Don't you just love it when your neighbors see suspicious activity at your home and fail to tell you or the police until after something happens🙄
@Jeff-sp7bg7 ай бұрын
Being "suspicious " isn't a crime you don't call the police for "suspicion" that's asinine...
@willer33997 ай бұрын
@@Jeff-sp7bg So, a stranger walks into your house when you’re not home and you don’t want your neighbors to call the police or at least call you to check on it? I hope you are never my neighbor.
@MechaNintendoMast7 ай бұрын
@@Jeff-sp7bg Says who?
@mj41937 ай бұрын
@willer3399 well I don't think it's that black and white. That stranger could've been a friend or somebody the family knew. Personally, I would've asked the home owners if they had asked a friend to drop over or something to that effect
@jasmincampbell81057 ай бұрын
@mj4193 look at that... informing your neighbors 😊
@chris-in-oceania7 ай бұрын
Heads up to the wife for reporting him for the burglary, thus helping get this case solved and him off the streets - just a massive pity that it was too late to spare Lori.
@kaym.28547 ай бұрын
I can't help but feel sorry for her.
@chris-in-oceania7 ай бұрын
@@kaym.2854 I feel sorry for her too, but we know next to nothing about her, or their relationship from what is given here... Hope she has moved on and is happy 🙂
@moonstruck5627 ай бұрын
Came here just to comment what you said. Kudos to her!
@Elizabeth_PDxxx7 ай бұрын
Same! She is so strong bless her
@jeanniemontgomery59597 ай бұрын
I totally agree. Most times I hear that the wife comes forward years later after the marriage ends. Bravo to this wife.
@barb-jm79907 ай бұрын
That is so creepy that a person she saw everyday at work, but had no real relationship with was so obscessed with her that he would do that. We have all worked with creepy people at one time or another and are lucky that they did not take things this far.
@southernbelladonna787 ай бұрын
Exactly! It's always creepy when you realize someone knows more about you than you know about them, etc. Example: A coworker knows who you are married to, where you live, who your family is and that you have a KZbin channel and you don't even know their name. Then they get offended that you haven't really noticed them or that they work there because you've never even had a conversation with them before.
@Ccl2tb7 ай бұрын
This is kind of like being a celebrity, minus the bodyguards
@bussinholidays90107 ай бұрын
@@southernbelladonna78well you probably talked about your life on your KZbin channel that’s why they know so much about you ya nutjub are you serious
@gossamer99667 ай бұрын
I am a nurse and I can just imagine her being polite and saying hello to him at work while in the meantime he's smiling and maybe made small talk while imagining dark and murderous fantasies of pure evil about her.
@EllieMae-qo3sp7 ай бұрын
@@southernbelladonna78mhmm a guy I never spoke to never seen said he remember me from high school. That was nearly a decade ago and he messaged me out the blue. It’s so weird how you could be minding your business and don’t even know you caught someone else’s eye
@JeaneGenie7 ай бұрын
It's bizarre that a neighbour saw a stranger entering the house when they were at work yet did nothing about it.
@KimberlyLetsGo7 ай бұрын
Not bizarre; reality.
@CacaCrotch7 ай бұрын
Not really. You never know if the owner messaged and told them "wait there til I get off work". You can't just assume that because YOU don't know somebody that the owner doesn't either.
@GrumpyMeow-Meow7 ай бұрын
I reported the same thing (someone going into my neighbors house when he was in Europe) and the police told me unless I was sure a crime was being committed, then they wouldn’t come. Small time idiots.
@berlingolingoful7 ай бұрын
Me too! Basically. They came to my house instead and made me feel like an idiot. @GrumpyMeow-Meow
@persephoneszeliga7 ай бұрын
Not bizarre. Involving the police can be a dangerous thing for an innocent bystander in this country. It’s so sad.
@Matagot907 ай бұрын
Maybe the neighbor could've told Lori that a strange man let himself into her house through the garage, and was still there. SMH
@WoodyWard7 ай бұрын
It's terrifying to even speculate on what could be happening in a situation like this.
@annazaman96577 ай бұрын
Poor Lori. What torture she went through. I think David was obsessed with her and decided to have her no matter what
@fainitesbarley22457 ай бұрын
Doesn’t really explain the sadism and degradation though
@annazaman96577 ай бұрын
@@fainitesbarley2245 some men like that kind of stuff.
@pfschuyler7 ай бұрын
No this was not some guy in love. He was a budding rapist/serial killer. His psychology is completely & utterly different.
@anomboing7 ай бұрын
I also think that her moving soon played some part, he would lose access to her and his fantasy would never be fulfilled. That's why he rushed and why he was determined to go through with it even after his wife found out about the burglary. He wasn't going to let her get away.
@karlaplascencia79987 ай бұрын
You can work with someone and have no idea they will murder you. That is a wild concept.
@FrankOdonnell-ej3hd7 ай бұрын
this case is another instance of the sex and power dynamic that is the motivation for almost all male serial killers. As for good neighbors I recall when I left my garage door open all night by accident and unlike the neighbor in this story the woman next door called us up to ask if everything was alright. After seeing this video I'm even more grateful to her now.⚛😀
@cecilr79867 ай бұрын
My neighbor always calls me if my garage door is open late at night. I do the same for any of my neighbors.
@sabinegierth-waniczek48724 ай бұрын
@@cecilr7986 *You are lucky to have such a good and attentive community!* I have done, and would and will continue to do, such things for my neighbours, but had to realise that they never did the same for me in similar circumstances, just like this victim's neighbour. Call me (rightfully so) naïve, too helpful and too trusting, but IMO you sometimes have to trust others to not become a cynical and jaded husk of a human (still my belief in spite of VERY bad past and recent experiences). [Most of them were very well off, really secretive, and nearly pathologically "private", but expected my help and attention, and often not even thanked me. I lived in a wealthy village in a rural, but adjacent to Zurich area of CH, and after a (for me) unforeseen separation I became a pariah in the "traditional" only-couples-two-to-four-kids neighbourhood, as is very common in Germany and here. I take it as it is, but try to stay true to myself. I could not live with the guilt of not having AT LEAST notified this poor woman of an unexpected "visitor", and LIKELY would have talked to her. My opinion, but who - me included - really knows how one will (re)act in a similar situation? It is haunting.]
@Swansong3217 ай бұрын
The title alone is genuinely terrifying enough
@agostinodublino13877 ай бұрын
CLOTHING CHALLENGED people ARE BACK 💯
@NoelStalker7 ай бұрын
that comment made me laugh. He says it with such a straight face
@gabrielal68726 ай бұрын
Came to find a comment on this. Didn’t want to laugh during such a serious matter but that was funny
@angierucinski56947 ай бұрын
Poor, poor Lori. How awful her final hours must have been, violated while being photographed before being murdered 🤢
@thelocalmaladroit88737 ай бұрын
Thanks Dr Grande, for keeping your older educational videos up. I have a family member with bipolar and have been binge watching them for help with my emotions since she has been hospitalized. You are a treasure!
@SuperWhatapain7 ай бұрын
💖
@DarkbutNotsinister7 ай бұрын
No stopping meds or drinking, it will mess them up for days. Remember bipolar disorder is a physical disorder that presents itself as a mental disorder. At the same time, therapy will teach them coping mechanisms. They can live a normal life. Moreover, there are strangers out here rooting for them. Like me. 💜 *I wish someone told me about how bad drinking was sooner than later.
@janmondragon87617 ай бұрын
@@DarkbutNotsinisterI beg to differ regarding bipolar being a physical disorder than a mental one. It’s a mental illness is a brain based condition that affects emotions, behaviors & thinking. Specifically, bipolar is a mood disorder. It does affect you physically when you’re in a depressed state or in a manic state. Sadly, I’ve been dealing with it for a few years now & have to take psych meds to be stable. Take care
@DarkbutNotsinister7 ай бұрын
@@janmondragon8761 I’ve lived with it for 30 of my 51 years. I’m on half a dozen meds to get me to normal. Were you around for the Wellbutrin dumpster fire? I was in the middle of it. I know how each & every medication affects my brain. My feelings are very big, but medication & coping mechanisms help me lead a life without symptoms. (Mostly) I’m not an expert on every brain, but I am an expert on my own brain. I have a pretty good handle on how bipolar disorder works. A mood disorder is caused by incorrect levels of brain juice. I have to be mindful of spending entire days chasing dopamine. My amygdala insists EVERYTHING IS TRYING TO KILL ME. I have no external circumstances or trauma that causes my brain juice to misfire. How long have you been diagnosed? Are you bipolar 1 or 2? Wait…..you DO have bipolar disorder or you’re an MD, right??
@wilhelmhagberg48977 ай бұрын
Never heard that take before, aren’t mental disorders almost by definition NOT physical? Alcohol dependency however involves the entire body, and is commonly triggered by neuropsychiatric disorders such as ADHD that have physical explanations.
@evelynwaugh40537 ай бұрын
I have such low conscientiousness that if I ever committed a crime bank and car repair receipts and my prescription eyeglasses would litter the crime scene and a trail of dog hair would lead investigators back to my lair.
@LúciaKitten7 ай бұрын
That makes 2 of us haha
@reneegardner22867 ай бұрын
Doesn't seem like something to brag about just saying 🤔
@kathleenadams49787 ай бұрын
Likewise. Except, because I left my glasses at the scene, the police would find me still trying to get my keys in the door. Or maybe, trying to find my house. 🙄
@janmondragon87617 ай бұрын
For me, I try to be organized so I write my to-do lists in my phone notes & set alarms for everything. But I’m also forgetful so I’ll probably leave my phone at the scene & get caught while I Uber back home 🤦🏽♀️
@lindaanderssonsweden1957 ай бұрын
@@kathleenadams4978 😂👍🏻
@commonsense26807 ай бұрын
Horrible and creepy story. It is surprising that the comment section had people divided on the neighbor's culpability in this incident. I guess I was thinking of the neighborhood I grew up in, not today's neighborhood. In my neighborhood, people took pride and comfort on relying on their neighbors to "watch" the house like if they were away. Today, everyone is in a rush to avoid knowing their neighbor and therefore NOT "nose into" their affairs. Or some commenter said they would have assumed the person was having an affair with one of the residents and not want to get involved. When I was a kid, most people would never have leaped to that conclusion. The neighbors especially looked after each others kids. It was a very secure feeling that is unfortunately lost today.
@hopeausbyn173415 күн бұрын
See something, Say something! Just don't gossip about it.
@brose.037 ай бұрын
My husband works the night shift most days at a job nearly an hour away from our house. I’m very pregnant, so I always feel extra vulnerable when he’s away. We’re adopting a couple of large dogs for this reason- not just for companionship for when I’m alone, but most importantly for protection over me and soon-to-be newborn. We do own guns, but I would rather an intruder be scared off by intimidating growls/barks if anything
@carly-rose-george7 ай бұрын
I read somewhere that it is the snappy ankle-biters that scare would-be intruders the most. Maybe get a big dog to be the muscle and a Chihuahua to be the wildcard.
@brose.037 ай бұрын
@@carly-rose-george I’m not surprised 😂 I’m a big dog person, but I don’t even view chihuahuas as a real dog lol, they’re more like hellish rats
@Katfishforrent7 ай бұрын
I hope I am not being able too nosey, or rude by my question. But I noticed you said you planned on adopting two large dogs. First, I do apologize and ask that you please bare with me, as my English is not the best. Also, please excuse any spelling or grammar mistakes. By adopting, do you mean getting dogs from a shelter? If so, I would ask that you please make sure it is something you are currently prepared and equipped to handle. Especially having a newborn on the way. I am all for adoption, and giving dogs a second chance at a happy life. I did a lot of volunteering, working at, and fostering for a dog rescue ran by my mil for many years. So, please know that I am not against adopting from shelters.(I encourage it for most cases) It's just, from my own experience, shelter dogs often come with behavioral issues, and past trauma that negatively impacts them, and they require extra work, and often special knowledge and skill to work through these issues. They also do not typically make good protection dogs, not right off anyway. Most are quite fearful from previous abuse, and would cower in fear just from raising a hand, sudden sounds and movement. If you're already quite far along, it is unlikely to have them settled, bonded to you, and trained by the time the baby arrives, and it would be near impossible to train a new dog, let alone two. Especially larger breeds from shelters, while recovering from birth and caring for a newborn.. It might sound like a great idea, but in reality, it will end up making life harder for both you and the dogs. And not knowing their history, the potential harm to the baby is very high. At our rescue. We had so many dogs returned to us after the latest owners came to realize that it was too much, or when one of their children ended up bit. Tbh, even buying puppies from a breeder at this time will also be quite challenging, having a baby so close to arrival. And if you are not already knowledgeable about dog training, it is a bad idea altogether to get two large breed dogs. It's a nightmare trying to care for two big dogs who are not well trained, along with having a newborn to care for and keep safe. Most dogs are not naturally protective, while also being safe around children and family from outside the household. I am truly sorry for being nosey, and giving unsolicited advice. I truly just wish the best for you, your family, and the dogs. And I know that sometimes in desperate times, ideas may seem good in theory, but it does not work out as hoped in reality. It is especially difficult for those who are newer to dog ownership. Having a baby, trying to care for and train TWO puppies, or adopted dogs with potential behavioral issues, after giving birth is going to be beyond exhausting. I suppose you may be able to board and train. If so, then I guess that makes a big difference and makes things a heck of a lot easier. But if not, please put in a lot of thought into this decision, and do as much research as possible. And research different breeds, their temperament, and how well their unique qualities, care needs, and personalities match your lifestyle and your needs. As it does make a difference. I do wish you the very best of luck! I genuinely do. Oh, and congratulations on your new baby! I hope you have a smooth, and memorable labor and delivery, with the best medical care any new mother can and should receive!
@sabinegierth-waniczek48724 ай бұрын
@@Katfishforrent *This is a very well founded, and important comment!* Dogs are *territorial and pack-oriented,* and a small weak newborn baby does not only wail in frequencies which many dogs can not stand for long, even if not previously traumatised, but is also the *"runt of the litter"* and in omega position. If this weakling gets more attention than the (in this setting ALWAYS) more entitled and stronger dogs, h3ll may break loose. Also, the *COSTS of food, amenities, veterinary care and insurance for larger dogs can skyrocket* - as can the *costs for a new baby!!!* This could be dangerous for the *family budget* , which already seems to be stretched, if the husband is forced to take a job far from his home, just to make ends meet. [Personal experience, but TLDR, so please feel free to ignore: My aunt and uncle in Greece always had large dogs for over forty years, and they needed them for guard duty, especially as they later lived in a very remote area on an island where many hunters used to stalk out rabbits, and would not have been adverse to a burglary side hustle in a large house, with only a middle-aged woman present... When I visited my aunt in this house, I always had a sinister feeling, in spite of the beautiful landscape the deserted area gave me shivers. Not being a dog person, I nonetheless could *interact friendly with the two dogs and was accepted by them,* because my aunt signalled to them that I belonged to the alpha stratum (and told me how to behave correctly!), *even as a guest.* Then the older one of the dogs (large bulldog, see below) died, and they bought a Rottweiler puppy, which they trained like all other puppies they previously had. At this time I had not visited for some years, and I abstained from it after hearing of what I will tell next. THIS dog was special - whatever the cause, it suddenly attacked without provokation one of my cousins and would have killed him, if not the surviving courageous mongrel (losing an ear and much fur) and my other cousin, a wrestler and weightlifter, had pulled the dog off his brother. They had been watching TV, and my attacked cousin sat on the floor with the dogs, alternately giving them treats, like many times before. *After this behaviour, I would have let a vet euthanise the Rottweiler,* but they thought to be able to handle it, because they never had made such experiences, and after their long history of owning dogs may have become cocky. *Besides, the dog was very expensive, and like I insinuated before, they really needed to choose an impressive and deterring breed.* Some time later my aunt went over to Athens, spending the whole day doing her tasks and for the journey. Meanwhile my uncle decided to mount a ladder to adjust the draining pipes under the roof, a task that my aunt had asked him to NOT perform in her absence, so she could stand by and eventually help. The dogs were present, when he lost his footing and fell to the ground from about four to five meters higher up. He broke his elbow, and also IIRC collar- and some other bones, but most importantly his pelvis, which led to massive injuries and excruciating pain. When my aunt returned home, it was already dark, and she tried to assess the situation - but *the Rottweiler lay on top of my already crushed uncle, and would not let her near him.* IIRC she had to call the police to remove the dog (which after this was STILL kept in the family, the reason why I never visited them again, as I was too afraid of it) and bring my uncle to the harbour to take the last ferry to Athens and to the hospital, where *he luckily was saved.* *My uncle nearly died on this evening, and the stupid mutt could have finished him even easier, but they kept it nonetheless.* *IN MY OPINION as a non-dog person and after this related experience, I am convinced that after an UNPROVOKED assault on a person, be it child or adult, ANY dog is not any longer safe to be in a household, especially with small children.* The older dog which later died (I think the correct expression is German Mastiff or Bulldog) was a really kind soul, but killed every critter which transgressed on the terrain - the only exception being the second dog, which as a mongrel puppy was thrown over the wall into the enclosure, because people knew how rapidly the older dog disposed of all life. The dog weighed about forty kilograms, reached my mid-thigh height, and if standing on its hind legs was taller than two meters. My cousin once had a friend over, and they played and wrestled with the dog, until they realised that they would be too late for an appointment if they did not immediately leave. So they abruptly stopped playing without a "cool down" phase and turned their backs on the dog. The dog did not realise the changed situation, and wanted to continue playing, so it stood up and lashed out against the back of the friend, drawing blood with its enormous claws. I witnessed this from two meters away, the whole fluid movement was done in a matter of split seconds. The wounds were not really dangerous, and did not need more than desinfection and a large band-aid over them. The guys realised their mistake and did not hold it against the dog, as they had failed to give it clear signals, but it was a sobering experience for me, because I had never before relised how quickly a large dog can become a danger, even if it does not intend to harm anybody. If this is play, I do not want to be around when it gets serious, like see above.]
@larmstrong23027 ай бұрын
How terrifying to have someone in a space in your home, and you don't know it! Happy Memorial Day Dr. Grande!
@yeahB7 ай бұрын
Especially when the person who locked them in there is your own husband
@LúciaKitten7 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for your analysis on this case, Dr.Grande! It is scary to contemplate just how many people, like David, we come in contact with...
@karenfisher41707 ай бұрын
Dr. Grande, how do you decompress? These stories you analyze are so horrific. I hope you take time to eat good food, look at beautiful scenery and spend time with people who love you.
@AnnaBelll.e7 ай бұрын
How horribly sad
@audreycasassa16837 ай бұрын
So scary! What this girl went thru. Rest in Peace Lori🌼🌼🌼
@autisticlybrē7 ай бұрын
Have a great weekend Dr. and Mrs. Grande 🙌
@anncarper81637 ай бұрын
That is so sad. Lori sounded like a nice person. I'm just glad the killer is behind bars.
@glendasully7 ай бұрын
Poor Lori. Just living her life & then some deranged Psycho takes it away from her.
@DAVE_ICEMAN7 ай бұрын
My favorite nerd ever, Dr Grande
@joycemarie97027 ай бұрын
How did the wife know her husband had committed the crime???
@moonstruck5627 ай бұрын
She probably saw the news of Lorri's disappearance on the local TV or newspaper and knew the victim worked at the same facility as her husband. Combined with evidence on his body and/or around the house especially considering he brought Lorri inside his house and on his bed, she probably put two and two together.
@sabinegierth-waniczek48724 ай бұрын
@@moonstruck562 Likely *the wife also jumped a bullet* , in addition to all this monster's prospective victims - IIRC he put Lorri on their MARITAL BED, and tortured her for what must have been a very long time. The perpetrator would shortly have realised that *his wife was a possible informer and threat to his freedom,* and have taken measures against HER also. MY OPINION: No way did the wife not at least *smell something different,* if not even seeing vestigial evidence that *another woman had been in the room.* To a degree I understand the impulse to close one's eyes instead of seeing who the person at your side really is, but she managed to get over this, and reported her delinquent partner. For this, and for thus helping to pull him out of the vicinity of future victims, I commend her very strongly. (I still ask myself if Lorri was the first and/ or only victim...)
@bonnie76847 ай бұрын
A budding serial killer who targets a very low risk victims with whom he works is bound to get caught 🤷♀️
@14catsand1human7 ай бұрын
Imagine being married to someone like that!!
@breathnstop7 ай бұрын
Too many neighbors watch crimes right next door and do nothing!
@Moodboard397 ай бұрын
Boy stfu dude. Why u assume everyone should be on a watch of people???
@Moodboard397 ай бұрын
Have u not heard " mind your business".
@sternshadowdude27 ай бұрын
I bet you also call people Karens when they call the police on suspicious looking people and it turns out to be nothing.
@Reading_the_comments7 ай бұрын
I really enjoy Dr Grande's educated speculation, witty humor and calm demeanor when discussing these horrible cases. I watch him every evening while getting ready for my night shift job. He gives us a glimpse into the twisted minds of the evil in this world. I hope he knows how much I appreciate his work.
@notozknows7 ай бұрын
At least we didn't hear, "The police botched the investigation early on!"
@robertgiles91247 ай бұрын
The snoopy neighbor was too stupid to call the Police even after seeing all the clues to a crime unfolding. smh The architect to David's house needs to do serious Jail time too. What a mess. I guess even D Students get some work after they mange to get a license somehow. Fake shutters never look good on anything. They just make a bad design worse.
@cplmpcocptcl63067 ай бұрын
Oh my. I see you weren’t joking at all. What a design.🙈
@tna_handyandy51737 ай бұрын
darn it. I had hope for you, Bob. very solid comment, but y0u profile is just fluff. perhaps youll join us greats someday.
@robertgiles91247 ай бұрын
@@tna_handyandy5173 You have mistaken me for someone who cares what you think.
@Spiritueli7 ай бұрын
omg ... better not to trust coworkers with anything, littleless residence info, etc. i think im gonna notch up my trust wall to strangers, which i also consider coworkers, as they are just strangers that are working in the same place as me, by a chance. so, there you go, still strangers, and nothing more.
@messrsandersonco59857 ай бұрын
Do you mean 'far less'? There is no such phrase as 'little less' unless you wanted to say, "this room is a 'little less spacious' than that one" which is clunky. Instead, we'd say, "that room is 'more spacious' than this one". After all, we don't say, A is less tall than B because it's clunky.
@charlottewilliams5747 ай бұрын
Why do i feel so chuffed to be here so early? Nice work dr grande! Keep up the alliteration, it pleases me no end lol! Much love, from 🇬🇧
@ndwknss7 ай бұрын
Dr Grande looking spiffy as always!
@TheMeisaku7 ай бұрын
I’m pretty sure his wife dresses him. He really doesn’t care much about clothes I don’t think, as long as they are comfortable. Typical unassuming male.
@DavidDeeble7 ай бұрын
This one is absolutely nutso.
@paulforder5917 ай бұрын
A neighbour saw suspicious activity at Lori's house, yet never notified the police until after the kidnapping.
@annazaman96577 ай бұрын
Please do a video on Paul Graves Williams who killed his wife and daughter in 2018
@maureeningleston15017 ай бұрын
It makes me so sad that GOD has spent decades in prison. I know this to be true as almost every prisoner has found him there.
@NoelStalker7 ай бұрын
LMFAO
@cplmpcocptcl63067 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂☠️
@reneegardner22867 ай бұрын
Good one! Fr tho!!!
@cecilr79867 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@confidentminaj7 ай бұрын
😂
@cynthiaschell72467 ай бұрын
get a security system and a dog and always check the videos on your phone for updates
@pameladee7 ай бұрын
Such a sad tragedy…the poor woman had no chance. The neighbor could have tipped off police about the strange man entering Lori’s house. Or even tell Lori and her husband know! Who lets something like this just happen? Great analogy about serial killers. I had no idea how they progress into their evil mindset. Thank you, Dr. Grande 🌵
@user-od3be8ny4o7 ай бұрын
I saw a dog on a public street yesterday. It was just wandering. It went into a garden and stood barking at me. Concerned it was lost, I pushed the doorbell on the property to check it was their dog. It wasn't, but it was their neighbours dog who always gera out. Some may call me a jobsworth, a busy body? I don't care. If something is suspicious, do something about it. That neighbour should feel bad for life!!
@hopeausbyn173415 күн бұрын
✅
@violetabaisas93277 ай бұрын
I am amazed of your analytical mind Dr. Grande!!!!
@slideoff6667 ай бұрын
THE MAN ENTERING THE HOUSE PART!!!! Lololol that part!
@williamwelch77 ай бұрын
Thanks Dr. Grande
@TakenTook7 ай бұрын
3:35 -- Yeah, because criminals always write detailed instruction notes to each other and make sure to include their names 🙄
@EllenD-p2q7 ай бұрын
Know your neighbors at least well enough to watch out for each other.
@sabinegierth-waniczek48724 ай бұрын
While agreeing with you, it also takes the other side to be interested and invested in the idea, it is not a one-way road.
@cristinawilliams78707 ай бұрын
Goodnight Dr.Grande all of your content videos are not Only very entertaining and your voice is very soothing. Since I am diagnosed with bipolar disorder I'm learning many in your content.keep creating and thank you so much.. watching from the Philippines 🩷
@RE1GN_BLOOD7 ай бұрын
Dude drove two hours a day to go work
@shanecrump79327 ай бұрын
“Clothing challenged” is a new one for me 😂
@janetleemarino87027 ай бұрын
Frightening that you could be working on the job, with a crazy person, a person crazy enough to kill, what a horrible person he seems to be.
@wendybond28487 ай бұрын
What a sad, tragic end and numerous people missed signs that all was not right.
@Majqq127 ай бұрын
wow what a great neighbor
@thepurplemaskknows93837 ай бұрын
With the “neighbor” who saw a man entering the house and did nothing, there is a contradiction in terms. The inaction is not that of a neighbor, but of a cowardly observer, or a complacent idiot whichever fits.
@genec56467 ай бұрын
Your neighbor watches a strange person go into your garage and says nothing about it. WOW!!!! Like a good neighbor, we will just mind our own business.
@Moodboard397 ай бұрын
Yea, Extacly mind your business. Why get involed? Worry about yourself daily business. We can't be all in people business..
@kdnick85847 ай бұрын
I sometimes think about how Dr. G. would describe my life: Unremarkable, average grades, married @ 21 to a grade school teacher, one child, returned to school @ 30, grandparent of 2 boys, died at 82. End of story. That's all she wrote.
@liberatedflygirl80007 ай бұрын
If he described me I would sound like the loser I am
@SuperWhatapain7 ай бұрын
@@liberatedflygirl8000 to be a loser on Dr grandes videos means you're a WINNER cause your still alive!!! 🤩 I Pray you find your joy, 🙏
@Jeff-sp7bg7 ай бұрын
Same with me. I was born. Graduated. From high school. Got a job. Got married. Got divorced. Got old and now here I am. An old divorced loser
@tomheineman43697 ай бұрын
This guy is really a vomity creep. There really is no way she could have protected herself. sadly the neighbor didn't call the cops. More people should pay attention. Heed the lesson from the kitty genevese case.
@melistasy7 ай бұрын
😢 @@Jeff-sp7bg
@strumminandwrenchin91627 ай бұрын
10:48 well don't they all suddenly become "religious" when they're serving a life sentence in a US state penitentiary?
@ruthbat-leah40787 ай бұрын
The clue's in the name? Penitentiary - penitence? Also, they're in a dark place, and the chaplains (if they're worth their salt) might be among those who treat them with dignity.
@emilyburton40957 ай бұрын
When you got nothin', you got nothin' to lose.
@Snakesnarl7 ай бұрын
Nobody voluntarily chooses the move to South Bend
@exposinginsanity7 ай бұрын
"mostly because of the entering the house part"...lol
@aprilkurtz15897 ай бұрын
Dr. Grande: Val-pah-raise-oh. Good vid, as always!!
@PaulinaHuffman7 ай бұрын
As a Valpo resident: Thank you April! :)
@aprilkurtz15897 ай бұрын
@@PaulinaHuffman I used to deliver coffee and other supplies to businesses who leased our coffee machines. I had accounts in Valpo, South Bend, Tippiecanoe, Indianapolis, and points in between!! I don't mind Indiana at all.
@terry85mar7 ай бұрын
Crazy. I live in Portage which is right next to Valparaiso but it's pronounced Val po ray zo not Val po razio.
@sararobertson18727 ай бұрын
It sounds like such a weird way to go about it with all the notes and objects involved...
@tina41787 ай бұрын
Stalking behavior
@isaactuuri64887 ай бұрын
Good channel, just the facts without the hype and hoopla as with similar other channels
@TeoBlu7 ай бұрын
Doc, please , please speculate on the mindset of Terrence Howard!
@psalms50_57 ай бұрын
What do you mean by his mindset? I'm unsure of how this would fit into the theme of the Doctors channel.
@jackiemarie52027 ай бұрын
Very curious what your take on Laurie Dann from chicago in the 1980s.
@Ralph_Baric_PhD_C20197 ай бұрын
Mr Grande, i would love to see your dry whit and sarcasm applied to your take on the Nick Rekieta arrest....
@lga57467 ай бұрын
Sad…
@garysmylie9757 ай бұрын
Well done.. be great if you had your own TV show..
@Sue1888-ca7 ай бұрын
Hi Dr. Grande, can you give an analysis on Tan siblings murder case in Singapore? Thx. 😊
@SummerLove-x3f7 ай бұрын
It's so sad
@True-w8987 ай бұрын
Can you analyze the case of Takoda Collins?
@gossamer99667 ай бұрын
This is one of the scariest cases I've seen on this channel, I can't imagine how utterly terrified she must have been. He was a sexual sadist who enjoyed torture, putting him in the most depraved and disturbing category of killers. I wonder if his wife experienced red flags throughout their relationship? Maybe unrelated or not, but porn depicting that type of torture is becoming more popular and young boys are being introduced to dark BDSM themes at the click of a link. I worry about young men unable to form meaningful healthy relationships because they are too addicted to porn, gaming, and creepy anime.
@zenawarrior74427 ай бұрын
What a sad situation. I agree his motivation was sexual. Interesting info on serial killers. Great breakdown & points again. Thanks Dr G😊🧡💜
@frankieperez6837 ай бұрын
Sad
@CapitanBluebeard7 ай бұрын
Can you analyze the case of Kristopher Baca?
@BrianJosephMorgan7 ай бұрын
Dr Grande, have you ever looked at the case of Joan Risch?
@mildredpierce45067 ай бұрын
How was he able to get her garage door opener and clone it?
@Neilsowards7 ай бұрын
Mildred Pierce, well, he worked with her and was moving her things (she thought). Probably took her key and made a copy during lunch hour or something like that.
@KimberlyLetsGo7 ай бұрын
Was it mentioned if the affair was just a fantasy of this guy?
@j3kkkkk7 ай бұрын
right!? and what led the wife of david to believe he was lori's murderer? i have so many questions about this case now after watching
@michelleruss98777 ай бұрын
Norm and Larry are the burgers from Home Alone .. 😂
@craigexaustralia71477 ай бұрын
Garry Ridgway was an automotive spray painter which is a profession where you need to be conscientious, extremely methodical and would work alone usually.
@kenmore017 ай бұрын
The note said you'll never find me or Lori. Tell the police case closed, don't bother looking. Later, police found him...
@ann78827 ай бұрын
11 cacti! Love your channel!❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@peterantonsen35397 ай бұрын
Doc got a dotted shirt..maby i need New bricks. Am i right?😂
@princeanalytical75427 ай бұрын
Can you analyze the case of Roger Fortson?
@TheCrescentSalon7 ай бұрын
Dr grande can u do a video on gerrick merrifield?
@BB0108647 ай бұрын
Clothing Challenged !!?? LMAO !!
@erinjk1237 ай бұрын
I was rewinding because i kept missing some details.
@enterchannelname45427 ай бұрын
I bet this guy is exceedingly creepy.
@lorigale46557 ай бұрын
I hope you're referring to David 😂
@SuperWhatapain7 ай бұрын
@lorigale4655 🤣
@persephoneszeliga7 ай бұрын
@@lorigale4655haha, right?😂😂😂😂
@kurliigurlii7 ай бұрын
"... images of clothing-challenged women on the wall." 😂
@erikamccarthy14577 ай бұрын
5/26/24 Makes me angry when person responsible for these horrific crimes, blame it on the victims or try to minimize their actions! Lori, rip
@Psylliumhead7 ай бұрын
It’s pronounced Val - per - raise - oh.
@Neilsowards7 ай бұрын
that's what I thought also.
@josh6567 ай бұрын
“I don’t take my work home with me.” Coworker comes to you.
@emusenet7 ай бұрын
My opinion is that he decided to move faster once he knew she's moving to another state and would be selling the house. using the real estate broker as a would be buyer he surveyed the house and used the RE agent names to try and get them implicated. This crime had nothing to do work as he had to know she's moving elsewhere.
@JimSeeley5517 ай бұрын
Puh-lease, Dr. Grande, it’s “Po-leece” not “Pleece” P.S. Love your show!
@atticstattic7 ай бұрын
An exercise physiologist is not a 'medical technician.'
@conorfitzmaurice89597 ай бұрын
What is the opposite of a serial killer? What traits and characters would they display?
@filipefigueiredo98477 ай бұрын
If he/ she owns an aluminum fishing boat, they're definitely not serial killers
@larmstrong23027 ай бұрын
I think a mother would be the opposite of a serial killer because they randomly give life. ❤
@margodphd7 ай бұрын
I'd say, based on my law degree and hobbyist interest in criminology - Kind, empathetic, caring and conscientious, lacking obsessive tendencies, no particular unfulfilled sexual fetishes, happy family life & partnerships and uneventful upbringing with full, caring family, relatively numerous friends - all relationships built on trust and mutual respect for eachother's humanity and differences and lacking in hostility, loving kids and animals, not secretive about much if anything, not greedy, satisfied with own financial position and able to celebrate success of others, with even temper and no particular aggressive, dominant tendencies, generally self aware and mindful of own mental health and emotional struggles, finding enjoyment in caring for others and bringing joy to other people. I'd wager that is the exact opposite of a serial killer or, most murderers in general in most points.
@sauter17 ай бұрын
@@larmstrong2302Randomly?
@larmstrong23027 ай бұрын
@@sauter1 Mine were random lol
@MechaNintendoMast7 ай бұрын
Don't serial killers that expect to get away with it target strangers? Granted I'm certainly no expert but he wasn't going to go too far targeting people who technically knew him, especially after already botching part of it.
@ddlang25147 ай бұрын
Thanks for addressing what red flags should have had more attention. It’s clear from the details of the burglary Lori was being targeted. Wish there was more thought to how women can protect themselves from this type of attack.
@SentMyOwnWay7 ай бұрын
Can you do a video about the guy who was recently caught with a mobile grape dungeon?
@roringusanda28377 ай бұрын
😮 Okay, my dumb ass thought this was about actual 🍇 grapes for like 5 minutes...