Man Starts New Life After Killing Parents to See Girlfriend | William Leslie Arnold Case Analysis

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  • Опубликовано: 21 дек 2024

Комментарии • 853

  • @t-drake5856
    @t-drake5856 Год назад +167

    The irony is she was worried about the truck drivers daughter, but didn’t have the foresight to see she was the one who raised a killer.

    • @sammas2959
      @sammas2959 11 месяцев назад +1

      And so this is our shortcomings today as well. 🙄

    • @gordons-alive4940
      @gordons-alive4940 17 дней назад

      She sounds pretty awful, the way the Dr. described her anyway, but damn.

  • @kimmurphy1683
    @kimmurphy1683 Год назад +47

    As the son of a domineering narcissistic mother, I can relate. Had he grown up in a truly caring family, I'm willing to bet his life would have been much different.

  • @res2788
    @res2788 Год назад +274

    I have a feeling that any girl that Leslie showed an interest in would be called no good.
    If the girl’s fathers occupation was Neurosurgeon, Leslie’s mother would have found another reason why the girl was no good.
    Toxic parents suck!

    • @chillywilly7299
      @chillywilly7299 Год назад +3

      So true I know if I had a descent father , I would not have got into half the trouble.

    • @christinab9808
      @christinab9808 Год назад +2

      So you shoot her 10 times???!!!

    • @sevengramrocks2746
      @sevengramrocks2746 Год назад

      @@christinab98086

    • @bradsanders6954
      @bradsanders6954 Год назад +11

      When mom's do that, drive other women away, they tend to have a fixation on their boy.
      They want him for them selves. Or want to fully control him, its a sickness.

    • @SinisterScoundrel6562
      @SinisterScoundrel6562 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@bradsanders6954Empty nest syndrome. Leads kids to hate their mothers for life.

  • @maureeningleston1501
    @maureeningleston1501 Год назад +84

    I'm not diagnosing but only speculating it's safe to hit like b4 watching Dr Grandes videos.

  • @elliebellie7816
    @elliebellie7816 Год назад +448

    My Australian father used to employ men who had no interest in returning to their overseas homes after WWII. Usually they had a wife and children they wanted to forget about and mostly wanted to lay about and drink all the time. Some American magazine television show even did a segment on one of his employees who didn't go back home and his wife and children had thought he was dead from the war for 20 or 30 years but somehow he was finally traced to Australia. He had no remorse for the agony he had caused his family.

    • @goatgod2009
      @goatgod2009 Год назад +80

      PTSD is a hell of a condition.

    • @KoolT
      @KoolT Год назад +64

      I know about other soldier's that didn't go home to America from Vietnam. And many became alcoholics. There were many alcoholics come out of wars, 😢.

    • @ann-mariepaliukenas19
      @ann-mariepaliukenas19 Год назад

      @@goatgod2009that’s not PTSD,that’s being a selfish a sshole.

    • @meeeeeeeeeeeep
      @meeeeeeeeeeeep Год назад +111

      ​@@goatgod2009 That isn't usually bc of PTSD. It's more narcissistic in nature than anything else.

    • @jasonnikolic
      @jasonnikolic Год назад +70

      @@goatgod2009 PTSD the most overused excuse of all time.

  • @Meenadevidasi
    @Meenadevidasi Год назад +45

    With a mother like that who needs enemies?

    • @pilarboutte392
      @pilarboutte392 6 месяцев назад +1

      What a horrid mother. Proof of just how that narcissist element in mom really knocks the s--- out of a child. Not condoning his actions but there's a deeply imprinted REASON for it, perhaps.

  • @fudgeisg00d
    @fudgeisg00d Год назад +254

    I think this case falls in line with a long list of cases which serve as good examples why you shouldn't say things like
    "What are you gonna do, shoot/stab/explode me?"

    • @drdr76
      @drdr76 Год назад +24

      Yes, some people have a hard time distinguishing a rhetorical question from a real question.

    • @girlwhomustnotbenamed4139
      @girlwhomustnotbenamed4139 Год назад +27

      Also maybe a good example as to why not abuse your children. Since it looks like a lot of people still need a separate reason for it, other than it's inhuman, wrong and actually against the law.

    • @ev25zv
      @ev25zv Год назад +5

      @@girlwhomustnotbenamed4139 Yeah, telling your kid that you don't want them to date a particular person is abuse. Best to let the kids run the household...

    • @ev25zv
      @ev25zv Год назад +5

      @Johnny Natural Nonsense. She just made it happen minutes sooner than it would have.

    • @aprilwatson8865
      @aprilwatson8865 Год назад +2

      @@ev25zv I agree, hardly abuse. Kids just don’t like to follow the rules.

  • @dicedrice7216
    @dicedrice7216 Год назад +122

    What happened to Crystal? She was probably a nice average person who had spend the rest of her life dealing with the guilt of being peripherally involved in these horrible murders.
    And poor little brother Jim!

    • @Mechaneer
      @Mechaneer Год назад +33

      Yeah, this story left me wondering how Crystal's life played out, as well as the "recent parolee" who helped Leslie escape.

    • @lf9341
      @lf9341 Год назад +12

      yes and the brother...

    • @SirenaSpades
      @SirenaSpades Год назад +13

      I'm curious how you think Crystal would end up feeling guilty. Like she had any control of what he would do. She probably felt glad she didn't end up marrying him!

    • @crystalbluepersuasion1027
      @crystalbluepersuasion1027 Год назад +13

      I think one of his high school classmates helped him escape too. Leslie was highly thought of by his HS classmates and teachers even after the murders and nobody liked the Mom. There wasn’t much you could do back then if you were seeing a child being abused.

    • @azieldaly2965
      @azieldaly2965 Год назад

      ​@@SirenaSpades Was he a bad husband?

  • @uncleted470
    @uncleted470 Год назад +28

    “He traded a physical prison for a mental one” I felt that. I can’t imagine living in constant fear. U are never supposed to put down ur guard even for a second. That’s very hard. How he managed to pull thru shoes he was a very determined man. At least he took care of his family.

  • @travisolson9190
    @travisolson9190 Год назад +56

    I remember my mom fuming in anger one night because she couldn’t believe her daughter was going to marry someone who went to a junior college. My sister didn’t marry her fiancé. His father died and my sister gave him less that week to get over it. He didn’t, and the relationship was over. Seems like she lost interest in someone that couldn’t live by our standards of not getting over problems within 10 minutes.

    • @truthsocialmedia
      @truthsocialmedia Год назад +1

      Narcissist mom and narc daughter.

    • @blacksuite1
      @blacksuite1 Год назад +2

      I guess your sis doesn't have a great relationship with her mom

    • @nmartin5551
      @nmartin5551 Год назад +2

      Hey! I think we may be related!!

    • @WanderlustHomebody
      @WanderlustHomebody Год назад +13

      The ex-fiance dodged a bullet!

    • @PriceySweater
      @PriceySweater 3 месяца назад

      Weird story to share on YT comments... Seems like you need some friends

  • @franbrooks605
    @franbrooks605 Год назад +94

    Once again, a great analysis. Even though he was free, he was still in prison. I don't know if serving his full sentence would have given him any peace....murdering your parents is top notch up there. I was relieved to hear he didn't commit any other crimes.

    • @mrazik131
      @mrazik131 Год назад

      the relive came from quick work out of grave digging....better than any psychologic therapy

    • @E.C.Animation
      @E.C.Animation Год назад +5

      No other crimes that we know of.

    • @011silbermond
      @011silbermond Год назад

      @@mrazik131 😅😅🙈🙈

    • @bradsanders6954
      @bradsanders6954 Год назад

      On the other hand, nobody knew where he was for a long time, he could have killed more people than Bundy and just kept moving. Who knows what he did in his spare time? Back then people could just disappear.
      He had some real tendencies, to grab a gun and shoot each parent 5 or 6 times and bury them in the backyard.
      At least he kept them close, like Gacy did.

  • @matthewneufer1758
    @matthewneufer1758 Год назад +19

    You have to give him some credit for not getting in trouble ever again.

  • @LDiamondz
    @LDiamondz Год назад +20

    "And a justified dislike of surprise parties." lol. I had to laugh when you said that. Unbeknownst to me, my son was passing by....and I heard him laugh from behind me! 🤣 He said, "I love that guy, Grande's the best!" 🤣 YES, son, he IS! 😆✌️❤

  • @Mandrake591
    @Mandrake591 Год назад +22

    His mother’s treatment of him was evil. Better for him to walk away forever than to react, obviously.

  • @internziko
    @internziko Год назад +344

    The guy had a better life on the run from prison then most people that never commit a crime.

    • @barneyronnie
      @barneyronnie Год назад

      How so?

    • @mrazik131
      @mrazik131 Год назад +13

      @@barneyronnie he was always ready and ready ...lol not sitting infront of tv!

    • @peterbunting4360
      @peterbunting4360 Год назад +16

      @@barneyronnie He got away from Nebraska and ended up living in Mt. Tamborine.

    • @iseeyou1312
      @iseeyou1312 Год назад +7

      @@barneyronnie He left America

    • @crystalbluepersuasion1027
      @crystalbluepersuasion1027 Год назад +8

      @@peterbunting4360 Omaha Nebraska is awesome. I was shocked when I moved there in 1981. It sure wasn’t on my bucket list either.

  • @enigmag9538
    @enigmag9538 Год назад +42

    This is a very interesting story. I've heard a few other stories of people who escaped prison after being incarcerated for murder at a very young age and they went on to lead a good life, at least in the eyes of those around them. It's all so confusing and sad in so many ways.

  • @girlwhomustnotbenamed4139
    @girlwhomustnotbenamed4139 Год назад +27

    His mother didn't deserve to die but she deserved to be held accountable for her abusive behaviour. And by the system not even thinking about that, this is what you get. She didn't treat him "like a child", she was abusive, and that's not a normal way to treat any human. We can't just pretent like her cruelty towards her own child didn't exist. This was the cycle of violence in action, and in a weird way it's lucky Leslie didn't kill other, innocent people but turned on his abuser instead.

    • @truthsocialmedia
      @truthsocialmedia Год назад +2

      @@wmdkitty the story was not told with that angle. You are making a lot of assumptions with no evidence.

    • @terrorists-are-among-us
      @terrorists-are-among-us Год назад

      He was a child and shouldn't have been dating at all. Get a job. Grow up. Move out 🤡 Toddlers are sick 🤮

  • @Kino_Chroma
    @Kino_Chroma Год назад +159

    The mom sounds like a narcissistic mother with a golden child and a scapegoat for her two sons. Thanks for the video.

    • @Elizabeth-xo9sn
      @Elizabeth-xo9sn Год назад +9

      Nobody would be good enough for her son type. Her twisted mind said she would loose a son. 😡

    • @jjgreen5206
      @jjgreen5206 Год назад +1

      But he was a child psychopath. He wasn’t a victim, he was manipulative and as Dr Grande said extremely selfish and entitled. I’m sure he was an extremely difficult kid. The mother may have been narcissistic but he was worse

    • @ImSimplyAHuman
      @ImSimplyAHuman Год назад +10

      @@jjgreen5206 it’s possible that his mother’s behavior may have turned him into a narcissist but I doubt he was a sociopath/psychopath. The circumstances sound more like a “crime of passion“ than a pathological personality disorder.

    • @katarinatibai8396
      @katarinatibai8396 Год назад

      💯

    • @irenebertoni
      @irenebertoni Год назад +6

      @@auntiefan4202 Yeah, I don't understand why multiple people here are referring to Leslie as a psychopath, when the video pretty clearly shows that he wasn't.

  • @bunnybgood411
    @bunnybgood411 Год назад +17

    It's so weird that he escaped from prison when he was going to be released anyway. That makes little sense.

  • @Flamsterette
    @Flamsterette Год назад +17

    Thank you for the Mother's Day 2023 upload, Dr. Grande. Good timing before I go to Pho dinner.

  • @aarondavis8943
    @aarondavis8943 Год назад +24

    That reverse psychology trick shouldn't be attempted on someone who is prone to rageful violence and is angry in the moment.

  • @multiio1424
    @multiio1424 Год назад +9

    I confess that when listening to the story, when it came to Leslie plotting his escape from prison I went "nooo you'll be released in a few years anyway, what are you doing, you're messing it up," and then when I heard that he escaped successfully and was never caught I went "yaaay good job mate."
    I wonder if ultimately it would've been better or worse for him if he hadn't escaped and had been released a few years later. He wouldn't have had to hide from the authorities for the rest of his life, he could've talked about his true past freely but on the other hand everybody would've known that he killed his parents as a kid, which might also have isolated him -- maybe he wouldn't have found a spouse and had a family? I mean, having killed your own parents is a huge guilt and a huge burden for any non-psychotic person obviously (and Leslie wasn't psychotic), not being able to talk about it to anyone must also be a huge burden, but everybody knowing about it probably isn't so easy either.

    • @Zakster2023
      @Zakster2023 Год назад +3

      Insightful points that I hadn’t considered. He would still have to report to a parole officer perhaps and could never move on from his crimes. Not sure taking on a fake personality and marrying someone while lying to them about your identity is morally or legally acceptable either though.

  • @adamweisshaup
    @adamweisshaup Год назад +25

    His family referring to him makes me think of my old man. No one knew much about him or his origins and he NEVER spoke about them, just vague references to 'back home.' You know that they don't want questions asked when no one ever asks them.

  • @cathyosullivan718
    @cathyosullivan718 Год назад +96

    Geez. What’s wrong with being a truck driver? Why did this make the daughter no good?

    • @hotaruishere2133
      @hotaruishere2133 Год назад +8

      Because it's not a "high end, respectable" job 😂😂😂😂 If people weren't Doctors, CEOs, or Chairmans of some sort of business, they were "low" and "dirty". Sounds like the mom and dad of Leslie didn't want Leslie "tarnishing" their family's reputation by him dating a daughter of a blue-collar job worker 😂😂😂

    • @toomanymarys7355
      @toomanymarys7355 Год назад +8

      Truck drivers had reputations for very sleazy behavior when fewer people were truck drivers. Truck stops had their own prostitutes. These are a lot less common now. Why this would necessarily make his daughter like her father, even if he was that sort, is in her head, though.

    • @jena.alexia
      @jena.alexia Год назад

      She was obviously a snob.

    • @E.C.Animation
      @E.C.Animation Год назад +6

      That's the killer's story. The parents can't tell their side of it.

    • @011silbermond
      @011silbermond Год назад +8

      My grandmother once, very late in life, said the preacher in her community refused to shake hands with people below status of a teacher.

  • @marksweet4077
    @marksweet4077 Год назад +82

    I hated my mother for her abuse, lies and manipulation but I never thought about hurting her in anyway. I just wanted to be loved and accepted like my brothers. When I’d had enough, I cut her out of my life completely. She died alone and forgotten by her real children

    • @nhmooytis7058
      @nhmooytis7058 Год назад +3

      One time my alcoholic mother shoved me, tbh I’d have shoved back but I knew she’d lie and tell my dad I started it and he’d deck me.

    • @January.
      @January. Год назад

      *any way

    • @janeoleary8454
      @janeoleary8454 Год назад +3

      That is very sad

    • @johnylalrina1451
      @johnylalrina1451 Год назад

      And you want the whole world to know about all your unfortunate upbringing?

    • @johnylalrina1451
      @johnylalrina1451 Год назад +1

      What people are willing to say on the internet about their dark past for some Like is actually amazing.

  • @daniel-adrianmazilul7653
    @daniel-adrianmazilul7653 Год назад +11

    The abused pull the trigger right on time ! after that William Leslie Arnold was freed. He lead a good life and he never went back. Very rare personality type .

  • @rhondasisco-cleveland2665
    @rhondasisco-cleveland2665 Год назад +129

    Mom was a narcissist and didn’t get it how she wanted it. Some people can’t handle mental abuse without losing it. It can be hard.

    • @E.C.Animation
      @E.C.Animation Год назад +8

      Then get a job and move out if you don't like how someone treats you. Not murder them! Wtf...

    • @aalexttostado
      @aalexttostado Год назад +29

      @@E.C.Animationtrue but you can’t mentally torture one of your sons and treat the other perfectly and expect them to not go insane on you?

    • @ImSimplyAHuman
      @ImSimplyAHuman Год назад +14

      @@aalexttostado I agree. This sounds like a “play stupid games, win stupid prizes” situation (on the part of the mother).

    • @no-ic5gw
      @no-ic5gw Год назад +8

      @@E.C.Animation read "the body keeps the score". You need to understand trauma.

    • @bunnymad5049
      @bunnymad5049 Год назад +2

      @@no-ic5gw Regardless of trauma, the kind of games his mother was playing don't justify murder. And I understand trauma first hand. You can forgive, you can move away as soon as able, you can go no contact and you can get help. It would seem he has possibly inherited some of his mother's mental issues with the lack of remorse and sense of entitlement he had. Oh - but yes - that's a really good book everyone could do with reading. xx

  • @victorialiarakos8593
    @victorialiarakos8593 Год назад +28

    I am an only child who suffered neglect. At one point I lived with my Grandparents, because my Mother was unable to take care of me. I was dropped off in the middle of the night and was not able to bring the few toys I had. Not all only children have wonderful lives. I suspect this myth may stem from people who had siblings. I may have misunderstood your comment, but thankful to be able to comment on this regardless

    • @nhmooytis7058
      @nhmooytis7058 Год назад +8

      I was an only child of a widow (who was a narcissist and alcoholic) and imho the downside is the parent(s) have nothing to focus on BUT the one child. At best it can result in spoiling the kid, at worst if the parent(s) are disturbed/destructive that is all directed at the lone victim. I was lucky that my mother remarried a nice man when I was 10, and from 12-15 had cousins live with us who were like my sisters. Sadly as the years went on my mother’s drinking and narcissism worsened and after I moved out after college my stepfather bore the brunt of it 😢.

    • @tgragg6988
      @tgragg6988 Год назад +1

      I'm going to make a statement without double checking the numbers because it's almost 3am I'm lazy and just don't care that much but I believe the only child that does better than the first born child is the only child. by better I mean successful in ones career or whatever. On average of course

    • @theriddlerUSA
      @theriddlerUSA Год назад +3

      Victoria I'm so sorry you were neglected during your childhood. I hope you are happy and living a great life. 🙂

    • @astramisie
      @astramisie Год назад +2

      @@nhmooytis7058I strongly agree, all the tortured was focused on the single child which they neglect also. That was my experience too

    • @nhmooytis7058
      @nhmooytis7058 Год назад +2

      @@astramisie I’d never have an only child if I had a choice, my mom didn’t. My dad died when I was a year old and she was 50 before she remarried.

  • @SonnyJim25
    @SonnyJim25 11 месяцев назад +1

    I only recently discovered Dr. Grande's channel here. I'm hooked. Mostly because of his humor. He throws in the lines that make me have to stop the video because I'm laughing too hard and then keep me giggling far too long afterward.

  • @loretta_3843
    @loretta_3843 Год назад +641

    His mother didn't approve of his girlfriend because her dad was a truck driver??! Ah, the good ol' days when people let their petty stereotypes and prejudices just hang out 🤦🏻‍♀️

    • @sarahs8371
      @sarahs8371 Год назад +69

      People still do that in front of others

    • @barneyronnie
      @barneyronnie Год назад +54

      We called them class conscious pigs.

    • @mrazik131
      @mrazik131 Год назад

      @@KatherineLaura6564 so to kill is the correct solution ha?

    • @franbrooks605
      @franbrooks605 Год назад +22

      What good old days, it's the new norm

    • @michaellear6904
      @michaellear6904 Год назад +80

      Yeah, everything would stop were it not for hard working truck drivers. It's an honorable necessary profession.

  • @shameronstar7220
    @shameronstar7220 Год назад +25

    Really fascinating story. Sounds like something you could base a movie off of.

    • @bubbabroad9051
      @bubbabroad9051 Год назад +2

      Yes, I had wanted to ask whether a documentary or movie spawned this. Very interesting story.

  • @TwistedReality13
    @TwistedReality13 Год назад +14

    "In a sense, he traded one prison for another" haunting.

  • @NoMorePandasss
    @NoMorePandasss Год назад +10

    Love how your studio and audio set up has evolved. Great content as always. Thanks!

  • @JDoe001
    @JDoe001 Год назад +24

    In this case, we differ on the meaning of "didn't do anything wrong" the effect horrible parents have on the psyche of helpless children is criminal.

  • @kailakatsaidthat9130
    @kailakatsaidthat9130 Год назад +63

    Im really conflicted about this one. Treating a child like that can create such a dark place inside of them. It sounds like she tried to break his spirit. Maybe his mom didnt deserve to be gunned down like that, but im not sure what people expect when they mistreat their children and pick favorites. His father had to know this was happening, which i feel makes him partially to blame for that resentment; but im sure he was only killed because he showed up.

    • @ev25zv
      @ev25zv Год назад +5

      Are you insane? They didn't approve of a girl he was hanging around with and so he killed them and you're conflicted? Jesus Christ...

    • @kailakatsaidthat9130
      @kailakatsaidthat9130 Год назад +16

      @@ev25zv It wasnt just the girl, did you watch the whole video?? He explained some of the abuse the boy faced, and I'm not conflicted about the fact that murder is wrong. He was a teenager, already being emotionally abused, add that to the hormones and frustration of being denied basic privileges. Every death is not a tragedy, some people really are terrible humans.

    • @crystalbluepersuasion1027
      @crystalbluepersuasion1027 Год назад +5

      There’s a lot more to it than what you see here. Read the 4 part story about it in the Omaha World Herald from 2017.

    • @ev25zv
      @ev25zv Год назад +3

      @@kailakatsaidthat9130 He said they didn't approve of his girlfriend and they didn't want him to take the car out and they had arguments. Sounds like a family with a teenager. Where are you getting all your info about the parents or is this what the kid said when he was arrested?
      Either way, he was 16. He could have gotten a job and moved out. In that era, that was very common.

    • @sabinegierth-waniczek4872
      @sabinegierth-waniczek4872 Год назад +3

      @@kailakatsaidthat9130Thank you so much! You are so correct in my opinion - I needed MANY more words, but you said it better!

  • @richlaue
    @richlaue Год назад +2

    Anybody that blows up this easily, is not someone you would want to be a friend of

  • @dissidentfairy4264
    @dissidentfairy4264 Год назад +104

    There's no excuse for murder ever unless it's self defense but his mother's treatment of him was terrible. For her to call a girl "no good" just because her father was a truck driver is pathetic! His explosive temperament and his mother's controlling and unfair favoritism was a lethal combination. In saying that, I want to repeat, there is zero excuse for murder!

    • @stephenbarone4053
      @stephenbarone4053 Год назад +18

      Boo hoo. I’ve known mothers with more impressive records when it comes to torment. Dr. Grande is correct; a selfish man with a tremendous sense of entitlement.

    • @jennyclark6183
      @jennyclark6183 Год назад +3

      The Bible says you can kill in self defense.

    • @lynettewilson7396
      @lynettewilson7396 Год назад +8

      He's a cold blooded killer

    • @barneyronnie
      @barneyronnie Год назад

      ​@@jennyclark6183 Where does it say that?

    • @Watchoutforsnakez
      @Watchoutforsnakez Год назад +4

      His father was a failure at manhood as well. He’s still a cold blooded killer.

  • @opium77757
    @opium77757 7 месяцев назад +1

    Always an interesting story! A daily stop with Dr Grande "makes my day"....🎉

  • @RoastFlea61
    @RoastFlea61 5 месяцев назад +1

    This is why so many old people end up in care facilities and die without seeing their family.
    They did it to themselves. Why would the kids that you tried to have absolutely control and authority over, then kicked them out, come back to care for you? Why? You didn’t care for them, you treated them like a chore.
    So now you can be the chore of an elder home.
    I’m so glad my parents are good people. I look forward to caring for them when they need it.

  • @Micah2147
    @Micah2147 Год назад +117

    Nebraska has their fair share of scary people.

    • @jeulogy702
      @jeulogy702 Год назад +14

      So does everywhere.

    • @meeeeeeeeeeeep
      @meeeeeeeeeeeep Год назад +1

      ​​@@jeulogy702 They never implied Nebraska was the only place that had scary people. Hell, up until he finally died, a very scary man who changed his name to, Mr. Lambert, moved to Nebraska and he was incredibly dangerous. Last I heard, he hired two of the best gunmen west of the Mississippi to violently stalk & blackmail Mr. & Mrs. Schwartz unless they agreed to participate in his financial crimes. He had a kill count of almost 300 people directly and indirectly caused by him. There are rumors he was even partly responsible for a major plane crash after the air traffic controller suffered a mental breakdown because his daughter killed herself. However I also heard that Mr. Lambert defeated an entire community of Nazis so maybe he's not all bad. He committed these many killings to protect his family after all. I also heard he's a meth chemist but maybe I'm wrong on that.

    • @elperroloco1988
      @elperroloco1988 Год назад +4

      I know right! Like didn’t like someone because their father was a truck driver,and taunting someone with a loaded firearm.

    • @margin606
      @margin606 Год назад +2

      Mostly because of the murder part.

    • @MypronounIsKing
      @MypronounIsKing Год назад

      @@nocnoc9931 That’s just the media trying to turn people off about conservative non-liberal states- propaganda

  • @ScottShedd123
    @ScottShedd123 Год назад +18

    It doesn't sound like 1st degree premeditated murder. It sounds like his mother emotionally abused him for years and he snapped. Not saying that it is right, but should have been 2nd degree.

  • @annika_panicka
    @annika_panicka Год назад +8

    Happy Mother's Day to all the Grande Dames™out there! 💐

  • @Rietto
    @Rietto Год назад +12

    I love your 'older crime' case content. ❤

  • @jimcronin2043
    @jimcronin2043 Год назад +43

    While not condoning the murders, I would take a look at what appears to be the passive attitude of Leslie's father with respect to the mother's treatment of their son. It is unfortunate that he did not step in and take control of what was taking place in the home. Adolescent and teen boys benefit greatly when their development has a productive paternal influence as they grow to adulthood. There are many exceptions, I know, but if possible it is best to have a positive father figure. Part of today's societal problems stem from the prevalence of broken homes or those that were mother-only from the start.

    • @truthsocialmedia
      @truthsocialmedia Год назад

      Some women will kick a man out of the house or leave if he corrects her or stands up to her, or call the cops and claim all kinds of BS. If I’ve learned anything in 45 years, there are ALOT of
      Covert narcissist women out there . ( I stay away from CN men because they are easier to spot in my opinion

    • @nataliep501
      @nataliep501 Год назад +1

      Due to men not stepping up or wearing protection?

    • @truthsocialmedia
      @truthsocialmedia Год назад

      @@nataliep501 what are you talking about? This has nothing to do with the case. Women have SOLE authority for reproductive rights. men have NO reproductive rights. stop spreading mis-information and gaslighting.

    • @supernova11711
      @supernova11711 Год назад +2

      Domineering and controlling women almost always end up with submissive men. Nobody else will put up with their sh*t. It only gets worse the longer their married because the man just becomes more and more under her control as the years go by.
      Two adults, choosing a situation, fair enough.
      The problem comes in when they have children. NOT a healthy environment.
      Though the dad doesn’t participate in the abuse, the child still inevitably (and understandably) grows to resent him for not standing up for himself or his children.
      Pretty similar to Jeffrey Dahmer’s parents dynamics actually.
      I’ve always felt that people should need a license to have children.

  • @wsidechris
    @wsidechris Год назад +12

    10:00 Is it just coincidence that this was posted on Mothers' Day? I'm not making a diagnosis, only speculating about what could be happening in this video.

    • @Cerbera66
      @Cerbera66 2 месяца назад

      😂🤣😁

  • @Kknightstar
    @Kknightstar Год назад +10

    Wow! That’s incredible! Thank you Doc!

  • @lindymerry38
    @lindymerry38 Год назад +35

    I'm surprised that you say the dad did nothing to provoke Leslie. The fact that he did nothing to protect his son from the mother's abuse is very concerning. In any case, Leslie probably felt compelled to kill his dad because of how his dad was reacting to the death of his wife.

    • @Marinaxp1
      @Marinaxp1 Год назад +10

      Agree, also Dr, Grande said that the father's immediate reaction was to try and attack and attack Lesley TWO times when a normal reaction would be to try to calm him and call the police. It really looks like the father has also been abusive and probably hit Lesley many times before.

    • @E.C.Animation
      @E.C.Animation Год назад +1

      So you believe the killer's side of the story? Mom can't tell her side and neither can dad. None of us were there. So there is no way to know the truth. But suuuuure, the killer is the victim.... 🙄

  • @augustmarstella3573
    @augustmarstella3573 Год назад +10

    “Became angry when neighbors threw him a surprise party” oh man, that’s actually pretty funny. I’m imagining an escaped convict with a secret identity walks into his house fumbling through the dark and a whole bunch of people leap out at him dressed as cops with a cake.

  • @jrzygurl
    @jrzygurl Год назад +28

    Dr. Grande I know all of your content these days is geared towards current affairs and events which is great but I was wondering is there anyway you could do a bit on the Lindbergh baby kidnapping cuz there was a lot of interesting stuff there...thnx

    • @minnietrout814
      @minnietrout814 Год назад +4

      I agree! All of the speculation about Charles Lindbergh actually orchestrating the kidnapping and death of the baby is really intriguing.

    • @rayross997
      @rayross997 Год назад +3

      I hope he covers Lindbergh's interest in eugenics also.

    • @jrzygurl
      @jrzygurl Год назад

      @Ray Ross me too!!,,, and there is great speculation that Lindberg himself was behind the kidnapping.. Lindbergh was a real lunatic ..he would hide the baby and then make like he disappeared until his wife was in hysterics... he was a nut and he didn't like the baby cuz there was some kind of deformity or something which Taps into the whole Eugenics thing.. he had children all over the place.
      .... American hero my ass now don't get me wrong what he did was phenomenal. Took a lot of guts but he really wanted the 25000 prize money... anyway just focusing on the crime there was a lot there I would be very interested if doctor Grande could look into it and hear his thoughts

  • @genxrants
    @genxrants Год назад +18

    Imagine always looking over your shoulder, giving up everything you love, all because you couldn't wait another year or two to be released.

  • @crystalbluepersuasion1027
    @crystalbluepersuasion1027 Год назад +5

    The Omaha World Herald did a 4 part story on this back in 2017. His high school classmates liked him a lot. We drive by his house on Poppleton quite a bit (I’ve had my eye on another house on Poppleton for a few years now). Omaha is a fantastic city with lots of beautiful neighborhoods. The Aksarben area where this is located is a lovely.

  • @WD-ih8rh
    @WD-ih8rh Год назад +2

    Dr Grande, this analysis is one of your best. Thank you.

  • @lynnsears654
    @lynnsears654 Год назад +2

    Perfect ending to my wonderful Mothers Day!!!!! Thank you Dr, Grande!!!!!

  • @KoolT
    @KoolT Год назад +5

    Happy Mother's day to your family Doc. Blessings.

  • @LaMaestra2102
    @LaMaestra2102 Год назад +19

    Whoa! So glad for your final analysis, Dr G! For a while there i thought you were going to say that not everyone needs life in prison for killing. But you punctuated that nicely for me.
    I mean, I feel bad for Michael Bever, but he still belongs in the clink. Thanks for all your hard work!

  • @charlesiragui2473
    @charlesiragui2473 Год назад +12

    “A tremendous sense of entitlement “? Because he irrationally fled prison? So if he’d served a few months more and completed his formal sentence, according to Nebraska law, he could have been categorized as repentant as taking responsibility? Perhaps that’s true but it could also have been calculating and unrepentant. His escape shows deeper paranoia: I’m behind the eight ball and all I can do is run, try to make my best of it. With a mother like this it’s likely he’d have such a worldview. His father, who “did nothing”, was not guilt free: he passively allowed his wife to create this horrible home.
    Was he justified in killing? No. Should he have served out his term? Yes. But those would ideally be signs of a soul at peace. He hadn’t found that. I wouldn’t call that entitled.

  • @Jeanne90275
    @Jeanne90275 Год назад +14

    The mother was more than controlling; she was sadistic, emasculating and, I suspect, relieving her own childhood experiences by rejecting one son and spoiling the other.The father's interest in ameliorating the situation was, in a word, underwhelming. Nothing justifies murder, but family dynamics like this rarely turn out well.

    • @terrorists-are-among-us
      @terrorists-are-among-us Год назад

      Maybe he could have been a man instead of a boy and moved out 🤯 angry incels 🤡

    • @Jeanne90275
      @Jeanne90275 Год назад

      @@terrorists-are-among-us I was explaining rather than condoning. Child abuse has negative repercussions for the individual and society.

  • @billylain7456
    @billylain7456 Год назад +2

    Excellent analysis and explanation. Thanks for posting Dr. Grande

  • @TheSelfCenter
    @TheSelfCenter Год назад +14

    Love this video! I find your content is so interesting and informative. 👍

  • @scoots8519
    @scoots8519 Год назад +3

    Wow what a story, the best you can say is I am glad he went on to never hurt anyone again.

    • @tyreseforren6721
      @tyreseforren6721 Год назад +1

      We don't know that

    • @scoots8519
      @scoots8519 Год назад

      @@tyreseforren6721 So can we hope that he never hurt anyone again or are we just going to be some negative internet troll?

    • @tyreseforren6721
      @tyreseforren6721 Год назад

      @@scoots8519 I'm not a troll people never take accountability for the things they do every time someone does something wrong or commits crimes they blame other people.

  • @elizabethwarman9028
    @elizabethwarman9028 Год назад +1

    Good evening Dr Grande, excellent analysis. As always I learn something new from your videos.
    Have a wonderful evening.

  • @gabe-po9yi
    @gabe-po9yi Год назад +25

    There’s a great passage in the Bible about not provoking one’s children to wrath. Maybe because it’s addressed specifically to fathers, the mother didn’t think it applied to her. I believe children of emotionally/psychologically abusive parents can feel as though they’re being destroyed, internally. Unable to escape destruction, they react as though one would who is in mortal fear of their life.

    • @terrorists-are-among-us
      @terrorists-are-among-us Год назад

      Toddlers shouldn't date until they're responsible adults. Get a job. Move out. Grow up. Stop whining 🤡🤮

  • @2steaksandwiches665
    @2steaksandwiches665 Год назад +4

    Because he was a truck driver? Dude, my buddy is a truck driver and makes over 100 grand a year. Maybe times have changed but still. I’ve always respected with those guys have to do with long hours, stress, and a hell of a lot of intelligence, to be able to figure all that stuff out

  • @patriciabradley4855
    @patriciabradley4855 Год назад +4

    I believe that he was truly sorry for the murder of his parents. His narcissistic mother pushed him way too far, she was very disrespectful to Crystal and in an instant, he snapped. He obviously moved on and was a productive man that provided for his family. I’m sorry but I blame the mother.

  • @TheDramacist
    @TheDramacist Год назад +15

    I recognise the mother's personality. My lil sister is the same monster to her son, but worships her daughters. If we had guns in the UK, Im sure the son would have shot her by now. Even Im tempted.

  • @jenanne31
    @jenanne31 Год назад +7

    Thank you for another entertaining video, Dr. Grande. I hope Mrs. Grande has a wonderful Mother's Day!

  • @noteveryday
    @noteveryday Год назад +6

    Dude I don't know how you always nail the comedy like that. One of the few things on YT that makes me crack up out loud. "In a strange twist it appears that Leslie had killed to see the Undead." I can only imagine how bad it was....1957. Edit: Now finished the whole thing, a really great script / presentation. Thx Dr. Grande.

  • @tracyking5945
    @tracyking5945 Год назад +1

    Your videos are worth repeating Dr. Grande. I learn so much. Thank you!

  • @mamaduck9370
    @mamaduck9370 Год назад +8

    The old fashioned term "while the balance of his mind was temporarily disturbed" applies in this case, I feel.
    Leslie was driven to a moment of madness by a mother who was struggling with her own mental health issues, teenage boys are impulsive and guns nearby sometimes make it too easy to do harm that can't be undone.
    Question is, is Leslie led a productive crime free life after he escaped prison, why didn't he just serve his term quietly?
    I think it's because he didn't want to live life with the label of reformed ex con and parent killer affecting his chances of employment, romance, etc..... I think he decided to start a new life on his own terms - his ego felt, as he had no desire to kill or harm anyone else ever again, that there was no need to serve full sentence, he felt ready for freedom and didn't want to waste any more of his youth.
    Just as he decided he needed to be free from his parents via an inappropriate and illegal solution, he decided to be free from jail via an inappropriate and illegal solution.
    Haunted by fear of capture for rest of his life, although apparently made positive contribution to society with family and employment and never got into trouble again.
    Pretty powerful argument against the death penalty.

    • @darrinheaton2614
      @darrinheaton2614 Год назад

      Maybe. But he was a kid in a men's prison. He was probably subject to constant abuse, perhaps even rape.

  • @jackiegrice714
    @jackiegrice714 Год назад +1

    Thanks for covering this Dr. Grande. It’s pretty atypical turn of events.

  • @creolelady182
    @creolelady182 Год назад +17

    That mother was something else

    • @Mechaneer
      @Mechaneer Год назад +5

      "What are you gonna do, shoot me?" Talk about famous last words...

    • @rowyourboat5361
      @rowyourboat5361 Год назад +6

      many of us had bad mothers- but we don't murder them.

    • @shameronstar7220
      @shameronstar7220 Год назад +3

      @@rowyourboat5361 It was a case of a lot of bad things mixing together to form the perfect storm.

  • @arinerm1331
    @arinerm1331 Год назад +27

    This is but one of the many cautionary tales of the DNA tests that "reveal" the origins of your ancestry. "You are 23% Italian" is absolute rubbish, but the other uses of your DNA are downright scary. Yes, some say that it has been instrumental in apprehending previously unknown subjects of horrendous crimes. How might it also be used against the very person who submits his DNA? We don't know yet, but time will tell.

    • @jkjives1786
      @jkjives1786 Год назад +3

      I did it (possibly against my better judgment) to find out my "ancestry." It was interesting, but then when I saw the margin of error on my ancestry, I wasn't very impressed with the results. I think the end goal is to get you interested enough that you buy a subscription.

    • @LDiamondz
      @LDiamondz Год назад +1

      I can think of a couple. Higher medical premiums for health insurance, if it's determined you have a DNA marker for a disease. Same reason to be denied life insurance. Also, tracking down people for very petty crimes. Right now, mostly used for murders/identifying victims. Down the road, they'll be using it for anything, like ringing a doorbell and running away.

    • @arinerm1331
      @arinerm1331 Год назад +7

      @@jkjives1786 I've seen publicized tests in which identical twins (and a set or two of identical triplets) sent in their identical DNA and got wildly varying results. As I mentioned, these results are absolute rubbish.

  • @irenes3470
    @irenes3470 Год назад +1

    Dr Grande is in rare form with this one 😊

  • @m.brooks7776
    @m.brooks7776 Год назад +2

    Dr. Grande, despite the morbid subjects that you cover, your dry humor is just the best 😂

  • @politicalfoolishness7491
    @politicalfoolishness7491 Год назад +7

    SCTV "The Taxidermist" from SCTV 1980s was a classic comedy skit about introducing his girlfriend to his "stuffed" parents.

  • @rayross997
    @rayross997 Год назад

    Suggesting the Clutter Family murders. Have a great week speculating Dr.Grande.

  • @Sheblah1
    @Sheblah1 Год назад +29

    This has to be one of the most fascinating, polarising (within one's self, even) and saddest cases covered yet. Ambivalence is the keyword here for sure. I'm grateful I had the upbringing my parents gave me as I was growing up. I do think he was narcissistic but surely his mother's relentless ego-malforming abuse shaped him so. You could argue he inherited her cruelty but even then the murders may never have happened had she not bullied him from birth to the extent that she did. My upbringing had many of its own moments and as time passes I'm aware of how all of them, every single one, occurred when the pain and sadness that struck my heart came from the pain that struck my father's heart, and that which struck his father's too, and so on..One of the reasons I believe I don't want children of my own.

    • @E.C.Animation
      @E.C.Animation Год назад +3

      The parents never got to tell their side of the story.

    • @Sheblah1
      @Sheblah1 Год назад +3

      @@E.C.Animation very true, it's nearly impossible to truly know what happens behind closed doors if we don't live on the other side of them.

    • @011silbermond
      @011silbermond Год назад +1

      Yes, these wounds which are passed on from generation to generation. I knew from early on I don´t want children.

    • @011silbermond
      @011silbermond Год назад

      @@Sheblah1 💝💝

  • @archimanic3848
    @archimanic3848 Год назад +5

    Great video Dr grande

  • @wilhelmhagberg8854
    @wilhelmhagberg8854 Год назад +8

    Dr Grande’s conclusion surprises me. Througout the video he shows us how Leslie despite his crime was actually a decent, loving and productive person. The crime was triggered by very specific circumstances and not a product of his true character. Nothing would have been gained by him sitting out his life in jail just out of principle.

  • @DavidHernandez-oz4me
    @DavidHernandez-oz4me Год назад +39

    I actually felt bad for the kid

  • @manewland1
    @manewland1 Год назад +2

    Thanks, as always, Dr. Grande!

  • @alecburris4225
    @alecburris4225 Год назад +2

    I bet his mom was absolutely unbearable to deal with and completely narcissistic. The dad was likely completely whipped and leslie felt trapped and berated. Unfortunately it culminated in him seeing killing his mother, and her enforcer (his dad) was the only way to escape. Ive seen this situation, and I legitimately feel bad for him

  • @zenawarrior7442
    @zenawarrior7442 Год назад +5

    Interesting case, great analysis always. I agree the parents didn't deserve to get killed, he was very selfish. Thanks Dr G😉💖💖

  • @laurenurban3942
    @laurenurban3942 Год назад +1

    Leslie’s mother never should have had children. No child deserves a mother like that. Is it an excuse for what he did…..perhaps. I’ve learned in life that when you treat people badly, nothing good comes from it. That doesn’t mean you deserve to be killed. It means that family member will always hate you and all it takes is a trigger for that person to unleash their hatred in a very bad way.

  • @selmazopinion
    @selmazopinion Год назад

    Yes! I was waiting for you to analyze this case!

  • @elizabethwillis885
    @elizabethwillis885 Год назад +7

    I feel like this guy drug out his prison sentence by escaping. He was never truly free and I bet he realized it. But it was too late by then. He already had a family and life outside of prison. If he had just finished his sentence, he could have lead a freer life post prison.

  • @abbinormal11
    @abbinormal11 Год назад +3

    Ugh it's not ok to kill but also not ok to have a kid just to push around. Had parents like this. Constantly pacing standing over me demanding I get it done faster. I thought I did a good job on my chores but they were never done right and I would get grounded for doing it wrong. Then they would redo it. I would get grounded for asking how they wanted it done. I would get yelled at for hours for doing it wrong. I just quit trying. my boss at subway thought I did fine. they wonder why we don't call and they can't keep help.

  • @bettinabarry8423
    @bettinabarry8423 Год назад +1

    Spot on Dr. Grande...if he was truly remorseful he would have served his time in prison! Wonder if it ever occurred to him to leave home and start his own life instead of killing his mother
    In a sense that is what he did when he escape from prison. Thank you Dr.Grande for your analysis on an this interesting case.

  • @Blissfulnessence
    @Blissfulnessence Год назад +4

    Interesting.
    It takes a lot to commit parricide and has often been seen as a symptom of a failing society.
    I just can't add anything to this. Thanks Dr. Grande (i think I've watched most,if not all, of your vids and don't always comment because you covered it so precisely)

  • @LauraKnotek
    @LauraKnotek Год назад +3

    I'm surprised that the authorities didn't opt to throw the book at William Leslie Arnold because of the Starkweather case.

  • @MyFrankieee
    @MyFrankieee Год назад +2

    No excuse for murder !But having to spend yrs with a narcissistic mother like that ! would cause the majorly of teenagers to develop a severe anger problem 😢what a sad and tragic story

  • @rullmourn1142
    @rullmourn1142 Год назад +1

    Thanks, Dr. Grande, I've never heard of this one before.

  • @michelleloveday6929
    @michelleloveday6929 Год назад +1

    Yes, it sounds to me that he was extremely arrogant. I feel his pain regarding his mother making fun of him and always criticizing. That was the trigger. But, he refused to believe her. Instead, he chose to believe he was the smartest and best around. He was always gonna come out on top. When he was being nice, it was because he had to be. But, dare you get into a confrontation with him, he seems to like a challenge. 😢

  • @And-vx6ry
    @And-vx6ry Год назад +5

    In a sense Leslie Arnold traded one prison for another. 14:52

  • @PrecociousFriand
    @PrecociousFriand Год назад +6

    The mother sounds like a sadistic abuser, who was aided and abbetted by her weak husband. Maybe they had it coming. That's sometimes what happens when you ruin a child's life with psychological torture for years on end, the person on the recieving end can't take it any more and finally snaps. Many people should not be allowed to procreate as they do not value the lives they are responsible for.

    • @sabinegierth-waniczek4872
      @sabinegierth-waniczek4872 Год назад +1

      Sadly you are exactly right here (said from experience), and I must admit that I find Dr.G to be wrong. Thank you.

  • @hanthonypiano
    @hanthonypiano Год назад +4

    I don't think you engaged with the idea that if he posed no risk to society after the murders then a life sentence doesn't seem as warranted beyond just vengeance or something. Like he seems to be some sort of exception to the idea of imprisonment for the sake of protecting the public

  • @DottieMinerva
    @DottieMinerva Год назад +1

    These stories are so fascinating to me. The stress and hiding does not seem worse it considering.

  • @margyrowland
    @margyrowland Год назад +1

    Tambourine Mountain is a beautiful tourist town in Queensland, Australia. It’s definitely worth visiting.

  • @lisapineapple
    @lisapineapple Год назад +4

    I’m sorry. I’m not cutting the grass three times.

  • @yoso5934
    @yoso5934 Год назад +1

    Love the groovy set-up ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️