When A Killer Thinks He's A Genius (but he's an idiot)

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  • Опубликовано: 15 янв 2023
  • In today's true crime documentary, we're covering the case of Isaiah Sweet.
    Note for RUclips's review team, here is the context of the video: this is an educational documentary and authoritative news piece based on actual police documents and case files. Our team of psychology professionals analyze the interrogation footage from an educational perspective with a focus on psychology, red flags, and prevention. Our goal is to educate the public, inform our audience, and raise awareness.
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Комментарии • 23 тыс.

  • @yeoscore
    @yeoscore Год назад +26714

    “i’m a very smart criminal” says the guy who just admitted to everything in great detail without a lawyer present

    • @anomaly3215
      @anomaly3215 Год назад +756

      doesn't matter, he was getting caught regardless, never getting let out regardless

    • @Flotter-Flo
      @Flotter-Flo Год назад +263

      @@anomaly3215 Funny comment, considering the video made it quite clear that he is likely to be let out.

    • @xGettinxMoneyx
      @xGettinxMoneyx Год назад +36

      @@anomaly3215 just wtf man 😅

    • @yeoscore
      @yeoscore Год назад +58

      @@user-mm4kk9kv6s yes that is totally what i meant

    • @MODERN-GAMING-IS-TRASH
      @MODERN-GAMING-IS-TRASH Год назад +62

      @@user-mm4kk9kv6sTechnically they can if he keeps pleading the fifth, stayed silent, and just play the game.

  • @kanrafingerguns
    @kanrafingerguns Год назад +24992

    Imagine being a defense lawyer, and they give you a video of your client reenacting their crime.

  • @NyseHaywood
    @NyseHaywood 6 месяцев назад +2119

    Updated: after doing some research on this case, this kid was taken from his mother and placed with his grandparents due to drug/alcohol addiction and poverty. Even his mother, their daughter, warned dcfs that her parents were horribly abusive and they ignored her. The justification of this was her addiction, however THAT should have been their first cue. While his grandfather was the primary abuser, the grandmother was no stranger to beating him when she felt it necessary ie: she broke his arm with a golf club and then made him pretned to fall off a bike so dcfs wouldnt suspect anything.... it can be said that there is no proof but the simple fact that he has dedicated his time to advocating troubled youth and wants to help other children that may be experiencing similar, tells me its probably not far from the truth...
    So, from the very beginning of this interview it seemed like there was something not right with the grandparents. Not to say what may or maynot have happened to him warrants double murder, imagine being in a situation where your caregivers are abusers and also hailed as saints for "taking you in" and being so selfless blah blah blah... his mother was an addict which caused him emotional and developmental delays and every time he tried to speak up he was made out to be the problem. No one can convince me the grandfathers possession of child p0rn is coincidental and he never did anything to his grandson. I hope this man can heal and some day be at peace. Shame on everyone who failed him and then allowed him to be a scapegoat for the failed child protective system and just locked him up to save face

    • @radkesrods1184
      @radkesrods1184 6 месяцев назад

      they forced him to commit murder, period. its obvious.

    • @propogandalf
      @propogandalf 6 месяцев назад +283

      Wow, thanks for the context

    • @atcmadness4351
      @atcmadness4351 6 месяцев назад +40

      I suppose that once the parents dealt with a daughter that was uncontrollable, they didn't want their grandson to grow up the same way. I've see lots of parents raise kids in different ways, often the ones that give their kids everything, have kids that grow up to be liars and manipulators, and they aren't much fun to be around. Let them do drugs, steal, hurt people, sooner or later their day will come...

    • @NyseHaywood
      @NyseHaywood 5 месяцев назад +130

      @@propogandalf you're welcome, I just felt like something was off from the very beginning of this video and had to do the research to make sense of things.

    • @LynetteA68
      @LynetteA68 5 месяцев назад +81

      Totally agree!! I’ve worked with troubled youth all my life (over 20 plus yrs) and most of the time kids who end up with these kinds of problems come from families that also have big problems & they end up making the kid the scapegoat instead of looking at the core problem and trying to fix it with the help of therapists psychiatrists etc and by the time they get them help it’s usually to late for them and or the kid. It’s really quite sad for all involved. This was partly a failure on DCFS part as well as the police who even after 18 calls to the house which included threats of violence did NOTHING to get this kid help! Kids don’t usually act out for no reason but are usually acting out as a way of screaming out for help!! Plain sad for all those involved.

  • @pettykittyfam
    @pettykittyfam 7 месяцев назад +1368

    Considering the grandfather had child corn on his computer I think this kid has a deeper darker story to tell.
    This kid isn't stupid... He is deeply damaged.

    • @YugiohMaster1987
      @YugiohMaster1987 5 месяцев назад +78

      The same computer Isaiah had access to?
      Remember he was a minor dating a girl his same age ...so kids being kids (just like adults) they could've swapped nudes with each other.
      Hence why Isaiah's attorneys begged for it not to be submitted as evidence as they believed the jurors would then view Isaiah as a pedophile (even though he was minor).
      We honestly don't know if it €P (it said indecent pictures of a minor. Which can be the clothing, the position their in, the actions they're doing, etc It could even be them eating a fruit/vegetable that's phallus shape) was due to Isaiah or his grandfather, since Isaiah, Grnpa & Grnma all had access to that computer and even the prosecution & defense couldn't figure out who it belonged to.

    • @Shavenhamster
      @Shavenhamster 5 месяцев назад +46

      @@YugiohMaster1987 It was on the granddads account.

    • @YugiohMaster1987
      @YugiohMaster1987 5 месяцев назад +49

      @@Shavenhamster
      Yes, you are correct it was on the grandad's account...which granddad, Grandma and Isaiah ALL had access to.

    • @apocratos0174
      @apocratos0174 5 месяцев назад +5

      Ikr
      So sad for this kid...he did the only thing that he could have done in his circunstances

    • @mattouten5909
      @mattouten5909 5 месяцев назад +53

      Interesting how many times they called the police on Isiah. Wouldn't you think abusers would want to avoid the having the police in their home?

  • @vvvios
    @vvvios 8 месяцев назад +4966

    That detective is unbelievably good at sounding genuinely friendly and empathetic to a kid who just murdered his family.

    • @danahooley7059
      @danahooley7059 8 месяцев назад +85

      this one
      edit: I thought your comment said "what detective", so I said this one...But I just look dumb lmao

    • @ryanv8135
      @ryanv8135 8 месяцев назад +20

      That’s what they do

    • @beartrap8625
      @beartrap8625 8 месяцев назад +18

      @@ryanv8135not all the time

    • @RichieSpencer666
      @RichieSpencer666 8 месяцев назад +6

      They all sound like that

    • @mrbort3977
      @mrbort3977 8 месяцев назад +30

      Id imagine you get desensitized after 50 years on the force

  • @janpawedwa4590
    @janpawedwa4590 Год назад +5099

    "I'm a VERY smart criminal", says he, as he sits in the interrogation room, caught by the cops, addmitting to every single detail of his crimes.

    • @scottthompson5800
      @scottthompson5800 Год назад

      Can't wait till he gets bullied in jail

    • @cursivefox
      @cursivefox Год назад +139

      300 IQ play /s

    • @JustCilenced
      @JustCilenced Год назад +92

      The way he boasts his "Intelligence" makes me irate

    • @christfigure
      @christfigure Год назад +23

      @@JustCilenced Caleb, you aren't that smart either

    • @JustCilenced
      @JustCilenced Год назад +174

      @@christfigure I never said I was.... simply stated I find his behavior disgusting. I find it odd people just attack others like this in the comments...

  • @QueenKennaofStormholt
    @QueenKennaofStormholt 5 месяцев назад +33

    Detective: "You gotta shoot straight with me."
    Me: Probably not the best choice of words here.

  • @zs7238
    @zs7238 4 месяца назад +421

    Wasn't the video reviewed by licensed psychologists? Didn't any of them know that abuse victims often can't decide if they love or hate their abusers, and change their opinions under different circumstances? I used to be sure I had 100% forgiven the ones that had wronged me, only to curse them and wish them dead when I was depressed. So why was his conflicting opinion an indication of lie, not internal struggle?

    • @Royalty_girlie
      @Royalty_girlie 4 месяца назад +20

      I'm in this predicament now. I want to see my abuser free and no longer tormented but other moments I feel like I strongly dislike her.

    • @Addersea
      @Addersea 4 месяца назад +78

      100%. I'm so fed up of EWU's takes and updates. They're either obvious ('when someone looks to the left and thinks, it can be a sign there's an inner monologue of thoughts' - yes, obviously they're thinking about the answer?!) or skew it to seem like the person is worse than they are - exactly as you said! This guy's interview with EWU would've happened more than 8 years, minimum, after the murders. Obviously he'd have done some emotional processing and realised the grandma was culpable too! In the thick of it, he was too focused on his grandpa's abuse to recognise hers. It makes perfect sense. Making it sound like he's lying because he's changed his view after [x] years is really, really shit.

    • @Kronoscyl
      @Kronoscyl 3 месяца назад +4

      Damn, for real

    • @samwise7456
      @samwise7456 3 месяца назад +4

      well said@@Addersea

    • @bossabassa364
      @bossabassa364 2 месяца назад +8

      @@Adderseayeah for real this guy's commentary is totally inconsistent.

  • @olliedee
    @olliedee Год назад +3314

    "I made SURE I didn't get any of their DNA on me"
    "I saw a chunk of something and picked it up and looked at it, it was a piece of my grandma"
    how ever did these detectives outsmart this genius?🤔🤦‍♂️

    • @cherylhuot4436
      @cherylhuot4436 Год назад +189

      Plus he “stepped on people” with bare feet. At least that’s what he said. I think this guy lies constantly and can’t keep track of all of them.

    • @robertthayer5779
      @robertthayer5779 Год назад +8

      🤣🤣🤣🔥👹

    • @ezrc9294
      @ezrc9294 Год назад

      he may not have their DNA on him, but he is made up of their DNA

    • @Topdoggie7
      @Topdoggie7 Год назад +67

      Bro thinks he's deep. Literally an I'm fourteen and this is deep killer.

    • @adifferentcookie
      @adifferentcookie Год назад +5

      🤦🏽‍♀️

  • @Mitsunari4Gunz
    @Mitsunari4Gunz 9 месяцев назад +4590

    I like how the narrator tries to give the detective all this credit to make this kid talk, this kid was ready to perform no matter what tactics they used.

    • @vibaj16
      @vibaj16 9 месяцев назад +127

      well, he was clearly lying throughout it, so they'd still have to use clever tactics if they wanted the truth

    • @Trentcast
      @Trentcast 9 месяцев назад +124

      For real! He even read himself his Miranda rights 🤣🤣🤣

    • @T3n50r
      @T3n50r 9 месяцев назад +76

      I think he was just done with it all. Fuck it. He seems like a nice kid to me tbh, assault and years of torment does that to a person. The proceedings from here on out doesn't matter to him, he's just happy it's over and wanted to tell his story regardless of the consequences.

    • @jasonfield3903
      @jasonfield3903 9 месяцев назад +22

      ABSOLUTELY 💯!
      AND UNDERSTANDABLY SO. SOUNDS LIKE THE GRANDPA REALLY DID ABUSE HIM AND HE SNAPPED UNDER A PERFECT STORM OF EVENTS AND THIS INTERVIEW WITH THE DETECTIVE WAS HIS FIRST REAL CHANCE TO SUM IT ALL UP AND THE KID NEEDED TO PURGE ALL THE POISONOUS ☠️ EVENTS IN HIS LIFE. LIKE WHERE HE RESPONDS MATTER OF FACTLY….”YEP”.

    • @T3n50r
      @T3n50r 9 месяцев назад +46

      @@jasonfield3903 Yeah, he even said he reached out for help several times but no one did anything. It's the same story with school shooters and so on, nobody cares until people finally snaps and then they're the villain. I mean, they are but my point is that it could have been prevented if someone had cared a little bit about those that can't defend themselves. They need help, and it should have happened ages ago when the first alarm bells started ringing.

  • @miku4296
    @miku4296 Месяц назад +17

    Bro, this kid is genuinely not okay and it makes me feel bad. It really does.

  • @BoxOKittens
    @BoxOKittens 6 месяцев назад +100

    I'd say his 'conflicting' feelings toward his grandma makes sense. When you're raised in a terrible environment, it can often lead to a mix of love and resentment toward your family members. I have those exact mixed feelings toward members of my own messed up family.

  • @floorshirts6402
    @floorshirts6402 Год назад +11327

    Props to this detective, dude played right into the narcissism.

    • @hannamariewilson
      @hannamariewilson Год назад +284

      Send all detectives to theater class for additional training lolololololololol

    • @aliencafe
      @aliencafe Год назад +1

      Seriously! This mf 'yes and'-ed his way into a conviction

    • @feenarvaez65
      @feenarvaez65 Год назад +179

      Hats off to the detective for not loosing it

    • @itskeagan3004
      @itskeagan3004 Год назад +225

      Was it THAT hard though? Kind of like talking to a moron and just shaking your head

    • @MikhailCazi
      @MikhailCazi Год назад +164

      @@itskeagan3004 I have no patience for people like this so yeah would be really hard for me :p

  • @AndyG85
    @AndyG85 Год назад +6746

    The way he goes so quickly from sobbing how sorry he is to showing off how great and skilful the murders were, is one of the weirdest things I’ve seen in ages.

    • @fuzzydawg2573
      @fuzzydawg2573 Год назад +99

      I totally agree! Was about to text the same thing until I saw your post

    • @aliencafe
      @aliencafe Год назад +309

      It's so creepy! Even him crying seemed like a show to me, honestly. Reminded me of how when toddlers do that weird fake cry when they're threatening to throw a tantrum lmao

    • @feenarvaez65
      @feenarvaez65 Год назад +99

      It’s possible to show an array of different emotions while suffering some type of break

    • @C.kirk1287
      @C.kirk1287 Год назад +18

      Definitely agree.. it makes me wonder how remorseful he truly is.

    • @alyssajade7699
      @alyssajade7699 Год назад +21

      @Octomi where do you get these poetry from murderers.??

  • @jinjoo7092
    @jinjoo7092 6 месяцев назад +246

    His interview at the end talking about wishing someone had told him how to get help and report abuse rings true to me. I didn't kill anyone, but I lived through horrible things in childhood that have left huge scars in my mental health, and I always wished that anyone in my surroundings would've done something about it. I believe him.
    Not only was his grandfather potentially an abuser, but the fact that his very own mother ended up in substance abuse and unable to care for a child could be an indication that she went through similar things, only her son ended up fighting back.

    • @christinadonovan5414
      @christinadonovan5414 6 месяцев назад +17

      The big thing here though is the “I didn’t kill anyone”. He had resources- his therapist that he clearly had a close relationship with, school resource officers and counselors- hearing the background information helps explain, but it doesn’t excuse anything. People have to take responsibility for themselves and meet help half way. He had plenty of opportunities to have that conversation with someone.

    • @NyseHaywood
      @NyseHaywood 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@christinadonovan5414yes, he had resources and he did try to tell people what was going on but his grandmother always called him a liar. If you have any real interest in this case look up the more recent interviews with him. He tells a lot about what went on and how many times he tried to get help but everyone wrote him off as the troubled kid with behavioral issues and mental delays. His grandmother actually broke his arm hitting him and then made him go out and pretend to fall off his bike because child services was already heavily involved in the family...I normally don't have much empathy, let alone sympathy, for someone capable of murdering their own grandparents. However the things this kid went through and every single adult in his life failed him. His mother, their own daughter, tried to fight him being placed in their care and told child services about abuse and they wrote her off as another junkie.... not saying I condone their murder but I can understand why he may have felt he had no other options left. He now advocates for children in abusive homes and wants to help kids in the ways people should have helped him. Its just a very sad situation all around

    • @margaretstokely9016
      @margaretstokely9016 5 месяцев назад

      most social worker types DON'T listen@@christinadonovan5414

    • @Kronoscyl
      @Kronoscyl 3 месяца назад +5

      @@christinadonovan5414 no shit dude, no ones excusing his actions, that doesn't mean you cant have sympathy for a situation...

    • @Southpaw88
      @Southpaw88 3 месяца назад +6

      ​@@Kronoscylpeople who like her think of the world from a black and white perspective.
      as someone who's been severely emotionally abused by my mother, I've had thoughts of offing her and my father twice, when I was pretty suic!dal. Thankfully I've moved on and didn't act on my emotions
      Whenever there's a case of kids offing their caretakers I'm more willing to listen to their perspectives because guess what, most of the time kids don't just decide to off the people that are most about them. It's something that's often brewing underneath because of their caretakers behavior, it's not an instant thought.

  • @juneprice3286
    @juneprice3286 5 месяцев назад +135

    He definitely needs help. It's really sad these children enduring so much abuse.

    • @Ryan-wx8of
      @Ryan-wx8of 5 месяцев назад +12

      As someone with a learning disability, this kind of treatment is pretty common when the parents don't understand the reason their child has so much trouble.

    • @CeeKayz0rz
      @CeeKayz0rz Месяц назад +4

      tbph, I highly doubt the claims of abuse; I'm betting he's fabricating and tailoring the "abuse" in order to try and play the victim, to try and justify his murder, possibly to receive a lighter sentence....
      Narcissistic as hell, sociopathic, zero real emotion, flip-flopping on the grandma's role, etc., it's all bullshit. Don't buy into it...
      Kids should not have to endure that, I totally agree - but this kid didn't endure that, is what I'm saying. :P

    • @ntsh96
      @ntsh96 Месяц назад +9

      ​@@CeeKayz0rzhis mom (a druggie) admitted that they abused her, which is probably why she ended up the way that she did. The grandpa was also found to have €P on his computer. This kid was DEFINITELY abused, and that's why his emotions are so wack. He doesn't know how to feel.

    • @J-en9ku
      @J-en9ku Месяц назад +1

      ​@@CeeKayz0rzdid you come across the information that the grandfather had child p or n on his computer? No reason not to believe the kid.

    • @nextcaller7349
      @nextcaller7349 Месяц назад +2

      @@CeeKayz0rzwhile normally I would agree, CP being on his grandpas computer - as well as his own abusive mother stating that she did not want him entrusted to the grandparents’ care due to their abusive nature (long before anyone knew their heads would be blown open). Obviously no one deserves to get brutally slaughtered in their own living room, but to say he was just “living with his two kind old grandparents” would definitely be a mischaracterization (for example, my kind old grandparents do not have CP on their computer AND if they did, the rest of my family would 100% be in touch with police ASAP). Something strange was going on in that home

  • @gilly5809
    @gilly5809 Год назад +3836

    He instantly goes from crying to getting excited to demonstrate what he did enthusiastically. Absolutely crazy.

    • @casecold1864
      @casecold1864 Год назад +103

      No sh sherlock, he shot his grandparents with an assault rifle, it's pretty clear how crazy he is.

    • @bretagnejean2410
      @bretagnejean2410 Год назад +252

      @@casecold1864 some people can kill whiout to be crazy. Imagine father beating his kids , mother or do permanent mind pressure. Kill can be a solution for kid as runaway.
      Always the same issue in usa with easy killing solution easily available for everybody.

    • @seancorbett8777
      @seancorbett8777 Год назад

      @@bretagnejean2410crazy is crazy, if he didn’t have a gun he would’ve killed them another way. Didn’t you hear all his different plans? From nicotine poisoning to carbon monoxide, he was gonna do it regardless of how, the gun was just easier. I live in Canada and our gun ownership is one of the highest in the world (falkland islands is second but has a population of 3k, then Yemen, but they’re a country at war,then New Caledonia, same as Falkland, small and lots of farms, then Serbia and Montenegro, both small war torn countries) so I’d say we’re the 2nd highest in the world among larger first world countries, and our crime rate is very low. To make it short, Americans are crazy, and there’s a lot of them, guns don’t help, but they don’t change people.

    • @giovanirafael
      @giovanirafael Год назад

      He is a psychopath!

    • @bretagnejean2410
      @bretagnejean2410 Год назад +29

      @@seancorbett8777 but that change a lot. With assault gun a kid can kill 30 people then with knife he ll be stopped before . Damage is huge also. I never say no gun = no crime. Its not normal people can buy war gun in time of peace. Other day in france had a crazy migrant that have attacked people with knife in airport. 4 hurt . With assault gun he ll have killed a lot.

  • @ibullman
    @ibullman Год назад +3540

    It's sad how this kid just gets a few compliments from the detective and you can tell how much it boost his confidence and makes him feel so smart.

    • @TectorThe
      @TectorThe Год назад +35

      Either he is so simple or in an exceptional situation that it works. The intention of the cop is very obvious...

    • @MrGonq
      @MrGonq Год назад +111

      @@Thalesium Positive affirmation works far better than scolding and negative punishment, but that seems to be a parenting technique that's ingrained from generation to generation. Not to say that some form of punishment when needed isn't beneficial, but it's so much easier to be hasty and angry than patient and positive.

    • @doblingamez1731
      @doblingamez1731 Год назад +83

      @@Thalesium this is either due to child abuse or neglect I'd assume. This kids felt the remorse of his actions. Doesn't mean he's a bad person because he did this seeking help. He literally told the detective that he wanted to find out what was wrong with him. Plus the grandfather had CP on his pc so it's hard to tell what led him there

    • @snaigel
      @snaigel Год назад +50

      He probably didn't got a compliment all his life

    • @user-hu8fn2jp5v
      @user-hu8fn2jp5v Год назад +26

      @@MrGonq no positve affirmation doesnt work better. My sister was always the "golden child" she was very supported and my parents kept talking highly of her, this put an expectation that she would do good, she started thinking highly of herself to the point where her capabilities couldnt catch up, she had too high of ambitions from this and as a result she couldnt reach it and attempted suicide. I on the other hand wasnt given all these attention, instead my parents especially my dad was more strict (maybe because im a male) but not to the point of abuse lol. Now i drive a porsche (keep in mind i came from a poor background) and i have to take care of my sister

  • @ciaacho1
    @ciaacho1 3 месяца назад +70

    CP on the grandpa's computer and the fact that he had a gun with three thousand rounds including hollow point, just laying in his basement with nothing preventing a child from accessing it... he was no ordinary grandpa.

    • @ajagoff
      @ajagoff Месяц назад +10

      Hollow point ammunition is nothing special, just fyi. It's just used in home defense so that if you need to shoot an intruder, the round is designed to expend all its energy in the first item it hits, whereas a normal full metal jacketed round would pass through the intended target and into whatever is behind it. A hollow point is less likely to pass through walls and hit something you don't intend to kill.

    • @evco4426
      @evco4426 Месяц назад +5

      @@ajagoff "Hollow point ammunition is nothing special" Do you realize that this ammo is illegal in any normal country?

    • @Jm-dx9tl
      @Jm-dx9tl Месяц назад +7

      @@evco4426what’s a normal country to you? Ones with extremely restrictive laws that you can’t even possess a knife outside of your household and anything outside of a specific length or operation are federal offences to possess or ones where it’s illegal but have massive crime waves like Haiti where they ban everything so they can crack down severely to regain control of the situation.

    • @janelle9998
      @janelle9998 29 дней назад

      Plus the high on drugs

    • @ciaacho1
      @ciaacho1 28 дней назад +1

      @@Jm-dx9tl what about countries in Europe and Asia that have low murder rates and coincidentally have no guns? Ever considered those? What if the guns and the culture around them are the issue? I know, it's mind-blowing stuff once you realize that if you give random people guns over a knife for example, they can more easily murder other people.

  • @EmilyMorgan-om5md
    @EmilyMorgan-om5md 4 месяца назад +67

    he was sexually abused by his grandpa, they also found CP on the grandpas computer. i’m so tired of seeing this case and seeing everyone treat him like he is a monster. not to mention the fact that his father was never in his life, and his mother abandoned him with the two WORST guardians possible- they were extremely verbally abusive to him. obviously murder is never the answer, but you really cannot blame him for feeling that was the only way out for him.

    • @DM-sj4vu
      @DM-sj4vu 3 месяца назад +2

      He is a monster

    • @cody44554
      @cody44554 Месяц назад +13

      @@DM-sj4vu View must be great from that glass house.

    • @unknownweirdo3816
      @unknownweirdo3816 Месяц назад +1

      sorry to ask, but where did you find out he was sexually abused? Not to imply you're not being truthful, I'm genuinly curious, if you dont mind elaborating

    • @EmilyMorgan-om5md
      @EmilyMorgan-om5md Месяц назад +3

      @@unknownweirdo3816 he mentioned it in an interview and I also think he might’ve mentioned it in the interrogation footage

    • @ZeonGenesis
      @ZeonGenesis Месяц назад +5

      Most murderers experienced abuse in their childhoods. There's a reason these individuals develop NPD or ASPD or both and go out to kill people. Just because Isaiah was abused does not mean he has not also become a horrible individual. He clearly had a very visible side to him that enjoyed the murder, had no remorse and showed clear narcissistic traits, like grandiosity and self-delusion. At the same time, he also had a side that showed remorse and self-loathing, splitting back and forth between the two, because even violent, abusive people are not black and white. Personality disorders in particular polarize a person's character traits. That means he can still very much be a terrible person and a threat to society. And to suggest that blowing the heads off of two people - which he said he wanted to do as gory as possible - should in any way be his only way out at the age of 17 is quite frankly disturbing.

  • @Null257
    @Null257 Год назад +4355

    Kid claimed he was abused by his grandfather. Grandpa's computer was filled with CP. Judge allowed the prosecution to suppress that evidence as irrelevant to the murders. Knowing the backstory kinda paints this kid in a different light.

    • @dafnesanchezcuesta6865
      @dafnesanchezcuesta6865 Год назад +366

      I agree

    • @anonym1694
      @anonym1694 Год назад +615

      yeah okay but don't just shoot people, get them into jail and leave your innocent grandma alone lol

    • @zacharymarkham5232
      @zacharymarkham5232 Год назад +785

      ​@@anonym1694 perhaps she knew?

    • @echopeak
      @echopeak Год назад +1609

      This turns it into a potentially justified murder, for me. I was sexually abused for 12 years as a kid and not a single adult I told believed me or reported my claims. For so many years I wanted to kill my abuser, but I knew that would most likely land me in prison. My abuser still walks free today, albeit in her own living hell.

    • @hi-mj5oi
      @hi-mj5oi Год назад +39

      W kid

  • @cutie62500
    @cutie62500 Год назад +2852

    The way he is literally being questioned for murder and still finds the time to brag about his grades and test scores as a drop out is pretty impressive actually

    • @marijagrujicic1370
      @marijagrujicic1370 Год назад

      Sounds like a mental disorder

    • @terskataneli6457
      @terskataneli6457 Год назад

      When you have a big dick and good looks + good paying job and high iq you don't need to brag because you know you are better than anyone else. This kid obviously had none of those

    • @yuncelluz8709
      @yuncelluz8709 Год назад

      Right
      Dumb ahh child

    • @qaxuyu
      @qaxuyu Год назад +86

      Narcissism or something.

    • @rainbowinthedark453
      @rainbowinthedark453 Год назад +55

      Psychopathic narcissism displayed in its finest form. I wonder why he lived with his grandparents? What happened in his early life. Makes me wonder. Maybe they will say I’m pretty early in.

  • @novashy7119
    @novashy7119 5 месяцев назад +41

    I actually liked the interview between EWU and him, the things he said reminded me of some things I learned in therapy. "I'm not saying other people failing me throughout my life is the reason I did it. At the end of the day, I'm the reason I did it. I chose to do what I did." Thats a very good step in understanding not to blame others and realizing no matter whats going on in your life, you chose to do something.

    • @bernicerogers2383
      @bernicerogers2383 4 месяца назад +1

      He remains an arrogant criminal without empathy who somehow thinks he can "help" others and is able to sound "nice" whilst committing the worst kind of acts and continuing to justify himself for those acts.

    • @TheBaumcm
      @TheBaumcm 13 дней назад +2

      ⁠@@bernicerogers2383some might argue harming an innocent child would be the worst kind of acts. He has all the hallmarks and it isn’t arrogance to want to have some good come out of a bad decision.

  • @jordanwalsh5506
    @jordanwalsh5506 6 месяцев назад +78

    I genuinely believe him when he says his grandpa was abusive and that his grandma was an enabler. His mother falling into addiction may have something to do with the grandparents (her parents) behaviour. She might've been a victim to the grandpas alleged fascination with children, which may have resulted in her confiding in drugs. The son seemed to have been following in those footsteps, meaning that maybe something similar was inflicted onto him by the grandpa. That grandpa is definitely very suspicious.

    • @elizabethb1096
      @elizabethb1096 5 месяцев назад +13

      Apparently per court documents the parents were severely abusive and negligent

    • @bentheisraelite
      @bentheisraelite 4 месяца назад

      You only saying that cause the complexion of his skin . He killed his grandparents in cold blood after searching it online

    • @CloudianMH
      @CloudianMH 4 месяца назад +11

      ​@@bentheisraelite bro wtf are you talking about

    • @elijah5099
      @elijah5099 24 дня назад

      what ??? 😂​@@bentheisraelite

    • @TheBaumcm
      @TheBaumcm 13 дней назад

      @@bentheisraeliteyou know, I’m really tired of people saying that others being human boils down to the color of anyone. Maybe get that chip off your shoulder and see how much better life gets.

  • @ThomasNeal
    @ThomasNeal Год назад +3288

    While I offer my condolences, I would never leave a weapon AND ammo out and unlocked if someone in my house had threatened to kill me repeatedly!

    • @shilohivy4590
      @shilohivy4590 Год назад +122

      Right?

    • @bethwood9377
      @bethwood9377 Год назад +83

      Ok. I hadn't thought of that, but it makes sense. He did mention holding a bat behind his grandfather at an earlier point, but the rifle did give him a way to do this without being close-up.

    • @persephoneblack888
      @persephoneblack888 Год назад +255

      For real, 3,000 rounds and guns left out in the open. If this dude wanted to, he could have just gone on a killing spree for the hell of it.

    • @seducedbysasquatch
      @seducedbysasquatch Год назад +81

      the fact he had been violent towards them in the past too, and his apparent drug addiction. not trying to blame the grandparents, as none of this is their fault, but i do wish they wouldve at the very least locked up their guns. granted he most likely would have found another way (a bat, nicotine poisoning...), but it would have limited his options.

    • @nickydee569
      @nickydee569 Год назад +4

      Lmfao

  • @rayaviii
    @rayaviii 6 месяцев назад +132

    this case sucks. i feel bad for this kid because he’s clearly unwell and has had a terrible upbringing. he shows signs of abuse; he doesn’t seem narcissistic, more like a kid who craves approval and praise. its sucks that this is how he decided to get it and those circumstances ruined his life before it even started.

    • @redmanrm1
      @redmanrm1 5 месяцев назад

      What an idiot

    • @johndelconte9915
      @johndelconte9915 5 месяцев назад +12

      It seems like he didn’t have a chance. From his mother, his grandparents, his counselor and his friends he had not one good example his whole life. His friends only wanted to get whatever they could get.

    • @bentheisraelite
      @bentheisraelite 4 месяца назад +2

      You only saying that cause the complexion of his skin . He killed his grandparents in cold blood after searching it online

    • @johndelconte9915
      @johndelconte9915 4 месяца назад +13

      @@bentheisraelite you missed the point and that’s why innocent people die.

    • @funnyduck4568
      @funnyduck4568 4 месяца назад +7

      @@bentheisraeliteah yes you have been the only one right all along the true issue in this story is skin color

  • @matroy
    @matroy 5 месяцев назад +12

    I'm extremely impressed how the detective is handling the situation, such an proffessional.

  • @JerseyPiney
    @JerseyPiney Год назад +3530

    The fact that they found CP on the grandfather's computer is crazy. I didn't expect that. Makes the story a lot different from my perspective.

    • @mallock8529
      @mallock8529 Год назад +1

      The drug addict mother, loose guns in the house, and the CP make it pretty clear that this family is deeply fucked up. It's hard to doubt the stories of opiate addiction and abuse

    • @JerseyPiney
      @JerseyPiney Год назад +386

      @@mallock8529 absolutely. There is way more to this story than we know.

    • @CLocal5125
      @CLocal5125 Год назад +681

      This is probably why the changes his sentence. Also explains the mother's drug problems I'm sure these two grew up in home with alot of abuse

    • @mgolemac4838
      @mgolemac4838 Год назад +442

      Yes, I was so sure he was lying about the grandpa's physical abuse and grandma's verbal abuse but changed my whole thinking when they found cp on grandpa's computer

    • @switchitup5446
      @switchitup5446 Год назад +94

      @@mgolemac4838 yeah u tried pretending u knew what happened, u didn't have a clue

  • @RR11333
    @RR11333 Год назад +544

    That interrogator is damn good. He noticed Isaiah seemed proud of his crimes, so he just rolled with it like it was normal, never changing his tone or acting disgusted. Just playing right into his narcissism.

    • @sumtingwong8592
      @sumtingwong8592 Год назад +5

      Yeah. It's gotta be hard to take all that in and keep it chill and casual.

    • @MerudonWoW
      @MerudonWoW Год назад +7

      @@JudeMalachi yea what did you watch?

    • @lalawong3993
      @lalawong3993 3 месяца назад +2

      His grandfather had child porn on his computer, maybe you should consider his abuse and clear learning disabilities in a different light

    • @RR11333
      @RR11333 3 месяца назад

      @@lalawong3993 This video is about the interrogation process. The interrogator's job is to quickly figure out what happened, and he did his job well. If the kid has other mental issues which require viewing his actions in a different light, that responsibility falls on the defense attorney and the jury.

  • @xdreadx_5025
    @xdreadx_5025 6 месяцев назад +33

    These videos are a perfect example of people being products of their environments...and it was always preached to me in school that we are the future (being children) that we are the ones taking the reigns so to speak and it's awful to know that people so young are often so mistreated and feel like murder is a healthy escape from their reality. I haven't had the best upbringing we've always been on the line of homelessness but I had a loving family and we all work very hard for what we have and I feel like that makes all the difference. It scares me to think what my life would've been like without a family that loves and cares for one another so much and what I could've turned into and watching these videos makes my heartbreak but I love hearing about people's stories both good and bad, I give hope to the future of people so we may come together and abolish the things that turn these people into cold blooded killers and the world can be a little more perfect..

  • @Xiploc3991
    @Xiploc3991 7 месяцев назад +9

    That detective had him fired up😂 he was like “hell yeah I’m a good criminal”😂

  • @lingomalikfdg4155
    @lingomalikfdg4155 Год назад +540

    “ I’m going to prison for the rest of my life “
    “Ok let’s not focus on that” 😭😂😂

    • @lingomalikfdg4155
      @lingomalikfdg4155 Год назад +3

      @@langtryvlogme 14:14 😁

    • @langtryvlogme
      @langtryvlogme Год назад

      14:20
      I wanna get high, baby let's go!! Come on I wanna smoke a big spliff with you!!

    • @acetale
      @acetale Год назад +7

      that took me out lmao 😂😂😂

    • @rozediana24
      @rozediana24 Год назад +1

      😂😂😂😂😂

    • @genchwan
      @genchwan Год назад +8

      worried about that later
      now its all that matters

  • @Vermont2002
    @Vermont2002 Год назад +2345

    “I could’ve made it from 300 yards, I have an amazing shot” this kid really said this when describing how he shot his grandparents. How horrible and sick. I couldn’t sit through an interview and listen to that. Props to the detective for being able to listen to this guy

    • @jackbandit2114
      @jackbandit2114 Год назад +105

      So cringe lol

    • @rosesinmyhead1594
      @rosesinmyhead1594 Год назад +42

      Was looking for this comment. I thought the same thing after he said that.

    • @italian1ist
      @italian1ist Год назад +51

      I honestly wonder if he has asbergers and doesn’t realize how crazy the stuff coming out of his mouth is.

    • @Mewse1203
      @Mewse1203 Год назад +102

      @italian1ist that's straight narcissism. He is so insecure that he has to puff himself up. "I'm super smart."I'm a master criminal."I could have made that shot from 300 feet" that's pretty tell tale

    • @dylanmcshane9976
      @dylanmcshane9976 Год назад +19

      @@italian1ist that's straight narcissism. He is so insecure that he has to puff himself up. "I'm super smart."I'm a master criminal."I could have made that shot from 300 feet" that's pretty tell tale

  • @1ND1G0BRR
    @1ND1G0BRR 5 месяцев назад +29

    i already love this detective, im like 10 minutes into the video and he just seems like such a good guy. he has such compassion to a literal murderer and thats really hard to do. ive accidentally spoiled myself by reading the comments but damn this case is horrifying

    • @cyleenos9291
      @cyleenos9291 4 месяца назад +1

      Hes playing an act

    • @TheBaumcm
      @TheBaumcm 13 дней назад

      Consider that by this time, they knew that he might not have been as “cold blooded” as many others assumed.

  • @WhoIsJC7
    @WhoIsJC7 4 месяца назад +5

    I'm in sales and it's fascinating how the detectives talk tracks, tone and word flow is extremely similar to those we use in sales when handling business reviews with clients and running negotiation talks. Love the psychology behind it all.

  • @VladimirBlarp
    @VladimirBlarp Год назад +2375

    The excitement he showed when describing the large chunks of their heads being scattered all over the house was one of the most disturbing things I've ever heard a person say. He was practically impressed with the amount of physical damage he did to their bodies.

    • @therearenoshortcuts9868
      @therearenoshortcuts9868 11 месяцев назад +33

      sounds like he really hated them

    • @Seeyeay
      @Seeyeay 11 месяцев назад +39

      ​@@therearenoshortcuts9868 exactly, sounds like they abused him daily.

    • @Seeyeay
      @Seeyeay 11 месяцев назад +17

      @@bradsanders407 fair

    • @ethanatkins1973
      @ethanatkins1973 11 месяцев назад +109

      @@Seeyeay Why would you even consider they were abusive? It's very clear the "abuse" is them trying to hold him responsible for his misbehavior.

    • @Seeyeay
      @Seeyeay 11 месяцев назад +15

      @@ethanatkins1973 you lack empathy

  • @ashleyheider7594
    @ashleyheider7594 Год назад +6242

    It's scary how many people out there genuinely think like this kid.

    • @Bella15230
      @Bella15230 Год назад +443

      Thats why I’m ruthlessly kind to everyone, I never want my behavior to influence someone to do something unthinkable.
      Edit, so apparently taking accountability for your actions/behavior and how they influence someone is a fear response. All I was trying to get at is you never know what someone’s going though, be kind, be patient and treat people they way you want to be treated. Much love

    • @vuckomrakic3760
      @vuckomrakic3760 Год назад +153

      Many of his kind of people walking down the streets every day... Insanity

    • @Bluntula
      @Bluntula Год назад +56

      @@Bella15230 Word.

    • @RyujinRoninReach
      @RyujinRoninReach Год назад

      Definitely alot of people walking around unmedicated with mental problems both men and women

    • @candyqueenify
      @candyqueenify Год назад +148

      Yeah he reminds me of Kyle Rittenhouse *with the fake crying 😖 scary shit!

  • @Masckerdoom
    @Masckerdoom 5 месяцев назад +49

    This is a very nuanced story. It almost seems like the writer himself struggles to understand that. Someone could come away believing that one or the other or all parties in the story are evil.
    As for my beliefs, I tend to agree with the courts that he was dealt one of the roughest hands you could get, and he can easily be rehabilitated with proper care and attention.

    • @VanitasCore
      @VanitasCore 5 месяцев назад +2

      That was his goal, to convince people he was the victim.

    • @JustSendMeLocation
      @JustSendMeLocation 5 месяцев назад

      Middle finger to you, he’s not a victim and doesn’t deserve rehabilitation or to come out, it’s because of people like you were in this mess.

    • @Masckerdoom
      @Masckerdoom 5 месяцев назад

      @@JustSendMeLocation let's check how life sentences are working in America
      Oh, you have dozens of mass murderers every year because it makes no difference
      Ok, hope you enjoy

    • @margaretstokely9016
      @margaretstokely9016 5 месяцев назад

      Not so easily rehabilitated, after all those years of a living hell.

    • @Masckerdoom
      @Masckerdoom 5 месяцев назад +7

      @@margaretstokely9016 but easy compared to someone who's purely malicious by nature.

  • @datman3416
    @datman3416 5 месяцев назад +4

    Eating a sammich as he’s talking about his grandparents brains hanging out … dudes a little psychopath

  • @chaslovescats5218
    @chaslovescats5218 Год назад +1526

    its so insane that he can go from crying, then the detective asks him about how he killed his grandparents and then all of a sudden he stops crying and explains it in great detail..

    • @nicripolas816
      @nicripolas816 11 месяцев назад +34

      Gleefully

    • @cloudfloat4179
      @cloudfloat4179 11 месяцев назад +21

      Maybe being sa by his grandfather(loved one) might have given him the idea. Being sa by a "loved one" who allegedly was a pedophile, is in itself ****** up. Imagine as a young man having to confess being sa by your own grandfather can't be easy.
      Just an interesting point I just found out myself.

    • @themechanicus9698
      @themechanicus9698 10 месяцев назад +33

      he was probably crying because he was going to jail and couldnt party anymore. he has no remorse for the killing tho can't change my mind about it.

    • @B3lph3g0r
      @B3lph3g0r 10 месяцев назад

      ikr

    • @sunnyandthechlo
      @sunnyandthechlo 10 месяцев назад +23

      @@cloudfloat4179Where did you get he was SAed from, it was never once said in the whole video. He said assaulted, that means hit, kicked, pushed etc.

  • @greeneyes2296
    @greeneyes2296 Год назад +2716

    This detective was pretty great actually. I was impressed on how he got the answers he needed while making sure the kid stayed calm and on point.

    • @beautybymj98
      @beautybymj98 Год назад +41

      i agree, great detective

    • @robertkrepek2561
      @robertkrepek2561 Год назад +31

      A hero would've laced his burger.

    • @LaVieBoheme1102
      @LaVieBoheme1102 Год назад

      @@robertkrepek2561 he wanted to be killed by the cops. F giving this kid what he wants, let him rot in jail and suffer

    • @SimplyStitches1234
      @SimplyStitches1234 Год назад +1

      💀

    • @Chris-hall9080
      @Chris-hall9080 Год назад +45

      I think the act of giving him food and the plus of not being stuffed into an interrogation room really helped. I’m sure his sick fascination with this murder definitely encouraged him to speak more as well.

  • @kanjo4976
    @kanjo4976 5 месяцев назад +7

    Committing a crime during the “I know everything” phase of life lol

  • @Keitorin2013
    @Keitorin2013 4 месяца назад +7

    34:37 I almost choked on drink with the narrator's serious reading: "Chea!" 🤣

  • @222myhead
    @222myhead Год назад +3340

    I like how the narrator doesn’t stop the video every second to explain what’s going on, but when he does stop everything he says is so Informative and interesting to listen to

  • @gregmeyer9595
    @gregmeyer9595 Год назад +826

    “I’m not a stupid person, I’m a smart criminal, I’ve got a criminal mind”- all said after being caught by the police after his first major crime. 😂

    • @Image-X
      @Image-X Год назад

      The kid is actually a moron.

    • @jr28778
      @jr28778 Год назад +4

      How do you know it was his 1st?

    • @gregmeyer9595
      @gregmeyer9595 Год назад +29

      @@jr28778 Honestly assuming when they mentioned the trouble he’s been in that they would have mentioned if he were ever arrested or had done something else serious before now.

    • @Pikasuet
      @Pikasuet Год назад

      I feel like this guy might have aspergers or some sort - unable to understand others’ perspective, no empathy, unable to understand the social cues during the interrogation and just full of himself🤔🤔🤔

    • @SmileyXVI
      @SmileyXVI Год назад

      with how much this dumbass stokes his ego "I'm very intelligent" He doesn't know the number one rule when talking to police which is not to lol.

  • @Jordan-W
    @Jordan-W 7 месяцев назад +23

    Did anyone else notice that the rifle shown is clearly an SKS? That is not a bolt action rifle. It is semi automatic, so if he actually racked the bolt between shots, he would be ejecting live rounds. It may have been pointed out already, but entire thing is crazy. The detective did an amazing job.

    • @hanakoakamoto8919
      @hanakoakamoto8919 5 месяцев назад +11

      Also caqlling a SKS "AR-15" is another crome he is guilty of.

    • @kdavis623
      @kdavis623 5 месяцев назад +16

      Yeah, "assault rifle" "ar-15" "bolt action"......... like every politician trying to talk about guns😂😂😂😂. Not a single correct description was used.

    • @hanakoakamoto8919
      @hanakoakamoto8919 5 месяцев назад

      Not every, our current Czech president Petr Pavel (retired army general) might know a thing or two :-D But yeah, after his bragging how good marksman he is claims about the rifle are hillarious :-D BTW: to my best knowledge SKS was never made here or in Slovakia (neither were AKs as we had our vz. 58) 🙂@@kdavis623

    • @Jordan-W
      @Jordan-W 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@kdavis623 Yep😂

    • @Jordan-W
      @Jordan-W 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@hanakoakamoto8919 Legit. It is really just sad.

  • @foullily8325
    @foullily8325 4 месяца назад +5

    Seems like the kid was surrounded by bad people, parents, grandparents, friends
    Doesnt excuse his actions, not at all, but it makes it a bit easier to understand why. Everyone around him failed him

  • @acrock21
    @acrock21 Год назад +1903

    its also sick how supportive all his friends were that he killed his grandparents. and the " can i come over and loot" line ... wow people are truly more evil than one would think.

    • @shaylamcgrady1048
      @shaylamcgrady1048 Год назад +107

      Yeah exactly. None of them had to the sense to think “Omg that’s bad! I’m telling my parents”. SMH. They thought it was cool and funny.
      I can’t even imagine how many of those people (just like his friends) are currently living amongst us. That’s some Scary shyt.

    • @acrock21
      @acrock21 Год назад +16

      @@shaylamcgrady1048 yeah and how many of them have yet to commit a murder as well.

    • @SpicyMacaronii
      @SpicyMacaronii Год назад +128

      His grandpa was found to have child pornography on his computer.
      He was likely abusive.
      His friends were probably told of the abuse. Most people do not sympathize with child molesters and pedophiles.
      Its really not that hard to understand why they would have felt supportive of him.

    • @acrock21
      @acrock21 Год назад +37

      @@SpicyMacaronii thats sick and vile but something like that could be planted... this kid planned this for a long time and obviously has access to said computer.

    • @Souc._
      @Souc._ Год назад

      @@SpicyMacaronii yea cuz I’m sure a bunch of meth head junkies are great people. Not saying grandpa (possibly) SA him isn’t bad, but that doesn’t warrant killing him and grandma. Also “let me come over and loot” doesn’t sound any bit like they were upset about what he had potentially gone thru, it sounds like they were sick fucks who just wanted a couple bucks

  • @aaronmutch1883
    @aaronmutch1883 Год назад +388

    The officer telling him “You gotta shoot me straight” made me laugh uncontrollably. Just tell him not to lie.

    • @tessaducek5601
      @tessaducek5601 Год назад +48

      I know! 🤣😂 Poor choice of words or habit!
      👍👍🤣🤣🤣

    • @ahrngel
      @ahrngel Год назад +29

      i thought maybe he worded it that way to taunt him, i love the detective questioning him

    • @southernbelle8920
      @southernbelle8920 Год назад +6

      Same! I thought Very poor choice of words Dude.

    • @tpv59
      @tpv59 Год назад +10

      What about when the officer called him, ''brother''???? Hahahahahahahahahaha

    • @DeathOfARockStar
      @DeathOfARockStar Год назад +17

      "Shoot me straight...like you did your grandparents." Is what he shouldve said. but that wouldve been messed up. lol

  • @Diazzz1998
    @Diazzz1998 5 месяцев назад +5

    That food must’ve been really good for him to say everything like that

  • @bonzology322
    @bonzology322 Год назад +2339

    This kid is very sick but what’s even more disturbing is the whole social crowd he’s connected with is deeply disturbed

    • @bdmenne
      @bdmenne Год назад

      They enabled and poured gasoline on his Attention Seeking. He had nothing else to hold onto except faux admiration from his f-uped circle. They pushed him to the extreme for their sick projections-perverse entertainment. It takes a village to create a monster or an Angel. Everyone should pay something. Tired of people externalizing cost and privatizing rewards. It’s the sickness of our economy and society

    • @sinjin8576
      @sinjin8576 Год назад +13

      Maybe? But they arent the ones shooting old people so...

    • @sarahgibbs1875
      @sarahgibbs1875 Год назад +198

      @@sinjin8576 but they were perfectly okay with their friend doing it

    • @1oneguythat
      @1oneguythat Год назад

      Dumb

    • @1oneguythat
      @1oneguythat Год назад +8

      ​@@sarahgibbs1875 extremely woke

  • @bashkillszombies
    @bashkillszombies 5 месяцев назад +20

    A bolt action AR-15 from Slovakia that looks like an AK74. Amazing, this guy is definitely a genius.

    • @Hal_Bennett
      @Hal_Bennett 5 месяцев назад +6

      Why did I have to look so far for this comment

    • @nightshade7240
      @nightshade7240 4 месяца назад +6

      And you're clearly a genius since it looks nothing like an AK74. Amazing how you want to talk guns but can't recognise an SKS, most likely Chinese made. I wasn't aware that a ten round magazine was ever made for the AK74 or that it had a bayonet lug. Weird that the SKS had both and is one of the most widespread models of firearm after the AK47.

    • @Hal_Bennett
      @Hal_Bennett 4 месяца назад +4

      @nightshade7240 woosh, dude.

    • @onyxacolyte2600
      @onyxacolyte2600 4 месяца назад +3

      @@nightshade7240lol not in modern times bud and also it is a sks but a Czech sks in a polystock

    • @ZonZorZerx
      @ZonZorZerx 3 месяца назад +2

      Yeah, as if that's the comment/knowledge that confirms his stupidity.

  • @southgamez
    @southgamez 9 месяцев назад +3095

    wow, that ending was a huge slap in the face for me. finding out that the grandpa appeared to be a child diddler, or at least had CP on his computer was wild, making me think that perhaps the kid wasn't lying when he said he was abused by grandpa and might have even been touched by him and didn't say anything because he was embarrassed to say it, and this was all allowed by grandma which resulted in him ending their lives.

    • @Arigator2
      @Arigator2 9 месяцев назад

      Probably the whole family has mental problems.

    • @rustyreese4006
      @rustyreese4006 9 месяцев назад +269

      Yes. But you have to remember that it's not confirmed as accurate. So it's just a rumor. I would think that if it was real that this guy's lawyer would be all over it and he might be out by now.
      I personally didn't buy anything he said after he was excitedly showing how he killed them. I don't think he should ever be released from known facts of the case.

    • @southgamez
      @southgamez 9 месяцев назад +90

      @@rustyreese4006 just because grandpa deserved it don't mean grandma deserved it. and it was stated quite clearly that grandpa's account or what was assumed to be grandpa's account had CP so there was CP and the account was named after the grandpa

    • @UncoverAncient
      @UncoverAncient 9 месяцев назад +304

      @@rustyreese4006He’s shows no psychopathic tendency’s and he clearly hated them for what they did to him. If you were ra ped for years would you not find peace in killing who did it to you?

    • @rustyreese4006
      @rustyreese4006 9 месяцев назад +86

      @@southgamez in the video it is said that the local press had been rumored to have evidence of it but nothing ever came of it. So again I don't think it's true. I can't think of any kind of press that would not run that story just for ratings. The video creator wasn't able to find it either. Believe what you like but I won't waste sympathy for someone based on just a rumor.

  • @Cassidys_Corner
    @Cassidys_Corner Год назад +438

    The real sad part is he had been reported for alarming behavior on 18 separate occasions. All the warning signs were there and nothing was done to prevent this from happening

    • @FerociousMit
      @FerociousMit Год назад +25

      It was up to the grandparents themselves.

    • @mik3y80
      @mik3y80 Год назад +46

      So true, You would think his grandparents would have locked the guns away.. Crazy.

    • @AS-fu1kd
      @AS-fu1kd Год назад +31

      That seems to be the pattern in most of these cases. Obvious signs that get ignored over and over.

    • @Ebola-Kun
      @Ebola-Kun Год назад +30

      I displayed many sociopathic tendencies during school growing up. Instead of focusing on therapy and how to help me- they just labeled me an ill manned special needs child and threatened me with how much of a failure in life I’d be. The systems in place aren’t built to recognize nor rehabilitate, they are to hammer nails into place.

    • @magnusgranskau7487
      @magnusgranskau7487 Год назад +8

      and yet the grandparents did even lock away the weapons and ammo

  • @looking4things669
    @looking4things669 5 месяцев назад +3

    It boggles my mind that his grandparents can be so casual about unlocked weapons when their grandson threatens violence against them. It's almost as if gun owners refuse to recognize the danger of gun violence. 🤷‍♀️🤷‍♀️

  • @traxx75
    @traxx75 Год назад +772

    I love how the whole interview Isaiah is like, 'I know a bit about everything' and later on the detective shoots back with 'I know lots of things' when Isaiah asks him how does he know.

    • @xMckey
      @xMckey Год назад +59

      yes, he was waiting for that moment the whole interrogation

    • @fie4426
      @fie4426 Год назад +7

      Tbh, you can know lots of things by knowing a bit of everything. The statements don't exclude each other

    • @user-jp4cj3ds7p
      @user-jp4cj3ds7p Год назад +14

      @@fie4426 the op never said they did

    • @sacha_msky
      @sacha_msky Год назад +2

      Sound pretty unprofessional

    • @BoredAmerican
      @BoredAmerican Год назад +12

      Bro doesn’t know much lol, that’s an SKS and it’s not bolt action nor an assault rifle or an AR15

  • @marcelfigueroa2449
    @marcelfigueroa2449 Год назад +1666

    This kid gets so excited whenever he gives details about the murders it’s so sickening. Props to the detective for keeping his cool and getting everything out of him calmly.

    • @JustMeELC
      @JustMeELC Год назад

      That's mental illness

    • @m0bz0mb39
      @m0bz0mb39 Год назад

      "I'm extremely intelligent...I'm a smart criminal" This guy really has an ego, hilarious he has a learning disability.
      Edit: also he says "I know everything." Like seriously, how narcissistic can you get?

    • @Ssm19494
      @Ssm19494 Год назад +33

      That detective was probably so hyped having this kid confess everything right away, saved so much effort

    • @KillerCuddles-fc6kg
      @KillerCuddles-fc6kg Год назад +23

      @@ka3097 "you gotta shoot straight with me..."
      LOL was the Cop messing with him?

    • @jamesandrews3583
      @jamesandrews3583 Год назад +3

      @@KillerCuddles-fc6kg lmao

  • @TheOVprodigy
    @TheOVprodigy 5 месяцев назад +5

    The most angering part is that he called an SKS an AR15.

  • @yoezzimsandoval7946
    @yoezzimsandoval7946 5 месяцев назад

    These videos are amazing . Salute the narrator

  • @susansharp985
    @susansharp985 Год назад +520

    Detective "Ya gotta shoot me straight" Good lord, what a thing to say to a killer.

  • @ProfessorMM
    @ProfessorMM Год назад +996

    This detective is absolutely brilliant. So incredibly patient and his ability to continue being so calm and kind while hearing such HORRIFIC confessions is admirable

    • @foxwoodjones9831
      @foxwoodjones9831 Год назад +19

      He was fantastic. Unfortunately, he probably has heard a lot of awful things before.

    • @BadDrucifer
      @BadDrucifer Год назад +21

      He even said:"You got to shoot me straight..." during the investigation

    • @daviddooley1284
      @daviddooley1284 Год назад +3

      @@foxwoodjones9831 I agree that the detective got the job done, but he was darn close to patronizing the loser when he kept pulling his, "wouldn't you agree", nonsense. Yes, he was emphasizing that the young man was clear minded during his cowardly and heinous acts, but that part was so ridiculous, that it got on my last nerve. At any rate, this kid is one messed up individual. Wow, I will say a prayer for humanity..

    • @Murlocsluvmeat
      @Murlocsluvmeat Год назад +7

      Meh, he had this easy, its not really brilliance, this was less an interrogation and more of a lets get all the info we can from this kid. Just had to be chill as ever. Anyone can do that

    • @Amy-yb4pj
      @Amy-yb4pj Год назад

      The fact he took a bite of his fucking sandwich while he was explaining about his paps brains were hanging out , really shows what a horrible fucked up kid he really is !!

  • @roybatty-
    @roybatty- 5 месяцев назад +1

    That detective has maximum chill and has his ego totally in control. Master class.

  • @mehmed93
    @mehmed93 4 месяца назад +6

    Suspect: *breathes*
    Narrator: “The detectives will take note of this behaviour”

  • @Zeroshiki
    @Zeroshiki Год назад +522

    The way he says _"My mom doesn't even know what's going on, she doesn't even know her parents are dead."_ and describes the murder scene so vividly is just cold asf. It's hard to believe that he has any real remorse.

    • @slimbrouckske
      @slimbrouckske Год назад +11

      He hasn't. Check his tweets again

    • @encryridion
      @encryridion Год назад +2

      Where does he say that in the video

    • @yyyyuhzm6829
      @yyyyuhzm6829 Год назад +2

      @@encryridion 28:50

    • @HeheBOiPadhle
      @HeheBOiPadhle Год назад +1

      @@slimbrouckske His Twitter account was removed unfortunately. It would have been fun to read what goes in a wannabe cool kid"s mind

    • @dendikke3
      @dendikke3 Год назад +22

      @@HeheBOiPadhle If you want to know what goes in a wannabe cool kid's mind, you could also just subscribe to Musk's account

  • @user-lq7sp3vu4x
    @user-lq7sp3vu4x 9 месяцев назад +204

    You can tell he dosent have anyone in his life that he can talk to. He was ready to spill the beans in full detail of what happened. Just sad all around.

  • @J4CKAL05
    @J4CKAL05 23 дня назад +1

    "...as we talk through this things, don't embellish anything with me, okay? You gotta shoot me straight."
    Interesting choice of phrasing there, detective.

  • @Holy-Place-Archives
    @Holy-Place-Archives 5 месяцев назад +4

    “I’m extremely intelligent” is so narcissistic especially after killing your own grandparents

    • @nightwalker7198
      @nightwalker7198 Месяц назад

      Whilst blabbing all the details without a lawyer

  • @nickcrawford9075
    @nickcrawford9075 Год назад +876

    I gotta give props to the detective in this interrogation. He did such an incredible job at recognizing how effective flattery would be in getting the suspect to let his guard down, and instantly got him to do so by pouring it on while simultaneously decimating multiple potential defense opportunities. Truly expert level stuff.

    • @wolfgangdevries127
      @wolfgangdevries127 Год назад +43

      You mean in exposing a complete narcissist, I assume. Just let them talk for a while about how great they are... that must be enough. No rocket science involved.

    • @FemboyKaiSaku
      @FemboyKaiSaku Год назад +35

      i dont think this kid even had a guard, going into this its clear he just wants to be honest and basically confess to everything but it seems he lies about certain things to almost seem cool/intelligent in a way

    • @TBonerton
      @TBonerton Год назад +45

      ​@@wolfgangdevries127 while no rocket science involved, it does take a level of patience to restrain from knocking his teeth out during some of his statements.

    • @wolfgangdevries127
      @wolfgangdevries127 Год назад +7

      @@TBonerton sure, but I assume it's his daily business. I agree with you he's pretty good at it. Sorry for being somewhat impulsive 😇

    • @wolfgangdevries127
      @wolfgangdevries127 Год назад +9

      @@FemboyKaiSaku what? He lies his thingy off. "Four days ago." Sure. "You guys make me feel like I didn't do anything wrong." Sure.
      "I'm not going to be lying to you guys about anything you ask me."
      Then lies about how he got that Rolex. All in about a minute.. I'm not gonna give this creep more time. What about you? 😇

  • @THEMUDBUSTERS4
    @THEMUDBUSTERS4 Год назад +856

    Crazy you guys were able to get an interview. You guys go above and beyond and have made it to the top of my list for true crime.

    • @janina873
      @janina873 Год назад +2

      Yes, added bonus! :)

    • @Manning32.
      @Manning32. Год назад +22

      They’re talking about the interview at the end with the killer. This Channel did an interview with the killer

    • @ElevatedCity
      @ElevatedCity Год назад +18

      @@0Ciju0 he said INTERVIEW not the interrogation video. They got an exclusive interview with the kid in the video.

    • @alicewilbanks9909
      @alicewilbanks9909 Год назад

      @@Manning32. 0

    • @THEMUDBUSTERS4
      @THEMUDBUSTERS4 Год назад +2

      @Lindy410 and some people are rude. I’m talking about the interview at the end of the video.

  • @god5590
    @god5590 4 месяца назад +1

    dang im from iowa city and i just clicked on a random video of yours that seemed interesting. this one is definitely a bit more shocking since i know all of the locations talked about

  • @iFluxyy
    @iFluxyy 6 месяцев назад +2

    Narrator going into detail as to why a gun is a more effective murder weapon than a knife or bat had me in unintentional stitches

  • @theyhates0ph1a
    @theyhates0ph1a Год назад +965

    the fact his grandparents knew they were in danger and even wanted him placed in foster care but was informed that he'd be going back with his mom instead and they didn't want that just goes to show how much they cared for him.
    edit: if what he said was true, his grandfather was emotionally abusive which couldve easily led to why isaiah snapped. not saying what isaiah did was okay at all but its obvious the system failed him from the beginning. his mom didnt play a very active role in his life and that could've also affected him. when he was asking for help it wasnt given to him. the whole story is sad atp.

    • @asniffer6532
      @asniffer6532 Год назад +92

      Most of those crimes happens due to child abuse. The amount of hatred he has developed along the years tells so much.

    • @Ins4n1ty_
      @Ins4n1ty_ Год назад +110

      If you watch the video to the end, you'll see they did not, in fact, care for the kid. The kid might be embellishing stuff, making they sound worse than they did but they clearly failed in raising both their own daughter and their grandson. As a victim of parental abuse myself, I understand what the kid is trying to say. The grandparents got what they had coming, when you breed hate, you get hate back. I don't think anything justifies murder, but the kid is clearly deranged due to an abusive household and this is what happens.

    • @antonsmith1497
      @antonsmith1497 Год назад +15

      @@theyhates0ph1a Shouldnt his therapist found this out? if the access to the weapons was this easy then probably to the Grandpas PC account aswell. Probably never logged off, why would he? And telling that police officers dont care about weed plants because they are owned by his grandpa? lol? The teens story is , sadly, full of shit. As in the video stated, he is extremly narcistic and pretty dumb. Combined with the aggressive mind, makes this an explosive mixture. Nothing can replace a good mother and a good father. At some point the kids ask questions and feel guilty why their real parents arent there. And pupils arent easy to each other too.

    • @johnnycaralta
      @johnnycaralta Год назад +4

      You know nothing about the situation.

    • @johnnycaralta
      @johnnycaralta Год назад +22

      @@honestyisadyingvirtue That's how the story went. His grandpa was a terrible father figure, and his grandma spoiled him to try and make up for it. His mother was worthless. This is all from firsthand accounts and witnessing some of the treatment.

  • @lianalonge1984
    @lianalonge1984 Год назад +520

    The way this kid turns the tears on and off is truly frightening.

    • @selenemccuntyface4061
      @selenemccuntyface4061 Год назад

      thats just mental illness.

    • @neonblack211
      @neonblack211 Год назад +92

      i dont think hes doing it on purpose, think of how young he is + hes been awake for 4 days on meth

    • @jimlahey3919
      @jimlahey3919 Год назад +84

      Those are real tears. Hes extremely emotional and coming down from a 4 day meth binge.

    • @mimibee626
      @mimibee626 Год назад +19

      I think his emotions are just barely kept under control.

    • @dalaedriajames8684
      @dalaedriajames8684 Год назад +14

      yeah and the amount of people buying it is frightening

  • @jcrocky
    @jcrocky 2 месяца назад +1

    This is a very good video to educate young people like me to know that if you were ever to be in any kind of trouble like this and ended up getting caught by the police, you should never let a detective make you feel too comfortable to admit everything you did in every detail like he’s your best friend. Always tell the detective that you are not going to speak without having a lawyer present. A lawyer is there to help tell you what you should and should not say to the police in order to possibly get a lighter sentence or get yourself out of trouble depending on what you did.

  • @rickydennis5043
    @rickydennis5043 4 месяца назад +4

    Smartest criminal ever, admitted to the whole thing without a lawyer.

  • @coollkidontheblock2
    @coollkidontheblock2 Год назад +3151

    The whole CP thing in the computer really changed the story for me. What Isaiah did was wrong but I wouldn’t doubt if the grandpa hit or sexually assaulted Isaiah multiple times before and the grandma just turned a blind eye

    • @danieljohn3152
      @danieljohn3152 Год назад +121

      This should be top comment

    • @michaelwerkov3438
      @michaelwerkov3438 Год назад +110

      @@ElizabethGlasby the whole point of this channel is analyzing

    • @sporkcunt8100
      @sporkcunt8100 Год назад +13

      I doubt it highly him contacting his friends immediately after is kinda proof that he was convinced by someone to follow through so they could take advantage of the tragic incident

    • @sporkcunt8100
      @sporkcunt8100 Год назад +9

      43:49 like come on man he’s a narcissist looking out for his own ass

    • @sporkcunt8100
      @sporkcunt8100 Год назад

      43:49 like come on man he’s a narcissist looking out for his own ass

  • @jagaloon14
    @jagaloon14 9 месяцев назад +2059

    As sad as it is to say, when a parent is found unjust to take care of their own child, the grandparents might not be the best answer. They almost always have something to do with why their own child can not be a good parent

    • @000blocks000
      @000blocks000 9 месяцев назад +148

      You definitely have a point. I’ve seen it with friends who ended up raised by their grandparents. I wouldn’t say “almost always,” but I’d say often enough that it’s a matter to consider.

    • @1029zsz
      @1029zsz 9 месяцев назад +32

      Interesting point

    • @jagaloon14
      @jagaloon14 9 месяцев назад +68

      @@000blocks000 I’m not trying to say every grandparent who finds themselves having to raise a child is going to raise a murderer. Just that if the parents were found unfit to raise a child, their own parents made some marginal mistakes somewhere along the line

    • @ninaballerina2807
      @ninaballerina2807 9 месяцев назад

      What exactly do you mean by 'good parent' in a Godless society with no moral compass whatsoever and not even the basic parental right to discipline their inherently sinful & wayward child? Yes, inherently. For, having been born of the cursed seed of the Fallen Man, irrefutably, all alike come bearing upon themselves his curses of Sin, Depravity, Degeneration & Death.

    • @peeledsoupbowls5263
      @peeledsoupbowls5263 9 месяцев назад +15

      The fact that the mom wasn't able to raise him due to drug addictions, and he also seems to suffer from those addictions...Regardless of whether he was being honest about his granda smoking pot, there's certainly a pattern there

  • @Sawneyy
    @Sawneyy 2 месяца назад +2

    "snitched on his dangerous friends" couple of seconds later "I'm a smart criminal"

  • @rsmith373
    @rsmith373 16 дней назад +2

    This ancient interrogation method is called the 'food' technique. With a full plate, the suspect will be more inclined to give up all the information the detectives need.

  • @Popeyesfsther
    @Popeyesfsther Год назад +264

    He stops crying to explain how he did it😬it’s like he’s proud of his actions and is eager to tell everybody how it went down.

    • @alienvomitsex
      @alienvomitsex Год назад

      Narcissists aren't really smart. They're easy to manipulate because they love to talk about themselves and brag.

    • @codym.5792
      @codym.5792 Год назад +12

      Yea man. He may have genuine PAIN knowing he did that to the people who saved him from a worse situation and went thru the struggle that is parenthood all over again when they should have been enjoying retirement and/or just their golden ages. BUTTT he does NOT feel a ton of regret over what he's done. He just realizes what he's lost.

    • @HitsFromTheDong
      @HitsFromTheDong Год назад +3

      I'm sure he told every person he talked to, he was very proud of himself.

    • @qq84
      @qq84 Год назад

      @@codym.5792 They were abusive so it got the right ones. They were everything but innocent. And no that doesn't make it okay to murder.

  • @flakestake3370
    @flakestake3370 Год назад +640

    I love how well the detective handled this. He made the suspect comfortable and made the situation feel less of an interrogation.

    • @jayrowe6473
      @jayrowe6473 Год назад +29

      That's what the 'friendly' does. They never needed the 'heavy'. As the saying goes, "you catch more flies with honey than you do with vinegar", or something to that effect.

    • @mestralofficial3766
      @mestralofficial3766 Год назад +6

      I mean he even told the kid to shoot him straight... I giggled a bit there tho' cause I couldn't resist at his metaphor's literal meaning... sorry. (if you get the reference)

    • @fluffylittlebear
      @fluffylittlebear Год назад +6

      I disagree. He made it painfully obvious that he didn't give a crap about the kid, and that he wasn't there to have a friendly conversation. Everything the detective said was calculated to put this kid in jail for as long as possible, and make the job of his defense attorney harder.
      It only wasn't obvious to this kid because he isn't as smart as he thinks he is, and according to the psychologist quoted near the end of this video, he had the emotional maturity of a young child at the time.
      But yeah, I think the detective did a shit job.

    • @russschmidt1975
      @russschmidt1975 Год назад +3

      He did a terrible interview. He asks nothing about the most important question. Why ? Why did he do it? All he asks about is what happened after the crime. I've never seen a worse interview. Its the teen who brings up the subject of possibly why hevdid it? That's brought up almost at the end.

    • @heidipokusa5196
      @heidipokusa5196 Год назад

      You are not an idiot are you? are you part of the grooming. Manipulation

  • @princessbubblegum9135
    @princessbubblegum9135 5 месяцев назад +9

    First case on your channel that I genuinely don’t blame the killer

    • @bentheisraelite
      @bentheisraelite 4 месяца назад +2

      You only saying that cause the complexion of his skin . He killed his grandparents in cold blood after searching it online

    • @nq6508
      @nq6508 4 месяца назад +4

      Projecting much? You sound like you have your own issues to worry about instead of accusing people of being racist. ​@@bentheisraelite

    • @bentheisraelite
      @bentheisraelite 3 месяца назад

      @@nq6508 I didn’t call anyone racist . I said the person was BIASED off their complexion . Read to comprehend if you have the ability

  • @matthewseel5961
    @matthewseel5961 7 месяцев назад +2

    How do detectives talk to evil people like this and go home and have a normal life.

  • @dank2583
    @dank2583 7 месяцев назад +705

    I definitely did not expect the self proclaimed "smart criminal" to confess within the first five seconds of the interrogation

    • @jonslg240
      @jonslg240 7 месяцев назад +15

      "It's a Czechoslovakian bolt-action AR-15 with a more-than 10 round 'clip'." 🤔🤔
      Looks a lot more like a semi-auto (non-bolt action) SKS/something variant/clone/whatever you call it, and it doesn't look like the magazine holds more than 10 rounds
      Looks kinda funky.. any gun enthusiasts willing to weigh-in and satisfy my/our curiosity?

    • @theclockman775
      @theclockman775 7 месяцев назад +9

      @@jonslg240Judging off the black and white photos, it just looks like a SKS, probably clip fed considering it only held 10 rounds, that’s not a mag on the bottom, that’s where the rounds (fed in by the clip while loading) are stored in the gun, he could’ve also put the rounds in by hand, and i’m pretty sure we all know that is NOT a AR-15, armalite doesnt even make SKS’ to my knowledge. Although, do not consider me a ‘expert’, i just like doing research about guns so i know a bit.

    • @jonslg240
      @jonslg240 7 месяцев назад

      @@theclockman775 thanks that's kinda what I thought, too but I also couldn't be sure it wasn't a Czechoslovakian bolt-action AR-15 with a magazine that holds more than 10 rounds, so I couldn't be certain... 😂

    • @theclockman775
      @theclockman775 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@jonslg240 The thing is, the SKS isn’t even bolt action, it’s semi auto, unless it’s some weird civilian SKS variant that requires you to pull the bolt back every shot.

    • @OnlyTwoShoes
      @OnlyTwoShoes 6 месяцев назад +6

      This kid is a certified genius. He found out his grandmother had cancer and put her straight into remission.

  • @preetiverma2728
    @preetiverma2728 Год назад +631

    When they talk about his background, how he started fraternizing with bad company, I did not expect it to be so bad. Like his friend going to the house to see the crime and another looting his dead grandparents and joking about it. That is really messed up and tragic.

    • @L-mo
      @L-mo Год назад

      Addiction to opiates will drive many otherwise “normal” people to extreme lengths. Plus his grandparents allowed him to have access to enough assault weaponry to take out a small country…

    • @Ephesians5-14
      @Ephesians5-14 Год назад +13

      I will never understand how sick people manage to find each other.

    • @elmar4574
      @elmar4574 Год назад +3

      @@Ephesians5-14 A mix of childhood nostalgia and the infection of new experiences.

    • @MorpheusASmith
      @MorpheusASmith Год назад +5

      @@Ephesians5-14 - Social media makes it a lot easier for them nowadays.

    • @AudioGardenSlave123
      @AudioGardenSlave123 Год назад +6

      Kids today are borderline soulless.

  • @pamelafranklin7322
    @pamelafranklin7322 6 месяцев назад +3

    A point I notice was he refered to the gun as an "Assault rifle" and the a "Hollow point assault rifle" which says to me that he wasnt that educated on guns but probably had gained his info from the internet.

  • @lilacheaven222
    @lilacheaven222 4 месяца назад +3

    25:42 "You gotta shoot me straight" damn the detective could've phrased it better 😭🤣

  • @petephelan969
    @petephelan969 Год назад +226

    They called the cops on him 18 times and tried to put him in foster care. So they definitely knew he was dangerous.

    • @wmason1961
      @wmason1961 Год назад +33

      One of my 4 children was dangerous. Knowing that was no help. It is almost impossible to get any help from the state until after they commit a heinous crime. A line he never formally crossed. He is still dangerous. Fortunately, he is now in his thirties, and we have no contact.

    • @bluntslt8023
      @bluntslt8023 Год назад +5

      @@wmason1961 why do you say he's dangerous and when was the last time you talked to him

    • @tykenneth1
      @tykenneth1 Год назад +31

      Yet they left their firearms unlocked and easy to reach

    • @wmason1961
      @wmason1961 Год назад +6

      @@bluntslt8023 the last time was Christmas at my daughter's house. He still talks to his sister.

    • @squibbelsmcjohnson
      @squibbelsmcjohnson Год назад +3

      ​@@tykenneth1exactly

  • @karenhill5925
    @karenhill5925 Год назад +1594

    One thing that shocked me was after 18 police reports against the grandson the grand parents thought it was safe to leave 300 rounds of ammunition and shotguns and rifles openly displayed in their basement?😳 That is so Crazy that they did not have them locked away not just because of the problems with the grandson but anyone that broke in would have instant access to them!

    • @rusteddenial453
      @rusteddenial453 Год назад +222

      America

    • @LisaPeterson227
      @LisaPeterson227 Год назад +28

      Not all narcissist are killers, all killers are narcissist. How do you become one? The personality traits of your early childhood caregivers.

    • @wodiberappin8624
      @wodiberappin8624 Год назад +31

      3000 rounds not 300 lol

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад

      Nearly every gun in our house is hidden around and no one ever shot anyone and when people too young are around we lock them up in a vault

    • @twbroei9203
      @twbroei9203 Год назад

      ​@@hammerhand5059 still having a gun in your surroundings is a bigger chance for these crimes to be happening. Its like the devils fruit if you know its there the chances are more likely. But in some cases i agree on you its the person who uses it. Everyone knows a knife is for cooking and almost everyone owns one. Even though its also seen as a stabbing murder weapon. People lock it away in a drawer or in open view from that moment its knowing if the weapon is there or having the weapon with you all times.The more you use it the more likely it is you use that item in this case a gun. I hope there are more people like you who sees guns more in a protective, collecting way or in a spare time moment. Not for crime and destroying lifes what most weapons are made for to do!

  • @user-dq3xw9cv3e
    @user-dq3xw9cv3e 4 месяца назад +2

    Is it weird that no matter how heinous the crime, I'm always thinking "STOP FUCKING TALKING TO THE POLICE!!!!"

  • @PepsiMaxVanilla
    @PepsiMaxVanilla 5 месяцев назад +2

    you can tell how much he hates the kid by how hes trying to incriminate him as a remorseless planned murderer but while being really nice and stuff to his face

  • @RiriRuruu
    @RiriRuruu Год назад +979

    I know this is an interrogation, but with how friendly and patient the detective sounds it almost feels like the kid's just talking to his therapist
    Sadly this isn't the case and two lives were lost...

    • @vincentlok8894
      @vincentlok8894 Год назад +87

      That's probably exactly what the detective is trained to do. Get the subject to trust them and talk to them. They want information and that's the most effective way to get it. ie; The detective is clearly good at his job.

    • @theodorerobert6774
      @theodorerobert6774 Год назад +30

      Suspect is telling everything with no pushing at all. It’s a slam dunk if he just babies him and keeps him talking.

    • @vanguardangel6912
      @vanguardangel6912 Год назад +9

      Your comment makes me wonder if there should be recommended mental health checkups at your local clinic alongside your normal body health checkup? Do yall think that would help decrease these amounts of crimes?

    • @mom.left.me.at.michaels9951
      @mom.left.me.at.michaels9951 Год назад +22

      @@vanguardangel6912 honestly I do really think so. To be fair, everyone needs therapy at some point in their life, and no one really thinks of it that way. People don't even consider therapy as an option, be it stigma, financial situation or the most common, thinking therapy is only for extreme cases. People don't necessarily think after someone close to them dies that maybe a support group or grief counseling might help, they just think they have to suffer. Because that's normal. In my own specific case, I come from a family of hoarders. Now some you can't immediately tell because they keep it behind closed doors but all of us have OCD, and only two of us will admit that it's OCD and work to control it. The other 12 just insist it's normal, or because their father did it and it didn't kill him it's fine for them. This statement sounds silly but "fish don't know they are wet". When you live in a mentally unstable situation, you just think that's normal. Standard mental health evaluations could really help in ending generational abuse, healing attachment styles, cycles of addiction and in general just having the opportunity to address red flag behavior before it escalates. I think mental health stigma is finally breaking down as we understand the issues more and more. As this continues I think mental health care will become if not mandatory like physicals, but at least more accessable and we can start getting ahead of these issues before they downward spiral into criminal cases.

    • @deepfriedchocobo
      @deepfriedchocobo Год назад +11

      @@vanguardangel6912 mental health is as if not more important than physical health

  • @carolkegel7599
    @carolkegel7599 11 месяцев назад +892

    In regards to Isaiah saying that he loved his Grandma, yet also claiming that she was verbally abusive and enabled his Grandfather's abuse: these feelings aren't mutually exclusive. It's very common to feel love and empathy towards people who abuse you, even when you also feel rage and resentment. That's one of the reasons it's so difficult to for so many people to leave abusive relationships.

    • @cutieapplepie
      @cutieapplepie 11 месяцев назад +60

      I one hundred percent agree, i still loved my mom even through all my trauma. Being tortured, sexually assaulted and drugged by both my parents. And those things did make me want to kill my parents. But at the end of the day, those thoughts were only "in the moment" thoughts when they whipped me like a slave and tased me. Life sucks, some parents dont deserve to be parents. But I made a conscious effort to better myself. I ran away and years later am still suffering from that pain, it lingers in my mind, but i persevere and tell myself I have to be greater than what I suffered.

    • @stermau101
      @stermau101 11 месяцев назад +2

      Boo hoo

    • @1Haaku
      @1Haaku 11 месяцев назад +4

      u did not believe him really? omfg😂😂

    • @maynaiem6409
      @maynaiem6409 11 месяцев назад +15

      @@cutieapplepie Total support for u. You are such a strong person

    • @NadiaLeeTalbot
      @NadiaLeeTalbot 11 месяцев назад +1

      He was not abused. I can’t people seriously believe this.

  • @YouCanCallMeChrys
    @YouCanCallMeChrys 6 месяцев назад +1

    I am flabbergasted. The sheer honesty is ridiculous. Why regret it immediately?! I can't 🥴

  • @h.erencalik
    @h.erencalik 4 месяца назад +2

    You can feel the detective forcibly agrees with him when he says "I'm a smart criminal"

    • @h.erencalik
      @h.erencalik 4 месяца назад +2

      Though it seems grandparents were kinda bad too

  • @shaybaeXx1989
    @shaybaeXx1989 Год назад +690

    The way he talks about what they looked like after he shot them. faces blown off, brains exploded everywhere. I couldn't imagine seeing the people I love looking like this, letalone me having done it to them. this is terrifying &absolutely shattering!! RIP to them

    • @AAa-km7mx
      @AAa-km7mx Год назад +64

      Yeah and then eats a sand which straight after talking about seeing his grandparents brains 🤢🤢

    • @mattbailey8599
      @mattbailey8599 Год назад +77

      I'm going out on a limb here but I don't think he really loved them that much.

    • @Jonathan-pp3du
      @Jonathan-pp3du Год назад +17

      @@mattbailey8599 That's my hunch too.

    • @randomsim6312
      @randomsim6312 Год назад +4

      @@mattbailey8599 woah pal, no need to make up any controversy!!! this a damn tragedy

    • @yt_hatescrime_data4301
      @yt_hatescrime_data4301 Год назад

      And he said he went and picked up a piece of brain to look at it. 🤦‍♂️ He should never see freedom, even if he lives to 100.

  • @blackwalls8126
    @blackwalls8126 Год назад +451

    Man, one small part that really hit is how he says he told his friend that he killed his grandparents and the friend asks if he can loot the house. That's just pure evil.
    Also, how he says he tried suicide but it "never worked". But somehow he knew exactly which method would end the life of his grandparents.

    • @phangirlable
      @phangirlable Год назад +68

      He certainly lied about the suicide attempts to get sympathy.

    • @FCUK-
      @FCUK- Год назад +26

      Makes me wonder what they've seen that normalizes him killing his grandparents but to able to go back to the house to steal while they're dead in there is so bizarre.

    • @BradLee208
      @BradLee208 Год назад

      That’s meth addicts for you

    • @Nefarious_Bread
      @Nefarious_Bread Год назад +6

      @@FCUK- I see people die on Reddit at least once a week. I remember the first time I saw somebody die on the internet I couldn't sleep for almost a week. Now, it's a quick moment of cringing and then I move on.

    • @Nefarious_Bread
      @Nefarious_Bread Год назад +4

      @@JoaquinElf Lol, it took me a second but I see what you did there.

  • @3232myke
    @3232myke 6 месяцев назад

    Best crime channel!

  • @capefear56
    @capefear56 Год назад +398

    The inexperienced sociopaths are always so apparent in their deceptive tactics. They flip from "I'm sooo excited to tell you how I did it!" to "but now I have to ball my eyes out" in such a jarring manner that it's incredibly obvious what they really are under the mask.

    • @LunatheMoonDragon
      @LunatheMoonDragon Год назад

      Just because people rubber band through emotions like that doesn't mean they're always being deceptive. It's also a big sign of severe mental illness and instability. He seems very forthcoming here, for the most part. He really doesn't have much left to be deceptive about. I believe he is just so mentally deteriorated that he has no control over his emotional state, and rapid fires back and forth from being excited about what he did, and being sad at losing his grandparents.

    • @persephoneblack888
      @persephoneblack888 Год назад +54

      Very true, especially that flip from "I loved my grandparents" to picking up their brain matter in the kitchen and looking at it. He admires his handy work.

    • @Pcgamingfixes
      @Pcgamingfixes Год назад +28

      While I like your comment I think for them both statements are genuine in a case like this. While to someone sane it looks like a masking behavior I just believe someone like this holds both statements genuinely. They are crazy imo.

    • @laurax1179
      @laurax1179 Год назад +20

      @@Pcgamingfixes Yeah I'd agree. He isn't just getting emotional when talking about how this will affect him (as weve seen some suspects on this channel do) but is very emotional when talking about how his grandparents didnt deserve this, and how long they raised him for. He seems to (pathologically in my opinion) seem to believe that both he didnt want his grandparents to suffer but also that he was going to kill them and seems to take glee in that violence.
      His grandparents seem very let down by the system here. They were asking for help with his obviously escalating behaviour but dont seems to have been offered any support.

    • @alfobootidir2474
      @alfobootidir2474 Год назад +8

      It’s hard to fake a perspective you can’t see from

  • @TuttiFruity0214
    @TuttiFruity0214 Год назад +1074

    He may not have been psychotic, doesn’t mean he is not a psychopath. He pretends to be remorseful but every time he goes back to telling his story he gets amped up like it’s the coolest thing ever.

    • @Slipknvt
      @Slipknvt Год назад +92

      I mean this kid had zero remorse he invited his buddies to “loot” the house that is fucking disgusting

    • @3takoyakis
      @3takoyakis Год назад +16

      I mean he was lonely too
      Other than being abused for years
      Thats gonna feel refreshing after breaking through the abuse

    • @elizabethferguson7002
      @elizabethferguson7002 Год назад +53

      ​@@3takoyakis abused?
      His grandparents called him a POS.
      I think that applies.
      I'm sure he was called a few other choice words.
      Sticks and stones...
      The grandparents expected retirement, instead they shifted gears to raise their drug addicted daughters baby.
      At 15 he started experimenting with drugs...
      Then Meth.
      Multiple violent outbursts and threats.
      Grandma is fighting Cancer.
      Grandpa obviously had severe pain from some old injury.
      Isaiah is the definition of a lil POS.
      Remember adults are human too.
      Geez Isaiah was probably born addicted.
      Many kids are born addicted and don't grow up to be sociopathic psychotic narcissists.
      He chose to dabble in the most dangerous drug.
      There's plenty of blame to go around but no one deserves to get their head blown off (.)

    • @elizabethferguson7002
      @elizabethferguson7002 Год назад +50

      @@InternetUserJesse did he? It was dropped...maybe it wasn't what they said.
      You know all you have to do is mention CP and it sticks like gorilla glue.
      Just because the words were said does not make it fact.

    • @royaltyheroismandthestreets
      @royaltyheroismandthestreets Год назад

      @@InternetUserJesse he didn’t have a computer full of cp he had 6 images HIS attorney considered inappropriate photos of children and it’s never been confirmed whether it was cp or not. don’t be ignorant and spread misinformation weirdo.