Post interrogation kino
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can we also have interview kino
whats something like the iceman interview
Iceman was just a massive liar
dont say that
The Ed Kemper interviews are engaging as fuck. A very articulate and self-aware guy. Could've been something special in another life
oh yeah this nigga was crazy
That's the impression I got. He just seems like a prison big talker.
Someone post the video of the cop’s body cam as he’s talking to the guy in his own house and his neighbor comes over to show them all the security footage and he starts sweating like crazy.
Absolute unadulterated kino
If you're looking for kino interviews
Anyone else really getting into Jim Can't Swim lately?
His videos are terrific. The Chris Watts stuff was fantastic, so damn interesting.
oh yeah i was watching him the other day
>TFW at a bar a roastie told me I look just like Chris Watts and I started laughing thinking about this pic and these threads
Seriously why do all women LOVE murder kino and true crime? All women love this shit so much
Wish he'd get back to the focused interrogation analysis compilations desu. good shit, though.
I have no idea dude. My sister is the same way she used to watch autopsy files. I get morbid obsessions but you only see this sort of stuff with killers.
Dangerous men make them wet
if there are any femanons ITT please tell us why you all love murder kino & true crime shows and docs. I promise not to call you a roastie
Girls don't post on Yea Forums it's a myth like santa
>post interrogation kino
>no post-interrogation kino
that's right we only have men and trannies
Let's keep it that way
Why don't any of these people get lawyers? Why would you willingly go into a police department for questioning?
>The photograph depicts United States Air Force Lt Col Robert L. Stirm being reunited with his family, after spending more than five years in captivity as a prisoner of war in North Vietnam. Stirm was shot down over Hanoi on October 27, 1967, while leading a flight of F-105s on a bombing mission, and was not released until March 14, 1973. The centerpiece of the photograph is Stirm's 15-year-old daughter Lorrie, who is excitedly greeting her father with outstretched arms, as the rest of the family approaches directly behind her.[5]
>Despite outward appearances, the reunion was an unhappy one for Stirm. Three days before he arrived in the United States, the same day he was released from captivity, Stirm received a Dear John letter from his wife Loretta informing him that their marriage was over. Stirm later learned that Loretta had been with other men throughout his captivity, receiving marriage proposals from three of them. In 1974, the Stirms divorced and Loretta remarried, but Lt Col Stirm was still ordered by the courts to provide her with 43% of his military retirement pay once he retired from the Air Force.[6] Stirm was later promoted to full Colonel and retired from the Air Force in 1977.[7]