Fed Explains The I-70 Killer
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 41 minutes
Words per Minute
146.85678
Summary
On today's FedReacts, we cover the case of the I-70 Killer. This case is a case that has been around for a while now, but the details have only just started to come together.
Transcript
00:02:19.160
Today we're going to be covering the I-70 killer.
00:02:21.740
We've literally just got off the plane, started to delay.
00:02:51.740
Zodiac Killer is a pseudonym of an unidentified serial killer who operate in Northern California.
00:02:56.020
All these serial killers, guys, they really get off on getting attention from the media.
00:03:00.880
Many years, Jeffrey Epstein sexually exploited and abused dozens of minor girls at his home.
00:03:05.080
It was OJ working together to get Nicole killed.
00:03:08.280
We're going to go over his past, the gang time, so that we all make sense.
00:03:15.720
Guys, some of you are saying that the mic is low.
00:03:19.500
If it's better, I'm going to turn it up for you guys a little bit.
00:03:21.840
All right, so it should be better, and I'm moving it a bit closer to me.
00:03:41.380
Now you guys should be able to hear me a lot better.
00:04:10.780
Sorry about that, guys, and I'll turn it up just a little bit more for y'all.
00:04:21.220
I think Angie's mic is going to sound a lot better, probably.
00:04:26.900
We literally just got off from a plane, and we made it a little bit late, but we're here.
00:04:33.280
We didn't think we were going to do this part today, but we're here, finally.
00:04:48.220
We're literally watching the stuff on the plane.
00:04:51.780
And next week, we're probably going to cover the one that we had programmed for last week.
00:04:56.060
Like, we haven't been able to because we've been traveling a lot lately.
00:05:00.220
We went to Vegas, and we just came here from L.A.
00:05:11.940
As you guys know, it's a YouTube channel where they bring people of differing opinions,
00:05:15.820
and they have discussions on certain societal topics.
00:05:19.440
This one in particular was fat guys versus fit guys.
00:05:26.140
All I'm going to say is they're probably going to edit out a lot of the stuff that I said,
00:05:33.600
Everyone else was being all nice and politically correct, and I was like, bro, what the fuck
00:05:41.480
I was behind the scenes watching the stuff, and it was just so crazy.
00:05:50.880
I'm here celebrating some special holiday only for him.
00:06:03.800
For you guys, I always complain that I wear too much makeup.
00:06:14.460
We had a lot of fun, and I'm actually pretty excited because I have something cooking for
00:06:37.960
Angie's going to edit it, and we'll put it up for you guys on Locals.
00:06:40.420
It's like some of the stuff that we did while we were out there.
00:06:44.140
Obviously, it was a business trip, so we didn't have too much downtime like that.
00:06:50.560
You guys know how it is when it comes to LA for me.
00:06:52.180
I just kind of just go, get the work done, and then get out of there.
00:06:56.440
We're launching right now, by the way, on Rumble, YouTube, Twitch, Twitter.
00:07:02.380
I don't know why the YouTube numbers are showing.
00:07:11.660
I was going to stay longer in LA, but as you guys know, we got the live show this Friday.
00:07:31.340
Can someone in the chat put the link to the live show in the chat for me, please?
00:07:41.940
This is going to be a meet and greet with them.
00:07:50.100
It was overwhelming to see how many people recognize Maren in LA and show support and love.
00:07:57.800
It's crazy to see that a lot of you actually stand by us after, you know, all the adversities that come and the controversy and everything.
00:08:09.680
And shout-out to the guys that help us out behind the scenes, everybody that does the videos, the clips.
00:08:15.980
Shout-out to Robert that helps me with the shorts for FedReacts.
00:08:20.260
He's always, like, there, like, sending me stuff.
00:08:23.020
Shout-out to the people that, yeah, do the shorts.
00:08:28.240
Shout-out for all the support, people that are always with us.
00:08:36.200
We're nothing without y'all, and we really appreciate it.
00:08:44.440
We're going to give you guys a full week of Fresh Fit Monday and Wednesday, so don't worry.
00:08:47.420
I came back early because I want to make sure that we get that content out to you guys.
00:08:52.100
And we'll probably go back out to L.A. again in May and do some stuff out there.
00:08:59.780
I'll read the chats real quick, then we'll get into this.
00:09:05.880
Like, I'm telling you, we landed, and then we just walked right in here.
00:09:09.120
And then I just started setting up the stream, and now we're live.
00:09:16.840
Hell, I even took a taxi instead of Uber because I knew it would be faster.
00:09:19.220
So, and I apologized last week that we didn't do a show because I felt really sick.
00:09:23.960
Because, obviously, we had been coming from L.A.
00:09:29.080
Let's go ahead and do a show right when we land.
00:09:38.600
Chains of Life says, hey, Myron, good to see you back on streaming FedReacts.
00:09:41.860
Also, did you do a pad with Rampage Jackson when you was in L.A.?
00:09:45.660
Not on this go-around, but that's why we're going to go back.
00:09:56.280
Modern Americans, so fat, the only time they burn calories is when they overcook food.
00:10:03.060
And then we got Punisher541 goes, suggest, with everything going on in the world currently,
00:10:06.880
I think it's time to bring back Andrew Bustamante.
00:10:09.980
Yeah, I could hit him out and see what he's doing.
00:10:12.100
Next time a girl says, I don't like when guys have other girls, when you go to the store
00:10:16.880
and see a cart by itself and nobody grabs it, you don't even check it.
00:10:30.420
So this case, the reason why I'm doing this case, actually, is I mentioned this killer
00:10:40.240
Oh, because I talked about how women, I talked about men being protectors and how men are aware
00:10:47.220
of certain things that women might not necessarily be aware of and how you need to be careful.
00:10:51.680
And this guy came to mind because he still wasn't caught because one of the girls I was
00:10:55.040
talking to was from the Midwest, and that's where this guy's from.
00:10:58.340
Yeah, that was one of the girls in the panel that was from Indiana.
00:11:04.560
It's like a live serial killer right now and active in your area.
00:11:24.780
The I-70 killer is an unidentified American serial killer who is known to have killed
00:11:28.060
six store clerks in the Midwest in the spring of 1992.
00:11:32.000
His nickname derives from the fact that several of the stores in which his victims worked were
00:11:41.240
Then as you guys can see here, the sketch, right?
00:11:44.980
And his nickname derives from the fact that several of the stores in which the victim worked
00:11:51.180
were located a few miles off Interstate 70, right?
00:11:54.000
And Interstate 70, guys, if you look at it, let's see here where it runs.
00:12:00.120
And just so you guys know, because we got a lot of foreign people that watch the show,
00:12:04.680
When a number is even, guys, it means east to west.
00:12:09.500
So, like, you look at Interstate 95, very popular highway, right?
00:12:13.120
It starts up here in, like, Vermont, I think, if I'm not mistaken.
00:12:16.860
And it starts in this area, Vermont or, um, uh, or, uh, fuck.
00:12:27.180
I think it starts in Burlington, Vermont, if I'm not mistaken.
00:12:31.620
It goes through, you know, Connecticut into New York, into Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, D.C.
00:12:38.780
You know, it goes all the way down through Jacksonville, all the way down to Miami.
00:12:42.820
It actually ends a few miles from here, Interstate 95, right?
00:12:45.760
And it's an odd number, so what does that mean?
00:12:48.660
But then you look at Interstate 70, where does it go?
00:12:51.780
It starts in Baltimore and ends in, where the fuck is this?
00:13:00.980
It looks like it ends in the middle of nowhere.
00:13:25.660
Okay, so, yeah, it goes through a bunch of the major cities, right?
00:13:31.980
And just so you guys know, um, a lot of people don't talk about this.
00:13:37.080
Interstate highways are a big, um, and I think, honestly, in the United States, I think that's
00:13:42.460
a big reason why, um, serial killers are, we have the most here in the United States.
00:13:47.800
I think the interstate highway system absolutely facilitated the flourish, flourishment, the
00:13:56.520
And it's because, since we live in a country where there's multiple states with their own
00:13:59.720
jurisdictions, own county sheriffs, own city police departments, own state police, et cetera,
00:14:03.880
um, and we saw this with Ted Bundy, it was very difficult for law enforcement to coordinate
00:14:09.360
efforts, right, and unite to catch these individuals.
00:14:13.820
And then when you add in the fact that you have, um, interstate highways, which allows
00:14:18.500
people to basically quickly get out of a jurisdiction into another one, um, it literally made the,
00:14:25.840
You look at someone like a Ted Bundy, um, a Samuel Little, a lot of these serial killers that
00:14:32.020
They lived on the interstates because they were able to quickly travel to different jurisdictions.
00:14:36.840
And guys, keep in mind, this is before the advent of computers, DNA, law enforcement working
00:14:42.800
Now, you know, law enforcement is able to get together and share notes and everything else
00:14:46.720
But if we want to talk about the heyday of serial killers, I would say the sixties and
00:14:51.240
seventies by far were the two decades when serial killers were going crazy.
00:14:56.140
All the legends, hate to say it like that, but all the legendary serial killers that you guys
00:15:00.380
read about, you know, your Ted Bunnies, your John Wayne Gacy's, Night Stalkers, et cetera.
00:15:05.920
Um, they all pretty much operated mostly between the sixties into the early eighties.
00:15:12.100
And then the seventies, I would say it was like that decade was like the golden era.
00:15:15.460
You know, that's like when they were really going wild, wild, man.
00:15:18.300
The seventies were just a dark time in general.
00:15:20.200
Um, if you look at like how much organized crime was going on between the mafia, then you
00:15:24.700
had all these serial killers going around, et cetera.
00:15:26.480
And DNA wasn't a thing you had the, uh, who else was running rampant at this time?
00:15:31.720
Um, BTK, like everybody, Zodiac killer, like all these guys were going crazy.
00:15:37.520
All the, all the most famous serial killers were operating in the seventies.
00:15:41.760
So, um, anyway, but yeah, here's interstate 70 right here.
00:15:46.180
And a lot of people don't talk about how the interstate highway system in the United States
00:15:49.120
absolutely facilitated the, um, success of a lot of these serial killers, especially Ted Bundy.
00:15:57.260
Um, you can watch my Ted Bundy episode and I go into this in more detail, but he started
00:16:02.980
And then he would go down into Oregon, into Utah, Colorado, and he killed women from like
00:16:08.940
seven or eight or like, I think like between seven to 10 different States, he killed women.
00:16:15.740
And at the time there wasn't like a infrastructure of a central database for law enforcement to
00:16:22.300
So they kind of had to like string it together and kind of figure it out.
00:16:26.080
Like, yo, we got a crazy serial killer that's attacking the same type of women in multiple
00:16:31.760
And that bunny, incredibly enough, was able to escape prison two different times in two
00:16:37.700
And, um, he escaped in Utah and I think he escaped in Colorado.
00:16:41.040
Um, and then he made his way all the way down here to Florida.
00:16:49.320
Um, and that's where he eventually ended up getting caught.
00:16:57.920
Um, interstate highways absolutely facilitated the, uh, blossoming of serial killers going
00:17:04.580
Um, and this guy's no different, obviously on a small, a little bit of a smaller scale,
00:17:12.700
So we got a documentary here that we're going to react to guys that we're going to watch.
00:17:25.480
He says, Marlon, have you all done stream about JFK and the boys and everything we need to
00:17:31.020
Yo, so funny enough, guys, I've been doing a lot of JFK research the past like two days.
00:17:39.700
Um, I've been listening to both the official version from the Warren commission.
00:17:44.620
And then I've also been listening to all the different perspectives, um, with whether
00:17:49.780
it's the grassy nose shooters, um, the, um, connection to a certain state, the homeland
00:17:59.160
Um, the, the CIA, Angleton, Dulles, like everything, man, I've been, I've been, uh, researching
00:18:07.000
Um, definitely going to bring Ryan on at some point to talk about this, but you can't talk
00:18:16.960
I think it's something that's kind of forgotten in American history nowadays.
00:18:20.560
A lot of these Gen Zers don't even know or remember who JFK was or RFK for that matter.
00:18:26.320
Um, you know, they might know, oh, RFK Jr., but they don't know who the senior is, who
00:18:31.440
Um, they don't know that he was the attorney general.
00:18:33.080
They don't know that, um, you know, Linda B. Johnson was the vice president.
00:18:36.280
He assumed office after, you know, JFK was assassinated.
00:18:39.540
They don't know that Linda B. Johnson also was a hardcore supporter of, you know, them
00:18:47.280
So, um, definitely going to have, uh, that pod.
00:18:52.260
It probably won't be on Fresh to Fit for obvious reasons.
00:18:54.820
Uh, it'll have to be on, uh, well, it'll be on Fresh to Fit.
00:19:04.520
And we're going to examine all, all the stuff, but I mean, I don't know.
00:19:08.520
I, I, I want to do it, but it doesn't seem like there, there's a lot of interest for it
00:19:12.900
Maybe I'm just a history buff loser and I enjoy this stuff, but I think it's important because
00:19:21.500
Has it been just the, the only one that has been assassinated?
00:19:25.760
I think there was like two other presidents that were, um, assassinated.
00:19:29.600
Um, but JFK obviously is the, is the most recent in, in like modern history, right?
00:19:34.560
Like, you know, um, yeah, um, Lincoln got assassinated, shot him in the back of the head
00:19:41.440
while he was watching like an opera or some shit like that.
00:19:44.560
I think it was Booths, was it the person that killed him?
00:19:47.660
Um, and then I think McKinley also was, uh, assassinated as well.
00:19:52.080
But yeah, I, I definitely want to do the JFK thing because, um, you know, there, there,
00:19:57.120
there's a whole side to JFK that people don't talk about as to like, like people always
00:20:02.600
talk about, oh, he got assassinated, but no one ever talks about the why.
00:20:05.620
And when you talk about the why, the dots start to connect why they wanted that man
00:20:18.000
Oh yeah, guys, uh, link to the event is pinned in the chat.
00:20:22.640
Um, let's drop it on the rumble chat for them too, Angie.
00:20:25.120
Um, if you guys want to come to a live event, meet fresh, meet me and fresh, uh, general admission
00:20:33.040
We got the yacht party as well after the event.
00:20:48.560
We got a documentary that we're going to play guys.
00:20:57.600
We'll play as the video is only 26 minutes guys.
00:20:59.860
So, um, we're going to go ahead and, uh, hold on.
00:21:07.860
We're going to go ahead and enlarge it here and play it at the speed of 1.25.
00:21:18.140
And then we're going to go ahead and put 1.25 for y'all.
00:21:26.260
We're going to like pause it, give commentary and stuff like that.
00:21:28.660
In 1992, a man with dull red hair and sleepy eyes stalked retail stores along Interstate
00:21:41.260
He selected businesses that were under-trafficked and understaffed.
00:21:45.380
He surveyed shops from the parking lot, looking through plate glass to determine if the potential
00:21:52.280
He would pretend to be a customer, casing the interior of the building to determine if
00:22:06.960
Then, he would ambush his victim with a .22 caliber pistol, escorting them out of view and
00:22:12.760
executing them with a shot to the back of the head.
00:22:15.660
He came to be known as the I-70 killer, claiming six victims within a month.
00:22:33.920
Some speculate he is connected to another spree of killings in Texas, where he is known
00:22:39.720
At the time of investigation, some detectives described these cases as going cold as soon
00:22:47.960
They were left with few leads and even fewer suspects.
00:22:51.840
These cases have remained unsolved for decades.
00:22:55.540
To this day, the I-70 killer has not been caught.
00:22:59.720
The St. Charles Police Department in Missouri renewed their investigation efforts in October
00:23:10.260
Then when they reunited the task force, or is this one in here?
00:23:18.100
We'll pull the footage for y'all for you real quick, because you had a link that showed
00:23:29.440
...forced between multiple state and federal agencies.
00:23:31.980
They plan to re-examine thousands of case files tucked into ten cabinet drawers within the walls
00:23:39.580
They will review all the evidence they have on the six murders that occurred in 1992 along
00:23:44.380
Interstate 70, and the three murders that occurred in 1993 along Interstate 35.
00:23:49.740
The story of the I-70 killer begins with Robin Foldauer.
00:24:02.120
And this happens often when you got, like, big cases like this.
00:24:04.960
We're going to start with developments with the I-70, I-35 serial killer.
00:24:09.560
Thirty years in the making, there is movement in that case tonight.
00:24:13.560
As we join you, what's developing is perhaps the most dramatic advancement in the serial
00:24:20.540
And as you may recall, the I-70, I-35 killers' trails spanned the Midwest, including a murder
00:24:27.240
Now, multiple sources tell News 4 another unsolved case nearly 10 years later could be added to
00:24:35.200
This video, take a look, from 20 years ago in Terre Haute, is the first time eyes in the
00:24:41.660
And that man you see there in the black, police believe, might be our serial killer.
00:24:46.600
News 4, Susan Elcorey is breaking down the newest developments.
00:24:50.620
Well, today investigators took a strong line, saying they really believe they're going to
00:24:56.500
And they're questioning if this Terre Haute murder case will be part of the connection
00:25:03.200
They say they found similarities between the I-70.
00:25:05.900
He does kind of look like the guy in the photo, in the picture.
00:25:08.700
The I-70 killings and the murder of Billy Brothman, which happened almost...
00:25:13.440
And a similar M.O. where he's going after small businesses that are, you know, not really
00:25:20.360
I sent you the updated picture that the police did with like...
00:25:25.700
Brothman was working at a convenience store when he was shot.
00:25:30.080
As it turns out, that store is seven blocks from one of the 1992 murders linked to the
00:25:37.400
Investigators said they had a person of interest but wouldn't give more details, saying they
00:25:48.900
So just to bring closure for those families to know what happened and know who was responsible
00:25:54.540
for taking their loved one's life would be tremendous.
00:25:58.680
This comes days after the FBI and several police departments formed a task force to take
00:26:06.200
Investigators are also showing renewed hope that DNA evidence will help.
00:26:11.460
They're hoping to compare evidence that each department has, and in the meantime, they
00:26:15.720
are asking for people to keep calling in tips that they hope will be key to closing this
00:26:26.920
I adjusted the volume so that when you guys, when we play the video, it won't be too bad.
00:26:31.840
I'll just turn it down on the YouTube side and it'll be fine.
00:26:36.220
But the documentary, the documentary, let me know if the documentary volume is bad.
00:26:40.600
Give me one's in the chat if it's, um, if it's bad, I'm sorry.
00:27:01.980
On April 8th, 1992, Robin Foldauer, age 26, had to cover the afternoon shift at Payless
00:27:12.920
Shoe Source when one of her employees called off.
00:27:15.360
She was the manager and the store only had two full-time employees with several part-timers.
00:27:20.960
The limited staff meant this wasn't her first time.
00:27:29.900
...being called in, and she would likely have to work the store alone.
00:27:33.900
Located on the outer edge of Indianapolis at 7325 Pendleton Pike, the store had lacked
00:28:00.020
So we'll go ahead and we'll pull this up just to show you guys what it looks like now.
00:28:26.020
So it's a Prime Care Family Dental now is what it is.
00:28:34.020
The only precaution was a buzzer that notified employees when someone entered the store.
00:28:38.020
Yeah, I remember that at the Payless stores where they would only hear when you come in
00:28:42.020
because, I mean, and here's the reality too, guys.
00:28:46.020
You're not going to have, you know, advanced surveillance cameras for low-cost items at Payless.
00:29:08.020
What was that address you gave me in another one?
00:29:10.020
I, that's one I found it on another website, but it's, I don't know why this thing is,
00:29:26.020
Okay, there's batteries and bulbs, it looks like.
00:29:50.020
...are uncertain of the specifics of that afternoon.
00:29:54.020
They would later review transactions conducted at the register to determine a timeline.
00:29:58.020
The last purchase occurred at 1.12 p.m., including one pair of men's shoes and one pair of women's shoes.
00:30:06.020
Police believe that shortly after, Foldauer was escorted to the storage room.
00:30:17.020
There, she was fatally shot with a .22 caliber pistol.
00:30:21.020
The perpetrator emptied the register and left through the rear exit.
00:30:25.020
In the passing hours, potential customers arrived, and seeing the store unattended, they stole shoes, unaware of Foldauer in the back of the store.
00:30:32.020
It wasn't until a worker from the Speedway gas station next door arrived that Foldauer was finally discovered.
00:30:38.020
Although the register likely couldn't have contained more than a few hundred...
00:30:43.020
Like, they went in there and stole instead of checking to see where the employee was.
00:30:49.020
You saw the store empty and they were like, yeah.
00:30:57.020
The operating theory for police was that this was a robbery gone wrong.
00:31:05.020
Next door at the Speedway station, customers still can't believe someone was killed just next door.
00:31:25.020
And now, now it's a batteries and, but what the hell do they sell at batteries and bulbs?
00:31:56.020
I remember it used to get made fun of if you had, if you fucking.
00:32:33.020
Payless is a privately held company owned by Blum Capital, Golden State Capital.
00:32:44.020
Payless emerged from bankruptcy on January 16th.
00:32:47.020
You know, and it's funny too, because anytime you went to those stores, it was always empty
00:32:51.020
and there would never be more than like two employees there.
00:32:57.020
I remember all my sandals from there, I would walk like two.
00:33:03.020
Like my mom used to go to Panama to buy for the Black Friday and then go back to Venezuela.
00:33:10.020
Everybody used to do that back in the early 2000s or late 2000s.
00:33:15.020
So it looks like they still exist, but like they're, yeah.
00:33:21.020
I can't, I haven't seen a Payless in years, man.
00:33:26.020
Customers still can't believe someone was killed just next door.
00:33:30.020
Police are sticking with the theory the motive for the killing is robbery.
00:33:34.020
Fuldauer, who was working alone at the time of the killing, died of a gunshot to the head.
00:33:38.020
Patricia Smith and Patricia Majors, ages 23 and 32, worked at La Bride d'Elegance,
00:33:58.020
a bridal shop at 4613 East Kellogg in Wichita, Kansas.
00:34:03.020
Majors owned the store with her husband and Smith was a part-time employee who was working
00:34:07.020
as a bridal consultant while pursuing a nursing degree.
00:34:10.020
The store was scheduled to close at 6pm that night.
00:34:13.020
However, the two women planned to stay late for a male customer who needed to pick up a
00:34:19.020
Smith's husband, Norman, waited up for her, and when she didn't return home after work
00:34:28.020
Police believe the two women opened the doors to a man thinking their customer had arrived.
00:34:33.020
Tragically, it was the I-70 killer, armed with a .22 caliber semi-automatic firearm.
00:34:39.020
He led the two women to the back of the bridal shop to a room that served as a work area and office.
00:34:45.020
It was there that he shot both women in the back of the head.
00:35:00.020
When I put in that address, it doesn't even really, like, come up.
00:35:03.020
But this might have been where this happened, which it looks like it might be a car dealership now.
00:35:16.020
One of these stores is probably what used to be a bridal shop.
00:35:20.020
Which, because it used to be, I remember as a kid, like, when you went to these bridal shops, they'd be huge.
00:35:29.020
I would think to myself, like, are all wedding dresses the same?
00:35:34.020
So, they'd have these things in fucking warehouses, man.
00:35:36.020
So, it's probably one of these buildings here from before.
00:35:44.020
Oh, we'll talk before that department stores my clothes in the near future.
00:35:50.020
And then you can see Interstate Highway 35 right here.
00:35:53.020
Which, as you guys know, I tell you guys all the time, I know that Interstate Highway 35 very well.
00:35:58.020
Because when I used to work in Laredo, Texas, that was one of the main corridors for drug trafficking on the southwest border.
00:36:07.020
And as he was fleeing the store, he encountered the male customer who had arrived to pick up his cummerbund.
00:36:14.020
But in an act of defiance, the man refused and fled the scene.
00:36:19.020
This witness would later provide police with a sketch of the perpetrator.
00:36:23.020
He was described as 5'7 and 150 pounds with dull red hair cut short.
00:36:30.020
The police matched ballistics at the scene with those found with Foldauer.
00:36:34.020
And law enforcement knew they were dealing with a serial killer.
00:36:37.020
Michael McCown, age 40, was working at Sylvia's Ceramic Shoppe on April 27, 1992.
00:36:56.020
Located at 2615 South 3rd Street in Terre Haute, Indiana, the store belonged to McCown's mother.
00:37:05.020
With no video evidence or witnesses, detectives have tried to recreate the chain of events.
00:37:15.020
No, I mean, it's just that it says that it was a store that belonged to his mother.
00:37:19.020
So there wasn't really, like, an address out there.
00:37:40.020
It says in here that it's now, like, a vape smoke shop.
00:38:10.020
Yeah, it says in here that the retail complex where the ceramic shop was, it's now a vape shop.
00:38:21.020
It's surrounded by fast food complexes and hotels.
00:39:16.020
Because if that's 2629, you know it's going to be on this side of the road.
00:40:04.020
It's 15 South 3rd Street in Terre Haute, Indiana.
00:40:10.020
With no video evidence or witnesses, detectives have tried to recreate the chain of events.
00:40:15.020
It's likely that McCown was directed by a customer to retrieve a small, white ceramic house on a shelf behind the counter.
00:40:23.020
When he turned to grab the house, he was shot at close range to the back of the head.
00:40:28.020
Some sources cite gunpowder stippling at the wound, suggesting the barrel of the gun was less than four inches away.
00:40:35.020
The register had not been emptied, and $15 remained in McCown's pocket.
00:40:42.020
The slaying of Michael McCown differed in many ways from the modus operandi of the I-70 killer.
00:40:48.020
McCown was the sole male victim, and he was not escorted to a back room.
00:40:53.020
It has been widely reported that McCown had long hair and an earring at the time of death, suggesting he could have been mistaken for a woman.
00:41:03.020
One of his sisters revealed that McCown had short hair at the time of the killing.
00:41:07.020
Additionally, at such close range, it would be difficult to mistake his gender.
00:41:12.020
These differences suggest the I-70 killer could have been more opportunistic than originally profiled.
00:41:17.020
McCown may not have fit the preferred victim profile, but he was slain anyway.
00:41:23.020
It may also suggest that the I-70 killer was less spontaneous than originally believed.
00:41:28.020
It's important to note that Sylvia's store was typically operated by McCown's mother.
00:41:33.020
Perhaps the store had been surveyed at a previous date, identifying McCown's mother as a preferred victim, only to discover her son at the register on April 27th.
00:41:43.020
I think that's the more plausible situation, is that, because when you're going to look at the other victims here, it's obvious that this guy did his homework and would stalk it and kind of like, you know, do his recon and figure out, okay, this place is empty between these hours.
00:42:05.020
Typically, this employee is working these hours.
00:42:07.020
And I think in this situation, it was just a bad call.
00:42:09.020
He will usually come after lunch time and closing time.
00:42:25.020
So, yeah, that one I think it was just bad timing.
00:42:28.020
Like, he thought the mom was going to be there working and it was the son.
00:42:42.020
Nancy Kitzmiller, age 24, managed Boot Village, a Western footwear shop in St. Charles, Missouri, just outside St. Louis.
00:42:50.020
She had recently graduated with a degree in geography from Oklahoma State, and she was
00:42:55.020
weeks away from starting a job with the Defense Mapping Agency.
00:42:59.020
She was filling in for an employee who had called off, and her shift started at noon that
00:43:04.020
The store was located between a beauty salon and veteran.
00:43:08.020
That one, I think I found like a police report, kind of like a police report, because this
00:43:12.020
was also in the 90s, and it's like on the Charles, like department, police department
00:43:23.020
And there is the address of the place where she died.
00:43:25.020
So, let's pull it up real quick and look at it.
00:43:36.020
So, this girl obviously had a future ahead of her.
00:43:41.020
The St. Charles, um, 413-1992 report number 207 victim, Nancy Christine Ketz-Miller.
00:43:48.020
Um, the St. Charles Police Department requested the assistance of the major case squad in investigating
00:43:53.020
the death of Nancy Ketz-Miller, age 24, at approximately 2.30 p.m.
00:43:56.020
Police officers responded to Boot Village, right after lunchtime, as we said before.
00:44:02.020
2079 Zumbilli Road, for a report of a possible homicide of the store, uh, sales clerk.
00:44:09.020
They, uh, there, they located employee Nancy Ketz-Miller in the rear office of the business.
00:44:14.020
She had a shot and was pronounced dead on the scene.
00:44:17.020
It is believed Nancy may have been a victim of the I-70 serial killer.
00:44:35.020
But what we'll do is we'll just go to the main road right here.
00:44:42.020
But the location, because if you go back, it's here.
00:44:52.020
But the location, because if you go back, it's here.
00:45:28.500
And once again, another, you know, plaza type situation, right?
00:45:35.460
Yeah, it probably didn't look like this in the 90s.
00:45:52.980
Witnesses spotted Kitzmiller helping a customer at 2.30 p.m.
00:46:00.340
Just, obviously, a guy who went through a facelift, you can tell from the modern building.
00:46:04.580
They described him as medium height with dull red hair.
00:46:07.380
Only minutes later, she was found by customers in the office at the rear of the store.
00:46:15.500
A small amount of cash was missing from the register, but the perpetrator had already fled the scene.
00:46:20.940
Yeah, so that tells you that this guy is doing this more for thrills and for fun versus, like, actually getting money.
00:46:28.020
Because if you're trying to get a big hit, you're not going to go, when you look at, like, sophisticated bank robbers and everything else like that, guys, like, trying to actually get a big lick, they're not robbing little stores like this.
00:46:37.440
They're going after, well, they could go all out like the L.A. Bank of America robbers.
00:46:44.060
We covered that one, too, by the way, guys, if you guys are wondering.
00:46:47.800
They went in with a bunch of armor and stuff, or the, I think, the 1996 or 1997.
00:46:55.760
Bank robbery where they stole, like, $18 million or something like that.
00:46:58.300
Still one of the biggest bank robberies in U.S. history.
00:47:06.500
Kevin Terrell, crazy how they use the same gun and ammunition and cannot find the purchase history of that caliber of weapon in these states.
00:47:13.480
So, remember, when you do an ATF e-trace, guys, all they're doing is they're, all they do when they do that, guys, is they find out where the weapon was originally purchased first.
00:47:25.700
And then from there, you got to do your homework and see if it was sold or whatever it may be like that.
00:47:29.820
So, it's not as easy to trace a weapon as you guys think it is because it's only going to take you to the original purchaser.
00:47:36.340
You don't know if that person got its bill of sale and they sold it to someone or switched hands again.
00:47:42.260
So, Sted Durant goes, when going through Fed background, will they look at all texts and DMs?
00:47:51.620
Big Disqualifier, PS, can you do a Fed Disqualifier show?
00:47:54.880
Yes, I can actually do a Fed Disqualifier show.
00:47:57.300
No, they're not going to go through your messages.
00:47:59.160
I mean, like, I mean, don't, unless you show it to them and shit.
00:48:03.320
But, yeah, bro, that might be not good for you if you've, you know, been tricking on chicks and shit like that.
00:48:12.840
Because that could be looked at as prostitution.
00:48:19.080
And, you know, hopefully it wasn't too long ago.
00:48:21.920
And then if they bring it up on a polygraph or anything like that, you know, obviously you don't want to lie.
00:48:27.820
Because if you get, the biggest thing is if you get caught on a lie, that's when you get hit with lack of candor and you'll be fucked.
00:48:34.240
So, and make sure whatever you put on your, I don't know if you're going for a police department or federal, but if you're going federal, you're going to have to do your SF-86 and then your personal history background.
00:48:43.420
You don't want anything in there to not match what you tell background investigators.
00:48:47.680
That's what will fuck you up when there's a discrepancy.
00:48:52.840
George Gaten goes, what happened to 9-11 stream?
00:48:57.320
Also, I've watched you guys keep up with the amazing work.
00:49:05.440
The ones that we did with Ryan Dawson covering it, we did like a three or four-part series on 9-11.
00:49:23.880
Kevin Terrell says, LMAO, you went to that Waxing Museum.
00:49:26.220
Yo, y'all could have stopped by my bar while in LA.
00:49:40.740
The Punisher 541 says, Martin, you should cover the Springwood Slasher.
00:49:49.820
He has had multiple movies made about him, Wildcase.
00:50:00.340
And DoakshiPoster69 says, I wonder why they never caught that cherry hot killer that they caught on camera.
00:50:10.200
Did you just give me a link for fucking Freddy Krueger?
00:50:25.440
DoakshiPoster69 says, I wonder why they never caught that cherry hot killer that they caught on camera.
00:50:34.900
That's why people are so mad, because there is an actual footage from this guy from 2001 where you can see clearly his face.
00:50:46.600
You can see clearly his face and everything, and the police hasn't caught him yet.
00:51:03.240
Kevin Terrell says, you guys didn't see my serial killer rumble donation?
00:51:18.580
On May 7th, 1992, Sarah Blessing, age 37, opened the store of many colors.
00:51:26.160
1992, May 7th, that's almost, that's 32 years, it's going to be 32 years in like a week or two.
00:51:44.840
Around noon, the New Age shop was located in Raytown, Missouri, near Kansas City, in the Woodson Village Shopping Center.
00:51:52.160
It was typically worked by only one employee at a time.
00:51:56.360
At 6.15 p.m., Tim Hickman, the owner of a VHS store that neighbors the store of many colors,
00:52:06.700
A bunch of people in this chapter, I don't even know what VHS is.
00:52:09.480
Spotted an unidentified man loitering in the area.
00:52:13.160
He was described as having dark hair, wearing a tweed jacket that would have been too warm for the weather.
00:52:18.160
Hickman later heard a pop through the cinder block walls that separated their stores.
00:52:23.780
He spotted the man exiting the store of many colors until he rounded the-
00:52:42.260
The guy didn't put it, but we got the address here for y'all.
00:53:11.180
Every single time, this guy's attacking small businesses located in strip malls, and then I guarantee you-
00:53:18.480
And then also, he would, like, he probably had his car parked out, and he could just, like, kind of just casually stroll.
00:53:26.000
But wait, it makes me wonder, like, having, like, weapons, like, guns and stuff back then was-
00:53:48.080
So civilians can just go to a store since forever and just buy, like, a weapon?
00:53:53.780
States, obviously, restricted to a degree, but look, right here.
00:54:01.500
No wonder why everybody's killing each other here.
00:54:04.080
A well-regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.
00:54:13.420
For all the foreigners out there, this is when people say the Second Amendment, this is what they're talking about.
00:54:17.840
So, yeah, obviously, states restrict it, but the Midwest in general is pretty pro-gun.
00:54:23.040
I am surprised because in my country, it's not legal to have guns unless you have a license, unless you have, like, law enforcement-
00:54:35.180
You cannot be a civilian and have a gun in your house.
00:54:41.420
Even though, yeah, and it's crazy because in my country, the criminal, yeah, like, delinquency is big.
00:54:53.520
Yeah, I think it's good for private citizens to have guns because, honestly, the police and the military can't always save you.
00:54:59.720
So, you know, obviously, you're going to have criminals having guns.
00:55:03.160
But the worst thing you want is only criminals and police having guns, right?
00:55:07.640
Because the criminals are going to get the guns anyway for obvious reasons.
00:55:11.480
So I think, you know, obviously, people having guns, private citizens is important.
00:55:15.960
But, yeah, a lot of these states that this guy was operating in are probably, like, pro-gun states.
00:55:29.440
Hickman found Blessing face down in the back room of her store with a gunshot wound to the head.
00:55:34.180
His eyewitness account gave police another opportunity to create a sketch, hoping it would drum up more.
00:55:40.060
So, you guys can see here, similar M.O., take him to the back of the store, shoot him, take some money out the register, you know, and then leave.
00:55:50.600
More than two other witnesses would spot the man just a mile away from Interstate 70.
00:55:56.380
The six murders along Interstate 70 were connected through ballistics.
00:56:01.000
The perpetrator had used the same .22 caliber ammunition and pistol in all six killings.
00:56:07.240
The victim profiles matched for all but McCown.
00:56:10.540
The killer was hunting female store clerks, young brunettes, and he was murdering them, executing them.
00:56:19.440
All these serial killers have things for brunettes.
00:56:22.480
Yo, I guess if you don't want to get killed, like, be a blonde or black-haired or something like that.
00:56:28.980
No, no, there's some serial killers that like blondes, too.
00:56:30.740
But Ted Bundy had a thing for brunettes, and he always used to go after brunettes in their 20s.
00:56:40.660
For some, this is the end of the spree for the I-70 killer.
00:56:44.080
They usually go for the, for the women that look like their moms.
00:56:49.960
However, many believe he continued his killings a year later in just a few states away.
00:56:55.300
Real quick, just so you guys get an idea of Interstate 35.
00:57:12.980
This is a highway that I have very deep, uh, nostalgia for.
00:57:18.740
Isn't the Interstate 95 goes all the way to Canada?
00:57:23.600
It starts here in Miami and goes all the way up this way.
00:57:27.780
Again, you guys, as I said before, odd numbers means north and south.
00:57:34.700
So, Interstate 70, even number, goes, you know, from Baltimore all the way into, uh, Utah, as we saw earlier.
00:57:43.860
It starts right here in good old Laredo, Texas.
00:57:48.200
And this is a huge drug trafficking highway right here.
00:57:50.520
But anyway, you guys see it goes through a bunch of major cities.
00:58:06.480
And then it goes all the way damn near into, you know, into Minneapolis.
00:58:13.260
Almost into pretty much, you know, not too far away from Canada.
00:58:19.160
And it also intersects with Interstate 70, which goes around, goes this way.
00:58:36.480
Mary Ann Glasscock, age 51, owned and worked the register at Emporium Antiques in Fort Worth, Texas.
01:00:04.200
On September 25th, 1973, a friend went to the business and found Mary Gould.
01:00:33.200
So there's probably somewhere, looks like it's a lobster spot now.
01:00:45.560
Glasscock's store was located at 4709 Bryce, near Interstate 35.
01:00:52.720
Glasscock phoned a repairman to reschedule an appointment as she would be late to her shop.
01:00:57.500
Robert Johnson arrived at the store at 1130 a.m. and found a female customer waiting outside.
01:01:03.680
She told him that she had been knocking, but the store appeared to be empty.
01:01:07.800
Johnson entered the unlocked store and found Glasscock partially nude with her pants pulled
01:01:13.400
She had suffered a gunshot wound to the head, and she'd lay in a pool of blood.
01:01:20.980
The perpetrator had emptied the register and taken Glasscock's keys.
01:01:24.980
However, her car was found in the parking lot by investigators.
01:01:28.480
Glasscock's murder was similar to the I-70 killings in many ways.
01:01:32.300
A single female brunette store clerk shot execution style with a .22 caliber pistol.
01:01:37.560
Robbery didn't seem to be the motive, and the killer left with a trophy.
01:01:41.860
However, ballistics wouldn't match the previous spree of killings,
01:01:45.560
and Texas investigators rejected the notion that these killings were committed by the same perpetrator.
01:01:53.300
Amy Vess, age 22, worked the register at Dancer's...
01:01:57.100
And the reason why, guys, a lot of the times the police will not want to go ahead and try to,
01:02:01.640
you know, link crimes early on is because what ends up happening
01:02:06.300
when you're able to say, oh, we link this crime to another one, etc.,
01:02:10.180
even though that's great from an investigator's standpoint,
01:02:18.360
It's not good for the town to say, oh, yeah, we got a serial killer on the loose.
01:02:23.580
So, and if you notice, I don't know if you guys have caught on to this,
01:02:26.860
but like serial killers, modern-day serial killers are significantly suppressed in the news and the press.
01:02:32.020
They do everything in their power to not call people serial killers anymore.
01:02:34.920
They try not to sensationalize it because they don't want them to end up like rock stars,
01:02:38.760
like Ted Bundy and Jeffrey Dahmer and everything else where these guys get Netflix series on them.
01:02:43.840
So what they do now is they don't give them as much clout.
01:02:48.500
So you'll notice, like, with these serial killers, these more modern serial killers,
01:02:51.700
they don't get the same press coverage that they do.
01:02:54.540
And investigators, a lot of times, are reluctant to name people as serial killers or spree killers, etc.,
01:02:59.780
and link crimes from across because it brings media attention, guys.
01:03:04.460
The media attention for a lot of chiefs is not good.
01:03:07.560
You don't want that because now your police department and your law enforcement agency
01:03:10.460
is under the limelight, and if you're, you know, a police chief, you got 10 officers
01:03:16.300
because, guys, keep in mind, not every police department is going to be like an NYPD,
01:03:22.700
I think NYPD right now is somewhere between 40,000 to 50,000 police officers, right?
01:03:26.080
Biggest police department in the fucking world, right?
01:03:54.120
Yeah, including more than 30,000 uniformed officers as of September 2023, right?
01:04:07.000
Yeah, they're going to put that out there because that's taxpayer money, right?
01:04:13.960
A lot of these small police departments where these crimes are occurring,
01:04:17.500
They don't want that shit because you got, you know...
01:04:20.580
It's one thing if you're a NYPD, you're an FBI, you're a big law enforcement agency,
01:04:24.140
and you have the resources and capacity to investigate these types of crimes.
01:04:28.020
But, bro, you're a little rinky-dink police department in terror-hot fucking Indiana.
01:04:31.160
You're like, bro, nigga, we got 10 officers, you know?
01:04:36.960
You know, we got maybe one canine if we're lucky, right?
01:04:40.140
Like, they don't got the resources and time to go ahead and chase a serial killer or a spree killer.
01:04:49.180
And you're like, oh, fuck, I don't know what I'm going to do.
01:04:53.020
And then also, you know, it's kind of embarrassing to be like, all right, we don't got the resources.
01:04:57.740
We're going to turn this over to the state police because then your community starts to lose respect for you.
01:05:04.940
Like, why the fuck do we even pay y'all niggas tax dollars?
01:05:07.180
Like, these are all underlying things that happen that police departments are looking at whenever there's a spree killer or anything else like that.
01:05:16.500
So, that's why they're reluctant to link crimes like this that are significant with murders because it causes pandemic, man.
01:05:23.020
You know, it causes people to be really worried.
01:05:26.680
And that's not good a lot of the times, especially for small communities, especially for these small community police departments, et cetera.
01:05:39.020
A dance apparel store located at 4001 West Green Oaks in Arlington, Texas.
01:05:45.320
This location was only a short drive away from the scene of Glasscock's murder.
01:05:49.480
Similar to Nancy Kitzmiller, Vess was not meant to be working on that evening.
01:05:54.900
She had been called in to the dance shop to cover a shift.
01:05:58.180
Sometime between 6.15 p.m. and 6.22 p.m., a stranger entered the store and ordered the woman to the back room.
01:06:05.540
There, he shot her twice, once in the neck behind the left ear and once in the back of the head.
01:06:11.160
As he fled the store, he emptied the register of $200 and disappeared.
01:06:14.840
One source reported that the neighboring store owner saw a strange man in the parking lot at 6.15 p.m.
01:06:25.020
When investigators of the I-70 killings heard about Vess, they were anxious to connect the cases.
01:06:29.960
They identified the matching M.O. and victim profile, proposing that ballistics didn't match because the killer had simply switched weapons.
01:06:36.960
Again, Texas investigators were reluctant to connect the cases, the Texas guys.
01:06:42.340
They admitted there were similarities, but they remained unconvinced.
01:06:49.780
Vicki Webb, age 35, worked the register at Alternatives Gift Shop.
01:06:54.640
It was located in the Rice Village Shopping District, across from Houston's Rice University.
01:06:59.960
It was 10 a.m. that Saturday when a short man with shaggy hair, estimated at 50 years old, entered the store briefly, leaving only to return a little more than an hour later.
01:07:10.920
He told her his niece was on her way to meet him.
01:07:13.380
Similar to his interaction with McCown, he attempted to purchase an item, a small copper picture frame.
01:07:18.680
During the transaction, he shot Webb in the back of the neck, and the bullet struck her between the second and third vertebrae.
01:07:24.880
She was paralyzed, from the waist down, but still alive.
01:07:28.160
The man jumped the counter and emptied the register of $75.
01:07:31.080
Then, he pulled Webb's pants to her ankles, just as he had done with Marianne Glasscock.
01:07:37.340
He put the gun to her head and pulled the trigger, but the gun misfired.
01:07:43.020
He laughed at this, but before he could clear the jam, he was startled by a vehicle outside and fled the scene.
01:07:48.760
Webb was even luckier, as doctors discovered she had an abnormally large spine, which allowed her to rehabilitate after her injury.
01:07:55.660
He was lucky as hell, man. She had God looking out for her.
01:07:59.860
Regaining the ability to walk after just three weeks, Webb would be the only surviving victim.
01:08:15.180
Investigators of the I-70 and I-35 killings began to compare notes and piece together a profile of their perpetrator.
01:08:22.400
Their physical description came from the surviving eyewitnesses.
01:08:27.400
The perpetrator had lazy eyelids, and he was described as looking sleepy.
01:08:32.120
He was between 35 and 50 years old at the time.
01:08:36.120
He had thinning red hair, combed forward, and he was of average build and height.
01:08:41.700
He was regularly described as having a stubbled beard.
01:08:44.780
In 2012, the St. Charles Police Department revealed a...
01:08:49.780
And just so you guys get a visual of this, pull this up for you, I'll show you guys real quick.
01:08:54.760
You can see here the damage done, obviously, all over the place.
01:09:05.440
You know, people always think that, oh yeah, just a serial killer, whatever.
01:09:11.620
Like, these are real innocent people that were just trying to run a small business.
01:09:15.880
This fucking dickhead comes in with a shitty little .22 and, you know, kills these people for fucking $170, $200, right?
01:09:24.080
Maybe all the money they made that day back in the 90s.
01:09:28.540
Additional information about the .22 caliber pistol used in the I-70 killings.
01:09:35.160
They suggested it could have been an Intratech Scorpion or Irma Werke model ET-22.
01:09:41.760
The ammunition was CCI brand .22 caliber long rifle copper clad lead bullets.
01:09:48.640
This ammunition and caliber are among the most popular in the United States.
01:09:53.720
There was one distinguishing trait about the ammunition used in these killings.
01:09:59.720
They started that task force up in 2021, and the FBI is involved in it, right?
01:10:04.340
Typically, the feds don't get involved in murder cases in general.
01:10:06.880
But when you got a spree killer like this or anything like that, you know, they'll lend their resources.
01:10:10.500
But keep in mind, it's going to be a state-led case.
01:10:14.400
The feds don't investigate murder contrary to popular belief.
01:10:19.300
Unless it's murder in the high seas, it's murder in, you know, furtherance of a RICO or a gang case or something like that or a continued criminal enterprise, the feds do not investigate one-off murder cases, guys.
01:10:31.960
That is a common misconception in public, you know, I guess, media, like on TV and movies and shit like that.
01:10:44.820
That is almost always going to be a state case.
01:10:48.680
Feds need a federal nexus to investigate a murder, right?
01:10:54.060
So basically, there needs to be a commission of a federal crime where the murder took place for the feds to come in.
01:11:01.260
For example, if I rob a bank and I shoot someone during the commission of that bank robbery, well, we know bank robberies are federal crimes.
01:11:08.100
If you've been watching Fed Reacts for a while, you already know it's FDIC insured.
01:11:16.720
Let's say I'm a gang member and I'm being investigated for part of a RICO case and I murder someone in the furtherance of my criminal enterprise, right, because we know RICO cases always attack the enterprise, a.k.a. the criminal organization.
01:11:27.640
Then that murder will be used against me because I'm committing it in furtherance of a federal crime.
01:11:36.380
They went after those guys for using a machine gun to kill a federal agent.
01:11:40.240
They were able to go after them for murder because they killed a federal agent.
01:11:43.900
So there needs to be a federal nexus for a federal crime for you to go after someone for a murder charge.
01:11:50.700
But as far as like a serial killer, a one-off thing, a guy killing his wife for insurance money or some shit like that, nine out of ten times that's going to be a state-led.
01:12:00.580
But also when Ted Bundy, when he crossed interstate lines too, right?
01:12:05.500
They can assist, but it's still going to be the state.
01:12:09.740
So when you got someone that's like crossing state lines, et cetera, the feds will come in a lot of the times and assist because the guys crossing state lines is difficult for state and local authorities that have limited jurisdiction in their, you know, areas of responsibilities.
01:12:27.520
It's difficult for them to coordinate and stuff.
01:12:29.200
So a lot of times what the FBI will do is they'll bring everybody under one roof and they'll work together.
01:12:34.440
And then they'll be able to lend resources to these different agencies.
01:12:38.880
But the way it's going to work is let's say Terha, Indiana has an investigator, someone out in Kansas has an investigator, someone in, you know, Texas has an, they have an investigator.
01:12:51.540
Each of those investigators is working with an assistant district attorney, an AD, an ADA, and they're pursuing charges in their local jurisdiction.
01:12:59.860
So we're investigating this guy for this murder here.
01:13:03.540
And then they're, they're looking at it like we're investigating this guy for this murder here.
01:13:06.960
And then you guys are probably wondering, well, okay, what's the point of them all getting together if they're individually looking at each murder for their own particular jurisdiction?
01:13:14.140
Well, the reason why it's relevant guys is because that ADA is going to use evidence from those other cases in their trial to show that it's the same individual.
01:13:24.760
So that's why they're working together because interestingly enough, each case on its own is weak.
01:13:30.620
However, when you take a Texas investigator, then you got an investigator from Indiana, then you got an investigator from Kansas, right?
01:13:38.640
And they're compiling all the data, though those crimes didn't occur in their jurisdiction and they're not being charged, they're not charging those individuals, they're not charging that charge, right, from that jurisdiction.
01:13:51.740
They're using it in their local jurisdiction to show more probable cause that this individual is committing crimes and he has a pattern of committing these crimes to build their case.
01:14:03.480
So each case by itself is weak, but when you put all the information together, it makes their individual case stronger where they're pursuing the charges.
01:14:11.580
And the FBI allows, a lot of the time, allows that to be facilitated.
01:14:15.460
Give me ones in the chat if that makes sense, guys.
01:14:17.460
Because this is something that confuses a lot of people when it comes to murder.
01:14:30.440
If it doesn't make sense, give me a two and then why does it make sense?
01:14:33.520
You know, they're going to drop the twos anyway.
01:14:38.020
That's why, that's how you weed out the trolls.
01:14:57.360
Myron, you had me down when I sent my Springwood Slasher chat and you searched it.
01:15:07.540
Uh, I don't know the deal with Hotboy right now.
01:15:15.560
Okay, what did you not get in particular, my friend?
01:15:18.860
And then Venom says, I have ADHD and zoned out.
01:15:36.140
Yeah, if you're going to put twos in the chat, tell me why.
01:15:43.760
If you put two with nothing in there, I'm not going to explain it.
01:15:49.860
Because I really do want y'all to get this, because this is an educational channel, and
01:15:55.240
that's my goal here, is to educate you guys on how the law enforcement system really works,
01:15:59.400
because 99% of the people that talk about law enforcement shit are fucking idiots, and
01:16:04.520
Or they're lawyers, and that's cool if you're a lawyer, but you don't know how investigations
01:16:08.980
go, because lawyers don't do investigations, contrary to popular belief.
01:16:11.560
Lawyers prosecute cases that the investigators put together, but they're not necessarily
01:16:18.880
They can tell you, this is the evidence that I want, but they're not responsible for actually
01:16:23.080
That is our fucking job as investigators, and a lot of people don't talk about that.
01:16:37.020
Man, you're basically saying FBI or the law won't even dare look at a case unless it's
01:16:49.040
Let's say you have a guy committing crimes in multiple jurisdictions, right?
01:16:54.140
The feds don't investigate murder, because there is no real federal statute for simply just
01:16:59.020
You need something else to be involved federally for the feds to charge you with murder.
01:17:05.660
So, since most of the time the states take over murder, what ends up happening when there's
01:17:09.960
murders in different states is the FBI will come in and basically think of them as the
01:17:22.000
However, the guests are the stars of the party.
01:17:24.520
So, the FBI just gets the venue for them to all come in and work together, and they're
01:17:28.580
able to bridge these different agencies together.
01:17:31.900
The local agencies will figure out, hey, this crime matches my stuff, and then they'll work
01:17:36.520
together, and they won't even involve the feds.
01:17:39.480
However, it does make it easier sometimes because you're able to use federal resources when you
01:17:43.240
But what is happening is each of these local, maybe a sheriff in one situation, a state trooper
01:17:50.420
in another situation, city police officer in another jurisdiction, these are all what
01:17:56.700
you call local law enforcement, and they all work with an ADA.
01:18:00.040
And they will have their ADA in their jurisdiction that they're working with, and say their case
01:18:05.980
They only have some gun information, maybe a fingerprint here or there, but someone else
01:18:11.700
in another jurisdiction has evidence that will make their case stronger because they
01:18:15.840
have pieces in their case that match up with their case.
01:18:18.420
So, what ends up happening is they're able to share information and use the information
01:18:22.740
from those other cases, though they can't prosecute that individual for those crimes in
01:18:26.840
that other jurisdiction, they can use it to strengthen the case for why they're prosecuting
01:18:34.900
If it doesn't, it doesn't make sense there, then you probably are low IQ.
01:18:47.660
And give me twos if it doesn't, and then tell me why it doesn't so I can make fun of you.
01:18:55.500
Hey, still try to keep this stuff educational for Yon Ninjas, man.
01:19:15.140
He said, the only time that boys play football is to get the quarterback.
01:19:26.820
Doug, she posted, he said, the fact that they never caught that they never, the fact that they never caught that they never caught the very hot or 170 killer makes me wonder if there was some cover up.
01:19:46.580
Albo asks, took out a Latina buddy last night for her first time, showed her a great time, and ended up smashing at the end.
01:19:56.800
What are your thoughts on chicks smashing after the first day?
01:20:00.900
And then he said, he said it again, and said, and I only spent like 120 total, big W.
01:20:09.880
You don't need to spend hundreds of dollars on these girls to smash them.
01:20:13.900
Show them a good time and make them feel safe and comfortable, and you're in there.
01:20:30.440
He asked you, like, what do you think about that?
01:20:33.820
Kevin Terrell's inbox, he says, Marlon, can you do a video about what to look out for as a civvy?
01:20:40.240
As a civvy, to be more aware against violent crimes like this, military background helps, but it's a civilian knowing to sit facing the door is critical.
01:20:47.800
You know, carrying a gun, exercising your Second Amendment right, training with your gun.
01:20:50.820
And a lot of people have a gun, but don't even know what the hell they're doing.
01:20:56.580
And then, yeah, guys, Albo Ace, yeah, don't spend hundreds of dollars on girls that you don't know like that, guys.
01:21:05.100
Took out a Latina baddie, showed her a great time, and I'm smashing it in.
01:21:07.940
What are your thoughts on the first day on the chat, by the way?
01:21:10.500
Hey, man, if you're a chat, then you're a chat, bro.
01:21:42.460
Corundum is an abrasive, and Rouge is a lubricant.
01:21:46.240
This suggested that the perpetrator could have been employed as a machinist,
01:21:53.340
Alternatively, these materials are used in the maintenance of weapons.
01:21:56.860
The Rouge may have been used to polish the feed ramp for the pistol.
01:22:01.400
Or, these materials could have been used in a process known as fire lapping.
01:22:06.780
Fire lapping is when bullets are coated in a lubricated abrasive
01:22:10.780
and fired through the barrel to clean or change the rifling of a weapon.
01:22:14.900
As there remains little evidence, criminal profiling will likely be necessary to identify suspects.
01:22:21.820
The following is a limited profile of the I-70 killer.
01:22:25.660
He targeted small stores off Interstates 70 and 35.
01:22:30.020
These were not heavily trafficked establishments, which suggested that robbery was not a motive,
01:22:34.880
although he did take small amounts of cash from the registers at each scene.
01:22:39.280
Store names and sold goods suggested the stores would be operated by females.
01:22:44.900
Le Bride d'Elegance and Sylvia Ceramics, along with craft stores and boot shops.
01:22:50.580
Perhaps the killer was selecting these stores as they would have a higher potential
01:22:57.740
The ritualism of these killings and the control exhibited by the killer
01:23:05.680
These individuals are often characterized as having high intelligence,
01:23:12.200
They plan their offenses, often targeting strangers.
01:23:15.940
And that makes sense, because after he walked out of some of these places,
01:23:18.580
you might have been able to just strike up a conversation like nothing happened.
01:23:24.180
And they demand complete submission from their victims.
01:23:30.100
This is a big thing with a lot of these serial killers, by the way, guys.
01:23:35.260
They, you know, Ted Bunny, all these guys like to play God.
01:23:38.900
They like to strangle the person for a bit, let them come back,
01:23:43.260
Like, a lot of these people just get off on control.
01:23:47.260
It makes me wonder if that first girl, that first victim,
01:24:01.180
they always try with something else before, beforehand.
01:24:10.440
Oh, all you're saying was, like, was that the first person they killed?
01:24:18.460
While the prevailing theory is that these murders were simply opportunistic,
01:24:22.820
many of the characteristics suggest this killer was organized and methodical.
01:24:27.420
The I-70 killer was a spree killer operating in short bursts before going dormant.
01:24:33.500
This demonstrates the killer was capable of regulating his urges.
01:24:43.640
And people were like, why the hell did this guy go silent?
01:24:53.540
But once his daughter went off to college and he no longer needed to be, you know, with her all the time,
01:25:03.080
He famously dropped the Kellogg's box with the tied-up Barbie doll in there,
01:25:09.120
So, definitely a lot of these guys will, you know, have a cool-off period sometimes
01:25:12.920
and it's because they get a family or whatever it may be.
01:25:14.940
The long distances suggested that he may have been a traveling salesman, truck driver, or construction subcontractor.
01:25:21.940
If this is the case, his vehicle was likely branded for business and would have been easily recognizable.
01:25:27.860
Every crime scene neighbors a nearby residential area,
01:25:31.360
and it has been suggested that the killer parked in these residential areas and walked to the crime scene,
01:25:36.160
only fling to his vehicle off-site after the commission of a crime.
01:25:39.180
This would imply that the I-70 killer was somewhat familiar with his intended targets
01:25:44.940
and the areas surrounding his potential crime scenes could have been scouted beforehand.
01:25:51.120
Perhaps these killings weren't acts of pure spontaneity.
01:25:54.640
Perhaps the I-70 killer surveilled these stores, selecting employees who fit his profile,
01:25:59.940
and returning at another date to commit his crime.
01:26:02.660
The bullets of his weapon had ejection marks, suggesting that the killer was using a weapon with a high-capacity ammo clip.
01:26:10.220
This means he arrived at the scene prepared to shoot much more than one or two bullets.
01:26:18.440
the St. Charles Police Department renewed their efforts to crack this cold case.
01:26:22.520
They released an age-progressed police sketch and reunited the original agencies involved in the investigation.
01:26:28.240
They sent samples for DNA testing as technological innovations allow for improved testing of trace evidence.
01:26:35.800
Yeah, because people talk about the 90s, right?
01:26:39.780
Yeah, guys, that's when they finally would, like, just started bringing it out.
01:26:42.460
But it didn't really, like, DNA didn't really, like, become, like, used and mainstreamed until the 2000s.
01:26:49.460
Though, they were using it in the 80s and the 90s, and then they had, I think, the first successful prosecution for DNA happened in the 80s or the 90s.
01:26:56.620
It wasn't, like, mainstream and every agency was submitting DNA until the 2000s, man.
01:27:01.960
So, whenever there's, like, a new cutting-edge technology that comes out, it takes a while, especially for the smaller police departments, to get on board.
01:27:16.260
Additionally, investigators received a new lead connected to a similar crime in 2001,
01:27:22.260
the convenience store robbery and murder of clerk Billy Brossman.
01:27:26.620
This murder occurred just seven blocks away from the murder of Michael McCown.
01:27:31.480
Although the crime was featured on America's Most Wanted, it has never been solved.
01:27:36.180
Police have stated that there are similarities between the cases, but ballistics don't match the 1992 murders.
01:27:42.960
Others have suggested that deceased serial killer Neil Falls could have been the I-70 killer.
01:28:04.640
In 2015, Falls attempted to abduct a sex worker, Heather Saul, in her home in West Virginia.
01:28:10.220
During the attempted abduction, Saul broke free and fatally shot Falls.
01:28:17.500
Police found handcuffs, knives, bulletproof vests, shovels, machetes, hammers, and more in Falls' trunk.
01:28:30.580
Uh, Neil Falls, born September 24th, 1969, he died in 2015, was an American suspected serial killer who was shot, killed in self-defense, but Heather Saul, a woman in Charleston, West Virginia Falls.
01:28:40.740
Had been stopped by police in over 20 states during his life, but did not incur any serious criminal charges.
01:28:45.340
Only after his death, the police discover evidence possibly tying Falls to other crimes, right?
01:28:50.920
And imagine how many of these crazy bastards that are out there doing this stuff that had never been caught, right?
01:28:54.640
And then here's some of the possible victims that, uh, he might have had, right?
01:29:03.760
Um, but normally, you know, guys like this, it's not the first time.
01:29:11.780
They found a kill kit similar like this with Ted Bunny as well.
01:29:14.640
...nine other murdered women, some of whom were located in Illinois.
01:29:19.300
Falls was in his 20s at the time of the 1992 murders, living in Kansas.
01:29:23.640
He resembled the police sketches and matched the physical descriptions given by witnesses.
01:29:29.340
He was an organized serial killer with a hatred for women.
01:29:32.600
In 2018, police tested some of his belongings, but...
01:29:35.580
A lot of these dudes are actually real massages. They hate females, man.
01:29:38.660
Investigators found no definitive connection to the I-70 killings.
01:29:43.240
Interstate highways run like veins through America.
01:29:46.760
Traffic coursing through cities and small towns alike.
01:29:53.280
With absolute anonymity and easy access, these highways are frequent hunting grounds for monsters.
01:30:07.360
And hauntingly, he is still out there somewhere.
01:30:28.420
I think that guy is not killing anymore, obviously.
01:30:43.480
Yeah, they showed it on screen, but let me pull, I could pull it up again.
01:30:46.520
The, that, that is how he might look right now.
01:30:50.140
The guy, like, the age, the, the drawing of him.
01:30:56.640
I don't think that guy is killing anymore, honestly.
01:31:01.160
Hopefully, they catch him maybe in a few years from now with the new evidence and stuff.
01:31:06.840
I just think it's very negligent that they haven't caught him yet because we have seen, like, a whole footage of his face.
01:31:14.820
How is there nothing to, you know, match records or something like that?
01:31:21.160
Something like the Fashion Furious, like, artifact that you can find everybody in the world.
01:31:27.720
However, this is, this is the age-enhanced photo.
01:31:33.740
So, this is what they predict you would look like now.
01:31:45.520
I'll read some of these chats and then I see some of y'all want me to stream some Overwatch.
01:32:00.240
You can't help yourself and you can't insult your people and call them the word that you
01:32:13.840
Then I get disappointed every time and they keep being pussies.
01:32:18.120
I was going to say, oh, let me get off this thing here.
01:32:20.820
It's funny because he went into a run the other day with a woman.
01:32:30.380
He could insult her, calling her slut and everything and all this stuff.
01:32:35.420
When we were playing, when you were helping me rank up, and there was this girl, and she
01:32:41.700
She was insulting her because you started insulting her and saying that she wasn't
01:32:52.740
Because I play with you and I get the, because you're low rank, so we have to play with these
01:32:56.940
idiots, and I'm like, what the hell are you doing?
01:33:21.860
Yeah, but when I play with my squad, when I play with Chinaman and I play with Awkward,
01:33:26.840
We're going on like 20 game win streaks and shit.
01:33:29.640
But then I play with randoms and shit, and it's like we start losing.
01:33:34.480
Anyway, if y'all want me to really play some Overwatch right now, I was going to just end the stream
01:33:38.840
But if y'all want me to play a little bit of Overwatch and show you guys what it's like,
01:33:42.800
I'll have to use Bill's account here, probably.
01:34:05.880
I never played on Angie's account, but what happens is Angie plays next to me, right?
01:34:16.940
I have my mic right here, and I put it right next to my mic.
01:34:20.700
And then she has, obviously, the mic that she's...
01:34:25.280
That's the FedReacts mic, and then that is the Overwatch mic that she has right there in front of us.
01:34:34.640
So what ends up happening is, I'll be playing, right?
01:34:42.220
So they'll hear me shitting on kids in another complete game lobby, and then they'll report her,
01:34:48.820
and then her account gets, like, voice con banned and shit like that, which is kind of funny.
01:34:52.920
Because she don't say nothing, and then her account gets...
01:34:58.380
What do you want me to tell you while you're, like, yelling at everybody and, like, going on demon time and, like, really, like, going on demon time, real time?
01:35:05.720
You want me to tell you, Myron, can you lower down a blur?
01:35:23.120
And when your voice ban, it kind of sucks because you can't say nothing.
01:35:30.720
Every time Myron plays, I have to mute the mic because of obvious reasons.
01:35:34.380
But sometimes I really want to engage with the people in the group so we can win the game.
01:35:39.740
And I have the microphone on and they can hear Myron and they think it's me.
01:35:44.400
So they start saying in the chat, yo, bad misty bag, bad misty bag, bad misty bag.
01:35:54.700
And they start insulting me thinking it's Myron.
01:35:56.300
And so I have to be like, yo, guys, no, it's not me.
01:36:01.060
And I have to, like, excuse myself because Myron always gets me banned.
01:36:07.300
In streaming, because he goes, like, crazy when he's streaming.
01:36:14.620
So, oh, look, last time I played, I went 23 and 11.
01:36:25.180
You do realize, like, most good players only have, like, a 50% win rate, right?
01:36:40.060
It's because of your performance during the games.
01:36:58.060
And then if you guys want, I'll stream some games after.
01:37:06.800
If you guys want to really see me play one game, give me ones in the chat.
01:37:10.740
I'll have to keep it somewhat clean because we're on YouTube and on Twitch.
01:37:16.220
But you guys will witness some of the beatings.
01:37:19.300
And when I say beatings, I mean as in beating these scrubs.
01:37:29.320
So what I'm going to do is I'm going to have to switch the sound over.
01:37:36.520
You guys should be hearing the game here in a second.
01:37:59.020
Oh, it's because I got the wrong headphones on.
01:38:01.540
So now I'm going to put the gamer headphones on, the tryhard headphones.
01:38:11.840
I'm going to go into this custom game real quick.
01:38:16.100
And I want you to give me ones if you guys can hear the game.
01:38:27.040
Give me one to the chat if y'all can hear this.
01:39:17.260
Give me one to the chat if it's good, if it's not too loud.
01:39:35.000
Let me just go ahead and update some stuff on the stream.
01:39:39.180
Talk to the people real quick to see if they can hear you.
01:39:58.280
Give me one to the chat if y'all can hear Chinaman.
01:40:23.020
So, what I'm going to do is I'm going to adjust something real quick.
01:40:46.120
You guys should be able to see the rumble numbers and the YouTube numbers.
01:40:59.820
I'm not a pro like Bills, but I'm getting good.
01:41:26.280
So, what I'm going to do is now I'm going to leave the game.
01:41:47.860
And what I'll do is I'll also show the chat in here for y'all ninjas.
01:43:05.720
Okay, because we're using two different interfaces and shit.
01:44:01.220
So if we're going to get a game, it's going to take a very long time.
01:44:10.800
If we want to play with Angie with a faster queue time, we both have to change account.
01:44:23.240
Do you have the login stuff for Yennefer's account?
01:44:26.560
Yeah, but I thought you were going to help it right now.
01:44:34.340
Because we do got to get Angie out of fucking bronze.
01:44:36.220
Dude, I thought with this new season that they would have...
01:44:52.420
They only reset with the big season changes, you know.
01:45:44.080
I just want to see the people in there just lower IQ.
01:45:57.480
They don't understand game dynamics, they don't have awareness.
01:46:01.480
I don't think if they really want to rank up, they can.
01:46:08.480
No, they don't. And the thing with most kids in bronze is they don't play enough and their mechanical skill is just terrible.
01:46:14.480
They can't aim. Like, when I see kids playing in bronze and they pick characters like McCree or Ana, I'm like, what are you doing?
01:46:21.480
Like, bro, you can barely aim. Why are you even... you know what I'm saying?
01:46:28.480
But yeah, that's... when you're bronze 9 out of 10 times, your mechanical aim, your mechanics just suck.
01:46:38.480
You don't know characters' abilities, your knowledge is limited.
01:46:43.480
Because you start with a high rank, the bronze is a different world.
01:47:05.480
Mouse and keyboard is a lot better than controller.
01:47:18.480
I won't tell you this though, mouse and keyboard is a lot better than controller
01:47:38.700
The controller will be good, too. Well, yeah, that's why they just banned zimming
01:47:46.000
For console players, they banned zimming, dude. It's hilarious
01:47:49.760
That's a cheat. It is cheating. I remember when I used to play on Xbox, you make it to GM level, bro
01:47:55.440
I was the only idiot that wasn't playing. I didn't use a zim not one time, bro
01:47:59.400
But it was it was annoying because the kids it would be obvious
01:48:02.000
They're playing on a zim because they could turn around like make a 360 turn. You can't do that on a controller
01:48:17.700
And if we don't get a match in like two or three minutes, what I'll do is I'll run a game with Chinaman
01:48:21.580
Just for the chat and then and then we'll and then we'll and then I'll start our overwatch stream and we'll just play
01:48:30.500
Just because we're still on the fed react stream and I don't want to stay playing overwatch too long
01:48:34.380
Just giving them a sneak peek of what it's like to watch me
01:48:39.420
But this is what I normally do anyway warm up a bit
01:48:53.420
Because when you're doing mechanical aiming man, you got to definitely warm up
01:48:59.560
Especially when you're playing a character like McCreer somebody that like if you miss it's gonna really get you punished
01:49:49.900
This is Angie right here guys. She's playing Lucio
01:49:55.900
She's having a good time. She likes wall riding
01:50:07.900
Right Angie, Lucio's your favorite character right now?
01:50:15.900
Yeah, she plays for those that are wondering she plays Lucio
01:50:25.900
That's gonna be tough that takes a lot of skill
01:50:31.900
Yeah a lot of positioning and a lot of mechanical skill Widowmaker
01:50:37.900
If you're not hitting headshots you're basically throwing
01:50:43.900
When I see kids at bronze level playing like Widowmaker
01:50:47.900
Like you don't shouldn't be playing Widowmaker Ash
01:50:49.900
Like these characters that like require a lot of mechanical skill
01:50:59.900
Like low rank players should like learn how to play soldier first
01:52:11.900
We got a game, so now I don't know what the fuck is going on, but let's do it.
01:52:29.900
Yeah, I didn't think we were going to get a game either.
01:52:34.900
Give me one thing to chat if you guys can hear everything nice and clear.
01:52:44.900
Oh, actually, matter of fact, hold on, I got to turn my audio up a little bit.
01:52:47.900
Alright, chat, now you guys should be able to hear it nice and clear.
01:52:53.900
So we got Angie on the squad, we got Chinaman on the squad, we about to rock these boys.
01:52:58.900
Alright, let's look at the rank because the kid's on the other team.
01:53:16.900
Bro, why do people make their profiles private?
01:53:26.900
Why are you scared to show your ranking, bitch?
01:54:09.900
Let's go the beaties will continue. Oh get a hulk you dead again.
01:54:22.780
Oh let's go let's go hamucho hamucho hamucho. Let's fuck him up.
01:54:31.900
Angie come to us Angie come to us we need heals.
01:54:39.900
Uh oh he got hooked. He turned big for no reason. Swallow clock what's up bitches?
01:54:59.740
A bunch of them on the right. A bunch of them on the right. Okay turret gone.
01:55:05.420
Oh these kids are getting their shit pushed in.
01:55:17.100
Yeah, yeah. I went for a turret. He's healed up though. Life weaver healed him up.
01:58:29.340
Go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go.
01:58:32.460
Bro, that Venture ultimate is fucking lame, man.
01:59:25.580
They're all low, they're all low, they're all one.
02:00:38.620
I pulled the High Noon because she was gonna javelin me.
02:01:21.980
We fucked them up. We fucked them up. Now we just gotta hold these scrubs
02:01:39.980
It does take a longer time to queue, it definitely does
02:02:13.980
Yeah, that's why so they can hear they can hear you
02:02:20.980
Give me one to the chat if y'all can hear Angie
02:02:27.980
Okay, so yeah, they can hear you Angie, you just have to use the shirt
02:02:37.980
Like the people in the game can't hear you, but that's fine
02:02:45.980
Ah, I thought you were watching the stream or something
02:03:25.980
Something that sucks about McCrea's damage drops off a lot
02:05:53.980
Angie, build up your sound boost as quickly as you can
02:12:01.860
banks with the deadlock gang oh we gotta push I'm gonna I'm gonna use my OGA next
02:12:14.480
OGA is super good and lower rank of course then it should get awkward here
02:12:31.860
we go hold this for a minute I know he's mad oh no fucking honor doesn't heal
02:14:08.580
coming back guys annoying ass Moira let's go fuck all right good shit bro
02:14:24.240
now we gotta push we're gonna have to carry on this one here man
02:14:31.420
let's see what this dude does I can't play Reaper I can of course this dude's a retard in our team bro
02:14:55.940
and lower rank just having fun it's okay lower rank is not that serious
02:15:41.380
Speed, speed us in Angie. Speed us in. Speed us in. Let's go.
02:15:46.600
Oh my bad. We're down, we're down, we're down here, man.
02:17:50.540
I can't believe we fucking lost that shit, man.
02:18:20.540
I don't wanna end the stream on a fucking loss like that.
02:19:39.540
I'm fucking these kids up for the next round, man.
02:22:28.260
Trigger fingers still at your barrel to smoke you.
02:25:05.620
You play builds account on healer, I play tank, so we're in the same rank.
02:25:30.620
Yeah, it still says we're gonna hit a wide match though.
02:25:46.620
If it doesn't, then I'll just queue up with Chinaman.
02:26:05.620
Yeah, Shreem, I don't want to end it on a loss.
02:26:16.620
Yeah, let me see if I can hit some of this chat.
02:26:34.620
I'm going through with you guys' chats right now.
02:26:36.620
Kevin Terrell says, LMAO serial killers was the OF for men in the 70s and 80s.
02:26:54.620
Isn't that wild to think that those streamers would have followed suit because of popularity?
02:26:59.620
You don't usually do foreign criminal cases, but hopefully you make an exception for this.
02:27:46.620
Rumble chat, yeah, you know they don't say whatever.
02:27:48.620
They talk shit about everybody in the Rumble chat.
02:28:07.620
man if you don't like it just leave what's happening what are they saying so gay
02:28:20.400
they're complaining bro this guy lies and tricks us into watching gay ass over what to be here for
02:28:26.460
the true crime yeah the true crime's over my friend we did it earlier man you could rewind
02:28:30.880
leave I just want to leave on an L you just leave why are you here watching if you don't want to watch
02:28:39.820
that's so gay all right last time the guy said he's a master tracer I added him as a friend and
02:28:50.200
send a message every day come one way one way never get the back no he's not going good yeah I would
02:28:58.720
have ended the game there guys but we didn't win so I'm like bro I can't take a I can't take an L
02:29:02.860
here so guys if you want the true crime it's there matter of fact let me put stamps in here right now
02:29:13.240
I have stamps here in a second oh also guys live show okay it's below on the event bright
02:29:27.360
jump in there get your tickets man come watch the live show that we got coming it's gonna be a good
02:30:21.540
angie we hit the time limit yeah it's okay i will get us a lower account yeah he's gonna get
02:30:30.600
us lower accounts and we'll be able to play with you he'll get us to lower accounts it's okay
02:30:34.140
yeah bye guys she's gonna get us some food anyway yeah all right so what i'll do is i'm gonna hear
02:30:42.100
change role here i'll do both dps and heal actually no i shouldn't do support because
02:30:49.080
it's gonna whatever yeah let me put damage automatically all right we're gonna get a w
02:30:54.540
guys um and guys oh again come to the live show it's gonna be a good time yeah come to the live
02:31:05.700
show and you'll be there i'll be there oh look at that instantly get a game
02:31:09.620
it's not good again fast as shit prepare for battle select your hero
02:31:33.620
someone needs to fill this saddle right find your strength we are soon to need it
02:31:48.680
all right i got the stamps right here for y'all ninjas i'm gonna put it in so if you guys that
02:31:55.940
are complaining fighting for timestamps are in there so you guys can go ahead and
02:32:20.540
my bad i'm backing up i got flanked my bad my bad look i will be back here everywhere
02:33:00.700
i got two let's get in the boy adventure ran away because she sucks
02:33:58.700
i didn't even know arisa was in here in chat yeah just let me know next time you're gonna ult
02:34:05.700
uh yeah they got widow they got widow now they got widow back up just back up they got widow
02:34:32.700
don't die don't die don't die you got heal you got heal just take a hover
02:34:38.700
lucio doesn't have a lot of healing just getting a point
02:40:34.880
As you guys can see I'm gonna put it in right now