yes. I noticed that too.

  • @the22ndday
    @the22ndday Год назад +3005

    What's unreal is that Lazarus was still granted her retirement money even though she had spent just about the whole time on the clock as a murderer and the city ignored all the signs to investigate her because she was a cop.
    The city of LA sure screwed the Rasmussen family of justice.

    • @MidnightVentures
      @MidnightVentures Год назад +71

      Sad. But at least she's behind bars now.

    • @Celisar1
      @Celisar1 Год назад +49

      She earned that money with decades of obviously good work.
      It would be totally unjust to deny her her rightfully earned retirement money.

    • @JoshuaFinancialPL
      @JoshuaFinancialPL Год назад +21

      ​@@Celisar1agreed. at least she must've done some good work, something of merit during those years. had she been a crooked cop? i actually doubt that.

    • @candyDander
      @candyDander Год назад +233

      @@Celisar1 Who's to say it was decades of good work, considering she worked for a police department which covered for her? If they're capable of running interference on an investigation and denying a family justice, and she's capable of cold blooded murder, we can't say for sure those decades were of good work.

    • @magusalakcristituto449
      @magusalakcristituto449 Год назад

      @@Celisar1 Lol she should be behind bars decades ago so how can you say "obviously good work"? are you mentally ill also? this woman is a cold blooded killer, she deserve nothing but to ROT in jail

  • @elizabethantoine9652
    @elizabethantoine9652 8 месяцев назад +781

    Denied parole !!! May 2024! 🍻

    • @carlmorgan8452
      @carlmorgan8452 7 месяцев назад +75

      Hard to believe she was eligible . Should be at least 23 years. Looking how long she skated.

    • @peterwall583
      @peterwall583 7 месяцев назад

      I hope this sick circus freak never gets out

    • @JackieOlantern
      @JackieOlantern 7 месяцев назад +24

      Delayed not denied.

    • @peterwall583
      @peterwall583 7 месяцев назад +35

      Please don't tell me that she may make parole I will be sick to my stomach if she does Stephanie is a cold-blooded killer

    • @GUITARTIME2024
      @GUITARTIME2024 6 месяцев назад +17

      She'll never be released

  • @WitchyBlueMoonlight
    @WitchyBlueMoonlight 9 месяцев назад +2277

    detectives: **ask a question**
    stephanie: **starts beatboxing**

  • @BobbyDigital_TheCode
    @BobbyDigital_TheCode Год назад +1986

    Hats off to these two detectives and middle finger to the law enforcement structure that tried many times to ‘protect their own’.

    • @monicadonnelly4991
      @monicadonnelly4991 Год назад

      There was so much violent and random crime at the time of the murder the police thought that was the obvious answer. After 3 strikes the crime rate dropped considerably. There was time to revisit suspicious cold cases. The forensic investigators were smart to take a dna sample from the bite. I don’t think they were trying to cover it up. They just took the east way out because they were so busy. Negligent but not nefarious

    • @LightBeingsBE
      @LightBeingsBE Год назад +22

      Absolutely! They protected her YT female life….so precious and pure (evil) in this country

    • @gipsydanger5020
      @gipsydanger5020 Год назад

      @@LightBeingsBE Oh sod off stop bringing race into it. Country is filled with all kinds of evil people

    • @JuanitaMichelle
      @JuanitaMichelle Год назад +2

      👏🏽 👏🏽 👏🏽

    • @ShannonFalk
      @ShannonFalk 7 месяцев назад +1

      Badasses

  • @loveyourself6961
    @loveyourself6961 Год назад +977

    Serious props to the detectives that took it upon themselves to reopen this investigation despite the suspect being their colleague. Justice finally served to the family of the victim and the late victim.

    • @mustaffa1611
      @mustaffa1611 Год назад +112

      more like she pissed off some higher ups and they're getting even

    • @guestonly1451
      @guestonly1451 Год назад +31

      They’re colleagues defended her and covered her murder, so no❤

    • @Gol_da25
      @Gol_da25 Год назад +32

      Props to the directives??? You do know they only open the case because she pissed someone off and that was the only reason why they did so for revenge right? They all knew she did it and only took her down because of retaliation

    • @wyomingptt
      @wyomingptt Год назад +2

      ​@@Gol_da25I mean okay but someone still had to investigate and bring up the charges so it's still a good thing.

    • @rubensaucedo4118
      @rubensaucedo4118 Год назад +5

      What about the justic of the citizens of Los Angeles being forced to put up with a corrupt and murdering police department???

  • @lucasdesvignes7190
    @lucasdesvignes7190 7 месяцев назад +227

    The way she says "she got killed." multiple time is chilling...

  • @Konouj
    @Konouj Год назад +1367

    She has crazy eyes. I'm so sorry for the Rasmussen. Imagine losing your daughter/sister this way and the people, who should help bring you and her justice, just sweep under the rug.

    • @norwegianzound
      @norwegianzound Год назад +13

      Poor Rasmussen. Never thought she'd meet a Rasputin.

    • @Lewdacris916
      @Lewdacris916 Год назад +1

      Yeah the LAPD is known for corruption, definitely some type of cover up took place with the evidence "going missing"

    • @connorduke4619
      @connorduke4619 Год назад

      She has the eyes of a psychopath. But don't judge too hashly, that is a stage of a human development we all pass through. First a psychopath like Lazarus and then a Narcissist like Hiter, Stalin, Mao, the Bidens, the Clintons, the Obamas, Trudeau, Soros, Schwab, Guetters, Dr Fauci, etc.

    • @Nominokoni
      @Nominokoni Год назад +3

      I can’t even believe she got away with the murder for so long

    • @Lewdacris916
      @Lewdacris916 Год назад +1

      @Zeria00 the police covered up the murder, her colleagues knew she was guilty

  • @busdriverguy
    @busdriverguy Год назад +1043

    I love how they gave her a 2 minute period of thinking she was getting away with it again

    • @joaquimrodriguez8961
      @joaquimrodriguez8961 Год назад +9

      Lol

    • @carpediem4512
      @carpediem4512 Год назад +3

      Love?

    • @vivianpatton5692
      @vivianpatton5692 Год назад +12

      @@carpediem4512 Yep

    • @Janesgirl22
      @Janesgirl22 Год назад +27

      ​@@carpediem4512 Oh yeah. Another 2 minute jaunt of smug freedom to add to the previous twenty three YEARS she enjoyed. Yes, I definitely love it.

    • @harveyparker-b8e
      @harveyparker-b8e Год назад +30

      Amazing the way she starts chirping like a songbird , when she knows full well that remaining silent is her right , and the best course of action .

  • @jdove39
    @jdove39 Год назад +3023

    I believe 100% that she was shocked by the allegation. Not because she's innocent, but because she thought she had gotten away with it and now it has circled the block!!! Oops, her bad. 🤣🤣🤣

    • @joaquimrodriguez8961
      @joaquimrodriguez8961 Год назад +13

      OOps!

    • @vsrztoro5989
      @vsrztoro5989 Год назад +7

      Real 😂

    • @ligma212
      @ligma212 Год назад +14

      Least corrupt cop 😂

    • @RASCALS26
      @RASCALS26 Год назад +21

      Lol circled the block. Karma has no chill! She ain’t got a life or nothing! She stay hittin corners lmfaoooo . Loved your comment!!

    • @jdove39
      @jdove39 Год назад +3

      @@RASCALS26 thanks!! Your's made me lol myself. ✌🏾

  • @jayyoutube8790
    @jayyoutube8790 8 месяцев назад +305

    What’s more frightening is the fact that other officers knew she did this and never said a word 🤯🤯

    • @PPuffNstuff
      @PPuffNstuff 7 месяцев назад +13

      Promoted too

    • @burtonknows9201
      @burtonknows9201 7 месяцев назад +10

      Knowing and proving are two separate things. Suffice it to say that technology and solid detective work solved this case.

    • @burtonknows9201
      @burtonknows9201 6 месяцев назад +1

      @PPuffNstuff civil service promotional exam. If you meet the criteria, you can take the exam. Showing discrimination during the exam process opens the agency to a lawsuit.

    • @Jud849
      @Jud849 6 месяцев назад +4

      @@burtonknows9201 thats why when you don’t know, you investigate, that of which they chose not to do despite the reasonable suspicion. See the issue?

    • @burtonknows9201
      @burtonknows9201 6 месяцев назад

      @@Jud849 I understand you are talking gibberish. Reasonable suspicion and guilt beyond a reasonable doubt are two separate things. Get back to me when you've done a cold case murder investigation resulting in a bench/jury conviction.

  • @underthegardenwall
    @underthegardenwall Год назад +3717

    Wow, she is SUCH a bad liar, it's actually embarrassing to watch her interrogation.

    • @destinybryner7267
      @destinybryner7267 Год назад +302

      She's a cop and yet has no clue she's being interrogated lol. She must not be a good detective 😂

    • @Xxbl0bxX
      @Xxbl0bxX Год назад +180

      She’s stuttering so much and asking so much to the point it’s obvious 💀

    • @talon-orp5786
      @talon-orp5786 Год назад +75

      Ngl she was believable in the first half
      but she just started breaking down

    • @ishypie2856
      @ishypie2856 Год назад +81

      It took me 3 days to watch it because of how annoying the "i-i-i don't know"

    • @Kamrab445
      @Kamrab445 Год назад +32

      She deadass started talking about her anger issues 😭

  • @godofplumbing
    @godofplumbing Год назад +16333

    Cops do not become Psychopaths, psychopaths become cops.

    • @dulciemidwinter1925
      @dulciemidwinter1925 Год назад +180

      Good point!

    • @kimclarke5018
      @kimclarke5018 Год назад +977

      Actually you don’t become a psychopath, your one to begin with from childhood. Sociopaths are created over time, psychopaths are born that way. Just to be clear.

    • @brianmurphy250
      @brianmurphy250 Год назад

      The same as how gr00mers end up as Boy Scout leaders, ect…jobs that put them in close daily contact with their victim pool.

    • @vivid5203
      @vivid5203 Год назад +148

      @@kimclarke5018I learned something new today

    • @Goibniu001
      @Goibniu001 Год назад +188

      @@kimclarke5018 You are correct, but that does not diminish the OP's point, (not that you were meaning to.)

  • @encinobalboa
    @encinobalboa Год назад +2778

    How someone could live with this act for 23 years is beyond me.

    • @priyankayadav8507
      @priyankayadav8507 Год назад +112

      But finally she got caught!!! ....it's insane to think that there may be many cases ...just like this

    • @JeffSchall
      @JeffSchall Год назад +152

      She's a cop. I guarantee that this wasn't the only time that she executed a person outside the law.

    • @evepane2925
      @evepane2925 Год назад +137

      Psychopaths have no problem sleeping. It's when they get caught the panic sets in

    • @patrickedmunds2835
      @patrickedmunds2835 Год назад +3

      Truly

    • @steve99098
      @steve99098 Год назад

      ​@@evepane2925sociopaths have zero guilt or conscience, they only care about themselves and getting what they went.
      A lot of cases I've seen it comes down to parenting or lack thereof, being an only child I got away with a lot, but I did get punished. I saw a case on Annie Elise's channel of woman in Texas that wanted a baby and killed a 8mth pregnant woman, the mother just kept enabling her even after she got convicted waiting on sentencing.

  • @guitarhurricane99
    @guitarhurricane99 6 месяцев назад +40

    It's amazing how she could remember who lived on what floor of what dorm decades ago, but conveniently couldn't remember if she'd ever met the victim or visited their home...

  • @MrMusick84
    @MrMusick84 8 месяцев назад +406

    These 2 detectives are at the top of their game. A+ work.

    • @carlmorgan8452
      @carlmorgan8452 5 месяцев назад +3

      DNA
      On the bite
      Sunk her battleship

    • @davidaugustofc2574
      @davidaugustofc2574 4 месяца назад +2

      ​@@carlmorgan8452 "lose lips sunk ships"
      - Quoting lyrics from Robert Williams, dunno if that's original

  • @CityThatCannotBeCaptured
    @CityThatCannotBeCaptured Год назад +1024

    She is clearly panicking and desperately trying to distance herself from the murder. It SCREAMS guilt.

    • @wengcollins3398
      @wengcollins3398 Год назад +3

      True she’s playing games

    • @gracenguyen6612
      @gracenguyen6612 Год назад +5

      True. Every time when coming to the relationship, she repeatedly mentioned million years ago, or such, just screaming she did it but have to cover up.

    • @sedakuday610
      @sedakuday610 7 месяцев назад +4

      Guilt?! Hardly. It's a fear for not to be found out!

    • @selig7
      @selig7 4 месяца назад +1

      @@sedakuday610Guilt as in guilty, not the emotion.

    • @sedakuday610
      @sedakuday610 4 месяца назад

      @@selig7 ah I see, in that case

  • @Allround_Alex
    @Allround_Alex 11 месяцев назад +2756

    For a high ranking detective that murdered the victim in question, it's insane how long she was being interrogated for without realising it was an interrogation..

    • @ADORABEL25
      @ADORABEL25 11 месяцев назад +235

      She knew. It is a manipulative act

    • @Allround_Alex
      @Allround_Alex 11 месяцев назад +71

      @@ADORABEL25 ​@ADORABEL25 I disagree. She would have known better than most that if it gets to the point that detectives are sitting you down for an interrogation, especially that long after a case has gone cold, that it is because they have crucial and incriminating evidence.
      The absolute most important thing anybody should do when being interrogated, whether guilty or innocent, is say nothing until a lawyer is present.
      If she genuinely knew this was an interrogation, she would have known they knew something that no amount of manipulation would have been able to dig her out of. She would have known that anything she said, aside from the truth, would have only served to incriminate her further.
      You don't get to being a high ranking and decorated detective without knowing these things.
      You heard her towards the end of the interrogation clue onto what was happening which is why she left the room and ended the interrogation. This was after HOURS.

    • @ADORABEL25
      @ADORABEL25 10 месяцев назад +85

      @@Allround_Alex Lets agree to disagree. I still think she knew. And played a long just excellent. Reality hits hard when her game doesn’t work out in the end.

    • @mjnoir1
      @mjnoir1 9 месяцев назад +12

      ​@@ADORABEL25that's a possibility but I doubt it though. she should have been smart enough to realize she was being interrogated . but that's interesting

    • @raghav5903
      @raghav5903 9 месяцев назад +24

      Here we should appreciate the intelligence and smartness of those junior detectives

  • @chrislewis5069
    @chrislewis5069 7 месяцев назад +36

    I loved this lady's surprise and her facial expressions and just acting so surprised exactly how you'd expect someone to act who thought they had got away with it

  • @tracylmcenaney
    @tracylmcenaney Год назад +542

    This interview never gets old... Must have seen it 20 times over the years. These detectives did great work

    • @Bakedea87
      @Bakedea87 Год назад +4

      Probably my third time lol

    • @aarde7036
      @aarde7036 Год назад +6

      20? That's a bit sick... Are you practising how not to behave after you get caught?

    • @Bakedea87
      @Bakedea87 Год назад +18

      @@aarde7036 Ever heard about a joke bud? Well I guess I shouldn't ask lol

    • @Bakedea87
      @Bakedea87 Год назад +4

      @@aarde7036 You really think she's seen this twenty times huh? Lol

    • @aarde7036
      @aarde7036 Год назад +3

      @@Bakedea87 "must have seen it 20 times" she says, right?

  • @peterbuckley3877
    @peterbuckley3877 Год назад +906

    They successfully made her think they were on her side and this was going nowhere,the more she talks the worse it becomes for her. She forgot the golden rule of never speak to the cops without a lawyer.

    • @jeffeey3117
      @jeffeey3117 Год назад +66

      She was probably thinking if she lawyered up then they would be scrutinizing her more. She should have kept her mouth shut

    • @redrocks1983
      @redrocks1983 Год назад +28

      There was DNA on the victim. It was irrelevant. Motive, Means, Opportunity.

    • @PokemonTrainerVince
      @PokemonTrainerVince Год назад +52

      ​@@redrocks1983 True. They simply did the interview probing for more stuff to nail her on. The information she provided made it a perfect slam dunk case. DNA was enough. Everything else was icing on the cake. They left no stone unturned.

    • @MalonsMilk
      @MalonsMilk Год назад +9

      No she knew all along she was in trouble. Listen to how she speaks, even though she made massive mistakes she is trying to cover her tracks in case they come back at her ‘I may have’ ‘I might have’ etc.

    • @jeffeey3117
      @jeffeey3117 Год назад +5

      @@MalonsMilk had she just not.killed.her.she wouldn't have been in trouble

  • @nimmichagger165
    @nimmichagger165 Год назад +2858

    How she ever rise to such high rank? She’s terrible under pressure. She acts so undoubtedly guilty. The standards must be so low. Imagine the evil she’s done to civilians during those 23 years as a cop. She may well have murdered many other innocent people. She’s a complete psychopath.

    • @ntakovacj3644
      @ntakovacj3644 Год назад +237

      Do you remember that she had a reputation among the other officers? They called her some kind of name -- spassa...something -- indicating that she would go haywire at times. I doubt she was the great officer that she's made out to be. She probably worked the system throughout her career, just like she planned the murder.

    • @Jamie-js3qw
      @Jamie-js3qw Год назад

      because it's hard for you to accept that intelligent, highly effective people can also be psychopathic. She won many medals from charm or beauty? No.@@ntakovacj3644

    • @oldcop18
      @oldcop18 Год назад

      A detective is not a high rank in any PD. Higher ranks have supervisory/management responsibilities attached & detectives do not supervise anyone. What Hollywood depicts on the big screen, and on TV, has no basis in reality.

    • @keviletuokire3390
      @keviletuokire3390 Год назад +95

      It doesn't matter how high your standards maybe, when you're guilty you can't keep your composure and think carefully. When shit gets real your brain can't handle it

    • @JB-zo7ln
      @JB-zo7ln Год назад

      I wonder the same thing about the people who obtained higher up positions at my company. Really makes you wonder. Sometimes it's luck, sometimes it's knowing all the right people and saying and doing all the right things even if you have no idea what you're doing and no one thinks anything of you. She probably just sucked all the right dicks in the force. That would be my guess. But sociopaths are very good at "what they do"

  • @thisismetoday
    @thisismetoday 4 месяца назад +78

    She’s not a psychopath at all. She just had help with the cover-up. She is the worst liar I have ever encountered. She just keeps on talking. Talking herself into trouble.

    • @raider1741
      @raider1741 3 месяца назад +3

      righttt a psychopath wouldn’t be stumbling as often and would’ve been way better at lying from what i’ve seen

    • @henrywallacesghost5883
      @henrywallacesghost5883 2 месяца назад

      She would have folded when it happened if they would have interviewed her at the time. It clearly was a murder of passion and rage.

  • @farmgirl5931
    @farmgirl5931 Год назад +828

    I would often think how horrible it is when It takes so long for certain people to be brought to justice, but at the same time within that 20 years she was able to build a beautiful life for herself that she enjoyed, and then have it all ripped away from her. Which is kind of justice in and of itself.

    • @BonMyFY
      @BonMyFY Год назад +14

      Amen

    • @triinpokk9198
      @triinpokk9198 Год назад +78

      She also got to enjoy that life, which she victim didnt.

    • @catherinemagee-l3x
      @catherinemagee-l3x Год назад +7

      Yes I agree could have had a great retirement and pride of a great job but she just used it to hide behind.

    • @bridgwll
      @bridgwll Год назад +15

      @@triinpokk9198I don’t think she would have enjoyed her life as much if she hadn’t killed her. Imagine living with the knowledge hanging over you. But, she made her bed.

    • @drjonesey5
      @drjonesey5 Год назад +16

      Not really, because her husband now has to deal with this, any kids have to deal with this, is it fair to them that their mother is a criminal murderer whom hid that fact and they loved her and had no idea just for her to be ripped away from their life? No. I'm not saying not to charge her or for her to get away with it, but I'm saying your comment is sort of surface level thought on her punishment alone but does not take into consideration who else gets hurt as a result of her getting away with the crime for so long and building a life. Had she got caught and justice served her husband could have married someone else and things like that. I don't think she has any kids biological kids, I heard of an adopted daughter, but to that child perhaps she felt that was her mom.

  • @Semmwizer
    @Semmwizer Год назад +735

    The fact the force defended her for so long and denied any attempts to investigate her till 2009, at which point they still had to tip-toe around investigating someone in their force is disturbing. Makes me wonder what else the department has covered up over the years.

    • @davisworth5114
      @davisworth5114 Год назад

      Well, there's the Black Dahlia murder, they knew Dr. George Hodel murdered her and let him leave the country.

    • @bakoena82
      @bakoena82 Год назад +50

      They have covered up stuff that could fit the 7 seas.

    • @fancyfacemissy4992
      @fancyfacemissy4992 Год назад +8

      ​@@bakoena82 right 😂😂

    • @trawlins396
      @trawlins396 Год назад

      You have no proof anyone covered anything

    • @dustinharris8442
      @dustinharris8442 Год назад

      Biggie smalls 😢

  • @brandonjones9635
    @brandonjones9635 Год назад +550

    Having watched a number of true-crime documentaries, I must admit that this one is exceptionally well done. The voice-over description is concise, relevant and clear. And the producers have resisted the common practice among some documentarians of introducing silly cartoons and snippets from popular movies in an attempt to amuse the viewer and illustrate a particular point. In fact, their use of stock material is minimal and is introduced only when something visual is necessary to the narrative but unavailable for obvious reasons. In short, this presentation deserves an A+.

    • @Im_lil_kennedy
      @Im_lil_kennedy Год назад +21

      Right? I hate those cheesy stock photos/video clips

    • @tiffaniemylord
      @tiffaniemylord Год назад +6

      i agree

    • @kaitlynmorgan4613
      @kaitlynmorgan4613 Год назад +10

      cheesy stock photos or videos gets rid of any immersion and seriousness 💀💀 its fine to use it an often amount, but not if theyre goofy

    • @johnnyhammer
      @johnnyhammer Год назад +3

      Then you'll love JCS... who did this case first.

    • @iscreemz4494
      @iscreemz4494 Год назад +1

      ​@Azraelking999 it's the BIG heat. When there's someone following you...

  • @goosenamedbrian
    @goosenamedbrian 8 месяцев назад +45

    It was very generous of them to allow her to retire. It was also very generous of them to gaslight anyone demanding justice.

  • @n74jw
    @n74jw Год назад +566

    I wouldn't buy for one second that she is that short of memory. She's a detective.

    • @troy8613
      @troy8613 Год назад +34

      Also I’d imagine ending an innocent persons life would be seared into the memory.

    • @joaquimrodriguez8961
      @joaquimrodriguez8961 Год назад +4

      Nor would I.

    • @jimmyzhao2673
      @jimmyzhao2673 Год назад +7

      She's trying and failing to pull a 'Columbo'

    • @LarsPallesen
      @LarsPallesen Год назад +22

      Especially about a murder of the wife of someone she knew very well. She would CERTAINLY know for sure if she had met the victim or not. So dumb to play hazy around that question.

    • @sarasweightlossjourney1432
      @sarasweightlossjourney1432 Год назад +1

      How do you have a checkpoint by your name? Just curious

  • @daffynobody420
    @daffynobody420 Год назад +812

    The level of empathy in the cops response when she said she lost her home in a earthquake was priceless.

    • @starlingswallow
      @starlingswallow Год назад +105

      And when they were asking about computers and scanning pictures😂😂😂

    • @kyrayates6026
      @kyrayates6026 Год назад +25

      Oh well they new they could help give her a new home 😂

    • @mileadileone3829
      @mileadileone3829 Год назад +9

      And when she mentioned her friend dying of cancer twice

    • @Lee-n2n1t
      @Lee-n2n1t 7 месяцев назад +5

      Totally they were playcating her the entire time. The one detective you have 10,000 photos on 1 DVD how do you do that I don't know slot about computers? They knew there assignment and the both ACED it with extra credit. Fascinating interrogation!

  • @SuussyBakka
    @SuussyBakka Год назад +1177

    The sheer panic on her face makes me smile

    • @emersonsmith5775
      @emersonsmith5775 Год назад +18

      Yes yes yes!!! I love it!!!

    • @melissaparker3566
      @melissaparker3566 Год назад +5

      Me too

    • @akunakii3782
      @akunakii3782 Год назад +21

      these crazy faces she mimics in in this short ammount of time

    • @Siile_
      @Siile_ Год назад

      Very satisfying indeed, evil bitch

    • @ashian23x46
      @ashian23x46 Год назад +13

      They need to check if anyone in her department covered up for her.

  • @jasoncoward-aintscared
    @jasoncoward-aintscared 5 месяцев назад +24

    Lazarus is one hell of a name for a killer.

    • @smurf902
      @smurf902 2 месяца назад +2

      Well....not that. It's the case being "risen from the dead." Hahaha what a fuckin terrible series of events.

  • @mattb6646
    @mattb6646 Год назад +714

    I love how they told her she was free to go then immediately bring her back to arrest her 😂

    • @joaquimrodriguez8961
      @joaquimrodriguez8961 Год назад +11

      They aways say that before questioning.

    • @JacobC479
      @JacobC479 Год назад +26

      @@joaquimrodriguez8961my dream is to see a video where they tell the person “you’re free to go, you can get up and go out that door any time” and the person say “okay thanks” and get up and leave😂 but most guilty people think they can outsmart the detectives and also wanna try to see what they know.

    • @melissaparker3566
      @melissaparker3566 Год назад +2

      Savage

    • @mattb6646
      @mattb6646 Год назад +5

      @@joaquimrodriguez8961 no they literally let her walk out the room like she was free to go

    • @joaquimrodriguez8961
      @joaquimrodriguez8961 Год назад +3

      @@mattb6646 Except they would have brought her back before she got in her vehicle.

  • @tracylangsley4064
    @tracylangsley4064 Год назад +535

    You would think as a seasoned cop she would know how to act when getting questioned lol

    • @joaquimrodriguez8961
      @joaquimrodriguez8961 Год назад +36

      Criminals are stupid, never thinking of their futures.

    • @akaaccount
      @akaaccount Год назад +65

      Knowing what to do and controlling yourself in the midst of fight or flight are two different things

    • @bbmmr8
      @bbmmr8 Год назад +11

      They didn’t read her her rights so none of this is admissible in court, which might have caused her to let her guard down… they just wanted to know where to look for more evidence of motive since they already had the warrant. Which she gave.

    • @yeah.cheers
      @yeah.cheers Год назад +30

      @@bbmmr8 As stated over and over by the detectives in the video, she is not being detained, is not under arrest, and is free to leave and go home at any time. The Miranda rights are not relevant in this instance, and there is no requirement for them to be read here.

    • @brianmacpherson4913
      @brianmacpherson4913 Год назад +8

      @@bbmmr8 Agreed. Plus, sometimes they get a slam dunk confession from what starts out as voluntary interview.

  • @mamytine
    @mamytine Год назад +1046

    I'm shocked at how guilty she is acting with being a detective.

    • @wonucantseewithouthisglasses
      @wonucantseewithouthisglasses Год назад +18

      she's literally shaking the time she realized she fcked up when he heard the man's name lol

    • @assrammington7961
      @assrammington7961 Год назад

      Interrogations are designed to make you act guilty. That’s why the best way to go into an interrogation is strapped up with abomb to be used when you’re about to be detained.

    • @goosewhisperer6275
      @goosewhisperer6275 Год назад +1

      Same here! 😯

    • @kd_ss
      @kd_ss Год назад

      There’s the perks of it

    • @7heRedBaron
      @7heRedBaron 8 месяцев назад +1

      If anyone had even talked to her 22 years earlier, she would have poured a can of beans all over the floor. Her whole attitude was Okay boys let’s pull up our sleeves and solve this case. The suspects are me and me. Now which one did it?

  • @georgecherucheril9947
    @georgecherucheril9947 7 месяцев назад +67

    The parole board recommended parole for Stephanie recently but victim's family are fighting it. It is being reviewed further. Hopefully Stephanie remains in prison for life.

    • @Rachelle-v2s
      @Rachelle-v2s 5 месяцев назад +1

      I can't believe they would approve that! This woman is a cold blooded killer!

    • @notting2640
      @notting2640 4 месяца назад

      She’s a white woman convict in a liberal city. She’ll be out in 2030 😂

    • @henrywallacesghost5883
      @henrywallacesghost5883 2 месяца назад +1

      She already got the best years of her life as a free woman.

    • @H0USE4100
      @H0USE4100 2 месяца назад

      How is that possible? The video says she isn’t supposed to be eligible for parole until 2034. How the hell is she getting out 10 years early, she must be a jailhouse snitch.

  • @STI2000
    @STI2000 Год назад +452

    Two words, ICE COLD!!! If not for the two detectives she would have had a respected and decorated career. How do you do something so heinous and just never look back?

    • @AngelWest58
      @AngelWest58 Год назад

      easy, if you're a narcissistic psychopathic murderer

    • @TheArmchairrocker
      @TheArmchairrocker Год назад +28

      She's a cop. That's what they do.

    • @joaquimrodriguez8961
      @joaquimrodriguez8961 Год назад

      @@TheArmchairrockeryou need to stop smoking crack.

    • @twosnakse
      @twosnakse Год назад +10

      @@TheArmchairrockerwhat about the other two?

    • @TheArmchairrocker
      @TheArmchairrocker Год назад +5

      @@twosnakse what about them? Finally go after a case almost 25 years later that could in no way negatively affect their career? How brave.

  • @ALT-vz3jn
    @ALT-vz3jn Год назад +356

    That interrogation was SO uncomfortable. She had so many indicators of guilt, I lost count. Contradicting herself constantly… I remember this interrogation from a few years ago, it was cool to watch it again now that I know more about interrogation techniques. Thank you.

    • @jaymac7203
      @jaymac7203 Год назад +27

      Her over exaggerated facial expressions though 😭😭 lol 😂

    • @andreablossom3929
      @andreablossom3929 Год назад +22

      Gosh she couldn't stop saying it was a million years ago, lady the detectives interviewing you know that. They are questioning you about this prehistoric case for a reason. It was a long time ago is not letting off the hook. I would have stopped watching if it weren't for me wanting to see her crazy eyes when she realized she was going to jail.

    • @daylinhesford3116
      @daylinhesford3116 Год назад +7

      Her repeating um, jeez, you know

    • @rubygirl214
      @rubygirl214 Год назад +1

      @@andreablossom3929it could be a drinking game!

  • @drill4206
    @drill4206 Год назад +595

    Imagine having 23 years to come up with a story and all we get is the golly gee 😂😂 i cant remember

    • @joaquimrodriguez8961
      @joaquimrodriguez8961 Год назад +69

      Or, it's been a million years.

    • @shotty2164
      @shotty2164 Год назад +55

      She probably had one back when it happened but she’d gotten away with it for so long she’d probably just completely believed she’d gotten away with it.

    • @mercmarc
      @mercmarc Год назад +14

      Anyone who says "golly gee" and is over ten years old is suspect.

    • @MrReymoclif714
      @MrReymoclif714 Год назад +2

      MTG!!!!

    • @Captain_Clobb
      @Captain_Clobb Год назад +5

      Dont forget, "ya know, ya know, ya know" x500 was so annoying. Sounded like bad tourrettes syndrome a few times.

  • @helloface001
    @helloface001 6 месяцев назад +15

    Those two detectives who unveiled all this are heroes. Gives me hope

  • @DudeWatIsThis
    @DudeWatIsThis Год назад +139

    I love how she alternates before "I don't remember, it's been so long" and extremely specific details.

    • @jordanwolfcastle7387
      @jordanwolfcastle7387 11 месяцев назад +9

      Right like the name of the street the apartment was on. Like everything else ohh it was so ma ny years ago how could i rememebr, but then just random shit she remembers clearly

    • @xyfie6354
      @xyfie6354 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@jordanwolfcastle7387right it's like she definitely remembers every detail vividly and is just lying abt it

    • @smurf902
      @smurf902 2 месяца назад

      It's been a million years....come on

  • @MrWiggiJ
    @MrWiggiJ Год назад +535

    Interrogator: "Do you know your name"?
    Stephanie: "Geeeee... Well i dont know, i dont know what to tell ya"

    • @IDidntWantAHandleYouTube
      @IDidntWantAHandleYouTube Год назад +81

      “It was just a million years ago!”

    •  11 месяцев назад +6

      when dinosaurs roamed the earth@@IDidntWantAHandleRUclips

    •  11 месяцев назад +3

      i wonder how much a gallon of gas was then@@IDidntWantAHandleRUclips

    • @peterantonsen3539
      @peterantonsen3539 10 месяцев назад +2

      😂😂

    • @F0XX_GALAHAD92
      @F0XX_GALAHAD92 10 месяцев назад +6

      But she’d riffed off two or three other girls name with no issue 😂

  • @appledoreman
    @appledoreman Год назад +573

    It's so bizarre watching someone lying through their teeth to detectives who already know that person's guilty.

    • @e.e.harrison1357
      @e.e.harrison1357 11 месяцев назад +8

      She sensed something was up. She knew it was only a matter of time that she was caught. She had to have wondered if it was all worth it. She probably came to the realization that it wasn't and prayed that this day would never happen.

    • @seltonk5136
      @seltonk5136 10 месяцев назад +2

      It's so bizarre watching an entire PD cover up a murder for 20 years

    • @ricomunoz6121
      @ricomunoz6121 10 месяцев назад +2

      And that's the fun of these videos... I freaking love it.

    • @frankpitochelli6786
      @frankpitochelli6786 10 месяцев назад

      If there were no DNA this crackpot would've gotten away with murder....
      She doesn't stop talking.

    • @F0XX_GALAHAD92
      @F0XX_GALAHAD92 10 месяцев назад

      Had to be even more bizarre being that they were addressing their superior about her involvement in a murder of all things

  • @garfle1959
    @garfle1959 8 месяцев назад +52

    When the judge sentenced her, hesaid "Lazarous, Come Forth"

    • @blankczechz
      @blankczechz 5 месяцев назад +1

      Bam. . . you're quick. I get in trouble all the time for stuff like that. I'm glad I'm not the only one. But seriously. Goid job.

    • @zariyahharrell1722
      @zariyahharrell1722 4 месяца назад

      I’m confused

    • @aiodensghost8645
      @aiodensghost8645 4 дня назад

      ​@@zariyahharrell1722it's a reference to Jesus telling Lazarus to come forth from the cave they put his body in. In this use case, it's kinda ironic (I can explain why, but then it just neuters the joke further)

  • @mbrewer57
    @mbrewer57 Год назад +195

    Stephanie and her mother, Carol, were customers at the auto repair shop I worked for in Simi Valley, California. Her mother was the sweetest person you could ever meet. Stephanie was always nice but freaked us out with those crazy looks. We were not surprised when this hit the news.

    • @KingdomCarrie
      @KingdomCarrie Год назад +2

      Wow. I also lived in Simi Valley at that time

    • @luierdaneenpamper3877
      @luierdaneenpamper3877 Год назад +11

      If someone asks what i mean with crazy eyes i show them this woman. It's almost unreal how bad it is

    • @Patrick_Bateman11
      @Patrick_Bateman11 Год назад +3

      Any other interesting things you can tell us?
      Like was this before or after the murder
      Or any off conversations you had with her ect

    • @brianogrady9031
      @brianogrady9031 Год назад +1

      Her mom and brother seem like great people.

    • @melissamoonchild9216
      @melissamoonchild9216 Год назад +4

      eyes dont lie aye

  • @derekdavis9136
    @derekdavis9136 Год назад +795

    Imagine the terror of this woman being inside your place staring at you with those psychotic eyes and knowing she’s there to kill you. I can’t even imagine the level of fear she had in her mind before she died

    • @HardCold-Alquan
      @HardCold-Alquan Год назад +35

      Now you know why horror movies involve people with sick eyes - because it is real!

    • @thanos7110
      @thanos7110 11 месяцев назад +17

      And if she killed the cop she would do life in prison. It was a lose lose situation.

    • @hollybrabeau
      @hollybrabeau 10 месяцев назад +1

      But she's not a sociopath, no tendencies.

    • @henryvanderbeek2973
      @henryvanderbeek2973 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@hollybrabeau I hope that's sarcasm.....

    • @metalhead6548
      @metalhead6548 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@hollybrabeauso her writing “if i cant have him, no one will” doesnt scream psychopath to u?

  • @reatcas
    @reatcas 9 месяцев назад +610

    IF something like this gets covered up in the police force, imagine what is being covered in the three letter agencies in the US

    • @kyletitterton
      @kyletitterton 8 месяцев назад +24

      It's probably best not to even think about it.

    • @AbbyCavapoo24
      @AbbyCavapoo24 8 месяцев назад +40

      If you don't already know it's way worse than you would imagine

    • @maxelldenomie6131
      @maxelldenomie6131 8 месяцев назад +2

      YES! Very much.

    • @littlegirllost2654
      @littlegirllost2654 8 месяцев назад +3

      Like a President’s redrum?

    • @humanbeing2420
      @humanbeing2420 7 месяцев назад +7

      If a thorough coverup like this eventually failed, imagine how difficult it must be to cover things up.

  • @cupidarrow8518
    @cupidarrow8518 6 месяцев назад +27

    17:35 "I don't even know what year she got killed."
    "Where was his apartment?"
    "Roscoe."
    Well... You failed at your memory loss game Stephanie...

  • @RobbinGraham
    @RobbinGraham 9 месяцев назад +124

    the huffing, sighing, groaning and eye-rolling is SUCH a tell that she's trying not to screw up all her lies. she's got to make every single sentence sound casually unafraid and that the questions are just preposterous because if you don't think she understands why she's in that interrogation room being questioned, you're crazy.

    • @INORIZZ-5
      @INORIZZ-5 4 месяца назад

      If you do crime at least have a better psychology lmao

  • @wynnehi3531
    @wynnehi3531 Год назад +1207

    This makes me sick how the cops were covering up this murder. They protected their own. They never bothered to even try to solve it. The gun that was used was a common one use by the police. She had a bit mark with DNA. The family even said they suspected her.

    • @JB-zo7ln
      @JB-zo7ln Год назад

      It's like anything else. They will protect some and take down others. It's always political whether you like it or not. That's just the natural way people become when put in large pools or groups. Very few lead, most will follow, and there's always good and bad. She probably sucked the right peoples dicks and was able to stay clear for 23 years, but another person maybe would have been nabbed many years earlier.

    • @Euroscot9155
      @Euroscot9155 Год назад +25

      Different days, different technologies and techniques don't let your distrust in the Police shroud the fact that the Police has improved and continues to do so... further evidenced by this arrest.

    • @MrDougHimmadome
      @MrDougHimmadome Год назад +20

      They didn’t have the DNA technology at the time to solve this murder.
      Yes they dropped the ball on the other stuff, but it’s not like they didn’t solve the crime.

    • @tessarae9127
      @tessarae9127 Год назад +42

      To the people simping for the police, whatever. The fact that the gun used is the same as a cop’s is 🚩. It’s obvious there was a lot of police helping their own… why the case went unsolved for 20 years.

    • @nathaliearnaert3255
      @nathaliearnaert3255 Год назад +12

      This world is full of corruption!

  • @Rawkstar1960
    @Rawkstar1960 Год назад +203

    Pretty amazing how she starts the interview not knowing anything about Rutten or Sherri (can’t even remember her first name?) but as they start down the rabbit hole she’s got all this information to reveal about the details of the breakup and the confrontation at the hospital. And, as others have pointed out, that she’s been a cop/detective for over two decades.

  • @JJVater
    @JJVater 2 месяца назад +2

    I love that you called out the lady near the beginning for calling in sick to work to avoid a meeting lol

  • @davidgangemi3314
    @davidgangemi3314 Год назад +522

    They should interrogate the commanding officer who waived off the idea that Stephanie Lazarus couldnt have been a suspect because she was a cop. That should be a sentence of 5 yrs at least.
    Aiding and abetting ,anyone?
    There were clear signs and traces of Lazarus'behavior in public towards Rasmussen that would have led them to her. But we all know the upstanding reputation of LA's finest now dont we?

    • @joaquimrodriguez8961
      @joaquimrodriguez8961 Год назад +3

      He didn't know, had he known than it would be a different story..

    • @twosnakse
      @twosnakse Год назад +5

      Aiding and abetting read a book lol

    • @TheNinnyfee
      @TheNinnyfee Год назад +21

      Yes, they should at least investigate her enablers and see what pops up.

    • @Janesgirl22
      @Janesgirl22 Год назад +21

      ​@@joaquimrodriguez8961He was told she'd been a problem to Sherri, but totally dismissed the concerns. So no, he did not do anything about it.

    • @melodies5622
      @melodies5622 Год назад +5

      Was probably long dead by the time they caught her...

  • @Burusagi
    @Burusagi Год назад +1063

    And to think she would've gotten away with it if only she hadn't been spiteful and disgusting enough to take a literal bite out of her victim during the murder. Absolutely wild.

    • @dissraps
      @dissraps Год назад +28

      Thats how women fight...

    • @rajeevshrivastava4488
      @rajeevshrivastava4488 Год назад +148

      she was losing the physical fight, she did that to get the upper hand and then she hit her with a flower pot, she did not take a bite out of her afterwards, victim fought for her life but unfortunately lost

    • @Iliana___2532
      @Iliana___2532 Год назад +1

      Omg, did she bite her though???

    • @rightinthecrack
      @rightinthecrack Год назад +63

      @@dissrapsnah, the bite was on her upper forearm, so it sounds like the other girl may have gotten her arm around and did some sort of chokehold while they were struggling, then the other played dirty and bit her arm.

    • @ZayTheVTuber
      @ZayTheVTuber Год назад +20

      @@dissrapsstop stereotyping smh

  • @tusharpandey858
    @tusharpandey858 Год назад +777

    I imagine how many killers and rapists die peacefully in old age without any consequences for their wrongdoings and how many people never got justice from our modern judicial system.

    • @pfranks75
      @pfranks75 Год назад +37

      I don’t think people who commit heinous crimes live peacefully.

    • @KLA98
      @KLA98 Год назад +71

      ​@@pfranks75whatever makes you feel better lol

    • @humanbeing3946
      @humanbeing3946 Год назад +9

      Even if they live peacefully without facing the consequences of their crime, I am sure they don't die peacefully.

    • @grapesarepurple2636
      @grapesarepurple2636 Год назад +7

      ​@@pfranks75 wrong

    • @luierdaneenpamper3877
      @luierdaneenpamper3877 Год назад +13

      ​@@pfranks75i wish i believed that as well.

  • @7bridgesroad213
    @7bridgesroad213 6 месяцев назад +7

    This interview lives in my head rent free.

  • @shivalishankersharma1562
    @shivalishankersharma1562 Год назад +2528

    Detective : whats your name ?
    Lazarus : geez, I don’t remember. It was back in the 60s my parents named me. It was so long ago. Sheesh let me try to remember.

    • @megc372
      @megc372 11 месяцев назад +172

      🤣🤣🤣 she’d have to look at her pictures 🤡

    • @NoName-i8x9o
      @NoName-i8x9o 10 месяцев назад +34

      Underrated comment

    • @theodoresurtee1178
      @theodoresurtee1178 9 месяцев назад +122

      Geez I mean this was a million years ago I mean gosh, what is this all about I mean geez what year was that, was it ‘93 or ‘94

    • @jjean7730
      @jjean7730 9 месяцев назад +4

      😂😂😂😂😂

    • @wolletemiriam1829
      @wolletemiriam1829 9 месяцев назад +2

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @RedPatriot227
    @RedPatriot227 Год назад +647

    My guess is that she was probably feeling anxious as to whether she'd get caught the first 2 to 5 years after she killed that woman, then she started feeling pretty confident but not certain. It's definitely something that comes up in her mind every now and then, but she begins to think about it less frequently as she becomes more confident that she's not going to get caught.Then moving forward to 10 years and then going on 15, at this point she's probably pretty confident and certain she's going to get away with it. Then 20 years go by, her crime is something that resides in the deep dark recesses of her mind, she probably doesn't think about it at all. and then one day you find yourself sitting across from two detectives who mention the name of your victim, and your whole world comes crashing down. Don't get me wrong, I don't feel sorry for her at all but damn, I can only imagine the flurry of angst and anxiety she was experiencing. As soon as they started talking she knew why she was there lol. She knew she was done for, but, don't want to go down with out a fight.

    • @daylinhesford3116
      @daylinhesford3116 Год назад +80

      That's why even though she's a detective, she was acting extremely guilty

    • @rheadias8139
      @rheadias8139 Год назад +39

      Very well written

    • @MalonsMilk
      @MalonsMilk Год назад +40

      This is exactly what she was thinking. Brilliant summation. I also think that she never committed another crime apart from trying to hide this one ever again. I’m not sure it was premeditated as I haven’t looked at the case properly but she was extremely angry and jealous of the wife

    • @g.m.backus5219
      @g.m.backus5219 Год назад +8

      Yes, and she certainly knew to keep her mouth shut but she did not

    • @NoIdea68
      @NoIdea68 Год назад +3

      Exactly!

  • @benja_304
    @benja_304 10 месяцев назад +1119

    I've seen teenage suspects playing innocent better than this detective with +20years of experience 💀

    • @hughhaefner3317
      @hughhaefner3317 10 месяцев назад +44

      Absolutely. She snitched on herself real good!

    • @tlhogid663
      @tlhogid663 10 месяцев назад +5

      My thoughts exactly!

    • @luna-mt7sf
      @luna-mt7sf 10 месяцев назад +17

      Because she's a psychopath, they have absolutely no feelings of shame or guilt

    • @RandomGuyWithNoBeard
      @RandomGuyWithNoBeard 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@luna-mt7sfno she isnt a psychopath, you can clearly see emotions. Psychopaths are devoid of emotions and have difficulty understanding them. They are very calculated and only do things that benefit themselve. Psychopaths plan almost everything, so I dont think they would be so shaky during an interogation

    • @darrinsiberia
      @darrinsiberia 8 месяцев назад +37

      "i mean... i killed his wife... but it was a million years ago! who cares about that anymore! lemme outta here ya hear!"

  • @fotisboys
    @fotisboys 7 месяцев назад +24

    All those years thinking you got away with 1st degree murder then finally realising you will end up in. Jail for rest of your life.

    • @notting2640
      @notting2640 4 месяца назад

      LA’s parole board is trying their best to get her out right now 😂 they will all cover for each other

  • @Cazz_
    @Cazz_ Год назад +1171

    It’s disgusting other cops covered up for her 🤬
    What a vile woman

    • @ngoclan1000able
      @ngoclan1000able Год назад +11

      I know right

    • @Icadelion
      @Icadelion Год назад +12

      @@KingfishStevens-di9jitakes 2 seconds to use common sense, did you skip 20 minutes into the video?

    • @Icadelion
      @Icadelion Год назад +23

      @@KingfishStevens-di9ji it’s not a hate for America, it’s stance of anti corruption, you know you can admit fault without jumping to incorrect conclusions

    • @LibertyRapsher
      @LibertyRapsher Год назад +17

      @@KingfishStevens-di9ji - HAHA! Talk about programming. So pointing out an instance of police corruption is some how anti America. That's crazier than Stephanie Lazarus. So in your world one must embrace the cops across the board, regardless of what they do or else they need to leave the US. Just the fact that you're linking the cops with the state is potentially revealing, because cops are supposed to be serving the people, but you see them as being synonymous with the state.

    • @CartanMilk
      @CartanMilk Год назад +3

      ​@@KingfishStevens-di9jiyou are silly sir

  • @JeffSchall
    @JeffSchall Год назад +163

    As a cop, she should have damn well known that, the second they started poking at her history with her ex-boyfriend (whose wife was murdered), she needed to lawyer up immediately - whether she was guilty or not.
    Also, she's simultaneously mellow and hyper, within a one minute stretch.

    • @deniseyeaisaidit
      @deniseyeaisaidit Год назад +28

      I believe she was too arrogant to back down. Those who knew her said, she was extremely competitive, almost dangerously competitive in everything in her life I think who she is in this interview is who she’s been her whole life and people just accepted it. They said in the office the other police officers used to call her Stephanie spazarus. I’m sure she gave them a reason to give her that nickname.

    • @dreamplace7469
      @dreamplace7469 Год назад +3

      That is the beautiful thing about human beings - Knowing means nothing when you're in the hot seat, the emotions take over.

  • @fictional.musings1704
    @fictional.musings1704 11 месяцев назад +310

    The way she kept saying that "I don't know, it's been million years now" was the moment that she knew a lot and she spoke fast and kept fumbling was the clear indication that she was the culprit.

    • @RightToFreedomGirl
      @RightToFreedomGirl 8 месяцев назад +4

      Well, in fairness, 23 years ago is a LONG yime ago. Who will remember certain classmates names even 😂 But she's guilty as sin

    • @CZ-PC
      @CZ-PC 6 месяцев назад +3

      Yeah people seem to fail she realized literally instantly.

    • @JAM661
      @JAM661 6 месяцев назад +1

      Well I do not remember any of room mate names from college 35 years ago. In fact the first guy I dated I do not remember his name either since we only dated for a few month. Your mind get filled with tons of other stuff over time. As a cop and detective she probably met 1000's of people during that time. Now if you show me a picture I will remember that person but if you just say some name I may not remember that name or not. Also what you end up remembering become selective over time as you start to forget fine details.

    • @monoprixlavie
      @monoprixlavie 4 месяца назад

      @@JAM661and why exactly are you defending her? She killed Rasmussen and remembers her own murder very well. She will not forget the memory and details of taking someone’s life. She was lying.

  • @darkside5959.
    @darkside5959. 2 месяца назад +8

    4:55 look at her smile bruh. Normal people don’t smile like that. There’s crazy in those eyes

  • @peggybaby0894
    @peggybaby0894 Год назад +183

    I want to see an in-depth interview with her husband! I don’t know how I would feel learning I had married and been with a murderer for years and we were both cops and involved so much in the department. 😵‍💫

    • @jeffeey3117
      @jeffeey3117 Год назад +11

      Especially if her husband started to bring up accusations that she may have been involved

    • @jeffeey3117
      @jeffeey3117 Год назад +9

      Then he would always have to look over his.shoulder. the scary part she could try to use arsenic to poison him

    • @lisinasadia
      @lisinasadia Год назад

      ​@@SatanenPerkeleyoww that crazy why will he want to kill u

    • @KennyNGA
      @KennyNGA Год назад +1

      ​@@SatanenPerkeleI can understand the guy

    • @jackrobinson9403
      @jackrobinson9403 6 месяцев назад

      As for the husband, he might of told him, either way it seems it was an open secret, he could of known either way!

  • @gretzkyyy5645
    @gretzkyyy5645 Год назад +426

    Imagine DYING because your FIANCE is CHEATING ON YOU and his MISTRESS KILLS YOU. What a life.

    • @whatupcuh6722
      @whatupcuh6722 11 месяцев назад +42

      personally i would come back to life and not allow that

    • @LumbridgeTeleport
      @LumbridgeTeleport 11 месяцев назад +10

      She chose him, knowing how much of a loser he was

    • @blondie3743
      @blondie3743 11 месяцев назад +26

      ​@@LumbridgeTeleportbecause bad people don't lie right?

    • @sampahpribadi
      @sampahpribadi 11 месяцев назад +44

      ​@@LumbridgeTeleportnice of you to blame the victim 👍

    • @Able-man-i6f
      @Able-man-i6f 6 месяцев назад

      He was cheating on his fiancé stupid, his “ex” has mad feelings for him still and didn’t want him to marry her

  • @euriditia
    @euriditia Год назад +951

    I've seen this interrogation several times and each time it always satisfying to see how bad of a liar she is. Not to mention, in most of the damn pictures of her, she has those damn crazy eyes. It's even more infuriating that they probably suspected she did it but because she was a cop they swept it under the rug. It's sad that a new generation of cops/detectives to get her, but I'm glad that it happened.

    • @Justice-ef9sk
      @Justice-ef9sk Год назад +53

      Right!! I mean, she really handled this badly. Pretending she didn't know John's name? Mispronouncing his last name? I mean she was literally obsessed with this guy! Hell, I'm in my forties and I STILL remember last names of people from HIGH SCHOOL, and they were only friends. And not remembering the confrontation she had with Sherry at the hospital? Oh, come on! 🙄Again, I can clearly remember the few physical fights I had--20 years ago!!
      She would have been more believable if she admitted to the things they were asking her. Like: yeah she was obsessed with John and yeah she confronted Sherry but so what, that doesn't make her a murderer, blah blah.... instead of the temporary amnesia BS game she was trying to play.
      Actually, as a cop she should have caught on immediately and said one word:
      L A W Y E R

    • @euriditia
      @euriditia Год назад +15

      @@Justice-ef9sk Lol this is so true. Anyone will remember their first love (or in her case, obsession)'s name. Unless she had a case of true amnesia, which she obviously did not lol! And yes, with a confrontation like that with someone you knew, anyone would remember that too!
      And I agree, because she was a cop at the time it surprises me she did not ask for a lawyer or anything. That was just a super dumb move, but I'm also glad she did not ask because then they wouldn't have had this play out the way it did.

    • @andreablossom3929
      @andreablossom3929 Год назад +18

      damn crazy eyes for real! 🤣🤣🤣Then when she mentioned her co-workers may have seen her hyper I'm like yea I've got a few of those in my life (family), very hyper people when dealing with negative emotion and very sociopathic presenting. Co-workers calling her Spazurus behind her back I can only imagine what it was like working with this nutcase that's been given a badge to do detective work of all things.

    • @misterbojangles6205
      @misterbojangles6205 Год назад +6

      I keep coming across it also, we're running out of YT content. Swept, scrubbed and mopped.

    • @thrownawaytubes
      @thrownawaytubes Год назад +11

      The cops that brushed it aside and wrote the remark abt watching too many cartoons should be held accountable

  • @skykid3
    @skykid3 7 месяцев назад +29

    Should never have been Allowed to retire from the police force and claim her full pension

  • @redbostonred2223
    @redbostonred2223 Год назад +265

    The two detectives that pursued the case deserve a lot of credit,
    they were not detoured from doing there job because the
    suspect was a former police officer, but there was some luck
    in the case if the DNA taken at the crime scene was lost
    there would have been no way of placing here at the murder
    scene. A job well done by these detectives.

    • @Jamesbond54630
      @Jamesbond54630 Год назад +15

      No dude this case was re-opened coz she messed up with the higher rank official.

    • @Obiahjones
      @Obiahjones Год назад +6

      You wonder how she failed to remember the DNA , she should have been aware of that DNA

    • @redbostonred2223
      @redbostonred2223 Год назад

      hay dude what's the difference why the case was reopened the detectives
      still had to narrowed down to her.
      @@Jamesbond54630

    • @drummersnare6276
      @drummersnare6276 Год назад +5

      *Deterred

    • @johnfrankster3244
      @johnfrankster3244 Год назад +1

      ^ nah bro its detoured lol.

  • @chad_b
    @chad_b Год назад +129

    Her facial expressions and her stuttering are hilarious 😁

    • @mattb6646
      @mattb6646 Год назад +9

      "Im not guilty, im not guilty, gosh stop asking me questions I said I'm not guilty" 😅

    • @TheNinnyfee
      @TheNinnyfee Год назад +5

      Her eyes are actually scary and crazy, but as a decorated detective stuttering doesn't become her.

    • @jaymac7203
      @jaymac7203 Год назад +1

      She's clearly innocent 😭 lol 😂

    • @Rachelle-v2s
      @Rachelle-v2s 5 месяцев назад

      😂😂😂😂😂

  • @corymanza1072
    @corymanza1072 10 месяцев назад +928

    It’s interesting that even though she’s a detective, she falls for the same tricks they’re trained to do. Probably in a panic of getting caught, it all went out the window.

    • @1mrsadkinson
      @1mrsadkinson 9 месяцев назад +82

      They’re trained to interrogate, not to be interrogated. And she’s probably never broken the law since and had convinced herself that she was innocent and that it was over, so she was completely unprepared. Or she may just be a horrible liar. 🤣

    • @penelopejoann
      @penelopejoann 8 месяцев назад +16

      Right? Human behavior can be so wretchedly predictable!

    • @SouthPawGirlie
      @SouthPawGirlie 8 месяцев назад +13

      ​@@1mrsadkinsonShe had broke the law, on the Documentary she would run plates on guys she liked, find out their address and show up to their house. That's against the law.

    • @1mrsadkinson
      @1mrsadkinson 8 месяцев назад +3

      @@SouthPawGirlie oh ok, I never said she didn’t, I said she’s probably. It was just an assumption. But thanks

    • @MalonsMilk
      @MalonsMilk 8 месяцев назад +2

      I guess it is kind of proof that I think she was not a natural born killer and that she was law abiding from that point on. She still needs to be punished and do time but it shows she’s not actually a danger to anyone and has probably helped more people than she harmed.

  • @Bionic_Fonzie
    @Bionic_Fonzie 6 месяцев назад +12

    32:06 - it took HOURS, for the "spidey sense" of a detective of 26 years, to kick in

  • @preciouschideraalumona5143
    @preciouschideraalumona5143 Год назад +195

    It's clear she's discussed this situation with fellow colleagues before. There was a cover up. Thank God for these detectives

  • @wandajaximov4527
    @wandajaximov4527 Год назад +874

    Don't date ANYONE named lazarus

  • @NKdidit
    @NKdidit Год назад +164

    Det: when did you date John?
    Stephanie: lets see.. I was born in 1960. I first ate peas in 1962, in 1969 I bought an orange shirt, in 1982 I had menstrual cramps.
    Det: did you have a fight with sherry?
    Stephanie: Jeez lets see, that was a million years ago. I'm not sure. That was a million years ago. I'm not sure

  • @josephdelp87
    @josephdelp87 3 месяца назад +6

    Imagine how many lives she has destroyed while on the job. Likely planting evidence, lying in court, shootings, false arrests, etc.

  • @AriaMadisonxo
    @AriaMadisonxo Год назад +463

    I recwatch this case often so I can know how to tell if someone's lying and gaslighting me 😂 there are more narcissists and sociopaths among us than we realize and its scary.

    • @imabal9183
      @imabal9183 Год назад +4

      😂 nice

    • @rainmanj9978
      @rainmanj9978 Год назад +1

      😢you can tell?

    • @thecoondog56
      @thecoondog56 Год назад

      bingo...and narcissists know theyre narcissists too ..very dangerous people who cant stop lying and manipulating everyone around them

    • @foodiesworldUSA
      @foodiesworldUSA Год назад +5

      Oh yes I’m learning about this now too

    • @alfredooliva5175
      @alfredooliva5175 Год назад +1

      best comment ever!

  • @blossomx1804
    @blossomx1804 Год назад +298

    I feel so sorry for her parents. They knew and they had to live with the injustice.

    • @thatfishguy4991
      @thatfishguy4991 10 месяцев назад

      Yeah it’s so sad they tarnished Steph’s name by framing her

    • @ladygumshoe7402
      @ladygumshoe7402 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@thatfishguy4991?????????

    • @ladygumshoe7402
      @ladygumshoe7402 5 месяцев назад

      I feel for the parents too😢😢 They tried telling everyone and anyone that would listen that Stephanie stalked their daughter and their daughter was concerned about this. Her retirement money should have been giving to the parents of the woman she murdered.......or the husband.

  • @redblackandgreen
    @redblackandgreen Год назад +198

    "If I can't have you, no one will "
    Classic lines of a killer 🤬

    • @mangafq8
      @mangafq8 8 месяцев назад

      Worth breaking up!!

    • @loralieisa
      @loralieisa 8 месяцев назад +3

      If she meant that she would have shot him not his wife.

    • @chorizoramen93
      @chorizoramen93 8 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@loralieisaNah, can go both ways. She likely thought once she was gone that he would choose her. But he didn't so...

    • @loralieisa
      @loralieisa 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@chorizoramen93 "If I can't have you no one will" means that only the murder of John would accomplish such. He did find another woman eventually.

    • @chorizoramen93
      @chorizoramen93 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@loralieisa not if she was crazy and willing to do the same to other future partners...

  • @mikerivera7509
    @mikerivera7509 7 месяцев назад +13

    Lazarus Been a cop for years and still didn't realize that she was getting set up

  • @dinglbarry1275
    @dinglbarry1275 Год назад +55

    Every 3 months or so I go back to watching Lazarus's interrogation for entertainment. It really is one of the funniest of all time. And she does an amazing impression of charles Bronson.

    • @johanneabelsen1644
      @johanneabelsen1644 Год назад +2

      I'd rather say POPEYE, with that mouth, she makes!😂🤦‍♂️

  • @gaming4life25
    @gaming4life25 Год назад +105

    I cannot believe she lived a very normal life for 23 years even after knowing that she murdered someone brutally and left a family completely devastated. The killer is definitely a psychopath.

  • @skehleben7699
    @skehleben7699 Год назад +179

    This is a good example as to why before someone is given a gun and a uniform they need extensive psychological testing.

    • @katiesimpson8517
      @katiesimpson8517 Год назад +3

      Retired Jail Nurse. Worked "intake." I absolutely agree.

    • @nickmansfield1
      @nickmansfield1 Год назад +4

      You may find a lot of people with criminal convictions more suited to the job than some regular police.

    • @trawlins396
      @trawlins396 Год назад +7

      She would've passed.

    • @JenGable-Justeson
      @JenGable-Justeson Год назад +1

      Yes ! But there must be follow up after three to five years after hiring.

  • @cloroxbleach945
    @cloroxbleach945 6 месяцев назад +11

    Can you imagine being in prison with the woman who put you there