Episode Transcript
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(00:17):
Hi, everyone, Welcome to anotherepisode of It's About Damn Crime, where
this week two best friends talk aboutwhat Justine uh oh children murders? Yeah,
there you go? Children birds?Did you forget for a second?
Yeah, I was like, whatare we doing here? Who am I?
I don't know what's happening? SoUm due to Justine being drunk,
(00:46):
yes, it hung over, soshe's been in and out of the bathroom,
poor thing. I woke up thismorning with so much anxiety, like
I know, like I just needto sleep. What time is it?
It's three o'clock. I have nothad one thing to eat today and I
just m gonna feel like like justikey, Yeah, you're not feeling too
(01:10):
well today. So because of that, um, we are going to be
releasing a Patreon episode, yes thisweek or Todayreon? Yeah. Um.
Also, guys, before we jumpinto the Patreon episode, we want to
let you guys know that this week, this Saturday, coming up at eight
(01:32):
pm at Pole Fitness Studio, theAlternative Babe Show is happening. Yeah.
Me interesting will be there the IDCcrew of course we're gonna be a part
of it the way there what Yes, Scott will be there and we'll be
doing it alongside the chicks from KeepingIt Casual podcast and Ashley from On This
(01:55):
Day Entertainment, So that'll be atime. Tickets are five dollars. You
can get them where Justine. It'sabout Damncrime dot Com slash live show,
just getting Just click on the liveshow tab. I don't know what.
I think it's live dash show.I honestly don't know. Just click it
out with live show. It's prettysimple. There you go. The tickets
(02:21):
are five dollars. That's a costof like a Starbucks coffee or something.
Yeah. Right, there's gonna bedrinks, yeah, which right now,
I'm telling you I don't feel likewe're taking in any sort of drinking,
but you know that's six days away, so you're gonna drink this drink.
Let's be real. There's gonna becostume contests, more drinking. We're gonna
(02:47):
tell some cool stranger danger stories.Justine's gonna tell a stranger danger story.
Yeah, the one I've been holdingonto my whole life. Yeah, oh
my ball. M Also, um, what's Scott gonna be? Is he
dressing up? Now? Scott's gonnabe Scott. We should get in my
(03:08):
shirt that says security on it.We should that's a good idea or crew
member. Crew. Yeah, crew, we'll just get like a plain black
T shirt and just write it intape, write it on a piece of
tape, stick it on it.It's the kind of crew we have perfect.
(03:30):
Yeah, and then we're gonna godo something afterwards. We're gonna head
somewhere we don't know where yet,but do a little after party. So
if you guys come out, planon, you know, drinking for a
while. We're don't drinking episode orwhatever whatever your life is about, do
it. What did I just say? Who am I? Where did I
come from? Why am I here? That's fine? Sorry? If you
(03:54):
can hear the dogs barking in thebackyard, I mean in the background,
what we gotta go? This isout. Hope you guys enjoy and here's
the show. Hi everyone, hairour faves. That was very sultrous.
(04:45):
It was huh is that a wordsultrous? Sultry? Sultry? Sure,
that's very sultry. It's like isthat the sultrius? Is that like a
sultry seductress? Yeah? Tight reminderit welcome, Hey guys. If you
guys know who we are ye andyou're listening to Patreon bonus episode number eleven.
(05:08):
Wow, we're almost out of year. I know we sell our episode
guy, Yeah, so oh onthis we're doing kids killing kids? Yeah,
killing kids, killer kids? Killerkids killing kids? Right? Yeah,
come with a better title. Thatwasn't great. What murderous kids killing
kids? Kids killing kids? Don'tkill kids? Whatever, We'll figure it
(05:31):
out. Okay, okay, Justine, do you want to start or we
start? We'll start, Okay,I shall start. Kay ready, yeah,
I'm so ready. All right,Dammi, guys, it started happening.
Here, here we go. Dammi. Lola Taylor was born in Lagos,
Nigeria, on December seventh, nineteeneighty nine, to Richard and Gloria
(05:54):
Taylor. He attended Wisdom Monastory Schoolbefore his mom and then him an older
sister and an older brother. Theykind of moved, okay, well,
they went to the UK in Augustof two thousand. His sister had epilepsy,
(06:15):
so they were going there for herto get treatment. But I don't
think they had like an end date. So they went and they rented an
apartment persona um so Richard stayed inNigeria to work, and he told Dammy
Lola he could come back after afew months. But he was like,
I'm gonna stay here in the UK. Here in the UK. Did I
(06:35):
say? Did I say here inthe UK? Here in the UK?
Okay, here in the UK.It's hard, so you could work on
his studies. He was ten yearsold and his goal in life was to
change the world. Oh, that'sa big goal. So he thought that
(06:58):
he could get better education in theUK. So it's like, Dad,
I appreciate the offer to come home. Mom must stay here. Who's he
staying with his mom? Mom andthe kids were in UK and then the
dad was back in Nigeria working.Oh. I don't know what he did.
He had some sort of fancy titlejob in Nigeria. Okay um.
So I think that's pretty smart thinkingfor a ten year old to go like,
(07:20):
hey, the schooling here is gonnaget me further in life. That
maybe my education that I would getin Nigeria. So yeah, I'm gonna
instead of going home, I'm gonnastay here. It's smart for a ten
year old to think like that.Wow right, Yeah, it's crazy.
Like when I was ten years old. I don't know, I was.
I was making mud balls and waitingfor the next day and then throwing them
(07:40):
at cars. That's what I wasdoing. All that's great. I think
I was playing Barbi that it's notten years old. Oh did you make
them hump each other? Making themrub smooth areas? Yeah? Rub there.
Do you remember the barbies that wouldhave like made like built in underwear
and it would just be like justlike sometimes it was nude colored, but
it would be just like swirlies.They just look our pubes. I've never
(08:03):
seen those built in underwear. Yeah, they have like because they were like
didn't want to show their smooth areas, so they put built an under around
them. And then I think theydo have bees. But then they would
also have like swirlies. Were theyglued on or they it was part of
the smooth area look like, sothere was no way you could ever take
them off. They were on thebarbe stuck there. Yeah. How weird?
(08:24):
Um? Okay, so back tothe UK and not um who makes
bart me Mattel Motel. Okay,we're not at Mattel. Okay, We're
back in the UK, back inthe USSR that's Russia, right, Yeah,
yeah, Okay, back in theuk uk Okay, that's great.
(08:46):
Okay. So here during his studyingin the UK, Damilola discovered the local
library. Oh. With the locallibrary, he just over that they offered
a lot of classes he could take, and a computer class in particular,
and he was super into computers.I feel like in two thousand that was
(09:11):
when the computers were really taken offin the world, you know, Like
yeah, so I was like,oh, computers are cool. Um,
So he started taking this class afterschool. He would go to the library
take a computer class and then oncehe was doing the computer class, he
would walk home, okay, Andso it was a kind of like part
of his routine. Yeah, hewould take like his scheduled outings. You
(09:35):
know. I don't know how oftenthe class was, but I can't imagine
they were offering a free computer classevery single day, you know what I'm
saying. Yeah, I don't.I don't think so Okay. So this
is where Damilola's father, Richard thinksthe trouble begin because the family wasn't living
in the best area and when Damilolawould walk home after he was done at
(09:56):
the library, he was approached alot by the local like street kids like
the gang, like the gangs.Yeah, um to join their gangs.
They're like, you're living in ourhood and you're going to join our gang.
Bid teenagers kid gang you know.Yeah. Um, but this is
a ten year old that wants tochange the world and he wants to have
(10:20):
a good education. He doesn't wantto be so he was like he'll know,
yeah, like I don't want tobe I want to go to the
library and I want to study computers. Yeah. And like he was really
active in sports at his school.Like I think he got bullied a little
bit because he was such like agoody goodie and he was like all about
just his future and every those areconsidered nerds. Yeah, he was a
(10:41):
little nerd and it's not a badthing at all. Live your life.
That's the way you should be.Yeah, you don't want to end up
like us, Okay, Um,nerds are Nerds are the cool thing.
They are in my eyes, especiallyas an adult. Yeah. Um.
So on November twenty seventh, twothousand, I felt like I didn't say
(11:03):
that two thousand. Is that itnormal? At that time? CCTV footage
shows ten year old Demilola leaving PeckhamLibrary at four fifty one pm. This
library is called Peckham. Peckham.Okay, you know, he looked like
a normal kid hitting home after school. Okay, there's like images or a
(11:26):
video of him, like in theelevator, um, coming out of the
library and there's just like people bustlingin and out, and he's just like
he's got on this little silver coat, like one of those puffy cooks because
it's fucking colder now, but it'slike silver. Um, and he just
looks like a normal Everything looks normal. Yeah, normal kid just going home,
(11:48):
going about his day, going justliving his life, you know,
his usual routine. And so afterthat we don't know exactly what happened because
the cameras have him coming through thelibrary at the library and down the strip
of the camera area as far asit went in front of the library,
and then he's gone. Um,So detectives believe that when he was just
(12:16):
four hundred yards from his house.Think about how close that is. I
don't know how close four hundred yardsis. I don't even know what a
yard. Arms sticks, Yeah,so like four hundred of them, so
like a distance, but not likea quarter of a mile too far.
I don't know. I can't tellyou anything in miles, okay. So
(12:37):
Demi Lola was surrounded by a groupof teenage gang members and told to give
over his silver jackets. Demilola said, hail to the no, not doing
it. So somebody picked up abroken bottle from the street and stabbed him
in the lake no, which severedan artery. And um, then the
(12:58):
stupid fucking idiot kids ran away.Um. So then Demilola got up and
he tried to walk to get help, and he found like a flight of
stairs. He staggered up them andthen kind of collapsed, and then an
off duty police officer noticed all theblood on the street and followed it up
the stairs and so he found umDemilola at the top of the stairs.
(13:22):
And then he called nine one one. And we don't usually do this here,
but I do have a nine oneone clip okay to insert, so
fair warning for warning, it's common, okay. And I said nine one
one, but I met nine ninenine okay, just forgot where she was
in a different country. It's fine, okay, Ready, go ahead,
(13:45):
ye like ye road row road,yeah yea. Before that to me was
(14:07):
about blood. How we done that? What happened. We do not know
that. We've just come out andfind him. M affect, like you
out, where is he bleeding from? He's coming him. We cannot fail.
So basically he came, you know, he found him and called nine
(14:31):
to nine. Yeah, and he'ssaying he's bleeding out and he's going,
which means that he's dying. Andhe says that the last thing that Dami
Lola said to him was I'm okay, I'm okay, okay. So even
in his his last breaths, he'sreassuring this complete stranger that he's okay.
Yeah. Um, So fifteen minutesafter leaving the library, Dammi Lola blood
(14:54):
to death and a dirty starwell witha complete stranger and ten days before his
eleventh birthday. What Yeah, thatmakes me want to cry, dude.
I cried the whole time I waswriting this, like it was such a
nightmare. That's so sad. Sowhen his mom, Gloria, got home
(15:16):
from work that day and police werein the surrounding area, they kind of
had everything taped off. Yeah,she asked what was going on and they
told her that a young boy haddied, and she said that in that
moment, she knew it was herson and she knew he had been killed.
So later Richard was called in Nigeriaand I don't know the time difference.
(15:37):
I think they're a day ahead.That sounds about right. And they
called him into his director's office.So they didn't call him to his office.
They called him and said, hey, you have a phone call.
You need to come take it inthe director's office. And he was like,
just send it to my office,like what's the and they're like no,
no, no, no, Ineed to I need to come take
(15:58):
it in the director's office. Sowhoever was on the phone told him that
Damilola had gone to school and neverreturned home and that he had been stabbed
to death. And then he saidthat he doesn't remember much after that,
like it all kind of went intolike a blurry haze. Of course,
(16:19):
so he immediately got on a planewent to the UK, and he said
that the moment that he got offthe plane, it was a media frenzy,
like really, his cameras everywhere andthey were following them around or asking
them questions. And he said thatstrangers were coming up to him and offering
him condolences and I get where thatwould be like very it's important, right
(16:40):
because you want your kid's case tobe solved so to put in the media,
but also as a parent that justlost their ten year old child and
privacy for yeah, let him grieve. Yeah. I can't imagine getting that
news and then landing, you know, in UK and then being bombarded with
(17:00):
reporters and cameras in your face andreporters with their mics in your face.
And he probably Stow was like whatthe fuck is going on? I mean
he was still in shock. Yeah, and then that was it. There
was no leads, nobody knew whodid it. Wow, there was like
a lot of suspicion of I meanthey were like it was probably like a
(17:22):
gang, street gang whatever. Butyeah, they couldn't say who for sure
did it was Um, but theydidn't find the bottle that he was.
They had the bottle, okay,Um, and they had him of course,
but it's like their kids, sothey're not necessarily in the system.
(17:45):
So warmer time, guys, Warmertime. We say here often, but
the Taylor family is exactly the familythat you want in your corner something bad
happens to you. Because when somethingbad happens, to you. You all
you hope that your family fights fightsfor you. And they fought, and
(18:07):
they fought, and they kept hisname in the papers, and they they
did something kind of cool, whichwas they didn't There's a lot of times
the family goes after the police andthey're kind of like you failed us,
and you fucked up and you werewrong. And the Taylor family rallied with
the police and was like like joinedforces, They're gonna solve this, and
we have all the faith in theworld in them. And I think kind
(18:29):
of like with that attitude, thepolice are more likely to go like,
yeah, like they do have alot of faith in us, and they
believe in us, and so we'regoing to do everything we can to help,
instead of being like, well,they're shitting on us, Like why
would we why would we go furtherand help? Yeah? Yeah, I
could see that mentality of a policeyeah officer, the police, the police
force. When the family ships onthem, they're like, well, yeah,
(18:49):
they're shitting on us, why goeven further? I think that I'm
incapable of doing my job, Likewhy would I even bother to help you?
You know, that goes with othermental like that goes with anything in
any situation, like, positivity isgoing to get you a hell of a
lot further than Yeah. So,after Demie Lola's murder, it took six
(19:12):
long years and three trials to identifyand convict his killers. Six years,
six years. We're gonna get madat the end of this, Okay,
I'm already mad. So in twothousand and two, four boys went on
trial at the Old Bailey, Ourold old Bailey, our old friend,
(19:33):
and they were charged with Demi Lola'smurder. But two of the boys were
found not guilty and the other twowere acquitted because they were basically just charged
based on a fourteen year old girlstestimony that she had seen them. But
then, for whatever reason, Ididn't dig too deep into it, she
was found enough to be like anunreliable witness was probably just flying. So
(19:56):
finally, in two thousand and six, Ricky and Danny Pretty were convicted of
manslaughter their brothers, their brothers forthe murder of Damilola Taylor. And who
the fuck are Ricky and Danny Pretty? Tell us? And what the hell
were they thinking? Well, okay, well, the brothers were members of
(20:17):
a gang known as the Young Peckhamboys, and by age twelve and thirteen,
they were out wreaking havoc all overthe streets. They were stealing and
probably stealing drugs. Um. Dannyat the time of the killing should have
been under twenty four hour curfew andhis social service as home. So he
(20:41):
was like in a like a grouphomemas and he should have been monitored twenty
four hours. Like he wasn't allowedto leave the group home, but for
whatever reason, no one was payingattention. He slipped out. And then
four weeks after Damilola was murdered,Danny was placed under a super VISI an
order for an assault with intent torob and this is troubled YEA and two
(21:06):
cases of racially aggravated assaults. Soit was also a little bit racist.
Yeah, they were also um ofcolor, Like there are people they're they're
black. I don't know if theywere black, but they had something in
them. Okay, Um, sono I think they were black or something.
(21:29):
Yeah, they weren't white. Theywere not white. Okay. There
saw so many pictures today I don'trecall who's who anymore. Um. So
obviously he had issues and he shouldhave been being monitored and he was twelve
at the time of the attack.Okay, okay. Then Ricky Pretty who
(21:51):
was thirteen at the time in thekilling, and that's his brother, that's
his brother. It's his older brotheralso had a history of violence and theft,
and he was too supposed to havebeen under supervision when Demilola was killed.
So they both were in the ina group home and nobody was watching
them, and nobody was watching them. Brilliant. So advances in DNA in
(22:14):
two thousand and six found Demilola's bloodon one of Danny's shoes and then on
Ricky's jacket, so that's how theywere finally able to contact them, and
then they were both okay. Sothen they were both sentenced right for Demila's
murder and they were both given eightyears eight years. Must say that one
(22:40):
time eight years they were given murderinga ten year old years a piece,
and they were both over eighteen atthe time of the trial. What so,
of course the family was pissed,Well, I would be two eight
years for murdering their ten year oldson. Such a joke, What the
hell? Bro It wasn't even veryfrustrating. I'm like speechless. Yeah,
(23:08):
I don't even know what to sayabout this. It really pisses me off.
Yeah, eight years, eight yearsa piece for killing a child.
But here's the other side of it. Hold on to that anchor. They
were kids though. So the judgesaid that there was many reasons for her
(23:29):
sentencing three to be exact. First, the boys roll in twelve and thirteen.
Yeah, And second, there wasno evidence to show that they had
planned to murder him. It's notlike they went and bought a gun and
sought him out and then they wentand killed him. You know, it
was just a reaction that happened,Like everything happened so quickly. Yeah.
And then third, the last thingwas is that they hadn't even brought a
(23:52):
weapon. They had just picked yousomething that they found on the streets.
So it wasn't even like they wereplanning on robbing someone that daily. They
just saw an opportunity. And you'rean idiot kid, you're twelve and thirteen
and you're living this thuggish lifestyle.Yeah, and you're living in a group
home where nobody's really paying attention toyou. So you seek that, you
(24:15):
know, you want to have friendsand shit, and and you want to
look that family mentality. No,further further look for the nearest gang because
that's a family friend, You're partof their family. Yeah, so,
which involves a lot of violence introublemaking and their kid. And then at
(24:37):
twelve and thirteen, you could Imean, you could tell a twelve year
old basically anything and he's gonna gookay. Yeah, Like, same thing
with a thirteen year old. Yourmind is still being formed, like you're
still disaster. So as upsetting asit is that they only got your like,
(25:00):
I understand where the judge was alsocoming from because they were kids as
well, like, and you can'tlock away and throw away a kid like
it doesn't make them any better,It doesn't fix them. I mean,
they definitely need to be punished for. Uh. But like one thing I
(25:22):
don't I kind of don't agree withis giving a kid life. No,
you should never give a child lifeunless the act was very heinous. Yeah,
Like what's that redhead kid? Didn'the get life? I forget his
name? Little kid? Yeah?Look at that? Yeah? Would they
say redheads have no souls, haveno offense any if you guys, are
(25:47):
there any redheads listen to us?Um? Yeah, so I think he
got life? That little What hedid that little boy was Oh, so
I think there's if you're like,you almost can't compare the two, right
because this these two are living onthe streets basically, and this is the
(26:07):
only life that they know. They'rethe product of their environment. But that's
what I'm talking about, Like,like I would disagree if the judge gave
those two boys the ones in yourlife life. You know, I don't
know if they gave that red headkid. That's obviously a completely different case
and we're not doing no know whatthat kid's name is. I tell us,
I forget his honestly tell us hisname. Um, but yeah,
(26:30):
I don't know if he got lifeor what. I could be mistaken,
but yeah he should have. Thatredhead kid, that's like a seriously demented
human people. Definitely, Yeah,he did way too much and you're demented.
They tortured this kid or they evensought him out, you know what
I mean. I think it's justlike it was a shit circumstances, you
know, wrong place, wrong time, and they asked for your jacket,
(26:55):
you didn't give it to the hestood your ground and and where they got
him cut him in the right place, they cut him in the right place,
and I think that he started therewas an artery in your leg,
right, I didn't know everywhere.The minute that he started bleeding really heavily,
they're like the fuck and they tookoff, you know, which is
kind of bullshit because you left himthere to bleed to death. Yeah,
(27:17):
so, I don't know. Ithink it's just it's enough. But when
you're also a kid, you don'tthink, you don't think, and you
act before you think. You run. I mean, it's in the act
of picking up that bottle to cuthim in the leg because he didn't give
you his jacket. It's such afucking stupid kid mentell. That jacket's not
even worth anything. It's not worththe life. They were stealing jewels from
(27:41):
him or money. They were tryingto take his jacket, Like jacket,
what are the gonna where that jacket? But maybe they're cold. I don't
know, maybe they weren't. Yeah, uh yeah, it's it sucks,
and it's that gang mentality, especiallywhen you're at a young age, Like
you said, your mind at ayoung age is perform and it's you're still
(28:04):
learning and when somebody tells you todo something or you live in a certain
lifestyle, like that thuggish life.That's all you know. Yeah, you're
robbing places or just doing anything youcan to get by, I guess,
or to feel included, to feelincluded itself or whatever. It doesn't I
mean, fuck the guy that said, let me take in little kids as
(28:26):
a part of my gang, youknow, like yeah, hm. So
I think the family was initially likefrustrated with the sentence, but then also
they're not hateful people. I thinkthey understood why, you know what I
mean? Um, okay, Soend of rant. End of rant.
(28:52):
So now I'm going to fast forwardto the future here, guys. Okay,
So Danny Pretty was released from Ikeep calling him pretty pretty. It's
p r E D d I E. I'm sure it's pretty pretty pretty.
I don't know. Pretty was releasedfrom prison in two thousand and eleven after
serving five years of his eight yearsentence five years, five years, and
(29:17):
he was released. He stayed onthe straight and narrow since its release.
There's been no uproar from him.I mean, he's just like, he's
just very low key and I don'twant to go back there, and I'm
good, like I'm gonna get myshit together. You know, I feel
like this is foreshadowing. I feellike his brother went down a wrong path.
Are asking me about Ricky? Yes, all right, Well Ricky on
(29:37):
the other hand, let me tellyou, guys, the second half of
this story is about Ricky. Holyshit, there's a second half, all
right, So Ricky, I'm kindof excited about the second half. Yeah.
I mean it's pretty good, butit's not like a half. It's
like a quarter ten percent. Okay. So Ricky was released in two thousand
and ten, so a year beforehis brother, after only serving four years
(30:00):
of his eight eight years? Whichone is which one? Pick? I
don't know, Oh, they don'tknow. I have no idea. Okay.
There was like I watched like thisweird British show and then like it
did a lot of reading, andthere was just like even if I hadn't
found that British show, I wouldn'teven have known what the theory was,
like what had happened. It waskind of like and I think that was
(30:22):
the problem with the other trials,where it was like nobody was there and
the kids weren't talking, so therewas no way to say like and then
not only that, but he tookoff walking right, so he moved away
from the original location of the crime, so things changed. He got picked
up. He died on scene,but because he was so little, the
ambulance came. They picked him up. They took him to the hospital and
they didn't give him his time asdeath till a few hours later or like
(30:47):
an hour later, but he diddie and stairwell. Ye. So there
was just like so many different factorsthat played into it, and like nobody
could say for sure this is whathappened. Even this whole jacket theory is
just a theory. Like, andthe only reason why they got these boys
is because they had blood on them. Yeah, And how they found that
(31:08):
blood six years later, I'm notsure, guys, but they did.
Maybe they had interviewed them originally andtaking their clothes and then they were able
to sat it later, like Idon't even know. Maybe somebody came forward
and named them pretty pretty wrecky,I said, prettiere Okay, okay,
(31:30):
So what happened with Ricky okay?Sock uh okay. So he was released
after serving only four years, andthen Danny was the worst one, like
the one I was talking about earlier, and it was like, oh,
it was was doing racist murderers orwhat did they say RACIALI racially aggravated assault?
(31:51):
Yeah, okay, two armed robberies, Danny, Danny got his life
together. Okay. So uh.He was released, but then said back
to Parrison a second time in Marchtwenty eleven for violating his parole. He
had gone back to his old gangarea and was there hanging out with his
old gang members, which was apart of his parole. Like, we'll
(32:12):
let you out, but I canhave no contact with any of them.
So he was again arresting, joking, asked back to prison. Six months
later. While he was in prison, he attacked another prisoner. Oh okay,
but then was still parole the secondtime on January twenty fifth, twenty
twelve, so he was released andparole the second time. Brilliant. Okay.
(32:35):
So he's been arrested, released andthen arrested, rasted, released and
now he's on probation on parole againa parole sorry, And then exactly sixteen
days later, he violated parole again. Who did he kill this time?
He didn't. He was hanging outwith his old gang again. Who did
they rob? Nobody? Oh,he just couldn't be there, so that
(32:57):
he was arrested for a third time. He just can't away from the gigging
the thug life. He didn't choosethe thug life. The thug life chose
him. That's exactly true, Okay. So then he was released I think
two pots said that one more timein July twenty twelve. But then a
year and a half later, inDecember twenty thirteen, he got into some
(33:19):
sort of high speed motorcycle chase withthe police and then was sent away for
five more months. He needs tojust be put away, like what are
they doing? Just so that maybehe was locked after his five months,
right, he started five months freeman, So in December twenty thirteen, five
months after that will stay. Junemaybe July of twenty fourteen, he was
(33:40):
a freeman, okay. And asof November twenty seventeen, he was back
behind bars. He had some sortof driving offenses that he was supposed to
go to court for. Then hedidn't show up to court, so he
was up rested. And I'm goingto assume he was out of jail now,
right because I was Justmber or therewas November and he was only he
(34:01):
only had two and a half monthsto serve. Okay, already April,
So I'm gonna assume that he's free. Um, but who really knows what
this guy? He could have beenout for four hours and gone back.
That was the last article I couldfight. So his friends say he has
since retired or I'm sorry, hesince tried to reinvent himself and he tried
(34:21):
to change his name. But butthis is the best This is gonna be
the best part. Okay. Apparentlyduring one of his prison stance, he
got into another altercation with another inmateand that inmate stabbed him cut off his
ear. So he's missing an ear. He only has one ear. Now,
he's only got one ear? Ohcan we call him one year Ricky?
(34:44):
One year Ricky? But I mean, is that is that Ricky?
Pretty? Pretty? What is thatpretty? Is that where you pretty?
He got one ear? Yeah?That's him? Who told me his name
is Ricky Brown? Ricky Brown filling? I wanted that's Ricky pretty? Like?
Come on? What when he justwears a hat a beanie all the
(35:07):
time. Yeah, it is coldin the UK. I don't know it
is, Okay. So April eighth, two thousand and eight, two years
after her son's killer was brought totwo thousand, two thousand and eight,
two thousand eight or going back intime, we'll be here. Okay.
So two years after her son's killerwas brought to jess or killer resisious,
they were about to justice, GloriaTaylor passed away. Oh well, at
(35:30):
least the murders were caught before shepassed. And I mean now they're probably
together. Um and Richard Taylor createdwhich is the dad again, the Damilola
Taylor Trust, which is used tohold an annual event to highlight youth who
are making an outstanding contribution to theircommunity. So whether it be an academics
(35:50):
or community service or if they're makingkiller music or video like whatever, if
you're doing something good in your lifeand you're a kid, you're going to
get recognized by this fund. Yeah. Or that that's a programmer. So
we're gonna wrap this up here rightnow. That's good though, Yeah,
(36:12):
that the dad's doing that, becauseI feel like when you give kids like
a good job, you know,or that's motivation for them to keep doing
what they're doing. And they wereinterviewing some of the kids that are part
of this whole thing, and theywere like, you know, it's very
rare when we get accolades were doingsomething good instead of getting called out for
all the bad things that we do, because when you're you're a kid,
(36:32):
you're stupid. Yeah, dumb things. Okay, So Damilola wished to change
the world right, and even thoughhe isn't here anymore, his memory has
absolutely done some good for it,and his dad thinks that he would be
proud of the work he's done inhis honor, which makes me want to
cry. Yeah, I think he'sjust his dad, Richard's been putting in
(36:57):
the good fight to make sure thatkids are appreciated more than their shoot on.
You know, it's like even thepretty boys like they what else were
they gonna do? They obviously didn'tcome from good homes. They were in
group homes. They were in grouphomes. And I don't know, it
sucks. You know, don't fuckinghave kids if you're not going to take
(37:21):
care of them. M hmmm,amen to that. I don't have to
say about that. Well, thatwas a very sad case. What is
that? Yeah, I know creda lot. Sometimes I'm just so emotional.
Yeah, well, I'm glad thatthe mom, Yeah, saw justice
(37:44):
for her child. I'm glad thedad is doing all he can to keep
his son's name, you know,alive and his memory alive. Um.
I'm mad that those two boys gotonly eight years apiece, but it is
what it is, and I'm gladat least one of them corrected his ways
(38:05):
and turned his life around. Iwish both of them did that, Yeah,
but unfortunately Ricky decided to keep hangingout with the gang. I think
he is that case where it's like, you put them into prison even at
eighteen nineteen. I think he wasnineteen when he went to prison. It
doesn't make you better, No,it doesn't doesn't. I mean, I
(38:27):
know it's there for punishment, butyou don't learn most of the time.
I think Danny was the exception tothe role where he went in, he
did his time and went fuck,yeah, fuck this, I never want
to be in again. And Rickydid what everybody else does basically, you
know, went in, he wasprobably still affiliated in the same gang in
the prison, came out, wentback to you again. It's like and
(38:51):
once you know something, that's allyou know. Yeah, how do you
change it? M If you haveno family to turn to when you get
that other thing, you have nofamily to turn to. Once you're out
of prison, you're gonna go backto your people that cared for you,
your family, yeah, which isaka your gang, your old gang that
you know, and that's gonna welcomehim back with open arms. And then
(39:14):
that's who you're gonna always go backto. Yeah, So it just sucks.
I wonder if he was released ayear after his brother was or at
the same time as Rother I know, but he was released a year before.
But I feel like if he wasreleased after oh, if his brother
was, if they would have connectedman and maybe his brother what's not Ricky
(39:37):
but the honey. I wonder ifDanny would have helped Ricky turn his life
around. Yeah, But because Rickywas the first one to get out before
then he didn't have his brother toturn to. He just went a totally
different yeah, or back to yeah, safe for him to his old ways,
or if it would have gone theopposite way, if they would have
both gone out at the same time, and then Ricky would have dragged Danny
(39:59):
down with him, yeah, becauseI feel like when Danny got released,
Ricky was already locked back up again. And he was like I'm not.
He's like, I'm gonna stay awayfrom that coming back here. So I
don't know. I'm sad that thatthat ten year old kid. Yeah,
I'm sad that he on. Hewas so cute. Dude, let gonna
(40:21):
show you picture of him. Isaw him, Did you say him?
Yeah? Oh, because I sentyou the name. Yeah, we have
to communicate names because then we mightend up doing the same case. Yeah,
we're gonna be like affirmative the samecase. Should we picture of him
again? I want to see becausemaybe I'm mixing him up with the two
kids that killed him. Um,but he had like it's it sucks when
(40:43):
there's a kid doing good, yeah, you know, likes a bright future.
Yeah, and he had so muchgoing for him. Who knows what
he could have achieved later on inlike they weren't even saying that, you
know, it's sad. I thinkthat's what's more heartbreaking. It's like he's
such he was a good kid,and there's so many like what if what
if he had just gone back toNigeria when his down was like come home,
(41:06):
you know, and he was likeI'm must say, yeah, if
you had just handed over your jacket. Yeah, what if you just handed
over your jacket. I mean,if that's what it was. Yeah,
if that was the case, he'slike a little study and you can see
him. I don't want to cryeven more, dude. There's a video
of him. He's in the elevatorat the library, and it breaks my
(41:28):
heart because he's just standing there withall these adults and he realized in that
moment, like how small he actuallyis in this big, disgusting world.
But like why why, like whydo we have kids killing each other?
Yeah, it's sad, very roughweek. I'm like very emotional, very
emotional. Yeah, my eyes aregetting pretty watery too. Um. It's
(41:54):
so it's it's sad, it reallyis. It's a disgusting world that we
live in where gangs exist and they'rethey just know violence. Yeah, and
it's anything to like. A gangprobably forms from a bunch of yeah exactly,
(42:15):
a bunch of lost kids coming fromgroup homes and they don't know anything
else. So they're gonna come,you know, they're gonna what's that word,
join forces with each other and justand then the gang is formed placed
in this world, yeah, andit just turned into chaos. Yeah,
okay, so resu peace Damilola.Shout out to the Taylor family for really
(42:39):
killing that. If they hear ifthey hear this, I want to hear
this be paid Patreon members and they'renot. Okay, are we ready for
my case? I'm ready? Allright, Okay. So on March fourteenth,
twenty eleven, Oh recently, yeah, I believe this has happened in
Jacksonville, Florida. You know howfucked up Florida is. Here we go,
(43:04):
twenty five year old I believe it'sBianella. Okay, Bianella's Yeah.
Twenty five year old Bianella Susanna lefther oldest son, she got two first
names, yes, Vanilla, SusanaSusannah. Yeah, left her oldest son,
twelve year old Christian Fernandez, towatch his two year old half brother,
(43:28):
David Gala raga. Ooh, Irolled my eyes on that one.
I'm glad you took this one on, even though Christian had broken one of
David's legs in a wrestling accident monthsbefore. Yeah, and you know,
I'm not too sure if it wasa wrestling accident or it happened at the
Jungle, at the Jungle gym,because there was articles that said it happened.
(43:53):
Yeah, there's articles that said therewas it happened on the jungle gym.
And then uh, Christian was like, you know David Brook's leg.
And then Christian was like, oh, he had an accident at the jungle
gym. And he's like two yearsso he's like yeah, he's just like
oh yeah, like whatever, Yeahhe's too. Dade Bryson's almost two years
(44:13):
old and I hung out with himyesterday and I told him to hit his
mom and he did. It.Was like clearly two year olds, we
could tell them whatever, yeah,they'll do it. So while their mom
was dropping their other brother off atkindergarten, Christian, you know, the
oldest one, became violent and pushedDavid into the bookshelf twice, knocking him
(44:36):
unconscious. The two year old,yes, I'm sorry, hold is David?
David is two, Christian is twelve. Christian okay, yeah, David
and Christian. Christian then carried Davidto their bedroom. Okay, so he
wasn't waking up. David was knockedunconscious, and so Christian thought that David
was sleeping Christian. Okay, sohe was a two year old old,
(45:00):
got it, yes, So hethought he was sleeping, and he carried
him to their bedroom. They hadbunk beds, and obviously the two year
old had the I don't know whythis two year old, Well, it
is a two year old ald tosleep in a bunk bed, yeah,
can sleep. No, he wasat the bottom one, obviously, So
um, Christian carried David to thebedroom, laid him in the bottom bunk
(45:21):
bed. He called his mom,Bianella, and told her that David had
fallen off the top bunk and wasn'twaking up like something happened. So Bianella
rushed home. Um and she camehome a little bit after nine am,
(45:42):
okay, and she found David unconsciouswith blood on his face. I think
there was blood trickling from his ohmy gosh. Yeah, so there was
blood on his face, like tricklingfrom his nose, and he, you
know, obviously still unconscious. Andyou would think that being Ella would take
(46:05):
her police, her son to thehospital or call nine one one, but
no, she changed David's clothes,his diaper, wiped the blood off of
his face, and put ice onhis head, hoping it was just a
concussion and that he would wake upsoon. How does Beanella I'll get to
(46:30):
that. Well, Oh I didn'ttell twenty five. She's twenty five years
old, so she's young but tooold to be acting like like, you
know, you should have called thepolice, right yeah? Um, are
you paying attention to me? Yeah, I'm trying to find out what legal
babysitting age is? What a legalbabysitting age? Yeah? Like, should
(46:52):
that twelve year old have been leftat home to care for his two year
old brothers? Oh? No,uh, they are having a ball.
Sorry, that's Scott and his andour friends Stephen our downstairs play video games.
So um. While she waited forher son David to wake up,
(47:13):
she went. She went on hercomputer, did some online banking, ransom
errands on her computer, hate bills, yeah, paying bills, was downloading
music, was searching for new uhscreen savers for a computer. Being an
ALBERTI gant in trouble for this bullshit? Um watch YouTube videos you know how
(47:36):
we can all go down a rabbithole and videos. Read news articles on
the fucking prince and princess and goddamnLondon. Kate and Kay and Kay and
Kaye, Will yeah, Kay andKate yeah, Will and Grace Well whatever
their names are I forget um andthen here and there. She would google
things like quote when someone gets knockedout, um and coma she was.
(48:05):
She even visited a website about concussionsa few times. I'd brother's happened in
Florida. Nobody did any of alltime? Okay, got it? Okay,
are you psychic? Okay? Soat about five twenty five PM,
(48:27):
from nine to five twenty five,Yeah, her first website, it shows
on her computer. The first websitesearch was at ten thirty. But I
mean she was there earlier. Yeah, that's just when she first decided to
get on the computer. Yeah.Um, So about like five twenty five,
b and Ella finally showed up tothe hospital with David held by that
(48:52):
point like what and David's injuries wereso bad that he was immediately flown to
Shans Jacksonville trauma unit. So hewas still alive, so he was breathing,
but he was hit. It washis injuries were just so critical.
(49:13):
Two days later David had come tohis injuries and then died. And those
injuries included there was a skull fracture. How hard was he throwing this kid?
Dude? There was a skull fracturethat obviously, when a skull there's
a skull fracture that causes bleeding intoyour brain. So he Um, that
(49:38):
was like the main thing that hedied from, but he also suffered from
subdural hemorrhich subdural hematoma. His lefteye was bruised, and then the bridge
of his nose there was also abruise on it. Detectives were like,
if she hadn't waited eight fucking hours, yeah, they probably could have saved
(49:58):
it. They probably they could havesaved Could I could have survived in his
head and took care about that bleeding? Yeah, but there was just so
much bleeding, so much blood curdling, just that much space in pressure on
your brain. Yeah, and it'sjust ridiculous. So what happened? So
(50:19):
twelve year old Christian Fernandez was arrested? Was he a big twelve year old?
Uh No, it was just anormal twelve year old. That's so
bizarre. So twelve year old ChristianFernandez was arrested for aggravated child abuse at
first, but um, after Daviddied, like actually died, that charge
(50:42):
changed to first degree murder. Themother, Bianella, was arrested and charged
with aggravated manslaughter of a child undereighteen years by culpable negligence. Good.
So they brought in Christian for questioning, sat him down. The interview took
(51:04):
about an hour, and there there'sa video that was released. It took
about one hour. It's like anhour and a half of questioning. And
they were asking him questions like,you know, when you hit him,
did you hear a snap? Yeah, it's horrible, And I think he
said yeah or I don't know.And then they asked him where his mom
(51:25):
was, and he's like she wasout dropping off my brother or driving.
I don't know where she was.And then you know, he was just
like he wasn't They asked him aboutthe brother, you know, David,
He's like he wasn't waking up.I think he asked him like, can
you help my brother? Yeah,So they asked him why he did what
(51:47):
he did to his brother, andhe basically said that something snapped in him
and he had a flashback of whathis stepfather had did to him. I'll
get into that. Yeah, hehad a flashback of what his stepdaughter,
his stepdaughter, stepdaughter. The storyjust took a reltorn. He had a
(52:07):
flashback of what his stepfather had didto him, and he snapped and he
took that violence out on his twoyear old brother. Wow. Now I'm
gonna talk about his life a littlebit. So Christian's life growing up,
he had a pretty rough childhood.His mom had him when she was just
twelve. Oh shit, yeah,because he she was twenty five and he
(52:30):
was twelve. So she had himwhen she was twelve. Wow, and
his dad was twenty Who just hitmy mic I'm so upset. Twenty years
old. And so his dad wasin and out of his life, and
obviously later on also a pedophile,a pedophile and later on, hey,
(52:52):
I had to become a registered sexoffender. Okay, yeah, Um,
his you know Christian's grandmother, youknow, Bianella's mom was a drug addict,
which caused Christian and his mom tobe put into a foster home because
she was still young. Hello,yeah she had so they both were put
(53:14):
into a foster home. Bring ship, it's crazy. Um. And when
Christian was around seven years old,Banella, his mom began dating and eventually
married his stepfather, Louise Gotta RagaBlanco Okay, and yeah, and when
(53:35):
when Banella started dating Louise, Christian'sbiological dad just was like, yeah,
he just stepped aside and just stoppedcoming around altogether. Don't do that.
No one replaces you biological parents.Okay. So Louise had been very abusive
towards Christian and his siblings. Um. Back in October of twenty ten,
(53:58):
I believe Louise had punched Christian inthe eye so hard he had to be
taken to the hospital for possible retinaldamage. Wo. Yeah, So Christian
showed up to school with a freak. His eye was just hanging out of
his fox and I believe his teachersand his mom I think, got together
(54:19):
and asked him what happened, andhe told he told him like, Louise
punched me in my eye. So, um, you know that, child
Services questioned him. He told themwhat happened. Child Services found out about
the views, and then authorities wantedto then question Louise, but Louise never
(54:42):
showed up for questioning. Did yougo to Mexico. No. Authorities then
went to the apartment where they livedand knocked on the door. Nobody answered
for a while, and then somebodyfinally answered, and it was a frightened
(55:04):
little girl answered the door and thepolice aster, you know, is your
dad home or where it's Louise home? And she was leading in, leading
them to the bedroom, and shewas trailing bloody footprints on the floor himself.
So it turns out that Louise hadshot himself in the bedroom, you
(55:28):
know, shot himself in the head. I'm sorry because he didn't want to
deal with the punishment of abusing hischildren. And you know, the whole
thing with Christian, well, nowonder, and to make things worse,
he shot himself in front of hisown children, including Christian. So Christians
already fucked fucked exactly. So authoritieswould later find out that Christian was also
(55:55):
sexually abused by Louise as well.Oh Louise, I'm glad he's dead.
I'm not going to tell you RPbecause I hope that you don't. Yeah.
So I'm pretty sure that's when hewas talking about those flashbacks, that's
what he was referring to, theabuse, sexual abuse, the murder exactly.
(56:16):
There were also reports of Christian snappinga kitten's neck after it had scratched
him, and there was also reportsof him sexually abusing his five year old
half brother. I mean, that'snot beyond the ram of possibility when you're
(56:37):
when you're sexually abused yourself. Sothat charge of sexually abusing his five year
old half brother, that charge wasadded on, but then it was dropped
later on by prosecutors because there wasconflicting statements from the five year old of
course with the five year old,Yeah, and there was lack of physical
(56:58):
evidence, so that charge had tobe dropped. After going back and forth
on had a sentence Christian. Becausethis trial lasted for a long time.
Not a long time, but itlasted for a while. They didn't know
how to sentence him because he washe was thirteen years old and when he
committed the crime and he had sufferedthrough so much, and whether to try
(57:22):
him as an adult or what toyou know, what to do? They
finally came with a decision. Andthat decision I think that decision was made
or there was a plea bargain thatthey struck or what I was struck.
And in February twenty thirteen, Christianpled guilty and we'll be released from the
(57:42):
Department of Juvenile Justice. On hisnineteenth birthday in January twenty eighteen, Yeah,
and we'll also spend eight years onprobation following his release. But if
he's good for I think the firstfive years, it'll drop after five years.
Yeah, he won't be able tosee his siblings unless they want to
(58:05):
meet him, and he can't bearound anybody under the age of sixteen without
supervision. In March twenty twelve,so this was a year before he was
sentenced. In March twenty twelve,his mom, bian Ella, she pled
guilty to aggravated manslaughter, but hersentencing had to wait until after Christian's trial
(58:32):
ended and he was sentenced. Whythey just needed that to be over and
done with so they can move onto her for someone I don't know,
all their evidence needed to come toa close and yeah, I don't know.
So in August twenty thirteen, sonow this is the same year Christian
(58:52):
was sentenced, but you know hewas he was sentenced in February twenty thirteen.
Now it's coming to her in Augusttwenty thirteen and received a suspended sentence
with probation for the rest of tenyears, and she lost custody of her
children. Good on the living custodyof your kids. But I mean,
but her too. Yeah, andthe thing that her lawyer said was that
(59:21):
she wasn't actually there exactly. Yes, that argument. They're like, they're
like, um, Christian had tocall her, she wasn't there, you
know, they didn't walk to thekitchen and tell her that something happened with
David that he had to call her. But it's like, why was she
letting a twelve year old watch atwo year old to begin with when he
(59:44):
had just broken David's leg a fewmonths before? Well, I mean she
was also with a man that wasmolesting her son and beating the funk out
of him. Yeah, she wasn'tmaking a good right and I think she
I think he was abusive towards hertoo, I'm sure. Yeah. So
I bet you all want to knowif Christian is released, because hello,
we're in April twenty eighteen. Yeahno, but not just kidding. No.
(01:00:07):
Yeah, he was happy. Hewas released one day after his nineteenth
birthday on January fifteenth this year,So his birthday's January fourteenth. He and
everybody said, good, positive vibethat he turns his life around. Yeah,
um, he still has to do. There was a he still has
to do, Like the probation periodof go to court for his probation ship.
(01:00:30):
But um, he's a free mannow, so not really when you're
on probation, Well he's not freefreeman, but he's out of jail,
but he's not on probation. Andthat's another one I can't really be that
upset about. Yeah, that's sohard. It becomes so convoluted when there's
ship. It's a child and achild, yeah, you know what I
(01:00:52):
mean. Well, and also whenyou're brought up in that home of violence,
like you're being you're being violent violatedit you know, you're being sexually
abused and at a young age.And and you can only imagine how long
this was going on because when hewas seven years old, that's when you
(01:01:12):
know, b and Ella started datingthat he was a system kid. Oh
yeah, he was a system kidexactly. That he had no chance.
Yeah, and his mom was akid having kids. And I wonder how
her parents were when they had it, you know what I mean. It's
like that ship carries down from generationto generation. Yeah, somebody just got
to break the cycle. Yeah,I can only imagine how because her mom,
(01:01:35):
Bingell's mom was a drug drug addict, so we had men coming in
and out of that house, lostin b and lla Like, just don't
have kids, it's not that hard. I'm thirty years old. I've never
had a kid, I've never hada scare. Yeah, but you didn't
also grow up in a broken reallybroken home, you know, where you
were being sexually abused, and it'shard. It's hard when you come from
(01:02:00):
a broken home and then like,yeah, how do you break that cycle?
You know you can absolutely do it, but how do you know you
can do it? But how doyou do it? Yeah, we don't
know. We don't have the answers. Yeah, well the fuck do we
know? But um, it's sadthat that that that two year old had
(01:02:21):
to die for die because of whattheir step father, of what actually his
father, David's father did to Christian. Christian had a flashback and snapped him,
killed him. Disgusting. This isa really downer episode, I know.
Well, I mean, we talkabout true crime, so every episode
(01:02:42):
is going to be downer. Yeah. Yeah, it's very sad, both
sad sad cases. And it's especiallysad when it's kids, you know,
kids killing kids or a kid ismurdered. Yeah, it's especially sad.
When that happens, and it justbecomes like so hard to like find the
bad guy what I mean, becauseyou don't. You don't come to this
(01:03:07):
role the killer, you know whatI mean? Like you, something turns
you into that, and that meansthat you suffered through something for a long
time. Sometimes sometimes you're born akiller. You're that little redheaded boy name.
Oh yeah, I forget his fuckingname. Yeah, redheaded killer boy
(01:03:32):
who killed. I bet that's allyou have to search for, boy,
redheaded boy who killed? I putliliad. That's fine. Eric Smith?
Wait, is he still is righthere? What is his name? His
name is Eric Smith? Look athim? He looks evil, He looks
(01:03:53):
dead in his eyes. His eyesare like he looks so is he do
get life? Can you tell methat real quick? Oh day, okay,
let's say okay, So Robbie's okay. So he was convicted of second
degree murder and sentenced as a juvenile. He had to spend at least nine
(01:04:17):
years in prison. Since then,he has been to nine parole eight times
since two thousand and two, andmost recently in April of twenty eighteen.
Oh this year, what year wasthis? You know? I hate when
people put on their website of thisyear, it's like, what year did
you write this? Just look atthe article on the top. I shouldn't
(01:04:39):
say that sucks, go New YorkDaily News. I don't know. Well,
he's eligible for parole again this year, so he's still in jail.
Yep. Jeez, okay, sokeep your eyes off for him. I
hope he never gets out. Dangwhat he did, that little kid is
horrendous, horrific. Yeah, allright, Um, that's it. We'll
(01:05:03):
catch you guys next month, andeverybody starts, you know, hugging each
other more. Yeah, saying nicethings, positive things. Yeah, stop
being negative. You can see,you know you can. Actually, it's
actually surprising how far a happy,positive thing you can go. When you
(01:05:23):
compliment somebody on a nice dress,yep, that makes their day. Or
you have a nice smile, yeahyou know, or hey, your hair
looks good. Things. Yeah,you can do it. We can all
do it. We have at it. Yeah. Um, all right,
and that's it for mus Yeah,okay, I love you, love you,
(01:05:43):
bye bye. Do you do youforgot to tell me that? There's
a lot of I forgot to tellyou. Now I'm not answering it now,
Justine, there's a lot of dessertout there Internet trolls. Oh day,
love you bye. All right,guys, So that was our Patreon
(01:06:12):
episode about killer Kids. It's verysad. Justine cried, I did I
remember? I told Bernie. Iwas like, I feel bad because like
I'm hungover and so, um,I can't do this for two hours today.
So can we just put up anold Patreon episode? And she said,
okay? Which one? I waslike? The one? I cried
it because I know all of youlike it when we cry, you would
(01:06:38):
joy our tears. Um. Allright, guys. Now we're jumping into
reviews, yes, because we toldyou guys at five hundred reviews we're gonna
do a giveaway, and we're almostthere. We're at four ninety seven.
Oh dang away, three away,three away. Um. Okay, we
(01:07:00):
have lots of five star reviews.You guys are the greatest and we wanted
to read them. Okay, Sofirst up, we have a five star
review from Courtney. Uh no,no, no, no, make him
say titled I love y'all keep doingyour thing. The research is there and
(01:07:21):
absolutely love the Stranger dangers. Noone else does what y'all are doing and
it's highly appreciated. Lots and lots. Uh just kidding, love lots and
lots Courtney, h thank you,Thank you so much, Courtney Corny.
Uh what is that uh? Nextone is from sal Mix one eight to
(01:07:42):
one, five stars titled fire Emoji, fire emoji, fire emoji, fire
emoji, and the comment is likea million fire emoji. Yeah, does
that mean we're on fire? We'reon fire? You? Thank you so
much you. Next up, wehave a another five star review from Willie's
(01:08:03):
Wife titled great Show and Hostesses.I can't stop listening to your show.
You guys have a real authentic andnatural way of telling important stories that otherwise
we'll get no attention. Keep upthe great work and love you. You
have a loyal listener in me.Thank you, Thank you. We love
a loyal listener. We do well. We would like to be your wife,
(01:08:27):
okay o dany I know? Nextfive star review is from Girl seven
to four titled turning true Crime onits Head. Justine and Britt and sometimes
Scott absolutely take a new approach totrue crime. Most of the stories are
stories I've never heard before or atleast never got actual details about. They
(01:08:49):
focus on crimes against POC, whichis why most of these aren't stories I've
heard before. However, they makeit light and fun instead of dreary and
sad. Yes, crimes are horror, but these lovely ladies joke about the
horrible killers and give details about theinnocent victims, giving them more of the
spotlight, unlike a lot of truecrime stories that focus solely on the killer.
(01:09:09):
I tune in every week and I'mnever disappointed in the episode. Also,
they include listener strangers what also?What? Also they include listeners stories,
which are always interesting to hear.Gabby, Thank you so much,
Gabby. Okay, last, butnot least, we have another five star
(01:09:32):
review from Let's p I don't knowif that's how you're supposed to say that,
but I had to. Yeah.Title, love you guys, but
where the F is I'm gonna assumeit's as Scott. Sorry, ladies,
I love you first and foremost,but we need a little of my main
(01:09:54):
man, Scott. Steve's dad issuper cool too. Basically, I learves
this podcast. The topics are greatand it feels like hanging out with my
best girlfriends. Keep it up,ladies, Thank you so much. Yeah,
I'll definitely let Scott know. Butlike we say, like we've said
before, he's just sleeping when werecord because he doesn't like to go to
(01:10:18):
bed until seven o'clock or six o'clockin the morning. Then he sleeps the
whole day away. So that's mylife, people. But yeah, thank
you guys for your five star reviews. If you can do so, please
leave us one. We're three awayfrom five hundred and we already said we're
(01:10:38):
doing a giveaway, so three away, please do that. Do it right
now. If you can't do it, telephone a friend exactly. Them the
rules, them, the rules.Yep, all right, guys. If
you would like to follow us,you can do so on Facebook and Instagram
and it's about damn Crime. Runit together, space it out. We
(01:11:00):
are there. We're also on Twitterand snapchat at i ADC podcast. Also,
if you have a stranger danger storythat you'd like to share, please
send it to It's about Damncrime atgmail dot com, or you can head
over to the website It's about damncrimedot com. Click on that stranger danger
tab a formal pop up, fillthat baby out, click submit. We'll
(01:11:21):
get it and we might just readit on our show. Yep, all
right, well, is that itfor this episode? Just seen? No
one does not, because we alsoneed to tell you guys that right now,
if you go to It's about Damncrimedot com at that little merch tab,
there is free shipping on our shipI don't know. Wow, there's
(01:11:47):
free shipping on our IDC merch.Yes at shop dot spreadshirt dot com slash
it's about damn Crime. No codeis needed, it's automatically free shipping,
free shipping. There you go.All right, guys, we'll catch you
next week with another episode. Untilthen, just you remember there's a lot
(01:12:13):
of desert out there, which I'msaying to all our local listeners. If
you don't show up on Saturday.Oh shit, Danster, watch out,
better watch out. Just gonna comefor you, I am, and I'll
come for you hard. Oh shoot, come? What do I live at
a dog pound? What is happening? Okay, we gotta go. Wow,
(01:12:35):
it's time to go. Okay,all right, guys, love you.
I love you more than because you'remy favorite. Okay, love me. Bye,