I went to middle school with Eldon. Lakes Magnet Middle School in CD'A. My best buddy Terrance and I tried to befriend Eldon. We noticed how lonely he seemed and how other kids avoided him because he was quite frankly.. weird. We tried to look past the weirdness and get him out of his shell a bit. Let's just say some of the stories he had told us about his life before moving to the area was wild and seemed like an unhinged fantasy. Nonetheless Terrance and myself would eat lunch with him and hang out with him on breaks. Until one day he stopped showing up to school and we shortly found out why. It was a shock and made all the stories he told us a lot more believable. I feel bad for Eldon. He didn't stand a chance with the parents and family life he had. He was so smart too. It's a shame how everything happened really. I still think about him often. It's crazy that I see a video like this pop up in my recommended and I can actually think back to times I've actually had conversations with Eldon. Crazy stuff.
@morseventurechannel1365 Жыл бұрын
Wow that is crazy. He probably was telling you the truth. I am half way in and I feel bad for him.
@Titus213-xc7pi Жыл бұрын
Always gotta be that person claim they knew the killer. Cut the crap kiddo eldon never knew u and vice versa! Carry on now
@melissasmidt222 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for providing more backstory and for befriending Eldon. Unfortunately, the damage was already done by his pernicious parents and continued until this tragedy.
@Sweetyhide Жыл бұрын
I can't believe he went to an adult prison. That tiny little young boy that can't even speak clear normal sentences. He seems so immature. To be around grown men in a prison seems crazy. They are going to eat him alive. Also, Did the detectives ever consider that he killed his brother first? I was thinking that he killed, or was in the process of killing his brother when his dad attacked him. That is why he killed his dad. He was torn about his dad but never about his brother. He wanted to hide the fact that he killed his brother but not that he killed his dad. It was just really odd.
@DoopamineHit Жыл бұрын
Damn that’s so sad to hear, can’t imagine what has been in your head for all this time. Also, was the note at 28:24 a school thing? If so how no teacher raised any type of suspicion about a 14yo kid talking about weapons that much?
@barfiemcflatus3729 Жыл бұрын
Coming from someone that grew up in an abusive home, there's a very real resentment a kid can feel towards his family.
@frankie3791 Жыл бұрын
Right? I'm 45 and still working on letting go smh for my own sanity and well being
@Beowulf891 Жыл бұрын
I didn't have it nearly as bad as this poor kid and I still hold some resentment towards my parents. Dad especially. I won't be doing anything like this since I don't live at home anymore but I can see how resentment, especially mixed with a likely mental illness, can explode this violently.
@zarasbazaar Жыл бұрын
I remember saying I hated my father and a relative was like "Oh, you don't hate him." No, I hated him and I still do 50 years later. I don't know why people don't take emotional abuse seriously.
@kab9706 Жыл бұрын
Children know that they are meant to be raised with love, respect, safety, and routine. Every child deserves love and safety from their caretakers. A kid who doesn't recieve that will be angry and bitter. I feel so bad for kids having to overcome abuse and neglect.
@shaylaster1607 Жыл бұрын
Enough to kill your little brother? Shot him , stab him and hack at his body? That much
@PenelopeFrank Жыл бұрын
Side note: From personal experience, you don't always know where one was hit because of the stress. I didn't realize I was stabbed or stomped on till the bruising of shoe prints showed up all over my body. And the bleeding, I thought was from the fall when I was robbed. Just saying... brain will block details when enduring trauma.
@sigmamale4147 Жыл бұрын
Yeah i remember hitting a solid wall when fighting, didnt realise it until i noticed a piece of skin on it
@billyyank5807 Жыл бұрын
That's not stress,that's called adrenaline lol And that's a major difference between military and regular civilians lol. We were trained to harness that adrenaline and use it. Wooooooooo.
@morgs2833 Жыл бұрын
agreed. i fell off a roof onto a spiked fence and only noticed my knee scratches. Didn't realize my entire thigh had been ripped open until a friend who saw it happen freaked out
@c.mcn4 Жыл бұрын
extremely valid point!! also, i hope you’re doing well!
@anthonyhowrard526 Жыл бұрын
@@billyyank5807 no training can prepare you for the real thing.
@Don_cheedle4 ай бұрын
All I’ve learned is that detectives would pick my antisocial ass apart no matter how innocent I am
@FisherStahl-ll1lv4 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@burlykim1324 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@PC-qy4mm3 ай бұрын
For people like us even if your innocent aquire legal counsel. DO NOT SPEAK TO COPS. THE MAGIC WORDS ARE ID LIKE MY ATTORNEY HERE FOR ANY QUESTIONING
@moonrose26103 ай бұрын
Excellent advice.
@rhondathacker26873 ай бұрын
@@burlykim132un
@lime.3 Жыл бұрын
what he did is obviously extremely tragic and messed up but when they said his sister had told police "he never had a chance", that broke my heart. your environment changes everything
@michellemarini5128 Жыл бұрын
My cousin Ronnie "never had a chance" though he was an introvert and took his own life 😢!
@shootama Жыл бұрын
im sorry to hear, hopes all well regarding your situation, as well as one could be.@@michellemarini5128
@CSDonohue11 Жыл бұрын
Sad All of this and cousin Ronnie
@avi7278 Жыл бұрын
BS, he's an f'd in the head psychopath. He wasn't abused. Those of us who were actually abused can easily see through this little BS schtick of his. He's a selfish little prick with 10 folders worth of mental problems. 8 months between beatings sounds like a f'n resort. Please don't waste your pity on this POS. There's plenty more children who actually deserve.
@hanslanda8303 Жыл бұрын
@@CSDonohue11poor cousin Ronnie
@drelezar7745 Жыл бұрын
Like others in this comment section, I too grew up in an abusive household. The physical abuse stopped when I turned 10, but having very unstable parents in a tiny low income home proved to be disastrous for my and my sibling’s mental health. I learned the hard way that CPS doesn’t care one bit about emotional turmoil- as long as you are being fed, and don’t have marks on you, they will happily leave you with abusive parents This feeling of being trapped and having literally no escape was so suffocating that I suffered a 5 month long psychotic break when I was 16. Near the end of this break, my body moved on its own (Extreme depersonalization), and I grabbed a fork and shoved it into my throat. I would have done anything to escape purgetory, and in that very specific moment… I was willing to. It’s hard to describe the existential crisis that came with growing up around so much chaos and suffering. But… despite it all, as a 20 year old I am the happiest person on the planet. I somehow learned that letting go of anger and pain was the best way to overcome both A saying I really connect with, “Heal before you have children, so they do not have to heal from you.”
@SamanthaP48 Жыл бұрын
Well in fairness often the foster care system can be just as abusive. If not far worse. So those individuals have to choose between not only taking you away from the only line of stability you have, but now paying an astronomical amount to put you into a different abusive home we’re more than likely you’re also going to have additional S abuse. Hopefully you can grow to let go of resentment and have understanding that you’re parent/parents were not mentally capable of being everything a child deserves. Possibly even learn to be grateful. By that I mean I’ve seen both types of families healthy/non-. Often the people that come from unhealthy household have a direct advantage in many ways. They don’t go into the world with the same level of naivety or being sheltered so much to the point where you’ve become useless. Ask children that came from foster parent households. Most of them as adults Will tell you that they’d rather have been in an abusive household with their families then go to the foster care system and then be abused by strangers. If you’re disappointed by how much the system already failed you imagine there being even more areas of the system you’re enveloped in? Do you think they would do an even better job? Everything the government does sucks. The more they are involved the worse it gets. I also came from a similar household. I’ve pulled myself out from the gutter in that time I’ve met multiple self-made millionaires. People who are well rounded, hard workers, emotionally resilient etc. essentially every single one came from a poor/abusive background. Whereas The overwhelming majority of those I know that came from middle/upper middle class or wealthy families rarely have these attributes refined. They grow up with a sense of entitlement/arrogance myriad into their 40s+. Best thing I can tell you is to start looking at your parent/s in a childlike manner. Or as if they have a mental health condition. I’d also suggest (if and when the time comes) Do not bother telling them you forgive them. Because there’s a fair chance you’re gonna be extremely disappointed with the reaction. It’s reasonably normal around that age to go through extreme emotional psychosis. Your hormones are all out of whack, the magnitude of life begins to come to the forefront of your mind. Anxiety/depression and even nihilism are all NORMAL -> heck I’ve known multiple individuals who came from literal perfect household. Little House on the Prairie, Rich. Perfect perfect perfect in every way, yet they still went through depression, wanted to kill them selves, went through psychosis. The whole 9. Most of this will settle down over the course of time. By 25 max your hormones will be completely evened out in the world will seem less and dreadful/overwhelming. (on your last point. Healing when done correctly shouldn’t take any more then 3yrs -> in the absolute worst case scenario) You have a certain timeline to have children. Specifically if you are a woman. And having children older is selfish. Whatever child/or even generations may have to go through is a drop in the bucket when it comes to weather your family exists in 100 years or doesn’t. I would go through a lifetime of unhappiness and sacrifice unreasonable amounts in order to have my family survive. Several hundred thousands of years instability was a norm. Death in childbirth or early infant deaths. Sickness without medical care winters without food, you name it all of those things were done generation after generation to be sure that you were here today. BILLIONS of people will still be having children regardless of what the circumstances are. Legit horrific circumstances. Yet in 100 years those families will still be here. Yet we have individuals like yourself like me and so on that are so worried about a stable environment that they’ve wiped away the opportunity to continue on legacy. And spit in the faces of our forbearers who went through unfathomable atrocities over the course of hundreds of thousands of years so that we can be here. Our families may have not done much but they made sure we were here.
@Fighting_Fatigue_117 Жыл бұрын
I wish you all the best things possible in life! ❤❤❤
@Neonmirrorblack Жыл бұрын
CPS ironically ended up at our home for something my mother *didn't* actually do. She was super abusive both physically and emotionally, but there was a relative calm of a few months during a summer when I was twelve, and she was actually being nice to me. One night when I had a friend over CPS showed up because of a huge bruise I had on my shin. A bruise that was caused by me accidentally banging against the metal frame of my folding bed. They never got called all the other times where she had hit me outside of our house in front of all of the neighbors, or even when she would have neighborhood kids restrain me so she could hit me...WTF? I ended up being placed in foster care for about two weeks (they were really nice actually), and then on the day they were taking me to my "permanent foster home", I had no idea where I was going, but as we passed a familiar neighborhood, I had hoped that they would be close enough that I could still visit my grandparents. Then the car pulled up to my grandparents house. Stayed with them for a year, which ended up being the best year of my childhood life (straight As too), but then on the day they went to actually sign the adoption papers, they found out my grandmother had cancer, so back to the unstable home I went. My mother was no longer able to physically abuse me, but she was even more out of touch with reality than previously. I never wanted to have children, just because I didn't want to subject any of them to what I had to go through.
@waterzero5461 Жыл бұрын
@@SamanthaP48You're someone I actually would like to talk to. Especially in regards to how the brain develops from 20 to 25. Among many other things. The conversation could go everywhere. Is there a way to DM privately on youtube to an email or?
@wellnesspathforme6236 Жыл бұрын
Chronic stress acts like a toxin -- a literal poison. The food supply has been depleted of 'stress nutrients' like organic copper (copper rich soils and organ meats) and organic magnesium (greens). Bio-copper and magnesium basically run your mitochondria, so when chronic stress short circuits your mitochondria, bio-copper and magnesium deplete and mitochondria become compromised. The solution is to renutrify, detoxify, and destress... generationally. The standard American diet is poisoning Mama and Baby, 'silent weapon for quiet wars' style. I will share some names of people who share relevant information in another comment under your comment.
@tinar.a.3542 Жыл бұрын
The statements made by Jr’s oldest son, and father, make me think they both ignored Jr’s abuse of his children. Malnourishment and rotted teeth don’t happen overnight.
@multiprospect6728Ай бұрын
jrs oldest son sounds like a scumbag lol, doesnt even think about what his brothers went through
@oliviapasquarelli992 ай бұрын
Imagine being 14 years old and your entire life you dad has convinced you the zombie apocalypse is around the corner and has a trailer full of weapons and leaves loaded guns around the house?! Now top it off with him taking drugs and physically assaulting you. This kid lived in a constant state of fear and it’s so heartbreaking to me.
@elliottbaker201Ай бұрын
Nah
@pepeshadilayАй бұрын
Waaaaah my dad abused me 😢😢😢😢waaaaaah
@JKnksrslyАй бұрын
@@pepeshadilayidgaf about ppl I don't know but this looks like serious abuse if hes malnourished and dimwitted and living in squalor, his mom run off etc
@sethmp333Ай бұрын
@@pepeshadilayhaha i get it, cause you don’t have a dad good joke
@icczy11Ай бұрын
@@JKnksrsly that's the stupidest shit I've read, he tried to kill his brother when he was six. Dude is just a psycho.
@shrimpmobile Жыл бұрын
It wouldn't surprise me if Eldon were on the spectrum as well, and support for him was neglected because he wasn't as high-needs as his brother. This whole story is heartbreaking.
@SammyMFsosaaa Жыл бұрын
The father too. It seems they all may have been on the spectrum
@Cristinerex5 Жыл бұрын
He sounds like he is on the spectrum. So sad.
@grey.7828 Жыл бұрын
Not everyone is ADHD and autistic
@Damned_afterall Жыл бұрын
ADHD and autism are genetic so it gets passed through families
@msdeviantdizzy Жыл бұрын
@@Damned_afterall Not necessarily-- they're highly heritable, but not all cases are genetic.
@Aelfwynn.Steorra6 ай бұрын
Every single adult in these kids' lives failed them in every conceivable way. I feel so sorry for all of them.
@360.Tapestry5 ай бұрын
given the volatile genetics, i'm not sure it would've gone any other way - even if the kids were given up at birth for adoption - like so many other stories on this channel
@maggiebeltaa54215 ай бұрын
@360.Tapestry The ol Nature Vs. Nurture. 😢 Totally get what you're saying but you never really know. It might have changed nothing but he definitely would've had a better shot at life under different circumstances. Just tragic any way you look at it. 😢
@roninkraut68735 ай бұрын
@@360.Tapestry It definitely makes an argument for sterilization..
@kawaiimooncharms4 ай бұрын
I called CPS so many times, my teachers even called bc id have to leave college exams to go make sure they were safe. Then their dad ran off with them. I had no idea where they were until the day a cop showed up at my gmas to tell us what happened. My mom and their dad were awful, terrible parents. Addicts, who would skip out on rent and fight non stop, neglect and emotional and physical abuse. It's not surprising to me, but I miss Johnny. Idk why I watch this stuff even 10 years later. I guess I'm hoping for closure in some way.
@official_alphabet_inc4 ай бұрын
@@360.Tapestry So some humans are just born evil is what your saying? Like in the movies? Like the Disney villain? Aiiiight.
@ZessXXify Жыл бұрын
“He stares at you, and you feel like you’re in a fishbowl.” That is THE most accurate description of an abuser I’ve heard so far. This is what they mean by trust your gut; we’re not always conscious of it, but people like Eldon and Junior put you off for a reason.
@OnTheBackOfBullets Жыл бұрын
Yeah that line caught me too. I've met folks who that line describes perfectly. I dont disagree with the charges, but I have no doubt there was a seriously toxic and abusive household that lead to those murders.
@lisasternenkind6467 Жыл бұрын
This is NOT a sign of an abuser. It's something troubled people do when thinking about their situation or about problem solving. The dad probably went outside I on the porch to have the freedom of thinking in a more quiet atmosphere. If unknown people wave their hand at him, might not even have been perceived by him at all when being totally focused on his thoughts about problem solving and life situation.
@ForceCaptKatra Жыл бұрын
A lot of abusers are very charasmatic people
@boobookitty1441 Жыл бұрын
@@lisasternenkind6467 I know exactly what u mean.. and I bet everyone on here has been staring off in a daze some point and completely miss things going on around them and just so happen to be staring in the same direction but almost like ur eyes are blurred bc ur so caught up in thoughts and just didn’t see them waving.. and to the person waving , they think ur a weirdo with an evil gaze bc u didn’t wave back
@mircat28 Жыл бұрын
Staring at someone isn’t illegal. How you choose to call it doesn’t make it illegal either.
@jamesedinger4956Ай бұрын
I think you're giving more credit to these particular interrogators than they deserve
@Souped-upJalopies15 күн бұрын
Way too much
@MoistNasa Жыл бұрын
I remember one day being so fed up with my abusive alcoholic mom that I stood over her bed with a knife, thinking the only way out of it was for her to be gone. I didn’t understand that I just had a couple years until I was an adult and could move out and be free. Thankfully I remembered my brother and my niece and realized that doing it would ruin their lives and traumatize them for life, I couldn’t do that to them. It was like battered woman syndrome but for a child. Now I have no contact with my mom anymore, it’s the most peaceful my life has ever been, and I see a therapist once a week. Remember, even though things may be awful right now, it has to end eventually. 2-3 years feels like forever but it really isn’t. Stay strong, it’ll be ok.
@liarwithagun Жыл бұрын
Been in a very similar situation myself when I was younger. I didn't have family worries to hold me back like you did, but unlike you I did realize that I just had to be patient and the problem would be over when I was free. I could chose to impulsively end the problem now and be stuck in prison for life (thought life was the penalty at the time) or I could wait a couple years and I could just leave. I ended up choosing to wait. Nowadays when I get intense thoughts of sewerslide due to all the stress of my life, I just remember that piece of wisdom I realized: that I just had to wait and it would pass, and everything would be okay. You just have to endure.
@traylynhayes6166 Жыл бұрын
Bra you need to be arrested
@parnellomello Жыл бұрын
@@traylynhayes6166right like wtf
@irmavep9917 Жыл бұрын
Pro tip: Google monitors and logs all comments that you post on their KZbin platform. Even after the comment is deleted, it lingers in their servers for years. Hopefully you are being a good little boy and not harming anyone innocent, because this comment could be used against you in the future. Welcome to the cyberpunk dystopia
@TXFgc57 Жыл бұрын
@@irmavep9917I don’t wanna sound dumb which I probably am. But how are they going to know if this comment was from him/her years later if it even would be that long, Especially knowing there’s no actual private info needed to have a KZbin account. (Serious question by the way.) the account Doesn’t even have an actual name.
@aliwooz913 Жыл бұрын
I really feel for kids who have been abused all their lives and live in broken homes. No kids should have to suffer
@mw3309 Жыл бұрын
True. Neither did his younger brother who he brutally murdered.
@mic47013 Жыл бұрын
Yeah true but that doesn't mean go murder your family.
@mic47013 Жыл бұрын
Plus people over come hardships in life but that doesn't mean go murder people.
@mixkulture4783 Жыл бұрын
He murdered his brother because he hated him not because of abuse you demon
@bigsister9354 Жыл бұрын
@@mic47013it depends on the personal traits. Some people after abuse will punish others and some people will punish themselves.
@horrorbehindthephoto Жыл бұрын
I don't think people realize just how much work is needed for a documentary this size and with this kind of editing. Props to you guys, I hope I can get at least a fraction of your success. Well executed as usual. 👏
@Lonely_Goat Жыл бұрын
Yeah we know it's not done with a magic wand. A well executed video and channel will be rewarded
@WaKeUpTIs Жыл бұрын
Very grateful for every video, incredible work beginning to end. Thanks guys!!
@MetalsirenIXI Жыл бұрын
You figure an hour + video is days and days of work.
@kevineastwood-tm2mt Жыл бұрын
Yeah this is EWU, I believe em to be up there with the best in the business
@dpbarbie9560 Жыл бұрын
you have a cool channel also 😊
@drudle3 ай бұрын
Suspect: "I killed my dad because he abused me and I feared for my safety. I killed my brother because I hated him for ruining our family." Police: "Okay, but can you explain WHY you killed them?" Suspect: ".. I just did. My dad abused me and I was scared. And I hated my brother." Police: "Okay, okay. But we're just trying to understand why you killed them. Can you explain why?"
@religion-free2 ай бұрын
right? how infuriating. and he's 14 YO FFS !!
@tishcallahan-smith6138Ай бұрын
Did he not understand his brother has a condition and can't help himself? I'm sure living with an autistic sibling is tough, but millions of people do and don't kill them. Tough childhood? Sure. But this? He's just a monster.
@religion-freeАй бұрын
@@tishcallahan-smith6138 he's raised by monsters wdye
@NateCloughnАй бұрын
@tishcallahan-smith6138 Your privileged ass is dumb as rocks please don't comment ever again without thinking first.
@pure5000Ай бұрын
@@tishcallahan-smith6138Fool..
@johnmichaels4330 Жыл бұрын
Interrogating a kid without representation (especially one from an abusive relationship) should be illegal in all states. Kids are way to impressionable.
@brendanjoyce645 Жыл бұрын
At a young age, said the judge, they should be put in a pit with wild dogs. They should be set to puzzle out from their proper clues the one of three doors that does not harbor wild lions. They should be made to run naked in the desert until… , Judge Holden.Blood Meridian
@johnmichaels4330 Жыл бұрын
@@brendanjoyce645 ok..... thanks psycho.
@brendanjoyce645 Жыл бұрын
@@johnmichaels4330 you don’t understand a word children should be made to learn they would be interrogated but they shouldn’t be by cops who just pump children for information not caring about the core of the situation
@SirDankleberry Жыл бұрын
@@brendanjoyce645Why are you quoting Judge Holden?
@Shyuthrosnaevin Жыл бұрын
.
@sianchild Жыл бұрын
It seems like this family was known to police (and social services?) from when the boys were tiny, and yet there doesn't seem to have been much support put in to protect either boy. It's such an incredible shame, and I wonder how things would have been different for them if it had.
@unsheepled Жыл бұрын
Proof that gubmint DGAS about any of us except for taxes we pay to keep funding their existence . CPS by the way in most states is involved in child trafficking
@5050TM Жыл бұрын
Usually nothing is or can be done until some terrible crap goes down. We need more services for abused children.
@knack82848 ай бұрын
Bro, my best friend lived in a trailer where his bed was falling through the floor onto the dirt and he had to sleep woth jackets on in the winter. Social services would always notify his mother before they came so she had time to clean and make sure everything looked fine. CPS is worthless.
@sianchild8 ай бұрын
@@knack8284 that's sort of my point. Often organisations like that are really underfunded so they just don't do much.
@Here_This8 ай бұрын
@@5050TM I doubt that he was abused as a child . Most likely the father reacted on mean things that older brother did to the younger .
@Papawheelie578 ай бұрын
Notice how the interviewer scratched his wrist, a sign that his wrist was itchy.
@Arto3434348 ай бұрын
They’re called detectives not articulatives, these cops are dolts
@EagerBoxer-ud51N7 ай бұрын
Mind blown 🤯
@Peekaboo69697 ай бұрын
Notice when he got up Yea he was leaving the room
@arksin117 ай бұрын
notice how there was food on the table, but there was no candle on the table?
@pvic69597 ай бұрын
33:25 this part happened and i looked down to see i was also sitting like that. i would get reckt in an interrogation. im gonna jsut ask for a laywer 100% of the time lol
@ethan_martin2 ай бұрын
one thing i didn’t like about this interrogation is that the detectives spent a long time trying to get him to admit that the crime was premeditated, and eldon clearly wasn’t really understanding their line of questioning. my guess is that he had intrusive thoughts of killing his father/brother during his father’s abusive episodes, and this time, the intrusive thoughts won
@infinitedeath1384Ай бұрын
Those thoughts were not intrusive at all. He fantasized about it. Intrusive means not wanted, and he absolutely wanted those thoughts because he hated his dad and brother.
@ethan_martinАй бұрын
@@infinitedeath1384 just because you hate someone doesn’t mean you want to kill them, even if the thought crosses your mind every now and then. with that said, i don’t really agree with my original comment because the conditions to establish “premeditation” are pretty weak. For example, acting on an intrusive thought might be enough to establish premeditation
@infinitedeath1384Ай бұрын
@@ethan_martin I never said that everyone who hates someone wants to kill them. Hate can be a reason someone wants to kill someone, and it was in this case.
@billwill373211 ай бұрын
when the guy sitting across from me in the waiting room crosses his leg..."he just shifted into a barrier position, what's that motherfucker hiding"
@femalearmyveteran69069 ай бұрын
😭😭😭😭😭😭same🫣🤔😭😭
@ReneSchickbauer9 ай бұрын
That's not always the case, though. I got a bad back, crossing my legs sometimes helps to relieve the pain a little.
@BlackOpsYT_9 ай бұрын
Bro same, I do this just to get comfortable and the narrator thinks its a huge indicator that hes being deceptive
@rashadpenny8269 ай бұрын
Lol
@jessehurtado56259 ай бұрын
I cross my legs to get comfortable at home. The narrator: This guy definitely kills people for a living.
@NORTAH85 Жыл бұрын
There’s definitely something going on with this kid as well. He’s not all there mentally. Whether it’s a mental disorder, or societal issues. He’s definitely not all there!
@lulumoon6942 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely, and no doubt the neglect he endured played a role, as well.
@8213apice Жыл бұрын
Mental issues come from childhood trauma
@TheBeefSlayer Жыл бұрын
Idk if it’s him not being all there… I think it’s more that there is more there that should not be. He has some extra stuff in his brain that is making him dangerous. Not a lack of things. If it was just a lack of things in his brain he would be passive and docile most likely.
@bayoutown1990 Жыл бұрын
In counseling one particular youth on the Autism Spectrum, talking to him was like pulling teeth. It took forever to get information to help him.
@NORTAH85 Жыл бұрын
@@bayoutown1990 does this kid show signs of being on the spectrum?
@Amy-u1t2g Жыл бұрын
As a mother of an autistic child my heart breaks hearing how his mother left because she couldn't handle him and how his brother hated him for being autistic and the challenges that brings. That poor boy was punished for something he could not help or control. So sad.
@kenw2225 Жыл бұрын
Autism is unfair for everyone. Parents , siblings. And the autistic person themself. No one seems to be trying to fix this epidemic and it's infuriating to know how many kids are struggling with severe asd. Can't judge this mother though as the rest of the home life seemed to be chaotic in general, and the autism might not be the primary reason for leaving. I will say , abandoning your child never sounds like a good thing.
@stevenb427 Жыл бұрын
@@kenw2225Epidemic???? Autism has always been here. People just did not diagnose it and put the people away in the sanitariums or asylums. ✌
@sbntik Жыл бұрын
@@kenw2225ngl i don't think being autistic is "bad for everyone" i mean i vaguely understand what you're trying to say, but my girlfriend had autism and she copes with it very well, however i do know everyone copes with things differently.
@The_only_wolf_of_lots Жыл бұрын
@@sbntikthey didn't say "bad" they said "unfair" two totally different words
@Tacklepig Жыл бұрын
@@kenw2225 it absolutely isn't. The idea that family members are suffering because of an autistic kid is, fairly, offensive.
@dannyrotten15164 ай бұрын
Omg ABUSE. what’s so wrong with saying that word. I understand censoring cussing or specific acts but abuse?
@alexdodge81864 ай бұрын
KZbin guidelines. They'll demonetize videos based on certain words. I agree it's dumb, but definitely a KZbin issue and not EWU
@rudestbeast49074 ай бұрын
The list grows daily
@SinisterScoundrel65624 ай бұрын
Soon the english language itself will end up considered offensive. It's already started with elimination of pronouns.
@thewhitelodgery3 ай бұрын
This is my only gripe with these - especially considering the topic.
@HarryWhittaker-g7l3 ай бұрын
In my opinion censoring only highlights the word. There is no one who can't instantly work out what is being implied. It just makes a little puzzle out of it where the answer is screamed out in my head. If they didn't censor it, the word would be as forgetful as the rest
@CluntBaby896 ай бұрын
The detectives keep thinking eldon is lying but a lot of times it seems like he just doesnt understand the wording of the questions.
@Lotsof_FPS5 ай бұрын
hes doing this on purpose because hes lying
@vibes16805 ай бұрын
@@Lotsof_FPSnah it’s different
@anna.luv35 ай бұрын
@@vibes1680i’m trans
@michelebella6775 ай бұрын
It seems like Eldon has some sort of intellectual disability or he’s neurodivergent in some sense. He’s clearly not a completely well rounded person.
@mousepariah38845 ай бұрын
Yeah like "Shot gun shots" Even I had to look at the screen to make sure that's what I heard cause like that's not a thing in the way they asked it. Do you mean shot gun shells? Shot gun wounds?
@XMorbidChaosX5 ай бұрын
He took a sip of water* Narrator- He’s drinking water because he’s lying
@Krabzz955 ай бұрын
Definitely wasn’t thirsty
@Prophet_muhammad_695 ай бұрын
Looks like I’m inside makkan
@user-kc1sy1km9y5 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 YOOOOO
@louieo.blevinsmusic41975 ай бұрын
Glad I’m not the only one who sometimes thinks they’re sometimes full of $hite.
@XMorbidChaosX4 ай бұрын
@@louieo.blevinsmusic4197 big shite
@MsTygame Жыл бұрын
The officer asking, ‘you know how many times my dad pushed me when I was kid’ was belittling.
@siiighhhs Жыл бұрын
Ikr? The kid already admitted that the father has abused him other times. Of course a shove/push is going to be a lot different for him than the officer.
@MsTygame Жыл бұрын
@@siiighhhs he’s like oh you were pushed a couple times what’s the big deal? Obviously he doesn’t understand being abused.
@revienknight1164 Жыл бұрын
You have to remember that they're making comments and asking questions in a way to get more information out of whoever they're interviewing. The detective 100% understands what abuse is, but his feelings don't matter right now.
@VortexKiller2 Жыл бұрын
@@siiighhhsif you shove somebody police class it as assault or battery when in all cases it is rather a minor thing, it's made out to be worse than it actually is
@xg3990 Жыл бұрын
@revienknight1164 he really doesn't understand and his tactics are shit.
@GigiTheGlamTraveler2 ай бұрын
As someone who was abused growing up. I definitely wondered "what would life be like if they died?" I would even ask family members "when my mom dies can I live with you?" because I could not see my life changing as long as she lived
@BeeKayy13Ай бұрын
That's very awful and I'm sorry your mind had to go there so young. I hope things are alot better for you now. Also love your username. Best wishes and I hope your life is changing all for the better 💖
@GFAYZOS Жыл бұрын
Feel very sorry for the youngest,can’t imagine how much of his short life was filled with fear.
@CityThatCannotBeCaptured Жыл бұрын
ALL of it. Eldon stabbed him in the back with a kitchen knife when he was six. I understand that living with an autistic kid can be unbearably difficult but John was sick and couldn't help it and I think was terrorised by Eldon all his life and very possibly the mother.
@anthonyhollohan7651 Жыл бұрын
and dad@@CityThatCannotBeCaptured
@Melanie-zm4xt Жыл бұрын
It seems no one thinks about the victims any more. This 'kid' thought about killing his brother for Years. Sometimes, there Are just mean, bad 'kids'. They just usually grow up before they start killing...
@quanguy8624 Жыл бұрын
@@Melanie-zm4xtno kid is born mean or violent or it’s taught nd learned in the environment and influences around them
@Melanie-zm4xt Жыл бұрын
@@quanguy8624 yeah,and you dream on. There Are Mean Kids. Go to a state syco.ward...
@lisascheunert7688 Жыл бұрын
This kid never had a chance. In my opinion. He didn't know how to process all of the pain and loss of his Mom. His brother couldn't help he was autistic. Both parents let these boys down. He snapped. My heart hurts for these children. I hope he gets some help. Thank you for covering this. I appreciate the hard work this channel does.
@lisascheunert7688 Жыл бұрын
@@kikibalser I hear you Linda. I agree with you wholeheartedly.
@sebastianbardon391 Жыл бұрын
The system let this people down. Starting with the housing issues, following with the mental health problems and adding guns into the mix. America is a decadent empire.
@RisingRevengeance Жыл бұрын
And he got sent to an adult prison as a young teenager. Idk what the solution is but it sure ain't that.
@gpolenik Жыл бұрын
it's almost always like that when kids kill. No one with a good upbringing would even think of it. I always feel bad for them even though they're murderers. They're killers but not evil.
@hazelrobertson9415 Жыл бұрын
@@gpolenikincorrect, the Columbine kids were from loving middle class homes. That's just one example. Elliott Roger is another. There are plenty of kids who are raised well who do this kind of thing, don't kid yourself.
@noushheravi872 Жыл бұрын
To everyone who went through childhood trauma, you have my deepest sympathy.. I Couldn't imagine!
@lulumoon6942 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for those words. I'm glad there are those who cannot! ❤️🙏💞
@LoganWengerOutdoors Жыл бұрын
It’s a terrible thing that affects your whole life took me 40 years to come to terms with it. See a doctor to help don’t deal with it yourself it was my biggest mistake but I’m good now love your children god bless
@Mrs.Robinsons Жыл бұрын
Its IDAHO USA lol- LD$/FLD$ cults "LatterDaySaints" are "Preparing the People" according to chad daybell and lori vallow. smh- Lots of cultish behaviors here! Lots of child abuse. Some people shouldnt have kids !
@jayslater3166 Жыл бұрын
Been through that as a child I still go through the trauma but I stayed true to myself my heart is good I didn't go crazy like him mental.
@gloriaeizquierdo3455 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your kind words.
@Ayron-o1u3 ай бұрын
Eldon- “what’s your name?” Officer- “cohen” Eldon- “that’s a cool name” Officer- “thanks 🤭”
@oliviapasquarelli992 ай бұрын
This instantly made me sad because it was such an innocent exchange 🥺 like it was so obvious he is still a child despite the severity of his crimes
@religion-free2 ай бұрын
coo hen 😝 (hen coop) .. or cool a hen!
@svnthr0906 ай бұрын
As someone who grew up with an abusive dad, I understand him. It’s hard not to grow up with hate and resentment when you never receive any love from a parent.
@Ryan_tremaine_klarenbach5 ай бұрын
Yeah that still doesn’t justify why he killed his brother tho
@muuminoobjeta4375 ай бұрын
skill issue tbh
@Lulu-ut9pv5 ай бұрын
He prob was a glass child has john would have all the attention, the special treatment and Eldon would loathe it feeling unfair and mentions numerous times "mom wouldn't have left"
@Idkwhatshappenin5 ай бұрын
@@muuminoobjeta437that’s crazy 😭😭😭😭
@niphanif4 ай бұрын
stop defending a murderer
@BunnyLang Жыл бұрын
I don't understand how detectives expect a 14 year old to psychologically understand why he did what he did, particularly right after this horrific incident. I imagine it would take years and years of therapy for him to truly understand why he did what he did, and understand the dynamics of what sound like an extremely painful family life. I do believe his parents abused him. Look at where they were living, the malnutrition, his mom running away. This is heartbreaking.
@they-live1 Жыл бұрын
That isnt the point of the questioning, how many years have you done detective work?
@romansbottom Жыл бұрын
well he said his dad was physically abusing him but the only thing in confusion would be him killing his younger brother
@BunnyLang Жыл бұрын
@@romansbottom True. Rage, resentment, blame are the words that come to my mind.
@patriarchyenjoyer69 Жыл бұрын
It doesn't take therapy to understand why you'd want someone dead. Therapists are not all-knowing. They aren't psychics. They rarely lead patients to any introspection and typically look for exterior sources of blame. If he can hack his little brother apart with a machete after shooting him multiple times, he can be treated as an adult would be. His feeling don't matter. His actions do.
@purlsndrops Жыл бұрын
They don’t really care. They’re just trying to entrap him. It’s always about revenge for them. Not about helping anyone. Not even the victims.
@cynikov Жыл бұрын
As a 17 year old with a severely autistic twin brother, I definitely understand his jealousy of his brother on a personal level. I felt that way when I was little, too, but of course nowhere near the point of wanting to hurt him. I eventually grew out of it, and I’m closer to him than ever even though he can’t talk. Autistic and disabled children deserve so much better, don't make it worse for them. ❤
@geemonster9179 Жыл бұрын
I'm autistic unfortunately i was diagnosed in the 1970's without my knowledge i wasn't told until i was 36
@Luppay131498 Жыл бұрын
This is really uplifting to hear. I was undiagnosed until I was sixteen and I can’t imagine what dealing with my constant overstimulation was like for my younger brother… I hope you and your brother continue to have a great relationship. 💜
@dreamtraveler6135 Жыл бұрын
As somebody who is named exactly him and is autistic, I now have an irrational fear of this happening.
@murrayroodbaard207 Жыл бұрын
Yeah but he wasn;t just jealous though. He was completely self-absorbed, as he proved with his story about wanting all the candy for himself because that's "good."
@SephirothWaifu Жыл бұрын
Working with kids and going to school for Early Childhood care and Edu, it's more than understandable that a child's mind is developing and not developed and so much what goes on in their solo universe effect's them entirely, so killing is a different point of view. Their emotions are unhinged and by far it's really primal even without reason and unaccountability. It's scary on how dangerous our minds can get and feels more dangerous with kids, as it feels there is no responsibility, empathy and emotions. Kids truly can be pure evil and those without realizing it or understanding it (or both) Everyone has a threshold, but certainly you cannot presume to know anyone, even the ones you live with because it's what they don't say is what anyone should be worried for. As a kid I didn't even know how to express myself and I'm a full fledge adult now and STILL learning. (You never stop learning ^.^) That's what is frightening of our species.
@ceceliawilliams5240Ай бұрын
This poor kid is so far gone he can’t even hold a conversation. He seems so lost every time they ask him a question:
@rajordan777 Жыл бұрын
His son and grandson are dead and his other grandson is accused and he is laughing and smiling. “No he didn’t yell at Johnny, he would yell at the other one”. That is an awesome grandfather
@Kra-ri6fd Жыл бұрын
I saw that too. It even stood out to me that he called Eldon, "the other one". That grandfather was very disconnected with his family from what it sounds like. Makes me wonder what kind of parent he was to the father of these two boys thar possibly led to the father of the boys being as messed up as he was.
@jamescoleman858911 ай бұрын
Why The boys weren't taken away from the parents way before this incident is absolutely mind-blowing. He even said that he called the police and said his dad was under the influence trying to drive and everything. System failed this boy many times over And it's just as responsible as the Father, mother, and grandfather.
@jacobmeis124911 ай бұрын
The system often does more harm than good. A cultural change is the only way to fix this, a culture focused on families. The system is not an answer and anyone that has been through it will tell you so.
@hotcrazycatladyme16810 ай бұрын
There's not enough foster homes. People want to raise their own children, not someone elses. It sucks.
@hotcrazycatladyme16810 ай бұрын
@@jacobmeis1249 No. The people who got into a good home would tell you different. More good people need to become foster parents, period. A lot of mom's stay at home with the kids anyways, so why not earn a wage while she does. That's how we change this.
@jacobmeis124910 ай бұрын
Obviously you have little experience with the children of foster care or you are making your income off of this. @@hotcrazycatladyme168
@thedukeofswellington182710 ай бұрын
They were living in an Emergency shelter... the dad was clearly a deadbeat
@marjorie666 Жыл бұрын
I think at the end Eldon said _"I wanna go back to California"_ in a wistful way, knowing deep down that wasn't going to happen. He clearly misses his mother deeply. He's also a minor who was questioned for hours without the presence of a parent, a supportive adult or legal counsel after a traumatic episode. You can see towards the end he is exhausted and has shut down, repeatedly giving "yeah" as an answer. Also the impoverishment, poor living situation (run down emergency shelter), the obvious neglect (Eldon is very underweight for his age), the absence of his mother and the stress of having a profoundly disabled brother had all clearly taken a toll. Eldon's father's history of drug use, his mental state, his obsession with an impending zombie apocalypse, the presence of unsecured guns and weapons and his Zolpidem habit are also deeply relevant. Have you seen someone who is addicted to Zolpidem and takes large doses regularly? I have. It can cause lowered inhibitions, agression, confusion, strange behaviour, kleptomania and amnesia. These behaviours would be very scary for a child to see in their sole caregiver. This is proven as Eldon had called the police on his father for this reason before, something he would not do lightly due to his belief it would anger his father. None of this is to defend what Eldon did. What he did was truly heinous and inexcusable, especially in regards to his little brother. But context is important and I believe this event was the result of a lifetime of neglect, abuse and pressure that exploded that night. His father pushing him was just the straw that broke the camel's back. A very sad story for every person involved.
@shukri114mohammed2 Жыл бұрын
This kid is pure evil 👿!!
@knightmarecx2069 Жыл бұрын
Elden do nothing wrong! He was liberating himself from a horrible situation, he was a child, he didn’t know better!
@marcellplaceres8724 Жыл бұрын
@@knightmarecx2069 he killed his disabled little brother???
@shukri114mohammed2 Жыл бұрын
@@marcellplaceres8724 am still crying 😢 that innocent angel
@skorza212 Жыл бұрын
Honestly I think there were 3 monsters in that interrogation room. The suspect was an idiot kid who did a horrible thing and should be punished for it. The two coppers knew exactly what they were doing, knowing exactly what they could do to not deny him his rights, but make it as hard as possible for him to know he should be exercising them. I wish this channel would do similar videos about people who ended up being totally innocent. The coppers behaviour is easy to justify when the suspect is actually guilty, I’d love to see all clever analysis and the praise for “good” police work getting a confession when the suspect turns out to be totally innocent and has just been railroaded into a confession
@MrLeesc22 ай бұрын
So much pain in this kids eyes …when he said I’m thinking of changing my name 😢
@wfpedersen11 ай бұрын
1:19:25: BIG missing point here is; Dad had weapons laying around LOADED. That creates INSANE fear. I totally can see (being an abused kid myself) how a parent pushing one HARD could create TREMENDOUS fear of being hurt. And it provokes me SO MUCH that they try and make this weird "If i pushed you, you wouldn't feel the need to shoot me" No?? cause he is not threatened by you like that. He keeps saying "dad was on his medication. He thought there was zombies" don't you get how terrifying that would be to experience? I totally get how he would feel like the dad was dangerous.
@aarona583911 ай бұрын
he hated his brother more he said. kid is crazy thats it
@jeremyvigil413811 ай бұрын
@aarona5839 Dude his parents fucked him up.
@DizzleEdits10 ай бұрын
@@aarona5839 "Kid is crazy that's it" is sometimes true, but not with this kid. It's obvious his home situation was weird and f.cked up. It doesn't rectify his actions, but bad nurture can do unimaginable things to a person
@anthonyewillingham705110 ай бұрын
It's not a missing point lol they mentioned it many times lol
@tiastewart9810 ай бұрын
Exactly
@Techno_Gecko Жыл бұрын
It really killed me inside when he talked about having and being a happy family. As someone with a somewhat abusive father (mostly verbal) and an autistic sibling i can understand the amount if mental fatigue you can experience. Luckily around the time i had enough of the dynamic at home I left to live somewhere else. Best decision I ever made.
@mulgakoldas2692 Жыл бұрын
Me too I had to leave young . The abuse by my parents to my brother and myself was to much.
@XLindsLuvsPinkX Жыл бұрын
Do you know if your brother is ok? I am a mother of a 5 year old with autism (born in 2018), and I truly understand the stress it causes, but at least in his case, his actions may not be under his control for now. So I was just wondering if he’s ok, maybe receiving some outside therapy (psychological/occupational/ABA) .
@lulumoon6942 Жыл бұрын
Glad you chose to save yourself, best to you in continued healing. ❤️🙏💞
@CSDonohue11 Жыл бұрын
Good for You I very glad you were able to have another opportunity for a better situation Can only imagine if you didn’t have any other options.
@toosweet1327 Жыл бұрын
😊
@dogleghobag Жыл бұрын
when i was his age it was a lot easier to focus my frustration on my younger siblings than it was to understand all the ways my parents were failing us through neglect and verbal abuse. i'm so grateful we didnt have guns in the house. i worry how many kids are close to doing what this kid did. hope they make it through.
@LithLore Жыл бұрын
:hugs: I hope you have found some safety and peace
@02baby_ Жыл бұрын
It’s scary to think about how this situation is more likely going on right now with a different child and it’s family, if not worse
@aldranzam3456 Жыл бұрын
My sister has told me if we had had a gun she would've done it. And I get it. Back then it seemed like it would never end. I would've killed myself, she would've killed us. Abuse and neglect destroy humanity. It's no excuse for murder, nothing is. I do however hope Eldon gets the help he needs and isn't made to suffer more than he already has. He's dangerous, sure, but he never got a chance at a decent life.
@orionxtc1119 Жыл бұрын
guns are not the problem per see.... knives and even rocks or bricks can be used to kill
@biancaman4930 Жыл бұрын
I was the younger one that got abused by my older half sister, because she didn't understand why we had different dads.+ living in a toxic, always hungry for drama family, got beaten bad for little things, and verbally abused by my parents that I will never make it in this world, has lowered my self esteem so bad. Imagine how this all feels on the younger kid that gets all the abuse constantly from everybody in the family. I still struggle with my sanity at 32 from time to time because of this, it was a freaking hell of a ride to get here now, thankful I didn't kill anybody, believe me I wanted to kill all of them so bad at those moments! I even imagined them having car accidents so they won't come home. I know how this kid feels, what's important is not to let your emotions get the better of you, just think that in time it will get better. No more abuse...
@duckettmusic4 ай бұрын
when he said he should die for killing his family it struck a nerve for me. clearly this kid is a real person on the inside and not a full 100% monster. ina diffrent life with normal people around him he couldve become something of a regular person.. very sad to think about
@LurkingCrassZero Жыл бұрын
This is incredibly sad. I can't even begin to imagine how damaging and traumatic it would be for those kids living in that household. I just wish he'd not harmed his brother.
@shambolicrhetoric6143 Жыл бұрын
As someone who endured an abusive childhood, it’s heartbreaking how apparent Eldon’s self-loathing is. You can just see he thinks he is worth nothing at all to anyone. It hurts. I once felt that way.
@jkephart4624 Жыл бұрын
@@shambolicrhetoric6143😊
@allisonoconnor8055 Жыл бұрын
Imagine living in a time where grown adults put this madness on a child 😭💔. Zombie Apocalypse INDEED 😲🤯💔😭🫣
@hybdotn7571 Жыл бұрын
Eldon snapped and kill everyone. Intrusive thoughts took over. Also brotherly hate is not rare. I always wish bad stuffs happens to my brother and it did. He died years ago because of a reckless driving under the influence of substance. Also hes the younger one. It must great to be u who never felt the hatred growing.
@lavernebell6274 Жыл бұрын
@@allisonoconnor8055 Do you think it has stopped? It hasn’t.
@nldm561 Жыл бұрын
Regardless if he’s guilty or not. It’s fairly gross they’re allowed to coerce a child with obvious mental issues to possibly self incriminate.
@jonah.donohue Жыл бұрын
They just let him talk
@jeffoswald8583 Жыл бұрын
There's so much more to this story, before and after. I just commented... This is such a tiny view of the overall story. And I completely agree with you...
@scottedwards58 Жыл бұрын
absolute, shame on them
@TheKoloradoShow Жыл бұрын
@@jonah.donohuethe same way a baby would drown in a tub if you just let it swim
@petergedd9330 Жыл бұрын
'Self incriminate?' I think the evidence pretty much did the job there. Someone has to do the job of getting the puss out, and they did it without aggression.
@shawnstrebeck217911 ай бұрын
I used to have that same look on my face as a teen. My step-dad humiliated me and beat the hell out of me for years and years. The funny thing is he really didn't understand that he was the reason I was depressed and doing drugs. This is happening in so many households. Its insane how many children are abused and molested on a daily basis. The fact the we ignore it as a society is even worse
@donnaleal731411 ай бұрын
I'm sorry ik what it's like
@fatasshole11 ай бұрын
Sorry you had to go through that, when a parent is supposed to be your foray into building trust with people. Absolutely reprehensible that it's such a common occurrence. Glad you, presumably, got away without becoming a sociopathic murderer.
@Erika-fx3id11 ай бұрын
I’m so sorry that your stepfather did that to you. I’m sure it was even worse than what you were so bravely able to share. I hope that you are away from him now. I hope you’re living well, at peace and you are truly happy. 💞 Furthermore, I hope you realize, no matter what you did, or did not do, it is not your fault! No one has the right to put their hands on a child or humiliate anyone, especially when it’s usually only to make the abuser feel better.
@jlambe1911 ай бұрын
My stepdad was also a horribly abusing prick. I'm grateful I only had to see him every other weekend....his poor sons though...they took a lot of abuse.
@Thecatnamedkiwi11 ай бұрын
It took me ten years of drug addiction to finally realize my upbringing were the reason why I was so lost and on drugs. I'm now 3 years clean of opiates.
@mattsweatt852 ай бұрын
These are the worst interrogation detectives I've ever seen. They've asked him "How many" this or "How many" that? The kid ain't counting how many times he's thought of hurting his brother or father. He's an abused 14 year old "BOY" where is his protection? Where is his lawyer? He doesn't know to ask a lawyer. This whole interrogation needs to be thrown out!
@Davy_Nier27 күн бұрын
It doesn't matter how old you are if you committed a terrible crime. They took advantage of the fact that he was a child and decided to extract information through heavy pressure, which, of course, worked perfectly. Maybe this caused him a little psychological trauma, but, believe me, no more trauma than the sight of two bodies mutilated by his own hands.
@johnex102926 күн бұрын
I wonder if you hold the same views for battered woman syndrome
@ripseeze_the_second559010 күн бұрын
Shut up
@sirpibble Жыл бұрын
That cop was being really slimy "you have the right to talk to me and I have the right to talk to you" Thats a complete misrepresentation of his rights
@swaggadash9017 Жыл бұрын
Yeah. Not to defend him but the interrogation seems wrong, that's how it is though I guess and why you never talk to them guilty or innocent.
@InverseCr0wn Жыл бұрын
They actually used and addressed this during the trial and appeal.
@sirpibble Жыл бұрын
@@InverseCr0wn that's exactly what I was thinking a lawyer would jump all over That's why you need to do it by the book, you can get all that information and none of its admissible because they were deceptive
@BonyHawksToeSkater10 ай бұрын
The detectives were slimy altogether. Desperately seeking a premeditated charge, and saying shit like “if I punched you, would you shoot me?” As if a stranger punching you is somehow comparable to years and years of neglect and abuse. Kinda felt sick watching this, and I wish it was only because of the details of the crimes committed.
@castorkat48686 ай бұрын
@@BonyHawksToeSkater some people say the cops are wrong no matter what.
@jillthornton5512 Жыл бұрын
I cried when he said, “We would’ve been a happy family.” What a horrible tragedy. Those poor boys, with no guidance, no loving mother around, no protective father… So sad.
@stevenunyabidness Жыл бұрын
hard to feel bad for anyone who could do what he did to a disabled little kid. some people were only put here to fill a grave and this kid has already done more of his share than that.
@cartoonloon8 Жыл бұрын
@stevenunyabidness Hard to feel sad, huh? His crazy father has weapons all over the house and trains his son to prepare for a zombie apocalypse while living in filth and being evicted constantly because he puts drugs and madness above taking care of his kids? Someone doesn't do an act like Eldon did without being pushed far beyond what any human should ever have to endure. And after 2 years in prison he feels BETTER than he has ever felt before, which tells you how brutal his home life was. Eldon was as much as a victim as any of the three.
@wtfmerc Жыл бұрын
@@cartoonloon8 no eldon wasnt as much as a victim as john under the bed getting shot at by multiple guns, then his brother stabs and hacks at his limbs and head. For his father I dont really care. But you are an absolute idiot for thinking the child with a DISABILITY, WENT THROUGH THE SAME NEGLECT AND HOUSEHOLD AS HIS BROTHER, AND ALSO DIED FROM HIS BROTHER is comparable
@kristintipps6735 Жыл бұрын
Wake up! You must be evil also to relate.
@kristintipps6735 Жыл бұрын
@jillthemuderer
@Quantum813 Жыл бұрын
Anyone else think it's kind of ridiculous that we censor the words "Abuse" "Sex" and "Rape" but are totally fine with graphic descriptions of a kid killing his brother with a machete?
@Steiveplays Жыл бұрын
@@chilenapromedioRU you know that's just so they can't get sued, right? these videos are insanely useful for future lawyers.
@nightynightshade Жыл бұрын
@@chilenapromedioRU you do realize it takes a lot of time and effort to analyze these cases and make a proper documentary with facts and useful information. So hell yeah he better get paid for it! Hours and hours of editing and studying to make his videos. If he were simply uploading interrogations without any input then your strong response would make more sense.
@Grnademaster Жыл бұрын
Violence is censored more in Europe, and sex is censored less. This would seem to be the way it should be if you had to choose one or the other to be censored. Of course, America has it a$$-backwards. Just like everything else. We love to see the blood and guts fly, but by-golly how offended we get just saying the WORDS to describe sex.
@AL3XTR0NiK Жыл бұрын
@@chilenapromedioRU Why watch them then if you don't agree?
@HolographicThoughts Жыл бұрын
KZbin automatically attempts to detect objectionable material in the video (both video and audio) and will automatically de-monetize the upload or even the channel for violations (although this is not enforced fairly) So yes the censorship is dumb but so is the blanket policy of demonetizing everything with questionable content.
@DeniseHanna-kt4yl4 ай бұрын
These cops should not have been allowed to interview this very disturbed young man. Clearly he needed the help of people who know about mental health and reliving past trauma to get the best out of him. Detectives are not trained to interview minors with mental health issues
@bonnie_gail3 ай бұрын
it really is shocking
@User986813 ай бұрын
I agree. Piggies just trying to get their quota. No sympathy for Eldon’s situation. His actions weren’t right but the detectives lacked major empathy for the poor kid
@Holdencox-n2hАй бұрын
Y'all are soft puseys
@AltairbnАй бұрын
@@User986811 referring to cops as piggies is unnecessary especially considering quota isn’t a thing. 2 the kid had issues yes but he officially killed someone and a specialist would only be involved after or during a trial to judge if he was mentally stable to be judged or admitted to a form of special care and it would have been unlikely he got to go and live a normal life
@DeaconPainАй бұрын
@@User98681you do know detectives aren't the cops doing terrible things on the streets
@MrLafrast10 ай бұрын
I am amazed by the fact that throughout the interrogation - and apparently also during the trial - the strangeness of a house full of weapons of all sorts and this father's obsession with a zombie apocalypse is practically never taken into consideration. An autistic child and another slightly older child left in the hands of an obviously deranged person? Are we really surprised if things have taken a disastrous turn? The whole thing is an absolute tragedy, but the real blame lies behind it.
@kathrynmccusker39249 ай бұрын
Amen
@AmmoPack9 ай бұрын
i’ve heard of more wild things than believing in zombies lol i don’t think that’s a valid point.
@alfamonk9 ай бұрын
absolutely - but in so many of these cases it's just the cops apportioning blame. And you see it in the comments. Lots of judgement, very little awareness of situations behind these tragedies. We ignore them at the peril to society.
@ParkerBlank9 ай бұрын
@@AmmoPackI’ve seen parents who believed far worse, doesn’t mean these guys’ delusional parent isn’t delusional. The fact of the matter is that his parental figures were not only bad people, or acted badly, they also were seemingly distant from their children. Don’t allow your judgment to be so impaired, fellow. Sometimes, when comparing the Empire State Building to the burj khalifi, it’s okay to still call the Empire State Building tall.
@rosshugecaulk9 ай бұрын
A house full of weapons is a person's choice to arm themselves. That's not an indication of much. The belief in the zombie apocalypse tho? 💀😭
@aiasfree5 ай бұрын
I can't understand why a video about a 14-year old killing his family would have the word 'abuse' censored but would leave 'murder' or 'kill' uncensored.
@Realwokstrt5 ай бұрын
KZbin guidlines
@sacr34 ай бұрын
This is KZbin's censoring efforts, a lot of people way back in the day would get mad at TV for censoring language and used to spout that if they had a show they wouldn't censor it. Everyone thinks they are not corruptible, everyone thinks they will be able to support free speech, until they have their income threatened. Now everyone's just a pawn in a scheme for censorship, no one has the balls to say no and find alternate means of income. Once KZbin started paying people to make videos, that's where trouble started. Prior to people getting paid KZbin was flourishing and many people made it series of videos and got paid by other methods, a lot of them did it for free, nowadays everyone's doing it for money. As a result we have a younger generation that wants to grow up to be a KZbinr as opposed to something that supports infrastructure and society, and as a result of that everyone is becoming Pro censorship. S******* on their own rights and everyone else's rights for some money
@HoLeeFuk3174 ай бұрын
KZbin doesn't like certain words and will demonetize videos
@David-v5v4 ай бұрын
Woke political correctness
@David-v5v4 ай бұрын
Woke political correctness
@rural478 Жыл бұрын
The fact that Anthony can just blatantly deny the evidence while he had been lucky enough to not live with his dad is wild to me.
@diox8tony Жыл бұрын
@@alishacenteno8770 he said "i never saw it, i don't think so",,,and when the cops said they heard it did happen, he said "oh, well maybe i should rethink that" ...he never out-right denied it.
@miniwolf1418 Жыл бұрын
@@diox8tonythat was the grandfather, Anthony was the half brother
@myrarowlands92164 ай бұрын
He probably snapped after all the abuse he has suffered. You can't excuse murder but it helps to understand what drove him to do it. It's sad all round.
@LAff-w8f Жыл бұрын
I mean, if a 14 year old was talking about all this major trauma with two police it's amazing he can speak at all. Putting his foot under his body or rubbing his chin seems more normal than malicious..
@autumnaltumn11 ай бұрын
Right, I hate how demonized and scrutinized this poor kid's actions or choice of words are. He just went through the most traumatic event of his life, of course he isn't going to be clear headed.
@TravelElectro11 ай бұрын
I never seen someone need a lawyer like this kid. The detectives keep trying to nail him for pre-meditation. The last half of the interview is just trying to put pre-meditation in there. They don't care about getting to the truth. the kids is totally traumatised. I see a lot of anxiety and trauma and he seems genuinely upset. I don't think he has processed what's happened yet. The remorse will come. He's not very fast mentally.
@nicolemckenna95211 ай бұрын
It looks to me like he was self conscious of his feet as they probably weren't groomed. The first thing he asked for when they were taking a break was shoes. He probably felt exposed, and that's why he was curling them
@theeric2810 ай бұрын
This channel is 70% bootlicking and propping up psudo science. These videos would be 30 minutes if the producer didnt have to throw out his judgement every 10 seconds smh. just like a cop
@dugsbunnyog354410 ай бұрын
@eric28 this channel does lean heavy into extremely abstract behavior analysis matter of factly. It's annoying af. But even that isn't as bad as the bootlicking.
@BasheerahAdams Жыл бұрын
"I can't tell if it's my heart racing, or his" just chills, I can't even begin to comprehend what the offices go through, it's just horrific listening, can't imagine actually having to be there EWU is definitely the best at these analysis and gives a good understanding to these videos!
@billyyank5807 Жыл бұрын
You learn to block things out. That's why we get videos of cops laughing at things. Because it's a coping mechanism as twisted as it is.
@NickMeisher Жыл бұрын
he will be out in 5 years , with all the abuse in prison, i wonder who is next?
@charlesbryson7443 Жыл бұрын
It always hits later. When there is a shooting, your adrenaline is up to full, you don’t know if the shooter is still there. Our body is amazing, with the way it handles circumstances. The officers will feel it later. They don’t get enough respect. Especially the homicide and sex crimes units.
@pixeltoxa9284 Жыл бұрын
The way he calmly said it
@jareyoujoking2351 Жыл бұрын
@billyyank5807 yes but let's not make excuses for utter disrespect. Such as laughing at someone's death. Call it what you want, but that's beyond disrespectful.
@karina-oh7826 Жыл бұрын
I feel very sorry for this child. I believe his older sister Natasha, i think that was her name, nailed it when she said that “Eldon never had a chance” for a normal life inside his family dynamic. Like any other kid, all he wanted was a happy family. He loved his mother and watching her suffer abuse at his father's hands to the point of her leaving was a total heartbreaker for Eldon. He was neglected, abused by his father for years, evidently experiencing intense emotions he couldn't deal with from so many facets of his disfunctional home life. Its obvious that he had no counseling or any caring adult to discuss those intense, every-present emotions he wasn't equipped to deal with alone. What Eldon did was not to be condoned, but circumstantially he was a volcano ready to erupt in the worst way possible. Those detectives treated him more like a streetwise criminal than the emotionally disturbed child that he was. All they wanted was their bottom line at the end of that interrogation. They certainly got that considering they baited and dragged him along through their process. Usually, Children's Services are sniffing around families with problems, at the ready to snatch a child away from their birth parents. Where were they all of the years this zombified disfunctional family was harboring 2 young children, one now dead? I only hope that the young Eldon had counseling at his disposal in that Adult Prison they saw fit to place him in. Seems like being around a bunch of adult criminals is not the best therapy for an abused young teen.
@12pointbuck92 Жыл бұрын
The kid deserves what's coming to him.
@donut_jam Жыл бұрын
Everything wrong with the world failed this kid.
@tacos420.7 Жыл бұрын
This guy just killed his dad and brother and he starts off the convo with “That’s a cool name” 😂😂😂bro what
@chlorine5795 Жыл бұрын
@@tacos420.7Finish your school
@designajunkiee6903 Жыл бұрын
I agree I was actually disgusted with how these detectives handled this- like this kid was giving him what they needed and they were like bullying him into making himself look like a monster
@bonnie_gail3 ай бұрын
this is horrifying that a 14 year old child has no assistance, just treated like a sophisticated adult, shame on the State of Idaho
@adrianstyba1663 ай бұрын
But he literally killed his dad and brother
@monsoonBloom2 ай бұрын
Shame on many policies, like taking rights away from women too
@BizyJKO13 Жыл бұрын
“I can’t tell if it’s my heart pumping or his” the way the cop wanted to break down but buckled up and did his job. So much respect. I know I wouldn’t be able to handle a scene like that
@eonfontes-may219 Жыл бұрын
hahaha some pig was too stupid to perform a basic medical exam and this lady wants to praise him for it lmao
@jinx6706 Жыл бұрын
I thought the same thing. Tragic all around
@tomdrum1394 Жыл бұрын
Same! It's tragic & break's my heart...A terrible situation all around.The crazy parents the autistic child, guns & SO MANY knives -weapons everywhere!!! And these amazing officers that do this nearly impossible job😰
@charliechurch5004 Жыл бұрын
He didn't wanna break down, it's a body response it's normal and routine officers are badass they put their life on the line daily for little pay
@charliechurch5004 Жыл бұрын
@@tomdrum1394don't blame guns, ppl can be killed by anything if someone was killed by a lamp would you blame the lamp .....😒
@melanieeeeeeeeee Жыл бұрын
Both of these children deserved so much better, my heart breaks for them both.
@azy_t Жыл бұрын
Yeah😢
@terminator9176 Жыл бұрын
He'll be out on the streets in just 5 years -2029
@PlaySA8 ай бұрын
'Like I said' does not mean someone is lying. It means they already said a thing and then they are going to say it again.
@commanderwyro42045 ай бұрын
i say it all the time because 90% of the people i talk to dont actually listen to people talking to i gotta remind them lol
@benjamminthor13425 ай бұрын
Right like according to all these interrogations I'm a liar in1000 ways but I'm not I'm actually super honest!
@aranna145 ай бұрын
It does say that it *may* be, but can also just be used to reaffirm something you said earlier. They state in just about every video that one behavior alone is not an indication of deception, and they look for at least three happening either at the same time or in quick succession.
@vibes16805 ай бұрын
@@benjamminthor1342same it confuses me 😊
@courtney41735 ай бұрын
They also clarify that the behaviors in the interviews are compared to the baseline behaviors of the individual, because what may be a sign of deception in one person it may be a common tick or gesture for another.
@katierussell33284 ай бұрын
That poor kid...90% sure he's high functioning autistic, those cops were in the wrong with how they talked about his Miranda rights, and wrong with how they interrogated the kid. It's obvious he's asking questions to understand what the cop means, like with "shotgun shells" and far more. It's obvious this kid has been neglected and abused in so many ways, and probably snapped...
@1andonlyKB2124 күн бұрын
being autistic and abused is NOT an excuse to commit murder! shame on you for sympathizing with this demon
@Texaslife98 Жыл бұрын
As far as the portion where it was said that he doesn’t fear authority like the typical teen would.. I personally have experience with this. As I was growing up I had a very violent and sadistic mother.. throughout the timeline of abuse I began to lose the fear & respect for authority. When the “authority” in your life has been proven to be insufficient or unreliable.. you begin to feel a sense of authority; this carries over into the development process.
@overworked1084 Жыл бұрын
Interesting- thanks for sharing. Sounds like you have insight into what influenced you as a child.
@ifartmagic Жыл бұрын
Never really thought about it before but holy shit this is accurate - I understand everything you wrote.
@burntblonde2925 Жыл бұрын
I’m so sorry you had to deal with that kind of Mother. Mothers are supposed to love and protect you. You certainly did NOT deserve that.
@metalwingdustАй бұрын
how are you doing now?
@Georgesspierre10 ай бұрын
This kid had no chance from the start, life gave him nothing… very sad.
@corban0the18 ай бұрын
@@TheJjt725really? What are they supposed to do? Sit the kid down with a cup of warm coco and inform him on all of his rights? The kid just killed two people.
@shinigami_01278 ай бұрын
@@corban0the1 Actually yes a minor needs representation in an interrogation. They took advantage of him
@corban0the18 ай бұрын
@@shinigami_0127 no you must not have watched the same video. Because in these circumstances he needed to request it, and frankly im not going to let you aware of laws so you can avoid responsibility. It seems like you wanted this kid to get away with murdering his brother and dad.
@NPC-ej4ql8 ай бұрын
@@corban0the1 No it doesn't seem like it, you're just barking up the wrong tree. Saying they took advantage of him has nothing to do with wanting him to get away with his crimes.
@Gersemi_Trader8 ай бұрын
First thing i noticed, dirty and messy house
@JohnHoods8 ай бұрын
He said “you have the right to talk to me”…instead of you have the right to remain silent. 😂
@jackiemk327 ай бұрын
Messed up
@chaoshavoc72356 ай бұрын
He does have a right to talk and also to not talk it’s a diversion strategy to get criminals to incriminate themselves.
@briankenney86096 ай бұрын
Police count on people being ignorant that’s why when people refuse to speak and request council they get so frustrated because than it’s up to them to prove guilt. Police will never help you prove your innocence .
@tracykerley57406 ай бұрын
He’s 14!! Total case of coercion 😮
@maxjeffwell6 ай бұрын
Cop is a manipulative mofo. He might as well be sitting on the other side.
@cosmonutts264414 күн бұрын
This interview is so heartbreaking. He's just a kid, He was at his limit with the abuse that he's been receiving. Like the sister said "he head no chance", had he been in a better family he could've lived his younger years with a better persepective of life and not full of hatred and anger. He was just a kid overloaded with negative emotion and years of abuse physically, verbally and mentally. I pray for all the people who has been under similar situations. May we all have the strength and courage to face our struggles head on and move on.
@dextermorgan1 Жыл бұрын
That Miranda warning was about as clear as molasses "I have the right to talk to you and you have the right to talk to me." I've never heard it explained that way before. A half decent defense attorney would probably have a field day with what was said.
@Sharpie_17 Жыл бұрын
oh you're totally right, that completely excuses him from murdering people
@xyz7572 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, the way they phrased that might make the entire interrogation thrown out as unlawful.
@dextermorgan1 Жыл бұрын
@@Sharpie_17 Lol Not too bright are you, Sport? You COMPLETELY missed the point of what I said.
@dextermorgan1 Жыл бұрын
@@xyz7572 It very well could.
@Sharpie_17 Жыл бұрын
@@dextermorgan1 doesn't matter at all what you said, you're trying to defend a murderer, you're no better than they are
@teebabi3077 Жыл бұрын
This was incredibly sad and personally, justice failed this kid. He clearly was abused, neglected, and snapped from the environment his father put him in. And to top it off, him going into adult prison he's only going to get worse unless he gets help. So sad. Prayers to him and family.
@michellemarini5128 Жыл бұрын
My thoughts completely!!!
@_maliciousIntent Жыл бұрын
All of the degenerate scumbag sub-human filth garbage less-than-dirt molecules of feces feeling bad for this murderer in the comments is unbelievable.
@jamiesmith5728 Жыл бұрын
And unfortunately, he WONT get help. He'll be thrown in there and forgot about.
@unicornmadness6286 Жыл бұрын
Are you joking, he murdered his family so justice was served and hope he never gets out. Imo, there are a lot and I mean a lot of children that get abused, but they don't go and murder someone. So stop.
@existentialcrisis4884 Жыл бұрын
@@unicornmadness6286I hope you never work in social services.
@birnbaumimgarten8501 Жыл бұрын
What I don´t understand: People keep asking why. Eldon can't easily answer the reasons why. There are certainly several answers that a psychiatrist can find out, but not in a police interrogation.
@sarahmurphy80309 ай бұрын
They need a confession and reason why
@johnheaslip10393 ай бұрын
He doesn’t even understand his basic rights. He should never have been interviewed without a lawyer. I am disgusted with our system.
@AutumnHoogsteen Жыл бұрын
The cops continuously asking him “if he puched you why wouldn’t you punch him back instead of shooting him” that’s too much. He obviously seems to have taken it from his dad one too many times. I’m not condoning murder but he was pushed to his limit and snapped. This is why children need to truly be seen and heard. How anyone around them didn’t notice his deteriorating state is beyond me. It’s unfortunate that he did this, but he needed help just as badly as any other abused child out there. This is a failure of society.
@uhnborhn5032 Жыл бұрын
100. Why didn't you simply fight back against the guy who's way bigger than you and controls your life? Suicidal
@sandra439511 ай бұрын
Complete failure....
@mellissa6139011 ай бұрын
What the cops don’t understand is that a child who is consistently abused, they’re afraid to fight back because the retaliation from their abuser(s) will be much worse. So of course this kid felt like the only way to make it stop was to put an end to it himself. My heart breaks for this kid. It’s not like he just decided he wanted to kill his parents, this has been building up for sometime and he felt completely defeated and terrified. So for the cop to ask him such a crazy question like this kid actually had that option is beyond me smh.
@mircat2811 ай бұрын
There are plenty of people who had crappy abused childhoods who know the difference between right and wrong and grew up to live well and did not turn into perverted killers.
@apocratos017411 ай бұрын
Loooooool Ikr Makes no sense! If the lion Biten you, why didnt you bite him back instead of using a gun???????
@lollol-qu9xu Жыл бұрын
how can we expect a child who's surrounded by guns and knives and machetes and has only known abuse and neglect, to not use them to retaliate against what he perceived as the threat to himself
@verabolton Жыл бұрын
What can we expect from a compulsive liar? Blame the mother who left him, the father who allegedly abused him, the brother who dared to eat his own candy instead of handing it over to him... 🧐 I don't believe one single word he says.
@user-ld3si9iy6s Жыл бұрын
Well, then you have a very bad read on human psychology my friend :p.. but it's ok, hopefully watching these videos helps you improve it!@@verabolton
@kiddfresh3673 Жыл бұрын
how was jonathan a threat?
@nickacelvn Жыл бұрын
Exactly and well said. It takes a village.
@verabolton Жыл бұрын
@@nickacelvn Oh, another one to blame! 🤦♀
@munkymunk9053 Жыл бұрын
Weird days when you can hear about these horrific crimes in great detail but you have to censor the word 'abusive', good job KZbin!
@planetvegan784311 ай бұрын
You don't have to censor. You censor cuz you want to make money off of these people's misery.
@nzunknowns606111 ай бұрын
OK KAREN
@marcusfitzgerald599 ай бұрын
Makes no sense
@AnthonyHoggard-ys1zd3 ай бұрын
An abusive father, an autistic younger brother, and an absent mother due to her ex- husband's abuse produced a sad chapter in a 14 year old boy's life.
@WiredXDragon Жыл бұрын
I love that EWU doesn’t really have a release schedule so it’s always a pleasant surprise when we get a new video 😊 great work as always!
@DaVinciDoll Жыл бұрын
I didn’t even realize it was new until reading this comment (I’m still catching up as they’re new to me) apparently I opened it 13 mins after it was posted I’ve never been to a video so soon!! Of course it was by accident lol so definitely a pleasant surprise for me!
@anaalicia5029 Жыл бұрын
I still wonder whether the man who does the voiceover also does the voice of Ghostface in the Scream movies, there’s so much similarity
@Schoolforthesoul Жыл бұрын
YABADABADOOOOO ❤ I love EWU😊
@serkotsins Жыл бұрын
nah yeah, i love that about their channel
@namethestars Жыл бұрын
@@anaalicia5029it isn't. The voice of Ghostface is Roger L. Jackson, the narrator of this is Russell Archey aka The Ravon.
@tarrenhoodie Жыл бұрын
It really bothers me how adamant the older brother was about there not being any neglect or abuse when there was evidence of both. This is a tough one, seems the kid was just so confused about everything.
@debbyhutchinson6984 Жыл бұрын
Because if he admitted it he would have to face his own story being public and people asking why he did nothing to help his brothers
@chrisandrabethea5394 Жыл бұрын
There could be a few factors as to why he wouldn’t know or he wasn’t abused. My impression is they have different moms. I say that because wouldn’t the older brother and sisters be living with dad as well, Eldon’s mom had/has here demons and doesn’t sound like a very fit parent. Also the fact that they only mention him(older brother) in passing and never really mention the sisters, only his statement about them. To me the way Samual senior tried covering up any abuse toward Eldon and his younger brother by never saying a flat “NO” that their dad wasn’t abusive, but by deflecting saying he never seen/heard any abuse and pushing it all on the mom, makes me believe there was abuse in the home and he might not have physically seen it but knew! I understand that’s his son and parents like to protect their children, but he knows what kind of person his son really was. With his parents dealing with drugs, domestic abuse, mental health(dads and now obviously his), child abuse inflected on him,neglect, abandonment issues with his mom, brother being autistic, grandpa turning a blind eye, violent video games, heavy metal with guns and knives laying around this was a recipe for disaster. Nowhere am I saying any one of these things is a reason to take a life, but when it’s all piled on you at one time and you don’t have the mindset/maturity to deal with it, there comes a breaking point.
@warwarneverchanges4937 Жыл бұрын
In the 90´s the father getting custody was less than 1% Imagine how F-up the mother must have been.
@claytonbarr5333 Жыл бұрын
I grew up with physical and mental abuse, I thought it was normal until I started talking to people and realized they would get uneasy. I begin to realize my upbringing was harsh when I was able to get outside context to compare with my life. That was when it begin to hit me and bother me about what I went through. Before when I thought it was normal treatment I accepted it as ok and that I was just weak minded.
@jasonparkins9239 Жыл бұрын
Kid was a monster. He butchered his brother and his dad tried to protect his brother and "got" in the way and got killed himself. My heart broke as their last moments was trying to be near eachother for comfort.
@violinflowerbot3677 Жыл бұрын
When you grow up in an abusive & neglectful home like that, it makes you think insane things sometimes. I've had to genuinely think about killing my own father in self defense, but thankfully its never actually come to that. Hearing cases like this breaks my fucking heart. It really does. A child should never have to feel like the only way out is for someone to die. I hope Eldon gets the help he needs one day. RIP to Johnathan as well. He deserved better. They both did. Also the sister's statement of "he never had a chance"...chills. She nailed it. I hope the family can recover from this tragedy.
@chaddad1488 Жыл бұрын
Feel bad for Jonathan and his father, the real victims, not that monster. Skewed priorities man, jeez.
@folkloreofbeing Жыл бұрын
I once had to walk away from my dad while he was scolding me from the sofa. I was standing behind him with a paring knife in my hand (I was cooking when he called me into have a go). He called something like a "little whore" and I had a fleeting image of planting that knife right in the top of his dome.
@j_g9109 Жыл бұрын
@@chaddad1488My heart breaks for Jonathan and what Eldon _could’ve_ been in a loving, healthy household, not who he is now or what he did. Why you or anyone else feel bad for *their* abusive father, I have no idea. Not all victims deserve to be missed or cried for. He gets no empathy from me. 🤷♀️
@chaddad1488 Жыл бұрын
@@j_g9109 Boo hoo daddy was mean, and what's the excuse for why he killed Jonathan? Who cares what his excuse was, there's no good reason to kill your family that isn't self-defense.
@impeccablespecimen Жыл бұрын
@@chaddad1488clearly you didn't grow up in an abusive home. It's literal psychological and physical torture day in and day out but if you tell anyone it will only get worse. Knowing you'll have to suffer that for years and years. Then there's a way out, that being murder. An immature, undeveloped child will take that way out rather than suffer at the hands of a monster. I don't condone his actions, but saying that the dad was completely innocent in this is just weaponized ignorance. I think it's horrible and unforgivable that he would kill Justin, but you can't act like abuse is innocent.
@CaptainAugust Жыл бұрын
Ambien is insane. Got it prescribed for sleeplessness and the first 2 times i took it, i woke up in the middle of the night tripping hard af. Woke up from a vivid dream/hallucination of people breaking into the house and shook my girlfriend away telling her there are people in the house. The next night i woke up standing in the driveway in my boxers in the middle of the night. Never took it again
@muddywaters0819 Жыл бұрын
You aint lying,at first i would sleep too too long,next min im hearing ish in dead silence.
@Dead_Again1313 Жыл бұрын
Seriously. And it seems like the word is just now getting out. I was first given it after my first deployment to Iraq in 2007 and took it off and on until like 2012. Ive taken all kinds of mental health meds and Ambien is right up there with Xanax in terms of the danger it can put people in.
@mommiej3ans319 Жыл бұрын
My ex MIL was on ambien. She started sleepwalking, and got into her car and wrecked into a parked car in the apartment parking lot. She got off of it after that.
@Ashtray.x Жыл бұрын
It is an insane medication. I was prescribed it at the beginning of the year & I was having vivid dreams, the worst one was of my deceased brother, just staring at me from the living room whenever I got up to use the bathroom & it was like I was fully aware. It haunted me for days & I threw the meds away the next day. Very scary stuff
@Ashtray.x Жыл бұрын
@@chilenapromedioRU I was fresh out the psychiatric hospital so no I wasn’t on just any type of medication, just taking medication as I was prescribed who was decided by multiple doctors. It only took one bad night for me to stop taking it. Not everybody has the same reaction & considering it’s an a controlled substance I would figure that not everybody would have a similar happy go-lucky experience. Are you a doctor or someone with a pharmaceutical degree? If not then your opinion is invalid :)
@R.POWELL Жыл бұрын
The whole family is insane !!! What kind of "grandparent " laughs in this kind of murder situation ?!! So sad about the innocent brother ....... 💔
@DS9TREK Жыл бұрын
It was probably nervous laughter
@dondada6602 Жыл бұрын
no@@DS9TREK
@lisawentworth6831 Жыл бұрын
@@DS9TREK no, it was a weird reaction...he thought the kids mother was messed up and not his chain smoking zombie killer son...
@Melanie-zm4xt Жыл бұрын
Actually, I think it's demonic. The biggest lie the devil convinced mankind was "They Don't Exist" They do! The name of JESUS makes them flee... The mention of Jesus, makes them tremble.
@deshia1471 Жыл бұрын
There's no way the brother wasn't insane as well in this environment. This is so dark and demonic..... and sad.
@carolpray9816 Жыл бұрын
These kids never had a chance. They were betrayed by every adult in their lives. It's incredibly sad.
@Simpleaxe59Gaming5 ай бұрын
You can tell this kid was absolutely failed by his parents :/
@johntucci88263 ай бұрын
Yeah, but jeez don't show any sympathy for the kids situation, there a lot of people that don't really recognize having sympathy for his situation and sympathy for his acts. Lot of angry dumb people
@ChristopherPeck-go2sl11 ай бұрын
I like how they show the iron maiden cd like it's iron maidens fault
@lakeshore26989 ай бұрын
I'm wondering about that too, I thought there was some kind of point about that coming up here
@Luceium019 ай бұрын
"games make a person violent" type of thing@@lakeshore2698
@x.tgaming68118 ай бұрын
😂 I thought the same thing 😂
@grizzlywhisker8 ай бұрын
I know right? I started laughing when I saw them holding it up with a glove as if it was some kind of valuable evidence. 😹
@patrickpetersen32018 ай бұрын
I thought it was crazy that hes wearing a Mortal Treason shirt which is a christian metal band. how weird.
@NondescriptMammal Жыл бұрын
The detective says "I don't want to put words in your mouth", but then he constantly asks a question and then immediately suggests the answer instead of waiting for an answer
@collinwallace71074 ай бұрын
At the start of the interview I understood with it being pretty obvious he was lying but around the end it just felt like they were trying to manipulate him to say it was premeditated and were just confusing him when in general it sounds like he just snapped
@EdinburghMayhemАй бұрын
How awful that this man was given two children to bring up. They didn't have a chance.
@tomservo5347 Жыл бұрын
It's so sad when a relative stated that "Eldon didn't stand a chance" as far as his childhood went. Can you really blame someone for finally snapping after years of abuse and neglect? Eldon looks malnourished, shy, but very intelligent. I really hope time and counseling will undo some of the damage but it's unlikely since his formative years were all spent under awful conditions.
@edwarda6923 Жыл бұрын
This is why guns should be banned. Had he not had loaded guns and pistols these murders probably could have been stopped.
@divinehatred6021 Жыл бұрын
@@edwarda6923 You are an absolute 1d1ot if you think that it all happened because of the gun and not because of the horrible conditions the child went through... But hey, you are a mentally ill leftie, you dont care about the trauma of anyone, all you care about is your narrative. I bet you couldnt even watch the whole video before writing this comment.
@MurrmorMeerkat Жыл бұрын
@@edwarda6923 b...but its not the gun its the person!!!
@XLindsLuvsPinkX Жыл бұрын
If his father owned those guns LEGALLY, he definitely didn’t report any known mental problems or medications that could effect his judgment. If guns kill people than spoons make people fat, and pencils misspell words.
@XLindsLuvsPinkX Жыл бұрын
Also, do you think criminals care if guns are banned? I kinda doubt it.
@winglexii10 ай бұрын
"I can't tell if it's my heart racing or his." really hit me for some reason.
@betsylaughlin44817 ай бұрын
Me too
@davebarahona47386 ай бұрын
Yeah they seemed so calm when talking like they have done this a million times but it was scary for them
@greasecheeks1654 ай бұрын
Bc you are soft
@PepeSmuggins4 ай бұрын
Imagine how you would feel…..that’s what he felt
@nicholejanisse7843 Жыл бұрын
I grew up with an abusive father, and there were times I wished he would have died. I never acted on it because I've always been someone who hates consequences, but I think it would have saved a few people besides my mother and I. My real father was actually a horrible man, by all accounts. So, I bet I would be out of jail by now if I had acted as a child to stop him.
@avamasquerade Жыл бұрын
I grew up much the same way, periodically, my father was actually homicidal and I had to outsmart him and put myself between him and my siblings and their mother. We lived in a 24' travel trailer for a few years when I was a teen. I would try to sneak out to use the restroom and my clinically paranoid father would wake up and ban me from leaving. It was torture every night, the hours before dawn. Sometimes, I'd find myself spending hours at the head of his bed while trying to sneak past him, staring down at his left temple, watching him sleep and envision slowly pressing something through the softest part of his skull and into the ruination of his brain. It seemed that as long as I vividly imagined this, he wouldn't wake up, and I could escape outside to use the bathroom. It was baffling, empowering, liberating, and utterly terrifying, the helplessness of that sleeping monster, how he'd make the suckling motions of his lower jaw as he slept like the primal part of his mind was dreaming of being a baby and nursing in the arms of his mother. Ultimately, I didn't end him because my siblings would've been utterly destroyed. While they hated the abuse and pitied our father (who very much took advantage of their pity to abuse us all further) they were raised to believe abuse was normal, that they deserved it, that if they just behaved perfect enough, they could stop it. When night fell and we were all ready to fall asleep, if we were in an abandoned house / squat and separated from our parents in another room, my sibling's denial crumbled while we nursed the day's wounds, reality hit like a hammer, during those whispered conversations tinged with absolute despair, my siblings looked to me to develop a plan to survive the next day, to assure them the abuse was weird, not normal, an aberration. But I had no real way of knowing that because none of us were allowed to go to school (we were told to tell anyone who asked that we were "home schooled") it was just some a priori knowledge, that we didn't deserve the abuse, that my soul was born with that my siblings didn't have the strength to actually believe without my assurances. In the morning, they would act on my plan, but deny that we were in any danger at all. Their denial was delusional, but I had to take what I could get, and they would at least follow the plan. In the end, while I felt sorry for my siblings and that facilitated our Father narrowly surviving me those many nights, it was my desire for revenge that took center stage. I wanted him alive. By then, I had witnessed enough "justifications" by society for the pain he inflicted on us to know that this ideologically sick country allowed our father to abuse us, it, in fact, facilitated his treatment of us as his "property" and allowed him to deny us even the most basic human rights. With that epiphany in my early teens, I could think of no better revenge than for all of us to escape, thereby denying that man the "comforts" of his sadistic domination of us, and inflicting his ensuing malevolence that this country empowered back onto it's citizens. It's been indescribable for me to witness the past 2 decades of the destruction he has since unleashed onto various (much deserving) communities. And of everything I've achieved in my life since I orchestrated our escape, inflicting that beast onto the people that created him rather than ending him on any one of those nights (and wasting myself in the process by spending my life behind bars as a consequence) is one of my proudest accomplishments. I studied him to survive him while growing up, I slowly poked holes in his brainwashing of the family (my step-mother included) then our escape unwound his precariously balanced psyche by denying him control, which spun him out and into the general direction of those who empowered and enabled him. I, my siblings, and their mother survived because of me, our children exist because of me, and we have all gone on to do incredible things with our lives, so if there is a heaven, I think I've more than earned my spot, and in lieu of me actually sending his particular brand of malevolence straight to hell, I customized a hell that pays in dividends for all responsible anyway. I'm quite satisfied with those results.
@stayfocused1084 Жыл бұрын
Creep
@yungmilf Жыл бұрын
I went through an abusive childhood via my mom and stepdad, i too had very negative thoughts towards them as a kid that im honestly terrified of. Though just like you the consequences ultimately stopped me. I was homeless in a hotel with my baby brother, and i couldnt grasp the thought of being split up from him. Fast forward to present day, and i havent seen him in 3 years. Hes still stuck in their abusive, neglectful environment and although im scared of those thoughts. I sometimes think maybe it wouldve saved him, and we would be at the very least in contact...
@jedcollings3624 Жыл бұрын
It's horrible what kind of world and mindset it puts you in, you should never have felt the need to end someone's life, but when you're a kid and it's like that, you just want it to stop, it feels like nobody cares about anything I'm glad you seem to be doing better, keep working on yourself and your beliefs, you'll be okay
@bandit6272 Жыл бұрын
Not a word about Johnathan? Your sympathy is misplaced and disgusting.
@DeniseHanna-kt4yl4 ай бұрын
He’s 14 not adult for all of his wrong reasons, don’t treat him like an adult
@andrewtucker7990 Жыл бұрын
The cop didn't mention that he also has a right NOT to talk to them.
@artnixie Жыл бұрын
the Miranda is sketch. "this just says you have the right to talk with me and you understand that." Kid understands nothing.
@andrewtucker7990 Жыл бұрын
@artnixie sure didn't, and it was on the detective to inform him. They knew what they were doing.
@JB-kg1zv Жыл бұрын
@@andrewtucker7990 its stupid on his part though who knows a good lawyer could maybe argue he tricked him out of his miranda rights and get whaterver he said thrown out.
@idorus Жыл бұрын
they could have cut that part out
@andrewtucker7990 Жыл бұрын
@@JB-kg1zv you're right about that. Dumb move on the detectives part.
@astraw13 Жыл бұрын
I have been in a remarkelblay similar situation to Eldon. I had thought about killing my dad for years during all the abuse. I had placed weapons all around my room waiting to use them when my dad attacked me again. He did. And when I was being beaten up I was thinking about reaching and putting our family out of the misery he caused, I just accepted that murder was too grotesque of a reaction and took the beating. That night he knocked my teeth out, was arrested, and my parents divorced shortly after. I was literally his same age. fuck idk i would psot this on yt, but literally no one knows except some locked away police file. This is not extraordinary, this is happening all around us. Please just pull through and know life is better when you get through.
@chriskessler7344 Жыл бұрын
Im so sorry that happened to you..im glad you didn't take your fathers life! He should spend alot of time in prison! ❤ your a survivor! ❤
@michellewatters4004 Жыл бұрын
Same here. I did the same thing. I had a baseball bat by my bed, pillow case full of soap.. even when he was jumping on top of me with his knee in my face, I just decided that my mother didn’t need to go thru all that mess. My grandparents lived 3000 miles away, so I couldn’t go there. So I just found myself a little 1 bedroom house, packed what I could fit in my little car and left.
@mcpartridgeboy Жыл бұрын
It baffles me how women select these men as prime mates.
@s_.777 Жыл бұрын
@@mcpartridgeboythey’re victims too and it’s not easy to leave, trust me.
@uhnborhn5032 Жыл бұрын
@@s_.777 you're a victim the first time it happens (or if you're a child), you become a participant when you go back after.
@RewardedRocki Жыл бұрын
At roughly 2:59 the indistinct part of that sentence is "pie in". When clearing rooms police use a tactic known as slicing the pie due to the visual appearance of the angular sweep they do when entering. Just thought I'd throw that out there. Great content as always.
@pv2639 Жыл бұрын
Mmmmm. Pie... 😛
@Incredibow_893 ай бұрын
I went to school with this kid. And I was also in the juvenile detention center at the time they had locked up for these charges. They actually let him go into general population for a little while and I struck up a conversation without even knowing who I was talking to at the time. Somebody came up and told me later that he was in for murdering his brother and his dad and all I could think was “this kid?! Nah not a chance” but when I got out I hears whole town talking about it. He really was a nice kid, just got dealt a bad hand by his obsessive father. His father really did threaten him with weapons and manipulation so I see the reasoning behind the thought of being scared. But the brutal slaying of his autistic brother is just so beneath me I could never understand how somebody could remove such innocence from this world with such intent. Anybody ever wonder how many murderers they’ve come into contact with and not even known it?
@jimslim_13138 ай бұрын
Narrator: Elden blinks three times in ten seconds… This means he only telling 33% of the truth
@Cali_life6196 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@notacompleteidiot...12855 ай бұрын
Eldon lets out 60 extremely small farts, making the investigating officers suspect that he might be trying to communicate his guilt in Morse code. 🤔
@marklulay5 ай бұрын
This comment had me rolling 😂😂😂😂
@fizzinsoda5 ай бұрын
fr the narrator is so annoying. "it was studied by a professional!" like yeah a professional yapper
@ally27564 ай бұрын
This cracked me uppp LMAOO
@backup368 Жыл бұрын
"What's you name?" "Eldon" "Elvin?" "Eldon" "Stop moving, Elvin."
@merrickmeyers9 ай бұрын
It’s actually elvis
@jeovs19 ай бұрын
Cops don’t give af about anyone lol it’s funny when the narrator says things about “respect for authority “
@teresajames12499 ай бұрын
Is Tayler with kelce nowL
@merrickmeyers9 ай бұрын
@@teresajames1249 joe Rogan
@mick74749 ай бұрын
my name is not Elvin...
@nowitzoverhead2873 Жыл бұрын
The tears are not just from him thinking he's caught. They are for multiple reasons obviously. Poor kid just wanted to be loved and instead was abused and had no outlet for his frustrations. So he snapped. Also he needs legal representation for this interrogation. these detectives know this but decided to ignore it. This interrogation is abusive and unprofessional.
@Rastei Жыл бұрын
Amazing how some people can even defend such an aberration of nature a savage murderer with no empathy who just obliterated 2 innocent lives. You are bad in the brain.
@grindcoreandturns Жыл бұрын
Well Idaho doesn't require that so...
@gazzyb85 Жыл бұрын
they keep putting words in his mouth to fit with their idea of what happened and then getting him to approve.
@HaltDieKlappa Жыл бұрын
They didnt ignore anything, they followed the state's laws, and got a confession from a kid who blew his fathers head off and hacked up his autistic brother, after planning to kill him since he was six. Id say they did their jobs. Would you prefer he was, what, walking the streets right now? No matter what the details of his upbringing were and how unfair that is to him, it doesnt change what he is now, a person who hacked up a helpless autistic child after blowing apart his legs with a shotgun. You're out of your mind for acting like the detectives did something bad here.
@mclennanashnic Жыл бұрын
@@gazzyb85yup
@anonymouspeople48963 ай бұрын
The way the GPA calls John John but calls eldon "the other one" just goes to show that boys life!
@BOBBY-n7m Жыл бұрын
No 14 year old should be questioned without a lawyer or guardian. This interrogation should never have been allowed on a child who has no understanding about self incrimination.
@enigmadrath1780 Жыл бұрын
Depends on the state. Many don't have laws requiring the presence of a parent or guardian. HOWEVER, oftentimes it's considered wise, for officials, to have one present because otherwise the minor's statements made during interrogations may be challenged or dismissed in court. So it's not illegal to interview without a parent/guardian; it's just not advisable.
@blaise5837 Жыл бұрын
dude he murdered 2 people and tried to fabricate the whole thing. multiple times. he couldve had a gaurdian present but wait he shot him in the face.
@Skepticismistheway Жыл бұрын
Hard to have a parent or guardian when he kinda killed them
@StarSquishie Жыл бұрын
@@enigmadrath1780 They're not commenting on the legality, but the morality. And frankly, I agree with them.
@duderitoz6953 Жыл бұрын
He killed 2 people, this isnt an overzealous action by authorities relax. You can be questioned without authorities & quite frankly, he doesnt have any guardians as he killed his.
@tylerstamps2786 Жыл бұрын
I feel for this kid for everything he’s gone through. And the detectives are insufferable. They are asking vague questions that a 14 year old who’s probably been abused cannot process. Then they ask the same questions six ways to Sunday over and over. This isn’t a career criminal you need to catch in a lie, it’s a disturbed 14 year old kid.
@elkins4406 Жыл бұрын
Idaho law is messed up to allow this sort of questioning of a minor without a guardian present. I had no idea there were states where that was legal. Then, they're also apparently okay with trying an obvious child as an adult, which I'm pretty sure is allowed *everywhere* in the US, so it's not just Idaho that's messed up beyond all reason.
@Aetohatir Жыл бұрын
I fully agree. I can't believe he was trailed as an adult.
@crazyeightsize Жыл бұрын
I don't know, the abuse is inexcusable. But hearing Eldon describes how he felt entitled to his brother's possessions is really chilling. If his brother didn't surrender his items to Eldon. Then Eldon would bestow a death sentence on him is sad to hear. I think mental illness ran in this family, and in young Eldon it took the form of extreme psychopathy. I believe he would have done this same thing even without the abuse. I feel that this kid is a danger to society.
@elkins4406 Жыл бұрын
@@crazyeightsize Yeah, the kid was super disturbed, no question. That exchange about the candy bar was absolutely chilling. I don't know if I agree that whatever genetic problems were lurking in his DNA would have taken that same form without the abuse -- I think I disagree with you there, but I could very well just be biased (I likely have some pretty nasty stuff lurking around in my DNA as well) -- but there's no way to know for sure: the abuse happened and nobody stepped in to stop it from happening for years and years and years, so now here we are. Was it too late for him by the time he murdered his brother and father? I honestly don't know the answer to that question. I really don't. Nobody will *ever* know the answer to that question, because he was tried as an adult and sent off to serve his sentence in an adult prison before he was even old enough to vote, far less drink. I doubt he'll ever be much of a benefit to society after that. It's very, very sad, and I just don't believe that it's the right way to deal with situations like this.
@amitbansal7754 Жыл бұрын
Well if you kill your dad and brother, whatever be the reason, whatever be the age, you deserve to suffer.