The Crime of Jeffrey Pyne

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  • čas přidán 3. 01. 2022
  • The Pyne family were happily living in Michigan, a successful and proud family. However, the matriarch of the family developed some mental health issues, which lead to stress within the family, and when she was found covered in blood in the garage, the police look at suspects from within.
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Komentáře • 9K

  • @DannyDisease
    @DannyDisease Před 2 lety +2835

    The fact that juries do that sort of "compromise" is absolutely horrifying.

    • @manumemanu
      @manumemanu Před 2 lety +129

      Right? You can't just "sort of compromise" when we are talking about locking up someone for decades... Truly horrifying.

    • @MrTaxiRob
      @MrTaxiRob Před 2 lety +121

      I didn't even know spilt verdicts were allowed in some states, I just found that out a couple months ago. Our court system is not as great as everyone thinks.

    • @lifesajoke6965
      @lifesajoke6965 Před 2 lety +102

      Yeah it's bullshit, I hate that they can consider the lesser offences in a lot of trials, either they proved that you committed the offence that you are being charged with or they didn't. It just incentivizes the prosecutors to overcharge people regardless of the amount and strength of evidence because they have nothing to lose.

    • @nozoto
      @nozoto Před 2 lety +61

      I know right, just settling for the 2nd degree murder option, as if one choose backup order at the dinner, when the menu item isn't available. Tssk, as long as the justice system is that idiotically carried out, I don't think death penalty should even be an option... And I admit that as a pro death sentence!

    • @gilbertvega4012
      @gilbertvega4012 Před 2 lety +13

      Only in Michigan

  • @jimmyzhao2673
    @jimmyzhao2673 Před 2 lety +1002

    If you are guilty, you need a lawyer.
    If you are innocent, you *definitely* need a lawyer.

    • @natural1952
      @natural1952 Před 2 lety +26

      My wife and I are no longer surprised (but still horrified) when we see persons of interest being interviewed by the police with no attorney present. Bad, bad idea.

    • @MichaelMikeTheRussianBot
      @MichaelMikeTheRussianBot Před 2 lety +17

      One time on jury duty , I was surprised by the # (5?) of the "hang-em-high/SOMEBODY_MUST_BE_PUNISHED" types who were surprised by that. The Law&Order crowd were shocked, & suddenly figured out that talking to cops was a dangerous thing, *especially* if you were not guilty. ;) The cops' sketchy, & sloppy , tactics/procedures did serve an educational purpose. ;)

    • @saraholder5035
      @saraholder5035 Před 2 lety +2

      Word 🤐

    • @EliCarter
      @EliCarter Před 2 lety +14

      A crime is only a crime if you are poor

    • @marlowp5234
      @marlowp5234 Před 2 lety

      @@EliCarter otherwise you will soon be paying atty fees. Though it's a fun card to play, huh

  • @nicholasmaloney4876
    @nicholasmaloney4876 Před 2 lety +301

    For anybody else on the fence about this trial. Even that's enough to show how much of a mistrial this was, proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt exists for a reason. Not guilty doesn't mean innocent, it just means there isn't enough to sentence. Even if it came out that he was the culprit, that still wouldn't justify this sham of a trial.

    • @chriskibodeaux9818
      @chriskibodeaux9818 Před rokem +5

      But the injuries to his hand and the access he had is more then enough to prove he did it!

    • @someguy7576
      @someguy7576 Před rokem +18

      @@chriskibodeaux9818 that’s categorically false.

    • @chriskibodeaux9818
      @chriskibodeaux9818 Před rokem +2

      @@someguy7576 but it’s not!

    • @lr6477
      @lr6477 Před rokem +14

      @@chriskibodeaux9818 more THEN enough? Don't you read books ever? It's more THAN. FFS

    • @cheyennes7681
      @cheyennes7681 Před rokem +2

      The problem with voting innocent is double jeopardy. I wish there was an option to actually vote for a mistrial but that only happens when a certain amount of jurors don't agree.

  • @NoOne-fo1di
    @NoOne-fo1di Před 2 měsíci +12

    Wow, knowing you can be put in prison with no real evidence is a terrifying thought.

  • @Ougagagoubou
    @Ougagagoubou Před 2 lety +4231

    It's insane that crimes without any evidence can even go on trial. Someone just being viewed as main suspect shouldn't be enough for trial, yet alone conviction.

    • @ichigen511
      @ichigen511 Před 2 lety +234

      His alibi seemed made up and his hands looked like he was swinging a 2"x4" that's hardly NO evidence. however, I would not be able to convict him if I were on the jury even if I thought it was probably him. probably is not good enough evidence to convict someone

    • @EbonyPope
      @EbonyPope Před 2 lety +183

      @@ichigen511 Yes but that doesn't tie him to the crime nor the location. It was too little evidence. The US still let's laymen decide over someone's fate. That's what you get when you use such outdated court proceedings.

    • @henriklarssen1331
      @henriklarssen1331 Před 2 lety +73

      I mean as the last person who saw her, his hands and behavior in the interrogation are very suspicous, but that isnt enough to put him in Jail.

    • @spignetti
      @spignetti Před 2 lety +46

      He smacked her from behind....Of course he has no other wounds...She's a small gal and that guy just up and dollywhopped her in the ole noggin"!! I tell ya....

    • @GSP-76
      @GSP-76 Před 2 lety +54

      @@ichigen511 This is the problem with our Justice System in general these days. Court drama, the media and TV have literally programmed people into thinking that only the strictest of scientific evidence is required to convict someone in court. It absolutely does NOT. The word "reasonable" is used often during investigations and court but no one understands what it means. You are required as a juror to convict a person based on "beyond reasonable doubt"...that doesn't mean you need DNA or video evidence of the person charged. What it means in the most basic and simplest form is - Given the entirety of the case the prosection has put forth, do you reasonably believe the charged is guilty? Juries don't use their heads or common sense anymore and they expect the prosecution to do their job for them. It's sad but unfortunately true.

  • @raymondkymsuttle
    @raymondkymsuttle Před 2 lety +1048

    The lawyer is 100% right about people assuming there’s a ‘right’ way to express grief/shock

    • @frosty_teacup
      @frosty_teacup Před 2 lety +64

      It's always annoyed me how people will hear something like a 911 call where someone is really calm and speaking clearly and immediately say "they're guilty because they're not having a breakdown and crying and screaming". These people don't understand shock and denial. Why is it so strange that someone hasn't been able to process the incident/trauma yet? Why do they have to react immediately, in the exact manner you expect them to?

    • @asphaltspreader
      @asphaltspreader Před 2 lety +53

      @@frosty_teacup When tragedy has struck my life I tend to go into "automatic mode". I do what needs to be done with little display of emotion.

    • @naedatanner8832
      @naedatanner8832 Před 2 lety +24

      @@asphaltspreader I also go into automatic mode. I've always assumed it's bc I'm a nurse(RN)✌💖🇨🇦

    • @ChubbyUnicorn
      @ChubbyUnicorn Před 2 lety +22

      Exactly. Grief/shock is expressed very differently, especially by people who've lived in a chaotic environment (like having a bipolar mother) or people who work under pressure or in intense situations (fire fighters, EMTs, construction, gamblers, elite athletes, etc.)

    • @shinobitoby
      @shinobitoby Před 2 lety +15

      We all go through it differently

  • @jeperstone
    @jeperstone Před rokem +37

    The American Judicial System frightens the life out of me

    • @EarthFirstGoVegan
      @EarthFirstGoVegan Před měsícem

      Why?

    • @monilangeKootenays
      @monilangeKootenays Před měsícem

      Understandably

    • @amandab8433
      @amandab8433 Před měsícem

      My mother, and family friends, worked in the local (large city) DA's and Police departments. There was some incredibly messed up stuff I learned about. One of the most important things was NEVER marry a police officer 😂, and ALWAYS get a lawyer before talking to ANYONE!

  • @auntiekatie778
    @auntiekatie778 Před 2 lety +24

    How? That's insane. Second degree murder just ADDED??? That's beyond crazy

  • @lorenl3374
    @lorenl3374 Před 2 lety +736

    The fact that the prosecution threw in second degree at the last minute just proves even they knew they didn’t have the evidence for conviction so they suggested second degree so they could still get their conviction but “alleviate” the jury of any guilt.

    • @Abedeuss
      @Abedeuss Před 2 lety +47

      Nothing like sending someone to jail for 20 jail with no evidence to alleviate the guilt...

    • @zliu4208
      @zliu4208 Před 2 lety +42

      The prosecution caught the defence off guard and psychologically manipulated the juries. The judge shouldn’t have allowed second degree murder to be added by the prosecution in last minutes.

    • @LiamL763
      @LiamL763 Před 2 lety +28

      Just shows the horrifying stupidity and spinelessness of some juries. What's more at least one jurors has come forward and admitted that they regret their verdict.

    • @gadaleantudor
      @gadaleantudor Před 2 lety +10

      Didn't follow the case, so I not sure if that's completely true. But if it is, the judge is an absolute mug. He should have never accepted that. Incompetent judges and an evil prosecution is a deadly combo (sometimes, quite literally).

    • @michaeltremarco8062
      @michaeltremarco8062 Před 2 lety +5

      It was a scummy despicable move. The justice system is an utter mess

  • @ClassicGaming617
    @ClassicGaming617 Před 2 lety +3000

    it's insane to me, how quickly investigators and prosecutors are so quick to just throw anyone in jail, but it's more astounding how these jurors don't give anything a second thought

    • @dianner5148
      @dianner5148 Před 2 lety +237

      Yes! I'm trying to figure out how someone can be found guilty of a crime with no evidence to suggest the committed the crime

    • @cade377
      @cade377 Před 2 lety +167

      It seems to come from an emotional place, more than anything else. I think the default setting is "if that person is here and accused of a crime..... they must have done it."

    • @deadbeatsdani
      @deadbeatsdani Před 2 lety +99

      yes this one was crazy to me!! the burden of proof is just not there, like how did the jury decide this was outcome that truly brought justice??

    • @jjdelft3216
      @jjdelft3216 Před 2 lety +261

      This is exactly why we dont use a jury system in the Netherlands, because you let people who know nothing about the laws and are very easily manipulated decide the faith of people. Why?

    • @anabelat2690
      @anabelat2690 Před 2 lety +89

      You're right.
      Aren't jurors instructed about reasonable doubt? I don't understand how could they be sure he was guilty.

  • @nener83
    @nener83 Před rokem +123

    I actually dated him for about 2 weeks. I met him bc I was a bartender in a pub, and he would come in for a beer after work at Spicer's Orchard. He was the nicest guy. He took me on nice dates, bowling, picnic, etc. Chivalry was constant. He did tell me that his mom passed away, and when I asked him about it, he said he didn't want to talk about it, which I thought was understandable as it was recent.
    Jeffrey also mentioned his sister a lot. It was clear how much he loved her and how protective he was of her.
    So knowing the owners of the orchard he worked at, I asked one of them about him, like is he a good guy to continue dating? That's when I found out he was on trial for the murder! I was shook to the core. He never came across as a person that could hurt a fly! And they believed that also. Just seemed to be a genuinely nice, honest guy. He would go out of his way to help anyone.
    So, knowing this new information, I gradually distanced myself from him, and we ceased dating.
    I had detectives follow me around town and question me at my work and home about him. I honestly didn't have anything bad to say about him. Is he guilty? I don't know. Sometimes people are wolves in sheep's clothing. But it's hard to comprehend he could be capable of something so heinous.

    • @hillaryh.5197
      @hillaryh.5197 Před rokem +5

      So…you’ve never heard of the holocaust?

    • @chezceleste
      @chezceleste Před rokem +28

      @@hillaryh.5197 WTF does that mean? There was evidence for that.

    • @hillaryh.5197
      @hillaryh.5197 Před rokem

      @@chezceleste You’re right. You’re Smart!

    • @bm-ww8kb
      @bm-ww8kb Před rokem +8

      wait. were you the other woman the ex was so pissed about?

    • @jmon651
      @jmon651 Před rokem +6

      @@hillaryh.5197 You're not!

  • @johnnywalker4857
    @johnnywalker4857 Před 2 měsíci +5

    The fact that the prosecution felt the need to add an additional charge at the end of the trial for the jury to consider demonstrates that they knew they didn't prove their case. The jury should have seen right through that and based their decision strictly on the evidence presented.

  • @Uptomyknees
    @Uptomyknees Před 2 lety +373

    How the hell do you get Beyond A Reasonable Doubt off NO EVIDENCE?

    • @amityislandchum
      @amityislandchum Před 2 lety +12

      You actually sit through the whole trial and see the evidence, rather than basing your conclusion off a 24-minute video on youtube.

    • @flyingtentacle7631
      @flyingtentacle7631 Před 2 lety +69

      @@amityislandchum 25 minutes of no evidence is not different than 8 hours of no evidence. The length of the trial does not add plus one evidence to the accused.
      You understand what evidence is, right? It's not the short hand on a clock.

    • @kidShibuya
      @kidShibuya Před 2 lety +11

      The better question is how do you judge a trial based off an entertainment youtube video?

    • @kidShibuya
      @kidShibuya Před 2 lety +4

      @@flyingtentacle7631 And you know there was no evidence how?

    • @funnydonor9484
      @funnydonor9484 Před 2 lety +17

      @@amityislandchum jurors forget their instructions so many times. Even tho you may know he did it, you can’t convict if the evidence doesn’t point to him beyond a reasonable doubt. Even tho this guy probably did it. I would gladly say not guilty, because that is the best way for our system to work. It takes emotion out of their decision. Yet people are arrested and convicted this way every day

  • @zilefn9212
    @zilefn9212 Před 2 lety +1330

    I'm a lawyer and froze when Mike said the court allowed the prosecution to throw in a 2nd degree charge when the trial was almost complete. That's horrifying. The entire defence, all of it, would very likely have been different had they known that would happen.

    • @hucklesnook1848
      @hucklesnook1848 Před 2 lety +39

      I am curious, is that cause for a new trial? It seems to me like it would be, but I am not fully informed.

    • @K42023
      @K42023 Před 2 lety +44

      I mean, if the family thought he was not guilty, and the family would be the ones who were most affected, why even charge dude? The rest of society has no stake in his trial. Odd.

    • @17thknight
      @17thknight Před 2 lety +13

      @@hucklesnook1848 If it's not then it damn well should be. It's disgusting and reeks of corruption.

    • @dark1810
      @dark1810 Před 2 lety +36

      gotta stick someone in your privately run jails sure justice was done in the end he can make license plates for 60 cent a day while lawyer man gets to enjoy freedom

    • @amazingsupergirl7125
      @amazingsupergirl7125 Před 2 lety +32

      I think prosecutors planned that all along.

  • @eagleman1542
    @eagleman1542 Před 2 lety +48

    Jeffrey was 22 at that time? Damn, stress really took a toll on him, both physically and mentally.

    • @levisguy53
      @levisguy53 Před rokem +7

      indeed, i'd seen this case featured on ID channel, don't recall which of their shows, but damn he lost a ton of hair in the 2 years or so from the crime to trial and sentencing.

    • @bm-ww8kb
      @bm-ww8kb Před rokem +4

      i can imagine itd do the same to you after your country turned its back on you. man these ones are infuriating.

    • @JadedBelle
      @JadedBelle Před rokem +2

      Teenagers cause stress that takes a toll as well. I'm just saying...my constant stream of grey hairs can prove it.

    • @eagleman1542
      @eagleman1542 Před rokem +4

      @@JadedBelle Great point, noted.

    • @JadedBelle
      @JadedBelle Před rokem +1

      @@eagleman1542 😂🫣

  • @campbellmackinnon3848
    @campbellmackinnon3848 Před 2 lety +4

    A truly disturbing lack of justice. It's scary to know your life can end based on zero evidence.

  • @jgeorgetx
    @jgeorgetx Před 2 lety +613

    The fact that he didn’t have any blood on himself or his clothes, despite all that was shed at the crime scene, would be a huge sticking point for me, if I’d been on that jury. I don’t think I would’ve been able to say he was guilty.

    • @mitchellwarner1526
      @mitchellwarner1526 Před 2 lety +53

      unfortunately most people on jurys are morons and care more about getting it over with then actually doing their job.

    • @stubbs-letterpress
      @stubbs-letterpress Před 2 lety +41

      Or bloody footprints, or dna at the scene. The knife attack was personal. There would be cut fingers, or blood evidence on the individual. There was none on him.

    • @jadezee6316
      @jadezee6316 Před 2 lety +1

      dont think?
      then you are as useless as they were

    • @shaneculkin7124
      @shaneculkin7124 Před 2 lety +30

      To be fair to the prosecution (who were clearly a bit scared and playing dirty!), Jeffrey had several hours to dispose of evidence, such as a hazmat suit type deal, and to thoroughly wash himself.
      I believe that he had three hours.. Minus the one minute it took to make that alibi voicemail call.
      I think that he did do it. I think his mother was a living nightmare and is probably happier now herself (Ha?!).
      But a good defense is to have another place to point to for the crime. And, again to be fair, that was very difficult.
      * Defense attorney may have shot himself in the foot by asking all of the witnesses if they know who did kill Ruth

    • @debshaw680
      @debshaw680 Před 2 lety +22

      It was in his own house where he had access to other clothes. He could have put clean clothes in the garage before. He could have taken those and the weapons and disposed of them. He lied about where he was. If your mother got killed, when you realized you were a suspect, would you clear that lie up?

  • @stevenrogers8939
    @stevenrogers8939 Před 2 lety +356

    My father died from cancer on Friday 2/2/2007 while I was dropping my kids to school .I didn’t cry until the second day after he was buried. Then I was ok. Few weeks later I dove into depression and my life went to hell. I still feel heartbroken till this day. Everyone reacts differently.

    • @Fuerwahrhalunke
      @Fuerwahrhalunke Před 2 lety +14

      Similar thing happened to me. My father passed 6/17/2013 while I was at work. Said I was fine for years and years, never shed a tear either, and today I'm still battling depression because of it. It took years for me to fully comprehend the situation I was and am in.

    • @Ena48145
      @Ena48145 Před 2 lety +10

      I didn't cry when one of my best friend's was killed on a freak train derailment. It took me days. I was just in shock. I probably showed little to no emotion. It wasn't until I was at the mall buying a dress for her funeral that I finally realized and broke down

    • @jannetteberends8730
      @jannetteberends8730 Před 2 lety +4

      Someone phoned me that my mother was not o.k. When I arrived at her house there was police who told me she passed away. My reaction: “can you look if there is Coca-Cola in the fridge”. Didn’t cry at all. But still miss her.
      Fortunately it turned out that there was no crime involved.

    • @approaching404
      @approaching404 Před 2 lety +1

      ...not really its either you breaking down once you get the news or shock then crying, you can tell if its genuine shock or not

    • @catharperfect7036
      @catharperfect7036 Před 2 lety +6

      Males in particular, we usually don't instantly break down crying.

  • @Indigomiko
    @Indigomiko Před 2 lety +113

    I've watched almost all your videos and this is the one that made me comment. I can't say whether Jeffery is guilty or innocent. I wasn't at the trial. But I dearly hope there was further evidence that wasn't covered in this video, cuz if there wasn't... This channel has taught me one thing I will be doing no matter how innocent I know I am. If the cops ever call me in I will say one thing, "I want a lawyer."

    • @dr.decker3623
      @dr.decker3623 Před rokem +3

      The Husband's Girlfriend did it, she heard the news about the divorce and killed her.

    • @daCubanaqt
      @daCubanaqt Před 4 měsíci

      @@dr.decker3623 The husband’s girlfriend came to my mind too! I’m sure the police vetted her alibi though.

    • @daCubanaqt
      @daCubanaqt Před 4 měsíci

      Oh, and always ask for a lawyer! Don’t tell cops or detectives anything. Keep your mouth shut!!

  • @misst7446
    @misst7446 Před 2 lety +81

    I’m left wondering about the fathers girlfriend, who he was going to leave his wife for! Did the police never look at her? She had all the motive in the world to want Ruth dead. Did the father get back together with his girlfriend after the wife’s death? Very interesting anyway…Love you too Mike!

    • @dr.decker3623
      @dr.decker3623 Před rokem +1

      The Husband's Girlfriend did it, she heard the news about the divorce and killed her.

    • @InsShogunGage
      @InsShogunGage Před rokem

      ​@@dr.decker3623 allegedly

  • @ericar3129
    @ericar3129 Před 2 lety +365

    This case is a perfect example of how broken our justice system is. Whether or not he actually committed the murder, there was MORE than enough reasonable doubt, and he should never have been convicted. Just goes to show how easily you can lose it all whether you did wrong or not.

  • @kimberlymarino7344
    @kimberlymarino7344 Před 2 lety +548

    I think they may have missed a pretty obvious suspect...how did the mistress take Bernie trying to stay with his wife? I'd be very interested to know if she was seriously looked at.

    • @rebeccagable9629
      @rebeccagable9629 Před 2 lety +32

      Good point.

    • @lidathorn6449
      @lidathorn6449 Před 2 lety +107

      Or Jeffreys ex girlfriend... How pleased did she look in court testifying against him?!

    • @p.kayward6966
      @p.kayward6966 Před 2 lety +22

      Bingo! My thoughts exactly!

    • @taydestiny38
      @taydestiny38 Před 2 lety +32

      @ Lida Thorn…she definitely came off as a jilted ex, but I don’t see her doing that to his Mom. She seems more likely to key his car or some sh*t like that. I do think he killed his Mom and that it was a result of pent up frustration of dealing with her bipolar disease. He probably would have been better off pleading temporary insanity.

    • @annieseaside
      @annieseaside Před 2 lety +27

      YES!!! I thought the exact same! Wether she did it or hired someone larger. One hard swing with a 2 X 4 should get her on the floor. The rest seemed like very intense personal rage. My son is BiPolar and it took a long time to get that correct diagnosis and longer to find the right mix of 3 meds. He goes off them because he hates them. He has done things that another family, (strangers) would leap to judge as unforgivable including being violent to me. Despite that, no matter what, no exceptions, I could not raise a hand to my son, who is 22 … not even in self defense. Just as he did nothing to stop his Mom attacking him. That is what you do when a toddler throws a tantrum or a mentally ill person looses it and becomes combative.
      Broadly speaking, the bond in a happy home between Mother & Son is so deep. When you love someone differently wired or suffering a mental illness you absolutely understand their worst acts, worst mistakes or worst days do not define them. You almost love them more knowing how much they are suffering and how suicidal they will be once they are balanced back out and grasp the damage. We tend to train our men to mute emotion shown. I think he was in shock and he’s a guy and that is why he didn’t start screaming, collapsing and sobbing as I would.
      Small towns do not have the funding or experience of the metropolises. I didn’t hear that much effort was made to look at anyone else. Had I been on the Jury I think I would have said it was not proved beyond a reasonable doubt. I get he is the most obvious guess, but I do Not believe it. As Mike pointed out, the attacker would have looked like Carrie and there was nowhere near enough time for him and his car to be flawlessly clean. I hope the Dad hires a Private Detective, gets home security of vehicles going close to all the houses anywhere in the greater area and works out sufficient new evidence for another trial. Anyway, just my personal position.

  • @lisahinton9682
    @lisahinton9682 Před 2 lety +153

    I had never heard of this case before. I was astonished when it came to the point in the trial where the prosecution was actually *allowed* to change the charge. That is appalling. Imagine what his life would've become had he not recently broken up with that witch of a girlfriend (at 18:50 - she's disgusting). And I actually welled up when his dad was speaking to the court, and Jeffrey was fighting to not burst into tears.
    I hope The Innocence Project helps him. Poor sod.

    • @laurieschneider5278
      @laurieschneider5278 Před 2 lety +8

      Well said!

    • @jflesh8673
      @jflesh8673 Před rokem +1

      Baretta did that S@$!..

    • @darkhorse7460
      @darkhorse7460 Před rokem

      She's disgusting?

    • @MasonTorrey
      @MasonTorrey Před 3 měsíci

      He was crying because he knew he'd fucked up and hurt his father and sister. Oh, and because it hit him that he's going to be locked up for a long time.

  • @chuckmaggs7624
    @chuckmaggs7624 Před rokem +22

    After all the hours of that chapter I had to comment, it is fascinating, that there was no evidence and they couldn't find any evidence, kind of scary!

  • @brtnbd739
    @brtnbd739 Před 2 lety +573

    It’s absolutely terrifying that they can literally put you in prison for literally half of your life with no evidence. There’s something truly wrong in our justice system

    • @tonycaniggia
      @tonycaniggia Před 2 lety +25

      their strongest evidence was that spiteful ex

    • @annagitana1
      @annagitana1 Před 2 lety +25

      It wasn’t no evidence. There was evidence in this case pointing to him:
      He was the last to see her alive. He had intense abrasions on his hand on the same day of the murder, which matched with what someone wielding a blunt object would have.
      He was at the house alone with her the day she was killed.
      He left a bizarre voicemail to a neighbor which indicated he was trying to create an alibi.
      He showed no emotion during questioning, despite the fact that his mother was just killed.
      His reaction when told she was murdered was fake and without real shock or grief.
      That’s all evidence. Jurors get to give that evidence the weight they deem appropriate.
      Was it enough evidence to cast aside reasonable doubt? I don’t know. I wasn’t on the jury. Maybe not. But there was evidence.

    • @sejje
      @sejje Před 2 lety +36

      @@annagitana1
      The killer was the last to see her alive. Maybe that's him, maybe it's not. "Last to see them alive" is a lead for police to follow. It's not evidence.
      His "intense abrasions" are circumstantial. He had an explanation. We can buy it or not, but those injuries could not be linked to the crime. Not evidence.
      He lived in the house, yeah? He was in the house with her every day, more than likely. Certainly not evidence.
      Voicemail is not bizarre out of this context. There's something to the lilacs not being mentioned, maybe. In a world where he's innocent, this voicemail wouldn't stand out to anyone as unusual. He thought she'd be there, he called when she wasn't. Not evidence.
      Your perception is that he showed no emotion or whatever. People's reactions are not evidence. They're not even reliable hunches. See dozens of other examples. Not evidence.
      Your perception is that his reaction was fake. We have no way to know that, you're just making it up. Not evidence.
      The whole point of the comment you responded to was that there was no evidence. No murder weapon. No blood spatter. No cleanup. Nobody spotted him there. Nobody had reason to believe he would do such a thing. He never threatened her. No bloody footprints. Not one piece of tangible evidence whatsoever.
      I don't know if the guy did it (my gut says he did), but I don't think it's a high bar to have some evidence produced when we sentence folks to live their remaining useful life in prison. I think the addition of the 2nd degree was shady af, too. Prosecutors are forced to choose before trial for a reason.

    • @elizabethgeorge168
      @elizabethgeorge168 Před 2 lety +24

      @@annagitana1 that's all circumstantial at best. There was no hard evidence, just opinions and assumptions.

    • @cade377
      @cade377 Před 2 lety +12

      @@annagitana1 He actually did show emotion when they told him. I'm guessing you had an expected emotional response. People react differently. How can you tell that his reaction to being told she was murdered was fake? I had a very similar reaction upon hearing that a friend of mine had been murdered. There's no "one reaction fits all" with this.
      I do agree, most of what you mentioned is evidence. Personally, I'd need more that directly ties him to having committed the act.

  • @Mindyourbusiness82
    @Mindyourbusiness82 Před 2 lety +488

    The lack of evidence is troubling. Also, her husband was about to leave her and then changed his mind. He was ruled out as a suspect but what about the woman he'd been planning to leave his wife for? Was she ever looked into? Seems like that person would have more motive to kill her than her son.

    • @enchanted376
      @enchanted376 Před 2 lety +31

      I agree that would be something to look into, jealous,angry,envious girlfriend thinks o he is gonna leave his wife then told o by the way I'm not now...hell yeah would make anyone mad n upset, definitely enough to look into.

    • @mearabelanger4111
      @mearabelanger4111 Před 2 lety +33

      That's exactly what I was thinking. The brutality/anger of the killing was consistent with a lot of other jealousy-related killings. And the evidence against Pyne was completely circumstancial.

    • @LacroixboiMarx
      @LacroixboiMarx Před 2 lety +23

      That’s a great point actually. They just glossed right over that huh.

    • @LacroixboiMarx
      @LacroixboiMarx Před 2 lety +8

      @Christina McIntosh oooohhh thanks!

    • @sonquatsch8585
      @sonquatsch8585 Před 2 lety +15

      people, people, stopped being wowed by his looks. my god. the naivite...he had the skin lesions on BOTH hands the day of the murder. he swung the 2x4s...he simply got rid of the clothing he had on during the murder. prolly incinerated them or something. maybe one of those textile hazmat suits, that cover the entire body...the hand injuries make it obvious he did it and his co-workers testified to the unlikelikhood of such injuries arising from work duties. c'mon gals... he was sick of his mom's illness so he killt her. dad suffered too and knows deep down he did it. the whole family was tired of dealing with her and the dad had more allegiance to his son than to the wife he wanted to leave. i'm o.k. with the 2nd degree. i think honestly they got into an argument and he lost it, which would be in line with murder 2. no matter how much he couldn't stand her, i don't think he was really interested in killing her, i think he broke under pressure after having some kind of confrontation. no money motive, no planning. she went off on him and he grabbed the 2x4 and knife. it's not complex folks. the clothes he had on during the murder are still on that property. prolly buried under the lilacs.

  • @syntext
    @syntext Před 2 lety +28

    This case is so different from the others you've covered, but I'm still stumped as to why he would lie about planting lilacs for someone who wasn't home to the police.

    • @glenbateman5960
      @glenbateman5960 Před rokem

      I have done work at the homes of people who weren't home at the time.

    • @syntext
      @syntext Před rokem +9

      @@glenbateman5960 Sure, but did you lie about doing work for them that you didn't do and they hadn't asked you to do? He told the police he had planted lilacs but he clearly hadn't.

    • @DannyBZ9
      @DannyBZ9 Před rokem +1

      How are you stumped? It’s obvious he murdered her

    • @syntext
      @syntext Před rokem +3

      @DannyBZ9 I'm stumped why he would lie about it if he was innocent. This video makes a whole argument about his possible innocence, but that doesn't seem all that likely, as you pointed out.

    • @DannyBZ9
      @DannyBZ9 Před rokem +6

      @@syntext this comment section is delusional. He had plenty of motive & lied about his whereabouts during the murder. Also lied about his hand injuries confirmed by co-workers

  • @wikitewok1383
    @wikitewok1383 Před 2 lety +13

    Absolutely disgusting what the prosecution did, they had no evidence to issue a search warrant let alone an arrest warrant. They railroaded this poor dude 😢

  • @djryanashton
    @djryanashton Před 2 lety +404

    Wow. It’s disgraceful that the prosecution was allowed to include second degree murder at the last minute. If it weren’t for that, I’m sure they would have had to go with “not guilty” as they clearly didn’t think he had premeditated the murder. The defense was caught totally off-guard. If second degree was an option, it should have been so right from the start or brought against him in a separate trial or something like that.

    • @12345678900987659101
      @12345678900987659101 Před 2 lety +55

      Agreed, one of the slimiest things I have ever seen a lawyer pull off. Shame on that judge for allowing it.

    • @madisonbrown5766
      @madisonbrown5766 Před 2 lety +35

      They knew they were going to lose this conviction. I believe that if they want to include the lesser charge of 2nd degree then it should be put forth from the beginning and or have a mistrial and start over with that but not allowed to include it at the end of the trial because the prosecutors knew they were losing that first degree murder conviction. This was wrong and I really hope someone takes up this case to help him get out and sue the prosecutors for malicious prosecution.

    • @carebear8762
      @carebear8762 Před 2 lety +8

      Without discussing the politics of the case, as a matter of black-letter law note that the recent Potter conviction likely only occurred because the Prosecution was able to redefine "Recklessness," as defined by both statute and case law, in its closing rebuttal without immediate correction by the judge. Absent that loosened definition the jury was allowed to use, there was no way for the agreed upon facts of the case to meet the actual legal standard.

    • @roseclemons
      @roseclemons Před 2 lety +2

      They included cause they knew a not guilty was going to come back. It’s absolutely right given the choice between two options sealed his fate. Scary

    • @H3artNSoul
      @H3artNSoul Před 2 lety +4

      I agree. With adding the “middle ground” of second degree murder it almost makes you feel like second degree murder is astronomically less worse when it’s just as bad. It puts you in a bad spot because of the very little evidence so it makes you feel like it’s the better option. As much as I want to say he’s not guilty I do however; have always felt like the true innocence or guiltily conscious comes forth when the person accused of the crime shows little fight to clear their name. This is my opinion but I just felt like he just wanted it all to end but couldn’t bring himself to admit to the murder so he just went with it. No appeal or fight to prove his innocence.

  • @SmooseySmellings
    @SmooseySmellings Před 2 lety +209

    That's awful and really disturbing that you can be thrown in Jail with zero evidence. Poor family.

    • @AutomaticDuck300
      @AutomaticDuck300 Před 2 lety +14

      I think he did it but we'll never know why.
      However, I still have questions about how he disposed of the murder weapons and bloody clothing after the event.

    • @4TheFellas
      @4TheFellas Před 2 lety +12

      @LemonZeppelin I'd say he did it as well, but in America, you must be proven guilty, beyond any reasonable doubt. I think there is more than enough reasonable doubt for him to have been acquitted.

    • @sancho8521
      @sancho8521 Před 2 lety

      @@AutomaticDuck300 went to local Y, showered and threw knife in dumpster

    • @EbonyPope
      @EbonyPope Před 2 lety +1

      Well 'murica.

    • @tredjesongen
      @tredjesongen Před 2 lety +7

      Uh,the hands? Nothing else could make such wounds than holding a plank for quite a while and beat senseless away for many minutes. And that lilac planting /fabricated alibi with out of place voicemail?
      And who in the whole world else were there that day? I say he snapped.
      A good liar never retract or confess.

  • @pattientzminger9086
    @pattientzminger9086 Před rokem +4

    I am Very Troubled that the jury decided the way they did, no evidence etc... Very Horrifying indeed!

  • @nathanchung27
    @nathanchung27 Před 2 lety +29

    This is the first time I'm experiencing this with one of your videos;
    I actually feel for this guy. I'm not excusing his actions (if he's even guilty), and there's never a good reason to murder someone if it's not in self-defence, but I can bet his mother made him and his family's lives a living nightmare. The lady wasn't even willing to sacrifice her hate for medication to save her family. If he really did kill her, it was out of hurt more than anything.
    I feel so on the fence with this one.

    • @bm-ww8kb
      @bm-ww8kb Před rokem

      lol youre not very familiar with a chronic mental illness eh

    • @margretsims1322
      @margretsims1322 Před 9 měsíci

      I agree with you......

  • @LasVegasBarbie
    @LasVegasBarbie Před 2 lety +243

    No blood on his clothing.. no blood in the bathroom or shower or his car.. it wouldn’t make sense if they couldn’t come up with how he was completely clean of not one drop off blood or evidence of a cleanup.

    • @ilalou941
      @ilalou941 Před 2 lety +19

      It also makes me wonder if they didn't find any other DNA on the mother. Because it was mentioned that she had defensive wounds. So didn't they find anything at all, like for an example under her fingernails?

    • @bkbff
      @bkbff Před 2 lety +6

      @@ilalou941 If he used a 2x4, he would be farther away. Maybe too far for her to get at him.

    • @Fitz1993
      @Fitz1993 Před 2 lety +11

      @@bkbff Yeah except how do you explain there being no blood on his what so ever when he apparently laid down on her and stabbed her in the kneck 17 times?

    • @kimmyfreak200
      @kimmyfreak200 Před 2 lety +5

      why didn't they search the neighbors house...

    • @kath3832
      @kath3832 Před 2 lety +3

      Also if you stab someone 17 times, your hand can slip on the blood and cut yourself also... So maybe blood of the killer mixed with the victims on the victim...I wonder if anything was found like that

  • @LegendaryMercenary.
    @LegendaryMercenary. Před 2 lety +1669

    Watching *That Chapter* grow from 170k to now 1.5M is a testament to the quality of your storytelling and production!
    Keep up the fantastic work my friend and have a fantastic New Year!

    • @nathanieltaylor6992
      @nathanieltaylor6992 Před 2 lety +15

      There's a few imitators out there now.

    • @DaisyMae439
      @DaisyMae439 Před 2 lety +7

      Yeah it has nothing to do with him selling his soul and putting shows out there about lies about chemtrail and a whole bunch of other stuff he's doing the devil's bidding

    • @maric820
      @maric820 Před 2 lety +31

      It was the tinfoil hat for me

    • @NiecieSavo
      @NiecieSavo Před 2 lety +39

      @@DaisyMae439 tf are you babbling about? 😆

    • @DaisyMae439
      @DaisyMae439 Před 2 lety +6

      @@NiecieSavo I don't expect dumbed down, mind controlled, zombie government slaves to understand or to hear or see what's really going on in this world!

  • @Nandrea7627
    @Nandrea7627 Před 2 lety +10

    I've been pondering a lot about the American judicial system recently, because it scares me that ppl are sitting on juries yet they possibly have not been taught critical thinking! Lack of critical thinking capabilities impacts ALL areas of life. It seems to be easier to just convict someone, without proper consideration, so everyone can just go home and forget about it!
    If you found yourself on trial, what faith or trust could you have in a Jury of your peers if they don't know how to critically think?

  • @kirkmaxwellofficial
    @kirkmaxwellofficial Před 6 měsíci +3

    The fact that they can just throw in the second degree thing right before the jury deliberates is the most unjust garbage I’ve ever seen

  • @alexandriajoy96
    @alexandriajoy96 Před 2 lety +567

    The father ALMOST left his wife, the victim, for another women... and then ended up staying with his wife when she had the strength to finally give medicine a try. Does anyone else sense a potential jealous mistress? No evidence really, but then again Jeff was basically convicted with less. All around we just don't know, and its another video that made me feel for the family involved!

    • @TheCrabbyCrafterlol
      @TheCrabbyCrafterlol Před 2 lety +49

      100% AGREED
      The boy's "tell-tale" blisters are OLD--and the pallet at work tore them open--they were already there. Of course the other employees "never got that kind of injury from pallets" his blisters were there before he went to work. He's obviously fit--perhaps he had blisters from lifting and they got tore up at work. Per the pics, the skin around the blisters is old and cracked--OLD NEWS--nothing to do with his mother's murder.

    • @glamdolly30
      @glamdolly30 Před 2 lety +28

      A jealous mistress?! And she got into the house and garage with the victim how? And what - she happened to spot the 4 x 4 on the garage floor, and on a whim chose it as the murder weapon? And swung that unwieldy hunk of wood at the victim's head 20 times? Then belatedly decided to use the knife she brought with her too?
      Oh - and by the way, no one saw a woman covered in blood leaving the house?
      This is real life, not an episode of 'Columbo'! Though not even 'Columbo' would come up with a plot as nonsensical as that. Women very rarely commit murder. It's so rare that when it does happen there is strong motive, and they are quickly found out. I love that you assume police 'forgot' to investigate the husband's ex, like they're the Keystone Cops or something.
      Of course they interviewed her, as they will have kept an open mind and interviewed every known associate of the victim, in the earliest stages of the invitation. That's basic police work. And she will have been eliminated as a suspect in the early days too - and then the net closed in on the actual killer, the victim's son.
      Because unlike his dad's mistress, Jeffrey Pyne didn't have an alibi, but did have heavy blistering injuries to both hands from beating his mother to a bloody pulp with a rough length of wood. There's ample compelling evidence Pyne is the killer, and thank God the jury had sufficient critical thinking skills to recognise his guilt and reach the right verdict.
      Unfortunately, murderers don't generally take a selfie of themselves mid-crime. Jurors have to work hard to recognise a defendant's guilt or innocence. What's more, today's killers are very forensically aware, thanks to all the true crime cases and police/legal dramas featured in the media. That means the premeditated killers like this guy, can enact a pretty good cover up, obliterating forensic evidence. Again that makes it tougher for jurors to reach the right verdict.
      Pyne did very well avoiding getting his mother's blood on his body, clothes or car. That didn't point to his innocence, but to a very thorough clean up/cover up. Sadly for him, he couldn't do anything about the injuries he got to both hands on the exact same day as the murder (that would be one helluva coincidence!) or his total lack of alibi. The jury showed excellent judgement and took a dangerous man out of society, respect to them.

    • @Jenn0421
      @Jenn0421 Před 2 lety +4

      Oooooooo 😳Good thought!!! Didn’t think of that…. 🤭 Damn!

    • @notknightbean
      @notknightbean Před 2 lety +21

      Or the girlfriend of jeffery?
      If she was so pissed about jeffery cheating, maybe she went over to hurt him but when he wasn’t home went for his mom. Like they mention in her interview she was talking about how he was a lier and a bad guy.

    • @RustyX2010
      @RustyX2010 Před 2 lety +15

      @@TheCrabbyCrafterlol Yes you can get blisters from lifting pallets without wearing gloves and especially if you've had previous blisters they can make it worst. Maybe he was the hardest worker at his job by being a young guy taking the pain of blisters and the other employees who said they never got blisters were lazy ass employees who stood around and did nothing all day.

  • @jeanettewishall6362
    @jeanettewishall6362 Před 2 lety +425

    I had never heard of this case before and my jaw hit the floor when it came to the point where the prosecution was actually ALLOWED to change the charge at the end of the trial. That is appalling.

    • @Preservestlandry
      @Preservestlandry Před 2 lety +7

      It's a lesser included offense and it's the law in Michigan. As the prosecutor said, they're entitled to have it included. Not "allowed."

    • @tylerskiss
      @tylerskiss Před 2 lety +31

      @@Preservestlandry And it is allowed to be introduced at any point in a trial? So any prosecutor can see his or her case going to s**t, and then just decide "you know what? I'm going to toss in this little conscience clearer for all you jurors"... that seems disgusting IF that is the case.

    • @hurpaderpp
      @hurpaderpp Před 2 lety +20

      @@tylerskiss seriously he needs a whole new trial for that

    • @daveandcynthiabrock9250
      @daveandcynthiabrock9250 Před 2 lety +1

      @@hurpaderpp Jury and prosecutor got it right!

    • @-danR
      @-danR Před 2 lety +1

      This trial was guilty beyond reasonable doubt.

  • @Rusty.1776
    @Rusty.1776 Před rokem +5

    His hand injuries sealed his fate...

  • @lctriguy69
    @lctriguy69 Před měsícem +2

    I looked into the Court of Appeal opinion on this one. Apparently he said he was gardening because he thought his teacher was still out of town-but she was at home and testified he didn’t come on the day of the murder. He also planted the lilacs a few days before.
    What reasonable explanation there be for him to lie about his whereabouts in the 1> hour window when his mother was killed? This guy is guilty as sin.

  • @dannycasey8261
    @dannycasey8261 Před 2 lety +601

    Of all the cases I've seen this young man deserved an appeal. There's no evidence other than his hands being damaged. Working with pallets you will get hurt. I feel very bad for him and his family. It's sad that the mom got murdered and horrible that someone got by with it.
    And the judge allowing for second degree to be put in the mix while knowing damned well there's not enough evidence is sickening.

    • @TheCrabbyCrafterlol
      @TheCrabbyCrafterlol Před 2 lety +21

      Plus--you can see he's physically fit--he may have had the blisters --BEFORE lifting the pallet at work that he said opened the PRE-EXISTING blisters-- that may be from lifting something heavy or doing something repeatedly--17 whacks with a 2x4 wouldn't make blisters that big or that fast--the skin around the blisters is old/cracked dry--those are "old" issues. And certainly not enough to warrant a prison sentence.

    • @dannycasey8261
      @dannycasey8261 Před 2 lety +13

      @@TheCrabbyCrafterlol Yes. And you could see a circle of the blistered skin. I feel so bad for him. To think he was convicted of it And he has to go to the pen. It made me sad. I'm 60 and he's still young. I truly hope he wins an appeal. The judge was so wrong to let them include the other charge beings that there was no real evidence.

    • @elishh8173
      @elishh8173 Před 2 lety +14

      His blisters are more consistent with pressure from lifting heavy things.
      He should contact a medical expert

    • @ScrubMyTub
      @ScrubMyTub Před 2 lety +5

      Megalul people trying to defend a kille4

    • @capefear56
      @capefear56 Před 2 lety +12

      It's a failing of the judicial system that a random selection of people are the deciding factor in whether or not you lose your freedom. Juries should be chosen from a competent pool of legal professionals, not the uneducated masses.

  • @GeorgiaOverdrive
    @GeorgiaOverdrive Před 2 lety +339

    One of the most consistent channels on CZcams. Never asks for likes or subs, never advertises his Patreon and has the most natural subscriber growth. Also the best views to subs ratio. Great job, Mike!

    • @lisajean228
      @lisajean228 Před 2 lety +7

      My ONLY patreon subscription, and well-deserved

    • @zippy0n942
      @zippy0n942 Před 2 lety +6

      I heard him ask one one video for a sub, but that was it, despite watching nearly all his videos, mike is the man!

    • @kevindube7096
      @kevindube7096 Před 2 lety +10

      He has referenced the Patreon multiple times too, I don’t see anything wrong with that

    • @debshaw680
      @debshaw680 Před 2 lety +8

      Do you do your job for no pay? Of course smaller channels have to advertise and ask for subs. That’s how they get paid. And Mike is clearly part of a large team.

    • @luminvader8911
      @luminvader8911 Před 2 lety +7

      @@debshaw680 came here to say that. I don't think it's wrong to ask for people to subscribe if they like the content or support the patreon if they want to finance the channel. No one is making you fork out money but they need money to survive, pay bills, spend time researching these videos and cases, they prob take hours, days, weeks, months to create. Having to sit through hours of footage and court cases and news footage etc. Without pay? They definitely deserve it. And Mike and his team 100% deserve it. Unlike TV or streaming services a lot of these channels are not getting paid for each episode ot backed by a big network. Most channels ask for subscribers or patreon at the end or beginning of their videos. It's so easy to just skip through it.

  • @Wabbertt13
    @Wabbertt13 Před 2 lety +10

    This is the embodiment of my biggest fear, where you can be convicted with such an extreme lack of evidence present. I personally don’t have an opinion if he’s guilty or not, but I do not believe there was sufficient evidence to render tat verdict

  • @nolan25100
    @nolan25100 Před 2 lety +1

    The 'my name is Jeff' easter egg at 5:03 is pure genius Mike.

  • @mikesknow
    @mikesknow Před 2 lety +215

    This was two houses down from my wife’s grandparents house. Don’t know if he’s guilty or not but I don’t think anyone should sit in prison for the rest of their life without actual evidence and not “he probably did it”.

    • @michaelcarlin7806
      @michaelcarlin7806 Před 2 lety +4

      Outrageous to throw a man in a cell for the rest of his cell.

    • @mikesknow
      @mikesknow Před 2 lety +4

      @@michaelcarlin7806 agreed. It’s not right without knowing without a doubt someone is guilty. Makes me sad for the family.

    • @nealkelly9757
      @nealkelly9757 Před 2 lety +2

      Overwhelming circumstantial evidence. The jury got it right.

    • @daveandcynthiabrock9250
      @daveandcynthiabrock9250 Před 2 lety

      He sooooo did it.He has dead eyes and was just a narcissistic Spoiled brat!!!

    • @Cove_Blue
      @Cove_Blue Před 2 lety +8

      @@nealkelly9757 What was this "overwhelming circumstantial evidence?"

  • @vanessadacenzo5764
    @vanessadacenzo5764 Před 2 lety +445

    This is my first time commenting on a case and I’ve seen hundreds. This is just another example of a disgusting justice system. Whether he actually did it or not, no one knows because there were no witnesses to the murder, but there is no hard evidence to support a guilty verdict. None. I find this sickening and alarming. This has happened to thousands of individuals- it can happen to anyone of us. We need to push back in support of these judiciary victims.

    • @Breakbeat.
      @Breakbeat. Před 2 lety +54

      And the prosecution was like "Hmm, they're probably not going to give 1st degree because there is no evidence.... Let's tell 'em they can do 2nd, that should work".
      That, to me, is terrifying.

    • @Jezzebel1313
      @Jezzebel1313 Před 2 lety +43

      @@Breakbeat. It smells more like "we want to win" and not like "what's the truth".

    • @ashenmoonclash
      @ashenmoonclash Před 2 lety +8

      It's happened way too many times since our judicial system was formed.

    • @charliethecockatoo2159
      @charliethecockatoo2159 Před 2 lety +14

      @@NoTeefy God, I wish I were surrounded by more people with that mindset.
      I find it truly terrifying - not to mention heartbreaking - how much of a failed state the US really is.

    • @parisjones2265
      @parisjones2265 Před 2 lety +6

      It also further rips a family apart and stunts the healing process from this horrifying crime. May she RIP and may her son have freedom.

  • @Doomcheese
    @Doomcheese Před rokem +6

    You always make great videos. I don't think a thank you is enough but that's all I'm good for. I love the channel and I hope you are successful.

  • @blondieb91390able
    @blondieb91390able Před rokem +1

    HUGE miscarriage of justice. What the absolute HELL was the jury thinking?! This is awful.

  • @DATrainedrop
    @DATrainedrop Před 2 lety +852

    This is the first time I’ve ever heard of this case, but the only thing I’m convinced of is the prosecution’s desire for a conviction. (Edit: hence the sudden addition of a second degree charge. It’s easier for a jury to convict someone of a “lesser” charge) Could Jeff have done it? Sure, I guess. Is there any proof. Hardly.
    The state doesn’t need a motive, yes, but the fact that they decided to charge him with the little circumstantial evidence they had is astounding.

    • @punkybrewstar83
      @punkybrewstar83 Před 2 lety +26

      Guilty is supposed to be beyond reasonable doubt. It sucks that juries are set up in such a way, that they can't easily come to the conclusion that they don't know. Cannot be sure of guilt or innocence at this time, should be a verdict that a jury can decide upon immediately and that is encouraged systematically. At the moment the jury is punished for not knowing to a degree, and very strongly pushed towards a guilty or innocent verdict.

    • @johannas.l.brushane2518
      @johannas.l.brushane2518 Před 2 lety +19

      They probably hoped that he would reject a trial and opt for a plea bargain which often seem as some sort of gamble for purpose of having statistic of quickly solved crimes.
      Another thing I'm puzzled over are that they allow so-called charachter witnesses. The only interesting would be if the acvused have a record of being a repeat offender, have showed violent tendencies. If a guy or a girl are slutty is not much of relevance to a murder case, especially if it's not even a case of a lover or partner but a parent?!?!

    • @perijetton9275
      @perijetton9275 Před 2 lety +29

      I don’t think he did it at all and after the Rittenhouse trial I don’t trust prosecutor’s at all!

    • @ginaperez8139
      @ginaperez8139 Před 2 lety +7

      Not Hardly there is NONE!!!

    • @AnyoneCanSee
      @AnyoneCanSee Před 2 lety +31

      @@ginaperez8139 - What are you talking about? He cheated on his girlfriend and she really really liked him, like a lot. Second-degree murder for that.

  • @angela21975
    @angela21975 Před 2 lety +283

    I absolutely hate when judges see jury's struggling and then offer them the option of 2nd degree murder. If he wasn't charged with 2nd degree, they shouldn't be able to do that!!! It allows the jury to second guess themselves and assign blame somewhere, and come up with false resolution!! It's just wrong!!!

    • @user-fk5zf1ei6f
      @user-fk5zf1ei6f Před 2 lety +3

      The judge didn't offer 2nd degree, the prosecution did.

    • @dans8149
      @dans8149 Před 2 lety +11

      @@user-fk5zf1ei6f I don't know for sure but I think it's up to the judge if he will allow it. Like and objection.. over ruled or sustained. That's why they both plead their cases why it should or shouldn't be allowed..

    • @AmexL
      @AmexL Před 2 lety +14

      @@dans8149 correct, it was a motion by the prosecution and the judge allowed it. It’s on the judge. He shouldn’t have.

    • @sidviciousness7469
      @sidviciousness7469 Před 2 lety +2

      @@AmexL
      The judge is a judge because of many years in college, law school etc. His allowing the motion was correct. And will standup to every appeal and technical question.
      There is STILL a victim. She won't suddenly rise from the grave regardless of her son's incarceration status.
      Believe it or not.
      Bitte...

    • @jamiedominy4552
      @jamiedominy4552 Před 2 lety +10

      If they were offered a second degree verdict, but still took three days to even choose that verdict, it definitely seems like there was plenty of doubt going on in that jury room.

  • @Justdessertsforme
    @Justdessertsforme Před 2 lety +1

    This verdict sickens me Mike. Our justice system failed this young man...😠

  • @joeymims5852
    @joeymims5852 Před rokem +1

    I hate how our judicial system works. Its so ridiculous in so many ways!

  • @rlawrence9838
    @rlawrence9838 Před 2 lety +196

    the inclusion of 2nd degree so that the jury would just convert doubt that he did it into a "just in case he did it let's" scenario must have been infuriating to the defence seeing as that they'd done their job in demonstrating reasonable doubt: if second degree murder had been on the table from the beginning it would 've changed the way they presented their case. The judge allowed the distance between the defences goal posts to be slightly lengthened right at the last minute.

    • @Pestacook
      @Pestacook Před 2 lety +6

      this is what had me thinking "okay, but what happened when they appealed this?" and then at the end he quickly said he was denied... i am surprised

    • @Tobeh
      @Tobeh Před 2 lety +12

      I'm amazed people are unable to see this is a desperate play by the prosecution desperate for a W so they don't have to do a more thorough investigation. It's such an obvious horseshit request that they don't want to win on evidence, they want to win on technicality. But each W means a person is going to jail. I bet that guys case log is full of people who didn't do the crime they were accused of.

    • @Yamezzzz
      @Yamezzzz Před 2 lety +6

      The difference between the US and the UK justice systems is just insane. This is actually horrifying.
      Innocent, guilty, or guilty but feeling a bit better with yourself if he's innocent

    • @luminacosmosa2324
      @luminacosmosa2324 Před 2 lety

      Widened. Goal post distance is widened. Field distance is lengthened.

    • @masterpassword2
      @masterpassword2 Před 2 lety +6

      You'd have to be delusional to convict someone for a jail term of 20+ years "just to be sure".

  • @76HabeasCorpus
    @76HabeasCorpus Před 2 lety +219

    I don't understand how someone can be found guilty "beyond a reasonable doubt" with no physical evidence, DNA or even a real motive, in this case. There seems to be little more than finger pointing in this case which, if you ask me is a pretty flimsy basis for a conviction.

    • @craigh5236
      @craigh5236 Před 2 lety +6

      The cops/prosecution was so eager for a conviction, any conviction. That and as we have seen so many times on this channel cops tend to be useless. They didn't even try to find the real killer.

    • @herbthompson8937
      @herbthompson8937 Před 2 lety +7

      @@craigh5236 cops and prosecutors don't decide who's guilty. Morons that are too stupid to get off of jury duty decide that. That should answer the question on how people can find someone guilty with 0 evidence.

    • @Mikael-jt1hk
      @Mikael-jt1hk Před 2 lety +1

      Name one other person who would have beaten a 51 year old woman to death? This HAS to be personal. Its overkill and strangers dont do that. Ever.

    • @76HabeasCorpus
      @76HabeasCorpus Před 2 lety

      @@Mikael-jt1hk It's not what you know, it's what you can prove.

    • @yunglynda1326
      @yunglynda1326 Před 2 lety

      Check under her fingernails!!!!

  • @cratty16
    @cratty16 Před měsícem +1

    Wow so much lack of evidence and still charged with 2nd degree. Thats wild.

  • @katilynshockey5689
    @katilynshockey5689 Před rokem +2

    I hope he gets ahold of the innocents project. They would be appalled by what the justice system did to this man

  • @angelriot
    @angelriot Před 2 lety +220

    It concerns me greatly that there was almost no evidence of his guilt, and yet he’s locked up in prison. This can happen to anyone.

    • @reignman30
      @reignman30 Před 2 lety +13

      I don't know, he didn't have an alibi, wounds on his hands from someone who might have been swinging a 2x4 around, the suspicious sounding voice mail he left. Probably not enough to convict him, but it's not like he's squeaky clean.

    • @IChIDH
      @IChIDH Před 2 lety +29

      @@reignman30 so what if you don't have an alibi? People do spend time alone and you don't have to prove you didn't do it, the state has to prove you did.

    • @WanderingBrushArt
      @WanderingBrushArt Před 2 lety +3

      @@reignman30 What country are you from?

    • @themudpit621
      @themudpit621 Před 2 lety +7

      @@reignman30 you're right, you don't know.

    • @WunnSEN
      @WunnSEN Před 2 lety +1

      @@IChIDH I mean...in your mothers murder case, don't you want to be as forthcoming as you can? Being vague n lying about what you was doing is FOR SURE going to make you look guilty. Whether or not you actually are, that's called having common sense.

  • @izstrella
    @izstrella Před 2 lety +24

    This is literally a case of "Well, WHO ELSE could it be?" - but they didn't even look for anyone else!

    • @Pocket_Sora
      @Pocket_Sora Před 2 lety +1

      My thoughts were what about the other woman the dad was starting to see before the mom decided to take her meds so he wouldn't leave her? How did she take to the fact he wasn't going to leave and go to her anymore? Was the mistress actually questioned/looked at that much?

    • @izstrella
      @izstrella Před 2 lety

      @@Pocket_Sora · Oh yeah, she wasn't even mentioned! I hope they did look into her!

  • @canadat4380
    @canadat4380 Před 2 lety +4

    My father was murdered when I was 13 and I acted the exact same as this guy when finding out and yah it was because of shock I didn't cry untill after the funeral and I was close with him so yah your statement about ppl acting like that is true. Of course years following came depression and all that stuff was hospitalized multiple times for it ,but my reaction was close to the same almost as if I didn't fully believe it was real.

  • @scratch5120
    @scratch5120 Před rokem +1

    People are cowards. That jury is full of cowards.

  • @josephdalessio2075
    @josephdalessio2075 Před 2 lety +267

    This case definitely proves anyone at anytime could be convicted and sentenced based on no evidence.

    • @NoNo_IStay
      @NoNo_IStay Před 2 lety +1

      I think he did it. I think he had years of pain and baggage. When his mother started taking her meds, i doubt she was remorseful of the way she was. Probably tried to act like a lot of things weren't said, leaving Jeff with his emotions. And he couldn't stand to watch her go on like everything was just fine.

    • @josephdalessio2075
      @josephdalessio2075 Před 2 lety +12

      @@NoNo_IStay I’m not saying he didn’t do it. I’m saying there isn’t enough evidence to convict

    • @NothingLefthereforyou
      @NothingLefthereforyou Před 2 lety +3

      @@NoNo_IStay well their is no evidence that provided guilt also the police did not look outside the family they tunnel visioned him just because a person isn’t a good guy doesn’t mean he is a murder they gave very bad evidence that could be destroy in the eyes of any *cough* *cough* smart person sorry but it’s clear their is no evidence that connects him to the crime I’m not saying he’s innocent but he definitely shouldn’t of been given a guilty verdict as this was a highly inappropriate/corrupted case honestly it seem the police just didn’t want to put effort in and tried to put blame fast sadly that is the harsh truth of the court system

    • @theexchipmunk
      @theexchipmunk Před 2 lety +5

      @@josephdalessio2075 This. No matter if he did or didn't do it. This was a conviction on him having otherwise explainable blisters and "feelings". Thats not enough to put someone away for decades.

    • @josephdalessio2075
      @josephdalessio2075 Před 2 lety +1

      @@theexchipmunk exactly !

  • @tellmeofyourhomeworldusul6060

    Omg, Jeffrey’s face when his dad when he was defending him really makes me think that he did not do this. It was the face of someone who has no one in their corner and the emotions overcoming him when he knows his dad had his back.

    • @acooper7675
      @acooper7675 Před 2 lety +36

      Interesting, I thought it could just as easily be interpreted as him being guilty--overwhelmed with regret and grief over what he put his father through. Either way this case was a sham, whether he did it or not

    • @makalo
      @makalo Před 2 lety +11

      casey anthony cried when her father just spoke with her lol...

    • @kennedy6587
      @kennedy6587 Před 2 lety +8

      @@acooper7675 that’s what I was about to say lol

    • @markhorder1818
      @markhorder1818 Před 2 lety +10

      Im sorry ...he did it those injuries to his hands are exactly what you would expect from swinging a lump of wood and hitting something or someone. ..pallets ? I don't think so

    • @PR-xm5zc
      @PR-xm5zc Před 2 lety +10

      So he is innocent because of how he looks? Hmm yeah that's a good way to go about judging someone's guilt almost worse than conviction with out evidence

  • @BeakerInShortShorts
    @BeakerInShortShorts Před rokem +1

    Can never tire of telling others “immediately lawyer up”. I have never once seen police be more merciful towards someone because they didn’t 😮

  • @kellyscott6361
    @kellyscott6361 Před měsícem +1

    I hope an advocacy group takes this case on - one that helps overturn wrongful convictions. I agree with the people who commented that there was no proof given that should have been considered to be beyond a reasonable doubt! That is appeal wasn’t granted is yet another disgraceful error by the state of Michigan!!

  • @SsnakeBite
    @SsnakeBite Před 2 lety +78

    I'm shocked that it's possible for the accusation to propose a new charge in the middle of trial. I mean, why even bother with the trial at all if you can change the charge halfway through? Let alone go with two simultaneous yet mutually-exclusive charges? It's incredibly manipulative and either shouldn't be allowed, or require starting the trial over with a new jury. Otherwise it's bordering on violating the right to a fair trial.

  • @MrFreeman042
    @MrFreeman042 Před 2 lety +31

    Just want to let you know Mike... I'm suffering from from quite serious depression, working on it but as well all probably know, you ahe to take each day as it comes. Tuesdays and Fridays are the days when for 20 minutes, things aren't so bad. I'm very grateful to you for that.

    • @inhishands8899
      @inhishands8899 Před 2 lety

      We are in hard times. If you can, try to take your eyes off the crazy world and your circumstances and turn them to Jesus. He is our only hope and our best friend in times of depression. I am a living witness. He will comfort you and lift you up. ~The LORD is nigh unto them that are of a broken heart; and saveth such as be of a contrite spirit. ~ Pslam 34:18 Praying for you. 🙏

    • @hootiewhooo1434
      @hootiewhooo1434 Před 2 lety +3

      Hang in there. Just remember depression is a liar and is not who you are.

    • @MrFreeman042
      @MrFreeman042 Před 2 lety +4

      @@hootiewhooo1434 Wise words. Lying cheating bastard it is

  • @hgillespie73
    @hgillespie73 Před 2 lety +4

    I have never heard of this story. Thank you. I just don't know. He could have ripped open blisters with pallets, I've got blisters raking. Didn't beat anyone to death, then stab them 16/17 times. Not alot of evidence. Can't be sure.

    • @troodon1096
      @troodon1096 Před 2 lety

      "Can't be sure" definitely doesn't add up to "guilty beyond a reasonable doubt."

  • @greeneyes9310
    @greeneyes9310 Před 3 měsíci

    I live in northern Michigan about 3 hours north of Detroit. I remember this story great job Mike and thank you 😊😊😊

  • @doclewis8927
    @doclewis8927 Před 2 lety +941

    YES! "Let's give it a goo"...we missed you (Mike)! Hope the holidays were good to you and yours (to everyone in the comments and Mike too)!

    • @lovepet4565
      @lovepet4565 Před 2 lety +14

      We missed you!
      Been watching every single video since start
      Love you and love Ireland!

    • @myutube3109
      @myutube3109 Před 2 lety +5

      Hope COVID isn't hitting you hard Mike. Seem to be doing ok

    • @katiecheser1970
      @katiecheser1970 Před 2 lety +9

      Same to you, my Holidays sucked fr but that's cause I've lost my mum so it'll never be the same

    • @juditholivares597
      @juditholivares597 Před 2 lety +9

      @@katiecheser1970 sorry for your loss!💜 lost both of my parents😢 YES Mike missed you seemed like forever lol..HAPPY NEW YEAR MIKE AN ALL ON HERE

    • @arnethaearl8468
      @arnethaearl8468 Před 2 lety +2

      You too

  • @nicholaspruitt9032
    @nicholaspruitt9032 Před 2 lety +271

    It is so comforting to know that there are people like me out there who have a morbid fascination with crime and violence, but would never ever actually commit any of these crimes myself. Mike thank you for making me feel like I am not a bad or sick person for having a deep interest in all things true crime. The members of your channel are such an eclectic bunch. I bet you have members from literally every continent. Hello guys!

    • @grantlowe8382
      @grantlowe8382 Před 2 lety +6

      HI to you too!!🦘🇦🇺

    • @brendaprice665
      @brendaprice665 Před 2 lety +6

      Hello ..... I love crime stories too and like you, would never do anything similar.

    • @tinawebb9124
      @tinawebb9124 Před 2 lety +8

      Watching from the United Kingdom 🇬🇧

    • @dianabodemer1889
      @dianabodemer1889 Před 2 lety +5

      Nice to meet you Nicholas, Happy New Year.

    • @bakielh229
      @bakielh229 Před 2 lety +15

      Confirming your suspicion: I'm from Morocco and every time I go to a supermarket or somewhere with CCTV I find myself fighting the urge to buy bleach, gloves, a shovel and plastic bags for my never-going-to-happen murder and the following That Chapter video about it

  • @jaimichaeldee1373
    @jaimichaeldee1373 Před rokem +1

    This happens more often than imagined. I'm glad this was covered, thanks for giving it a goo! It shows how simply someone's life can be drastically changed based on the decisions and tactics by prosecution just to earn a dollar. You get ahead by winning cases, even if you cheat to win. I hope we hear more on this case in the future.

  • @darrenleaguecity
    @darrenleaguecity Před rokem +1

    Our system is truly broken!

  • @clintonleonard5187
    @clintonleonard5187 Před 2 lety +107

    Cannot believe they did that. How can you just convict someone of second degree murder because they "might have" done it? That genuinely makes me sick...no evidence.

    • @jenniferroach4153
      @jenniferroach4153 Před 2 lety +7

      And the judge allowed it! It’s terrible what our so called justice system does.

    • @ginaperez8139
      @ginaperez8139 Před 2 lety +3

      Sooo I agree Like I don't know this family But I'm PISSED HE DID NOT COMMIT THAT MURDER! THEY SHLD LOOK AT OLE DADS EX THAT HE DATED WHILST HE WAS ON THE BREAK!

    • @frankboff1260
      @frankboff1260 Před 2 lety +2

      And yet others who are obviously guilty (with evidence) walk away.

    • @freeflyer151
      @freeflyer151 Před 2 lety +2

      It happens all the time

    • @frankboff1260
      @frankboff1260 Před 2 lety

      @@freeflyer151 the injustice system is just another money making scheme.

  • @sherryperkins1323
    @sherryperkins1323 Před 2 lety +78

    It absolutely terrifies me that a person can be convicted w/o any tangible evidence and not reversed on appeal! God help us!

    • @boobookitty1441
      @boobookitty1441 Před 2 lety +2

      10:00 But what about those messed up hands tho? And that sketchy voice mail to his neighbor? And that silent reaction to ur MOM was MURDERED?? If someone told me my MOM was MURDERED, I would be like omg wtf happened!! How !! Do u know who did it? Where!! Omg !! Omg omg!! My mom!! And I know my kids who are 17, 18, and 24 would definitely be flipping out wanting to know wtf happened and all of my friends would even be screaming wtf happened! But this dude jus covers his face while peeking thru his fingers. Lol 😂 that’s shady as hell lol. But those messed up hands was the biggest kicker for me.

    • @skyflores9827
      @skyflores9827 Před 2 lety +2

      Can’t refute that, but his injuries to his hands alone are a great indicator of what he did, and not to mention, it wasn’t like it was a robbery, nothing was stolen. Dad had a solid alibi and he didn’t. He was home at the same time frame the mother was murdered.

    • @SuperNuclearUnicorn
      @SuperNuclearUnicorn Před 2 lety +3

      @@boobookitty1441 four words: beyond a reasonable doubt
      You better be 100% sure if you're going to put someone away for such a serious crime and you're joking if you say you're 100% sure despite there being no physical evidence. It's all just vague and circumstantial, or based on how you think someone should react despite everyone reacting differently when grieving.
      I'd be concerned if you were on my jury panel given I tend not to be super emotional and I'm generally really reserved. You'd probably think I'm a killer just because I didn't burst out in tears screaming

    • @SuperNuclearUnicorn
      @SuperNuclearUnicorn Před 2 lety +2

      @@skyflores9827 just minor blisters on his hands though? For such a violent crime? And apparently she had defensive wounds so she must have fought back in some way. And there was no blood on him or anything. Surely that's enough doubt to rule out a conviction given the "beyond a reasonable doubt" thing

    • @boobookitty1441
      @boobookitty1441 Před 2 lety

      @@SuperNuclearUnicorn if 12 jurors came to decide he’s guilty , then they had evidence… and it’s not just about the way he reacted .. he has huge blisters on the inside of his palms.. says guilty to me! I’ve watched hundreds of interrogations and I’ve never once saw someone “innocent” with blisters on the inside of their hands. That came from stabbing with great force over and over and hitting her over and over. Even his coworkers said there is nothing, absolutely nothing that would cause blisters on his hands at work. And that was his excuse. Lmao.. and as far as the second degree murder charge, I feel the jury chose this bc he was abused his whole life and this death was a result of that. The judge gave him the most years possible bc even he knows this dude is guilty. And if u don’t know he’s guilty then I feel bad for u bc I bet u are the most gullible person in the world 🤦‍♀️

  • @juliebunch69
    @juliebunch69 Před 2 lety

    I’m fairly new to your channel, going through videos one by one. I’ve lived in Michigan the better part of my life, and I haven’t ever heard a single one of the cases you’ve covered that come from here!!! It’s shocking!!!

  • @KimH-v888
    @KimH-v888 Před 2 měsíci +2

    What ever happened to ‘beyond a reasonable doubt’? I hope the Freedom Project takes on his case, I think a reexamination of his verdict is warranted.

  • @mytrixrnot4kids
    @mytrixrnot4kids Před 2 lety +12

    I think it’s wonderful that Mike loves me, a middle aged housewife from the Midwest! My daughter tried to say it was said to all his viewers but I know differently because of how he looks me right in the eye when he says it! I love you too, Mike!

    • @Deebeez716
      @Deebeez716 Před 2 lety

      😊

    • @fernunrau7315
      @fernunrau7315 Před 2 lety +1

      I thought he was looking at me? 😉

    • @damagecontrol7
      @damagecontrol7 Před 2 lety +3

      He loves me too, a big burly middle aged man with a beard and pot belly.

    • @mytrixrnot4kids
      @mytrixrnot4kids Před 2 lety +1

      @@damagecontrol7 no! I’m the only one! His true love!

    • @mytrixrnot4kids
      @mytrixrnot4kids Před 2 lety

      @@fernunrau7315 sorry Hun! I’m his soul mate

  • @motojunkie8348
    @motojunkie8348 Před 2 lety +180

    It boggles my mind how many people don't simply say "I'd like a lawyer". Even if I was innocent and had no idea what was going on I'd still refuse to answer any questions.

    • @madamlt5758
      @madamlt5758 Před 2 lety +16

      That’s the way to do it.

    • @cats1970
      @cats1970 Před 2 lety +13

      1) you need to say “I want/demand a lawyer” as what you said isn’t definite enough for the court. “get me a lawyer, dawg” was ruled not demanding a lawyer because the cop thought he meant a literal lawyer dog.
      2) with cases like these cops prey on a very vulnerable loved one. his mother was just brutally murdered and the cops undoubtedly framed their questions as “helping to find her killer” since he was a vital part of the timeframe. especially if you believe you have a clear alibi/no forensically reasonable possibility and don’t already mistrust police.

    • @keircampbell9374
      @keircampbell9374 Před 2 lety +4

      Always be honest with police. Tell no lies. And if you’re a suspect, tell NOTHING. If you’re caught in lies you look suspicious, and if you’re a suspect they’re TRYING to catch you so don’t give ‘em shit.

    • @werenotfree6412
      @werenotfree6412 Před 2 lety

      @@keircampbell9374 never speak to the cops. They do not determine your guilt or innocence.

    • @thedude3620
      @thedude3620 Před 2 lety +11

      @@keircampbell9374 that's yhe problem they will almost ALWAYS make you out to be or seem as the suspect. You could be the MOST innocent person but they'll attack you anyway. Guilty, confused or innocent ALWAYS ask for a Lawyer!

  • @jamiemorgan2178
    @jamiemorgan2178 Před 2 lety +1

    I'm always ready for the next video. Love you too, Mike

  • @trishannagroves7332
    @trishannagroves7332 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Was a firefighter on scene for this. I said right from the start, the son did it. He was acting all kinds of strange, even throwing himself out of the back of the ambulance in all fours dry heaving. Very extremely fake. His hands looked like they had knife cuts all over them. My ex had to testify on behalf of the prosecution.

  • @keithdevlin1
    @keithdevlin1 Před 2 lety +72

    *You know your day in court is going to get a lot worse when the prosecutor calls your ex to the witness stand.* 😭

    • @Mr_Meowingtons
      @Mr_Meowingtons Před 2 lety +12

      yeah forreal.. and she 100% seamed to be vengeful

    • @Whelmed.
      @Whelmed. Před 2 lety +1

      @@Mr_Meowingtons - Plot twist. She framed him. =D

    • @SupremeCommanderBaiser
      @SupremeCommanderBaiser Před 2 lety +8

      @@dawnroberts3626 Why was she even there? The cheating has nothing to do with this case anyway.

    • @kevjtnbtmglr
      @kevjtnbtmglr Před 2 lety +7

      @@dawnroberts3626 What misogynistic terms were used here?

    • @melodi996
      @melodi996 Před 2 lety +2

      @@dawnroberts3626 lol, what, which terms you saw there? She shouldn't be there and she just looks like an angry person who decided to blame an ex for every sin of this world, it's pathetic what US courts look like.

  • @Peppysgirl
    @Peppysgirl Před 2 lety +176

    I can entertain it's possible that he did it - the voicemail and the injuries are definitely suspicious. But that's not nearly enough to prove "beyond a reasonable doubt". I've seen plenty of very obviously guilty parties walk with far more evidence against then. That "compromise" option absolutely shouldn't have been allowed and it should've been declared a mistrial. I hope he gets out or they find actual proof (DNA, fingerprints, the 2 by 4, etc.)

    • @beautifulsurprise9424
      @beautifulsurprise9424 Před 2 lety +16

      Exactly. What’s worse? Letting a guilty person go free because the prosecution didn’t prove their case or sending an innocent person to jail for decades without presenting any physical evidence pointing to their guilt by adding a lesser included charge at the last minute to ensure that a jury who was struggling with a verdict had something to convict the person of? I personally think convicting an innocent person with no physical evidence is far worse. And the ability to add second degree murder at the last minute when they realized they were losing should be criminal.

    • @sailorarwen6101
      @sailorarwen6101 Před 2 lety

      @@beautifulsurprise9424 Tell that you the many criminals that have been guilty of crimes and are allowed to walk free only to keep committing crimes and even end up killing people. Like that guy at the Wisconsin parade?

    • @Peppysgirl
      @Peppysgirl Před 2 lety +14

      @@sailorarwen6101 I'd rather take the risk of letting 100 guilty people go than take away decades (or, in some cases, their entire life) from 1 innocent one. There is no excuse for innocent people going to jail with modern forensic and investigative methods, absolutely none. If he is innocent, and even if he gets out (and remember, he's serving at least 20 years, but could potentially serve up to 60), his life is likely already ruined beyond repair because the cops didn't do their jobs. There's no excuse for that

    • @drsquashhead1656
      @drsquashhead1656 Před 2 lety

      I hope he stays in. He's clearly guilty. Trust your fellow man. He did it!

    • @bryanrhodes369
      @bryanrhodes369 Před 2 lety +9

      He referred to her in the present tense through the interrogation. He hadn't processed that she was dead. If he did that on purpose it's a remarkable bit of attention to detail. I mean, difficult not to screw that bit of acting up.

  • @emilywyskiel5
    @emilywyskiel5 Před 2 lety

    How crazy I’ve watched your videos for years now, and I randomly come across this video from my own hometown I’ve never heard about

  • @Jaxissupergay77
    @Jaxissupergay77 Před 2 lety +1

    Mike talks about the worst that we do to one another, but I always come away feeling, if sad and shocked....at least we know Mike's a good fella! Let's give it a goo!!!

  • @rhythmnblues9195
    @rhythmnblues9195 Před 2 lety +298

    Kind of shocking that he was able to be tried for this without a confession or basically evidence? Also kind of shocking his ex was able to speak about him cheating on her…I know that she’s testifying about his character but it’s kind of apples and oranges compared to k*lling one’s own mother. Thanks Mike for your awesome vids :)

    • @TheKenton
      @TheKenton Před 2 lety +20

      It's more common than we know. It's not unusual for men to go to prison for being someone nobody likes, but not actually being guilty. Or for guilty people to walk free because they are likeable. Justice is not blind and judges should never be elected (it causes political leans). Anyone who gets a paycheck should face the possibility of getting fired for poor work.

    • @rhythmnblues9195
      @rhythmnblues9195 Před 2 lety +7

      @@TheKenton I fully agree. I see this in a lot of professions…people being absolved of accountability. Whatever happened to the saying: with great power comes great responsibility? Seems like it’s changed to: with great power comes great power and no accountability.

    • @TahtahmesDiary
      @TahtahmesDiary Před 2 lety +7

      @@rhythmnblues9195 With great power comes money and you can do a lot with it to avoid accountability.

    • @rhythmnblues9195
      @rhythmnblues9195 Před 2 lety +1

      @@TahtahmesDiary This is correct. Also your hair is to die for if this is you in your thumbnail.

    • @xmateinc
      @xmateinc Před 2 lety +5

      meanwhile in the ritten house trial they weren't allowed to talk about his character at all. Surprised this man got convicted with no evidence.

  • @nerdlynerd7465
    @nerdlynerd7465 Před 2 lety +89

    Holy cow - for once, a defense attorney that didn’t make me absolutely cringe.

    • @EricTechstuffs
      @EricTechstuffs Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah, I am gonna use that guy if I ever need him.

    • @amityislandchum
      @amityislandchum Před 2 lety +2

      @@EricTechstuffs Lol, that would be a terrible idea. Mike edited the video to make the defense look good (because Mike believes Jeffrey is innocent). In actuality, the attorney didn't even call a single witness for the defense. If you know anything about law, you know that is really, REALLY unusual. He didn't even bother getting a single character witness. He just believed that Jeffrey would get acquitted, despite a lot of evidence against him that wasn't included in this video.

    • @EricTechstuffs
      @EricTechstuffs Před 2 lety

      @@amityislandchum ooof ! I am glad I probably won’t need him then ! If I have time I may watch the trial. Thanks !

  • @sheriffcharliepanda8613
    @sheriffcharliepanda8613 Před 2 lety +1

    This is NOT a did or didn't do situation this is a how could you possibly convict someone with zero evidence!

  • @kanescott1300
    @kanescott1300 Před 2 lety +162

    Imagine losing your mother to a murder, and then losing your life to a conviction for her murder without any evidence. Imagine seeing your son locked up for life after losing your wife in such a way. Absolutely horrendous, and I would be ashamed to prosecute anyone in such a manner.

    • @1962pjh
      @1962pjh Před 2 lety

      Happens all the time. Todd Mullis is Innocent too

    • @marys3127
      @marys3127 Před 2 lety +5

      Take a look again at the Chris Watts case. He was involved in a plot to kill his wife, but it involved at least two other people. And yet they walk free and he serves life in prison. Red X crime files has an outstanding series about this, with digital evidence, gps info, cell phone pings, routers, and screenshots from cell phones, etc.

    • @-b1872
      @-b1872 Před 2 lety +1

      Except his finger blisters from wood….

    • @frosty_teacup
      @frosty_teacup Před 2 lety

      @@marys3127 Who else do you think was involved? I know about Kessinger, but I can't recall a 3rd

    • @annamarie8292
      @annamarie8292 Před 2 lety +1

      @@frosty_teacup I saw a video of the ring doorbell and someone in a white t shirt was running from the house and Nicole's cell phone pinged in that area. She has some major connections... It's insane she got off Scott free.

  • @ashleycoston7314
    @ashleycoston7314 Před 2 lety +132

    Can we all just take a moment to appreciate Mike for all his hard work! thank you for all the great content!!😊💯

    • @mircat28
      @mircat28 Před 2 lety

      He does it as a job, why wouldn't he do it well?

    • @ashleycoston7314
      @ashleycoston7314 Před 2 lety +1

      @@mircat28 I dont know how many people do you know have jobs and dont put in their best effort?? Some people dont have good work ethic..

    • @josephmclafferty4987
      @josephmclafferty4987 Před 2 lety +3

      Not everyone that does a job, does it even remotely well, I think anyone can relate to that. So, I think he deserves the positive comments, and will second them. Thank you Mike for all the quality and in depth content you put together, it is a treat for all us consumers of it, that think the fact you do a good job is more than just what anyone would do.

    • @almanathaniel9883
      @almanathaniel9883 Před 2 lety +3

      I, for one, have done terrible things at work. Wouldn't hire me, that's for sure

  • @laurieschneider5278
    @laurieschneider5278 Před 2 lety +1

    I know very little about the U.S. legal system.But it seems insane that his appeal was denied, and that no new defense lawyer challenged the legitimacy of his trial. First there was no actual evidence, but also throwing in the choice of 2nd degree when the prosecution wanted to insure they won. I feel so bad for this family, and I think the Prosecution cared much more about winning than seeking justice. And I don't think the jury did either.

  • @spiderboo464
    @spiderboo464 Před 3 měsíci +1

    The prosecution should NOT be allowed to tack on the end "oh by the way, we'll accept guilty of 2nd degree murder too." They knew there was a pretty good chance he was being acquitted so they threw that in at the end. What a load of shit!

  • @emilyd9645
    @emilyd9645 Před 2 lety +88

    I can’t seem to wrap my head around how they even got this to trial? There are so many cases that have detectives say how they don’t even have enough evidence to charge someone so they keep digging. I just don’t understand how that can be for one and not the other

    • @lyricberlin
      @lyricberlin Před 2 lety +1

      his hands proved he was guilty

    • @bryanlivingston5068
      @bryanlivingston5068 Před 2 lety +4

      @@lyricberlin his hands prove nothing. I’ve had blisters exactly like this working construction. It does however give a POSSIBLE piece of the story. As in like “maaaaaaybe his hands could have been injured in this way. And this be his only injury sustained during a brutal murder”
      But also, his voicemail to his neighbor was pretty sketchy.

    • @MDCxThePG
      @MDCxThePG Před 2 lety +3

      He defiitely didn't get a fair trial at all with that last minute second degree charge tacked on. I thought for sure he'd win an appeal shortly after but it was denied. Even if he did do it, he didn't get a fair trial whatsoever the first time around.

    • @tellmeofyourhomeworldusul6060
      @tellmeofyourhomeworldusul6060 Před 2 lety +2

      @@lyricberlin I disagree. I think the hand injuries with other supporting evidence would definitely make him guilty, but other evidence seems to steer away from this theory. I am not saying he isn’t guilty, he may be, but look at Casey Anthony. There was a lot more evidence pointing right at her than this guy and she was acquitted (because her jury wasn’t all that bright and believed her lawyers tall tales in my opinion)

    • @emilyd9645
      @emilyd9645 Před 2 lety

      @@lyricberlin those blisters really don’t prove anything…

  • @craig5698
    @craig5698 Před 2 lety +29

    I was wondering about his reference to the lilac bushes as his alibi. Turns out the homeowner was adamant that the bushes had been moved on May 23, not the 27th as Pyne claimed. A neighbor also said he was working on an outdoor pool all day and that there was no way Pyne was there when he said he was. So he lied about his alibi. Seems relevant.

    • @sbragan5lg76i
      @sbragan5lg76i Před 2 lety

      Makes one wonder if he had a more violent helper and he is keeping his mouth shut. 🤔

    • @gsmontag
      @gsmontag Před 2 lety +4

      Witnesses are consistently the weakest forms of evidence, and people will mis-remember or overestimate their abilities (like their ability to know every person moving in the area) all the time.

  • @W333L
    @W333L Před 2 lety +1

    I can’t believe they would proceed to charge this guy and not look into any other suspects. They immediately dropped the possibility of a door being unlocked in a suburban neighborhood, or even the less likely but absolutely possible picking of a lock. It’s so horrible they even tried to convict a man without a single shred of physical evidence and virtually no motive

  • @maxsooderberg
    @maxsooderberg Před 2 lety +1

    Gotta say those blisters on his hands really are some 'swinging around 2x4' blisters. The type of blisters you'd get in an adrenaline fueled situation where you don't realise the damage you are doing to yourself. He really needed a better explanation for how he got those if he was gonna be innocent in my eyes.

  • @funmilayotijani3119
    @funmilayotijani3119 Před 2 lety +466

    This is such a bizarre crime
    As much as I hate seeing guilty criminals walk off, I hate the idea of someone possibly wrongfully convicted even more
    There isn't enough evidence of his guilt and there isn't enough evidence of his innocence either
    The only shady "evidence" that really stands out to me (or at least cast some doubts on his innoncence) is that suspicious voicemail. And of course his injuries. I wonder if there was any attempt to corroborate his claim of haven gotten injured at work.

    • @mitchellwarner1526
      @mitchellwarner1526 Před 2 lety +75

      rather see a guilty man walk than an innocent man convicted

    • @joshchavez8190
      @joshchavez8190 Před 2 lety +31

      There was. Mike* mentions they asked other employees about it, and they said they had never received or seen an injury in the area. I’m paraphrasing, but it was something to that effect.

    • @jillgarlick2122
      @jillgarlick2122 Před 2 lety +28

      The ‘planting lilacs’ thing on the day he said which turned out to be a lie is a worry, but not proof. The injuries cannot be proof of anything bad if the weapon used to bludgeon her was not found. Darn strange one. More to be heard about this one day I feel.

    • @jillgarlick2122
      @jillgarlick2122 Před 2 lety +11

      @@joshchavez8190 but once again that isn’t proof he is lying.

    • @srmj71
      @srmj71 Před 2 lety +28

      About the only shady thing he did, was to lie about going to his ex's place. That was dumb as hell. This is why you don't talk to any police, for any reason, without an attorney.

  • @wanderinghistorian
    @wanderinghistorian Před 2 lety +53

    Unless you left something out, Mike, the verdict was utter BS. Those jurors should be ashamed of themselves. I also want to know on what basis the court of appeals denied his appeal? There's NO evidence!

    • @milestonowheres
      @milestonowheres Před 2 lety +2

      I have seen a few cases mike has covered… he is not a good resource for the facts .. he often leaves out details and gives details that have no evidence behind them .

    • @tarheelsk8tr247
      @tarheelsk8tr247 Před 2 lety

      If I'm not mistaken, the first (maybe only?) grounds on which you can appeal a conviction of that magnitude is 'ineffective assistance of counsel' aka 'my lawyer did a bad job and that's why I'm in prison.' Clearly his lawyer did a good job, so maybe he is just fucked?

    • @ChangeHumanity
      @ChangeHumanity Před 2 lety +5

      I don’t believe it was utter bs. Why aren’t you blaming his defence? If the prosecutor had no evidence then his defence team should of had an easy case. But clearly they couldn’t argue the questions very well and didn’t convince the jury! Also look at the whole picture! There was no other evidence to prove there was an intruder. All signs point to Jeffery because he was the last to see her. If this was someone else they would of had another motive such as theft etc.
      He’s 100% guilty even though there wasn’t enough evidence to prove it.

    • @jockturner1547
      @jockturner1547 Před 2 lety +4

      @@ChangeHumanity But that's the thing, your conviction right there is completely circumstantial. There isn't enough evidence to prosecute him beyond a reasonable doubt. There is reasonable doubt. This means it never should have gone to trial, the investigation team haven't gathered enough evidence to go to trail so it never should have.
      Yeah it's likely looking at the situation that it was Jeffery, there really isn't any other person to consider, but the conviction never should have been done.
      This is one of those cases where to have a fair and unbaised court system that aims to limit the number of false convictions of innocent people, you sometimes have to let a guilty person go when you can't prove beyond reasonable doubt.
      That's where investigators come in, they should be looking more into the case to build a stronger case but the simply pushed and rushed a verdict. What if he actually had nothing to do with it? What if the actual killer is still out there. Perhaps they're a serial killer whose just getting started, I mean she was found right at the door, no? No murder weapon found, no blood anywhere around Jeffrey was found, no evidence of a shower used to clean himself of said blood.
      You simply don't and can't know for sure, convicting someone simply because they are the most likely isn't beyond reasonable doubt. Even though I think most of us can agree it is most likely Jeffrey who killed his own mother.

    • @wanderinghistorian
      @wanderinghistorian Před 2 lety

      @@jockturner1547 Agree 100%. I am not saying he didn't do it. I have no clue if he did it or not, neither does anyone else, and that's why he should not have been convicted.

  • @Bigmonkey-hehe22
    @Bigmonkey-hehe22 Před 10 měsíci

    I thoroughly enjoy your videos. You put everything together perfectly in my opinion. You can definitely tell that you do your research.
    Is anyhow, I am a subscriber of your channel.
    Of all your videos...( I'm not just saying this because I live here) The caldwell idaho Case was definitely something. What a movie this would be. That is, If someone could think of a script so crazy. Have they ever found him? The murder? I will keep my eyes peeled.... Keep up the good work my friend!!!

  • @TheJcris87
    @TheJcris87 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Scorned Ex should not be a credible witness.

  • @meganwoehl5277
    @meganwoehl5277 Před 2 lety +272

    I completely understand how someone could react differently when finding out about a death. In middle school I found out about a classmate/teammates death while I was at another friend's sleepover. She was actually my partner on our figure skating team and we were close. When I found out that night I did not cry. I even remember laughing a bit, not really processing it and thinking it was a bad joke. The next morning my mom picked me up from my friend's house and as soon as I got in the car I just burst into the most gut wrenching tears I've ever cried in my life. I stayed in my room for 4 days straight, just crying. And I felt guilty about not crying the night I found out. I felt guilty for feeling like it wasn't real and that I would go to practice and she would be there like normal. It's still a hard memory for me. I look back on it and I feel all the grief I should have felt that night. But it didn't hit me until I saw my mom's face and knew she was about to tell me it was true. That night I was in shock, and anyone who saw me wouldn't have thought one of my closest friends had just been killed. I told one of my other teammates that night and she got sooo angry at me, insisting I was lying. She was furious I would pull a prank like that. Deleted me from MySpace and blocked my number. She apologized a week later at the funeral. Her reaction was anger. I think it's probably normal for people not to react with grief right away. Sometimes it takes a while for news to truly hit our systems. And our brains have so many defenses in place to protect us from anything upsetting.
    I don't know if this man killed his mother. But i wouldn't hold his behavior on the day of her murder against him.

    • @MM-uw5tt
      @MM-uw5tt Před 2 lety +16

      My grandma died on kids day which in my country is the happiest holiday a kid can have because of all the celebrations centred around candied, fun fairs, gifts etc. I just sat on the couch and snort laughed every other minute. My dad cried. My mom was angry. Brother went to his room for the day. All of us had different reactions.

    • @meganwoehl5277
      @meganwoehl5277 Před 2 lety +8

      @M M Exactly! My grandmother passed away a few months ago. We all knew it was coming but when I got the call I went through quite a few emotions all at once. Sobbing, laughing (at myself mostly), yelling, more crying. Grief is strange.

    • @torinqa
      @torinqa Před 2 lety +13

      When my classmate died in a car accident it took me two days to finally admit, that it's true. I had dreams about him for months, not being able to comprehand what happened. It's been over 4 years now and some days I still can't believe it. So yeah, I completely understand. I can't imagine his shock going from "Your mom died" to "Your mum was murdered" to "You murdered your mom". I really feel so sorry for him

    • @meganwoehl5277
      @meganwoehl5277 Před 2 lety +5

      @Aliena that's how my friend died as well. Car accident after being run off the gravel road by some jerk. I knew 3 of the 4 people in that car. She was the only one to die, but one other was thrown as well and was in ICU for weeks, the other was fine. The one I didn't know, who was driving, was paralyzed from the chest down. It was so much to process. Once I had processed my friends death I still had to grapple with all the other lives affected. It was hard on our school. I don't think anyone processes grief the same...especially when you're young and unaccustomed to death.
      Still, over 10 years later, and I am scared to drive on gravel roads...despite the fact that's where I learned to drive.

    • @papermind4010
      @papermind4010 Před 2 lety +6

      One time when I was a little kid one of our family friends had passed away and when my parents told me I said “oh” and then proceeded to take a 10 hour nap in the middle of the day, basically my brain said we’re not dealing with this