Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast - Real Crime Scene Investigations Explained | How CSI Solves Murder Cases
Episode Date: April 5, 2025Investigator Alina Burroughs examines murder cases ripped from the headlines. She explores prosecution and defense teams' tactics to highlight the evidence that argues their case. Alina knows it c...an't bring the victims back -- but it can bring them home.Alinas IG https://www.instagram.com/alinaburroughs/?hl=enhttps://www.alinaburroughs.comFollow me on all socials!Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/insidetruecrime/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@mattcoxtruecrimeDo you want to be a guest? Fill out the form https://forms.gle/5H7FnhvMHKtUnq7k7Send me an email here: insidetruecrime@gmail.comDo you want a custom "con man" painting to shown up at your doorstep every month? Subscribe to my Patreon: https: //www.patreon.com/insidetruecrimeDo you want a custom painting done by me? Check out my Etsy Store: https://www.etsy.com/shop/coxpopartListen to my True Crime Podcasts anywhere: https://anchor.fm/mattcox Check out my true crime books! Shark in the Housing Pool: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0851KBYCFBent: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BV4GC7TMIt's Insanity: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08KFYXKK8Devil Exposed: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08TH1WT5GDevil Exposed (The Abridgment): https://www.amazon.com/dp/1070682438The Program: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0858W4G3KBailout: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/bailout-matthew-cox/1142275402Dude, Where's My Hand-Grenade?: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BXNFHBDF/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1678623676&sr=1-1Checkout my disturbingly twisted satiric novel!Stranger Danger: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BSWQP3WXIf you would like to support me directly, I accept donations here:Paypal: https://www.paypal.me/MattCox69Cashapp: $coxcon69
Transcript
Discussion (0)
He was targeting sex workers, and he would solicit services.
He would then beat them near to death and then leave them.
And we had had this probably maybe four to five times that we would find these women beaten nearly to death.
I encounter people on generally the worst days of their lives.
Nobody calls a crime scene investigator if their days going well.
Right.
Right. And I don't encounter people that are happy to see me.
If I'm lucky, the victims are living.
Hey, this is Matt Cox, and I am here with Alina Burroughs, and she is the host of crime scenes confidential.
And she is an expert in forensic science.
I've watched several of the episodes.
Um, you know, I mean, I thought they were really interesting, a little, really kind of graphic, too, you know, like you really kind of get into the whole thing. And I, and I, the one I thought was interesting. Well, I mean, I guess it wasn't just the forensics, but it was the fact that it seemed like the police got on to one of, this is the guy that had like the furniture store.
Yeah. It seems like they decided he was.
was he was guilty, and then they just stuck with that.
Yeah.
That's a common thing that we see in some investigations,
and that's why I fell in love with crime scene investigation forensic evidence
because it doesn't have a bias.
It doesn't have an interest in a particular person,
especially when we look at some older cases before forensic science really had a chance to evolve.
You know, what you see is police get there.
They make up their mind about something, and they kind of run with it.
because, like I said, depending on the time, there may or may not have been forensic science
that could come about with blood test results that supported one way or another. And that's the scary
thing when we look at cases that are a bit older. That's part of the reason why crime scene
confidential exists. We want to look at cases under the eye of 2023 and look at decisions that were
made. You know, the stakes are pretty high here. We have people that are still in prison that are saying
they're innocent. And if they were put in prison in a time in which we didn't have forensic
capabilities that we have today, do they still need to be there? Right. I mean, look at how many
people, you know, DNA has proven that this was not the person. Right. You know, that they were
100% sure, like the, you know, all the, all the evidence pointed toward them. And then suddenly
20 years later, DNA comes out and it's like, oh, wasn't him. Exactly. That's why science is there.
People always have an interest in maintaining a perception and people lie, right?
We know that for a fact.
But DNA doesn't.
It's going to be the 100% truth of what happened.
And that's what the show does is, you know, we reexamine these cases that are highly controversial, that a lot of them are based on circumstantial evidence.
And we look at them in 20, you know, 2023 eye, a current I, current forensics, and say, was the forensics that was used at the time?
still something that we hold valid today. And, you know, are the people that are convicted? Was this a proper conviction? Is this been a wrongful conviction? Is there somebody that's been released? Is it a wrongful release? You know, what are we looking at with these cases? Right. So, Hammond, how did you get into this? Where, like, your police, I mean, were your, sorry, were your parents, police officers, were there law enforcement in your family?
Not law enforcement in the way that most people look at traditional law enforcement, but my father did train a lot of law enforcement in something that most people aren't familiar with, which is police promotional processes, right? We don't want police to promote people based on, hey, I know that guy. We should promote it. We want to have good promotional procedures that are based on picking the right person for the job because they are the most knowledgeable, the most skilled, they have the best capabilities. And my dad is actually an industrial
organizational psychologist who designs testing procedures to make sure that the right people are
promoted for the right reasons, in effect, removing bias from that part of the process. So I did
start working with my father when I was in undergraduate school. So while I was working in college,
I worked for the family business. And that's where I became interested in crime scene.
I started helping writing tests and looking at the crime scene procedures. And I said, I think this is
really what I want to do. So I started working on my graduate degree at that point. So what I did
and what I advise everybody else to do because they always ask me how to be a CSI is you call the local
agency where you want to work. And that's what I did. I picked up the phone and I said,
I want to be a CSI. What does it take for me to get a job at your agency? And they said, well,
we have, you know, this requirement that you either need to have six years.
of experience or you need to have, you know, as a CSI, and I had none at that point, or they said
you need to have six years degree. And at that point, I had a bachelor's degree. So six years
meant I need to have a master's degree to get my foot in the door. So I said, okay, I hung up the
phone and I enrolled in to work on my master's degree. And I did the master's program in three
semesters. So I got my master's degree in about a nine-month period. Did it matter what your
master's degree was in? Master of science, yes. It had to be a related, related field. So I got my
master of science and criminal justice, came back and I said, got your six years right now, education,
and can I take the test to be a crime scene investigator? And that's how the whole thing started.
Okay. Well, I mean, where we're, I mean,
Where were you born?
I'm just letting you know, I know we're jumping backwards now, but where were you born and raised?
Born and raised in Central Florida.
Okay.
So, yeah, a lot of the cases that have really been highly publicized, a lot of the high profile cases that I worked, like the Kaylee Anthony case or the Pulse Night Club shooting, are near and dear to me because those are, that's my hometown.
Right.
Yeah, we've got some.
Horific crimes in Florida.
Yeah.
I'm in Florida.
I was raised in Tampa.
Well, I was raised in Temple Terrace,
but nobody knows where Temple Terrace is,
so I should say Tampa.
Yeah, I actually, at one point,
trained Temple Terrace Police Department,
so I know where Temple Terrace is.
Yep.
Yeah, I, so did you have, like,
are your brother, any brothers, sisters, anything like that?
Any?
Yep, I have a brother who's got a background in military,
and but on the law enforcement one in the family that went into investigations for sure it's funny
because I interview I'll interview police officers or you know former mobsters or whatever and in like
it up in New York they're all they always say the same thing they're always like you know listen
in the neighborhood it's it's very much like it sounds like something out of like a crime movie but
They all seem to say the same thing.
They're like, look, you were either going to be a criminal or you were going to be, you know, law enforcement or work for the government in some way.
There was really only two paths.
So I just, I'm just always wondering when I talk to law enforcement.
Yeah.
Oh, it always is.
And then a lot of guys, like their family members will have, you know, military law enforcement, that sort of thing.
Or at least sometimes just government, you know, in some form or another, they work for the government somehow.
Yeah.
So.
Well, you know, I've considered many other jobs before I found my way into a crime scene. So I started to be an attorney. I considered, you know, being an attorney. I took the L-SAT and I'd considered law school at one point. And I still actually toy with the idea, especially going through years of my time in the criminal justice system. I think it could be a step for me at some point, play around with the idea, but I'm not an attorney. But I do get to.
play that part, think that through.
As an investigator, you have to think about all the steps, right?
How is this going to play out in court?
I don't know.
I guess it depends on the kind of the type of attorney you are.
I know a lot of attorneys and they always just seem, it's just so frustrating.
You know, because things sometimes, you know, you feel they just don't go their way,
especially criminal defense attorneys.
Like, you know, you meet the guy you're representing, you're the defendant, you think he's okay.
you think, you know, we can negotiate this.
The next thing you know, he's got 20 years and you're like, wow, that just he didn't
deserve that or maybe deserved better than that or worse than that.
Yeah, there's not a lot of control in the criminal justice system.
You know, whether or not your police officer, a crime scene investigator or an attorney,
I think as you enter that funnel that, you know, we call the criminal justice system.
And I don't think a lot of people have a lot of control over.
any of those steps. So frustration is a common
word that's used to describe that. You know, I don't have control over my cases.
You know, people ask like, you know, how do you feel about these things? You know, I
encounter people on generally the worst days of their lives. Nobody calls a crime scene
investigator if their day's going well. Right. Right. And I don't encounter people that
are happy to see me. If I'm lucky, the victims are living. Right.
So how did the, I mean, how did you end up, you know, getting on the show or, I don't know, doing the show? Was it your idea or were you approached?
It's a serendipity, right? I've also, in my career as a crime scene investigator, I've done a lot of teaching. So I taught college forensic science. So I'm kind of used to being in front of people and translating forensic science and breaking concepts down.
You know, things that can be relatively complex concepts like forensic genetic genealogy, and then, you know, breaking that down into a way there, people want to hear about it. You know, people don't want to, you know, tune out. And I want to be able to keep the attention of a student that's in class. So I always taught that there are a couple different ways and different levels that you can instruct things, right? You can canoe or you can scuba dive, right? I can go across the surface and explain things.
like that, if you start scuba diving, you're going to lose people really fast. And so I think
I learned how to explain topics in a way that makes it easy for people to understand and get
interested and get on board and go, yeah, that makes sensely. And I understand. And maybe I want
to know a little bit more about those things. So I learned that skill, I think, as a teacher,
as a professor. And so I'm in front of people. I'm explaining concepts. I did a lot of public
speaking at that point. And I was out doing public speaking and I had somebody approached me and
asked if I'd ever considered, you know, doing something like a television show. And my thought
process at that point in time was, you know, as a crime scene investigator, I want to impact
families, right? I want to make a difference in the world. I'm one of those silly people that
thinks that I might be able to change the world. And I can make that difference at a very small
level as an investigator, or if I get to a larger number of people, maybe I can change the world
at a bigger level. So I considered that. And I worked with a production company. We thought about
what we might want out of a show. And then, you know, out of, you know, maybe 18 months of talking
about this, crime scene confidential was born. It wasn't called that at first, but, you know,
it evolved into that. And it's evolved more in season two, I think, than it was in season one like anything. I say that I have two children. It's season one and season two of crime scene confidential. And it really is my heart and soul that's put into this. So I'm still able to get involved in cases. I'm still able to research. I go through two to four thousand pages of documents on every one of these cases, personally researching everything. I'm still able to talk to family.
members and hopefully be able to provide them with something that gives them some closure
kind of walk them through this journey maybe there's some healing that can be done
maybe through this show i can put them together and have some conversations some really
powerful conversations take place on this show not just between me and the people that i
interview but between other people uh key players in the show that have been introduced um
You know, in season two, we see a man convicted of murder introduced to the son of the woman he's found guilty of murdering.
And conversations taking place between them because the son had things he needed to say to this man.
The man had things he needed to say to the son.
And that's just part of a journey.
There's an emotional aspect to the show.
And then there's the science aspect of the show so that I get to be the CSI.
I get to tell people the confidential aspect of crime scene confidential is that you should get to this glimpse of this is what a CSI does when they get to the to a scene here's how my mind sees things here's how it works this is how I process something this is what I'm thinking that doesn't make any sense if this then this and if that person said this doesn't that indicate that they knew this kind of walking through that process step by step.
So you said 18 months of with the dealing with the production company.
Like did the production company go to, you know, A&E or did they pitch the project to
to different your different networks and then get a budget to do the show?
Yeah, that's typically how it works is, you know, you work on a concept and then a production
company goes out to a variety of networks and then a network can pass on that.
pick it up and an investigation discovery, thankfully said, yes, we would love to see that
tattooed pink-haired lady come on and talk about crime scenes with us.
Did you shoot a sizzle reel?
No.
Well, it was also during COVID.
So COVID comes into play a bit with that as well.
We're not really interacting as much with people.
So I did some Zoom interviews.
So if you want to call that a sizzle reel.
Right.
how many episodes do you do you see um so the number of episodes also depends uh each time usually on a first season you get six episodes so it's kind of like a trial run to see how things go and see how well it's rated and if people like it and uh fantastically it rated very well people loved it we actually got season one got nominated for um an american reality television award for best new series so super thankful for that
And then we got picked up for season two, which has eight episodes.
Do you have anything to do with what makes the show?
Because, I mean, you know, obviously they end up with 30, 40 hours of video that some video editor trims down.
I mean, you must watch the episodes and just be like, you know, like, oh, that didn't make it.
Or, oh, that was a good, you know, oh, they didn't really explain that very well.
Oh, yeah.
yeah um i have an amazing working relationship with the showrunner and uh if if there's something that
i've said first of all he is fantastic and he is always just so great at picking you know the bits
like i remember you know when you explain this so well or i remember this particular scene that
was so touching or so poignant and those cuts kind of always already make it in without me having to
you know, say anything at all. He doesn't need my help. But if there was a moment where I was like,
I really want this in there, then, you know, absolutely, we all kind of sit around and say,
oh, but I would really like this in there. The hardest part, I think, for me, when I look at
rough cuts of the show and then rough cuts get narrated to find cuts, you know, narrowed down to
find cuts, and then, you know, what ends up becoming what people watch is there's so much
more content that we have filmed that I wish could make it in there. And it's just such a
struggle for me because I'm like, oh, but what about this and what about this? And I want to
say, I mean, the show would be two hours long if I had anything to do with it because I'm so
terrible at eliminating things from the show because I just want everything in there.
Well, I mean, it's like, it's like, you know, obviously everybody's heard this. You know,
it's like reading a book and then seeing the movie. Like, it's, it's just agony when you, you know,
you know that. But the, you know, the, the viewer doesn't realize what's missing so they don't miss it. So they feel they're okay with what they see because they don't realize like, oh, we didn't even talk about the third, you know, perpetrator or the next door neighbor that, you know.
So much content. And, you know, really it has to be narrowed down just because it can get too complex and too hard to follow sometimes. You know, I looked at these cases.
and you're, I mean, there are nights.
I'm there, you know, most of the time at my computer in my pajamas,
just, you know, going over these thousands of pages of things.
And I have papers with handwritten drawings and diagrams and lists of weapons and arrows that go to these.
I mean, it is like an insane person that where I have all these things.
And I think, how are they going to make this easily translatable to a viewer when I have all of this spread out?
And I'm trying to think of, you know, all of the victims and all of the weapons and which
bullet went to which so yeah there's you know there's this much you know there's this encyclopedia
that we go through and then it it kind of comes down to this nice thin version for television
but you're absolutely right i just am like oh i'm dying inside because i wanted all of these other
extra beats right to get in there with thinking about the you know the um you know all of the
all the documents that you have to go through like who acquired all that do you guys do like a freedom of
Information Act through or does like the producer go and and gather all that and and how receptive
are the is law enforcement or you know whatever the whatever whether it's state or us attorneys
you know and whether it's federal or state law enforcement like how receptive are they for you to go
and say hey we want to go ahead and run through your case again because you know they're like no no
our case perfect yeah exactly need your help thank you we're good yeah they say no absolutely come on take a look
yeah well the good news about cases that are adjudicated already is that the information is available we can
look at all of this information that's out there so we do have you know researchers and line producers
that thankfully they grab everything right police reports and autopsy reports lab reports everything right so
they gather it all they put it in a
Google Docs folder for me, and then I sit down with the biggest cup of coffee you've
ever seen, and I just open it up and I start reading. And if these cases have gone to trial,
trial transcripts. Right. That's when I break out my glasses, because trial transcripts,
depending on how many days a trial went on, can be thousands of pages. And you're just reading
the prosecution and the witnesses and you're reading through everything. But the way that I look at it is I can't
have a knowledgeable interview with somebody. I'm going to interview, maybe a prosecutor,
maybe a defense. I can't have a knowledgeable conversation with them. If I got a cliff note,
if I got cliff notes of the trial, I need to be able to show up on scene and say, in your
closing arguments, you said this, you know, and have some sort of counter argument. So if they
come back and they said, well, I did da-da-da-da, that I don't just sit there and nod. Oh, okay.
Good story. I need to be able to say, yeah, but you said this. And then they approached with
I have to have back and forth, and I can't do that if I just got somebody that read it and gave
me a summary. I have to read every page of those trial transcripts. And that's why it's so important
for me to go through every bit of this case on my own. So I open a blank word dog. I open all
of these documents, and I just started taking notes. This is what stood out to me. You know,
this was great that they did this. Why did they do this? Maybe now this is available. This should be
retested. These are the questions I have. Did they ask this, this, and this? Or if I was there,
I want to know this, this, this and this. Because when we start the show, and I am boots on the ground
in that city, on that crime scene, getting a new perspective, I want to have questions that I can
ask that prosecutor. I want to ask that investigator. How did they behave when you were sitting down
in that room with them? I want to be on the crime scene, which we are for all of these episodes
of Crime Scene Comedential. I go to the crime scene.
there is a perspective I get from being at a crime scene that I can't recreate by sitting there at my home office in my pajamas with my coffee.
It's great to read that report.
But I get so much more information from physically getting there.
You watched our premiere episode.
I am in the creek where the victim was found.
It was, I think the water temp was somewhere around 30 to 33 degrees.
It was about 25 degrees outside.
I'm in waiters.
You can't wear shoes with those.
So I've got a little socked feet inside those waiters.
I was having trouble forming words in that episode because my face was so cold.
There's a perspective you get from being out there that you cannot get from those documents.
I don't feel like, I don't feel like Chris Anderson would, he'd have stayed on the shore.
He'd have been like, that suit nice and sharp.
He'd have been like, listen, I, I'm not.
coming around down there. He sends somebody else. I'm going to send this to Chris. He'd have been
there in that sharp suit. He'd been like, this suit's going to stay nice and crisp from this
shoreline. He was, yeah, he was a good interview. Yeah, this is fantastic. Very, very
likable, very funny, very jovial. Um, so, uh, had another question, but she were talking
and then I forgot what it was. It was, it was, I was wondering, like, or, so,
I mean have you had any issues where they I mean I kind of asked but you you you not really like have you actually had any issues with you said that they have ones that have been like adjudicated you haven't had any where they you started the process of saying hey here's a case what we want to do and then it just went so bad you guys were like scratch that we can't they're not cooperating no I don't think so and I think that if if it were that it probably they wouldn't it wouldn't make it to me because they know how
intense I get into these cases, they probably wouldn't release. If they give me a name, they know
I'm going to start doing my research, so they probably won't even tell me a name until they know
that this is good and solid for us. The good news about season two that we didn't have with
season one. So season one, we filmed the whole season. Nobody knew about the show, right? We were a
brand new show. Nobody knew what this was. So by the time we film a second season, we have a whole
season that people can watch. We have a reputation. They look at it and they understand.
and who we are, what we do.
So the access that we have in season two is unprecedented
because people have seen it and they are,
I mean, such an honor that people trust me
to the extent that they do,
that I sit down and we have some just deep, powerful conversations.
This season is just really up to the ante.
Do you have any, are there any cases that stand out,
not just in this season, but just let's say,
in your career, do you have any cases that stood out that were really exceptional or challenging or?
I think there are always cases that stand out to me for a variety of different reasons,
and it's not always because they're the most gruesome or anything like that.
I think there's cases that stand out to me because it was the most interesting out of the box kind of solve, right?
you know crime scene isn't something that you can just say it's fingerprints and shoe tracks and
DNA yeah it's those things but crime scene is such a it can come in any way shape or form right
it's about making matches between victim suspect and crime scene and that can come in any
capacity it's not just in that box so any case that i've made a match on something that's just
been like how did that happen um i had we had a serial rapist who was he was going around he was
targeting prostitutes in the orlando area and he was soliciting services from them are i should
say sex workers i'm from an older school that has to learn to change my word choice uh he was
targeting sex workers and he would solicit services he would then beat them near to death
and then leave them. And we had had this probably maybe four to five times that we would find
these women beaten nearly to death. And they would give a description, and they would say,
it's just, all I can say is that it's a, you know, a white male, and I think he was driving a pickup truck.
And this is all the description we have. So, of course, everything is a cooperative joint effort.
law enforcement is out looking for
a description of this vehicle
and they find a pickup truck and they think it could be
related. They're not quite sure yet.
They go out,
they tow a vehicle somewhere.
I simultaneously get called to a scene
where one of these women had reported
being drug into the woods
and beaten. And I just happened to notice
that there was in this area a tree branch
that had been kind of broken off.
And I thought, well, that kind of looks like
maybe if a truck had driven into there,
maybe the truck had something on it
that could have pulled a tree branch off
so I cut the tree branch
and collected it
and when they found the truck
there was still a piece of tree branch
sticking out of like a work ladder
that was on the top of his truck
he had driven through there and it had broken
off a piece of that
and so a tree branch
connected this truck
right knew that crime scene where that woman was
raped and brutally beaten
And so a piece of a tree connected this guy.
The moment you, the moment the detectives talked to him and he says, no, I wasn't, I wasn't in the woods.
No, of course not.
And, you know, and then they're like, oh, okay, that's it.
He just, just doomed himself.
Now he's locked himself into a, into an narrative that the forensics don't support at all.
Right.
And I'm downstairs, unbeknownst, right, photographing this tree branch.
from the crime scene and this tree branch that I've taken out of the ladder on the top of your
truck. And there's a piece because it was like a, it wasn't a dead tree. It was a living tree. So it
peeled kind of back this piece that is still curled back onto the piece from his car. And I
placed it back right down into the branch from the crime scene. That's hard to explain. It's real
hard to explain. And so those are the moments when I'm just like, this is why I love my job. I live for those
moments. I live for those moments because, you know, especially victims like that, a sex
worker might think maybe they're not going to listen to me because of who I am or because of what
I've said. And so forensic science is now giving that voice to a victim and legitimizing her story
and saying, yes, she's a victim. This is what happened. Everything that she is saying is true. And now
we have a person identified
that can now be shown in a lineup
to these five other victims.
Do you know what the resolution to that case was?
Yeah, I don't remember exactly what he was sentenced to,
but he was found guilty of multiple of those crimes
and obviously they stopped after that.
Do you have it?
Was this one that was
that was an episode on the show?
No.
We focus on deaths on our show
For now
Right
So what's
Which episode
Stands out to you in either season one or two
Because I don't know if you want to say in season two yet
Or maybe you do, I don't know
I think instead of episodes
It's moments that stand out to me
You know sitting down with
Obviously
Our premiere episode has me sitting
down with a man that was convicted of killing a female.
Those are very poignant moments, very powerful conversations.
I have moments where I sit down with family members
and ask them how they feel about maybe a parent that has been charged with a crime.
And to hear a child say something about their
parent shocked me. You know, you can make your own opinions as an outsider. You know, we can all
make opinions as to, you know, the guilt or the innocence of somebody or how we feel about that.
But when you ask a child how they feel about the guilt or innocence of a parent, you usually
have an expectation. And I'll just say that, you know, the answers that that the children give
me were shocking.
So there are moments
that stick out in my head about particular
interviews for sure.
Okay.
I mean, are, is there,
have you wrapped up season
two, like all of them?
Yes, all of season two has been
filmed. So season two starts,
premiere episode airs September
6, that 9, 8 Central on ID,
also streaming on Max. And then it will air
every week
so all of September
pretty much all of October
everybody gets to see
crime scene confidential
so I've been working
filming for some time
to get these eight episodes done
so that everybody can watch them
do you have anything else
you're working on?
Um
yes
and
I will let you know
when I can tell you more
okay
um
yeah so like this may have
blossomed into something else
into another type of
well that's always the goal
you know this is I want to
engage this has always been
crime scene is is my passion
and I love talking to people I love
engaging with people
and so I hope that I'm blessed with a long career
of being able to do this
um
okay
now as far as more seasons of the show
you know we don't know we can't we live
season by season that's the stress of being a
television host, right? So if people like season one and want a season two, they have to just
watch, right? That's all I can say is watch. So if you want season three, watch season two.
We live in a ratings world. I, you know, I interviewed two women that they were, they live in
LA and they had started. How did it start? It was a true crime series that had started as a
series and I don't think they ever actually did anything like you know they you know there was a
plan you know it just it just got to that that stage where it just wasn't greenlit but everybody
kind of involved liked it and they basically said that but the budget was it's like okay
listen you know like it wasn't worth risking the budget for the crime scene show and what they
switched it to was a podcast yeah and now they do a podcast oh it was called
called I know I'm not I can't remember it was but it was it was something like I met my murderer online and it was about online dating and so it was online dating and how some you know somebody had met some some guy on it you know on a dating website and they dated for three months or six months and then he had ended up killing her.
in one case a guy had met a woman online and he was leaving his wife for her and the wife killed the woman and then killed herself just to make sure that the her husband that was yeah thing you know just to make sure that he was as miserable as possible like you know to me he's the one who's got to go
But that wasn't the way the wife felt.
Well, there's a lot of twisted realities to people, you know, that it appears that people don't understand the concept of divorce, you know, that you don't have to murder people.
You can just leave them.
Right.
That is an option.
On this case.
She had, she, she was playing by a different set of rules.
But anyway, yeah, it had actually turned into, to a podcast.
So, you know, it's like there's always, it's funny because usually.
it's like a podcast that turns into a show.
Right.
That's the typical stepping stone.
Television shows are hard, right?
They're hard to get.
And there are so many steps at which, you know, it can go kind of end.
Right.
You know, and I happened to get into that process in the middle of COVID, which made it even worse.
Because as soon as, you know, COVID and the lockdown, everything hit, everybody went, oh, wait a minute.
You know, we're going to.
Yeah, right.
The brakes would put on everything.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right. I mean, so do you, can you think of anything we haven't covered?
Because listen, I'm a talker.
We can go on forever. I can talk about anything forever, but this is about you.
I'm trying to think if I've covered everything or not.
Do you do a lot of interviews?
you know I it's usually in spurt so I have a lot of interviews right now because we're coming up to premiere so I get real popular around the show premiere and then uh you know I'll also get probably real popular right after the show premieres and then people start watching it and then when people go oh oh now we found the show we see you know what's going on with this then uh yeah I get you know what's going on with this then uh yeah I get you know
these little random uptakes. I also, you know, do some news coverage for, you know,
any cases that do pop up in the news media. You know, people are very curious as to why the things
that happen in our world happen. And, you know, I think that could be said for true crime in
general. You know, one of the more common questions that I get is why are people and women in
particular so interested in true crime? I think that question mostly comes from men that are
frightened as to why women are so interested in true crime and if they're trying to pick up
tips and if they should be frightened by this. And generally what I say is that they should not be
frightened by this. This is the outlet, right? And also something that I think men typically don't
think about or take for granted maybe is that you probably don't think about where you park your
car and if it's under a light and how you're going to get from that car to a building or from that
building back or if you're going to go out late at night, you know, if you're in a parking
garage and, you know, there are, if you're getting into an elevator, are you frightened by who's
on the elevator with you? If you, I mean, I'm a coward. So that's, I understand. Do you think about
these things? I think about these things. Most men don't typically think about their safety as much as
women have to. It's become a part of what, how we think. If we're going jogging, are we safe to
go jogging? Where are we going to go jogging? Is it well lit? If we're going to meet friends out,
what time is that function going to end? And can we safely get back to our cars, to our homes?
You know, all of these things have become such a part of how women have to think. And men kind of have a
luxury of not necessarily having to think like that. And true crime does a lot of things.
It, one, provides some trading. You know, women watch this like, you know, where did it go wrong?
You know, I'm making mental notes, right? You know, you don't do that. You do that. Right. Oh, well, you know,
she went jogging alone at night, right? Clearly, that's the mistake. We don't do that. So it's almost
like providing training. They also, you know, people in general, not just women, but they, we love
to solve problems. We want to think about as an investigator, what would I have done? Where would I
have looked or how would I have solved this case? Would I have come to the same conclusion? And one of
the things that I do love about crime scene confidential is we, we love our viewers and we are not going to
of him how to think. I'm not there to say this is how you should feel about this case.
I'm going to tell you this is what the evidence is. This is how it fits into the case. This is what
the prosecution says and this is how the defense plays it. Here's the key people in this case and what
they did. Here, maybe we're even going to talk to the murderer themselves. But Alina's not here
to tell you how this, how you should feel about this or what you should think about this. I'm here
to present the facts and let you decide whether or not this person should be found guilty or
innocent. And what I love is hearing people say, gosh, I sat down and I had a conversation with my
husband or my coworkers the next day. And we think guilty. Well, we think innocent. And well,
but the evidence, this. Well, but yeah, but that. And that it's spawning these thought-provoking
conversations about evidence, about bias. Well, yeah, but the investment.
investigation was biased from the start.
Yeah, but the evidence, right?
We're letting our viewers, it's a choose your own adventure.
I'm here to present the evidence and the facts
and let the viewer decide if you were the jury.
What would you find?
Right. I, like I said, I watch a lot of,
so everything, so there's like, I have like two or three things
that I thought of when you were talking. So one is I told you
I watch a lot of true crime and, like, cold case files as often.
I'd say at least once or twice a month, I'll be somewhere with my wife, and she has a,
her daughter is Mary Shelley.
Like, we were at the beach a couple months ago, and we're laying on the beach, and Mary Shelley
says, Mom, can I have the keys?
And, you know, to the car, I want to go get my whatever out of the car.
And she was sure, she gives her the keys.
And as she was walking off, I looked at my wife.
wife and I'm saying I'm telling you right now this feels like the beginning of a cold case file you know and that was
the last time we saw her exactly and then the the image switches to a negative and you'd walk just don't say
that I said I'm just saying I would think about going going with her because I said this is definitely the
scene there were so many people nobody saw her again never made it to the car the keys were found
two days later in the bush I said she's like oh come on I mean but
I think about that all the time.
I'm like, something will happen.
I'll be like, I don't know.
I feel like I should call and tell someone that I changed.
I'm not headed here.
I'm now going to the mall.
I'm like, yeah, you know, let me text somebody that.
I heard he was headed to get his hair cut.
And they never saw him again.
They found the body, you know, in the woods two months later.
I'm telling you.
It's a thing, true crime training.
The other thing is, and I've heard that whole,
the whole thing about, you know, women, you know, why do they like true crime? And this is the thing. Women tend to, and I think it's like 75% to 80% of true crime is consumed by women. But it's actually, and which maybe this probably is even worse, it's really the more violent true crime stuff that they crave. Because my channel, which the bulk of my channel, which the bulk of my chance,
doesn't focus on any type of violence, right? Not that there's not some stuff that does
that where I get, I have a discussion about some kind of a violent content, but very
seldom, right? I'd say less than 5%, maybe less, at least less than 10. Most of it is credit
card fraudsters. Yeah. Scammers, you know, things like that. And so 82 to 83% of my viewers are
men and only and really only in the last year or so have i gotten more uh female uh subscribers
which is weird right like it's i think that's weird that so many men are they're just you know
that they they they i guess they shy away from the more violent you would think men would be
more interested in violence but it's just they have an out i mean typically is very stereotypically
men have the outlet of sports for, you know, that side of things. And I also describe true crime
as like the adrenaline rush. It's a mental version of a roller coaster, right? You know,
why do people go on roller coasters? Because they know it's safe, but you get to experience this
thrill that your body goes through in a safe environment. And true crime is kind of that on the
emotional side. You get to be safe at home, right? You're snuggled up. You're totally safe. And you
get to have that, oh my gosh, these adrenaline, you know, rushed feelings from a completely safe
controlled environment. And you get that feeling of, I'm safe. You know, that's, it's terrible for
them, but you also feel better about your life because you're like, oh, thank gosh, that I'm in this
safe place and I don't have to go through that, but you also get that adrenaline rush at the same
time. You're solving problems. You're learning life lessons. You're getting training. Why not watch
true crime? Right. I left that I had a, you know, guys will come here.
here and and uh because i a lot of my i probably once or twice well at least once a week uh i have
someone come and we do an in-person podcast right they'll come for two three hours and leave and i
had a guy come one time we did the podcast and he left and my roommate when he walked out the
door and the guy was listen he was he was there was something not right he he felt there was a
disturbing presence about him and my roommate when
When he left, he said, I'm telling you right now, that guy's going to come back and kill everyone in the house.
He said, I'm telling you.
And I said, I said, listen, I know.
I understand.
He said, tell her right now.
He said, I feel very uncomfortable.
I don't like this guy knowing where we live.
I was like, oh.
Wow.
But, yeah, I.
There's a thing to that, though, you know.
There's a, there's a vibe to people.
There is, right?
Like, like I had heard that there was a study done where they had people that had people that had.
like, I don't know if they'd rob, they'd rob, like, they were robbers, right?
Like, I don't know if their purse snatchers or what they were, but they were basically robbers.
And they had studied people, and within, like, 80%, they could look at someone walking down the street and tell if that was someone that would rob or not.
And, like, almost everybody they picked were people that had been robbed.
And people that have been robbed are more likely to be robbed multiple times.
body language micro expressions uh i mean i do some of that when i talk to people as well there's
like mirroring language and there's a ton to that sure um so was that was the other thing i was
going to mention to you was yeah that's i don't know i guess it doesn't matter it's it's it's
bizarre uh but yeah true crime is is super i don't know why it's fascinating to me and i and i
And I actually do watch the, even the violent ones.
Like, I don't really like them that they're the violent ones, but I do love, I guess because
I've written several books and I've done a lot of research.
Like, I'm very curious to know how these guys piece, you know, how the, the, I guess
not just the forensic scientist, but the, but the detectives and, you know, how they piece it
together, especially when you've got people that are blatantly lying to you.
And, you know, how do you see through that?
And anyway, yeah, so interesting.
I find it interesting.
I really hope that you enjoy the rest of the season.
I know that you will, especially after we talk today.
So you get all of September, all of our snowboard.
Yeah.
You know, like I was going to watch them that.
Like, after I watched those two, then my wife and I was, I was going to watch another one, at least another one.
I couldn't get it to work.
Yeah, well, we'll resend the last.
link so you can watch the the get that third one watched it also it also could have been user error
by the way so you know like just on my i'm not super tech savvy but i was amazed that i got it to work
to begin with so okay well good i i i really appreciate you you know taking the time to to speak with
me and i mean i hope it does well and if you figure out you know what the the next gig is that you
feel comfortable with. And you want to do a podcast on it. Let me know.
Thank you so much. Thanks for giving me the time to talk about something that I'm super
proud of. And I cannot wait to share with the world. So September 6th is coming up so soon.
It feels like the biggest secret that I've been keeping for the longest time, right,
since filming. So I'm excited for this moment to actually come out and unleash season two
crime scene confidential with the world. Oh, how would know if I was going to ask you?
yeah do you get recognized yes okay I was gonna say like has that like
the first time somebody came up to you was it just like were you shocked or no I mean I
have to consider I have pink hair so it's not like I can really not already so it's easy for
them to recognize you yeah I'm a little more easily recognizable so there's that
And, you know, it comes in waves.
So when the show is running, actively running, I get recognized a lot more.
When it's not running, then, you know, it's a little less.
I really enjoy talking to people.
So I never mind.
Everybody is usually really polite.
And they just, you know, come up and say hi.
And, you know, the only time that it freaked me out a little is I was out shopping, like Christmas shopping.
And I was walking to my car in the parking lot.
And they waited for me to get inside my car and then came.
up to the window of my car and knocked on it. And so I was like, I just, you know, would recommend maybe not knocking on it. Like, I, you know, could have thought it was a carjacking. So maybe don't approach in the carjacking kind of manner to somebody that is retired from the law enforcement profession. Just, you know, yell or wave or introduce yourself. I would be happy to say hi, but don't pretend to carjack me. Thanks. Yes, A. All right. Well, that's kind of cool, right? You got to get, that's pretty cool to be recognized.
Yeah, I love it and I love just that people get excited about the show in general.
So it's an honor.
Hey, I appreciate you guys watching.
And if you like the video, do me a favor and share it to your friends and family.
Also, if you haven't subscribed yet, please subscribe to the channel.
Hit the bell to get notified of videos like this.
Leave me a comment in the comment section.
Also, we're going to leave any links on the show in the description box.
and we'll also leave any social media for Ms. Burroughs in the description box.
Also, really appreciate you guys watching.
See ya.
I am going to be interviewing former homicide detective Chris Anderson,
and we're going to talk about some cases and his book and some what he's been doing.
And so check out the podcast.
I appreciate you coming on.
Hey, no problem, man.
I appreciate you.
for happening.
So you were on Discovery Channel's, what was the name of the show?
The name of the show was Reasonable Doubt.
Reasonable Doubt.
And that was for five seasons?
Yeah, man, yeah.
So, yeah, Discovery, yeah, going on to Reasonable Doubt was a, you know, it was a huge change
in my career.
You know, I'm used to, you know, investigating homicide cases and working cold cases and things
of that nature.
But getting the opportunity to go from, you know, as a homicide investigator and then being featured on first 48 and then going into my old show, Reasonable Doubt, and running it for five years, man, that was, you know, that was a huge change. It was life changing for me, actually, to see some of the cases that I've worked, see some of the cases that others have worked and being able to sit down and really get some people some help. That was a grip.
one of the best things I've done in my career.
So I'm wondering, when you go in and speak with,
so you go to reinvestigate a case and you go and do the homicide detectives that had worked the case,
like are they okay with that?
Are they irritated?
Like they feel like, hey, this guy's, you know,
looking over my shoulder or double checking my work or, or they open to it.
Like, man, we want the help.
So, yeah, some of the cases I've looked into, they run the gamut of everything they just said.
I've run into some cases where some guys have, you know, been very open to having somebody look at another case.
I've had some guys that have, you know, felt like I was looking over their shoulders and they had to critique their work and things in that nature.
And I've had some that just flat-out said, no, you know, you're not going to tell me, you know,
my work is wrong.
And, you know, that's kind of like the mindset of a, of a homicide investigator.
You don't want people, you know, critiquing your work, you know,
and you always want to maintain one of the worst things that could happen to a police officer
and even a homicide investigator especially is to have someone come in and say that
someone you were responsible for convicting.
Your investigation was responsible of convicting.
The worst thing to say was that guy was wrongfully convicted.
So I can understand some of these guys and I won't meet a comment any question.
But on the other hand, I look at it like this.
There have been lots of cases where people have been wrongfully convicted.
And as a matter of fact, there are innocent people that are sitting in prison now.
Whenever an investigation has been done and a trial has been conducted and you have more questions that still remain that answers,
then you should be willing to open up the books.
And let's re-investigate.
Let's re-look into it.
what happened in this case and see if maybe we got this one wrong.
Yeah, I, so I've, you know, I've spoken with a lot of, of law enforcement.
And I always, it's funny, like, with my opinion of homicide detectives are that, like, they're very,
they tend to be very focused on, on not convicting, but, but solving that crime.
Like, because, you know, there's no, there's no worse crime than murder, obviously.
And it's funny, you tend to get, you know, those are the guys that raise up through the ranks.
You know what I mean?
Like, they have a goal.
That's what they want to do.
They want to, they want to get to become a homicide detective.
So usually, like, the best, the best guys.
And a lot of times that I've just noticed that they're super driven and they don't care about anything else.
It's like, look, like all these other crimes are, you know,
almost a joke in comparison to murder. It's like, oh, you're, the guy had a gun. Okay, great. The guy was smoking pot. Okay, great. The guy had, look, I don't care about any of that. I'll take any help. You know, I want, you know, I want to solve this crime and I'm could care less about anything that I have to do to get to that point or who I have to deal with and talk to because those other crime don't mean anything. Right. So, which I like about that. What I don't like is what you're saying, like that, like that would upset me. It's like, okay, I get you.
you feel like the guy committed the crime, but do you really know it?
Right.
And yeah, so you're absolutely right.
I mean, homicide investigators are extremely driven individuals.
You have to be driven.
You have to be extremely focused because when you're not focused and when you're not driven,
when you get tired, you're going to go home, you know, if you're not driven.
If you're not focused, when you're looking at those cases and walking through the crime scenes
and having to process the millions of bits of information that are coming to you
without warning, if you're not focused, you'll miss something that's extremely important.
So, yeah, most homicide investigators that I've known that I've met in my career,
they were extremely focused, they were extremely driven.
These were the guys that were the cream of the crop in their police departments,
and they they ascended to the hikes of a homicide investigator.
And it takes a lot.
I mean, in my department, it took a lot for a guy to get into that unit.
They didn't just end up in that unit by a happenstance.
There were supervisors that were looking for a particular skill set
for the individuals that they brought into that unit.
So when did you, where were you raised?
So I was raised in my city that I worked in Birmingham, Alabama.
I grew up in Birmingham.
I grew up in one of the roughest parts of Birmingham.
I don't know if you're a fan of the show First 48,
which I was one of the investigators that was featured on First 48 also.
And a lot of the cases that we found on First 48 were cases that happened in my neighborhood where I grew up.
So, yeah, I came up through Birmingham.
I'm a second generation police officer.
My mom was a cop here.
And she was brought into the department during a time where, you know,
there weren't a lot of females in police work
and not a lot of black females in police work.
So she's always been a trailblazing, a hero to me.
So when she went into police work, I was probably about four or five years old.
And, you know, when I got of age, I think I was 21 when I started with the
department, you know, I didn't want to work anywhere else but the Murray Air Police Department
because it's where I grew up. That's why I wanted to make, you know, the most impact.
Was your father around?
Yeah, yeah. So my father was around. My father was the victim of an assault, a serious assault,
when I was, wow, there's probably a year or two after my mom became a police officer.
And he was seriously injured and handicapped for the rest of his life.
He's still alive today, but he was handicapped during that time.
And he never could really hold out a job or anything like that.
So my mom, while she raised three boys, she also had to take care of a husband.
You know, she was the breadwin of all the family after my father was almost murdered.
So, I mean, what are your, you have, what, two brothers?
I have two brothers.
I have an older brother.
I'm the middle child of us three.
I was probably anyone that knows me and my family,
I was the one that was least likely to anyone could ever, you know,
see me being a law enforcement officer.
I was that one that didn't make the great grades.
I was the one that I always stayed in trouble.
You know, if there was any one of my mother's children that probably should have
ended up in prison, it would have been.
So, you know, but, you know, God had a different calling for me at a different path.
I ended up going into police work at a young age.
My brothers are both very successful.
And, you know, now we look after our parents.
They're not in law enforcement?
No, no.
I was the only one of my mother's children that went into law enforcement.
How long were you on the force before you became a homicide detective?
What made you, and what did you want to become one in general?
Oh, oh, absolutely, absolutely.
So going into law enforcement and having a mother like mine,
who was very well known, very well respected within the department,
I wanted to carve my own way and not walk.
I'm going to have to walk in her footsteps, but I wanted to carve my own way.
And one thing that she never wanted to be was an investigator.
You know, she always loves school resources.
since she always loved being, you know, a supervisor and things of that nature.
So she was great at everything she did.
So me, I wanted a different path.
So, you know, I went into law enforcement at 21 and I did about five years in patrol.
And my time in patrol was probably some of the greatest times that I've had in police work.
But after about five years in patrol, I think the year,
I hired on in 1995.
There was four years.
I hired on in 1995.
In 1999, I was promoted to,
which I did a little step in narcotics.
Narcotics really wasn't for me.
But I ended up getting promoted into our burglary unit.
And from there, in 1990, 1999, I want to say it was.
And from 1999, all the way up to, wow,
2000 and 2011 or 12 I was in the investigations I moved around to several different
units but I went to homicide in 2005 and stayed there until I was promoted to sergeant in
2011 I spent the most time at homicide did you were you gunning for homicide like was that
was like or just absolutely oh I absolutely the way that we brought out to our we run
our department different than a lot of police, some of the police departments, I won't
say a lot, but some to be police departments. You know, we have investigators that, we have
burglary investigators, then we have robbery investigators, and then we have homicide. And, you know,
we have investigators that specialize in certain types of crime. So, whereas most, you know,
police departments don't work like that. If you work burglaries, if you're a detective,
you work all of them, burglaries, and homicide. We didn't, we didn't,
work like that. So I knew pretty early in my career that homicide was where I wanted to
beat. It was the tip of the sphere. As far as investigators, they were always the sharpest.
They were always the most cutting. They were always the, you know, the guys that I came up under,
they were the guys that you wanted to be in police work. So I always knew I wanted to go to
homicide when I was young. And I went into investigations that, I mean,
I was probably in my early 20s, and I think I got promoted to homicide right at about 20, you know, 28, 29 years old, I want to say.
I can't remember exactly, but yes, I was pretty young in police work.
And, you know, seeing all of that in a young husband, a young father, you know, I got kids.
You know, I got babies now, you know, and as a homicide investigation, you spend a lot of time and work, a lot of time at work.
missing out on football games and having to leave out of your daughter's ballet practice or there
recitals, you know, because you're getting that call. But I was driven, man, and I wanted,
this is something that I wanted to do. So from the time that I was in homicide, and it happened
a lot when I was in robber and burglary too, but when I was in homicide, my wife was almost a single
wife, you know, she had to raise our kids. She had to go and do all of it. He handled
the house and everything.
So, yeah, but it was a great time in my career.
I wouldn't, there are certain parts of it.
I wish I could do over again, but I wouldn't trade it for the world.
That experience is, it was amazing for me.
Do you have, are there any cases that stand out that?
Jerry, I got plenty of them, man.
I got plenty of cases that stand out to me.
I've worked almost nothing that you could show me in a crime scene would surprise me.
So I've worked everything from child murders, children being, you know, slain and then all the way up to, you know, elderly people being, you know, murdered and thrown out on the side of the road.
So I've got plenty of cases that really touched that affected me in different ways.
And that's one thing that I love about homicide, no two days are the same.
Never.
It's never the same.
And that's what some of the things that were,
a lot of investigators get burned out because, you know,
it's just the monotony of everything that's happening.
But you can never say that when you're a homicide investigator, you know, no two days are the same.
So I had a case that I actually.
we wrote about in my book called The Case.
And I talk a little bit about how I, you know,
move through our police department.
I talked about how the impact of my mother had on me as an investigator,
as a young, you know, police officer.
And I talk about this one particular case that I investigated here in Birmingham.
And it's a true story.
I mean, you know, I changed a lot of the names and things of that nature.
in the case.
But, you know, it was a real case that actually happened here in Birmingham.
It was the investigation, what happened during the investigation, the drive, you know, it almost, work in that case almost cost me, you know, while I got it solved, got the people arrested, got justice for my victim.
I almost lost everything that was important to me.
That's my wife.
like she is my family
you know but it was
just
it was one of those things that
that just happened man
and it helped me
after working that that particular case
it helped me become a better father
a better husband and a better detective also
what was a case
what help okay
I'll tell you about it yeah
so yeah
during that time my wife and I
were on a rough patch
I was kind of new at how much I had been at
homicide for maybe a year or so and you know I'm still trying to make my way I'm trying to
you know learn gather all this information and learn how to do this job as well as I could
and I had gotten a pretty good go at it and but during that time I you know I kind of left
my wife and all my kids and they you know I wasn't around like I should have been and she had
gotten fed up and plus you know I was doing all kinds of other stuff you know I wasn't
most, you know, faithful guys, put it like that.
Right.
So, you know, it happens like that.
So we get out and my wife, I come into the house and she's already tired because I told
I was coming home and ended up not getting home for hours.
My kids were waiting up for me.
She had made dinner for me.
You know, I'm like, okay, I'm sick of it right now.
So I go upstairs, you know, I talk to my kids for a little while, I'll eat my
food and me and her about to get into an argument and I get a call. Now, I'll tell you what really
helped me to become really why this case was so touching to me. So I get a call out of that a young
lady's been, a young girl that's been murdered. And they asked me to come out to the crime
scene, which I'm going to go anyway, because I'm the lead investigator that night. Get out to the
crime scene. And I'm looking at this vehicle, this vehicle, this is, say, like a 2004, 2005 or a
BMW. It's lodged up on the side of a wall and the tires are still engaged because the victim,
she's been shot inside of her vehicle and she tried to drive away from her attacker and he shot
one time through the car, strikes her in the back of her head and she dives instantly. So
the car ended up wrecking and it's lodged on the side of a wall.
And we couldn't get it out of, out of gear before I got out there.
And, you know, until we could take some precautions to not screw up the crime scene.
Excuse me.
Excuse me.
At any rate, I get out to the crime scene.
And the whole while there, I'm thinking to myself, you know, I need to try to straighten
this stuff out with my wife because I'm not doing what I'm supposed to do as a father.
I know that.
I'm not being a husband.
I should be.
So I get out to the crime scene
And I'm not spending enough time with my kids
And those were the most important things of my life
Get out to the crime scene
And I'm taking down my notes
And I'm looking in the car at the victim
Now they've got everything set up to where I can be close enough to
And take down my notes before they remove the body from the car
And I'm writing out my notes and the guy
I asked the guy and said, what's her name?
And he says Kayla
and I stopped for a second, you know, her name is what?
My daughter's name is Kayla.
This young lady is not too much older than my daughter.
So from that point, you know, I'm already struck him because I had to spend
time with my kids, you know, I'm already going through this mental thing that we go
through it as homicide investigators, you know, and from that point on,
everything that I saw, everything that I did, every picture that I looked at, I didn't see my victim's face.
I saw my own child's face.
And I thought about everything that was going, that was happening about, you know, how I wasn't spending any time with her.
And I thought about my victim's family, you know, they let that daughter go out of the house just for a few minutes and, you know, a couple of hours.
And now she'll never be seen again.
I didn't want to be like that.
So, yeah, yeah, I started working this case, and it was like investigating my own child's murder.
You know, I picked up a really good relationship with my victim's mom, which I talked to her and her brother, and I don't talk to her father as much, but I talked to, you know, my victim's mom and brother, we're friends today.
and they know my kids
and her family
and we just kind of connected
and I think
that connection
was brought about
by one of the most
traumatic events that any person
could experience and that's murder
so
you know I'm just giving you a preface
of the case I don't want to hear
everything that happened but yeah man
it was one of
working that case helped
me to realize that every day is special. Every day, you need to do something to make tomorrow
better. So I started after I finished the case up, and you know, if you're interested in seeing
the book or reading the book, it's on Amazon now. It's been doing book sales. I've been doing
pretty well, but I, you know, I always can use another person buy one more book. So, yeah,
I take you through all the emotions that I went through. And I take you.
through everything that was happening with me and my wife and my kids during that time,
you know, the nights that I left and slept in my office and, you know,
the nights of being out on the streets or trying to, you know, be at home and spend time
with my kids, but mentally I'm not there, you know, I'm physically there.
Mentally, I'm still at work trying to find these fuckers that kill my child.
So, yeah, it's, there's a lot of, of, of,
There's a lot of PTSD that happens with law enforcement that a lot of people don't know about.
A lot of people don't talk about.
And it goes, some of it comes about by some of the things that you see here and do on a daily basis.
And I think that's what happened with me during that time.
Do you know how many cases you work?
Yes.
Yes.
So I, um, so I've investigated, I think last count.
where I've led
I've led in over
100 cases
the last count
of cases that I've
investigated murder cases
that I've investigated
1 over 300
and may not sound like a lot
but that's a lot
yeah that's how to translate a lot
I was going to say
like what are
our
try to think what are the more complicated
cases
the more complicated cases
the more complicated
Can you, because aren't most murders, like it's kind of random, it just happened, it gets out of control, or to me, like, if someone really methodically thought out the crime, like, that's a difficult case.
Right.
So the ones, they're all difficult in some way, shape, or form.
Even some of the ones that most people would think are easier cases, the domestic violence type cases.
What's going on YouTube?
Ardap Dan here, Federal Prison Time Consulting.
Hope you guys are all having a great day.
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All right, guys, see you, see you at the end of the video.
Peace.
I'm out of here.
Back to you, Matt.
So here's the thing when you think about homicide investigations.
The one thing that's helped me out the most is almost three quarters of the murders that
happen in the U.S., they are caused by someone that has a relationship with the victim.
You know, that there's some sort of relationship, some sort of connection with the victim.
Most murders are not random acts of violence, the majority of them.
So when you deal with homicides, if you go into it with that mindset,
you can usually maneuver through you,
and you know how to take your investigation.
It all starts with the background of the victim.
It's called victimology.
And I don't think enough schools teach enough about victimology
and learning victimology, because especially when it comes to homicide investigations,
because like I just said, three quarters of every case that you'll work in this country
are caused by, are committed by someone that's connected to you a bit.
So, yeah, they're all complex in that sense because you have to unravel each piece.
It's like a, like an onion.
You know, you have to peel back so many layers until you get to where what actually the root cause of what happened.
And usually nine times out of ten, it's you.
usually with something, someone that's connected to a victim.
So, yeah, they are all, but they all, they all have a level of complexity that,
you know, only, you can only understand it if you've been through it or conducted an
homicide investigation.
Do you, I mean, so do you, but do you have any one in particular that's interesting that,
that that was complicated, that you eventually put it together for some, you know what I mean?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So the ones that are usually the most complex are your serial cases.
And I've only had one of those because those are not.
Usually your serial cases are not, you know, they're not, how can I think they are those random acts of violence.
Right.
This person sees someone that they think would make, would become a, they could be an easy target.
They do whatever, you know, and they could be.
the murder. So those are
those are the ones that you have to
that are extremely hard to put
together because it usually
takes a lot
of working, moving parts.
And I had one like that.
And this one wasn't
yeah, this one was
it was kind of random, but there was
a connection between a victim and the suspect.
So I had this young girl.
She was 17 years old at the time that
she was murdered.
So here's this scenario
Her that mom had been on some really bad terms
And when she gets out of school
She was responsible for going to her mom's job
Sitting down with her for about two or three hours
And then riding home with her mom for work
Because her mom just didn't trust her in the house by herself
She's a little bit of this case
So on this particular day
This girl I had been on punishment for
on this punishment that her mom had
and, you know, enforced on her.
She was having to get off the bus
and come to sit up there with her
at work until her mom got off
and then her mom would take her home.
But on this day,
the mom said,
allows her to go on home.
You know, go to the house a little bit earlier
because she was going to, her mom had to work some overtime.
And this young lady had to do some homework.
So she allowed her to go home.
Mom comes home about four hours later,
it fires her daughter, she's been murdered.
And her, her, her, she had been strangled to death.
And then the suspect cut her throat.
And he cut her throat after she was murdered.
Her body was positioned and posed in a way that, you know,
it wouldn't have happened if, you know, it wasn't just random.
You could tell that the body had imposed.
So the way that she was.
posed, it led me to believe that, you know, it was somebody that was kind of close to
her. She had a boyfriend who, I had some witnesses who said that, you know, they had seen
the guy lurking around the house earlier that day. And so I'm thinking, okay, this is my guy. I need
to go pick him up. You know, he's where I need to start. Pick the guy up, bringing him in for
questioning. He doesn't confess like that meant to anything. But I get the witness.
and who says that, okay, they can identify him
as the person that was working around the house that day.
But nothing, that was it.
You know, he was very convincing in the interview room.
And I didn't feel right about putting him in jail at the moment.
The mom's pissed off.
She was totally pissed off with it.
I didn't feel right about putting him in jail.
So I didn't.
And I didn't have enough probable cause charging with anything.
But, you know, I said, let's just give me time.
I'm going to work this case.
And I'll find out who's responsible if it's him and he's going to jail.
If it's not him, let me find out who's responsible.
I worked that case for three years, three years.
I mean, and doing something on it at least on a daily basis
or going back out to the crime scene, you know, talking to people that knew the girl.
And this is during a time where D.S.
evidence wasn't as prevalent as it is today.
Like you can do DNA test and get it back within a couple of hours now.
You know, back then it took months and it took years sometimes.
I mean, you could even get it unless you had, you know, a suspect.
So at any rate, during those three years, a lot of things happened.
And, you know, that's when DNA and the collection of it and processing of it went into overdrive.
So what here in Alabama, which they've done now nationwide,
they started taking samples, DNA samples from everyone that was in prison.
So when I first started this case, you know, we never, we didn't, they didn't do that.
But I had DNA that was connected to this victim.
So at any rate, three years later, I get a DNA hit from this guy,
They completely random guy
The mom, nobody knew that the victim
And this guy had been seeing each other
Had been talking on the phone
Anything like that.
She had, and actually,
they had just met earlier that day.
And she ended up bringing him back to the house
And he ended up
Was the one that was responsible for the murder.
He was in prison
For murderings, another young woman
That happened in another municipality,
just, you know, a few miles away from where my department was.
And, you know, I went over and talked to him.
He wouldn't talk to me, but I had the DNA evidence, you know, against him.
He had gotten life in prison for the other young girl's murder because he did hurt.
Although the actual reality, he got convicted before I even knew he was responsible for my murder.
He had been convicted of two murders.
so that's why it became a serial case he had killed three young ladies over the span of about
i want to say it was over about the span of a year and uh the only thing that connected him in my
case was the dna evidence and he had no reason to be at the house it was in a vagina and uh yeah
you know he he was responsible for that murder uh those are some of the cases that you know it was
It was completely random.
There was nothing that suggested this girl and this guy had a connection.
And that makes it extremely hard when you're investigating homicide cases.
It's just those random acts of violence.
Yeah, I was going to say the serial killers, you know, that is the whole thing.
There's some long-distance truck driver.
They swing into it and they'll go after somebody who's vulnerable anyway, a prostitute or somebody,
get in the car nobody sees them get in the car they find the body like how are you
gonna how are you gonna track this back to one of the 10,000 truck stop that boy drove
through through that day 10,000 trucks that drove through right without something like
DNA that's why they get away with so many I always love the books um if you ever read james
Patterson where
he's got
Detective Cross
Uh-huh
Is the Honol's
So I forget the name
of his like nemesis
But they always make him seem so
You know
Of course he's he's a sadist
But
You know
They always make him seem so brilliant
And so
And he thought everything through
And the truth is most of these guys
They're just
They're you know
Not that they're stupid
but they're so over or so driven by just you know instinct and they make huge mistakes but
they get away with it because there's like you said there's typically no connection between
them and the victim so even though they made all these major mistakes the truth is is it's just
difficult to pin them down and eventually it's got to take something like like DNA and they're
already got five convictions and they go ahead and a bit to another 10 because they know they're
about to be put into the electric chair or something.
Right, right, right. Yeah. I mean, you know, look, it's complex within itself,
but I think the technology and investigations has helped us out a lot as detectives,
but you cannot be a good detective that's just going to get out there and beat the pavement
and talk to people and be able to communicate with people.
Well, I was going to say, even with cameras being everywhere, you still have to go to the bank,
you still have to go to the convenience store, you still have to go and, you still have to go
And, you know, you still have to, it's still all that running around to say, well, if he went this way, he probably would have crossed this liquor store and they've got a camera. So let's go there. You just have to put all those things together. Then you have to sit there and look through 12 hours of tape or 120 hours of tape or whatever the case may be. And then, you know, everything. It's just, I was going to say, it's like, like I said, I've talked to a bunch of law enforcement. They're like, it's just like extreme bored and.
boredom with these spikes
of adrenaline.
It's like being a soldier. It's like you're
nothing happens for
you know, three months straight and then you're
in a battle for four days straight and it's just
exhausting.
That's exactly right.
As you say, I was in
you know, I, when I
was locked up and I would do all this research
on guys and I'd order the Freedom of Information
Act. Like it would be hours and hours
of printing documents,
paperwork, ordering documents,
sheets, reordering documents, and then the spike in adrenaline would be you get mail and you open
up the transcript and on page 7, you're like, oh, oh, yeah, right. You're running right. Like, I would
feel like I had solved the case. I'm running around and going, oh my gosh, she was driven in black
worth spending these, you know, whatever it would. No. It always works out like that, man.
You know, we would have, there would be days like we would be going for.
for two or three days.
I remember I had a case on first 48
a couple years.
Well, it was probably
a, oh man,
this was in
2010,
I want to say it was.
This case was on first 48.
Man, we had, I mean,
during the initial phases of the investigation,
so what happened was we had this victim
that was inside of her home,
some guys break in on her
and put her down on the ground in,
shoot, killing a murderer inside her house.
And then to the store and got gas and poured gas all around the house,
set the house on fire, tried to burn the body up.
Done this thing ever.
And so during the initial phases of the investigation, you know,
I thought it was just going to be a random, I mean, a completely, you know,
kind of normal if that's the word that you can use, a homicide cases which you normally can't use.
I thought it was just going to be like a routine investigation.
So while we're out on the scene, some of the family members come to the house
and they start asking about the woman's child.
She said her child should have been inside of the house and we haven't seen a child.
There's not a child inside of the house.
So now the case switches from just a routine investigation to now we are looking for an
and the child.
So we just, we go, we run for hours and hours and hours.
And then we ended up locating the child, you know, at a, at a, at a friend of her's
house.
So, you know, and, and then we go back into the routine of investigating the case.
And maybe two or three hours after, after that, we get a big lead of where the victim's
property may have been or whatever.
You know, we run and go start investigating that for you.
So that's like that's you're you're very right that that's the the the the ups and downs of the homicide investigation.
You know, you're sometimes you move a little bit slow.
Sometimes you're running your tail off for hours and hours.
Sometimes you're running the tail off for days, you know, and it's, that's the way it works.
You got to be able to adjust your body and your mindset to doing it like that.
Oh, um, man, I was.
going to, I, you had said something and shoot, now I can't remember. Um, yeah, uh, so, oh, no,
it was we've, um, I would he's always joke, um, about, you know, your, your co-defendant getting
arrested. And it was always like, well, you know, you, you know, you're always going to say something.
No, he's not going to say another. No, he'll say something. No, he won't. And, and, and I tell,
You've seen the first 48.
They're all talking.
They're all going to, like, every one of the gangsters that walks in there
ends up crying his eyes out within two hours and saying, you know,
oh, you don't understand.
Friend and so.
I'm glad you brought that up because that reminds me that actually it was the same case
I just told you about.
You know, when I got the guys that were responsible for the murder,
got him into the room.
There was one guy.
I can't remember what his name.
That's, geez.
He's like, I remember this joke, but he taken me out so bad.
He was just the hard, and he wanted to be so hard.
That's like, look, man, you charged with capital murder.
He's like, capital of murder.
You don't believe that yourself.
I'm too pregnant to go to jail.
Oh, okay.
This is what he's saying.
And the camera crew, they get all that.
They eat that shit up.
You know, so they get all of it on camera, and they post it on the show.
And I'm like, I was ticked off about that case myself
because, you know, what they didn't show was,
two days after he's charged now and now he's over at the county jail he's had his preliminary
hearing and you know they're not letting him go he doesn't have a bond he got to sit there until
a trial because he's charged with capital murder it's starting to sink in uh yeah yeah in a in a big
way i got call after call after call from jail people saying hey hey uh detective anison he wants to talk
to you. And the same guy that walked out of my office saying that I'm too pretty to go to jail,
you don't believe that yourself. You know, he's all big, band, bow, sat right there and told me the
entire thing of how this robbery went down, you know, and it was too late then because his partner
had already snitched all everybody and told everybody, you know, what had happened. But yeah,
he told him, he sat there and tried to confess to everything. And then he tried to, with
draws confession later on but you know that's a whole other story but the point that i want to make
is on first 48 and all these other shows they try to seem so hard so violent but when you get them
in that room in that box that's what we called it the box when you get them in the box 90% of them
break down and will tell every single thing that happened they will tell you things that you
weren't even investigated you know they'll tell you about crimes
they've committed that you didn't even know that they were responsible for you know just to get out of that especially when it comes to murder if they committed robberies oh my god they will tell you about 30 robberies that they committed that they can get out of this homicide that they look at it but i mean at what
so if you just killed so you can't possibly think you're gonna you're gonna talk your way out of it i mean they do that i mean that you're just that that ace tell me what they do
They try.
I mean, you know, you think about it.
So the way our criminal justice system is set up in most states,
I know what Alabama is.
Alabama wants the most culpable person.
They want the person that who was the one that actually pull the trigger,
who was the mastermind behind it.
So if you come in and you're the first person to say,
well, he was the mastermind behind it and this is how we did it.
You know, sometimes they are more lenient.
towards you in your sentencing phase.
Right.
So, you know, look, a lot of people will say,
don't, you know, don't go in and talk to the police.
Okay, you have a right to not make any, any statements to your, to law enforcement.
That's your constitutional right set out by the government of the United States of America.
But if you are involved in a case and sometimes,
You know, you might want to, if you're not as culpable as the next person.
First off, you don't want to do the crime.
Just don't do the crime.
Right.
You know, that's the first thing.
But if you're involved and, you know, look, there's a lot of deals being slung around,
especially if you're with someone that, that if you are a co-defendant,
this co-defendant is nine times out of ten, co-defendants are going to talk.
They're going to talk.
I mean, so if you're not about that life, don't do the crime.
but you know
if you're not about that life
don't do the crowd with somebody else
you know
that's probably some of the best that why it's like
it's funny
I always so listen
I'll tell you something you might find funny
at anybody like watching this
these guys have heard me talk about this before
so you know I have all these
I've done all these podcasts right
so you've got all the scammers out there
think that I'm you know
like a scam guru or I'm gonna
I'm going to make them rich or, you know, they need to hook up with me or talk to me or something.
And, you know, I would get these emails offering me money if I just talk to them.
And I'm like, you know, no, no.
And I actually had a guy one time who, you know, was texting me.
Just kind of like on a, hey, I watch your stuff.
I like your stuff.
You know, so we're going back and forth.
So you, you, even though I've never met the guy, you know, you kind of, I don't want to say necessarily a friendship, but, you know, you respond.
Well, at some point, this is, we're talking about months later, six months later, of talking on and off.
He flies to Tampa.
He tells me, hey, I'm actually, my girlfriend lives in Tampa.
We're going down there.
Okay.
Hey, I'd love to buy here to some Starbucks.
Okay, I'll meet you for Starbucks.
So I meet him.
And he tells me, he tells me, listen, I wanted to fly down.
And he'd been locked up before, too, in, uh, in, uh, in, uh,
New York. And he said, look, I was locked up in New York. You know, like I did like, I forget three or four years. I never told on nobody. I'm like, okay. And he's like, so I wanted to come down. I wanted to let you know that, you know, I'm a solid guy. And I was like, okay. And he said, uh, but I need some help, man. Like if I could, you know, if you could help me help me help me help me help me help me help me help me help me help me help me help me help me help me help me help me out. Like if I could get like half a million. I forget what the amount was. He actually had like a specific amount like 400,000 or something. He said, if you could help me get 800, he's
He was like, I'll split it with you.
He's all you've got to do is tell me how to do it.
I'll go in the bank.
I'll go and sign the papers.
I'll do this.
I'll do this.
And he's going on and on and on.
I'm like, right, right, right.
And I said, okay.
And I said, well, you understand.
I said, I'm basically already.
Well, I said, once you get caught, I'm already on the indictment.
And he goes, what do you mean?
I said, no, man, I would never say nothing.
I would, I'll just take it.
If I advise, I said, no, no, no, no, let me explain something.
I said, let's say you never bring my name up.
Once they grab you, I said, and they will grab you.
I said, so they're going to get you.
I said, you're going to tell somebody.
No, I would never tell somebody.
I said, stop something.
You're going to tell somebody.
You're going to brag.
It's going to get, it's going to end up connecting to you somehow.
I said, you know what they're going to do?
They're going to pull your phone records.
They're going to see that we've spoken on the phone.
They're going to see that there's text messages.
They're going to look me up.
They're going to go into a grand jury.
they're going to add my name to the
conspiracy or to the list of conspirators
I said because this is something I'm known
for I said so
they're not going I said it doesn't
they're going to read my record they're going to read
the transcripts they're going to see that you
you've come down here they're going to see that
both our phones were at our Starbucks for
45 minutes
I said that you flew back the same day
and then three months later there was
you stole a million dollars
I said I'm already done
I said and you know what I said I can't even go
to trial. Because I can't take the stand in my own defend. I said, because I've got a history.
So I have to sit there while they read off all these things and they allege that I've done something,
even though right now I'm telling you, get on the plane and fly back to New York. I said,
that's just the way it is. I said, I'm already done. I said, so I don't need to give them any
additional information. And I said, that's if you keep your mouth shut. And the truth is
I said once you're locked up
and they say look
you can get two years
you're looking at eight now
you'll get two
we know Cox
all you have to do is say
that he helped you
like yeah and we
I literally got up and we left
and he was going
no no I was like stop
so you don't understand how
the electronic surveillance
alone connects
every but
if I was on the jury
I wouldn't think I wasn't a part of it
right
so it's
It's, you know, it's tough.
It's very real.
It's very, it's happened to own multiple cases to you.
I mean, the case that, the cases I wrote about in my book, you know, that were, even
though I only, you know, I was able to indict the people that were responsible for
her murders, there were a lot of other names that came up in connection to these guys
that, you know, we found information that helped close other cases on.
I mean, people don't understand, I guess, you know, some people see television and they think that, you know, when an investigator's working a case, that's the only case that they work, and that's just not true.
I mean, I found that the guys that we, that I arrested for Kayla's murder, they were responsible for 12 other carjackers, because that's how she got murdered.
They were trying to carjack a vehicle.
And they were responsible for 12 other carjackings,
but there were other people.
You know, sometimes it would be those three.
Sometimes it would be two of those guys and another guy, you know,
or sometimes it'd be just one guy and two other people.
But a lot of those folks got charged because, you know,
when we work cases like this, we don't just work that one particular cases.
There are multiple other cases that we usually get closed with every homicide investigation.
I was going to say that's, it's funny, that's like committing a crime.
And let's say I commit the purpose, me and three guys, we go and we commit this perfect little conspiracy.
We get a couple million dollars.
We're thrilled.
We walk away.
That's great.
You walk away, or I walk away.
But then two years later, one of those guys commits a crime.
And it's serious.
And he says, you know, and the detective says, you know, and the detective says,
look you can help yourself out like you could do five years or you could do you could do one year
you know you know anything well you know what yeah they're gonna take on deal right
you got to be in prison for a long period of time so the best thing to do is don't do the cry don't do
yeah um yeah it's it's it's insanity now nowadays there's the technology DNA cameras everything
it's rough
you know
I need to make sure
I say this
I love the way
the technology
has helped out
investigations
it's not a
but it's not a
end all
be all
especially DNA
you know
with the way
that they are collecting
it now
it's actually become
kind of dangerous
in my opinion
in certain aspects
that is
you know
because
like
there's no way
you can go
in any place
and not leave something of you in that place.
I'm not talking about like to restaurants,
you know, your friends' house.
There are certain investigative theories.
And not theory, there are actually facts that say that, you know,
each time you enter in a room,
you take something away and you leave something there.
So with that premise and the way that DNA is being collected,
you know, it can become dangerous.
And we've seen that in some of the cases that I've investigated,
especially some of the cases we looked into are reasonable doubt.
It was going to say, what was the term transference?
Yeah, transference.
Yeah.
That theory is called the La Carte principle.
But, yeah, that's what he speaks of.
It's especially like your skin sales from your hand.
things of that nature that can be pulled.
You know, you need a minimal amount of skin cells can be pulled and you can get a DNA profile
for her.
And that becomes kind of dangerous because if, you know, if you find someone's DNA inside of a certain
area where it shouldn't have been or inside of a crime scene and it comes back to a certain
person, that doesn't mean that that person is responsible for that murder.
That means that you need to look at that person that either eliminate them or find enough evidence
that convicts them. And we've had cases where some of that evidence has wrongfully convicted
there. I was going to say there was the, this was recently, I want to say like maybe a week
ago, a buddy of mine mentioned it to me that some guy had committed a murder and his, one of his
family members had gone on ancestry DNA and uploaded their DNA and they were like, look, a relative
of this guys
come into that murder
and so they sure enough
the detectives
connected it all
and said okay boom
that's our guy
that's the next door neighbor
and a week after the killing
he moved across the country
isn't you know
there have been a couple of cases
I've researched
one of them was
ah man upset
it was I think it was a murder
or a serial killer
and I think it was like California
or something like that
that they were able to connect
his DNA or a close relative of his they were able to connect his DNA to those murders
you know i never got lucky enough to do nothing like that because jesus christ that that would
that would have been easy but you know yeah it's uh oh yeah yeah but i'll bet that was still
that was still a lot of phone calls a lot of fill out of paid a lot of ways a lot of you know
somebody he absolutely
And somebody has to put that together.
Somebody has to be, a couple of guys got to be sitting in a room with their banging their head against the wall.
And somebody says, you know what?
This is a long shot.
Yeah.
What if we did this?
So all that, you know, first they run the DNA through it and then they go, ah, well, let's see if we can get a relative.
Maybe he didn't do it.
He's not going to upload his deal.
Maybe a relative.
Okay, run it again.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, it is, uh, yeah, the technology and investigation.
is completely going
and in a direction
that me when I was working cases
I never would have imagined
it or something like that
but I wish I had it
because there are a lot of cases that I
well I left quite a few cases
that were
that I would love to see Saul
finished
you know a lot
quite a fear
so what are you doing now
so right now
I serve as the chief of police at Talladega College.
It's my alma mater.
And, you know, of course, all campus police departments have.
They're all in particular police departments.
And I was, you know, I was blessed enough to get the opportunity to go back and work at my institution.
After I retired from, you know, law enforcement and there was a change in the leadership.
So they asked me to come on it.
See if I can help out with the security measures there.
And I love police Indiana College.
It's much different than, you know, what I'm used to.
So, you know, now it's more mentorship than enforcement.
You know, so, yeah, and I'm an instructor.
I also teach criminal investigations there at college.
Okay, perfect.
Yeah, man, yeah, man.
It's been a great, it's been a great rise since retiring.
Um, okay, so, any, no, any, any, any, so there was the, you were on the first 48.
Mm-hmm.
And, um, then you did reasonable doubt. Was that? Yeah. Okay. My memory's horrible. So,
uh, reasonable doubt. So, I mean, are there, are, are, are any other projects along those lines, like, are, that you're looking at or, or pitching or thinking about?
So, uh, I don't think that we.
We're done with reasonable doubt.
I think that that show was so beyond its time.
There have been certain television shows that have tried to do something like a reasonable doubt.
But I just think that the way that we did it was, it was great.
It wasn't just television.
It's really, we would try to write some of the wrongs that happened within our criminal justice system.
It was just way more than just television for me.
I would love to see if we could to try to get, you know,
another show kind of like reasonable doubt back all.
But, you know, other than that, that, you know, that's all I'm doing.
I make appearances.
I've made several appearances on all kinds of news, all the news media stations
as an expert in criminal investigations and homicide investigations.
And I've made several appearances on different crime shows.
those, you know, to talk that as an expert also.
But as far as a television show that, you know, I have a few things that are in the
works, nothing major, but I would love to get back on television.
Okay.
Any new books you're working on?
Yeah, I'm actually, I actually am, this fall, I am working on a book called,
man, you are crazy.
I am co-author in that book with the guy that I think you're familiar with Evan Donaldson, Katie.
Yeah, that's my book.
That's my dude, man.
Katie and I, we actually met on the media circuit during podcasts.
And our publicists put us together, man, to talk about some of the PTSD that's involved in law enforcement,
which is never really looking to.
And actually, it's actually shunned upon them to even mention that you may have received some PTSD from working at law enforcement.
But our goal is to destigmatize that, destigmatize that mindset because I believe that you respond to PTSD.
People respond to PTSD in different ways.
And, you know, if you don't get help for it, don't understand how to navigate through it, you usually respond in a negative way.
So that's our goal to write the book, help to destigmatize and talk about, you know,
how can we go about destigmatizing the mindset that PTSD does exist in law enforcement
and we need to do more in order to solve the problem.
I did, I interviewed both of them.
Okay.
We all went to dinner.
He met my wife.
Who else was there?
Gosh, John A-Light was there.
So was Mike Dowd. Do you know who that in?
Yeah, Mike Dowell, yeah.
So he was there, and there was a bunch of people there.
So we all had dinner, and then I, we did the podcast, I think, the next day.
And listen, what a horrible podcast.
Like, I mean, they're in tears.
I'm in tears.
Like, I borderline cry most of the day anyway, just in general.
You know, and these two guys, you know, they're tearing up and I'm tearing up.
It was, it was, after an hour, it was, like, I typically in the middle of the day, like, don't want to take a, like, I'm not the kind of guy that's like, oh, I'm going to go take a nap.
Like, I mean, I wanted to go crawled in bed and just sleep for like, you know, hours.
It's emotionally draining.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Katie is my guy, man.
He's a good, he's a really good guy, real police.
I flew up to his city a couple months ago to do his podcast, man.
And it was a great experience.
I love doing this studio stuff.
I just, you know, unfortunately, I just, you know,
it takes a lot of time out of my schedule to fly up and do things.
Yeah, he, he, a couple months ago, he asked me,
hey, when are you going to be in, in New York?
I think it's in New York, or New Jersey, New York.
Jersey.
Well, yeah, so he asked me, well, wait, you're going to be up here anytime soon?
I was like, no.
Man.
No.
I was like, you know, I just go to Jersey all the time.
yeah like how is that um it's funny because i actually have another podcast i need to do i i got to
see the problem isn't i don't know there's actually like three podcasts in that general area the
problem with that general area in my mind you know new york city and that that general area is not
that big but the truth it but it is big there's like three you know like from one podcast like
New Jersey to, you know, there's like this, this guy.
So I tracked it.
I went on Google Maps.
It's okay, this guy's address is this, this.
Well, that's four hours.
Like, if this guy's an hour and 45 minutes, like I.