It always amazes me how someone could have no problem taking people’s lives but will do anything to avoid the death penalty.
@JD-gk7eh7 ай бұрын
People say killers have no value for human life. I don't think that's true. If they didn't think life has value, they'd not go around taking it--you don't, for example, go around picking up and collecting things you don't think are valuable either. Rather, they enjoy the power that comes from taking lives. That's why they don't have a problem trying to get out of the death penalty, because it's another way for them to exert power or prevent someone else from having the same one they had had over so many others.
@Alphacentauri8197 ай бұрын
@@JD-gk7eh some good points…but maybe a caveat I see, is that they value life in a very different way. They don’t value the individual, the personhood, or anything about another…other than what the other provides for their self serving need. The women were outlets for his rage, objects used and not valued. Yes, about the power. Absolutely.
@TrentAdam7 ай бұрын
I dunno I think they just don't want it to happen to them. Who would? Makes perfect sense!
@dmichael1006 ай бұрын
I can see being "amazed' that someone could take so many lives for decades and go on living normally otherwise. Avoiding the death penalty is not amazing at all. Personal survival- no matter how moral a person is- is one of the strongest forces innate in most humans- or animals, for that matter.
@AKIsAClown6 ай бұрын
You need to understand how their brains works in order to understand what motivates them. If you try to think about it in the ways that us with brains that aren’t psychopathic work then we would obviously never be able to make sense of it
@cosmosrunner24688 ай бұрын
This is how a true crime documentary is made, excellent narrator, all the relevant information and people involved.
@MrMustangMan7 ай бұрын
no joke.!!!!!
@kenibnanak55547 ай бұрын
With no mention of the little pyramid stones that linked so many of the murders.
@randykarl43517 ай бұрын
May I know the name of the narrator?
@wendybutler16817 ай бұрын
Anything based on Ann Rule's research is bound to be top-notch. She was a Master at her craft. Growing up in the Pacific Northwest, we lived what she wrote. Brudos, Bundy and a whole lot more. So many places to dump bodies here.
@lyndafayesmusic7 ай бұрын
"Crime Zone's" narrator is quite an eloquent story teller , also, btw; Telling the story, WELL, is a CRAFT but there are many SLOPPY story copyists...JUST FOR THE VIEWS. The ones that merely hijack video clips and then have nothing of merit to even say about what they've stolen are the WORST. We happen to like the narrators on "Forty-Eight Hours" -they'll never replace KENDRA btw...the New Detectives are pretty eloquent too. It's sad to hear about someone who's trying to support their three children, whose been a victim of abuse-who thinks they HAVE to work as a prostitute; Seems that even fast food workers HIRING some of these mothers, sometimes show empathy for them...Surely it should be a last resort, and not a "way to work your way through college!"
@BigLebowski3247 ай бұрын
His wife had so much pain in her eyes. My empathy goes out to her.
@אילייןלוי7 ай бұрын
Hats off to the people that have to uncover these corpses.. U have to have nerves of steal The greatest respect to u all..
@cogitokayla80707 ай бұрын
I feel so sad for her. That poor woman
@malonielangthorne28487 ай бұрын
Empathy is not an adjective
@BigLebowski3247 ай бұрын
@@malonielangthorne2848 here’s some of that attention you were looking for. Ooh wait, never mind. No one cares.
@Valcurdra7 ай бұрын
What is strange, is their meeting seemed to stop the murders for a while, tragically his seemingly genuine love for her, probably saved lives. The poor woman, what a horrible thing to live with, hopefully she saved some women in the period where the murders stopped.
@kimwagoner11478 ай бұрын
43:43 , That Father saying, I forgive you, affected him worse than others saying they hated him. That fathers FAITH is strong. This story was Horrible. I can't imagine the fear they faced. I truly hope these families have found a way to heal.
@lindaarrington93978 ай бұрын
. I know me 2😢
@JamesStreet-tp1vb8 ай бұрын
I think you are right. The effect on him was palpable. That cut him long, hard and deep.
@Propfaqs8 ай бұрын
No. That father’s judgement was twisted by brainwashing. The forgiveness God spoke of is not for raping babies and strangling children nor prostitutes. Forgiveness has boundaries. You do not have to stand up there and virtue signal to get respect. Just speak from the heart about your loss. Trust that God will do the rest. But believe it. Forgiveness will not be part of the judgement.
@cynthiageorge30298 ай бұрын
He may have told him he forgave him but I truly don’t believe that…..
@bloodaonadeline83467 ай бұрын
@@cynthiageorge3029Then you don’t know jesus. Jesus can do the impossible.
@TanukiOkiyo8 ай бұрын
I cannot imagine how traumatized his ex wife must be. You can see that this is still so painful recounting it . I hope the families and she can find peace and healing .
@ddivincenzo11948 ай бұрын
I watched Ridgeway's court proceedings at my home in Massachusetts and was overwhelmed by Linda Rule's dad forgiving Ridgeway. That man had a great heart.
@amandacarden37878 ай бұрын
A better heart than I would have
@heikkijhautanen45768 ай бұрын
I could never forgive if that was me.
@Olivia01548 ай бұрын
WOW :( thats so sad
@andyroid50288 ай бұрын
@GurovskiStop putting words in everyone's mouths. Some people can forgive & some can't. I remember a few things from this video, but the thing that stands out most is NOT Mr. Rule's forgiveness.
@MadeItThruThat7 ай бұрын
Loosing his daughter must’ve left him broken. Definitely showed how strong he is to put his faith in god above the hand he got dealt.
@stur.75027 ай бұрын
I remember back in 2003 i was working right near Hwy167 (W. Valley Hwy.) and Willis St. Upon leaving the shop I was going to turn onto Willis St. as usual to head out for the day. There must have been 40 State Trooper, motorcycle Cops, unmarked detective vehicles etc. all lined along the road. The forensic paleontologists had their canopy tents up and sifting swings and the cadaver dogs working this small area about the size of a largish back yard. The grass is always 3 feet tall there. Turned out it was one of Ridgeway's victims lying 25 feet off the side of the road in that tall grass forever. I must have drove past that spot two or three times a day for a year never knowing, hiding right there 25 feet away in plain sight. Man, you want to talk about the creeps of reality. It still bothers me today, even just sharing this.
@juri_xiii99777 ай бұрын
Damn, chilling, hidden in plain sight..
@ForageGardener7 ай бұрын
@@vf12497439go look for shallow depressions or places where the plants are growing much stronger than right nearby
@alecbaldwin96717 ай бұрын
That’s crazy man. Don’t have any guilt about not noticing or anything!
@patfromamboy7 ай бұрын
I had similar thoughts when Wesley Dodd was killing kids in Vancouver. I thought that I read his electric meter several times while he had killed people and wondered if other killers or future killers were ever near me. It’s creepy.
@fredricksmith-something.21257 ай бұрын
Yeah. They live among us. When I was in the 8th grade there was a 6th grade girl that went missing. I didn't really know her. But, a few days later they found her body in a trash can in her neighborhood a few houses from her cousins. Now, I knew her cousins very well and would walk home with them every day. It was her neighbors family member that had killed her. I still get the creeps thinking about how many times I walked past that trash can in that short time..
@JamesStreet-tp1vb8 ай бұрын
I can't imagine the terror those young girls were going through. You know they had heard about all these bodies being found and then to find themselves in his clutches must have been horrific. I like this judge making him face the families of his victims and allowing them to state their feelings. The one that hurt him most was the father telling him "I forgive you." That got to him.
@hannahhopkinson90448 ай бұрын
I don't think people are will ever be able to fully put themselves into their shoes 😢 their terror will have been insurmountable. My God,there were so many of them though, so so many, and probably many more we will never know about. Horrendous case 😢
@CMoore85398 ай бұрын
@@hannahhopkinson9044Exactly my thoughts! That man had a wife and children but that didn’t mean anything to him! My how could a human being be so extremely cruel like that? It’s beyond my understanding. I feel very sorry for the families of all the young girls. I’d Never forgive it!!
@mandykitson70398 ай бұрын
I got moved by that too what an astonishing thing to do - it got to him when al others didn't seem to :/
@NiteDriv3r8 ай бұрын
Don't be Street Sxxxx
@NiteDriv3r8 ай бұрын
Don't be Street S****
@onewayturtles7 ай бұрын
I didn't realize until just now that my dad worked at the same plant as Ridgway in the early '80s, when the murders were taking place. It's crazy. I grew up hearing about these murders, but by the time he was caught and tried, I was an adult and had moved away from the area, so I didn't pay much attention.
@toernebohmite3 ай бұрын
Your dad is Gary Ridgway.
@HardwareHank023 ай бұрын
@@onewayturtles he worked there for a long time, it’s said that a lot of kenworth trucks were painted by him which is kinda crazy to think people even now are still driving trucks that he painted
@Emily-vs9ju7 ай бұрын
12:00 how can he be outsmarting the police when they had him, they visited him at his home - “there’s no one here” he said - they believed him and didn’t pursue the investigation????
@catladytx7 ай бұрын
That's the part that really stuck with me too. Just think about seeing your significant other in a vehicle kidnapped and following them and finding the vehicle and the house you no there in and the person you witnessed says no one's here and the police say okay and leave. The officer that went to that house that day is trash. I hope he thinks about that everyday
@Emily-vs9ju7 ай бұрын
@@catladytx IKR?? I’d like to think they would have a conscience!!
@Death887584 ай бұрын
@@catladytxI don't think she was kidnapped,she willingly went with him
@KeshuvHuriaMusic5 ай бұрын
the fact that Ted Bundy tried to help investigators catch the green river killer in the 80s adds such a fascinating layer to this story!
@ruleBRITANNIA169028 күн бұрын
Only reason bundy did that was to get involved and to still feel a bit of power
@chrissyknowsitall51708 ай бұрын
Living in Seattle/Tacoma my entire life. First there was Bundy in the 70's but the GreenRiver killer was much more terrifying. I never thought he would of been caught. Thank God he finally was. Watching it unravel in real time was heartbreaking for all the families. I hope he is rotting where ever he is now. RIP to all the ladies🕯🕯🕯🕊🕊🕊
@lindaarrington93978 ай бұрын
This comment touched me I'm in VA. This case was what made me starte watching . Reading and studing serials I read anything I could find on Ridgeway I also didn't think they could catch up to him I started praying and praying over this It broke my heart tht so many families were hurting. I wanted to watch his full court procedures but I never could find that.. don't know why they won't release that info and his full interigati9ns. I'm so sorry the folks living out there was terrorized that way I hope you are ok all of yall. I'd have been a nervous wreck. Respect from Va.
@chrissieroxba29498 ай бұрын
I grew up in Wichita, KS during the BTK murders.. its affected me my whole life! Hugs!
@chrissyknowsitall51708 ай бұрын
@lindaarrington9397 thank you so much. I want to say there wasn't a trial he just plead guilty. And didn't pass GO. Just went straight to jail. He is what a monster is!!!
@chrissyknowsitall51708 ай бұрын
@chrissieroxba2949 oh I totally can relate. During the Bundy yrs, my mom wouldn't let us play in our front yard or ride our bikes. It's like we were on lock down.
@curiouslyme5248 ай бұрын
@@chrissyknowsitall5170Well, for good reason. That must have been terrifying, living life as that was all going on. Hugs.
@rejaneflorinda61627 ай бұрын
All the tears and pain were not able to move Ridgeway. But forgiveness did. It was the only time you could see some emotion in him. That is powerful.
@seahag61187 ай бұрын
And I think what ppl don't understand, we have to forgive or we aren't forgiven. I'm sure ole Ridgeway realized if this guy could forgive him God could.. but hard to say bc you know.. he was just feeling sorry for himself🤷♀️ Anyways I was more worried about Bundy bc both myself & my BFF were straight up his type & the right age.. he just loved the good-hearted kinda gal✌🏼😎
@Angel-mi6qs24 күн бұрын
With his father being hateful towards women I imagine he’s accustomed to hatred he can brush it off, what these killers aren’t used to is others humanizing them. They spend so much time dehumanizing their victims and everyone around them that at a certain point they end up dehumanizing themselves in a way and after so long being seen as a monster they aren’t used to forgiveness
@jaimebanks837723 күн бұрын
@Angel-mi6qs The serial killers feel inhuman, in a sense, well before they dehumanize others via serial murder. This story is tragic for everyone involved.
@FrankMorrisAZ1441.4 күн бұрын
He did that so Ridgeway would remember his words, leading to them torturing Ridgeway for life, very psychological words that will play with his head
@oz21898 ай бұрын
The capacity for depravity within the human psyche is scary
@scottricci50637 ай бұрын
Yep, surrendering to the deranged compulsions and succumbing to the influences of the darkest temptations is the inherent trait of the weak flesh.
@slabbusterrtr76907 ай бұрын
A human is the most evil creature in the planet meanest to
@johnd5457 ай бұрын
Truly....
@grrrrbabyverygrrr81656 ай бұрын
In the male psyche*
@warwarneverchanges49376 ай бұрын
@@grrrrbabyverygrrr8165 Cause woman are not capable of comitting crime. 😂😂😂
@Queen.AnneBoleyn8 ай бұрын
This psychopath passed several lie detector tests. That's why their results should be taken very lightly. Obviously. This book by Ann Rule, Green River Running Red, was absolutely one of my favorites.
@bloodaonadeline83467 ай бұрын
yes the tests can be beaten but they can often tell when someone is being deceitful of course if lying doesn’t affect you neurologically or physically the test isn’t gonna detect what isn’t there.
@derp1957 ай бұрын
@@bloodaonadeline8346 They're also so unreliable it's basically pseudoscience. It's more of an intimidation tactic than a way to discover the truth.
@seahag61187 ай бұрын
Psychopathy comes from sociopathy.. even sociopaths who don't commit crimes can't pass them bc of the very nature of sociopathy🤷♀️ so read up on that so you understand what Im saying✌🏼
@jamesmaybrick20017 ай бұрын
polygraphs are junk pseudoscience. The only real use they have is as plot devices in tv shows/movies. They are not a real thing.
@vegemitesandwich817 ай бұрын
That's why they are not admissible in court. Guilty can pass, innocent can fail. It's junk science, but an investigative tool nonetheless.
@lilnikki32338 ай бұрын
I lived close to where Gary Ridgeway worked when arrested. For years women in that area were filled with fear and so relieved when the case was finally solved.
@coffeebeanB8 ай бұрын
Linda's father is truly someone to admire, he even made a psychopath shed tears and feel sorry for himself and perhaps even regret it just a little bit like a normal human being, forgiveness is so hard to truly achieve, yet so powerful
@michelehamilton9617 ай бұрын
Why does the father making the killer cry such a big deal to so many people? Why is “forgiveness “ for this murderer the biggest deal? I feel it comes less from “Christianity” than the fact that you don’t care about the lives of these victims. They weren’t real victims to you so his “conversion “ is more important.
@emeralddaughters7 ай бұрын
That was quite powerful.
@autumn1111555517 ай бұрын
I hope it made Ridgeway feel some remorse. But I can’t help feel that it’s not the father’s place to forgive him, because he wasn’t the one killed.
@Audreylalaland7 ай бұрын
Psychopaths have no capacity to feel empathy they just can’t. He was definitely not feeling anything . Probably” it “was thinking that is what a normal human would do and managed to cry out of shame. They are barely human beings and most of them are in power and in finance only a small percentage kills
@hopeisthething19657 ай бұрын
He has no right to forgive the murderer. The crime was done against someone else.
@auntiemeemaw38858 ай бұрын
If the first police had just followed up with the pick-up truck, many lives may have been saved.
@kenw22258 ай бұрын
They did follow up. They went to the house. Sorry but we're not letting the govt run rampant in our homes. I know women get emotional and throw logic out the window , but the govt is prevented from doing such things for a reason. It's to protect all of us from the govt. Yes I'd like if they had caught him that day too, but they have no grounds for just coming in your home. Imagine if someone says you're holding someone in your home and the cops come in . Dump out all your cereal and pasta boxes , throwing it all on the floor, cutting open your furniture, dumping all your dressers , cutting your mattresses. And just overall trashing everything in your home... thats what they do when the come in peoples homes. Even opening holes in walls sometimes. All without any compensation to fix damages or the emotional distress. Keep in mind, all your neighbors see the 10 cop cars and flashing lights , the whole community knows. Youre assuled guilty off public rumors... Just cause someone says you did something , doesnt give the cops or govt the ability to do what you think they should be able to. On top of all that, there's no way of knowing if she was even still there when the cop knocked at the door
@dolorestroeller47348 ай бұрын
That was so negligent!
@all_avation7 ай бұрын
I don't understand the family - I would have barged in if I thought my daughter was in that house.
@auntiemeemaw38857 ай бұрын
@@all_avation Me too and took the risk of arrest.
@jadesluv7 ай бұрын
A stakeout could have saved dozens of lives, who were those two stupid cops that talked to Ridgeway
@fullmetalscotsman13068 ай бұрын
He wasn't outsmarting homicide detectives. Total incompetence that the family found the van the girl was in, and they let it drop.
@nicholaszikos38517 ай бұрын
Spoken like a true serial killer mother in the making Look at the mothers of serial killers
@adamirishconundrum8517 ай бұрын
The cops were letting him get away with it because the victims were criminals
@rachael_grey7 ай бұрын
@adamirishconundrum851 Yeah, their prejudice caused some real reluctance. Luckily wiser heads eventually came into leadership. The early failures changed how King Co. approached cases like this.
@Abebarthol7 ай бұрын
How dare you say such disgusting hate speech. And KZbin allows this kind of comment?!?!
@consv7 ай бұрын
That's how I felt when I saw that too.
@bradr21428 ай бұрын
Good to see Ann Rule a great crime writer. The author of many great books. My favorite was the want ad killer. RIP Ann. You know this is gonna be good with her on it.
@lorettasearcy14718 ай бұрын
Ann Rule was an amazing human being. R.I.P Ann Rule gone but never forgotten.
@timothyclark17548 ай бұрын
Who?
@alisong23288 ай бұрын
She died in 2015.
@beckyboo14338 ай бұрын
Yes, great author ❤️❤️ feel like I know her from how many books I've read by her
@lorettasearcy14718 ай бұрын
@@beckyboo1433 Same here and she used to be a 👮 officer herself.
@smokeyp75657 ай бұрын
@@beckyboo1433 fancy seeing you!!! What a great documentary!!
@TheLawgirlnyc8 ай бұрын
The second story - my word… she was way too chill. “He raped the baby and bashed its head in with a hatchet”, then she talked about him (“ma daddy”) like he was just a scamp doing silly stuff. I hope it’s a coping mechanism of some sort.
@heathernikki57348 ай бұрын
Agreed 😵💫😳
@MarkOrourke-rh5fu8 ай бұрын
He probably treated her like a princess!! Honestly..
@aramedt8 ай бұрын
She really pissed me off, talking about her daddy like she is proud of him
@derekf90178 ай бұрын
Obviously she disassociates with it thru verbalization
@mphillips01ify7 ай бұрын
Apples don't fall far from the tree. The creepy daughter has the same genes as her psychopath father. She is a digusting creature.
@Trend_inginfashion7 ай бұрын
The guy who forgave him proved that forgiveness is the best weapon against any form of evil!
@dmichael1006 ай бұрын
It may be a powerful psychological tool to process and live with the grief and ramifications of having a loved one murdered, but its not really a weapon against evil. Forgiveness didn't stop the killing from happening and doesn't do anything about Gary killing again. Incarcerating him stopped him killing whether anyone forgave him or not.
@paxsopranodynasty7555Ай бұрын
@dmichael100 Agreed . Everyone has their faith, I'm not here to knock it. It just seems to me that people take " God forgives " to such drastic extremes. Maybe it's a way to make ourselves feel better about living amongst all this evil. Just my opinion. I don't know the right way , if there is such a thing . I'm not God . But I pray for his victims and their families. I couldn't care less about someone like him who causes this much pain .
@FrankMorrisAZ1441.4 күн бұрын
He did that so Ridgeway would remember his words, leading to them torturing Ridgeway for life, very psychological words that will play with his head
@FrankMorrisAZ1441.4 күн бұрын
He did that so Ridgeway would remember his words, leading to them torturing Ridgeway for life, very psychological words that will play with his head
@lindadavis5668Күн бұрын
I swear to Zeus and Ra and Wankan Tanka, Odin, and Altijera I believe you are all dead in the imaginations of people. Slowly by slowly Science proves the Bible is man made, ego driven, fairy tales.
@joshuabrooks49077 ай бұрын
I was a chauffeur in Olympia for a few years. Every time I went to Sea-Tac (the airport), I'd always go to the gas station right there at 176th and international Blvd (old 99). I could just feel the presence of all the victims of Gary Ridgway, as I drove south along the Blvd. It got so bad that I found a different route whenever I left the airport. Also, R. I. P. Ann Rule!
@angelacrutcher23088 ай бұрын
But he's scared to die. What a sick insane coward.
@janetm89028 ай бұрын
It is beyond comprehensible that people are capable of such horrors upon others - human or animal! So sick - it's scary as hell!+
@TraceyDevine-bo1kp8 ай бұрын
I read the book about Pee Wee Gaskins and this video just touched on his crimes. He used to fill his victims with molten lead in all their orifices why they were still alive.Truly horrific.
@Randomai4118 ай бұрын
It’s not surprising Netflix as brainwashing people into accepting violence and other acts as normal when in more censorship when it comes to violent act on Netflix and other apps
@RiaLTodd7 ай бұрын
Nah, it's comprehensible. What's truly remarkable is the level of compassion and forgiveness shown by that father.
@oneoflokis7 ай бұрын
@@TraceyDevine-bo1kpDid he? Wow... 🤮
@Cognitively_m_paired_4_Kamala7 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, that's how some folks get their kicks. Hard thing for a normal person to relate to
@clpr20238 ай бұрын
I think the daughter knew more back then than she admits. She knew people were disappearing yet did nothing. She describes him raping a baby like it’s nothing. No emotion at all. Idk just very odd.
@adriennem79278 ай бұрын
I think I'm more traumatized by her than anything, his daughter.
@RockyR8187 ай бұрын
SO TRUE. She expressed more emotion over her friend being killed than the sexual assault, hacking, and killing of that TODDLER. That is very sick.
@kymross64057 ай бұрын
Lets all agree shes not in her right mind. Shes like a child
@Screaminchief557 ай бұрын
Which one are you talking about?
@Nephilimfields7 ай бұрын
@@Screaminchief55 the 2nd account..., PeeWee's daughter
@imeldahiggins-wiffle83027 ай бұрын
At the same time the Green River killings were happening in Seattle area, Robert Hansen was killing women in Anchorage....he owned a bakery and would fly the women out of town and hunt them down...i was a young kid when that happened...scary.
@Juju-l3o5 ай бұрын
I watched a couple movies about that, one with John Cusack it was frightening.
@JustMomHere8 ай бұрын
My heart breaks for the young women who were such victims of child abuse and neglect.💔
@anthonycassata51524 ай бұрын
So it is messed up that girls become prostitutes, no doubt, but are you saying that you feel sooty because they were abused and that’s why they get into this kind of lifestyle?🤔🤔
@teresalacaze92414 ай бұрын
You mean the dudes. Wake up.
@Indiegirl0077 ай бұрын
Hearing that victim's dad give him forgiveness....and seeing his daughter's killer crumble like that.....my god. I got chills. That was POWERFUL. It was like with a word, he became undone. It was over.
@cynthiaarrowsmith57098 ай бұрын
The wife and everyone who knew him talks about how normal and meek he was. I guess that’s why he went so long undetected. No one would have even thought he was capable.
@Tooeasy9118 ай бұрын
This is truly insane.. this channels documentaries are always top notch 👌
@Levikarose797 ай бұрын
I lived in Greenwater as a kid, a small mountain town through which the Green River flows. I was under 10yrs old but I recall peering up and down the river banks to make sure there were no dead people or serial killers before I went for my swim!
@shaggyrumplenutz1610Ай бұрын
That's horrible. When the Atlanta Child Murderer was still active, I remember always being terrified of strangers.
@Levikarose79Ай бұрын
@@shaggyrumplenutz1610 Well I hope that didn't stay with you for too long. Was that killer ever caught? I don't recall that story if I've heard it. As for me, It's more scary to look back on I think, remembering what an ignorant little child I was, having no real idea the horrors some people are capable of inflicting on others. I knew about the things going on, but without a real understanding of what that meant. Sure I peeked up and down the river for serial killers, but what on earth was I gonna do if I saw one, half a mile from home at a secluded, wooded, river bend?! /facepalm
@shaggyrumplenutz1610Ай бұрын
@Levikarose79 yeah, they caught him. His name is Wayne Williams.
@sarahjanegaltrey28908 ай бұрын
I've been disappointed and bullied throughout life. Mistreated and abused also. Would not dream of any violence towards a soul. No bloody excuse. At all. He is mad
@CraigBarron-z4f8 ай бұрын
Amen!!.....Same here!!!
@eldiputacio77537 ай бұрын
Same here 🤠
@kama76526 ай бұрын
I hope your life is fantastic now. Best wishes for a wonderful future,
@TwoPawz-137 ай бұрын
I met Gary and a friend of his at a bar I went to. I once followed them both to his friends house and bought something and he lived right off military Road close to his dumping place. His buddy carried a pistol in his back side where your crack is and seen it because he was heavy and when he reached forward you could see it .I have always thought his friend was in on it, because of where he lived.Gary at the bar was always pleasant and smiling , but who knew he was this sick man after he left .i knew of a real pretty girl who worked in the same plant he did and omg how lucky she was.
@heyheyhey333514 ай бұрын
As far as I know, all of his victims were prostitutes. Still, I'm sure it was a terrifying revelation to be a woman and to have associated with Ridgway in any way.
@sarahconn32858 ай бұрын
You should do an episode on the Atlanta child murder that case happened in the late 70s early 80s blew my mind
@MarkOrourke-rh5fu8 ай бұрын
Was never aware of that case, must check it out, or maybe I shouldn't, anything to do with kids very tough watch
@sarahconn32858 ай бұрын
@@MarkOrourke-rh5fu yes it was he also kill adults to and he threw the victims in the river so check it out
@MarkOrourke-rh5fu8 ай бұрын
@@sarahconn3285 thanks Sarah gonna search for it next now , appreciate it..
@sarahconn32858 ай бұрын
@@MarkOrourke-rh5fu welcome
@jon-jo5pn7 ай бұрын
There are videos on KZbin already.
@derekbaker7778 ай бұрын
They made a movie type of documentary about the Green River Killer on Tubi TV, and it was a captivating and powerful movie. Law enforcement was about to give up on trying to catch the serial killer except for one determined Deputy who was the one who ended up solving the case and catching Gary Ridgeway, and it was an overlooked detail and statement made by a young lady about a scratch she left on Gary's arm that he covered up by pouring acid on it, and is what lead to the Deputy solving the case after almost two decades, and Gary even fooled his own wife who didn't have a clue about his horrific and evil behavior, and I don't care if his victims were prostitutes nobody deserves to die and be murdered the way Gary did to these ladies.
@antiochiaadtaurum37868 ай бұрын
why would you say ' I don't care if his victims were prostitutes ' - reconsider your use of language
@derekbaker7778 ай бұрын
@@antiochiaadtaurum3786: It shouldn't matter what kind of lifestyles ppl lead nobody deserves to be raped and murdered is the point I was trying to make that everyone seemed to get.
@Tracy4098 ай бұрын
@derekbaker him and ted bundy operated on same patch ted bundy also was offered a plea deal life with out parole he did not want the deal because he genuinely thought he would get off
@Tracy4098 ай бұрын
@@derekbaker777 there’s a series called death row stories with a German bloke and he did a lot of interviews with inmates on Texas males on death row “before their scheduled execution “…a lot get their lawyers to go to court/supreme courts to get a stay for this that and the 3rd saying lethal injection protocol with the drugs is cruel unusual punishment im sorry what about their victims why should they be able to fall asleep have a peaceful execution no I’m sorry there was alot of said botched executions and I am sorry there is no such thing as a botched execution
@almaarnold73328 ай бұрын
She made the statement that not even prostitutes deserve to die because sadly there are people out here who think these women should be fair game for those willing to murder.
@DonnaGarner-qi7ej8 ай бұрын
It’s never a mannequin
@jjr17288 ай бұрын
Sometimes a labrador is just a golden retriever. And sometimes, a mannequin is just a mannequin
@neversaw7 ай бұрын
Everytime I watch one of these shows and they say "they thought it was a mannequin" I end up singing "it's never a mannequin" in an array of tunes because it's said so often
@DustinKisling-v2b7 ай бұрын
In my hometown a couple of teens were stealing mannequins and wrapping them in clear plastic with duct tape where the mouth was and fake blood all over them. Some were left in woods some were left on creek banks and some were weighted down and put in the creeks. It was hilarious and creepy at the same time
@DustinKisling-v2b7 ай бұрын
@Gurovski teenagers and their pranks I guess
@ProudGoyim6667 ай бұрын
it's usually a womannequin
@dodobrd12387 ай бұрын
They say their is power in forgiveness. You can feel the power of this poor fathers words as he forgives and see the exact moment they touched Ridgway in a way no hateful or unforgiven words could!! That is power. I understand the families who couldn't or wouldn't but watching that made me feel something that hate has never been able to do.
@jollan17473 ай бұрын
Amen!
@lorettasearcy14718 ай бұрын
I'm praying for the victims,their families and friends. I love and appreciate Faye and Dave Reichert ,they're amazing. They never gave up on these women.
@anthonycassata51524 ай бұрын
Well after the people are dead, there’s no sense at all praying for them, it’s too late for that. Now as far as praying for family members or friends, that’s a little different. And what exactly are you going to pray for them?
@poerava8 ай бұрын
Brilliantly produced Some of his daughters comments were very disturbing.
@neversaw7 ай бұрын
I feel like she's so desensitised to the horrific things as being almost normal because she knew her dad as a kind man to her so she knows how bad the things he did were but mentally it's like a different person or just a story she read not someone who she loves. The trauma has got to have messed up her brain!
@waternineeightlotus28697 ай бұрын
I agree. I often had the feeling she was proud of her "Daddy". She honestly gave me shivers.
@linalicious4157 ай бұрын
Omg me too! Instantly i thought omfg she's proud of her father!@waternineeightlotus2869
@Alphacentauri8197 ай бұрын
@@neversawyours is one of the most aware, connecting the dots, comments I’ve seen. I’ve studied trauma, intergenerational trauma, attachment theory, CPTSD, and more…and so many are clueless and making the most ignorant comments. I’m so glad you get it
@Juju-l3o5 ай бұрын
Yeah she looks off herself, who knows she could’ve followed his steps the way she was praising him had he not got caught.
@headishome84528 ай бұрын
Vulnerable young teenagers and women are still going missing... there are still SK's out there.
@TransoceanicOutreach8 ай бұрын
FBI estimate there are currently 60 active SKs in the US.
@DTM938 ай бұрын
Crazy they can't find them given modern day technology and DNA cameras etc aswell.
@soniZX018 ай бұрын
"The wages of sin is death." Romans 6:23
@kimberlyhood40958 ай бұрын
@@TransoceanicOutreachthere's more than that if you add the trucker's that are doing the same thing. They estimated around 250 that pick up the girls in one state and dump their bodies in another making it almost impossible to identify the remains.
@kimberlyhood40958 ай бұрын
@@DTM93that's how they just got LISK, he threw away his pizza crusts in a trashcan in the middle of Manhattan. They also matched his wife's hair to a strand found on a victim.
@DesertGrownWeed7 ай бұрын
This is the first KZbin channel I’ve actually tuned back into my video I had previously started watching. Well made. 🇺🇸
@vocal-hm3yo8 ай бұрын
The daughter in the second story is something seriously wrong with. How can she still call this murderer 'my daddy' and talk about these hideous crimes without the slightest show of emotion. She seems heartless too.
@hannahhopkinson90448 ай бұрын
She sounds a little bit obsessed with " Ma Daddy" she's seriously off isn't she
@makeuplayshaa8 ай бұрын
As I'm looking at her, I thought of the term "raccon eyes" and she's definitely off.
@heathernikki57348 ай бұрын
I think she’s just been messed up from birth
@MarkOrourke-rh5fu8 ай бұрын
Her father is the worse serial killer in us history I believe, I think it has probably messed her up some what!!
@cpparkinson51097 ай бұрын
@@MarkOrourke-rh5fu Mmm yeah that's debatable. Believe Samuel Little holds that title, as much as Peewee would like that crown.
@icychill1057 ай бұрын
To this day my mother is afraid to drive past the green river even though Gary Ridgeway has been in prison since 2001. I cant imagine how shaken the actual towns people are having lived through this.
@Juju-l3o5 ай бұрын
I used to live up the hill from the green river. I would get that eerie feeling whenever I drove by. That area in general was never a good area, there were other bodies being found there unrelated to the green river killer.
@vocal-hm3yo8 ай бұрын
Can't even listen to his daughter. She talks as though she is proud of her 'daddy's' deeds. So sickening.
@alisong23288 ай бұрын
She testified against him. She also warned officials about the plan to murder someone in jail. I think she's horrified but used to it by now.
@johncenaraw17 ай бұрын
😢 trauma makes people do weird things though
@joannecoyne38928 ай бұрын
That daughter is nearly as nuts as the father
@cowoverthemoo8 ай бұрын
She seems proud of her dad.
@dogman07118 ай бұрын
She's definitely a couple of sandwiches she of a picnic.
@kenw22258 ай бұрын
Maybe he was
@JenessaAndKingston8 ай бұрын
@@alfiesdad4757maybe he was to her. But idk if i could ever speak to my dad if he did all these things
@denjack25428 ай бұрын
The ROTTEN apple doesn't fall far from the tree. DISGUSTING.... with a sick, twisted smirk on her face.
@LoloO428 ай бұрын
Pee wee's daughter belongs in prison, too. She actually admits that she knew he was killing people. And, she giggled when she talked about him raping her cousin! Very sick woman.
@f1o18iwi98 ай бұрын
who knows what he did with her also, if anything she sounds like a proud child. calling him daddy.
@wrokgoddess8 ай бұрын
I'm sure she's illiterate and probably born in the backwoods with only him to talk to..
@denjack25428 ай бұрын
Twisted, demented, and sick
@BunnySlippers828 ай бұрын
Is there a documentary you recommend? I don't know much about him or the case.
@angelacrutcher23088 ай бұрын
Disgusting
@dr.zippymcscoots87258 ай бұрын
Gary Ridgeway and Dennis Raider were so similar in what they did, that many people thought they were the same dude.
@kloveshimself5 ай бұрын
@@dr.zippymcscoots8725 agreed!
@Juju-l3o5 ай бұрын
How were they similar? Only similarity they had was they were very devoted to church.
@gullwingstorm8578 ай бұрын
Wow, maybe you could put in fifteen more ads, because thirty just isn’t enough.
@CraigBarron-z4f8 ай бұрын
Buy You Tube premium and you'll never see an ad.
@juneyshu61977 ай бұрын
Worse than tv.
@HelenLangSA7 ай бұрын
Get KZbin premium…It’s really cheap. NO ads hehe
@candiced.68237 ай бұрын
Ad free for me. There are ad free KZbin apps you can get for free.
@Rando_Shyte7 ай бұрын
Brave browser on android, opera on ios, and ublock origin on windows. Simple. I haven't seen a youtube ad in like 10 years
@irishhoopers68997 ай бұрын
It really grates on me to hear him called "prolific". I usually associate the word with a great amount of work, like prolific authors and so forth. I think he should be called the "worst", not the most "prolific" it sounds like praise to my ears.
@GordonBrevity4 ай бұрын
You're right. The way they buy in to this being some sort of competition - who can kill the most? Ridgway's "body count" is "unrivalled". There was one on Israel Keyes that was almost drooling at points. True crime still doesn't get it right.
@Ronskie668 ай бұрын
I counted 52 Ma Daddie's. I could be out by a hundred though.
@UnknownUser-fe5zu7 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@warwarneverchanges49376 ай бұрын
Ma Daddy said its worms in the water
@BenGarrott8 ай бұрын
Fun fact: The lead detective that caught the Green River Killer is the frontrunner in the polls to become governor of Washington this November.
@rachael_grey7 ай бұрын
Reichert was a good detective. He's a bit of a git, otherwise.
@kalanisplash7 ай бұрын
@@rachael_grey Reichert is a Republican. Truck Painter Gary Ridgeway did not destroy Seattle, the Democrat party destroyed Seattle with BLM Antifa and Palestinian Jew haters. Here in Portland Oregon I grew up with Green Bay Packer Running Back Randall Woodfield. Woodfield would look up prior high school and college friends during off season for dating and serial killing.
@GS-zc4sk7 ай бұрын
Gov Insleez was the pile that removed the D penalty in WA. Saving the lives of convicted Serials in WA. On the tax payers dime.
@Shell20147 ай бұрын
Washington loves democrats and chaos to much to vote republican.
@clifforddriver94348 ай бұрын
They happen to be everywhere. I personally lived in Oak Harbor, WA, in the 60'. Went to Jr high school and high school with another one of your serial killers, Robert Yates. Later moved to Southern California and came in contact with another one of them. Gerald Parker, who's on death row in San Quinton. Had a roommate in Southern California who had contact with another serial killer as a 12, year old. The individual there name was William Bonin. He happened to be the first individual executed by lethal injection. Like i said, these individuals are more common than you think.
@theodoradamianidis8 ай бұрын
Scary!
@Juju-l3o5 ай бұрын
Oh my !
@brittneyakabeezus2608 ай бұрын
2:48 Thank you, Detective for your service to bring justice to this evil entity. I am so apologetic for your past & it’s poignant that you grew up to see JUST IS SERVED!! 💛
@verabolton7 ай бұрын
That daughter of Gaskin shouldn't be given any attention. She's one of the most disturbing person I've ever seen.
@roseannrook78977 ай бұрын
Just a typical inbred Appalachia type...
@kloveshimself5 ай бұрын
agreed
@annomanatofu36284 ай бұрын
She is repulsive and exploits her vile father for her own gain. Her using 'half pint' and 'daddy' and her murder tour are truly the lowest class thing i have seen.
@sgardi25 ай бұрын
I knew a guy that looks so much like him and, oddly enough, worked as an automotive painter. He was very strange and used to say crazy things. He hold a box cutter and say " it only takes this much of a blade to kill a man." I believe it was in the early 90s
@jennifermeans958 ай бұрын
They focused on his mother but he also had an unhealthy relationship with his father. Homemade depravity!
@lindaarrington93978 ай бұрын
I think the same way His parents twisted his mind That's 5 sure But I also think he had this evil in him Born bad.
@melisentiapheiffer30348 ай бұрын
He had a " dead mother" complex. His relationship with his mother defined who he became.
@TipTheScales277 ай бұрын
@@melisentiapheiffer3034Way to massively downplay his father calling women whores and taking him with to his prostitute excursions. He wouldn’t hate women without his dad putting those thoughts into his head!
@judepower44257 ай бұрын
Yeah, it's always mum's fault .... NOT
@melisentiapheiffer30347 ай бұрын
@@judepower4425 I'm not saying it's ALL mom's. Don't be thick!
@kellyanderson76247 ай бұрын
It amazes me that these serial killers can lead normal lives and have families.
@ceriliz289Ай бұрын
@kellyanderson7624 me too ,it's unbelievable
@TeamFish158 ай бұрын
How in the holy FnCK could the police not associate all of these missing people with Gaskins?? Many were close relations!! And the daughter knew of people coming to their house but never being seen again??? A lot of blood on the police and daughter’s hands.
@TamiTribbiani-im1go4 ай бұрын
She was child and probably brainwashed by him.
@BittyBitsBOOKS3 ай бұрын
As someone from the south hearing an accent come out of his daughters mouth that sounds like a lot of my family members just sends chills. The way she calls him “daddy” is such a wholesome Deep South colloquialism so juxtapositioned against the fact she’s talking about the atrocities he did while interspersing a term of endearment is just chilling.
@bearxbunny18358 ай бұрын
The sheriff Dave Reichart is the reason Ridgway was caught, HE was the one who pushed for the DNA testing to be done and he did so on his very first day as a sheriff. He hasn't been mentioned at all so far into this documentary which is so disrespectful
@kimthomas87178 ай бұрын
I was a teenager when the task force was formed and he had brown hair … I grew older and had children, his hair was white/ grey when he retired from the force . That guy was determined & gave his lively hood to this .
@bearxbunny18358 ай бұрын
@@kimthomas8717 He gave everything to catch him and this video doesn't ever even say his name
@adriennem79278 ай бұрын
Amen for this Sheriff and all the people that had to deal handling of all those poor bodies left behind, in both stories!!! How anyone could sleep after being involved in finding them, it's amazing that they could finish the lives they had. Hopefully. Bcuz of these sic monsters. That daughter??? Well she sure knew lots & lots, didn't she, sweet Ole lil thing...😢.. what did he do to her?
@lorettasearcy14718 ай бұрын
@@bearxbunny1835 Yes he did and I admire him greatly for seeing these women as human beings. Instead of trash because of what they did for a living,we're all human beings no matter your race or the color of your skin,or sexual preferences God made all of us. And Jesus Christ is Hebrew not black white or Hispanic.
@Saber_Matrix8 ай бұрын
John Ritter would've been the perfect cast for the Green River Killer
@titopuente61498 ай бұрын
Died too young. Great actor. RIP
@reginafromrio8 ай бұрын
Ugh i can't stand how people call them prolific. I know what the word means. I attribute it to artists and poets. Someone worthy of recognition.
@kenw22258 ай бұрын
Hes probably the most prolific. Bundy or him
@MarkOrourke-rh5fu8 ай бұрын
I agree with that totally, not a word I'd use either
@Ariadne76-k3d7 ай бұрын
Yes, it makes it sound as if they were producing something of merit!
@westernhemisphere22058 ай бұрын
Just because ridgeway is gone doesn't mean it's over. There are more of these sadistic psychopaths out there. Don't put yourself in an obvious dangerous situation. Prostitution is not only illegal it's also one of the most dangerous situations a person can put theirself in.
@marcomoreno67487 ай бұрын
It's dangerous because it is illegal, and forced into the black market Countries with legalized and regulated prostitution don't have these problems.
@amymiller49317 ай бұрын
Obvious danger???
@TamiTribbiani-im1go4 ай бұрын
@@amymiller4931 Being a prostitute is putting yourself in obvious danger.
@stargazing001013 күн бұрын
Cannot put into words on how I felt at the end of the Pewe Gaskin story. That poor daughter of his loves him still dearly
@jennifermeans958 ай бұрын
The second SK story sounds beyond surreal. It didn't matter who the victim was (family or stranger), reason for the murder (felt betrayed to an interacial relationship) or place (in the woods or near his home or prison). He was thief, rapist and murder. Three-time loser!
@nicolefournel-hartery81875 ай бұрын
My sister once told me that she lacked the compassion gene. I said "Do you love your kids? Would you do anything for them if they were hurt or needed you?". She said yes. So I replied "You have compassion, you just chose not to use it when it comes to other people. You use that excuse to give you permission to treat others any way you want. You use that excuse to push people away, to protect yourself from being hurt."
@lorettasearcy14718 ай бұрын
Why wasn't Sheriff Dave Reichert shown? He helped capture Gary Ridgeway.
@Khd3873 ай бұрын
Judith seems like the sweetest woman. So sincere. My heart breaks for her. So many victims.
@StephASMR8 ай бұрын
Why are these girls references as ‘someone’s daughter’ or ‘someone’s sister’. They are SOMEONE in and of themselves
@marcomoreno67487 ай бұрын
The word of The Lord is clear. Women, know your place. It is beside your husband. I pray you will be delivered from Satan's grip and unto Jesus Christ pur Lord Amen 🙏
@eddiejames98277 ай бұрын
Well, they were someone's daughters, sisters, and mothers. Regardless of the life they were living, there were people who loved them.
@StephASMR7 ай бұрын
@@eddiejames9827 yes I absolutely agree with you, they are ALSO someone’s daughter/mother etc. I should have been clearer in my initial post. But we don’t have to be something to someone to be someone ourselves. I say this because for those sad souls that have lost their way and have no one to grieve them… they are also worthy.
@StephASMR7 ай бұрын
@@marcomoreno6748 yeah nah!!! My place is where I want it to be. ALONGSIDE my husband is one of those places. But I’ll decide. Thanks
@StratospheralNurse7 ай бұрын
@marcomoreno6748 dude shut up. How about know your own place, which isn't telling the rest of us how to live our lives.
@geihoowa8 ай бұрын
The narrator keeps referring to the victims as “women”. Many of them were under 18. They were children. Unfortunately, abuse at home creates runaways. Runaways turn to prostitution as a means to make money. That does not mean they are not children. Underage, abused, runaway, desperate, children.
@laragara8 ай бұрын
Thank you---- that was annoying me too and it's done a lot in crime stories---- it helps to _lessen_ the crime (apparently)---- cause if it's women, meh!!!!
@BeaIEngio8 ай бұрын
Of the 49 known victims, 20 were under 18. Many were 15 and Wendy Stephens was 14. It is indeed bizarre that he is not regarded as a child killer, but a prostitute killer.
@randomtourist66568 ай бұрын
With all those victims in such a small town, within such a small period of time, having even had a witness see a truck take a victim to a house they knock at, that to me just tells you either;- 1. The police force was not top notch 2. Some seriously slept on the job. 3. The police simply did not go over and above due to the victims being from the red light district
@msreneerr11098 ай бұрын
Right bc I'm not understanding why more wasn't done the killings SHOULD'VE been stopped a long time ago. There was hardly any investigation done like they went STRAIGHT to the killers house I'm truly not understanding their logic this is beyond ridiculous
@Dan-tt8sn3 ай бұрын
Yea. It’s like they wanted to let him keep cleaning the streets until they decided it was enough.
@billymcswain63205 ай бұрын
I remember reading a book on serial killers in 2000 right before I joined Navy, his case was the last entry in the book. Said cops suspected who did it but never had enough evidence to make an arrest. Then in late 2001 at meps I saw news flash, green river killed caught through DNA and I'm surprised remembering that book I read
@guitarsoundsaroundАй бұрын
It was a very tiny fine droplet of paint, that lead to the discovery who did it. I don’t recall all the details but that paint type was unique only to that manufacturer. And they narrowed it down getting employee records who had access to that paint from there.
@Raztiana6 ай бұрын
These otherwise kind and hardworking detectives need to stop talking about female victims as "someone's mother/sister/daughter". They were someone in their own right, not just a family member to someone else.
@danv87184 ай бұрын
Exactly. They talk as if they weren't someone's mother/sister/daughter they wouldn't matter at all.
@jimmya53983 ай бұрын
You both need to shut up and stop being dumb. It’s not that deep. People have much stronger feelings for their mothers, daughters and sisters than strangers. They are just saying it’s tragic, that they are important. If your daughter was a victim you’d be crying for weeks. Because it’s a stranger, you’re not going to cry.
@jamesgolder3737 ай бұрын
Watching that green river killer documentary and seeing how horrific his killing spree was it made me realise how lucky I am to have the best dad on the planet and a man who has looked after me and my mum my entire life .....r.i.p to all those victims of his atrocities and I hope the families managed to find some solace after he was captured and thrown in prison for the rest of his life...respect to all the victims and their families
@harleyadams45518 ай бұрын
Ann Rule is by far my favourite true crime writer.
@frahnzenberg75617 ай бұрын
Real Stories has always been my fav.
@tinygrim8 ай бұрын
This one blows my mind ..
@danandlaura7078 ай бұрын
Sad times for sure x
@ashleywhitethisisabsolutel10045 ай бұрын
My deepest condolences go out to all of the victims of this evil man, Gary Ridgeway, I pray that all of these souls are all now at peace.😢
@fiberpoet62507 ай бұрын
The Gary Ridgeway case was straight up incompetence. They said they were trying, but they weren’t. Gary Ridgeway could have been so easily busted with a few undercover cops. He picked up the girls from the same place and dumped their bodies around the same area. Uncover cops and some stakeouts would have saved so many lives.
@heyheyhey333514 ай бұрын
They did use undercover cops. There was even a time Ridgway picked up an undercover and was arrested for it. Ridgway also didn't pick up all of his victims in the same area. And while there were clusters where he left victims, he spanned out, in some cases even going across state lines. There were actually multiple people who were considered strong suspects (Ridgway included). I highly recommend you read The Search for the Green River Killer to get a better idea of why the case was so difficult (pre-DNA forensics, at least).
@BeautifullyBroken10227 ай бұрын
I’m so creeped out by the daughter saying “My daddy” at the beginning of every sentence. She doesn’t seem to comprehend the horrendous actions of her father. And she has a scary lack of empathy or emotions. Very strange
@MM-ig1iv8 ай бұрын
That guy was very disturbed! I wish people could never get like this and we'd all stay rather similar to each other as far as characteristics and personality's. But it's not a perfect world is it.. This guy doesn't qualify for a human being in my book. A complete monster! Edit: both of these guy's are. But Gary I remember as a little kid hearing about the green river killer on the news. "before he was caught" it used to scare me.
@kohinarec65808 ай бұрын
It is important to remember that these homicidal psychopaths are humans and often very normal on the outside, at least at the first glance. They are not some phantoms or monsters but very dangerous humans. I agree they are very inhumane and cruel and I have no sympathy for them
@irvingzisman32525 ай бұрын
Gary Ridgeway is my all-time favorite serial killer. Thanks for this killer film!
@kamalapati1548 ай бұрын
I am here to say that Law Enforcement failed huge catching him. Felt that all the way in Oregon.
@ianpilkington20378 ай бұрын
Washington State and Serial Killers go together like Apple Pie & Ice cream
@kenw22258 ай бұрын
Something in the water... imagine the mental issues they had , or the experiences that caused them to enact such a life. I dont believe people are born as such. If you go with that idea, born as serial killers, then everyone is capable. Human nature allows for self preservation and narcissism in every person, and circumstance could allow for all , especially males, to follow such a path. Women are less likely, obviously. But I think its young age and adolescent experience that caused these people to grow up to this lifestyle. Weird mommy -child dynamic, or a absent dad , paired with abuse
@CashMacGregor8 ай бұрын
you know his brain is wired differently when taking a lie detector test he passed when asked if he killed these women.
@jackzerr25487 ай бұрын
Learned to lie well
@kloveshimself5 ай бұрын
thank you to the loyal, beautiful, strong black woman who saw these victims as PEOPLE. we NEED more people like HER around❤❤❤
@KarlEriksenopinion8 ай бұрын
Did this girl know that her father was doing all this killing while it was happening? Her commentary leads me to believe her father was telling her what he was doing.....If so she is an accomplice after the fact and should be in prison for life. She laughed after she said he did enuf bad for everyone in her family. i doubt the victims family would see the humor.
@grrrrbabyverygrrr81656 ай бұрын
It seems like he told her afterwards in phone calls from prison. The fact she went into early labour when she found out he was a murderer indicates she had no clue.
@grrrrbabyverygrrr81656 ай бұрын
I also think shes a bit slow/not all there.
@jeffreyhall49465 ай бұрын
I moved to the Seattle area in 1988 from Fort Worth, Texas. I had heard of the Green River killer. I remember driving along I think it was US 90 and I passed a green state sign on the roadway that said "Green River Ordinance Enforced". I thought it was some absurd attempt to get the killer to stop leaving bodies in that area. I would later learn it had to do with prohibiting door to door sales.
@WheezinGeezerTV7 ай бұрын
I still freak out about this guy. I had my turn for a chance encounter. I knew I was in trouble the moment I closed the truck door. But it ends with him reaching for his gun and it hitting the back of the seat and falls out of his hand. He was still being weird and I kept getting louder and he knew in a moment he was going to have to fight for his life because I was going to be fighting for mine. I just thought he was some weirdo, it wasn't till years later that I found out who he was when I was getting ready for work and had the sound down so I didn't wake anybody. But I recognised him the moment they showed him being lead into a courtroom. He wasn't wearing his glasses, but I said to myself, "hey it's that weirdo". Later after I got off work he was on the evening news and this time he had his glasses on. I called it in on the night that it happened but only had a partial license plate. Don't believe the bullshit that he was killing prostitutes, I had gotten off work and was wearing waiter gear which included an apron, hardly what a prostitute would be wearing. I always wondered if anyone else escaped. But I'll never forget him. I was living in Federalway, Washington at the time, this was over 30 years ago.
@antiochiaadtaurum37868 ай бұрын
20 minutes in and this is an excellent documentary
@fd41328 ай бұрын
Very sad for these families the pain in their faces.
@kelsey.targaryen7 ай бұрын
I feel for his wife. She seems like a nice lady and even the police said that if you didn’t know that he was the killer that they wouldn’t have even guessed themselves. Imagine how life shattering and heartbreaking. It would be to think you’re a perfect marriage and know that the man you were with is the most prolific serial killer in American history. Look on her face when she describes the messages she got from him about him coming home late… man that sucks
@lorettasearcy14718 ай бұрын
Yes they are human women no matter what they did for a living.
@DeformedConscience7 ай бұрын
Where can his full video confessions/interviews be seen and not just bits and pieces of them. Anywhere?
@drewoftheinternet8 ай бұрын
Shirley Gaskins strikes me as many crayons short of a full box.
@JEM19897 ай бұрын
not trying to be rude or smart a$$ but I mean, Look at her father. You cant be right with a sire like that
@Ariadne76-k3d7 ай бұрын
Her elevator doesn't go to the top!
@ijaripanju34087 ай бұрын
@@JEM1989your absolutely right .. the guy is the stereotypical racist or gangmember(and no matter the skin color anyone of any variety can be a racist or gang member) ...as mentioned a couple cans short of a six pack 😂😂.
@1914AD7 ай бұрын
Simple people with simple minds.
@TheColtonStreeter7 ай бұрын
Sometimes I think im crazy, then I see these crime documentaries and I think "nah, im not crazy." People are messed up
@audibjornsson61078 ай бұрын
The strip has moved to Aurora Ave, so many young ladies out thier risking thier lives. I remember when the Riverman was on the loose and noone knew who he was
@Midds1_8 ай бұрын
At least on Aurora there’s a camera on every corner, but still! I feel for those girls on Aurora during the dead of Winter walking the streets in next to nothing. 🥲
@RodneyPinSC7 ай бұрын
Very nice documentary. One small correction - in the title, Ridgway's name does not have an 'e'. Gary Leon Ridgway