Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:45):
There is a darkness that drives the devils of her
own humanity, joined Danielle in text as they explore these
infamous minds. Good morning, everybody. We I know we're early,
(01:11):
very very very very very early, but we were going
to do a pre record and I like interacting with
the audience so much that I'm just like, let's just
do it live. Let's just do it live people. Yeah. Yeah,
Once the alert goes off, you know, people will come
(01:32):
in and uh we got we got Kimber, Denise and
Barry and let's see, uh we got We've got some
more people coming in.
Speaker 2 (01:41):
That's awesome, But welcome everybody.
Speaker 1 (01:45):
Danielle's coming off a crazy night at work and and
uh she has been on call and working for the
last twenty six freaking days. And last night was was
the last night? Was it was the last night for
all that kind of stuff. And she's as tired as
I am. You've been up since.
Speaker 2 (02:04):
What Yeah, app all night. I I'm used to it,
but usually my uncle it's for four days, but this
time I'm covering for four or five people, including one
of the CEOs that it's in charge. Uh, And basically
it's my honor of course that I've been recognized and
(02:25):
put in that position, so entire facility goes basically under
my name and three more people. So we have many
residents or patients that need care and attention. So I
do enjoy it. I have fun. But then also you know,
certain things that I like to address. I love to
learn because I do also learn from them. But I
(02:45):
am a little bit tired because I was dealing with
some things here and they're finishing the case conferences, going
through the you know that everything is done and everything,
so I am I want to just relax. So that's
why we're doing is very early, ladies and gentlemen, because
me and text after this, we just want to sit
down and relax and close our eyes for a little
(03:08):
bit and have a happy Sunday, just like you guys do.
Speaker 1 (03:12):
There you go, now this case. Before we get into
the case, I want to make sure that I do this.
I want to recognize the main victim in this case,
which was which was she was nineteen years old when
(03:33):
this happened.
Speaker 2 (03:35):
Yeah, Colleen, Colleen, Yeah, Colleen Slammer, Yeah, Slammer.
Speaker 1 (03:41):
And this took place. It was many of you know
about the job Corps and that type of thing, and
she was trying to, you know, do she was very
very bright. She was on her way to you know,
(04:05):
get the training she needed and and and probably you know,
do real good with her life and everything. And she's
a very beautiful young woman. She she was known to
be very kind and and very outgoing and very fun
and and everything. And unfortunately she didn't get the the
opportunity to blossom, is the way Daniel put it, and
(04:31):
I think that's a great way to put it. And
the what you're going to find out about this case there,
it's it's disturbing. It's very very disturbing what happened. And
this is a straight up mental illness case, I think.
(04:51):
I mean, it's all the the I hope y'all don't
take this moment. Colon wasn't the only victim in this case.
The perpetrator of this horrendous act was also a victim
as well. And I'm not excusing her behavior at all,
(05:18):
but you've heard it say on a couple occasions that
this person never had a chance, and I think she
pretty much falls into that category unfortunately, and I don't know,
(05:39):
it's started very very young for her. Sorry to burn
actually for her. Yeah, you want to you want to
take us out on the sure.
Speaker 2 (05:51):
Sure. So first of all, I want to say thank
you everybody for joining us and respecting me and my
brow texts this morning. So this show is going to
be quite interesting. It's going to be about basically Miss
Christa Dale Pike, one of the American convicted murder and
(06:11):
the youngest woman in the United States to be sentenced
to a death. She's born March tenth, nineteen seventy six,
so she's forty years old, forty eight years old in
West Virginia. Basically, they even did a movie on her,
Woman on the Dead Row. Basically, what I can say
(06:34):
about her, she did have like parents in the beginning.
She was born and raised in the biological family by
Carissa Hansen and Glenn Pike. So Glenn Pike was her father.
But she was raised in a very horrible family. Does
that in her way of acting and behaving of course not,
(06:58):
of course not. Both of her parents were really negligent
and they were abusive physically and mentally. Also, she was
never checked during like her development, but she was fiedel
Alcohol Spectrum disorder baby because her mother was using drugs
(07:19):
and alcohol while she was conceived the way she would
be neglected. They say that she will be left in uh,
you know, stool or you know dogs, speces, crawling on
the floor, trying to eat and everything. Also, it's very common,
many people don't know. But for I will just kind
(07:40):
of elaborated for Federal alcohol spectrum disordered children that actually
basically do get seizures because there is an issue with
their brain and development of their brain. Many of fiel
lolcal spectrum disordered children do have frontal seizures. Basically. Another
(08:02):
thing she did have Grandma, and this was a mother
from her father, mister Pike. She loved the grandma so
so much and grandma was trying her hardest to help
her grow. But basically, what's happening when grandma did pass away,
so her only hero protector and somebody that she could
(08:25):
lean on and hide because they said sometimes when she
would get beaten, you know, they would fight between themselves,
throw the bottles, she would run away to her grandma's
house and sometimes when they'll come, they will see her
hiding behind the toilet seed or under the table. When
Grandma die, she was preteen, she was twelve years old
(08:47):
and basically she did something that most twelve year olds
would never think of, and that she tried to commit
the suicide. And I respect some of you guys, what
are you sharing inside of the chat saying you know
that you were raised in that kind of family and
I do understand you, and I am a big fighter
(09:10):
against the violence and abuse. That's also my job pro writing, counseling,
guidance and support. But what I can also tell you,
of course, not every person that is abused or they
were victims, that they become perpetrator themselves. But this can
be one of the factors that some people will turn
from a victim to actually perpetrate on themselves. When Grandma died,
(09:38):
they said that night when she heard that she was
totally lost and they found her, that she took her
mother's bottle of tailanol and she took all the pills
and they took her to the hospital and that's how
they found out that she actually tried to overdose with mother, Taylanhos.
That also tells you that mother was basically you know,
(10:03):
taking thailandal threes what are really high on coding and
really highly addictive. That it's actually happy thing that she survived.
So what do you think about that text? When you
think about twelve year old child, you know, trying to
do a suicide, well, you know.
Speaker 1 (10:27):
The mhm when you're when you're that young and you
try to commit suicide, it's it is it's tragic because
you know, you're you're talking about a twelve year old
(10:47):
kid that sees no other way out. Yeah, you know,
she she was born with brain damage. Yes, and she
she was punched and you know, I mean she was
punched by her you know, mother's boyfriend, beat up like that.
Speaker 2 (11:09):
She yeah, by the age.
Speaker 1 (11:15):
Mean, you're so traggic. It's just really is because that
I don't know if anything could have prevented The only
thing I think that could have prevented this from happening
is her being unfortunately unfortunately incarcerated.
Speaker 2 (11:32):
Because I don't yeah, I think, yeah.
Speaker 1 (11:36):
I don't think she was way I think she was
way too far gone at a very very early age. Yes,
you know, we in this case, we hear about you know,
around the size of around around the age of twelve,
that she's also accused of sexually you know, molesting her
(11:56):
half sister or her stepsister.
Speaker 2 (11:59):
And and.
Speaker 1 (12:04):
They you know, but but she but she's she was.
She went through the same thing, you know, and and
we've talked about the circle of violence and and and
that kind of behavior, and she was a pathological liar.
There was a man one time, and she was a
teenager that called and saying he was going to sexually
(12:28):
assault her, and uh, pike and a friend beat him
with a stick in the parking lot. I can't blame
her there, you know, that's that's pretty much about That's
kind of the response I'd have too. But she was
really bright too. She was not she was not stupid.
Speaker 2 (12:49):
You know, did she have a good i Q level?
So her IQ level show that she was mentally the lead,
but she did that she had abnormal way or we
can say not normal way of learning and understanding things.
But she would process abuse and violence as almost a
(13:11):
normal part of the life because that's how she was raised.
And you know, she was really abused as a child.
She was sexually molested. That also started at a very
early age. You know, she was abused physically and mentally
by her mother, boyfriends, and then she just lived in
(13:33):
a continuous cycle of abuse mental, physical, and sexual. You know,
when she was in a grade ten, she was sent
to juvenile facility, and instead of that juvenile facility putting
her into the right path, they said that she even
got more lost, and probably the reason why she got
(13:55):
even more lost because she didn't get attention and appropriate
you know, diagnosis and assessment. Unfortunately, a lots of times
these young children when they're sent to these facilities, they
turn even worse instead of being better. The reason why
then they're actually exploited to many things that are maybe
(14:17):
not exploited more in their lives. There's many children there
that they're having a different traumas and different way of
survival and you know, fighting on the street and trying
to protect themselves. So they're actually, in one way to say,
in a harsh way, they're gaining these bad skills from
each other. So this is now the mechanism is becoming
(14:41):
bigger and bigger. So it's like writing your resume. You're
getting more and more skills. You're improving your negative behavior
and you know the way you're going to cope with
basically negative behavior and your negative emotions. When she ended
up in basically in the juvenile the ten uh, you know,
(15:02):
she was all for occasional trainings and the skills. But
she did finish, she did really well. Uh and then
after that she did end up in a job Corps
center in Knox.
Speaker 1 (15:21):
And Knox.
Speaker 2 (15:23):
He says. She wanted to be a nurse.
Speaker 1 (15:26):
Yeah, and what is this? So I just.
Speaker 2 (15:31):
Str that's her.
Speaker 1 (15:36):
You're losing your connection, Danielle. Real quick, guys, I want
I want to applaud several of you out there in
our audience that said you had similar experiences to what
this young lady you know, went through, and you can
(16:00):
came out on top of it. You came out stronger,
and you you stopped the circle, you stopped the you know.
And my hat goes offty really because you are very strong.
You're stronger a lot of times, rot stronger than you
give yourself credit for to come out of this on
(16:21):
the other side. So you should be proud of yourself.
If you're not, you should be because you have a
lot to be proud of. You survived and flourished in
an environment that so many people would not have. I
just I just want tell them to know that. I
(16:42):
just want tell them to know that that I'm.
Speaker 2 (16:45):
Freaking something to that. Thank you. I want to say
to each and every one of you that you actually
did come out as a hero's and the reason why
you are a hero. You did break the circle of
whyolence and you did actually something unbelievable, and that break
(17:06):
this violence to continue and become bigger because you always
go from one stage to another, honeymoon stage, and it
goes grooming stage, and it goes all over. I'm not
saying that trauma doesn't exist. I'm not saying that certain
things that you went through were easy and pleasant. Of
course not. But you are a hero. You made a difference.
(17:27):
And what are you doing right now? Even you know
saying this publicly on the social media, it's telling how
strong and powerful you are, that these wounds did make
you stronger and make you a better person and a
better member of this society. So for that, I want
to say thank you.
Speaker 1 (17:46):
Yes absolutely, And you know, and when you get into
these cases like this, it's it's it's not it's not
like we want to sit here and talk about, oh,
they did this and they did this, and we're going
to brush over what happened, but we're not going to
(18:08):
focus on it. We try to figure out and and
not justify what was done, but find out the reason
that these these well, evil things happen, and another thing
that was and we also we want to lift up
(18:30):
the victims for sure, but we cannot, we cannot forget
that a lot of times the perpetrators were victims themselves
and they didn't have the the inner strength that so
many of you have. And you are an inspiration to
a lot of people. I would love to interview you,
(18:54):
some of you, you know, if you're willing, I would
love to interview you and get the positive side of this,
because that you, you are the positive side of this,
and if you want to get your story out there,
we would absolutely love to hear it and give you
that platform. Of course, getting getting back, getting back to
(19:18):
this case. When she went to the job corps, she
she made a really good friend, a really sweet person.
Unfortunately that one didn't stick. She kind of she met
a guy that was actually younger than her to Darryl's
(19:41):
ship and along with him they started. When she started
dating him, they developed an interest in the occult and
devil worship. Yes, the there was also another person that
(20:02):
they befriended, Chandola Peterson, which was eighteen. So you're looking
at two girls that were eighteen, a boy that was
you know, a young man that was seventeen. Okay, now
we're not going to go into their backgrounds, because I'm
sure they have pretty similar ones. But when they got
(20:30):
into occult, that multiplies the I think the evil entities
that are involved in this and that you give yourself
over to just multiplies what you're already going through and
channels that evil that might be inside you or you know,
(20:54):
or even even creates it, and channels it through the
mental illness that already exists there. And the rage. You know,
it's not just mental illness, the rage that these people
have against everybody because they think, you know, they are
(21:15):
by themselves, and once they make ties with people that
feel the same have been through the same thing, it's
almost they it's they're going to get revenge on the world.
Speaker 2 (21:26):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (21:27):
And when they get focused on something with her, with
her personality disorder we were talking about back back backstage,
we were talking about a motive. Well, the motive in
this one was jealousy, and Danielle was telling me about
the difference between jealousy, you know, a man and a woman.
(21:50):
You want to touch on that, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (21:52):
Well, I'm let me go back a little bit to her.
I will explain that, but you said something very important
here is jealousy is one of the most I can say,
evil acts that wakes up inside of all of us,
you know, as a child, and go like, oh, we're
jealous because this one has this Barbie doll and this
(22:13):
one has that truck where you know, maybe this one
is looking better than I am. But you must understand
females are actually much different creatures than the males. Females
use a jealousy even as a motive to kill. Many
murders do happen. Of course they do happen also with
(22:33):
a male, but there's more motives to kill somebody when
you have females then to have males basically murderers or perpetrators.
What's happening that inside of the female's brain and the
hormones there is a huge rage and revenge that it's
turning into the obsession. So basically they will follow this
(22:56):
person where they go. They will, for example, on social media,
will look where you are, what you're doing, what you're wearing,
what you're eating. This evil jealousy becomes obsession, and that
obsession usually turns into something deadly, and that would be
a murdering that person. Sometimes girls can gang up because
(23:19):
that girls may be more popular, better educated, more beautiful,
has a more maybe male attention, and basically that motive
is to end this. So it's like to remove this
person being onto my way, becoming you know, more popular,
(23:41):
people going after me, that man loving me. And in
this case, this is what Christa did. She committed a
terrible crime at age of eighteen, that left young woman
did basically Miss Colleen's slummer in the job crops. So
they lure her in and they they kill her brewery
(24:02):
and he was old because she said that Miss Colleen
was you know, getting attention and going away with her boyfriend.
That never came out as truth or that we're actually
ever involved in any kind of relationship. But we must
(24:23):
understand also that miss Krista Pike had bipolar disorder. She
also had brain damage, she had major trauma, sexual abuse,
physical abuse, mental abuse. She's not capable of seeing the
things clearly. So when you're mentioning something the mister text
or my bro a couple of minutes ago, when you said,
(24:45):
we are not here to justify, you know, because of
their illness with saying this is okay why she did it,
of course not, but we are mentioning you these illnesses
to realize if this person gets the help, you know
as sooner it's better, then we may protect somebody and
they may also live a better life instead of being
you know, in a jail or waiting for a dead
(25:07):
sentence like it's in the case with miss Christa. Miss Christa,
they said that she followed this young girl everywhere that
she had nightmare, she would woke up and saying, she's there,
she's there, she's with my boyfriend. Another thing that they
were saying, you know, they found the drawings and the
pictures while she was explaining how Christa was really obsessed
(25:29):
with Colleen. So like I'm saying, when you have jealousy
and envy with females, it's ninety nine gonna go into
the motive to kill or obsession, and that obsession is
going to turn into something very bad or deadly if
intervention is not done. An unfortunately, intervention wasn't done, and
we have young victims like miss Slummers Colleen that was
(25:54):
going to blossom maybe into something beautiful, but she was
you know before her time.
Speaker 1 (26:01):
Yeah, when when they attacked her, I'm gonna go with
this real quick. When they attacked her, there was three
things used. They used a box cutter, which is a
razor and I and a meat cleaver, and a chunk
of asphalt. Now, they slashed her and cut her and
(26:26):
hacked her over three hundred times. While she was alive.
She was held the girls held her down while Daryl
carved a pentagram that covered her chest and part of
her admin huge. She was begging for her life, begging
(26:50):
for him to stop. And that's when that's when Christa
picked up a tunk of asphalt, yeah, and started beating
in her, beating her in the head. She beat her
in the heads so bad that she busted out a
piece of her skull, which she cleaned off, wrapped up
(27:13):
and put it in her pocket as a souvenir.
Speaker 2 (27:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (27:23):
When they when they weren't very smart about going about this,
they signed out. You have to sign in and out
when you're when you're in the job where they were
living there, they all they all signed out at the
same time and went to a a Some people on
(27:45):
the story called it a park, but it was really
an abandoned place. But anyway, they when they signed back
in only three of them signed back in, so it
didn't take long for them to figure out what had happened.
So when they arrested her, she was showing and she
(28:08):
this other friend that she had befriended. She actually took
the piece of skull and was showing it off to her. Yes, okay.
And there was something that I do not agree with
that happened in court. Okay, when she was arrested and
(28:29):
she gets she's during her trial, they had Colleen's skull
in the courtroom as evidence, yes, and passed it around
to the jurors while her parents and loved ones were
(28:50):
there in the courtroom.
Speaker 2 (28:52):
Horrible.
Speaker 1 (28:54):
Why you would do that and not do that in private?
I do not know that that was unnecessary And to
me that was that was That's a horrendous act in itself.
(29:17):
And these are state These are state appointed defense attorneys
doing our I'm sorry, prosecutors doing this, not defense attorneys.
Prosecutors doing this. Why to judge allowed it? I have
no idea that that's And Kimber, You're exactly right. It's
very disrespectful one to Colleen, and it's very disrespectful to
(29:40):
the family. If you want to show that, if you
want to show that evidence. Do it in private chambers,
you know, yes, not not out in public court when
people are watching, you know, people past there, and and
the pieces of her skull were falling off when they
were passing this around because it was so mutilated. I
(30:05):
just that that was one of the most horrific things
that I've ever read in the court case.
Speaker 2 (30:10):
I was shocked.
Speaker 1 (30:12):
I was too. I don't understand, and evidently there was
no there was nothing said or done about this. To me,
the lawyer should have been disbarred and the judge should
have to and fired right there. Yes, that that is
unbelievable and unbelievable behavior. I don't I'll never understand that
(30:37):
because you're not doing nothing but torturing the family even further. Okay,
but they I think they took they if I remember correctly,
the jury took all of ninety minutes, and an hour
of that was for lunch to convict her and put
(30:57):
her to sentence her to death.
Speaker 2 (31:00):
Is it really time for lunch after that? I know
I'm going to sound really horrible right now, but we
were just holding a skull of a young innocent girl.
You know, she's not even to anyone, so she's not
a much adult. Yeah, she's eighteen, but in many states
(31:20):
and even the places around the world, you are not
even and if you look at it medically, you are
not fully one hundred percent developed. And we are passing
a skull of a young, innocent woman around like it's
a football, you know, and we are describing this is
what happened while the family is there. I must say
when I read this, even right now, I get shivers
(31:42):
on my arms thinking how did her family feel? But
I will tell you something what I do think that
Christa did feel. She felt really glorified by many you know,
reading of many diagnoses, attending many seminars, and you know,
being part of the research, you know, behavior intervention specialist
(32:05):
and nurse and many things other things that I do
training in focal spectrum disorder. List goes on. She this
is her time. Everybody is seeing who she is there
now you know, so scared. This is horrible what she did.
This is her moment. She's feeding her soul on this
negative energy on her negative behavior is getting attention, and
(32:30):
this is what she's liking and enjoying. Even if they're thinking, okay,
this is probably new to show the evidence of course,
I'm not saying, but she was happy about it. This
is the moment when she is getting the attention, she
is being glorified. Oh my god, everybody is looking at
me what I did. So somebody is saying, that's the monic,
(32:53):
you know, miss, and I totally agree Camber. Yes, she
was smiling. And the reason why she's smiling, like I'm saying,
she's being recognized and glorified in her own eyes and
in her head that you know, this skull is being
passed like a baseball, you know, basically around a ball.
And then think about how her family did feel. We
(33:16):
have a mother there, you know that you just bury
her child, and you know, and basically the peace of
the child is being carried around. I personally think this
was very unprofessionally being done by the court. I don't
think was done in a correct way to respect her remains,
to respect the family. And I also don't think was
(33:38):
done in appropriate way when we're thinking about Christa, because
Christa is getting what she wants and that's to be
you know, glorified and you know, being this amazing person
that everybody's looking at. Oh my god, So this was
really a wrong way to show the evidence. If they
(34:02):
wanted to show the evidence, they should show it. You know,
I can say, you know, let's exclude this and this
and maybe even show it on the pictures on the slides.
There's many different ways because this wasn't done in eighteen
hundred century. This was done just recently. So she was
getting attention. But you know, text, she was getting attention
(34:22):
that she wanted. This is what makes her really happy.
You know, she was smiling and everybody is looking at her.
She they're terrified. She's this powerful young woman that you know,
watch out. I'm the emn myself. Woohoo. You know, actually
I think, you know, you are much more than I
can even say out loud on the social media what
(34:45):
I think. But you know, this is what's happening when
actually we don't pay attention to certain signs and symptoms
that are showing up at the early age, right, you know.
Speaker 1 (34:57):
And another thing, another thing I don't understand is why
are you going to decapitate the body. She wasn't decapitated.
They removed the head in the skull, Okay, to do this,
(35:23):
I don't understand it at all. You know, the only time,
the only time that the Christa showed any emotion besides
sitting there with a smirk on her face. Basically, m
was when they when the way they announced her being
put to death. Oh yeah, because she was at that time.
(35:45):
Now it's changed now, I'm sure, but at that time herself,
she was going to be put to death into the
electric chair. And when they when they announced that, they
tell you exactly what's going to happen to you, and
that's when she burst into two years but her uh,
(36:07):
her accomplices m hm. So Ship was after after she
(36:30):
was after she was sentenced to death. Yeah, Ship received
a life sentence because he turned informant. I don't know.
Peterson turned informant. I'm sorry. Ship received license with the
possibility of hear role plus twenty five years. He should
never see the light of day. Peterson the girl, the
other girl who turned informant, received probation for pleading guilty
(36:54):
to being necessory after the fact. So she got off
really really light. Now. When she was in prison, her
her her, it didn't stop with with just Colleen. She
(37:18):
was she had a female lover in prison and was
convinced that this this other woman was once again making
moves on her on her, on her on her lover.
And I think I'm trying to remember. I looked so many,
(37:48):
I looked at so many, says I believe she tried
that she tried to kill her. She didn't. I don't
think she should. Yeah, and and she and on top
of all that, oh here it is. Yeah, attacked in
the temple, attempted to strangle fellow inmate Patricia Jones with
(38:11):
a shoestring, and nearly succeeded in choking to death. Jones
had been serving a life sentence for murder, and Pike
was convicted of attempted first degree murder in August twelfth,
two thousand and four. Although in this position of the
Tennessee Department of Corrections that Cornett assisted in this crime,
their investigators concluded that there was an insufficient evidence to
(38:35):
charge her with helping the attack. With the attack on Jones. Now,
she also tried to escape prison.
Speaker 2 (38:44):
Yeah, oh yeah she did. I was just going to
say go ahead please.
Speaker 1 (38:49):
In March twenty twelve, it was revealed that Pike had
made several escape plans involving correction officer Justin Heflin God
and a New Jersey man named Donald co Hut although
it has never been determined exactly how it began. Coohut,
who worked as a personal trainer and was then in
his early thirties, entered into a letter writing correspondence with
(39:12):
Pike around the beginning of two on and eleven. By
July that year, Kohut was making the nearly seventeen hundred
mile trip by car from New Jersey to Nashville to
visit Pike on in person on visiting days once or
twice a month. Eventually, he communicated a plan for her escape,
(39:33):
and Pike enlisted the help of a corrections officer, Heflin,
who agreed to participate and retain in return for cash
and gifts. Because of security concerns, the Tennessee Department of
Corrections has not provided many details about the plan. However,
eventually unsealed document laid out of scenario where a prison
(39:53):
key had been duplicated by the prison guard and they
and twenty twelve they received information about the plot. This
led to the attempted prison break being thwarted by the
Corrections Department. According to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigations, the
(40:17):
plan was not very far along when it uncovered in
marks twenty twelve, Kohut was arrested in charge with bribery
conspiracy to commit escape, while Hefflin was arrested in charge
with bribery, official misconduct, conspiracy to commit Skate Pike was
not charged, and it was unclear to the investigators that
she was even a participant in the conspiracy other than
(40:38):
being aware of it. Like I said, she's not stupid, folks,
She is not stupid, these two guys. I mean, she's
very miniculent, and she's a good looking girl. She really is.
She's very pretty. They call her the face of an
angel and the mind of a devil. That's what they
(41:00):
call her. And oh absolutely, Kimber absolutely that I think
she was using her female persuasions. Oh yeah, no doubt,
no doubt. Especially I'm sure that stuff went on with
the guard.
Speaker 2 (41:16):
Oh yeah. And this is the saddest part, ladies and gentlemen,
this is not the first story that we actually hear
that guard. It doesn't matter if it's a female or
the male gets involved inmates. It makes me very very
angry that actually this happens. It happens in every country.
(41:38):
I'm not saying it happens is just the United States, Canada,
it happens all around the world. Sometimes people cannot control
their emotions. Sometimes people you know, like you're saying, they're
very manipulated. Whatever, I still don't think if you ask me,
this is my conclusion text, my own opinion. I don't
think any normal person via very clear mind and you know,
(42:03):
with being capable of understanding the fact and crime, would
get involved with anybody who is behind the bar doing
such a horrible crime. I'm not talking about stealing, robbing
the bank. I'm talking about being a serial killer, you know, rapist.
I'm talking about being somebody who it's a penophile. I
(42:26):
saw many documentaries and I did a lots of research,
and it's proven that ninety nine percent of these people
never got treatments. They are actually never going to be
capable of being cured, and we have them, unfortunately, on
our streets. And then somebody who's supposed to protect us
and have much clearer mind than all of us, it's
getting involved with them and letting them go outside or
(42:50):
helping them to go outside and commit another crime. I'm
not sure if some of these people maybe they need
to have mental assessments once or twice a year to see,
you know, because they're seeing a lot and they're capable
continuing the job, if you know, if maybe also texts.
They need to have different kind of trainings, checkings to understand,
(43:14):
you know, this is what's happening, because maybe they're getting
used to it. They're constantly you know, getting these people
putting them behind the bars. They see them every day.
They don't do nothing there sit you know, maybe they
read the paper whatever. So for them, after receiving them
and going through their basically files, they don't see them
anymore like that. They see them constantly behind the bars.
(43:35):
They're not doing nothing, So maybe they need to be
reminded who they are and what they are like when
I hear it. For example, you know, many of our
serial killers that you and I did, women are sending
them the letters. They're saying they're in love with them,
they will with them. I'm waiting for you to come
out then the guards, you know, and I'm like, wait
(43:55):
a second, we are we where are we going with this?
If you take miss Krista Pike, Ladies and Jetube and
everybody in a chart, she was a clear psychopath. I'm
sorry to say this.
Speaker 3 (44:08):
She was manipulative, liar, you know, organizing everything with her thoughts.
Speaker 2 (44:13):
She knew exactly what she was doing.
Speaker 3 (44:15):
Okay, Yes, she was born with phylocal spectrum disorder, malfunctioning
of the brain.
Speaker 2 (44:21):
You know, she never received the help. She was sexually,
in physically and mentally abused during her or entire very
short life. While she was freedom, you know, enjoying everything
just like everybody else does. But that doesn't give you
right to go in harass and abuse and you know,
mistreat others. And then you know, what are we having here?
(44:44):
Then she gets other people that are probably like you're saying,
she'd make the group that had mental issues too. She
made her a little coolt together. Okay, let's go on
a killing spree. Maybe if she didn't admit it that
she killed, you know, Delila, miss Colleen, you know, maybe
she would continue.
Speaker 3 (45:04):
God knows who will be next. And if you look
at her picture, why she's crying here, she's crying because
she's feeling sorry for herself while they.
Speaker 1 (45:11):
Were that's when she got sentenced to death.
Speaker 3 (45:17):
Yeah, so if you look at she's crying because she
cannot escape now. So the truth to it is, but
why she wasn't crying what she was doing you know,
discrrible crime to Colleen, or why she was smiling just
maybe a couple hours ago before they were, you know,
sharing the skull and mutilation of her body and everything.
(45:39):
She was smiling and having a smirk on her face
because she was being glorified.
Speaker 2 (45:43):
Look at it. It's like a piece of a puzzle.
So if you look at what kind of monster you
need to be to actually do this, you know, damage
to persons, sculls, texts, people don't know. But I'm gonna
share something you guys, very personal and very important to know,
(46:04):
and maybe it can help you tomorrow to understand these
crimes very if you're reading or maybe even protect somebody,
or if you hear something when you hear of a
shaking baby syndrome and that child now brain injury or
they actually did survive shaking baby in syndrome where they
died from it. These little things, as much as you
(46:25):
know they're fragile, they don't die just from a little shaking.
This is a vigorous, violent shaking to damage somebody's brain
or to hit them and make the skull break. As
much as they are really you know a little and
you know undeveloped It's not that easy, you know, to
give a shaking baby syndrome. So the reason why I'm
(46:48):
giving you this is the same you're talking about this
young woman. So when you see her skull, this was
done with the force, with the impact, with the rage.
That also tell you that this woman in the picture
should be behind the bars and never let go. I'm
sorry to see it, and I think that the entire
system failed here. You know, that Colean just that she
(47:13):
needed to have and I'm sorry you know that we
have you know, miss Christa here. Actually, you know, she's
a little bit older than me. You know, I'm born
nineteen eighty, so she's a little bit older than me. If
you look at her, she looks like she's, you know,
really well taken care of. She has hair, she has makeup.
I can see there, you know, nicely clean down. I
(47:33):
don't think she's suffering as much as the families of
miss Colean suffering. So where is the justice here? So
that's what I'm telling you, Please, ladies and gentlemen, when
you see somebody suffering from these mental illnesses, don't just
let go and say okay. They need attention before the
crime is committed or before somebody pays the price. So
(47:58):
that's why me and text are trying to make this
huge awareness. I feel sorry for anything that she went through,
God forbid, But look at Colleen's mother, look at her daughter.
They even decapitate the body, like you said, Texts, how
she did feel while her daughter's head was being passed
(48:19):
around like a tennis ball. This is very disturbing to me.
So I personally do think that case went really sour.
I think that things in the court went really wrong
that they shouldn't. And I think that miss you know
Pike should never be let out. And I do believe
that you know, she does deserve little injection, electric chair
(48:42):
or whatever in different states is allowed to And the
reason why because Miss Colleen never got to blossom and
live her life. And I'm sure her mother is living
in the trauma every day. So it's quite sad and
quite horrible. So just think about that scull, you guys,
and I think what kind of rage and what kind
(49:02):
of anger this psychopath, this monster had inside of her hair?
Was she was obsessed and jealous motive went to obsession
and killing this young woman very so horrible.
Speaker 1 (49:17):
Yeah, it's and we and if you haven't seen it, folks.
We did a show, you know what, I'm gonna put
this up here. Sure, I try to do this, I
try to remember to do this all on every show,
but I forget. This is the National Domestic Abuse Hotline, folks.
(49:41):
I urge you to reach out if if you know of,
or if you're a victim of, you know, any kind
of domestic abuse. The numbers eight hundred and seven nine
nine seven two three three. Again, that's the National Abuse
Domestic Abuse Hotline. If you're aware of or you're a
victim of, please reach out eight hundred nine seven two
(50:03):
three three. And I want to leave. That'scrolling up there.
That's it's it's so much. It's so often the topic
that that you know, bleeds over into the cases that
we talk about, and at some point, domestic abuse is
always in there somewhere, it seems like, and yeah, so
(50:28):
but this case is was and you hear me describe
them all the time as fascinating and what's fascinating to
me and Danielle also it is the it's the psychological
stuff that's behind and what makes these people tick. So
(50:51):
and Barry, you're right, he says, I knew several men
who were victims of physical abuse by their wives.
Speaker 2 (50:57):
Oh, he doesn't have to be. It happens on both sides,
of course, yes.
Speaker 1 (51:01):
You know. And the problem with being and just coming
from man, if you're being abused by a woman, One,
it's hard to get anybody to believe you.
Speaker 2 (51:13):
It's even worse.
Speaker 1 (51:15):
Two it's as a man, it's hard to say anything. Yeah,
you know, but so yeah, it happens on both sides
of the fence, folks. And it's just it's just as
it's just as traumatizing and sad for for a man
(51:36):
or a woman, you know, much less a kid. Okay,
that's I don't, I don't, I want I won't. I
won't tolerate that at all. I won't tolerate abusive women.
I want tolerate abusive y'all. I don't care if I
know you or not. If I see it happening outside,
you know, out in public, you can bet your butt
(51:58):
I'm going to step in because.
Speaker 2 (52:04):
And one thing, text, I love what you said. We
are not being here stereotypes. Uh you know. I did
get training especially for the violence and abuse. And there
was a special section by the Canadian Red Cross that
talks particularly about the men being abused by the women.
So that's happening every day, and of course for the
(52:25):
male it's even harder. You know, sometimes there's a cultural
way because you know, maybe he'll be made fun of.
Then there's a different way. You know, I'm supposed to
be provided, taking care of the family, and I'm being
abused by this female. You know, I'm supposed to be
in protecting the children, but now you know, I cannot
protect the children against the women that gave a birth
(52:46):
of them. So it's a totally different aspect. And I'm
looking basically, you know how maybe we can do one
show text just about the female perpetrators, you know, against
you know, basically the males, and I can give a
little bit more about the knowledge and you know, education
(53:07):
to everybody so they can understand that this is happening
every day. But what we can say about this case,
ladies and gentlemen, it's a one horrible case that told
us nothing else that you know, certain things when they
go sout. It's starting from the early age because there
was no attention given. There was no you know, right treatment,
(53:28):
nobody to reach out also to Miss Fike. But then
the worst thing because there was no attention, there was
no treatment. This turned into the horrible crime that one
life basically never end up blossoming and you know, living
as a normal part of the community. So please take
(53:49):
this as a you know, something that can help you
out as educational tool, reach out to abuse, hotline to
me or text if you need any help. You know,
will try hardest to put you in a right direction.
And don't forget crime does happened every day and it's
up to us to make a difference.
Speaker 1 (54:07):
Yeah, for sure. Well, thank you everybody for joining this analyst.
It was a rough one. Unfortunately, when you're on this subject,
you know you're not gonna have any very many lighthearted shows.
May we need to do one about stupid criminals lighting
it up a little bit.
Speaker 2 (54:27):
We can do that too. We can do that too,
so people can love mister bean and lying the gun
in the United States of America. And because you know,
in iglood is a little bit different, you know, and
it's coming to the weapons and carrying around. So even
the bobbies just recently started carrying the you know, weapons
when certain attacks did happened because of terror age and everything,
(54:52):
but they didn't wear that so for him that was
quite terrifying when he came to visit you guys, well.
Speaker 1 (54:59):
Thank you everybody. Daniel thank you. I know you're you're
waiting to go to bed. I'm gonna go grab it
now because I got to run. So we'll see y'alllater
and we'll see you tomorrow night. Danielle. What are you
doing tomorrow night on your show?
Speaker 2 (55:12):
Yes, so tomorrow is gonna be quite interesting. I know,
I guys did for you two nights of the readings.
Then you guys really did enjoy it. So me and
Donicho are ganging up again and we're gonna do the
spirit animals. I can tell you with spirit animal, how
to involve the spirit animal or how to help you.
You know, we're dealing, you know, with certain things, troubles,
(55:35):
how to protect yourself and everything. So it will be
quite interesting. Bigfoot is my spirit animal. I love that one.
So join me tomorrow at six pm empty and you know,
and after that, of course, don't forget you do have
Texas front port. You will be quite fun and exciting.
You know. We'll love you guys, and thank you so
(55:57):
much for joining us, because both of us you're getting
swollen and our eyes are closed.
Speaker 1 (56:03):
We've got there's a lot of stuff going on in
the porchs family. We've got, of course, this show on Sundays,
and you've also got Truth or Tenfold before us at
five o'clock or normally for us, we jumped on it
early today, but at five o'clock. Randy and Brandy do
(56:24):
Truth or tenfol on Sundays, and then Yeah, and then
on Tuesdays you've got Paranormal Paul over there on his
patio at one pm. And then Tuesday nights you've got BMR.
And then Wednesdays you've got Wednesday's We've got who got Wednesday? Wednesday? Wednesday, Oh,
(56:48):
the new show with Brandy, Donnie, Paul and Randy, Paranormal
Show and Tell. And then on Thursdays you've got bm
R again with me on Brunch with big Foot Michigan Rob.
(57:08):
And then Thursday night he does his late show Noless.
Saturday nights, I'm sorry, Thursday nights you've got Blondes and Booze,
and then Fridays you've got you got Blondes and Booze
again on Friday, and then Saturday you've got I'm missing something,
(57:32):
Dad gum it now time.
Speaker 2 (57:34):
I'm so scared to say because I don't anybody. Just
check out many things out there that everybody I forgot.
Speaker 1 (57:41):
You know what I forgot. I forgot me and Paul's
new show.
Speaker 2 (57:43):
On Wednesday, Oh my lord, tending your big kicks at
Kissing Hogway Weird.
Speaker 1 (57:52):
Yeah, waking up Weird. Thank you, Kimber and then uh yeah,
I mean every day of the week you can catch
a member of the Porch. And I want to say
that I want to give a big shout out to
the mods that were on the show yesterday. Those are
thes that got to see it. You know what I'm
talking about. I just want to say, thank you so much.
(58:13):
We needed you were there, Danielle, thank you. You want
to take us out?
Speaker 2 (58:20):
Yeah, good night, it's good night because I'm going to bed.
Everybody have a wonderful Sunday. God bless you all. We're
going to have a little rest. Don't miss out shows.
Please check out Texas Front Porch. There's many great shows
and our family is quite lovely. There's always something for somebody.
So everybody has their own vibe. So see what works
(58:43):
for you. God bless you all. God bless the United
States of America and Canada. Keep safe and keep happy
because life is too sure. You never know what can
happen tomorrow. Good night, everybody. I'm gonna say good night
because I'm going to bed.
Speaker 1 (58:57):
Bye bye bye, everybody.
Speaker 2 (59:00):
M