The Debrief With MyronGainesX - May 15, 2023


Fed Explains The Former Cop Turned Serial Killer: The Golden State Killer


Episode Stats

Length

2 hours and 51 minutes

Words per Minute

189.1912

Word Count

32,435

Sentence Count

871

Misogynist Sentences

72

Hate Speech Sentences

88


Summary

On this episode of Fed It, we have a special guest, 6ix9ine himself, Billy Seiko. We talk about his criminal past and how he got his start in the music industry. We also talk about how he became one of the most successful rappers of all time.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 I was a special agent with Homelands and Investigations, okay guys?
00:00:22.040 HSI.
00:00:22.860 The cases that I did mostly were human smuggling and drug trafficking.
00:00:27.100 No one else has these documents, by the way.
00:00:30.280 Here's what Fetit covers.
00:00:32.020 Dr. Lafredo confirmed lacerations due to stepping on glass.
00:00:38.220 Murder investigations.
00:00:39.220 You see him reaching in his jacket.
00:00:40.300 You don't know.
00:00:41.500 And he's positioning.
00:00:42.120 Been on February 13, 2019.
00:00:43.840 You're facing two-pound spells in meditative murder.
00:00:46.900 Bracketeering and Rico conspiracies.
00:00:48.720 Young slime life here and after referred to as YSL.
00:00:51.360 This is 6ix9ine.
00:00:53.040 And then this is Billy Seiko right here.
00:00:54.460 Now, when they first started, guys, 6ix9ine ran with YouTube.
00:00:57.460 I'm upset.
00:00:57.960 I'm watching this music video.
00:00:59.700 You know, I'm bobbing my head like, hey, this shit lit.
00:01:01.800 But at the same time, I'm pausing.
00:01:03.280 Oh, wait, who this?
00:01:04.520 Right?
00:01:04.940 Oh, who's that in the back?
00:01:07.120 Firearms and Violet Client.
00:01:08.460 A.K.A. Bush IC violated.
00:01:10.300 In order to stay away from the victim.
00:01:12.180 Bush IC arrested after shooting at King of Diamonds.
00:01:14.380 Miami strip club injured one person.
00:01:15.860 This is the one that's going to fuck him up because this gun is not tracing.
00:01:19.600 Well, it happened at the gun range.
00:01:20.780 Here's your boy, 42 Doug, right here on the left.
00:01:22.460 Okay, sex trafficking and sex crimes.
00:01:25.000 They can effectively link him to paying an underage girl.
00:01:28.040 I'm going to lock my 50-year-old, right, right.
00:01:29.820 And the first bomb went off right here.
00:01:32.460 Suspect to set down a back path at the site of the second explosion.
00:01:36.160 Inspired by Al-Qaeda.
00:01:37.600 Two terrorists, his brothers, the Zokar Sarnev and Tamarland Sarnev.
00:01:42.120 When the cartels shipped drugs into the country.
00:01:44.200 As this guy got arrested for espionage, okay?
00:01:46.900 Trading secrets with the Russians for monetary compensation.
00:01:50.600 The largest corrupt police bust in New Orleans history.
00:01:55.180 The days of the police are gone.
00:01:56.800 So he was in this bad boy.
00:01:58.320 We're going to go over his past, the gang guy, so that this all makes sense.
00:02:08.800 All right, we're back.
00:02:09.760 What's up, guys?
00:02:10.300 Welcome to Fed It.
00:02:11.040 Sorry about that.
00:02:11.680 I think the audio should be good now.
00:02:13.520 Give me ones in the chat if you guys can actually hear me.
00:02:16.180 Give me ones in the chat if you guys can actually hear me.
00:02:17.960 I'm actually sitting at the table today.
00:02:19.580 I got Angie and Kim helping me out behind the scenes so I can go ahead and yap to y'all.
00:02:23.800 We good?
00:02:24.520 Yeah.
00:02:24.860 We're good now, ladies?
00:02:25.620 Okay.
00:02:25.980 So, guys, yeah, I know this is a little bit of a different setup for Fed It, man.
00:02:29.560 But, you know, I got the two lovely ladies helping me out here.
00:02:31.860 So I'll be able to sit here at the table.
00:02:33.700 And Angie's going to be behind the ones and twos.
00:02:35.160 And Kim is going to help me out with the super chats and the chat in general.
00:02:37.920 So, real quick, before I even get into it, Angie, you want to introduce yourself to the people?
00:02:42.360 Yeah.
00:02:43.420 So, tonight we're going to have a women power in this studio.
00:02:48.380 Yeah, okay.
00:02:49.100 That's why y'all deserve less.
00:02:52.380 Yo, you guys want to know why we're late?
00:02:54.180 Because I have to teach them how to do everything behind the scenes real quick.
00:02:56.520 That's why we're late, man.
00:02:57.680 Y'all over here saying, oh, yo, you smash them, blah, blah.
00:03:00.480 No, I'm smashing my head into the wall trying to teach them this shit.
00:03:03.260 Okay.
00:03:03.620 So, yeah, go ahead.
00:03:04.240 That's the light of the truth.
00:03:05.200 That was like five minutes.
00:03:06.400 That's why we're late, guys.
00:03:07.480 You're teaching me what to do and thank him.
00:03:10.000 So, I hope, like, I don't mess up doing this because this is how it works.
00:03:15.940 Like, you guys should give a Don DeMarco.
00:03:18.740 Oh, you have your song bar there?
00:03:20.420 Yeah, I do.
00:03:21.640 Yeah, you see how hard it is behind the scenes now, huh?
00:03:25.880 It's very hard.
00:03:27.120 Yeah.
00:03:27.280 This is very hard.
00:03:28.540 And, well.
00:03:29.280 So, tell the people who you are for those that don't know and then we'll go to Kim.
00:03:32.160 Well, my name is Angie.
00:03:34.320 I'm the Venezuelan that can't speak English, as you always call me.
00:03:37.880 And, as always, I'll be helping Marion to do these cases.
00:03:42.340 So, yeah.
00:03:43.000 That's about me.
00:03:44.460 Cool.
00:03:44.820 This is Kim.
00:03:45.800 And then Kim.
00:03:46.660 Hi, I'm Kim.
00:03:48.820 I'm Colombian.
00:03:50.000 I'm 18.
00:03:52.360 This is my first FEDA case.
00:03:54.160 Let's see how it goes.
00:03:55.780 Yeah, this is her test run.
00:03:57.720 No, I'm just kidding.
00:03:58.760 She actually did quite a bit of research into the Golden State Killer guys, a.k.a.
00:04:03.400 Joseph James D'Angelo.
00:04:04.880 She had done a bunch of research, sent me links and everything else like that.
00:04:07.720 So, it helped me kind of streamline the process of what we're going to show you guys today
00:04:11.240 because I got a combination of documentaries, links, maps, all that stuff.
00:04:15.880 So, shout out to Kim for helping me behind the scenes with this particular serial killer
00:04:19.980 because you guys have been asking for this guy forever, man.
00:04:22.580 And so, we're going to go ahead and make sure that we cover this appropriately.
00:04:25.860 Did a bunch of research on him.
00:04:28.060 Earlier, we've been looking to do this guy for a long time because, I mean, Angie, they've
00:04:31.160 been requesting him for, what, months, right?
00:04:33.220 Yeah, for quite a while.
00:04:33.580 Yes.
00:04:34.080 Okay.
00:04:34.900 So, cool.
00:04:36.160 Without further ado, let's actually, you know what?
00:04:37.680 We'll hit the chats real quick.
00:04:39.300 Let's pull up some of these chats real quick and then I'll get into the broadcast.
00:04:43.600 Hey, guys.
00:04:43.980 If you're just coming in, don't forget to like the video, subscribe to the channel if you
00:04:47.380 haven't already.
00:04:48.440 So, that goes, J.R. Choi says, hyped about this one.
00:04:54.000 Okay.
00:04:54.300 Guys, I'm reading it from far.
00:04:55.360 So, sorry.
00:04:55.740 My vision from, oh, I got my basket.
00:04:58.820 I don't.
00:04:59.420 Never mind.
00:05:00.460 Actually, you know what?
00:05:00.960 You just read it, Kim.
00:05:01.660 You got it because I can't see from where I'm at.
00:05:03.840 You and Fresh should moderate a debate between Sneeko and Destiny versus Rolo and Saint to
00:05:08.340 Sinner and Studio.
00:05:10.840 Maybe I'll do that in the future.
00:05:12.200 Maybe we'll do that in the future.
00:05:13.440 You guys know that we're cool with all the parties.
00:05:15.080 So, maybe.
00:05:15.840 What's his next one?
00:05:17.000 You read them, Kim, because I can't see.
00:05:18.580 Hi from Laredo.
00:05:21.200 Oh, Laredo.
00:05:22.040 Yeah.
00:05:22.480 That's Texas.
00:05:22.660 Myron, hopefully you get to break down the Jamie Zapata ICE agent case.
00:05:27.540 Oh, man.
00:05:29.540 Okay, guys.
00:05:30.300 We're going to go through this quick little story time real quick.
00:05:36.820 So, I never knew Jaime Zapata, right?
00:05:39.580 Rest in peace to him.
00:05:40.320 But for some of you guys that are wondering, he was a special agent at Homeland Security Investigations
00:05:44.460 from the Laredo office.
00:05:46.660 I think he was originally from Brownsville.
00:05:48.340 And he got killed back in 2011 in Mexico while he was in, I think it was like outside of Mexico
00:05:54.760 City by some Zetas.
00:05:56.220 And they were like transporting equipment.
00:06:00.040 And I never knew him personally because I came on the job after the fact that I came in in 2014.
00:06:03.780 He was killed in 2011.
00:06:04.840 But all of his friends, my first supervisor was actually a very close friend of his.
00:06:11.260 And you know, guys, what was crazy?
00:06:12.880 It was actually my supervisor that was supposed to go to Mexico instead of Jaime.
00:06:18.100 So, if my supervisor had went, and he's a good friend of mine, if he had went to Mexico City,
00:06:23.000 or yeah, if he had went on that detail, he would have been the one that got killed in that situation.
00:06:27.540 So, rest in peace to him.
00:06:28.960 Rest in peace to, you know, obviously condolences to his family.
00:06:31.640 I will definitely cover the Jaime Zapata case.
00:06:35.260 But yeah, they ended up catching the guys that killed him and prosecuting them.
00:06:38.840 Like the whole U.S. government like went really hard on those guys to find them and go after them
00:06:42.700 because they basically killed them for no reason, man.
00:06:44.860 They wanted to steal their car because they were like in an armored SUV.
00:06:48.240 And yeah, crazy story, man.
00:06:50.480 Crazy, crazy story.
00:06:51.380 But I know all of his, a lot of his close friends.
00:06:55.000 I might even bring one of my friends that was like best friends with him on the show.
00:06:59.600 And we'll talk about it for y'all.
00:07:00.760 So, we'll see what happens.
00:07:02.120 We'll see what happens with that one.
00:07:04.340 But yeah, rest in peace to him.
00:07:06.400 What else, Kim?
00:07:08.040 Why did the officer who got shot by the Louisville mass shooter need to go,
00:07:12.160 need to go fund me for his lobotomy?
00:07:15.880 Isn't the government supposed to pay for that?
00:07:18.820 Oh, okay.
00:07:19.780 That's the case that we did, Angie, if you remember.
00:07:21.740 Yeah, because I know that is weird.
00:07:25.200 I mean, it might be because the surgery is too expensive for like,
00:07:28.460 it might not be covered by insurance.
00:07:29.740 Maybe that's why, but I know that there's a GoFundMe for him.
00:07:32.600 If you guys go back to the Louisville shooter, I had his link there to go donate.
00:07:37.840 But he's been recovering.
00:07:38.660 I've been following up with it.
00:07:39.660 So, he's doing better, man.
00:07:40.740 So, you know, support and prayers to him and his family.
00:07:44.180 And then we got, who became a new member there?
00:07:46.400 Mike Worth.
00:07:47.440 Mike who?
00:07:48.180 Mike Worth.
00:07:48.800 Mike Worth.
00:07:49.220 Shout out to you, bro.
00:07:49.780 Welcome to the FEDA team, my friend.
00:07:51.700 What else?
00:07:52.240 Have Angie a shout out to my amigo.
00:07:56.900 You want to read that one?
00:07:58.680 Michaka says, have Angie give a shout out to my amigo, Dixon Mayes.
00:08:03.920 Shout out to you, Dixon Mayes.
00:08:07.500 Okay.
00:08:08.060 What else?
00:08:09.320 We need funding, Myron.
00:08:10.480 Don't forget where you came from.
00:08:11.800 Who's that coming from?
00:08:12.560 New Britain Police Department.
00:08:14.420 Oh, wow.
00:08:15.080 You guys are hilarious, bro.
00:08:18.580 Yeah.
00:08:19.200 I'm from New Brant, Connecticut.
00:08:20.420 So, these guys are funny.
00:08:21.280 Okay.
00:08:21.640 What else?
00:08:22.740 Angie, be careful.
00:08:23.560 There's probably leftover peanut butter all over that seat.
00:08:26.240 Oh, fantastic.
00:08:28.140 That's from New Brant Police Department again.
00:08:29.740 And then who's this one from?
00:08:30.840 E-Man G?
00:08:31.920 W. Celsius Mayer.
00:08:33.160 Oh, man.
00:08:34.240 I shouldn't be giving a free advertising.
00:08:36.920 My man, Mayer, I'm putting the wives to work.
00:08:39.060 Shout out to you.
00:08:41.260 I am.
00:08:41.860 I got to put wife number two and three to work.
00:08:43.580 I'm just kidding.
00:08:44.020 Oh, come on.
00:08:45.080 But, yeah.
00:08:46.080 No, man.
00:08:46.420 Shout out to them for coming out and helping me behind the scenes.
00:08:48.840 What else do we got?
00:08:49.980 The fact that you have an 18-year-old and with a bunch of old heads says a lot about this podcast.
00:08:55.580 What the fuck?
00:08:59.560 I don't know what that was.
00:09:01.400 I guess he's making fun of you, Kim.
00:09:03.040 You got anything you want to say?
00:09:03.720 Yeah, they're making fun of you, Kim.
00:09:05.880 I mean, being young is great.
00:09:10.300 She's so cute.
00:09:11.340 Good comeback.
00:09:12.480 Good comeback.
00:09:14.020 Shout out Myron.
00:09:14.900 Big fan.
00:09:15.400 Let's go.
00:09:15.800 W-Fed it.
00:09:16.460 Don DeMarco.
00:09:17.140 Hey, man.
00:09:17.540 Appreciate that, my friend.
00:09:18.580 Don DeMarco.
00:09:19.660 What else?
00:09:20.260 Oh, DEA's in the house, too?
00:09:21.460 Yeah.
00:09:21.720 This message is for Kim.
00:09:22.740 We're hiring undercover agents if you're available.
00:09:25.440 She's from Colombia, too.
00:09:26.480 She can help y'all.
00:09:28.840 And you're from Medellin, right?
00:09:30.060 I am from Medellin.
00:09:30.680 Yeah.
00:09:31.120 So, yeah.
00:09:31.620 She can help y'all out, man.
00:09:33.220 What else do we got here?
00:09:34.800 From them boys.
00:09:37.660 With the CIA symbol.
00:09:38.740 Can you play that thing?
00:09:39.580 Okay.
00:09:41.540 Hello, Amru.
00:09:43.740 Please watch your mouth.
00:09:44.800 Thank you.
00:09:46.300 They put my government there.
00:09:48.100 Thanks, bro.
00:09:48.580 I appreciate that.
00:09:49.200 Don't worry.
00:09:49.840 I know y'all are sad because I'm bringing Ryan Dawson on the pod and exposing you guys,
00:09:52.960 but it's fine.
00:09:53.880 Who else do we got?
00:09:54.520 Shout out to you and the ladies for this one, Mayan.
00:09:57.020 As a born and raised Chicagoan, I am super stoked for the Chicago outfit breakdown.
00:10:02.300 Yes.
00:10:03.520 We might actually film that one tonight because the Colombo crime family, we're going to have
00:10:08.020 Michael Francis on Wednesday, guys.
00:10:10.600 Yes, Donda Marco.
00:10:11.660 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:10:12.200 I want to definitely make sure that I have some of you guys that are wondering.
00:10:17.000 Michael Francis was a capo for the Colombo crime family.
00:10:19.880 He was making millions of dollars a week, basically doing all types of shit.
00:10:22.620 But one of the main things he's famous for is he was basically scamming gas stations
00:10:26.700 and not paying taxes.
00:10:28.260 Well, he's scamming the government through using gas stations and not paying the government.
00:10:32.120 So he made millions of dollars doing this.
00:10:34.720 I think something like one week, he made like eight million a week doing this crap back
00:10:37.580 back in like the 70s or 80s in New York.
00:10:39.380 So we're going to talk with him on Wednesday and then we'll cover the Colombo crime family
00:10:42.920 for the week after unfed it.
00:10:44.320 But this one is probably going to be the outfit, which is Al Capone and the Chicago guys,
00:10:47.840 because they didn't call the mafia in Chicago, the mafia or La Cosa Noce.
00:10:50.680 They call them the outfit.
00:10:51.560 So what else do we got, Kim?
00:10:54.380 Have Angie send shout out to my friends in Lomas.
00:10:59.940 What is Lomas Turbas?
00:11:01.100 What is that?
00:11:01.940 Why don't you send it, man?
00:11:04.760 It's a joke, Maren.
00:11:06.280 You're playing with you.
00:11:08.680 So it says shout out to Lomas Turbas.
00:11:12.140 If you're united together, it says you masturbate.
00:11:15.560 Oh, OK.
00:11:16.160 OK.
00:11:16.540 All right.
00:11:17.120 Interesting.
00:11:17.460 It's so funny.
00:11:18.100 OK.
00:11:18.420 So it's a word on a play on words in Spanish.
00:11:21.600 OK.
00:11:21.860 What else do we got?
00:11:22.660 How long did it take you to become a federal agent?
00:11:25.700 It took me a while.
00:11:27.660 So how I got on the job, guys, is I know we got a lot of new viewers.
00:11:31.600 So I was an intern first.
00:11:33.340 I got an internship in 2010 through my school in Northeast University.
00:11:37.980 I was working in the Boston field office.
00:11:40.180 And then in 2013, after I graduated college and got my degree, they converted me from intern to special agent.
00:11:46.280 Then I went to the academy.
00:11:47.040 So I kind of got my shoe in being an intern first.
00:11:50.220 But I did that for three years, learned the job as an intern, right?
00:11:54.200 So by the time I transitioned over to an agent, I already knew how to use the databases.
00:11:56.920 I already knew how investigations work because I was basically shadowing an agent when I was an intern.
00:12:01.620 And it made the whole process streamlined.
00:12:04.220 So it made it a lot easier.
00:12:05.000 I was able to hit the ground running immediately when I got in the field in Laredo.
00:12:08.760 What else?
00:12:09.320 W-2 out of four wife.
00:12:13.340 Okay.
00:12:14.120 Appreciate that, sir.
00:12:15.540 And then we got here.
00:12:16.400 That's Jacobus.
00:12:17.620 What does he say?
00:12:18.580 This says new producer, but they still have trouble speaking English.
00:12:21.560 Facts, bro.
00:12:22.360 Hey, man.
00:12:22.760 Cheap labor, bro.
00:12:23.560 That's me.
00:12:25.020 You got a Colombian event as well.
00:12:26.180 It's cheap labor, man.
00:12:27.340 What else we got here?
00:12:28.320 Myron, you're not safe either.
00:12:29.780 You built like an oversized eagle.
00:12:32.540 An oversized what?
00:12:33.640 Eagle.
00:12:34.220 Eagle?
00:12:34.780 You built like an oversized eagle.
00:12:36.660 Oh, like an oversized eagle.
00:12:37.740 Okay, he's making fun of me.
00:12:38.560 Okay, fantastic.
00:12:39.440 Thank you, sir.
00:12:40.240 And I think we're...
00:12:40.980 Are we good now?
00:12:41.700 Caught up?
00:12:42.080 We have a couple more.
00:12:43.200 Okay.
00:12:43.480 We have three more.
00:12:44.260 So I'll read these three that came in, and then we'll get into the show.
00:12:47.760 Yeah.
00:12:48.020 Go ahead.
00:12:48.440 Appreciate your hard work.
00:12:49.480 Keep up the grind.
00:12:50.580 All right.
00:12:51.260 What else?
00:12:52.520 When are y'all doing the Willy Picton?
00:12:55.240 Think they might have a few fed victims that belong at the BBQ?
00:12:59.580 What?
00:13:00.240 Kim?
00:13:00.880 When are y'all going to do the Willy Picton?
00:13:03.480 Think they might have a few...
00:13:05.760 They think they might...
00:13:06.660 He might have fed victims.
00:13:08.640 Too long at the BBQ.
00:13:15.520 No, I don't know who that guy...
00:13:17.520 Who that guy...
00:13:18.080 Willy Picton...
00:13:18.740 I mean, did you write that name down, Angie?
00:13:20.460 Is that someone that we have in the queue to do?
00:13:22.480 No.
00:13:23.040 Willy Picton?
00:13:23.560 I have this, like, Robert Picton, I think.
00:13:26.100 Okay.
00:13:26.380 That's what I think he means, is the Canadian dude.
00:13:29.540 All right.
00:13:29.880 What else do we got?
00:13:31.580 As an agent, how do you feel about the YouTube predators?
00:13:35.780 Predatory...
00:13:36.220 I mean, you can't really do anything to them because, like, unless you get the police involved,
00:13:41.360 like, they're not going to face any charges.
00:13:43.300 You know, you embarrass them and make them look crazy.
00:13:44.940 But, I mean, you know, you might want to go ahead and get the police involved from the
00:13:48.560 beginning, right?
00:13:49.820 Everything isn't about clout, necessarily.
00:13:52.000 Yeah.
00:13:52.580 Because a lot of them, like, do this shit and they don't, like, get the police involved.
00:13:54.960 So it's like, oh, fantastic.
00:13:56.080 Now you can't prosecute them because you didn't gather evidence properly.
00:13:58.780 And worse than that, now they're going to be way more suspicious and not want to commit
00:14:02.760 any crimes, right?
00:14:03.960 So, yeah, it kind of sucks a bit because if it's real, then that person is basically
00:14:08.080 not going to do that shit or lay low now.
00:14:10.500 What else?
00:14:10.880 Anything else?
00:14:11.720 We have a couple more, but they came in after.
00:14:13.680 Okay, cool.
00:14:14.500 So, guys, so we're going to go ahead and get into today's topic.
00:14:17.640 Today, we're going to be covering the Golden State Killer, a.k.a.
00:14:19.180 Joseph James D'Angelo.
00:14:20.100 This is a crazy story how he got caught.
00:14:22.740 But this is him right here, guys.
00:14:24.520 Joseph James D'Angelo, Joseph from Wikipedia.
00:14:27.860 So, Joseph James D'Angelo Jr., born November 8, 1945, is an American serial killer, rapist,
00:14:33.500 burglar, and former police officer who committed at least 13 murders, 51 rapes, and 120 burglaries
00:14:38.360 across California between 1974 and 1986.
00:14:41.180 He was responsible for at least three separate crime sprees throughout the state, each of
00:14:44.580 which spawned a different nickname in the press before it became evident that they were committed
00:14:48.400 by the same person.
00:14:49.500 For all you guys that love Richard Ramirez, we had covered him as well, a.k.a.
00:14:52.780 the Night Stalker.
00:14:53.620 This dude, the Golden State Killer, a.k.a.
00:14:57.200 Joseph James D'Angelo, he was the original Night Stalker, guys.
00:15:00.780 This guy was doing this crap back before Richard Ramirez was running around, and this
00:15:04.540 guy had California, especially, you know, the whole greater California area, all the
00:15:09.340 way from south to northern California, in fear, man.
00:15:13.140 People were buying new locks.
00:15:15.340 People were getting dogs.
00:15:16.080 People were buying guns.
00:15:17.060 Like, when this guy was going wild during this era, gun sales soared, right?
00:15:21.560 So that just goes to show you guys the fear and how he was able to terrorize the community
00:15:25.560 because back then, guys, law enforcement wasn't as sophisticated as it is now, and keep it
00:15:30.140 thousand with y'all.
00:15:30.700 Back in the 70s, America was a very dangerous place, man.
00:15:33.440 If you look at all the top serial killers, they pretty much all existed between the 60s
00:15:37.840 all the way up until the 1990s until DNA testing became a very important factor in determining
00:15:44.900 who these individuals were.
00:15:45.980 But these guys would basically be able to get away for decades, and they didn't end up catching
00:15:49.700 him until 30, 40 years later, which we're going to talk about that.
00:15:52.500 But let's switch over to the next tab.
00:15:55.260 So I got a documentary here that we're going to play for you guys.
00:15:58.820 Yes, I'm Angie.
00:15:59.780 Yeah, there you go.
00:16:00.660 Well, I was going to say that this guy actually had, like, a bunch of names.
00:16:09.020 Like, he got East Area Rapist, which was also, like, a mix.
00:16:16.220 He also got a name called Irons, which is, like, a mix between East Area Rapist and original
00:16:23.320 Night Stalker.
00:16:24.620 Yeah, Irons.
00:16:25.440 Yep.
00:16:25.800 Yeah, Irons.
00:16:26.700 And he had, like, a bunch of names.
00:16:28.200 Like, the last one was, like, the Golden State Killer that we'll see later on why he was
00:16:32.020 named like that.
00:16:33.820 He also had the Diamond Knot Killer, the Golden State Killer, original Night Stalker, East Bay
00:16:39.320 Killer, East Area Rapist.
00:16:41.140 He had, like, over 10 different names.
00:16:42.600 Yeah, he had one that was, like, Rantzacker, Vizela, Rantzacker, some crap like that.
00:16:46.020 Yeah, yeah, Vizela Rantzacker.
00:16:46.680 Yeah.
00:16:47.100 Like, bro, this dude was doing all kinds of crazy shit, and he terrorized the community
00:16:50.040 for so long, and they weren't able to.
00:16:51.460 The reason why, you guys are probably wondering, well, yo, Myra, hold on.
00:16:53.340 Whoa, whoa, whoa.
00:16:54.200 Why does this dude have so many nicknames?
00:16:55.620 The reason why, guys, is because he committed crimes.
00:16:57.800 Let's actually look at his crime map real quick.
00:16:59.200 It's the second tab, Angie.
00:17:00.260 Yeah, yeah, I know.
00:17:00.780 So if you guys look at this crime map here, right, you look, he was committing crimes in San
00:17:03.940 Francisco, San Joaquin, Stanislau, YOLO, Contra Costa, Santa Clara.
00:17:12.600 And so they weren't able to link the crimes back to him, guys.
00:17:16.120 And go ahead and enlarge it real quick on the screen for them, Angie, so they can see.
00:17:18.820 So they weren't able to figure out who the hell this guy was, and they thought it was
00:17:22.140 different individuals committing these crimes.
00:17:24.100 So it wasn't until they started looking at the crime scenes, collecting DNA, and looking
00:17:28.780 at different MOs, right, Moda's operandi, that they were able to say, oh, this East Area
00:17:35.840 rapist, this Golden State killer, this Rantzacker, whatever it is, it's the same dude, right?
00:17:40.740 Because he was using certain tactics and tricks, which you guys are going to see here in a
00:17:43.940 bit, involving dishes and other cutlery in the house that made him very distinct and
00:17:49.620 stand out.
00:17:50.120 And the reason why he was able to get away is because the guy did his homework and did
00:17:54.300 a lot of recon before he would actually break into the houses.
00:17:56.820 But these are the areas that this guy had an absolute terror from 1976 to 1986.
00:18:02.260 Okay.
00:18:03.480 So let's go ahead into the documentary, Angie, which I think should be the next tab there.
00:18:07.160 Yeah.
00:18:09.420 Here, just pause it.
00:18:10.240 Just hit pause on it because you hit play on it.
00:18:11.880 Oh, I hit play?
00:18:12.640 Yeah.
00:18:13.000 Yeah.
00:18:13.260 Pause.
00:18:13.640 Okay, cool.
00:18:14.280 And that comes from the FBI.
00:18:15.520 All right.
00:18:15.820 So this comes from True Crime Mysteries here, guys.
00:18:17.640 Shout out to them.
00:18:18.460 We're going to play this documentary, and then we're going to be stopping it as needed.
00:18:21.800 And this is going to give a pretty damn good overview on this case.
00:18:25.560 So yeah, without further ado, let's go ahead.
00:18:26.960 Johnson said her assailant may be the East Area Rapist, who is suspected of committing
00:18:31.780 at least four other rapes in the same area, or he may be an imitator.
00:18:37.700 Police are urging everyone in the Concord, Walnut Creek, and San Ramon area to be on the
00:18:42.060 lookout and to report strangers in their neighborhoods who seem to be just hanging around or displaying
00:18:47.500 any other suspicious behavior.
00:18:52.620 Fast forward a bit, Angie, just to hit the right tab a few times.
00:18:55.980 There you go.
00:18:56.960 A shout out to True Crime Mysteries.
00:18:58.460 This YouTube channel is pretty good.
00:18:59.340 Keep going.
00:19:00.280 Today, we are playing.
00:19:02.100 I've done a new voiceover and a completely redone video, and I put it all together as
00:19:06.660 one video into it.
00:19:09.160 The Golden State Killer went by many names.
00:19:12.060 It took a lot of years to discover he was the same culprit in multiple crime sprees.
00:19:17.240 His crimes dubbed him the East Area Rapist, the Diamond Knot Killer, the Visalia Ransacker,
00:19:23.080 and the original Night Stalker.
00:19:24.480 He was finally coined the Golden State Killer by crime author Michelle McNamara.
00:19:28.980 Let's start from the beginning.
00:19:31.120 Pause.
00:19:33.380 That's the wife of a famous actor.
00:19:35.580 I forget his first name, but it's something.
00:19:36.900 Peyton.
00:19:37.340 Peyton Oswald.
00:19:38.140 What is it?
00:19:38.840 Peyton Oswald.
00:19:39.780 Bam.
00:19:40.040 That's Peyton Oswald's wife right there, Michelle Nakamura.
00:19:42.580 And she, like, did a whole bunch of research into this case.
00:19:45.460 She's what you would call, like, an armchair detective, or they call them sleuths, where
00:19:49.160 when a crime goes unsolved, like, the community kind of chops in, gets in, and tries to identify
00:19:54.380 who the individual is.
00:19:55.240 If you guys want to really go down the rabbit hole of sleuths, the Zodiac Killer by far has
00:20:00.480 the most sleuths I've ever seen in my life.
00:20:02.340 There's entire forums dedicated to trying to identify who the Zodiac Killer is, which if
00:20:07.360 you guys want, you go back on my Feta channel and watch that one.
00:20:09.320 That was actually one of my favorite breakdowns.
00:20:10.400 It was like a four-hour breakdown.
00:20:11.280 But we go into the Zodiac Killer, the crimes, all the suspects, each murder, the evidence
00:20:17.260 in it.
00:20:18.160 It was really good.
00:20:19.380 One of my favorite episodes that I did.
00:20:21.200 But this guy, the Golden State Killer, also definitely got a lot of people interested in
00:20:26.080 trying to figure out who the hell he was.
00:20:28.460 And as you guys can see, all those different names, people didn't know it was the same
00:20:31.440 guy at the time.
00:20:32.400 Because back in the 70s, right, another thing, too, I want to note for you guys.
00:20:36.680 In the 70s, guys, the computers weren't a streamlined thing.
00:20:40.160 And national databases weren't a streamlined thing.
00:20:42.040 And police agencies didn't necessarily work with each other.
00:20:44.380 Nowadays, right, we have streamlined databases, right, like NCIC, NLITS, et cetera, which NCIC
00:20:50.960 stands for the National Crime Information Center.
00:20:53.000 And then NLITS, if I'm not mistaken, stands for the National Law Enforcement Telecommunication
00:20:56.360 System, which basically what these systems do is it allows you to put people's criminal
00:21:00.200 histories and records and bolos and warrants and all that stuff in one central database
00:21:04.180 that all the law enforcement agencies in the United States have access to, to include
00:21:07.420 Canadian law enforcement agencies, by the way.
00:21:09.220 And it allows law enforcement agencies to work together and communicate and has the
00:21:13.620 contact information of investigating agents, detectives, officers, whatever it may be.
00:21:18.120 And this didn't exist, guys, back in the 70s, which, again, is another big contributor as
00:21:22.380 to why a lot of these crooks were able to go free and not get caught, because law enforcement
00:21:25.860 agencies weren't sophisticated enough to work together, to piece together, you know, evidence
00:21:29.760 from this crime scene to another crime scene.
00:21:31.460 Imagine you're a detective out and, you know, stalked in California, and then you got another
00:21:35.220 detective in, you know, Sacramento, and then another one in San Fran, etc., and you have
00:21:39.020 a bunch of crimes going on.
00:21:40.200 Well, you might not know how to reach out to the neighboring town and be like, hey, I
00:21:44.120 got this and I got this and this is the evidence that I got.
00:21:46.080 No one was sharing information.
00:21:47.500 And if you don't share information, bad things typically happen in the law enforcement world.
00:21:50.740 I mean, look at 9-11, right?
00:21:51.780 I will argue, Martin, that most of these crimes weren't unsolved because the police wouldn't
00:21:58.120 work together.
00:21:58.640 Like, I don't know what you think about that.
00:22:00.760 I think that and the DNA, I think, are the two biggest things.
00:22:05.340 Yeah.
00:22:05.760 That kept...
00:22:06.660 Because serial killers, like, the peak of serial killers in the U.S. was, like, in the 70s.
00:22:11.980 Like, that was, like, the decade where you'll see, like, the most numbers of serial killers
00:22:18.300 in this country.
00:22:19.620 Yes.
00:22:20.060 All the most prominent ones operated there in the 70s, whether it was Ted Bundy, John Wayne
00:22:23.540 Gacy, the Zodiac Killer, who else?
00:22:26.960 Gary Ridgway, a.k.a.
00:22:28.520 the Green River Killer.
00:22:29.620 Yeah.
00:22:29.840 Like, most of the top serial killers were all operating in the 70s.
00:22:33.420 What was that?
00:22:33.900 Ed Kemper.
00:22:35.080 This other guy that would, like...
00:22:36.760 Yeah, the torso killer.
00:22:37.760 We got to do him, too, by the way.
00:22:39.280 Yeah.
00:22:39.440 So...
00:22:39.940 But anyway, let's go back to the documentary.
00:22:41.720 All right.
00:22:43.280 Don't forget to like the video, guys.
00:22:45.680 Oops.
00:22:48.300 Here, you can enlarge it on there and for them.
00:22:49.680 Visalia was a community first hit by who would become the Golden State Killer, but at the
00:22:58.380 time of these crimes, he was known as the Visalia Ransacker.
00:23:01.920 He honed his skills here.
00:23:03.520 It was where he took his first life.
00:23:05.720 And investigators knew he was building to something more violent even early on.
00:23:10.520 Visalia would be plagued with a violent prowler for nearly two years before he disappeared.
00:23:15.360 In 1974, reports began coming in about a prowler in the small farm town of Visalia, California.
00:23:23.240 There had been multiple sightings of a prowler in the neighborhood of South Desmarais Street.
00:23:27.920 A few weeks later, a house would be ransacked.
00:23:31.000 Little was stolen, mostly just keepsakes such as piggy banks, class rings, engraved jewelry,
00:23:37.360 personalized items, or small collections like coins or stamps.
00:23:41.400 A distinguishing calling card was that he would steal one earring from a pair or a single cufflink.
00:23:49.380 The items he took were sometimes found nearby or in the next home he ransacked.
00:23:55.000 All right, so you guys are probably wondering, like, wait, why is he taking, like, random-ass items
00:23:58.580 and maybe one piece of, like, a two-set of earrings or whatever?
00:24:01.560 A lot of times, guys, these serial killers, they want to be able to relive their crimes
00:24:04.880 and they really enjoy and get a rush out of doing it.
00:24:07.200 So they want to go ahead and take a trophy back from their crimes.
00:24:09.940 And you're going to see in this situation, the Golden State Killer originally started
00:24:13.700 as, like, you know, just a grapist slash thief.
00:24:17.240 But you're going to see that his crimes start to become more and more and more severe
00:24:21.460 and more violent because as you commit these crimes more and more,
00:24:25.920 the need for that, I guess, that rush, you need to do crazier and crazier shit
00:24:31.000 to get that next level of rush.
00:24:33.160 It's kind of like a drug addict.
00:24:34.400 So you guys are going to see him progress in violence throughout this documentary.
00:24:38.000 Let's get back to it.
00:24:41.760 He also stole any weapons in the house, firearms, ammunition, knives, tools, and even a billy club.
00:24:50.700 This immediately led investigators to believe he was already gravitating towards violence.
00:24:56.960 Occasionally, he would only steal more practical items that seemed to be used for his personal use,
00:25:01.920 such as packages of shirts, glue, canned foods, dishes, and a stereo.
00:25:08.500 He would often leave higher valued items, including money left in plain sight.
00:25:13.840 He would hit homes where homeowners were out of town.
00:25:16.360 And this proves right here, guys.
00:25:18.440 You don't got to show me, Angie.
00:25:19.200 It's fine.
00:25:20.020 This proves right here, guys, the fact that he would leave money where it is and not take high valuable items.
00:25:24.220 He was stealing, stealing, not necessarily to get monetary benefit, right?
00:25:28.740 Maybe that though that might be a small part of it.
00:25:31.040 What he was mostly stealing for was for the thrill and to have a souvenir slash trophy from each of his escapades.
00:25:36.980 Yeah.
00:25:37.080 I will say that he was like a kleptomaniac.
00:25:39.420 Yes, yes, yes.
00:25:40.600 And that you guys are going to see that him being a klepto actually led to him getting fired as a police officer later on.
00:25:46.140 Later on, yeah.
00:25:46.720 Kim, you got anything?
00:25:48.680 I just found it crazy that he would also take like coupons for like local grocery stores.
00:25:53.040 Yeah.
00:25:53.580 He wasn't interested in taking anything valuable.
00:25:56.340 Yeah, like that's weird shit, right?
00:25:57.820 Like, let me go ahead.
00:25:58.780 Oh, yeah.
00:25:59.400 I'm going to get off on the fact that these guys live right next to a fucking stop and shop or some shit.
00:26:03.160 Like, what the hell, bro?
00:26:03.980 Like, you want to get a discount on some mangoes?
00:26:05.700 Like, what's going on here?
00:26:06.960 So, yeah, he would take weird shit, bro.
00:26:09.320 And also, this guy would linger around and eat the food, too, which is also weird.
00:26:13.760 Yeah, he would commit his crimes and then he would go around to the kitchen and eat something.
00:26:17.400 Yeah.
00:26:17.800 You know who else used to do that?
00:26:19.200 You guys should check out the episode.
00:26:20.540 I covered the railroad killer who actually ended up making it to the FBI top 10.
00:26:25.260 I think his name was Richard something Ramirez.
00:26:28.320 But I have an episode on the railroad killer.
00:26:30.040 Guys, go watch that one as well.
00:26:31.360 He also used to have a weird habit where he would break into the house, kill the individual, get their food.
00:26:36.480 Sit there and stare at their driver's licenses while he was eating the food and they were dead in the other room.
00:26:40.780 Weirdo.
00:26:41.020 Very strange individuals, bro.
00:26:42.420 Like, what the?
00:26:42.880 What?
00:26:43.520 But anyway.
00:26:44.940 What the fuck?
00:26:45.680 Anyway, let's keep going.
00:26:48.020 Town.
00:26:48.880 He would lurk in the same neighborhood for weeks before deciding on a target.
00:26:52.840 Investigators noticed that the house would have identical shoe prints.
00:26:57.660 The shoe prints would be under windows, paced around the backyard, and often establish roots.
00:27:03.940 This patient and calm attitude was a sign that he did this to satisfy a different craving.
00:27:11.200 He would often enter the home through an unlocked window.
00:27:14.520 Sometimes it would be slipping a lock or forcing open a sliding glass door.
00:27:19.440 Yeah, I'm reading the chat right now.
00:27:20.840 You guys are right.
00:27:21.380 Richard Ramirez used to do it, too.
00:27:22.560 But this other guy talked about the railroad killer.
00:27:24.580 He like pride.
00:27:25.880 He would literally kill them, get their driver's license, stare at it while he was eating the food in the house, and then he would leave.
00:27:31.560 And he would eat half the food.
00:27:32.660 He made a purpose, made it like on purpose.
00:27:36.320 He would eat half the food and leave it there.
00:27:37.680 And he would do that to kind of show his dominance and like, hey, this is my mark.
00:27:41.800 Like, I came here, killed them, ate their food, and I got their driver's licenses here.
00:27:45.520 So he had a very strange fetish with looking at his victims.
00:27:49.380 So, yeah.
00:27:50.260 Weird.
00:27:50.600 Yeah, I don't know.
00:27:51.640 Maybe he got turned on by driver's licenses.
00:27:53.380 I don't know why, because a Texas driver's license is not that attractive.
00:27:55.980 It's weird looking.
00:27:57.160 But anyway, let's keep going.
00:27:59.340 To gain entrance into a home, he would create multiple escape points by opening additional windows, pulling off screens.
00:28:06.840 This was so he could have an easy exit if someone entered the house unexpectedly.
00:28:12.520 And it also made hearing outside noises easier.
00:28:16.100 Cars passing, people walking, dogs barking.
00:28:20.120 All indicators that he had been spotted.
00:28:23.600 Once he was comfortable in the home, he would then begin ransacking.
00:28:27.960 He would open every drawer, cupboard, and closet.
00:28:30.900 He would collect up women's undergarments, arranging them in particular ways and in a deliberate fashion.
00:28:37.740 He would take photographs out of frames and stimulate himself using lotion found in the home.
00:28:43.600 Pause.
00:28:43.780 Or sometimes he would...
00:28:44.900 My man would break in and rub one out in there like, what is going on?
00:28:49.580 You know, which goes to speak to his perversion, obviously.
00:28:53.160 But yeah, I mean, like I said, guys, like these...
00:28:56.860 And here's the thing.
00:28:57.320 They leave their DNA at the scenes.
00:28:58.800 Now, you guys are probably wondering, like, what an idiot.
00:29:00.180 Why would you, you know, whack off at the scene and leave DNA evidence?
00:29:04.880 Again, guys, back then in the 70s, it wasn't a thing, man.
00:29:07.720 So luckily, the investigators were able to go ahead and collect this stuff, preserve it, and then use it years down the road, which you guys are going to see here later on.
00:29:14.720 But yeah, this is very common.
00:29:16.880 Another person that used to do something similar to this was BTK, who I also covered, a.k.a. Dennis Rader.
00:29:22.760 He also used to, like, you know, slug his meat at the crime scenes as well.
00:29:27.840 So go ahead and check that one out as well if you guys want to see another strange individual.
00:29:31.760 Slug his meat.
00:29:32.500 Yeah, we're on YouTube, so I'm trying to keep it somewhat clean.
00:29:34.980 He's just slug his meat.
00:29:37.480 All right, let's get back to it.
00:29:41.820 Oh, shit.
00:29:42.500 He would bring his own, additionally smearing lotion all around the house.
00:29:49.080 He would often cause minimal damage to the homes, knocking over bookshelves or pouring wine onto the carpet, or dumping liquids onto furniture.
00:29:58.360 He would often ransack multiple homes in one night, and on November 30th, 1974, there were 12 separate incidences connected to the Visalia Ransacker.
00:30:08.880 Although he was rarely seen, there were a few witnesses.
00:30:12.500 He was described as a Caucasian man with a fair complexion and light hair, a young adult, average height, stocky build, and a cleft in his chin.
00:30:23.420 He was described as physically fit, as he was able to scale walls with witnesses saying he had strong arms and a firm grip.
00:30:30.140 The most common way people described him was that he had a plump baby face and a thick neck.
00:30:36.580 He was seen wearing jeans and tennis shoes, which matched the shoe prints at the seams, and his shoe size was a men's nine.
00:30:44.720 By 1995, his crimes began to escalate.
00:30:47.740 And also another thing also that they noticed about this guy, guys, when they looked at the footprints, the footprints were very firm into the ground, which means he would stand in one location for a long period of time and stalk his prey and go in at the best time.
00:31:03.020 And that's why he was able to do this for so long and not get caught, is because he really studied his people and he wouldn't move.
00:31:08.020 And he was really good at being silent and quiet and just being patient.
00:31:11.200 So when they did find track foot marks, excuse me, footprints and markings, they were almost always like perfectly indented because he would sit still for hours and watch the people before he broke in.
00:31:23.080 He would study the house and everything.
00:31:25.260 Yep.
00:31:25.600 He would study the house.
00:31:26.560 So he like had a perfect like escape plan and everything.
00:31:29.220 Yep.
00:31:29.380 And as you guys saw before, he would open doors and windows as he was going through the home to create multiple escape routes.
00:31:35.340 It was actually pretty smart because Richard Ramirez didn't do that type of shit.
00:31:39.280 Richard Ramirez a little bit dumber.
00:31:40.240 He would just go in and just shoot and kill like he didn't give a shit about this stuff.
00:31:43.020 But obviously for him, it didn't start out with him killing people.
00:31:46.140 It started out with him ransacking and then, you know, doing some weird sexual stuff.
00:31:50.020 But as it became more and more violent, he started to take on that other persona.
00:31:54.500 Let's get back to it.
00:31:55.160 I will say that this guy was very weird because he will be clever to some things and also very stupid to others because he will leave like, yeah, like she said, he will leave like little things like shoelaces or like he will put like glasses or.
00:32:10.240 Bottles on door frames and against the door.
00:32:13.520 So he will know if someone is coming or anything.
00:32:15.880 Yes.
00:32:16.200 He will prepare like the house before the attack.
00:32:20.140 But also he will be very stupid to go like bicycles.
00:32:23.940 I mean, again, that's very clever to avoid the street like main street who wouldn't get chased.
00:32:29.380 But whenever he go like, well, you'll see it later on.
00:32:32.740 Whenever he will get caught or anything, he will just be like very like, I don't know, very hard.
00:32:38.920 Like like an idiotic behavior.
00:32:41.260 That's what I'm trying to say.
00:32:42.140 Like he was very stupid.
00:32:43.320 Well, yeah, he was he was set up all these booby traps in the house.
00:32:46.180 Right.
00:32:46.620 So that he can be alerted if anyone is walking around, like, you know, setting stuff up by the doors or whatever, because he wasn't really good once he was confronted.
00:32:54.400 A lot of the times, which you guys are going to see here, he'd like run around or streak or whatever.
00:32:58.380 So he used to set all these things up in place because he wasn't really good with the confrontation.
00:33:01.580 He obviously becomes better and better at it as he does this more and more.
00:33:04.420 But he set all these booby traps up to kind of be able to alert himself should someone come near him, et cetera.
00:33:10.040 It was actually pretty smart that he would do that.
00:33:11.560 Yeah.
00:33:11.960 All right.
00:33:12.420 Let's get back to it.
00:33:14.280 On September 11th, 1975, a man entered the home of the Snelling family while they slept.
00:33:22.000 Claude Snelling woke, hearing strange noises.
00:33:25.260 He was already on edge, having confronted a prowler peeping into his daughter's window seven months prior.
00:33:30.600 He opened the door to his bedroom and saw the sliding glass doors leading to the backyard were wide open.
00:33:37.660 He ran to the door and saw a man attempting to kidnap his daughter.
00:33:41.980 He shouted and ran at the man but was shot twice.
00:33:45.280 The gun pierced the silence in the early morning.
00:33:49.100 The assailant fled the scene, escaping in a wooded area behind the home.
00:33:52.980 Claude died of his wounds and his daughter would later undergo hypnotherapy to try and remember as many details about the man who killed her father.
00:34:02.500 She remembered that the night before.
00:34:04.360 That's got to be every dad's worst nightmare.
00:34:06.500 You like see your daughter getting kidnapped by some dude in a ski mask late at night, you know, after a string of burglaries and break ins.
00:34:13.180 That's literally got to be the worst thing ever.
00:34:14.920 But W dad for trying to defend his daughter and dying in the process.
00:34:18.880 But yeah, recipes to him.
00:34:20.160 Let's get back to it.
00:34:20.720 She'd heard a noise outside her window.
00:34:24.920 She'd looked, but it was too dark to see anything.
00:34:28.160 She remembered being woken up to an immense pressure on top of her body.
00:34:32.880 It was a man lying on top of her.
00:34:35.920 The man had a hand over her nose and mouth.
00:34:38.840 When she struggled to breathe, the man growled,
00:34:41.520 Don't scream or I'll stab you.
00:34:44.560 She stayed quiet and he removed his hand from her face and growled again,
00:34:48.900 You're coming with me.
00:34:50.720 It was then that he stood up and showed her he had a gun.
00:34:54.680 He kept a hold of her arm.
00:34:55.960 And when she asked him, why are you doing this?
00:34:58.180 Where are you taking me?
00:34:59.680 But he didn't answer.
00:35:00.680 She began crying and resisting to slow him down, knowing nothing good could happen if she left the house.
00:35:07.320 He redirected from threatening her to threatening her.
00:35:10.120 This is something he also used to do, guys, which was very strange.
00:35:12.580 He would change his voice when he would talk to his victims in a very weird, sinister type tone.
00:35:17.660 OK, and and actually, Kim, do me a favor.
00:35:21.140 Google phone call from from Golden State Killer.
00:35:26.280 And I'll play you guys an excerpt of how he would speak to his victims.
00:35:29.140 He is very, very strange, bizarre.
00:35:32.360 Let's keep getting back into it, though, while Kim pulls that up, Angie.
00:35:34.760 Yeah.
00:35:37.320 Oh, yeah.
00:35:38.820 Back to the documentary.
00:35:39.700 ...her family.
00:35:40.980 She noticed he had left the back door open already.
00:35:43.960 She dug her heels into the carpet as hard as she could, which made a loud noise.
00:35:48.300 This was what woke her father.
00:35:50.280 The man had started dragging her out of the house.
00:35:52.980 She was already a dozen feet into the yard and through a gate that had been left open.
00:35:57.560 And under the car park, when she heard her father's voice yell at the man holding her arm,
00:36:01.880 she made eye contact with her father, and for a moment, everyone stopped.
00:36:07.040 Her father lunged and the attacker shot, and then was gone.
00:36:12.040 It had all happened so fast.
00:36:14.140 The weapon Claude was murdered with was determined to be a Moroku revolver that had been stolen by the Visalia Ransacker just two weeks before the murder.
00:36:22.940 The Snells' neighborhood had also had multiple incidences of evidence of the Prowler and vehicles being broken into before the shooting.
00:36:32.800 After the Snelling murder, nighttime stakeouts began in the neighborhoods the Prowler had previously been sighted in, but the ransackings continued.
00:36:40.560 On December 10th, 1975, Officer Bill McGowan on stakeout saw a shadowy figure appear near a garage where he'd been hiding during the stakeouts.
00:36:51.980 The garage had purposely been left open by the police.
00:36:55.340 There was another officer inside the garage.
00:36:58.040 He watched as the figure crept around the hedge and peeked into the garage.
00:37:02.280 The Prowler made his way along the home towards the backyard.
00:37:05.380 Officer McGowan quietly followed him and observed the Prowler toying with the lock on the back gate.
00:37:12.500 That was when he clicked the flashlight on the Prowler's head.
00:37:16.080 The Prowler shrieked in a high-pitched, unnatural voice.
00:37:20.400 Oh, my God.
00:37:22.100 He had been wearing a skeet.
00:37:23.480 So this dude went from, you know, on that Sinister-type vibe.
00:37:26.760 You know, telling girls, oh, come with me.
00:37:29.520 The dude basically turns into fucking Batman.
00:37:31.960 Then as soon as the police catch him, he goes, oh, my God.
00:37:34.680 And he shrieks and he starts acting like a girl.
00:37:36.840 So, you know, the thing with this guy is he kind of was the pussy guy.
00:37:40.040 Like, he would set up all these booby traps and set himself up with all these escape rods because he really didn't want confrontation like that.
00:37:46.040 He wanted to kind of get in, steal, you know, grape to whatever he wanted to do, maybe whack off to some lotion and then leave.
00:37:52.300 But if he got confronted, he wasn't prepared for it.
00:37:55.380 Do you got that clip, Kim?
00:37:57.100 Yeah, I do.
00:37:57.320 So you know how to do it, right?
00:37:58.900 Yeah.
00:37:59.520 Right there.
00:38:00.020 So we're going to go ahead and play a portion, guys, so you hear what this guy's voice sounds like real fast.
00:38:04.680 So he actually went ahead and called one of his victims after the fact.
00:38:07.820 And this is what he said.
00:38:11.740 Oh, you know what?
00:38:12.560 Oh, my bad.
00:38:13.060 My bad.
00:38:13.520 Pause it.
00:38:14.300 You got to send that tab to Angie.
00:38:15.620 Don't worry.
00:38:15.980 I'll do that because they're not going to hear from that computer.
00:38:19.160 That's my bad.
00:38:20.200 Go back to the documentary, Angie.
00:38:21.920 You were trying to say something, by the way.
00:38:23.680 No.
00:38:23.980 Oh, well, yeah.
00:38:25.320 I was going to say that when he killed that man.
00:38:28.400 Switch the camera to you.
00:38:29.500 Yeah.
00:38:30.400 When he killed that man, that was actually like his first reported victim.
00:38:34.680 That like his first murder, the father of the girl.
00:38:38.680 Yes.
00:38:39.180 Yes.
00:38:39.540 That was his first murder.
00:38:40.320 So he basically like, yeah, he hated confrontation.
00:38:43.900 Like he was scared of confrontation.
00:38:45.320 So when this guy like came after him, he just like ran off on his bicycle and just like shoot him from like this from the bicycle and he killed him and let the girl go.
00:38:55.500 So it was just like that.
00:38:57.480 This is what I mean.
00:38:58.180 He wasn't planning for that.
00:38:59.320 Yeah.
00:38:59.700 In this situation.
00:39:00.320 But but that would that's what started the trend.
00:39:02.960 And, you know, they always say with like murder, the more times you kill, the easier it becomes.
00:39:07.360 Yeah.
00:39:07.760 So.
00:39:08.480 All right.
00:39:08.940 Let's keep going here with the doc.
00:39:10.420 And guys, don't forget that we got almost 2000.
00:39:13.500 Like the video.
00:39:14.900 Yeah.
00:39:15.300 Like the video, guys.
00:39:16.000 We almost got 2K yelling here up onto his head.
00:39:18.980 Officer McGowan got a good look at the suspect and yelled, police officer, hold it right there.
00:39:25.460 The suspect vaulted over the gate and took off running in a zigzag pattern through the yard.
00:39:32.500 Officer McGowan ordered the suspect to stop and put his hands out.
00:39:36.520 But when he kept running, he pursued.
00:39:39.200 The suspect continued to scream, oh, my God, please don't hurt me in a bizarre, high pitched and oddly feminine voice.
00:39:46.140 The officer fired a warning shot, which also alerted his partner.
00:39:51.260 The suspect hopped over fences with an intimate knowledge of the area.
00:39:56.240 The man stopped running only 5 feet from the officer and put a hand up, his back facing the officer.
00:40:03.320 His other hand began rummaging through his coat pockets.
00:40:07.600 Before the officer could react, the suspect spun around and fired a shot.
00:40:12.280 Officer McGowan fell and the suspect ran off.
00:40:16.140 I fell down, the impact knocked me back.
00:40:19.200 And he continued to run, throwing some items, apparently taking the burglary in the area.
00:40:31.400 He obviously didn't take the full run of that bullet that he fired.
00:40:34.020 What happened there?
00:40:34.420 Yeah, the projectile went into the end of my flashlight, which is the Kel light, the big metal one, and went through several batteries and lodged in the back portion of the flashlight.
00:40:46.820 The Visalia Ransacker eluded police that night.
00:40:50.300 Despite the entire police force tracking his prints and using police dogs, McGowan was able to add to the description that he drew his weapon and shot with his left hand.
00:41:02.160 He worked with the sketch artist to come up with these images.
00:41:05.760 Officer McGowan served as the member of the Visalia Police Department for many years, where he retired after a long and honorable career.
00:41:15.760 Even in his retirement, he continued to help the Visalia ransacking case.
00:41:20.700 And after he passed, his son.
00:41:22.360 And guys, I want you guys to kind of not gloss over the fact.
00:41:24.760 Think about that.
00:41:25.500 He was able.
00:41:26.320 He got caught by the police, right?
00:41:27.920 Red handed.
00:41:28.680 And he was able to evade capture.
00:41:30.380 That's testament to how much homework this guy would do as far as finding escape routes and setting himself up to not be caught after the fact.
00:41:37.700 He was able to lose a police officer that's extremely familiar with the area and get away and not be caught.
00:41:44.520 So this guy definitely, you know, crossed his T's and dotted his I's as far as like creating escape routes and setting himself up to win so that he could go ahead and get away from the crime scene.
00:41:52.860 And a big part of that is because he was a police officer.
00:41:54.920 So he kind of knew police procedure.
00:41:56.300 So he would park his car blocks away and have the car set up so that when he after he committed his crime, he'd be able to run to where the car was.
00:42:04.760 And that car typically was going to be outside of the perimeter where the police would secure.
00:42:08.380 So he could just get back in his car, act like nothing happened and drive like a regular, regular citizen and no one be none the wiser.
00:42:14.220 So he used to set himself up for a victory when it came to these situations.
00:42:17.780 And that comes from him doing his homework.
00:42:19.280 What he would do is he would make sure that the house he was going into, there was like a park nearby and he would ride the bike.
00:42:26.300 To the park where he would leave his car at.
00:42:29.280 And that's how he would escape.
00:42:30.380 And that's how he basically escaped from the police officer that time that he was caught.
00:42:34.620 And he was also the one investigating his own cases due to him working for the police.
00:42:39.940 Well, it will be a park or it will be like a school or it will be like an open space.
00:42:44.580 Usually it will be like he will look for open spaces near the house victim, the victim's house.
00:42:50.920 So he will like use it as an escape.
00:42:55.300 I don't know, like escape route.
00:42:57.020 Yeah.
00:42:57.280 Yeah.
00:42:57.460 He would he would really study the area, the houses and everything to not get caught.
00:43:01.420 Yeah.
00:43:02.960 All right.
00:43:03.620 So, OK, let's I was able to pull up that video.
00:43:07.480 And I got it there for you on the side.
00:43:09.920 Play that video real quick of him with that threatening phone call.
00:43:13.940 There you go.
00:43:14.720 This is it right here, guys.
00:43:15.560 So we'll play hit dismiss there.
00:43:18.160 This is this account is assigned in on this one.
00:43:21.620 Skip to move it to where?
00:43:26.180 Fifty two.
00:43:26.740 Fifty two.
00:43:27.320 OK, and I think he made this phone call in 1977.
00:43:31.280 He called one of his victims and terrorized him.
00:43:33.720 So this kind of gives you guys an idea of like how this guy would behave like sound when he talked to his victims.
00:43:38.480 Go ahead.
00:43:38.760 Play this guy had nothing to do with his life.
00:43:40.900 Honestly.
00:43:41.320 At least the public staff speaking.
00:43:45.740 You're never going to catch me.
00:43:47.000 History rapists, you dumb fuckers.
00:43:49.100 I'm going to fuck again tonight.
00:43:50.320 Be careful.
00:44:03.860 Hello?
00:44:05.180 Yes, radar.
00:44:06.360 Howdy.
00:44:06.960 It's radar.
00:44:08.740 I'm sorry, Mr. Long.
00:44:10.680 Yeah.
00:44:11.320 So the victim identified the voice.
00:44:26.320 So pause, pause, pause.
00:44:27.640 After 20 seconds of heavy breathing, the caller whispered, going to kill you, going to kill you, going to kill you, bitch, bitch, bitch, bitch.
00:44:34.420 Fucking whore.
00:44:35.260 OK, this guy definitely needs to read my book, Why Women Deserve Less, because he's mad as hell.
00:44:40.040 What the fuck is going on?
00:44:41.780 He needs to get some RP awareness.
00:44:43.660 Play it, play.
00:44:48.520 Hello?
00:44:53.000 Hello?
00:45:00.200 Hello?
00:45:00.840 Hello?
00:45:01.320 Hello?
00:45:01.600 Hello?
00:45:05.760 I'm going to kill you, bitch.
00:45:27.520 I'm going to kill you, I'm going to kill you, I'm going to kill you.
00:45:57.520 I'm going to kill you, I'm going to kill you, I'm going to kill you.
00:46:27.520 He never had the idea that this dude was on some fucking demon time right here, calling one of the victims back, and making all these threatening messages.
00:46:35.040 He was definitely a weirdo on that one.
00:46:36.280 You had something, Kim?
00:46:36.900 He would also call the police and tell him that, hey, I'm going to attack tonight, I'm going to be at this location and everything.
00:46:43.280 And there was one case where he was actually at the location, and even then, they weren't able to catch him because the police that was on duty that night just thought it was a joke and didn't pay attention to him.
00:46:54.080 He like rode his bike right in front of him.
00:46:56.280 yeah definitely uh this guy was on some weirdo time let's go back to the documentary
00:47:01.080 but i just wanted you guys to kind of hear his voice and get an insight as to what type
00:47:04.920 of individual this is and how he uh really got off on um creating fear with his victims
00:47:10.280 and went on to continue his work after this incident the ransacking in vasalia stopped
00:47:19.940 the investigation for the vasalia ransacker remained to be the most expensive in vasalia's
00:47:26.780 history his crimes in this era of his life amounted to one murder one attempted kidnapping
00:47:33.180 one attempted murder and over 100 burglaries he was active as early as 1973 and police are now
00:47:42.560 trying to connect him to burglaries in exeter california which had begun in 1968 and a spree
00:47:49.720 of robberies dubbed the cordova cat burglar at the moment however there is no evidence linking him
00:47:56.220 to these but the mo is the same as if and exeter just so you guys know is the police department
00:48:02.540 that this guy used to pretty much work for so the mo was the same and they think that it was him
00:48:07.720 that was committing these burglaries as well so this dude might have been committing crime since
00:48:10.540 the freaking 70s 60s guys let's keep going azalia ransacker which is why it is without a doubt all
00:48:18.740 crimes were committed by the same man
00:48:20.720 all right pause so now we're going to get into uh the the ear era the east area rapist era before
00:48:31.260 we do that i'll read some of these chats real quick so they don't pile up too much
00:48:33.960 and shout out to angie by the way in the ones and two she's not doing too bad for her first time
00:48:37.580 um kim can we pull some of these up all right go ahead you you got it read them
00:48:41.300 dip set in the house we shut the block down for feta tonight oh okay shout out to kill a cam in
00:48:47.480 the house all right appreciate that myron thanks for saving my life with your knowledge and that
00:48:52.460 comes from read their name too kim before you read the chat g mindset okay shout out to you my friend
00:48:56.700 thank you new britain police department says never mind you need a fun kim with hooked on
00:49:02.540 phonics phonics oh i'm trying to say you can't read nope stupid i'm also a virgin who didn't take
00:49:10.840 a shower by ty ty uh create 17 says i see myron has both spouses pregnant present hello good evening
00:49:20.720 y'all appreciate that these guys man really excited for this one myron and it's pronounced stan is
00:49:28.140 it's chenny lost county from cali 209 okay thank you my friend shout out to california rob says if
00:49:36.940 y'all ever need help with research on these serial killers shows let me know and i will help for free
00:49:41.440 okay uh appreciate that you can you can um yeah um um you guys can like if you want to help you can
00:49:50.720 guys like hit me up on fedi at fedi.1811 on instagram because i'll be reading you all uh i have a
00:49:57.500 prosecutor from texas that that i told him that he he can help me from the cases from texas so um
00:50:03.920 yeah give me up on uh fedi.1811 so if you want to help with the cases yes angie manages that for me um
00:50:11.500 so if you guys want to go ahead and get any type of fedi information go ahead and reach out and she
00:50:15.560 she's pretty good about uh checking back and responding to dms yeah all right what else do we
00:50:19.500 got here kim bloody trigger 17 says we need a special fnf with angie instead of chris
00:50:25.920 can rose says thumbs up
00:50:32.340 wait you hit that sound effect edgy yeah okay good job she's over here already figuring it out
00:50:37.600 all right i'm still in chris of yeah he's using chris of sound effects okay what about what else
00:50:43.980 can rose says thumbs up thank you five dollars thank you five dollars for the mops go um d this
00:50:52.860 one myron i have a suggestion dedicate one episode or a few exclusively for detailed stories from hsi
00:50:59.800 thanks for a great contest as content as always also angie get the fuck out of myron's
00:51:05.040 um that's from dicot i see i see y'all man i'm safe here in the united states though i'm not in
00:51:10.060 romania um that's that's a police agency for romania i i was kind of wondering yeah i know
00:51:15.780 sometimes you um you'll be like commenting on your cases and stuff but i i have received like a lot of
00:51:22.260 people requesting your cases like your yeah one that i actually did yeah so i was wondering if you
00:51:27.580 you can do it like it's like they will like do something to you there's a few that i could talk
00:51:31.820 about i've i think i've covered like two um there's one big one that was like literally one of the
00:51:38.180 biggest cases in the country that i had that um i want to talk to y'all about but i want to make
00:51:43.300 sure that it's kind of like almost done because it's actually i think it still might be active to
00:51:46.560 this day um but i was the one that started and it's actually it hit the press as well um but yeah
00:51:52.440 i'll be covering more of my cases guys um and i might even bring in some of my old colleagues
00:51:57.320 and put that and have them and have them talk about how we did it they probably won't be on camera
00:52:01.640 guys for obvious reasons but um yeah i might bring some of my old colleagues and we could talk
00:52:06.100 about the case and i think you guys would really enjoy that um you guys can hear the trials and
00:52:10.940 tribulations that we went through man because it was it was tough like a lot of these gray hairs that
00:52:14.840 i got is from that job uh which actually shout out to angie as well helping me with that and uh kim
00:52:19.560 they helped me uh with my white hairs they helped me fucking dye this shit so yeah show it off yeah
00:52:25.460 now now look uh nice and young put it on your hoodie you put on the hoodie you're covering artwork man
00:52:30.540 what do you mean my covering artwork oh oh yeah it's cold in here man it's cold in here but yeah
00:52:35.920 shout out to them because they actually helped me with my beard and shit like that dying it so
00:52:39.160 yeah it was a hard work you guys yeah it was it was it was tough they enjoyed a little too much
00:52:44.720 though all right what else do we got here elite says we need an episode with two wives
00:52:49.240 with other two wives angie versus angie and kim versus group two who's group two well you'll know
00:52:56.740 all right listen oh okay i see what y'all did there all right let's let's just move on continue
00:53:05.840 what else what else jeffrey dommer says kim looking tasty
00:53:10.300 yo you you guys are you guys got no chill man you guys make these names up and shit
00:53:21.540 i'll never forget someone uh someone one time i was doing the the jeffrey dommer breakdown which
00:53:26.480 you guys should go check that one i was actually funny someone put in the super chat um you know
00:53:30.600 you know that song by ice spice a munch oh uh you thought i was feeling you nigga you lunch i was like
00:53:36.580 what the fuck jeffrey dommer it's the jeffrey dommer remix all right what else we got um
00:53:43.940 myron thanks for for saying all the things that we men don't talk about appreciate all the effort
00:53:49.980 to make them wake up no thank you my friend hey guys do me a favor like the video subscribe
00:53:53.880 to the channel if you guys haven't already i know we're doing a little new setup here where i'm
00:53:57.000 talking and they're behind the scenes helping out but uh shout out to them and like the video
00:54:00.240 subscribe to the channel i think we got almost 2k y'all watching we also got twitch up right now
00:54:03.920 guys because we're gonna play a part of another documentary that might get hit with the copyright
00:54:08.040 y'all already know what time it is so i have the twitch as a backup yeah you guys um follow at
00:54:12.680 petty.1811 please yes on instagram yeah and send your social media yeah all right what else we got
00:54:18.460 here cali 209 says people think cali is only big cities a lot of small towns dairy farms and almond
00:54:25.160 orchards around here yeah yeah yeah there's a lot of rural parts of california for sure
00:54:29.760 it's not just all smoke and mirrors like la good caught up yeah all right let's get back to the
00:54:35.080 uh to the documentary so now we're going to go into the east area rapist era guys so this is where
00:54:40.820 stuff starts to get a little bit more violent a teenage girl was raped today in her home in
00:54:47.040 contra costa county and though officials are not saying it was the work of the east area rapist
00:54:51.620 they do say the crime was committed in his style but he and bruno has more
00:54:55.960 law enforcement officials from every police agency in contra costa county tonight are looking for the
00:55:03.180 man who raped a 13 year old walnut creek girl early this morning y'all see that 1970s drip man look at
00:55:08.840 them they're styling on all y'all man 1970s swag let's go back let's continue the young victim was
00:55:15.540 attacked in her rancho san miguel home police say she described her attacker as a white male
00:55:21.200 six feet tall weighing 185 pounds was wearing some type of a mask or a hood i was wearing shorts and a
00:55:30.720 t-shirt he apparently was in the residence for approximately 45 minutes we don't know how he
00:55:39.340 gained entry she was bound he raped her he didn't bother anyone else in the residence and
00:55:47.920 the young girl's father and older sister were inside the residence at the time were unaware of
00:55:54.860 the attack johnson said her assailant may be the east area rapist who is suspected of committing at
00:56:00.660 least four other rapes in the same area or he may be an imitator police are urging everyone in the
00:56:07.040 concord walnut creek and san ramon area to be on the lookout and to report strangers in their
00:56:12.100 neighborhoods who seem to be just hanging around or displaying any other suspicious behavior this is
00:56:17.900 betty and bruno and walnut creek for the 10 o'clock news rancho cordova a suburb in the
00:56:23.580 sacramento area in the early 1970s was considered a sleepy and safe residential area to raise a
00:56:30.300 family in the 1950s aerojet had opened its headquarters there which was causing a suburban
00:56:36.760 housing boom turning the open vineyards into neatly organized neighborhoods of single-story homes
00:56:42.940 however it wasn't a perfect community memories from the 70s were littered with both positive hot
00:56:50.020 summer days spent by the river and those that weren't so fondly looked upon homelessness and drugs
00:56:56.560 by far though one needs only mention a name to stop folks who grew up in that area in the 70s
00:57:03.540 dead in their tracks the east area rapist or ear this was the first community he plagued with
00:57:10.480 escalating violence it meant something to him as even when they thought he had moved on to a
00:57:17.560 different area he would keep coming back many who investigated had believed that this was where he
00:57:24.500 lived his home his first attack was on june 18th 1976 a call came into the rancho cordova police department
00:57:33.820 i mean this is kind of theory here but i suspect another reason why he changes mo guys in this era is
00:57:39.040 that the he basically the police were starting to catch on to him he used to work in law enforcement
00:57:42.620 himself so he said okay let me go ahead and change how i commit my crimes i mean i might still burglarize
00:57:48.100 here and there and still be able to keep my mementos and be able to get my rocks off but now i'm going
00:57:52.560 to be more violent so they might not be able to link um me to the past crimes that i was committing
00:57:57.540 in the other area and that's why they had all these different nicknames and for him he probably looked
00:58:01.300 at it like oh now they got a new nickname they don't know i'm the same guy in all these situations
00:58:04.700 so guys like this serial killers like this guys a lot of times they're narcissists and they keep up
00:58:09.100 with the news and they'll go ahead and adapt the way they commit their crimes to how much press
00:58:13.980 coverage they're getting so that they can kind of avoid detection and back in the 70s guys remember
00:58:18.520 there was no social media the only way people got their news was through newspapers and you know
00:58:23.100 conventional mainstream media that we all laugh at nowadays so he would keep up with that a lot of
00:58:28.320 these serial killers would i know btk was huge with doing this ted bunny etc and they would change
00:58:32.360 sometimes the way they did things so that they can try to go ahead and lead police on a false trail
00:58:37.500 so i think that's another big reason why he switched up how he did things go ahead you have some angie
00:58:41.660 yeah also let's not forget that this guy has talking to mike angie bring it closer to you oh sorry um
00:58:46.480 this guy had also like an associate in like police science um and he studied uh he had a bachelor's
00:58:52.460 in criminal justice so that's that's why he he became a police a police officer he also was a veteran
00:59:00.160 in the vietnam war so he had a like a lot of background on like how the police will operate
00:59:05.720 yep and tactical experience yeah he also like myron said he will keep up with the with the media he
00:59:11.080 will keep up with the news so whenever like the the newspaper will put like details on how these
00:59:15.960 um brown soccer buglery or something will attack he will change his models apparently yep and one of
00:59:23.660 the times they said that oh he only attacks women so then he started attacking men after
00:59:27.120 yeah so non-man like couples yeah he would attack couples so um so you know this is just kind of goes
00:59:32.860 to show that the guy was definitely aware of what was going on and switched how he moved
00:59:35.900 so that to avoid police detection uh let's get back to it apartment at 5 a.m from a 23 year old woman
00:59:44.400 she had managed to walk backwards knock the phone onto the floor searching for zero with numb fingers
00:59:51.640 her hands were tied behind her back tied so tightly that she had lost circulation she was calling to
00:59:58.760 report a home invasion and sexual assault she told police she had been awoken to a man standing in her
01:00:05.220 doorway she had initially thought she was dreaming thinking to herself who wears a ski mask in sacramento
01:00:12.600 in june before realizing the danger before her she noted that the mask was strange it was white with
01:00:20.820 the coarse knit like material with eye holds cut out and a seam down the middle she also noted he was
01:00:27.300 about five foot nine moderately muscular wearing a blue t-shirt and gray canvas gloves she also noted he
01:00:35.620 had very pale legs with dark hair he wasn't wearing pants breathing heavily and holding a knife if you make
01:00:43.540 one move or sound my man i guess he forgot to tan before uh committing this assault
01:00:49.060 let's go back to it i'll stick this knife into you he whispered he had brought rope and tied her hands
01:00:58.740 but then opted to take a sash from her closet and use it to buy her hands instead in between assaults
01:01:04.900 she could hear him in the house ransacking from her bedroom she could hear him opening drawers and rifling
01:01:10.420 through her contents he spoke in a low guttural whisper through clenched teeth he had cut her above
01:01:16.980 her brow which she felt was an accident which you know you guys already heard how he sounded when we
01:01:22.500 played that excerpt there so it would be that weird heavy breathing strange creepo voice yeah let's keep
01:01:28.980 going but police had concerns about testing his limits for violence in the weeks leading up to the
01:01:35.700 attacks what would later be noted as a trend his first victim had seen an older dark medium-sized
01:01:42.660 car drive by her house several times she could never make out the face but it felt like she was being
01:01:48.900 watched she had also started to receive frequent hang-up calls police had initially thought that the
01:01:54.500 attacker was some kid a punk who would be caught quickly but there was something about this rapist that
01:02:00.500 was different from others he was careful not to remove his gloves he had meticulously learned his
01:02:06.660 victim's schedule although the house had been thoroughly ransacked he had only stolen relatively
01:02:12.740 low value items he would continue this trend attacking single women who lived alone or with small children
01:02:20.820 he would bounce around different suburbs in sacramento rancho cordova carmichael and citrus heights
01:02:27.220 it would follow a similar pattern calls of a prowler shoe prints spotted under windowsills homes being
01:02:34.900 ransacked still nothing of value was stolen repeated dropped calls occasionally those who answered the
01:02:41.460 phone her breathing sometimes threats like i'll kill your husband
01:02:57.220 this is really her idea yeah here you can tap over a few seconds totaled 10 victims his fifth victim
01:03:13.140 jane carson recalled cuddling her son in the early morning hours on october 5th when she heard someone
01:03:19.780 running down the hall her husband a captain in the air force had just left for work moments ago and she
01:03:26.580 had assumed he had forgotten something jack is that you did you forget something a man wearing a ski
01:03:33.380 mask entered hang on um yeah so so i was watching an interview of this lady um recent like a recent
01:03:42.900 interview of this lady and this guy entered his her house three minutes after her husband was gone
01:03:50.500 three minutes he didn't waste it yeah that means he was watching for a while yeah he was waiting he was
01:03:55.140 waiting for the guy to come out so he could enter and he tied the the baby the kid who was like four
01:04:00.820 years old or something like that and then he tied her so this is crazy to me like to know uh for him to do
01:04:08.180 it so quick right after but i mean that tells you that he did his homework yeah like the fact that he was
01:04:11.860 so confident to enter in three minutes after the guy left that tells you he probably been watching them for
01:04:15.940 weeks and also um well he committed like the attack the rape he will take the kid to another room he
01:04:22.580 will do it and then he will who will take it back to her right next to her and then he will leave and
01:04:28.500 leave leave them like died up the whole time that he was like graping her all the mom would say is like
01:04:34.420 please don't kill my kid yeah and like she was like in tears and like odd like worked around and he
01:04:40.660 just gave her her kid back like nothing yeah yeah he's like oh i'm done here i'll see you bye
01:04:46.260 i guess uh see you know what did i say ejaculate and evacuate that's what he probably was like yeah
01:04:51.460 i gotta get out of here fucking weirdo all right let's keep going the room he was holding a butcher's
01:04:57.140 knife jane had been sitting up in bed her three-year-old sleeping next to her shut up or i'll kill you
01:05:03.940 i just want your money he whispered through clenched teeth okay whatever you want jane complied he bound
01:05:10.340 blindfolded and gagged both jane and her son he then picked up the child and moved him to another
01:05:17.140 room jane was now in a full-on panic not knowing where her child was he repeatedly told her to shut
01:05:24.740 up she said he must have told her at least 50 times you guys are going to see why those dinner plates and
01:05:30.660 cups become very important pieces of evidence later on let's keep going times he assaulted her but before
01:05:37.620 he left he returned her son onto the bed beside her when she knew the intruder had left the house
01:05:44.020 she ran to the neighbors and got help the attacker had entered the home through her son's bedroom window
01:05:50.340 only moments after her husband had left three minutes only two weeks prior to the attack they
01:05:56.340 had been a victim to a strange burglary where the intruder had also entered through their son's bedroom
01:06:02.500 window uh pause see that right there guys the reason why he was so brazen is because he had
01:06:08.820 broken in before so he felt a little bit more confident so he did a test run it looks like and
01:06:12.500 then he went back and actually did the real thing right after keep going and i think you can hit the
01:06:17.780 space bar angie to make it easier for yourself rings but had left behind some jewelry that had been
01:06:22.900 stolen from their neighbor's house police had been sure it was the same guy whose primary objective
01:06:29.460 had never been theft jane and her husband hadn't been concerned about a rapist in the area
01:06:35.540 there had been a media blackout at the time regarding the crimes of the east area rapist
01:06:40.660 jane would later tell media outlets that she would have taken more considerable precautions
01:06:46.100 had the police been more open about what they had known about the attacks rumors had swirled about
01:06:52.420 the attacks because of the blackout the police couldn't dispute the stories
01:06:56.740 and strange details began to emerge about the ear mutilating victims he began targeting more
01:07:03.540 affluent neighborhoods perhaps because of the lack of accurate press about him he attacked twice in
01:07:10.500 one night shout out to the news media you are fake news they're messing up let's keep going one of the
01:07:16.100 victims was a housewife in carmichael police felt he was pushing into the nicer neighborhoods to get
01:07:22.020 more attention in the 1970s there was a dramatic uptick in crime in california
01:07:28.900 most detectives who worked that decade referred to it as the dark times his first crimes and guys it
01:07:36.260 wasn't just dark times for california it was dark times all over the united states inflation was going
01:07:40.660 through the roof uh obviously we had just been in the vietnam era situation vietnam war um you know
01:07:47.140 you had a bunch of crime going on in new york city they used to call it fear city back then the
01:07:50.980 mafia was running rampant serial killers running rampant technology wasn't as um prevalent as it
01:07:56.020 is now you know they didn't have cell phones to record these crooks so there was all kinds of
01:07:59.460 crazy crime going on in the 70s that's why the 70s guys was referred to as pretty much the heyday of
01:08:03.700 when most of the most prolific serial killers were operating all of them pretty much had a golden run
01:08:09.380 during the 70s and it's because of all these things that contributed to it let's keep going
01:08:15.700 been reported but once police realized they were dealing with a serial rapist they opted
01:08:20.820 to enforce a media blackout not to validate him with the press or scare him off from the region
01:08:27.940 october had brought three more attacks after james the 1970s was a time long before they had dedicated
01:08:35.220 departments to sex crimes long before there was criminal profiling terms like signature behaviors and
01:08:42.340 rituals were often used to distinguish offenders from one another in jane's attack like the attacks before
01:08:50.340 he had cut her just on the shoulder police believed he was suppressing an urge to inflict more pain
01:08:57.460 in the assaults following james he had begun clicking scissors and threatening to cut off toes
01:09:03.860 he would stab the bed next to victims and psychological torment became a new signature of the ear
01:09:10.340 he would often use their names mention personal information such as their high school to torment them
01:09:18.020 making them believe that they knew their attacker he would stand silently sometimes for hours making
01:09:25.780 victims believe he had left before making a noise to indicate he was still there pause like imagine
01:09:32.340 how crazy of an individual you have to be where you break into someone's house assault them like sit
01:09:37.780 around they think that they're safe and then they just hear you still there breathing acting crazy bro
01:09:41.780 like yo this dude was on some serious he just wanted to terrorize them and here's the other thing too
01:09:47.700 you know by him saying like oh i know where your high school is i know this etc that would go ahead
01:09:52.340 and create even more fear in the victim so that they couldn't feel like okay should i go to the
01:09:57.780 police or whatever this guy knows who i am he knows where i live he knows like he really knows what
01:10:01.860 i do so he would also do that because guys like this get off on the fear of their victims
01:10:06.020 so and he had he had none but time he would just sit there and you know stalk them and figure out
01:10:11.060 their life uh situation so that he can go ahead and terrorize them even more uh let's keep going
01:10:17.780 ear was always described the same white five foot nine late teens early 20s medium athletic build
01:10:26.420 clenched whisper small penis he spoke
01:10:30.020 all those girls are like this dude got a small d he can't even do it right what the man ew god damn
01:10:42.900 all right let's keep going quickly moved in an entirely leisurely way he would drape towels over tvs or lamps
01:10:51.300 lighting seemed to be necessary and he had particular psychosexual needs
01:10:57.300 he would often bind his victim multiple times and would use different materials
01:11:02.580 he never fondled the victims and would question the victims while assaulting
01:11:07.620 he'd ask jane is this like the captains while he had been raping her while he was assaulting her
01:11:14.260 he would snap at her directions put some emotion into that he would order or i'll use my knife
01:11:20.100 what it hadn't been typical for a ski mask rapist to be so devoted to recon
01:11:26.500 this was the police most significant concern they were dealing with someone different something
01:11:32.820 they had never seen before after his attack in carmichael 500 people attended a town hall regarding the
01:11:40.500 attacks on november 3rd the following day the bee a local newspaper published an article about the
01:11:46.820 eight attacks that had occurred so far in 1976 the detectives awkwardly fielded questions they had
01:11:53.780 no answers to and reminded people to be vigilant in their neighborhoods they had never anticipated so
01:12:00.180 many people to attend law enforcement officials from every police agency in contra costa county tonight
01:12:07.140 are looking for the man who raped a 13 year old walnut creek girl early this morning the young victim was
01:12:12.580 attacked in her rancho san miguel home police say she described her attacker as a white male six
01:12:18.820 feet tall weighing 185 pounds i was wearing some fast forward it real quick type of a mask or it was in
01:12:26.420 the residence for gained entry she was bound keep going and we're inside when a man came up behind
01:12:34.580 her 1977 marked a turning point for the ear the sacramento bee did an article warning single women
01:12:42.340 and how to protect themselves and they wrote the east area rapist will never attack while a man is in
01:12:48.580 the house pause after okay now they've challenged them we'll see what happens after this yeah he took
01:12:56.020 this excuse as challenge yep uh but they they didn't say something what i don't know and this like uh
01:13:03.220 assembly that they made like this this oh the town hall meeting yeah what about it so um you know let me
01:13:10.660 um so there was a guy that said um if if this man comes into my house i'm gonna kill him
01:13:17.780 and not only like only three months later he attacked this man's house oh really because he was actually
01:13:25.380 present during the town hall meeting yeah he was oh the golden state killer yeah he was there he
01:13:30.260 heard what he said and he took it like as a oh okay damn so he was like okay let's see let's see
01:13:36.260 what you really do man let's see if you're about it wow this guy was evil bro imagine like terrorizing
01:13:43.780 a community like hey we're gonna have a town hall meeting to discuss this and one man shows up like
01:13:47.860 oh yeah i'm man this really sucks i changed the locks on my door this is terrible oh my god
01:13:53.380 meanwhile he's scoping out the whole neighborhood and shit man demon time for real all right that
01:13:59.940 article almost as if it had been a challenge the ear began targeting couples he read the news articles
01:14:06.660 written about him and if they noted a particular trend he would adapt some speculated he would even
01:14:13.700 change his appearance if it was written he was pale in his next attacks they would be carried out by
01:14:19.620 a much more tanned man his hair went from and if you guys notice all these sketches look completely
01:14:26.340 different yeah so that tells you that he was on top of it you know taking over steps to change his
01:14:31.940 look between attacks so they wouldn't know and he did a good job because think about it they had all
01:14:36.100 these different nicknames they had all these different sketches so they didn't know that this was all the
01:14:40.100 same guy let's keep going long to short he was continually adapting his attack on couples was an
01:14:49.860 escalation point in the year's criminal career there were 11 attacks in a row he would get the female
01:14:56.580 to bind the man and separate the two after bringing the woman to the living room he would force the men
01:15:02.660 on all fours and stack teacups and saucers on their back saying if i hear these rattle or crash
01:15:10.260 i'll kill her the attacks would look the same shoelace binding so he would put them in the anus and reach
01:15:17.620 position aka being on all fours and put a bunch of fucking plates on their back that's actually a really
01:15:24.900 smart move because if he heard anything he knew right away okay i'm gonna go uh go back over here and deal with the
01:15:30.260 the threat and again this guy was smart he would set booby traps up in the house like on doors etc
01:15:35.860 so if it would get tripped he would knew someone was coming and uh as he got more and more
01:15:39.780 sophisticated he would go ahead and incapacitate the guy by setting up uh plates on him so they
01:15:44.740 couldn't move man because obviously in their head they're like damn if i move and he hears this
01:15:47.940 he's gonna kill my wife so they were literally powerless so uh shots anus and reach position
01:15:52.820 if y'all know what i mean and wrists tied so tight they were bruised empty beer cans and food eaten
01:16:02.500 he took his time often staying in the house for hours after assaulting the victim multiple times
01:16:08.820 he would ransack the house opening cupboards and drawers stealing engraved jewelry and stamp or coin
01:16:13.780 collections photos occasionally money but never taking anything valuable some items would be found
01:16:20.820 later dumped somewhere nearby he had told one victim he had been in the army this had already been a
01:16:27.700 line of theories from detectives there were four military bases around sacramento and one air force base
01:16:35.860 many of his victims described his demeanor as someone who had a background in the armed forces
01:16:41.940 they recognized the methods he used he would open up multiple exits stalking the potential victims for weeks
01:16:50.020 the dishes trick was a technique commonly used in the vietnam war he would also turn off air conditioning
01:16:56.980 units to hear better in addition to his preference for knives and how proficient he was with knots
01:17:02.900 there was also the suspicion that the ear was one of them he was always one step ahead of the police
01:17:09.700 treetop cameras were placed in neighborhoods officers thought he would likely attack
01:17:13.700 they had depleted their entire overtime budget for the year by april having additional patrol cars
01:17:20.340 and floodlights were installed in most neighborhoods homeowners began trimming back shrubbery and trees to
01:17:27.060 maximize visibility if the police were focusing on one area the ear would strike in another one he also
01:17:34.260 seemed more knowledgeable in police techniques than the average citizen he wore gloves and if you guys notice
01:17:41.140 he's going he's committing these crimes in small little areas where the police departments aren't
01:17:45.300 necessarily sophisticated we're talking about police departments that might have five to ten guys so
01:17:50.020 they didn't have the ability to conduct full-on manhunts to find this dude so he was also smart to hit
01:17:54.900 multiple places and multiple jurisdictions that didn't have the law enforcement capacity to actually
01:17:59.380 bring him to justice because he already knew what was going on being a small-town cop himself
01:18:03.700 and the military experience helped them significantly as well let's go back
01:18:07.220 and he seemed to know where police were patrolling and when he had even shouted at a victim to freeze
01:18:14.820 as she had been trying to scurry to the telephone they never seemed to be able to catch a break
01:18:20.900 the police of sacramento began cutting tree limbs removing shrubbery anything that could hide a prowler
01:18:28.020 people were installing floodlights and lighting up entire neighborhoods over 3 000 guns were sold in three
01:18:35.620 months households began sleeping in shifts or not sleeping at all in the hours between 1 and 5 a.m
01:18:43.140 people started putting bars on their windows and people would gather in neighborhoods for neighborhoods
01:18:48.020 watch stakeouts no and guys this is an understatement during this era this guy was like a like a legend he
01:18:54.500 literally had everyone shook to down to the core i mean 3 000 guns like that talk about creating business
01:19:01.220 you know locksmiths were going we're busy as hell gun owners uh people that did any type of security
01:19:06.980 type work they were all getting crazy business from this guy and no one had created this much turmoil
01:19:12.180 and fear in california until richard ramirez about 10 years later the second night stalker but this dude
01:19:17.540 was the original night stalker let's keep going
01:19:22.260 no one was safe and it seemed the whole community was on high alert
01:19:26.900 on may 17th 1977 police were called to carmichael a man stood on the side of the road with the
01:19:34.340 shoelace dangling from his wrist the man spoke in a thick italian accent and the officer richard
01:19:40.980 shelby recognized him immediately he had been at the town hall meeting about the attacker six months
01:19:46.820 previously and he had loudly spoken out about the east area rapist and the investigators
01:19:51.940 the ear had been at the meeting he had seemingly chosen this victim as a challenge after what was
01:20:00.020 the 42nd attack in dansville investigators were searching an area that a neighbor had reported
01:20:05.540 seeing a suspicious vehicle in the previous day and they discovered three sheets of paper torn out of
01:20:10.980 a notebook the first sheet appeared to be some homework part of an essay on general george armstrong
01:20:18.180 custer the other sheet was a journal styled writing about how the author had been made
01:20:23.460 to write lines by their teacher and how angry it made him the letter was called mad is the word
01:20:31.460 although it is unclear if it belonged to the ear investigators did use it to attempt to find a
01:20:36.900 suspect the author specified having a male teacher and assuming he went to school and was a local in the
01:20:43.380 area there hadn't been a lot of male teachers at that time but this didn't turn up any new leads
01:20:50.420 the last page was a hand-drawn map of what appeared to be a suburban neighborhood with the word
01:20:56.420 punishment scrawled on the reverse they couldn't determine what neighborhood it was but it revealed
01:21:02.740 that the artist had a strong knowledge of architectural layout and landscape design police then began to
01:21:09.540 look into anyone who may have done security for development projects or cartographers anyone who
01:21:15.700 would have had a valid reason for being in a neighborhood for extended periods of time a lot of
01:21:21.780 the areas the ear hit were usually adjacent to building developments brian maggiore was out for a walk with
01:21:29.700 his wife katie and their dog the couple were in high spirits celebrating a promotion where brian an administrative
01:21:36.100 specialist with the air force had just received word that he was being posted to germany it was about
01:21:41.780 9 pm and they were only blocks from their apartment in rancho cordova where they encountered a man prowling
01:21:47.220 in the dark it is believed that brian chased the prowler into a nearby backyard brian who was six foot one and
01:21:54.580 had a good 50 pounds on the prowler was closing in on the suspect when the prowler produced a gun and shot brian
01:22:00.660 in the chest the prowler then came around the house and chased down katie who was running away and fired
01:22:07.860 she was shot fatally it was initially thought to be unrelated to the ear but at the scene a pre-tied
01:22:14.980 binding made of shoelaces were found near window of a nearby home the young couple only in their early
01:22:21.700 20s murder rocked the already terrified community a witness looked at a window witnessing the entire scene
01:22:28.820 they were able to describe the shooter as wearing a ski mask wearing a brown leather jacket with dark
01:22:34.500 quiet shoes at this point the ear only killed out of necessity only in times when he felt there was
01:22:41.780 no other way out the majority's murders marked his second escalation of violence resulting in death
01:22:49.460 during his attacks he began telling victims he would start killing he would say that he wanted
01:22:55.140 them to relay messages to the police and that he wanted to read that message in the papers the next
01:23:00.420 morning there was a break in the summer in 1978 this is a very common trait guys between a lot of serial
01:23:07.300 killers whether it was ted bundy um john wayne gacy aka the killer clown jeffrey dahmer um gary ridgeway
01:23:15.300 all these serial killers guys um samuel little etc they really get off on getting attention from the media
01:23:22.100 um and and back then guys like i mean i'll just say it most serial killers are fucking cloud chasers
01:23:27.860 like they are the original cloud chasers man like they they not only did they enjoy the thrill of
01:23:32.900 killing people and having a mo to do so they also enjoyed all the attention that came their way from
01:23:39.060 all these heinous acts and that actually and that's why they didn't want to go ahead and publish some of
01:23:43.140 this stuff when he was in the early era of him being the ear because they don't want to give him that
01:23:47.700 attention but in the the negative of that is the people didn't know what was going on so they
01:23:52.340 weren't able to properly adapt so it gets to a point where the crimes are being committed and the police
01:23:56.180 have to notify the public and that gives the killers exactly what they want a lot of them get
01:24:00.100 great satisfaction from being covered in the media because like i told y'all before man you did not have
01:24:04.820 your own platforms like instagram you know the internet facebook none of that existed back then man
01:24:09.620 you could only be a celebrity or be famous through being put on main stream television and or radio
01:24:16.020 that's how it used to be before when they had the monopoly on all um production um anything for
01:24:22.820 you for me ladies before we get back to it do you have anything okay no no all right let's get back to
01:24:32.980 his last attack had been in june and for a while everyone breathed a sigh of relief police began being
01:24:39.300 reassigned to new cases hopeful that the man terrorizing sacramento was in prison or had died
01:24:45.780 their hopes were quickly discarded as attacks started the following october his attacks began
01:24:50.980 to stray further and further from rancho cordova stretching south to san jose then suddenly back to
01:24:57.300 rancho cordova and back down to walnut creek the summer of 1979 also saw a break like he began to take
01:25:05.940 summers off only to start again in the fall police believe there was a strong connection to an academic
01:25:12.420 calendar as he i mean serial killers need breaks too man you got to go on vacation a little bit
01:25:16.500 man some paid time off you know what i'm saying you got to deal with the kids and stuff and by the
01:25:22.100 way just so y'all know he had a family during this period of time so that could explain also why he
01:25:26.660 would take summers off his kids probably weren't in school yeah significant breaks between july and
01:25:33.620 october and attacks never happened on school holidays i didn't hear him come in i didn't hear anything and
01:25:42.340 all of a sudden there was someone sitting in my door the bedroom door and i looked up and i thought
01:25:49.060 it was my dad at first you know because he you know he drives weird hours and he might have come in
01:25:54.020 early because it was early in the morning and nope it wasn't my dad so um he came in he had a ski mask on
01:26:05.540 and jumped on and jumped on the bed and had a knife
01:26:12.340 and i don't i don't exactly remember what he said something to the effect of you know don't scream
01:26:19.220 don't you know whatever and tied my hands behind my back he he could have cut over my eye over my eye
01:26:30.260 but i didn't even realize that i had been cut and um i guess part of what he said is that you know
01:26:40.260 i don't even i don't know what he said i just remember feeling extremely threatened pause
01:26:45.860 after was all and this is common guys like when victims are describing the event they're in such
01:26:50.740 shock like they don't even everything is moving so fast it's very difficult for them to recall um
01:26:55.300 intimate details like that so you know obviously you go through a traumatic experience like this this is
01:26:59.620 like life-changing type shit man so yeah obviously terrible for the victim let's go back over and
01:27:06.980 done with he went through the stuff in the room took money out of my purse took um
01:27:14.180 some coin books and stuff that i had and took a piece of jewelry i don't it it was just something
01:27:21.620 that i had just gotten i don't even know what it was um and i laid in the bed for it seemed like forever
01:27:28.260 forever forever because i'd never heard that i was waiting for the door to close and i never heard the
01:27:34.660 door close so i was afraid to get up to you know to see and finally i said okay this this is do or die
01:27:44.740 i don't
01:27:47.860 i don't hold it against him there's something wrong with him no you don't say all right pause all right so
01:27:54.740 now we're going to get into the original night stalker area but before we do let's hit some of
01:27:57.780 these chats real fast um so you guys can see man that this guy was terrorizing the community and
01:28:03.940 the reason why she stayed there for so long guys because like we know from before what this guy would
01:28:08.020 do is he would sit in the house longer the person would think they're safe and then he'd make an
01:28:12.340 abrupt noise and they'd be like oh damn okay he didn't leave so he'll constantly take that um that i
01:28:18.340 guess maybe feeling of being safe uh for a short period of time he'll take it away immediately and let
01:28:23.300 them know no i'm still here so this guy was on some demon time uh what do we got here go ahead kim
01:28:28.260 you got it venezuela and colombia called myron we are going to induct you into the passport bro
01:28:34.180 fraternity okay thank you so i appreciate that um what else knowing what you know myron do you
01:28:41.780 believe you would have performed better than the police at the time if you were brought back to that
01:28:46.100 area that's a really good question um i mean knowing what i know now like what uh yeah what
01:28:54.020 you know myron do you yes i would have i would have um because i would have uh relied heavily on
01:28:58.500 working with other agencies um and networking because if i know what i know now like let's say
01:29:03.620 they like move me back in time like in a dream world scenario right you know they moved me back 40 50
01:29:10.740 years ago now that i have now and i'm back in that era for sure because i would go ahead and do
01:29:17.060 things i would have to basically do all the old-fashioned police work uh but i know that's
01:29:21.860 the way to do it and i would do things that police back then typically didn't do like working with other
01:29:25.540 agencies uh establishing like uh databases that are shared between different agencies and um you know
01:29:31.780 just being more i guess cooperative because the thing with law enforcement is a lot of agencies
01:29:36.900 don't want to share information and they don't necessarily they want to be the guy to catch them
01:29:40.580 which is good and bad because in one sense it makes the agency competitive so that you know
01:29:44.900 it incentivizes them to perform but on the other end it's bad because since everyone is trying to
01:29:49.700 catch the same guy a lot of times i want the credit they don't share information so it's a
01:29:52.740 double-edged sword that tends to bite a lot of agencies in the ass but back then it was even more
01:29:56.980 pronounced because they didn't even have the databases to do so so yeah i think i think if i was
01:30:01.140 knowing what i know now going back in that time yeah i would have definitely employed some
01:30:05.060 tactics that back then they were definitely not doing because there was a lot of keystone cops
01:30:08.660 back then as well guys alex says like the video or i'll kiss you okay i appreciate that not really
01:30:17.300 but okay and guys we got uh 2100 y'all watching right now do me a favor guys like the video man
01:30:22.820 because i see we got only i think we got one we only got 1k likes man so guys hit that like button man
01:30:29.060 okay subscribe to the channel if you haven't already and uh let's keep going what else we got here kim
01:30:32.900 christopher says damn this killer is creepy as fuck yeah i know this guy's on yeah now i can see
01:30:38.020 why you you anytime you guys request the killer they're always on some of the weirdest ones man
01:30:42.580 what else jc sir go ahead okay that's a super sticker um super sticker okay shout out to you jc i want
01:30:49.140 you guys to think just like a second about this this guy will go into couples house will make the the
01:30:57.060 woman tie the man and then he will proceed to rape her in another room while the man is listening in
01:31:04.420 the other room so i mean if you guys i mean i cannot imagine how to think about that you know like you
01:31:11.700 you're helpless you're you're like you you cannot help her you're just lying you're just sitting there
01:31:16.180 on all fours with fucking dinner plates on your back like what the fuck is going on bro it must be
01:31:21.780 horrible to to to just to be present you know to to go through that absolutely uh what else we got
01:31:29.140 here kim jc sir says for a typical home besides big canines and cameras what would you say is the
01:31:34.980 ultimate deterrence to make a crazy man like that fear coming onto your property um well nowadays you
01:31:41.540 know what i would have um you guys would be amazed at how like just putting like an adt sign like in
01:31:46.740 the front of your house saying like this house is protected by adt even if you don't have it that
01:31:50.660 helps keeping your lights on at night um getting a camera system guys like that's definitely in today's
01:31:55.700 day and age you can get them for cheap you can get like a ufie or whatever i'm a big proponent on you
01:31:59.380 having guns in the house um having having guns close to you at all times and you know that
01:32:05.380 yeah so you know obviously exercise your second amendment right and um yeah man having dogs also
01:32:12.980 huge deterrent for a lot of these crooks especially if you got like a guard dog like a german shepherd
01:32:16.900 or a doberman or something like that that's a huge deterrent so all these things definitely help you
01:32:21.460 with mitigating risk as far as being a victim of uh of a burglary or some type of crime like that
01:32:27.060 um question what is the thing that you mentioned the mvdt something like the what it's like a security
01:32:32.580 system so it's a sign that says like you have cameras installed in a security system yeah you
01:32:37.540 put it like on your front lawn okay but i don't even know if adt still exists does this still even
01:32:41.620 exist i think there's a different like company now but it's like a little blue sign that people put on
01:32:46.580 the front or on the windows and yeah i might be showing my age with that one but y'all get the idea
01:32:50.260 put like some kind of sign in front of your house that says this house is secured by blah blah blah
01:32:54.100 because even if it's true or not it'll make the burglar think twice like nah because burglars are lazy
01:32:59.460 bro like that's why they're burglars in the first place so they want to go ahead and commit crimes
01:33:04.820 and get the money in the easiest way possible with the least path to resistance so if you got a dog
01:33:09.860 you got cameras it's obvious you got cameras um they're probably not going to be like this is not
01:33:14.660 worth it unless they really want to like get to you then you know what time it is and the beware of
01:33:18.980 the dogs yeah that helps sign yep yep all these things to make your place seem less welcoming
01:33:24.580 okay junior choice became a member oh shout out to you choy appreciate that welcome to the game
01:33:31.940 parker says appreciate the content myer and also nice watch loving leveling up from the rolex from
01:33:37.540 what i can see looks like an ap royal oak yes yes this is the ap royal look thank you very much my
01:33:42.580 friend yeah i like ap's a lot man they hold value well and um now nowadays if i'm gonna buy a nice
01:33:47.700 watch i'm gonna make sure that it holds value so the you know i did a whole episode on watches by
01:33:52.420 the way guys i'm fresh i had nico leonard on there we talked watches so if you're a watch guy
01:33:56.100 definitely go watch that we we um talked about good watches bad watches we talked about rolex
01:34:00.420 being lame and not having anything in in stock um but ap's man long story short they only make
01:34:05.780 about 40 000 of them a year um yeah they're a little bit more expensive entry price around 30
01:34:09.780 care whatever but they hold value a lot better than rolexes do so thank you and i like them they're
01:34:13.540 nice and clean but yes you are right sir this is a royal oak blackface uh 2014 uh let's see here we got
01:34:19.540 uh super sticker okay appreciate that michael mcstroke that's it caught up cool let's get back
01:34:25.940 to the doc now we're going to get into the original night stalker era and how many people we got watching
01:34:30.580 we got 2.1 of y'all 2100 you guys you guys could be anywhere else in the world but you guys are here
01:34:34.100 with us if you guys are watching on twitch right now okay go ahead and open up another tab and watch
01:34:38.500 us on youtube like the video over there as well um again i'm multi-streaming it on twitch and youtube
01:34:43.780 because i am going to play some other uh documentary here that may or may not get us turned off in the
01:34:48.660 middle of the stream so you know you you got to preemptively prepare right so uh all right let's
01:34:52.660 get into it angie thank you like the video guys okay we're laughing at the child there was a sacrament
01:34:59.300 oh you got you laughing what'd they say um to put a sign beware of masculine women in the house
01:35:04.900 oh yeah there you go beware of shaniqua they definitely not gonna show up at that point
01:35:12.980 they're like no i'm good bro i'm also laughing at the child because department of justice
01:35:17.060 just beeping with irs right now yo you guys are the best chat ever bro you got all these government
01:35:24.740 agencies in here fighting with each other it's hilarious man all right east area rapist has been
01:35:30.180 active for 16 months 15 scroll up a bit angie at first a single investigator worked the case full time
01:35:37.460 now several people are involved the pressure to catch this man has been mounting but a multi-rapist
01:35:43.380 often acts on impulse most of the multiple rapists attack on impulse and so they have no
01:35:51.220 predetermined point of attack so finally years later now they're finally making a task force and
01:35:56.580 going after this guy right which they should have done this from the rip but again back then different
01:36:01.860 times let's go back they have there is no way to calculate a pattern of where they're going to strike
01:36:08.580 next or the type of place they're going to strike next or who their next victim is going to be many
01:36:15.060 of those involved with the case say the east area rapist lives within the area where he operates
01:36:20.660 that he picks upon blocks of homes within neighborhoods jumping from one to the other
01:36:26.500 one of his few mistakes was to attack a woman who lived only one block inside sacramento city limits
01:36:31.940 and then steal her car which only brought in the city's rape detail and four more people to work
01:36:37.620 toward catching him it takes a while for a community to wake up sacramento was no exception
01:36:43.220 by late fall when the east area rapist began claiming two and three victims a month citizens began buying
01:36:49.460 everything they could think of to protect themselves gun sales are way up with some of the buyers not that
01:36:55.620 familiar with how to use firearms and that can be dangerous in the summer of 1979 he took a second
01:37:02.900 summer break in a row in the fall he had moved to southern california in the santa barbara area
01:37:09.460 at first his series of crimes were not initially linked to the east area rapist it wasn't until much
01:37:15.140 later that the crimes were linked via dna evidence he was dubbed the night stalker but serial killer richard
01:37:22.420 ramirez had also received the same and just so you guys uh no i did a full episode on richard ramirez
01:37:28.100 as well uh they did a whole you know netflix documentary on him so if you guys want to watch
01:37:32.340 that one i have a whole serial player serial killer playlist on the fetid channel man we cover
01:37:36.580 everything over here man we're the best true crime channel on youtube
01:37:41.780 so if you guys um you know saw the netflix series you guys want to get a little bit more
01:37:45.620 insight and get my perspective on a night stalker uh the second night stalker aka richard ramirez go
01:37:49.860 ahead and check that one out as well but this guy right here was the og night stalker um i i wish
01:37:54.740 i could have done that yeah and also like the serial killer because i'll be passionate about those cases
01:38:00.580 as well but you guys have been requesting richard ramirez and marion has had it like ages ago yeah
01:38:06.500 on the playlist so you guys could uh if you will check the playlist that he has on um actually can you
01:38:11.700 pull it up real quick for them kim on on youtube because we're not playing sound so we can actually show
01:38:15.380 it from your screen um let's let's go back to the documentary when she pulls it up we'll have it
01:38:19.300 ready and we'll show them because y'all been asking me for the same cases over and over in the comments
01:38:23.940 yeah differentiate between the two our killer was given the prefix original october 1st 1979 in
01:38:32.340 galita the weather was hot and humid and a young couple slept with their windows open trying to capture a
01:38:38.900 breeze they woke not to the uncomfortable temperature of the room but a blinding flashlight pointed at
01:38:45.460 their faces a voice from beyond the light ordered them to roll over on their stomachs then he ordered
01:38:54.260 oh yeah go ahead yeah just add her screen to it oh you got it okay yeah so yeah if y'all hit um
01:39:00.260 that's the playlist go back to home real quick okay if you guys scroll down right um see i got most
01:39:06.340 popular videos then i got all videos old uh you know recent to oldest and then you scroll down
01:39:10.740 sunday videos which is the live streams then we got thursday videos which is the pre-recorded stuff
01:39:14.500 and then i got um infamous serial killers right there you got obviously jeffrey dommer john wayne
01:39:19.860 gacy ted bundy the zodiac the nice stalker hit hit the tab to the right real quick um angie yeah yeah
01:39:24.980 see how it says next to nice stalker hit that little button to the right it's right keep going yep
01:39:28.820 right there and then i got here obviously the green river killer gary ridgeway uh samuel little who has 93
01:39:34.260 murders um uh with the toy box killer oh yeah that guy was crazy that episode was wild um btk uh
01:39:41.460 the unabomber right that's oh that's a classic one uh this um the railroad killer and then we got ed
01:39:47.300 guy and aka the guy that they made uh the texas chainsaw mask off of so i've covered a lot of these
01:39:52.020 serial killers that you guys want um we got a few that we still got to cover obviously we're doing
01:39:55.460 gold estate killer now and then obviously we got a whole mafia playlist for y'all right the uh yeah
01:40:00.660 that's just been i've been asking for a long time but we got the original john guy named the gambino
01:40:07.620 the lucchese we got the um banano family the genovese crime family and then now we're going
01:40:11.860 to do the outfit we're probably going to record that tonight and then we'll go ahead and give
01:40:14.900 you all the colombo after that and then here's i got a whole 9 11 playlist as well which covers
01:40:19.860 the official narrative and the unofficial narratives and just you guys are wondering hey when are we going
01:40:24.180 to bring that ryan dawson back ryan dawson he was in japan guys this past friday so we couldn't do uh
01:40:29.220 the broadcast we're going to bring ryan dawson back next friday uh not this coming friday because
01:40:34.260 i'm going to be out of town but we're going to bring him the friday after that to finish up the
01:40:38.100 9 11 situation uh but yeah all right let's get back to it the woman to tie up her boyfriend using a
01:40:44.100 ligature tossed at her the man growled orders at her in a strange forced whisper to tie it tight
01:40:50.980 or she would be killed the man then tied her neither of them got a good look at the intruder the man
01:40:57.460 demanded money and began rummaging through drawers and slamming them shut what seemed like
01:41:02.420 a century later he returned to the room he forced the woman onto her feet and walked her
01:41:07.940 into the living room he then forced her on the floor he threw a pair of shorts over her head to
01:41:13.460 prevent her watching his movements he went to the kitchen to continue opening and closing drawers and
01:41:18.900 cupboards then the fridge he sounded like he was pacing and began chanting to himself i'll kill them
01:41:25.940 i'll kill them i'll kill them like he needed to encourage himself while he paced and chanted the
01:41:33.060 woman managed to wiggle out of her he was searching through the fridge he was trying to get some
01:41:37.300 wheaties and uh and get prepare himself to do the killing man breakfast of champions oh man all right
01:41:43.860 she screamed that kind of blood-curdling scream that movies can never quite capture alerting her neighbors
01:41:54.980 her boyfriend still in the bedroom had been able to hop out of the back door when he got close to the
01:42:00.740 shrubbery in the backyard he dropped and rolled under an orange tree narrowly missing a frantic beam of
01:42:06.820 flashlight searching the next door neighbor of the couple was an fbi agent he had been enjoying
01:42:13.220 the quiet evening trying to finish a book when he was alerted to the screams he grabbed his firearm and ran
01:42:19.220 out to the front yard in his peripheral he saw movement and his vision flicked to a man furiously biking
01:42:25.780 away from the chaos wow crazy the neighbor got in his car and pursued the man the man dumped the bike
01:42:31.940 along with a steak knife and dove between houses the agent attempted to maintain vision but eventually
01:42:38.580 gave up the couple only had a vague description of the suspect white dark hair maybe five foot
01:42:45.700 10 or 11. the fbi agent didn't they got lucky they had the fbi agent down the street man shout out to
01:42:54.580 that go ahead let's keep have much to add he hadn't been wearing a mask and he wore a plaid shirt jeans
01:43:00.820 and tennis shoes the agent received a lot of backlash from local cops for not shooting the assailant
01:43:07.540 but he stood his ground saying he didn't know what had happened in the house yet if there was a weapon
01:43:12.420 or if he was even the suspect that had attacked yeah it's actually good that he didn't shoot him
01:43:16.660 because he probably would have been indicted for murder or manslaughter if he had actually shot the
01:43:20.420 guy because he was not presenting a threat on his life at that point let's go ahead his neighbors he
01:43:26.740 didn't feel he could open fire based on the information he had at the time this also was the
01:43:32.820 first attack in the area and he had no idea this would be the first in many murders the bike had been
01:43:39.620 stolen from a nearby home and the steak knife had come from the couple's kitchen the couple themselves
01:43:45.380 had been confident that the intruder had every intention of killing them and had he not given
01:43:50.420 them time to get away he would have succeeded he never made that mistake again after this there are no
01:43:57.540 more witness accounts of his crimes there are only crime scene reconstructions he struck next in
01:44:04.260 golita on december 30th 1979 and his victims were dr robert offman and his new girlfriend dr barbara
01:44:11.620 manning then a married couple charlene and lyman smith in march 1980 in the ventura area lyman was to be
01:44:20.340 appointed as a judge and the police felt it was a targeted attack charlene had an unusual knot used to
01:44:26.980 bind her wrists this briefly brought him the moniker the diamond knot killer in august it was another
01:44:33.940 married couple keith and patrice harrington in dana point the following victim was in irvine she had
01:44:40.820 been home alone and thought to be bludgeoned to death she was married but her husband was in the
01:44:45.700 hospital at the time although he had a solid alibi he was still lead suspect in her murder years later
01:44:52.660 his second wife would say they would often receive hang-up calls and occasional threats for many years
01:44:58.660 following she truly felt that she would be next even decades after the last attack victims would
01:45:05.860 often be tormented with hang-up calls or taunts like remember when we played he enjoyed their
01:45:12.820 change of tone when they recognized his voice he wanted them to know he was still out there alive free
01:45:20.740 one victim could hear a woman and also i want you guys to kind of understand where this guy is coming
01:45:25.540 from for you to find someone's phone number back then you had to actually search them up on the
01:45:29.380 fucking phone book okay i know some of y'all are probably like wait what my what are you talking
01:45:32.740 about what the hell is a phone book like the jello yes the jello page yes the jello pages the jello pages
01:45:38.660 yes so like back then guys if you want to get someone's phone number they had these big ass phone
01:45:44.100 books that you'd search the person's last name and they'd have all the numbers there so he would
01:45:48.020 actually go through the process of figuring out what their number was identify that number and then call them
01:45:51.780 back months after the fact to be able to relish in his crime and get that terror out of them this
01:45:55.860 guy really got off to that shit i once saw one in a hotel like i've never seen one yeah i've never
01:46:01.460 seen any of those it's a dated thing like it's i'm showing my age right now with phone books i mean
01:46:05.540 kim probably doesn't even know what the hell a phone book is like wait what it's a big ass book that you
01:46:09.300 just have to look for yeah i've seen one so you've you've touched one before i have you know what it is
01:46:13.780 i do let's keep going back then put the camera on y'all man sorry you guys talk i can't imagine like
01:46:21.620 back then like people cannot could not like change numbers or anything right because these are land
01:46:26.500 land phones yeah they could but it was a it was a pain in ass you'd have to call a phone company and
01:46:30.900 it's not as easy as it is now okay right so let's go back to it and children in the background and knew he
01:46:38.500 was out there living a life with his family investigators were sure he still lived locally
01:46:45.940 one woman had started a new job waitressing at denny's during a seemingly uneventful shift she
01:46:51.940 answered the restaurant's phone and the caller threatened to attack her again police theorized
01:46:57.380 that her attacker had coincidentally been at the restaurant around christmas one victim picked up
01:47:03.220 the phone one day and the caller said merry christmas it's me again this guy
01:47:13.700 all right diamond not killer all right so um let's go ahead and hit the chats real quick and
01:47:18.340 then we'll uh cover this part and then we're going to go into how they caught him guys
01:47:23.700 we just have a few chats uh make back says w stream shout out to you my friend thank you
01:47:28.340 and tony says fed it merch coming soon maybe maybe maybe i'm ready for mara to to yeah i do this
01:47:38.820 channel guys like on the side for fun it's not really to like make money and profit a bunch i really
01:47:43.460 genuinely do enjoy this stuff um and i think that you guys enjoy getting my perspective on some of these
01:47:48.740 famous cases so i'll see people are asking for people want the merch i guess all right i'll
01:47:53.940 i'll figure something out for y'all julio says angie say myron and kim said yes sir on god
01:48:01.060 my god damn it
01:48:07.780 and guys give me a quick favor go ahead and like the video man subscribe to the channel because
01:48:11.140 um shout out to angie and kim in the back because kim had done quite a bit of research on this guy prior
01:48:15.860 to and um and angie did as well so they helped me quite a bit with preparing for this uh podcast for
01:48:22.420 y'all what else we got oh those were all the tuts that was it all right cool let's get back to the
01:48:26.580 uh to the documentary i think you got something on screen here angie oh and actually no that's
01:48:31.460 you kim but you go ahead and you're good good his crimes in the 1980s became fewer and further
01:48:36.820 between at this point it is unclear if there are more crimes attributed to him that aren't connected
01:48:42.980 yet or perhaps he had a change in personal life that was putting a damper on his ability
01:48:48.100 to be as prolific as he had once been in july of 1981 there were two more victims bringing the
01:48:55.620 total of his south california crimes to 10 and 11. sherry domingo was temporarily staying in a
01:49:02.420 deceased relative's house while it was in the process of being sold her boyfriend greg sanchez
01:49:08.420 was also a victim the two had been separated for several months when he went to see her for dinner
01:49:13.940 this attack more than the others seemed like a crime of opportunity greg was young fit and based
01:49:21.700 on the scene it looked like he gave one hell of a fight he suffered a gunshot wound to his cheek and
01:49:27.860 continued to fight on but ultimately he was bludgeoned to death this would be the ears last attack on a
01:49:34.340 couple a piece of evidence had renewed hopes for capture flecks of paint recovered at the scene
01:49:41.860 the calais real shopping center was being developed around the time of the murders the development
01:49:47.780 was in its final stages of construction at the time of the offerman manning murders which would
01:49:53.060 have included painting however this lead didn't pan out either taking on couples was posing to be
01:49:59.700 more of a challenge than earlier on in his career he was now having too many close calls people fighting
01:50:06.500 for their lives weren't as easy to incapacitate the men kept getting closer and closer to gaining the
01:50:12.580 upper hand after the domingo sanchez murders he disappeared for five years his last known victim
01:50:20.660 was a teenager named janelle cruz her family were on vacation in mexico and janelle was at home alone
01:50:27.540 she had been assaulted and beaten with such overkill that she was unrecognizable this case
01:50:33.460 wasn't thought to have been connected but it was linked by dna years later it had broken a five
01:50:39.860 year hiatus and janelle had seemingly no connection to any of his other victims in the area janelle had
01:50:46.660 multiple men coming in and out of her life and it seemed that one of them had killed her in the
01:50:51.700 jealous rage but the evidence couldn't connect any of them janelle's house was less than two miles from
01:50:58.500 the seventh murder so it was likely he had stalked the area before it like many other victims homes
01:51:04.980 backed onto a drainage canal police had one suspect in mind for the southern california murders he was
01:51:11.860 a golita local a career criminal but he was killed when he had tried to buy guns and drugs in mexico
01:51:18.020 and it had been a setup he died in 1982 and the slain of janelle cruz in 86 eliminated him as a suspect
01:51:25.620 they had been so confident it had been a resident of golita they had never really looked elsewhere
01:51:32.980 like the crimes in rancho cordova golita had a san jose creek running adjacent to the residential
01:51:38.420 neighborhoods the first three houses he hit ran along the creek it had provided a prowler with
01:51:44.820 ample coverage to observe unnoticed in the dark allowing him to bypass the need to venture into the
01:51:51.220 neighborhoods and risk being seen captured also guys running into a creek helps with um keeping
01:51:57.540 getting dogs off your scent when you're running from the cops so that's another you know benefit
01:52:02.500 to being around the creek when you're committing these crimes let's keep going yeah it does it's
01:52:07.140 not 100 but it does help to a degree to blunt uh your your scent for the dogs like his other crimes in
01:52:14.420 sacramento there were also tiny details that indicated his presence only realized in retrospect
01:52:22.020 janelle cruz was the final victim many investigators were sure he was dead there had been a burglar who
01:52:28.580 had been shot by an armed homeowner and they had hoped he had been their guy sexual predators never truly
01:52:36.100 stop they have to be stopped he began to be forgotten about no one wrote about the unsolved unconnected
01:52:43.620 crimes for decades his crimes were pervasive and he impacted so many lives he was once a boogeyman
01:52:51.780 plaguing communities for years only to disappear even in making these videos multiple people have
01:52:59.140 commented detailing how their lives had been changed forever 20 years after the crimes had been
01:53:05.540 committed most of the evidence had been destroyed this was routine evidence room procedure
01:53:11.700 cases that had passed the statute of limitations needed to make space for newer evidence however
01:53:18.020 some labs kept all of their evidence on the ear hopefully that one day it will be required for
01:53:23.780 so just so you guys know what ended up happening is they turned over all this evidence to the fbi
01:53:29.220 and this picture that you guys are these pictures you guys are seeing here in the past like
01:53:32.660 five ten seconds uh this is where the fbi kept all the evidence because yes a statute of limitations
01:53:37.620 guys um you know it's between five to ten years depending on certain crimes especially like grape
01:53:42.900 whatever they do have statute of limitations murder no um but burglary grape in some states there's
01:53:47.940 statute of limitations which basically means you can't prosecute someone after a certain period of
01:53:52.020 time has elapsed so um since they were able to put all these crimes under one individual what they
01:53:58.820 did was they turned it over to the fbi and consolidated all the evidence in one location
01:54:02.980 where they would have everything together and you guys are going to see here that the fbi does come
01:54:06.260 and get involved in this investigation um even though it's typically a state case because the feds
01:54:10.340 don't really have jurisdiction and burglaries slash murder cases that's typically reserved for
01:54:14.980 the state but when you have something that's hitting all these different areas all these different
01:54:18.740 cities and counties etc they would reach out to the feds a lot of times for assistance
01:54:22.420 we're finding this guy that was one of my questions i had this written down for a while now for you
01:54:26.580 um so nowadays like in this age area like if a killer's like like this what department will take
01:54:36.420 place to investigate these kind of cases oh that's really good question so it depends on where it's
01:54:41.060 where it's caught so um i'll give you an example like let's say it's in texas right and there's a
01:54:46.260 murder typically the lead agency is going to be either the city police that are there or the sheriff's
01:54:52.980 office okay or they'll do the case together but typically it's going to start with the city police
01:54:57.780 department that's there they're going to have first right of refusal now if the police department is
01:55:01.220 too small and can't investigate or doesn't have the capacity to do that murder it'll go to the
01:55:05.940 sheriff's office right so we'll work small to big so the city will take it first let's say they don't
01:55:10.980 have enough police officers or they don't have a homicide unit it's going to go to the county
01:55:15.220 if the county doesn't have the capacity to do it and let's say maybe it's above their um their
01:55:20.180 capabilities maybe they don't have a forensic unit maybe they don't have uh the resources or
01:55:23.860 maybe the sheriff's department is small they don't have a homicide a refined homicide unit it's going
01:55:28.340 to go to the state and when i say the state i'm talking about the state police uh if it's a high
01:55:33.060 profile type murder a lot of the times it's going to go to the top state agency so for example like
01:55:38.740 in texas you have a high profile murder it's going to go to the texas rangers a high profile murder
01:55:44.180 would be maybe the murder of a child that's receiving a lot of news uh maybe of a prominent
01:55:49.060 figure maybe a politician is being killed uh maybe it was it's related to gang violence or
01:55:54.020 whatever it may be um but it's high profiles and like it's getting a lot of media attention if it's
01:55:59.060 getting a lot of media attention typically the state is going to come in and take the case but
01:56:03.620 it really comes down to where the crime occurred does the police department that where the crime
01:56:08.420 occurred have their own resources to take it if they do they're going to take it so if you commit a
01:56:12.500 murder in new york city for example nypd is going to take that all day yeah of course but uh
01:56:16.740 what about like a case like this for example like this guy is moving around
01:56:21.060 so what about if he goes like right to the borders of california because he was like or all around
01:56:26.980 california yeah so it would be all the different sheriff's offices would work together um and then
01:56:32.340 each of them would would work their their case in their jurisdiction and then they would all come
01:56:37.300 together and work and figure out which venue is best to prosecute them so when you have a guy
01:56:41.620 committee crimes all these different places you'll get with all the different district attorneys and you
01:56:44.980 guys are going to see this when i show you guys a press conference all the different prosecutors
01:56:48.100 will get together they'll figure out what's the strongest venue for prosecution he's going to get
01:56:51.860 the most time here the strongest cases here they will go ahead and bring that bring uh the case
01:56:58.100 there and prosecute them there where they have the best chances when you have a situation like this
01:57:02.100 or if they're able to establish that there's a federal jurisdiction the feds will take it that's that's
01:57:07.620 what i was gonna ask like what would it take for a case like this to to get like a big department like
01:57:13.700 the fbi to take to take charge of these cases really good questions um it would need to affect
01:57:19.700 so for the feds to come in it's got to affect something called interstate commerce and interstate
01:57:25.140 commerce guys is basically a fancy way of saying it affects um commerce of the united states between
01:57:30.980 different states so i'll give you an example right let's say this golden state killer was committing
01:57:35.700 these crimes but he was also robbing banks well banks right affect interstate commerce because
01:57:40.900 banks are institutions that are federally insured and what they'll basically do is they'll be able
01:57:45.860 to tie that these murders to bank robberies so now the feds can step in so if you remember the pizza
01:57:50.900 bomber right the big reason why the fbi took that case is because well yeah explosives were involved
01:57:56.180 so atf was there but the main reason why the fbi took that investigation was because he bank robbed
01:58:00.420 the bank so that gave the fbi jurisdiction to take the case and then all the other crimes that occurred
01:58:05.060 during the commission of that bank robbery they're able to enhance does that make sense
01:58:08.900 so then they need to commit a crime that affects interstate commerce or affects a federal
01:58:13.300 jurisdiction um another example is let's say this east area rapist guy or the golden state killer
01:58:17.780 in this case let's say he was part of a motorcycle gang right and he was committing these crimes in
01:58:21.860 furtherance of that criminal organization or in furtherance of that motorcycle gang well then the
01:58:25.940 feds would take over and say okay these burglaries and these crimes these murders he's committing
01:58:30.020 them to benefit the motorcycle gang so we can go ahead and indict him under rico or let's say he had
01:58:34.820 been doing money laundering while committing these crimes then the feds could step in and say oh he's
01:58:39.620 committing these crimes he's getting paid for and he's money laundering he's moving the money through
01:58:43.300 bank bank accounts wire fraud so they need to commit some type of crime that affects interstate commerce
01:58:49.940 for the feds to come in otherwise if it's just like a simple burglary or murders like this that's kind
01:58:54.820 of like one-off or maybe serial murders the fbi could come in and assist or the feds could come in and
01:58:59.300 assist but it's still going to go to the state for prosecution right does that answer it yeah
01:59:05.380 pretty much all right down the market for good questions down the marco
01:59:12.980 trial paul holes a criminal analysis turned investigator took on the case in the late 90s
01:59:19.780 after coming across evidence boxes marked so that's going to be the i think we're good with this
01:59:25.060 documentary for now now we're going to go into how they caught him guys so he committed these crimes
01:59:29.860 for well over a decade no one was able to catch him and again let me show you how the map real fast
01:59:33.860 let's recap um okay he was he was active from 1976 all the way to 1986 a decade of terror guys
01:59:41.140 he committed crimes in sacramento san joaquin uh stanislaus yolo contra costa santa clara alameda
01:59:47.220 all these different cities and counties right yeah and different state jurisdictions so but he was
01:59:52.340 committing grapes and murders so now the case is yes and the murders so now the case is going to get
02:00:00.180 transferred to another detective right and we're going to go over and outline how he was able to
02:00:05.300 identify this guy so go ahead and hit uh is it this one i think this one oh no no not that one
02:00:10.500 this uh nope go back cold case actually well you know what what so actually yeah so not this one
02:00:17.700 click the next one this one yep click that one okay no no no no no no no next tab next tab all
02:00:22.740 right so this is a press conference guys that was held in 2016 prior to them catching the golden state
02:00:26.820 killer as y'all can see look at all the different agencies here this woman that's up is the fbi special
02:00:31.460 agent in charge or sa sac for the sacramento area so in 2016 i think this was on damn it was yeah oh
02:00:39.220 june 15 2016 uh they had a this press conference and i wasn't even looking at the screen my bad and
02:00:45.380 this is where they announced that the fbi is going to get involved and they actually put up
02:00:48.580 a prize hit play real quick sorry about that paul um so why are we here today today we're going to
02:00:56.820 launch a national campaign to help identify the east area rapist golden state killer this unknown
02:01:04.660 subject terrorized the communities in the greater sacramento region from 76 to 78 in the east bay area
02:01:11.780 in 1979 and southern california from 1979 to 1986. due to the number and frequency of burglaries and rapes
02:01:20.260 committed in the sacramento area the subject likely resided in or near sacramento from 1976
02:01:27.780 to 1978. this subject has eluded investigators for over 40 years and so it's interesting that on
02:01:35.700 the 40-year anniversary they would go ahead and get involved that the federal level put a 50 000
02:01:39.780 reward on him so go ahead and hit uh go to the next tab angie okay so and and here if you guys look
02:01:46.420 here's the fbi cold case website right um sorry uh i just want to say that this was like a few months
02:01:53.620 before this lady passed out and her investigation on michelle magnara the girl oh oh okay the woman
02:02:02.500 that wrote that book that we talked about in the beginning this is right before she passed away
02:02:05.380 okay she passed away in april 21 of 2016 so this same year that she's doing the press conference okay
02:02:12.740 so and her book actually brought a lot more attention back to the golden state killer exactly that's what i'm
02:02:17.300 trying to say that her investigation actually helped a lot into this like new investigation
02:02:22.260 to catch him okay okay so her book reinvigorated the uh the manhunt okay so let's go ahead and pull
02:02:28.900 up this cold case thing for the fbi so go ahead and play on this
02:02:35.620 between 1976 and 1986 a serial rapist pause murder uh murder and terrorized uh hit x on that little
02:02:41.860 thing there angie okay terrorized california communities from sacramento to orange county all
02:02:46.340 right go ahead and play yeah just get it out next time
02:03:00.180 he's got to be one of the most prolific criminals when you think of the other murder cases that are
02:03:06.660 connected and all the rape cases and god knows what else we don't know about
02:03:15.940 he's not uh concerned about human life um he enjoys the terror uh enjoy all right so hit that
02:03:24.500 little x button right there uh angie so it gets out the way so i'll read this for you says dubbed the
02:03:29.780 east area rapist and golden state killer the man committed 12 murders 45 rapes and more than 125
02:03:34.100 residential burglaries hit play is uh inflicting that type of uh an emotional uh type pain on people
02:03:43.380 during that time frame everybody was in fear we had people sleeping with shotguns we had people
02:03:48.260 purchasing dogs people were concerned um and they had a right to be this guy was terrorizing the community
02:03:53.940 uh case started in 1976 with the rape of a female in the ranch of cordova carmichael area of sacramento
02:04:04.100 uh his primary entrance into a residence was by prying open doors or windows at the rear of the
02:04:10.100 residence he would then get in have a ski mask on and often shine the light a flashlight in the eyes of the
02:04:16.100 victims uh at that point the victim that's a common police tactic by the way guys like i can tell you
02:04:21.060 guys from my personal training experience uh they taught you how to shine that you know whenever you
02:04:25.620 got your weapon liner or whatever get a bright ass light so you shine it in their eyes so it disorients
02:04:29.620 the subject you know when you have your weapon on them so that's a police tactic and uh and the
02:04:35.300 person talking right now by the way guys is the fbi case agent that handled the the golden state
02:04:39.940 killer because once the feds opened up a case right you have obviously you need a case agent and his job
02:04:45.380 was not only to get the resource of the fbi involved to catch this guy it was also to monitor
02:04:50.260 it from the federal angle as well but keep in mind that the state is still the lead agency on this
02:04:54.900 situation it's just that when you have high profile cases like this typically the fbi will come in to
02:04:58.580 assist because like i told you before i've made my jokes that the fbi are definitely cloud chasers
02:05:03.700 it just so happened that on the 40th anniversary of him um committing these crimes and you know the
02:05:09.060 resurgence of an interest in this individual from that book that michelle nakamura wrote
02:05:13.380 uh it sparked that reinvigorated the need to find this guy because it went unsolved for so long
02:05:19.540 let's keep going this would be tied up and then he would sexually assault the female
02:05:25.940 and ransack the residents taking small items small rings coins other items would be taken
02:05:33.940 sometimes cash whatever you could find we know that after he committed his crime he would jump over
02:05:40.020 the rear fences of residences run through other people's backyards obviously avoiding streets
02:05:45.060 where people would see him he'd run out to uh the levee run through the fence run out get out on the
02:05:50.020 levee and then get onto the parkway where it could easily hide in the bushes or trees and escape capture
02:05:55.220 we have identified the dna for easteria um we just don't have a face so that's the you know the the
02:06:03.860 whole like look at all that the all those files man for this case they have like a whole area just
02:06:08.740 dedicated to him um and the fbi took it from all the other different agencies uh so that they can house
02:06:14.020 it because they didn't want the evidence to be destroyed because as you guys know once the statute
02:06:17.300 of limitations hits there's no point for them to keep the evidence so the fbi preserved it keep going
02:06:21.940 aim for that dna so at this point the fbi is assisting our local counterparts sacramento county
02:06:27.380 sheriff's office contra costa county wow look at all the evidence that they have on this guy here
02:06:31.460 i told you yeah sheriff's office and our southern partners with collection of dna of possible suspects
02:06:37.860 so when we go out we identify someone that potentially might be this is also common guys where
02:06:42.260 if you have like a criminal that's committing a bunch of crimes in an area um and the local agencies
02:06:47.700 are kind of like disoriented or confused and they kind of want to house all the evidence in one
02:06:51.060 central location this is also common to get the fbi involved to put everything in one place so they
02:06:56.020 have all the evidence and they're able to kind of work out of one area together as a task force
02:07:00.180 so that's another reason why they consolidated all the evidence into one location um something
02:07:04.500 that was snugging in my head right now like it's um since i said that uh the 70s was sorry
02:07:11.700 the 70s was like at the peak of serial killers here in america yeah you will think that
02:07:16.740 like each area each day will have its own serial killer because you have gary richway you have ted
02:07:23.060 bundy you have all these guys so they were striking all from different places in the us i want to think
02:07:29.300 like how much this evidence and how much these cases helped aid improve enhance um investigations
02:07:37.540 nowadays for these like kind of cases yeah it forced the police to step their game up is what it did it
02:07:42.820 forced it yeah absolutely like uh the 70s forced police agencies to adapt and overcome and become
02:07:47.860 better with working with each other using better technology um sharing information so um this 1970s
02:07:54.420 absolutely forced law enforcement agencies to become better yeah absolutely yeah okay
02:08:02.980 suspect on this case or person of interest what we're doing is looking at who they were were they
02:08:07.780 in custody at the time of the crimes uh what's their blood type um any other ways to
02:08:12.660 eliminate them at that point if we can't eliminate them through various other means we're then going
02:08:17.860 out and interviewing these people and contacting them um and asking for a consensual sample of dna
02:08:27.860 so we're doing this all over the united states we obtained a 50 000 reward leading to the arrest and
02:08:33.940 capture and conviction of the individual responsible for the easterian rapist series
02:08:39.140 that may push somebody over the edge of who knows something and um kind of provide us that that one
02:08:45.540 tip that we need uh just like any homicide so now you guys so you know just to recap real quick the show
02:08:54.100 before we get into how they caught him so guys welcome to the podcast as you all know we're
02:08:57.380 covering the golden state killer aka the east area rapist aka the vizella ransacker all these different
02:09:01.620 crazy ass names he was committing burglaries uh and rapes between 1976 all the way to 1986 they did
02:09:08.100 not catch him for decades um the fbi ends up coming and joining the investigation on the 40-year
02:09:13.380 anniversary of 2016 they start a whole campaign uh with a 50 000 reward to go out and catch this guy
02:09:19.060 so now we're going to get into how i think it was detective hole if i'm not mistaken actually identified
02:09:25.380 this guy and they were able to finally apprehend him decades later so um i got this right here from
02:09:32.340 um i think this was from 60 minutes go ahead yeah last next tab the last step yeah that tab right there
02:09:37.940 uh this is unmasked the golden killer this was from 60 minutes australia um let's go ahead and go
02:09:44.660 yeah this one isn't bad cookie pause and that individual there was one of the guys that worked
02:09:51.060 with him when he was a police officer saying that he was very intelligent and they were basically able
02:09:54.820 he was able to evade detection a lot of times guys because he knew police practices like i described
02:09:58.500 to you earlier how they would cordon off the perimeter he would basically have his car parked
02:10:02.740 and he knew a bunch of techniques to avoid detection because he knew how police departments work
02:10:06.420 being an exeter police department officer himself back in the day but he ended up getting fired
02:10:10.980 for shoplifting uh so let's go ahead and hit it so this is the uh the neighborhood where the east
02:10:17.620 area rapist uh started attacking but ultimately not as smart as detective paul
02:10:24.420 holds who after more than two decades of investigating finally figured out d'angelo's lines
02:10:32.100 all the houses are single story he rarely went into a neighborhood that had two-story houses
02:10:40.180 you like to move around so just you guys know this is 60 minutes so we're gonna have to be a little
02:10:44.660 bit more deliberate here with pausing it and i apologize for that uh because they began
02:10:48.740 hit with the copyrights and show me on the side angie by the way too um just uh yeah just hit that
02:10:54.820 you know the yeah there you go bam uh so what i was gonna say here is this guy detective knowles
02:11:01.220 ended up getting on this case in the 90s um but he didn't end up solving it until a decade plus later
02:11:08.420 because this case had been passed down to him from another detective prior
02:11:11.780 and moved through the backyards detective hall says in the mid-1970s joseph d'angelo moved from
02:11:20.100 exeter to the suburbs of sacramento which then became the rogue cops new hunting ground as far
02:11:27.700 as the law enforcement training he understood exactly how patrol was going to respond to
02:11:34.740 uh an attack that had occurred and so he would park his car at locations so he could as law
02:11:43.140 enforcement is potentially responding slip through that and get to his vehicle many blocks away from
02:11:49.540 where the victim's house was to be able to drive pause and just so you guys know remember a police
02:11:55.220 officer chased him and he was able to evade evade from uh evade that police officer why because he knew
02:12:00.660 the neighborhood even better than him it was able to get away so this guy definitely did his homework
02:12:05.940 and that's why he was able to evade uh avoid getting arrested for so long is because he would
02:12:10.900 stalk the victims for weeks on end and make sure he hid at the best time and had plenty of escape routes
02:12:15.860 so they wouldn't be able to find them after the fact i want to say something um yeah and if came if
02:12:20.260 you can help me if you want um so i want to give a shout out to bailey's area because she actually
02:12:24.580 helped me a lot with this we love her um so she said in her video that some chick that puts on makeup
02:12:35.940 when she does true crime i'm like she goes over it like so well she has like information that she
02:12:40.740 actually looks into and everything in a lot of videos it's we love her so i don't know if i will
02:12:45.700 know that then the bottom um chris is somewhere i will give her up anyways um she actually said that
02:12:54.180 uh there was a victim that had a brother that had a lot of money that he was rich so he actually gave
02:13:00.260 away two million dollars to help and aid the investigation to catch this guy later on yeah it
02:13:07.060 was a it was the brother of the guy that originally got killed right yes yes the father remember that you
02:13:10.980 guys that we showed you guys before it was his brother that put two million to pledge um into for
02:13:15.380 dna to make sure california collected dna from suspects yep so um which ended up working out
02:13:22.180 very well here yeah well d'angelo used to work here a police officer by day and by night the east
02:13:30.660 area rapist the first 44 rapes and two murders were committed while he was a cop here until he was
02:13:37.220 caught shoplifting a can of dog repellent and a hammer the police chief sacked him on the spot a few
02:13:43.540 weeks later how dumb do you gotta be to steal fucking that bullshit and a hammer to go ahead
02:13:49.940 and get you lose your job bro you stupid all right let's keep going a prowler turned up at the chief's
02:13:56.740 home outside his daughter's window he was convinced it was a vengeful d'angelo but staggeringly the police
02:14:03.700 chief never followed it up it was the one big clue that could have put a stop to all the killing
02:14:10.500 jane when no one followed up his dismissal from the police force for shoplifting it's crazy
02:14:16.820 for rape victim jane carson sandler that oversight should have been the moment joseph d'angelo's
02:14:24.900 secret was uncovered that's surprising isn't it very surprising that's probably the biggest miss
02:14:31.220 of the entire investigation i agree i agree i agree in 1979 this is the fifth uh this this lady was his
02:14:40.980 fifth fifth victim fifth okay the one with the with the child that we mentioned earlier ah yes okay
02:14:46.660 that's her now today okay the spree of sexual assaults in sacramento stopped abruptly for no
02:14:53.300 obvious reason what investigators didn't know was their biggest fear had come true this sadistic
02:15:00.340 violent rapist was on the move again and had become even more brazen when the east area rapist
02:15:08.260 re-emerged in southern california it was as a fully fledged serial killer
02:15:15.780 so he starts off as the east area rapist that's correct and that name gets changed to the golden
02:15:20.420 state killer yes so you see an offender that over the course of more than a decade he's moving through
02:15:27.460 the state and at that point in time law enforcement is not conclusively connecting the dots that this is
02:15:34.580 the same guy he is probably the only offender that i know who has had different monikers
02:15:43.060 when it was an unsolved series the golden state killer murdered 13 people across the state of
02:15:49.060 california added to the 50 rapes and various other assaults and kidnappings he became one of the united
02:15:56.020 states most hunted fugitives every detective in the country wanted to solve the crimes including
02:16:03.220 detective paul holtz who first got his hands on the case files in 1994 you started investigating this
02:16:12.580 just as dna technology and just before he gets into how i identify it just to give you guys a little
02:16:17.940 insight here the worst thing ever man is inheriting an old ass case from another detective or another
02:16:24.180 investigator holy i got to give this detective a don demarco because there's nothing worse than
02:16:31.220 getting an old ass case that is big as hell you have zero idea what went down before you get the case
02:16:38.100 because the detective before you got you know retired or whatever it may be so you're a newer detective
02:16:43.300 you get assigned a big case like this you don't know what went down before you don't know where to
02:16:47.300 start and um kudos to this guy for taking the initiative to take this case seriously because
02:16:51.700 a lot of the times whenever you get cases handed down to you you're like bro this isn't mine i don't
02:16:55.540 give a fuck and you go ahead and you pursue your own thing i mean i'll be honest i'm guilty of it
02:16:58.980 myself like when i would come into a group or i start a new field office they'd give me a bunch of
02:17:02.660 old ass cases and i'd be like all right i'm gonna close all these things out as soon as i can um because
02:17:06.980 it's not your baby you don't give a shit um but this guy obviously um you know i would obviously with the
02:17:12.740 star power that this case had uh he took it seriously and was able to bring it to fruition
02:17:17.620 which is uh really great so shout out to him for that because inheriting an old ass case is a pain
02:17:22.420 in ass guys i can tell you that from being a former investigator let's go ahead he was becoming
02:17:28.340 a real thing for law enforcement didn't you that is the reason why i initially decided i need to look
02:17:33.940 at this case because i have this this newfangled dna technology and i was like well let me see what i
02:17:40.100 can do and since 2001 the golden state killer's dna profile was up in the fbi's codis system which
02:17:49.780 is the fbi's dna database that's a national that's a national database uh it's over 16 million profiles
02:17:58.340 in that database it didn't hit because joseph d'angelo had never been convicted of any crime
02:18:04.900 in trouble with the police on that level he was not in any database he he had never been convicted
02:18:11.060 of a crime that qualified him to be compelled to give his dna to be put into a database and you guys
02:18:16.500 are probably wondering well what what do they what's compelling enough to put someone's dna in a
02:18:20.180 database so um back in like 2013 2014 guys there was a new rule slash you know mandate from law
02:18:27.460 enforcement agencies that if you arrested someone for a felony you had to dna swab them right so um
02:18:33.860 i mean at the feds i didn't have to do that so much because when i arrested someone i'll turn
02:18:37.140 them over to the marshals because think of the marshals as like the the federal sheriff's office
02:18:41.060 they basically take all the prisoners they would dna swab them but for any time you're arrested for
02:18:45.300 a felony united states they typically dna swab you nowadays but back then he had not been committed uh
02:18:52.740 convicted or caught for any crimes he had never been arrested because he just got like a petty theft
02:18:56.660 which is probably a larceny back then and they didn't dna swab you back in you know the 60s 70s
02:19:00.980 when he got arrested for that shoplifting wasn't he convicted for like the shop in fact like the
02:19:05.860 shoplifting no yeah but it was the crime wasn't wasn't uh i don't know if he got convicted for it
02:19:11.620 but either way it wouldn't have been a crime that they would collect dna on back then like nowadays
02:19:16.420 they might if it's a felony but back then they didn't collect dna for some of these crimes he didn't
02:19:19.380 get convicted what happened was he was just kicked off the police okay so yeah it was just like he got
02:19:24.020 caught and okay so yeah but even if they did catch him they wouldn't collect the dna anyway it was it
02:19:27.780 was before that time okay so how did you find him so that's where uh as i sat back just almost feeling
02:19:36.900 defeated about all these years haven't found this guy how am i going to get this case to progress
02:19:45.380 and that's when i learned about this technique using uh genealogy in dna
02:19:53.460 this discovers that fam oh should somebody get real oh good history websites like ancestry.com
02:20:02.660 and jedmatch.com can help track down persons of interest one of their features is that you can enter
02:20:10.580 your own dna to find long lost family members but holes took it to the next step using dna collected
02:20:19.140 from the golden state killers crime scenes he uploaded it to see if he could get any matches
02:20:25.540 yes pause it oh man now you regret whacking off at other places huh that lotion ain't so good now is
02:20:33.940 it oh man this is scary he had all they had all that dna from this dude whacking it and the place
02:20:39.380 is slugging his me he's gonna come back to haunt him now bro let's keep going it was a brilliant thought
02:20:46.500 smart modern detective work were you doing this though on a clandestine level did you have to create a false
02:20:53.860 profile yes so he created an undercover profile and uploaded the golden state killers dna profile
02:21:01.940 all right guys when he says undercover profile whatever but basically what that means is the
02:21:05.860 police department paid to create an account paid to submit the stuff and what they did was they
02:21:10.580 created a fake profile as if it was really someone trying to figure out you know if they're related to
02:21:15.060 this serial killer um and they did it surreptitiously that way so they wouldn't alert the company that they
02:21:22.740 were conducting an investigation utilizing their site that's basically what he means when he says
02:21:26.260 we use the undercover profile he basically posed as a regular person trying to identify um a potential
02:21:32.420 you know relative that they're long been long estranged estranged from um so yeah man very very smart
02:21:39.380 detective work right here let's keep going to gen match within a day i had the list of potential
02:21:47.060 uh relatives uh to the golden state killer out of gen match within one day so we ended up with roughly
02:21:53.700 five males that had california connections that were of the right age that caused us to have to do a
02:22:01.940 little bit more research on who these individuals were to see if they had any other aspects of them
02:22:09.140 that caused us to we might need to look at them closer as a potential suspect that shortlist had the
02:22:16.180 name joseph james de angelo 40 years later they got your ass bro all right let's keep going now let's
02:22:27.220 see how they got of the golden state killer perfectly he lived in sacramento and was the right age to
02:22:33.700 commit the crimes after secretly watching him for days police took a used tissue out of his garbage bin
02:22:41.140 and tested it for a definitive dna match it came up positive the fantastic gotcha moment gotcha bitch
02:22:53.220 there is no question that joseph de angelo is a golden state killer the dna evidence that we have in this
02:22:59.860 case is uh conclusive coming up staring down the gold so um yeah guys that's freaking crazy and another
02:23:10.260 example where this happened you guys if you guys like this like um catching guys decades after the
02:23:15.220 fact go watch the btk breakdown i did basically he came out of retirement right because i guess he
02:23:20.420 wanted to bust some nuts and kill some people again and he was sending the police all these like you know
02:23:25.220 clues sending them a cereal box haha serial killer whatever the fuck with tied up dolls um the police
02:23:30.420 ended up catching him as well through dna and it's very interesting how they did it so if you guys like
02:23:35.380 this um serial killers facing justice decades after the fact type theme go ahead and watch the btk
02:23:41.540 breakdown i did also very interesting how they caught him through the use of dna all right let's get into
02:23:47.300 the trial okay the trial oh no no no no that back to no how you had it before just we'll keep playing
02:23:54.180 the video that we had okay and state killer hopefully he'll stay here until the day he dies
02:23:59.140 and case closed for a good call pause pause yeah show the screen there you go after 24 years of
02:24:06.020 looking for this guy and i got you that's next on 60 minutes also guys do me a favor like the video
02:24:13.460 subscribe to the channel margaret wardlow and jane carson sandler have waited 40 years to look the man who
02:24:20.260 raped them in the eyes today is that day but looking at the shuffling frail elderly man in orange
02:24:29.780 prison overalls it's hard to picture the golden state killer the monster behind at least 50 rapes
02:24:37.060 and 13 murders
02:24:41.060 seeing him in that orange jumpsuit it must have given you some pleasure pause yes i feel there's closure
02:24:48.820 he's probably like on that scooby-doo type shit i would have got away with it too if it wasn't for
02:24:52.420 you meddling dna websites what the man i know he's mad as hell bro what oh the actually um what the
02:25:01.140 go ahead put the camera on you yeah put you here we're gonna get here with the copper right yeah yeah
02:25:07.860 sorry guys we got to play around with it when you're using 60 minute type
02:25:10.580 shit actually when he got caught he got arrested you know what he said what
02:25:17.140 what's gonna happen to the rose in the oven wait that's what he said when he got arrested
02:25:21.780 what's gonna happen to the roasted oven those were his words like bro
02:25:24.900 he did not care he was like i got a roast in the oven well like like not all nonchalant like
02:25:32.420 well i got a roast in the oven do you imagine that all the police show up with the fbi and
02:25:36.980 they come and arrest your ass and oh bro i gotta i gotta get this pork done man come on yeah he
02:25:41.940 couldn't give three f's like he was already 73 i mean he lived his whole life happy with his daughters
02:25:49.060 and and granddaughters and everything and his wife and his wife exactly so who was the divorce lawyer
02:25:54.740 also exactly it brings us to the fact that um i cannot believe that she wouldn't suspect anything
02:26:02.660 they will say that this his wife didn't know anything about the the um the murders and the
02:26:08.580 rapes and everything so that's us yeah but even if she did she does isn't compelled to testify
02:26:14.580 because um spouses have something called privilege kind of like when you like attorney client privilege
02:26:19.380 with your lawyer you can confess your lawyer and say i did it um spouses also have the privilege of
02:26:24.180 they don't have to tell the police anything about their spouse yeah but also into the video that i
02:26:29.620 watched um when his wife actually started like becoming suspicious of everything you get a large
02:26:35.300 came out there you go when his wife become became suspicious he stopped and he went on the summer
02:26:40.420 vacation with his three daughters and everything and it would say that he stopped because he had
02:26:44.340 the daughters and he kind of regretted everything he did yeah crazy that he had three daughters
02:26:48.980 doing all this crazy shit and he also had sisters wow yeah and well he stopped because of that
02:26:58.420 he stopped because of that he stopped because he got married he got kids actually not because he got
02:27:02.900 married because he kept committing these crimes when he was married but when he got his first first
02:27:08.340 daughter or second i think that's when he stopped and then his his granddaughters and and daughters um
02:27:16.100 testified for him in the in court they said like he was a great dad he was a great grandpa and yeah they
02:27:22.260 had no clue yeah they literally had no clue yeah all right uh let's get back to it the trial i know where
02:27:29.860 he is now i've taken pictures of this building i know where he is and this is hopefully he'll stay
02:27:35.380 here till the day he dies for paul holes it's surreal to know the man he'd spent half his life searching
02:27:42.020 for is now behind bars after 24 years of looking for this guy and trying to identify him to see him
02:27:50.580 you know on the in the interview room on the computer monitor as i'm watching him just sit there looking
02:27:55.940 dejected was a reward in and of itself he's just thinking about that roast like damn yeah 42 years
02:28:03.220 after his first sadistic rape joseph d'angelo was finally arrested here at his home hiding in plain
02:28:09.860 sight among his suburban hunting grounds a retired father of three daughters he's been married to a
02:28:16.500 local divorce lawyer for all those years and ironically despite specializing in the trade and being
02:28:23.300 estranged from him since 1991 she has never divorced joseph you see the law here says communication
02:28:30.980 between spouses is privileged you can't be forced to testify against your husband or your wife in
02:28:37.300 court in short we may never know exactly what she knows pause and she probably won't say anything
02:28:45.380 because it'll make her look bad yeah she probably had her suspicions she probably that's an it's a lose
02:28:49.860 lose-lose scenario so she's never going to say anything well you know we were talking earlier
02:28:54.500 yeah that um he will leave like you will know because of his behavior that he was like an odd guy
02:29:01.780 yeah because of his like his girlfriend and we were talking later like she she kind of knew bailey
02:29:06.820 siren said in her video that this his this first girlfriend that he got and he was going to get
02:29:12.020 engaged with her bonnie um yeah bonnie um oh we have a video on that too if y'all want to really
02:29:17.460 see how crazy this guy is uh yeah we could you we can show it to them real quick let's go ahead
02:29:21.780 over his childhood yeah so let's check this out guys this is how crazy this dude was when it came to
02:29:27.460 he he was he really he was a misogynist for real uh hit uh he needed to get my book and stop being
02:29:34.020 and fucking angry at women hit hit the golden state killers uh it's the fourth tab fourth tab oh
02:29:38.660 there you go edgy she found it um this one not no the one before that okay that one go ahead play
02:29:44.020 this and listen large it his his ex-girlfriend state killer came and testified at his trial
02:29:50.500 good the former fiance of the golden state killer is speaking out to inside edition i got out of it
02:29:56.740 but to be engaged to him ever she was like yikes yeah like holy is uh a regret i'll always have bonnie
02:30:06.580 colwell was engaged to joseph d'angelo in the early 1970s when she was just 18. their engagement
02:30:13.140 announcement was carried in the local newspaper he was my first long-term relationship i didn't have
02:30:19.940 dating experience it started off very lighthearted but bonnie broke off the
02:30:26.180 engagement when she found out how scary d'angelo could be he did not take the rejection well he
02:30:31.940 actually and she didn't know about the murders at this point guys she just she just knew that
02:30:36.260 he was acting a little bit weird no but he wasn't he wasn't committing murders like him you know why
02:30:40.660 she uh no because remember they had they had been able to trace back that he had been linked to
02:30:45.220 burglary since 1968 all right right right okay but he hadn't killed people yet yes go ahead um so he
02:30:51.220 actually beat a dog to death in front of her yeah and she didn't cut it off because of that she cut
02:30:57.780 it off because he asked her to help him cheat on a test yeah not because of him beating a dog yeah
02:31:05.460 not because of him beating a dog to death but instead because he asked her for help cheating on the test
02:31:10.740 wow like like what like cheating on a test like in school that was the drill deal break yeah that
02:31:17.780 was college college yeah okay so that was a deal breaker that was not the dog exactly like not not
02:31:24.900 the dog what bro like just tell me i guess fuck that dog fuck that dog bro all right let's keep going
02:31:34.020 he tried to abduct her at gunpoint so he could take her to nevada and force her to marry him he
02:31:40.020 said get dressed we're going to reno we're going to get married tonight did you believe that he would
02:31:45.220 use that gun if you said no i didn't know now i know that he's more than capable of using a gun
02:31:52.580 to kill someone d'angelo's hatred of bonnie was unmistakable when he launched his monstrous
02:31:57.940 13 year long crime spree one of the victims says d'angelo repeatedly spat out i hate you bonnie
02:32:04.180 as he raped her take your mask off yesterday 50 years after she broke up bonnie revealed her face
02:32:11.700 and gave the monster a long steely glare she wasn't allowed to speak since she is technically not a
02:32:17.780 victim of d'angelo's crimes her friend d'angelo rape survivor jane carson sandler spoke on her behalf
02:32:24.660 even a gun pointed at her face could not make her choose you i don't think the man has a soul
02:32:31.540 that's a l can't even get a girlfriend with a gun to the face come on man this is crazy like the
02:32:37.860 victims and his ex-girlfriend just became friends yeah isn't that kind of weird like so weird like one
02:32:44.740 of them was having sex with him consensually and the other one wasn't that's kind of
02:32:47.780 weird like that's kind of crazy right they're like eskibol sisters on some weirdo time
02:32:54.340 shit sorry i can't see through my tears there was more anguish today in the courtroom
02:33:13.140 as the families of those d'angelo murdered faced him down today i am in the room with the pathetic
02:33:20.340 excuse of a man who will now finally be held accountable for his actions my dad lay at the
02:33:26.740 front door oh oh that's the daughter of the girl a girl that uh okay hit play hit play yeah that's
02:33:31.860 the daughter of the girl that got uh her father got killed in front of her people are saying and
02:33:35.700 canceled yeah yeah yeah yeah we're probably going to get canceled after that one this dude leading to
02:33:41.940 golden state killer was out here busting nuts and all over california man
02:33:45.300 oh my god you're going crazy bro it's got like the darkest joke all right let's go
02:34:05.060 and ended up dying on the way to the hospital d'angelo a former police officer will be sentenced
02:34:10.580 for 13 murders and 50 rapes on friday pause yeah he ended up pleading guilty to those and you know
02:34:17.460 it's it's interesting because i would say that girl right there probably had one of the worst
02:34:21.460 experiences because yeah she got great than everything but she watched her father die in
02:34:24.420 front of her so yeah um uh hit let's go back to the uh the the uh 60 minute one something this video
02:34:32.580 didn't go over um people like the other one is in second to last okay most people ask like why
02:34:39.380 people like this do stuff like that alongside a lot of other serial killers he had a very tough
02:34:46.260 childhood so his father was a sergeant in the u.s army so they moved around a lot so he had like no
02:34:51.860 friends and anything so he wasn't in any sports and said he would blow up animals for fun yeah
02:34:58.100 really that was his hobby yeah that was his hobby a lot of serial killers start off with hurting
02:35:02.260 animals yeah like that's that's how a lot of the jeffrey dommer kind of started that way like a lot
02:35:07.140 of these guys like start with hurting animals yeah and also um his sister animals sorry that this
02:35:13.220 his sister testified that he's that but he never confirmed this but he's that like apparently abused
02:35:19.060 him and he also was a witness when his seven-year-old when his seven-year-old sister was raped by two
02:35:27.060 our men in the warehouse oh like um when they were in germany uh-huh they were stationed somewhere
02:35:32.580 with his father and he witnessed her getting raped oh wow some of his father's like co-workers and
02:35:38.740 everything damn that's that's terrible man you will think that these things like actually
02:35:45.060 fucked him up a little bit yeah and he will become like you know all these um serial killers
02:35:51.300 and rapists tend to be fucked up by something in their childhood yeah they come with trauma and
02:35:56.340 everything yeah childhood yeah because there's always that age-old question are serial killers
02:36:00.260 born or made i would argue that they're mostly made you know most of them you will say that they
02:36:04.740 are sociopaths yeah um guys do me a favor by the way man i hope you guys are enjoying this broadcast
02:36:09.140 shout out to uh kim and angie with the extra insight you know doing some research with these little uh
02:36:13.860 little tidbits that i didn't even know but like the video guys subscribe to the channel we got 2 000
02:36:17.860 y'all watching right now um we haven't been kicked off yet thank god um so we got only 1.4
02:36:22.900 don't call it don't call it don't jigs it yeah well i mean i mean the 60 minutes crap um yeah
02:36:28.980 guys like the video subscribe to the channel if you haven't already we only got 1.4k likes but
02:36:32.260 there's 2 000 plus you guys watching over 2 000 y'all watching so go ahead and like the video please
02:36:35.940 let's uh finish up here i have said all through the years somebody knew who the rapist was oh
02:36:46.180 oh what happened oh you probably closed the tab accidentally here it's fine um share yeah just go
02:36:52.660 back to uh yeah well l man l angie we're gonna give her a big l it's fine actually don't put the
02:37:02.100 camera on kim and let her read the super chats while you fix that yeah enlarge her enlarger uh
02:37:08.420 yeah let's read the chats while angie does that go ahead go ahead kim read them cj says myron do you
02:37:12.980 have any tips on how i could get smarter any books you recommend yeah uh marion do you have
02:37:21.460 any tips on how i could get smarter any books you will recommend why women deserve less out on amazon
02:37:27.860 right now it's just one okay okay okay all right sorry about that okay what was that question again
02:37:42.020 sorry about that guys do you have any tips on how i can get smarter any books you recommend
02:37:46.340 uh man i mean i i got a bunch of books that i like i you know what i was reading recently that's
02:37:52.980 pretty good guys um the uh um it's the book by 50 cent hustler's ambition or something like that i
02:37:59.780 think that one was really good a lot of good tidbits in there um and then we got the documentary
02:38:05.540 back up guys here we'll put it back in a second pause it real quick yeah um obviously rich dad poor
02:38:10.180 dad um i like um unscripted by mj demarco that's a really good book but um uh you can't hurt me also
02:38:18.180 pretty good book um so yeah man you go go check out some of those books as far as like self-improvement
02:38:22.660 getting getting your mindset right big big mo says arepas originated in hate oh here we go you just
02:38:29.620 started a debate again like mo started this debate a few days ago between kim and i because you know
02:38:37.940 if you know colombian and venezuela it's unspoken beef between us yeah that's unspoken beef um we have
02:38:44.500 these big arguments on where arepas were originated when obviously everybody knows that arepas were
02:38:50.100 originated in venezuela so mo started this no now he's like turning it back to him like they were
02:38:56.900 originating hate which i saw him in the chat saying that he only said that um to get us mad but
02:39:05.540 yeah of course he did listen most of our problems were originated when colombia
02:39:17.620 this is what they this is what they say when they're coffee like they're doing this just to
02:39:21.460 cope you know that look at what you started mo all right let's get back to the gold estate
02:39:26.340 killer versus golden at it do you want to finish yeah yeah we'll hit uh we'll hit the um yeah we'll
02:39:31.140 go back to the documentary okay all right lead investigator carol daly still can't work out why
02:39:40.980 suspicions about d'angelo weren't raised earlier he had a different ski mask for almost every rape a
02:39:47.700 different jacket different shoes if he threw them away after each use um i have no idea what did he do with
02:39:54.980 everything he stole did he bring him into his house did he hide him somewhere if you were a partner
02:39:59.940 or a wife right you think you would have some sort of inclination that something was going on i would
02:40:05.220 think so but then um you know if he was out all hours of the night it would be basically what happened
02:40:11.300 was when the wife was questioned she said that she believed him every time he stepped out uh that he had
02:40:15.460 to go work or do something like that so yeah allegedly of course allegedly allegedly so let's
02:40:22.340 continue dying right yeah most favorite term divorce time or wondering you know what are you up to
02:40:29.540 the golden state killer case is unprecedented in many ways but above all for the way it was solved
02:40:37.060 perhaps it's a look into where future police investigation is heading and that could mean cold
02:40:43.060 cases all over the world could be reopened to make use of the ever-increasing wealth of dna
02:40:49.380 material stored on genealogy websites it's a much more precise tool to be able to allow law enforcement
02:40:58.180 to actually identify this guy that is committing these atrocities and we're not seeing anything about
02:41:03.620 who you are genetically we just know oh you shared a common ancestor many generations ago with our guy at some
02:41:11.940 time somewhere in a penitentiary here in california somebody will walk in to a jail cell and say
02:41:20.180 sorry i put you in there uncle joe i was just looking for some distant relatives in
02:41:25.940 norway or italy there there could be that scenario absolutely as it stands joseph d'angelo
02:41:34.260 yeah so he's still thinking about that roast i guess but yo
02:41:37.140 uh look at his face like man i just want some roast but yo for all them serial killers back in
02:41:42.580 the day y'all were busting nuts at the crime scene man they're coming for you out man next thing you
02:41:46.340 know fbi open up because they definitely watching now man you guys want to bust nuts all over the
02:41:52.420 place next thing you know your cousin wants to you know figure out who their estranged uncle is
02:41:57.380 next thing you find out there's a serial killer man so these serial killers are about to get all caught
02:42:01.860 man dude all right let's keep going will be tried for the 13 murders he is accused of the 50 rapes
02:42:10.580 fall outside the statute of limitations in california but for his victims including margaret wardlow
02:42:18.100 any justice is enough for the cruel man whose identity she thought she'd never know
02:42:24.260 was all right so yeah guys he ended up getting uh you know 12 consecutive life sentences without
02:42:31.460 the possibility of parole plus eight years and he basically pled guilty and he confessed to other
02:42:36.100 unsolved crimes as well and that was a part of his plea agreement because they were going to
02:42:39.460 originally push for the death penalty but he was able to avoid the death penalty by pleading guilty
02:42:43.620 and helping them solve other crimes and here's a list here um uh you want to tell them real quick
02:42:50.260 about this angie because you you found this list here i don't know how to pull it up oh oh here
02:42:55.460 yeah just share the screen okay here um here's the list you guys you can see all the victims some of
02:43:00.740 them are identified some of them are not and you can see the charges and the number of the victim
02:43:06.100 of court where he committed all these crimes yeah so and you can see like also the cases like by name
02:43:11.940 so visale ransacker original night stalker all these things yeah it's very detailed and this is on
02:43:18.660 the golden state killer.com so if you guys are you know one of these people that love stats and
02:43:22.100 numbers and likes to keep track of this stuff um don't worry someone already did it for you all
02:43:26.260 all the numbers of the people that he abused and killed and everything so yeah go ahead and feel free
02:43:32.900 to uh to check that out but uh yeah that case is crazy let's hit the rest of these chats and close out here
02:43:38.740 julio says oh honey angie is a bum big kim with spinach and kale now we need wife number one
02:43:48.820 say bbc gang we up so oh man that was easy and who said who said that put him on camera uh julio okay
02:43:57.460 what's uh what else uh chinese thank you bro for the donation what do you think is wrong with the border
02:44:03.220 crisis what do you think is wrong with the border crisis from chinese mss uh i mean anytime you open
02:44:16.980 up the borders it's always going to be a security threat man because you don't really know who's
02:44:20.260 coming through you know but i'm not surprised this happened when obama was in office too they
02:44:24.260 opened the borders like morons what else john moron says taking notes appreciate that my friend
02:44:31.220 smashing reality myron have you heard of the smiley face killer theory possible current zero
02:44:37.540 killer in the chicagoland and lake michigan area um if it's the guy that i'm thinking about the chicago
02:44:43.460 strangler they haven't caught him yet um i don't know if his nickname is a smiley but you might be
02:44:47.940 thinking about that guy let's keep going brandon hunter can we get a fed episode on guns and debunking
02:44:55.140 liberal gun control myths also blue-pilled conditioned men creating the increase in mass shooting
02:45:01.620 uh yeah i mean maybe maybe one day we might even talk about that on fresh and fit
02:45:06.020 but yeah definitely these you know the current sexual marketplace has to play
02:45:11.700 what the hell someone use your picture oh it's kim i guess it's you
02:45:19.460 yeah that's you so you might as well just read your own super chat
02:45:21.780 angie stop looking at my man myron like that i will secure the number ones
02:45:27.380 what the fuck bro yo what the hell man
02:45:33.540 you guys need to grow up god damn it
02:45:35.780 that's probably mo mo is we're creating all these
02:45:40.900 all this we'll try to start trouble man yeah
02:45:44.500 all right in the chat yo guys like the video bro like the video we got 1.5k likes but you but
02:45:49.780 only a two thousand y'all watch it man get get us a two thousand likes man for us giving you this
02:45:53.700 entertainment it's midnight right now on a sunday we're over here filming for y'all man so
02:45:58.100 going over time kim's face was hilarious what else we got kim that's it that's it cool um ladies
02:46:04.660 what are your final thoughts on this situation before we close out what's your what are your
02:46:08.820 final thoughts um it was a good case i've been wanting to cover it for a while yes it's interesting
02:46:13.540 thank you for helping out on it too thank you for having me um it was cool being here and doing it
02:46:20.180 live seeing everyone's comments and everything and it was great i want to give kim a shout out
02:46:26.340 because this is her first time doing this and she actually did pretty good i mean you were great sweetie
02:46:31.700 thank you a lot better than her first time don't worry we can actually understand you you just suck
02:46:37.540 it reading okay dude i cannot find the sounds anyways um yeah i was very very nervous the first
02:46:47.300 time i did it so you are and i mean you did pretty good i really liked you having it here thank you
02:46:53.060 very much my love cool uh guys i hope you enjoyed that one man with you guys been requesting this one
02:46:57.700 for months man so i'm happy that we're able to finally deliver it to you and we didn't get shut off
02:47:01.620 while using uh the documentaries yeah finally so you have something andrew yeah well i really like
02:47:07.140 this case you guys been asking this for like ages uh and we finally got it done so i'm really happy
02:47:14.420 for it um hopefully we'll do like the menendez brothers i'm really excited about that case also
02:47:19.860 i'll get myron to watch the documentaries oh yeah maybe we'll watch that tonight actually yes
02:47:24.580 so we can like cover it like next next live and i'm really excited for michael francisi here in the
02:47:29.940 studio next week yes we're gonna have him on wednesday guys it's gonna be great also um i'm
02:47:34.420 finishing uh why women deserve less pretty soon it's gonna be in espanol in espanish yes
02:47:39.860 can you say it please can you say it
02:47:48.580 she's so cute she has like this colombian accent it's so cute
02:47:52.980 so yeah you guys um it'll be done soon oh
02:47:56.180 shit okay yeah it is when you're ready
02:48:02.340 we have two more super chats oh two more okay yeah we can go ahead kim pull them up real fast
02:48:07.140 toxically masculine says myron can you break down how you use a va loan home loan to jump
02:48:13.060 start a real estate journey yeah just if you if you're a veteran bro you can use a va loan to get
02:48:19.220 a house pretty much with no money down so what i would suggest is uh get that first house and make
02:48:23.860 sure that it's a duplex or triplex because since you're not putting any money down what's going to
02:48:27.380 end up happening is your mortgage is going to be super high so to offset that high mortgage try to
02:48:31.540 get a duplex triplex or fourplex which you'll qualify for under a va loan get into the property
02:48:36.180 with little to no money down and have your tenants pay that high mortgage for you and then
02:48:42.100 will you ever do ed kemper yes we will okay angie has it on the list and just keeping a tally of
02:48:48.340 all the cases that we need to do for y'all yes so um go ahead you guys have been requesting loads of
02:48:54.180 cases also like cases from the mafia as well we're not gonna cover them all because some of them are
02:48:59.780 not like i mean i don't know how to say this but like some of them suck
02:49:06.580 yeah he said it not you yeah some of them really like are not necessary for like the stream so um we're
02:49:12.900 gonna just cover like the main ones that are very important for the italian they get the most requests
02:49:17.860 yes and also like they're very important for the italian mafia history so yes yes so we're gonna
02:49:22.900 do that and the cases that you have been requesting i've been piling them up in the list but yeah there's
02:49:28.820 a big list it's a big list because you guys keep asking same cases which are the highly requested that
02:49:35.220 are categorized as highly requested ones and also you you add new cases all the time so there is no way
02:49:40.660 we're gonna cover all of them if you don't like keep asking for the same ones so yeah if you guys we
02:49:45.860 typically go for the ones that you guys keep asking for over and over like this one golden
02:49:49.460 state killer yeah i've been asking for this one for a very long time so i was like we got to do it you
02:49:53.060 know what i mean so yeah it's okay to repeat yourself i mean well i remember one guy used to dm me every
02:49:57.460 single like damn near every week about the mafia which is why we covered it but um you know with
02:50:03.060 certain types of cases we're gonna do a series first like the mafia for example we got to do it right
02:50:07.220 we got to do all the families when i do the columbia cartels and pablo escobar i got to do it right
02:50:11.140 got to do the whole series when i do pop uh um you know um chapel guzman joaquin guzman you know
02:50:18.740 we're gonna have to do a whole series for that so um if we're gonna do big cases like that it's
02:50:22.980 gonna be a series gonna take time i'm gonna have to do a week by week so that's another reason two
02:50:26.180 guys were sometimes they're delayed but um yeah i think we're caught up on everything guys yo don't
02:50:31.540 forget to like the video guys subscribe to the channel if you haven't already uh we're gonna catch
02:50:35.220 you guys tomorrow i think we're gonna either have a debate with destiny and uh rollo and sartain
02:50:40.740 and sneaker or um we might have um a regular money monday i got to figure it out what we're
02:50:46.660 gonna do but that's kind of what it's looking like right now um and you got the stuff ready to go
02:50:51.700 yeah uh hang on i don't know how to do that no i already have it set up for you and i will also
02:50:55.380 under brand like the the case that we should cover as well man is i'm gonna say it hit live because you
02:51:00.740 you might forget it's island awareness because i've been having like maybe a lot of people asking for
02:51:05.220 that so the first female serial killer yes yeah yes all right okay cool all right well angie hit the
02:51:10.500 outro and we'll get out of here we'll catch you guys on the next episode of fed it man peace
02:51:15.460 okay is it here
02:51:23.780 i was a special agent with homelands