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Episode Transcript

True Crime Time For April 14, 2026 | Baby Cut From Womb Murder, Starved Toddler Case, AI Hoax Arrest

In this episode of True Crime Time For, Woody and Cyndi Overton cover a lineup of deeply disturbing and eye-opening cases that highlight the extremes of human behavior — from calculated murder to unimaginable neglect and modern-day crime fueled by technology.

The episode opens with a historical look back at the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln, a reminder of how violence has shaped history and continues to impact society today.

From there, the episode moves into a chilling online predator case out of Texas, where a man believed he was communicating with a teenage girl, only to find out he had been interacting with an undercover federal agent. The investigation uncovered additional illegal material, pointing to a much larger and more disturbing pattern of behavior.

In Indiana, Woody and Cyndi break down a heartbreaking case involving a two-year-old child who died from severe neglect and starvation. Investigators found the child had resorted to eating diapers and drywall due to extreme hunger, while the parents lived in clean conditions just feet away. The delay in calling for help and the condition of the home paint a devastating picture of prolonged abuse.

One of the most shocking cases covered involves a Texas woman sentenced to death after murdering a pregnant mother and removing her unborn child in an elaborate and premeditated scheme. The lengths she went to fake a pregnancy — including staging ultrasounds and a gender reveal — make this one of the most disturbing crimes imaginable.

Additional cases include:

  • A mid-air assault involving an intoxicated airline passenger targeting a teenage girl
  • A traffic stop that led to the discovery of a homicide victim inside a vehicle and another body nearby
  • A Florida man arrested after using AI to stage a fake crime involving a police vehicle in an attempt to go viral

Throughout the episode, Woody and Cyndi reinforce a central message: evil exists in many forms — and whether it’s neglect, manipulation, or violence, awareness and accountability are key to stopping it.

f you’re struggling with OCD or unrelenting intrusive thoughts, NOCD can help. Book a free 15 minute call to get started: https://learn.nocd.com/RLRC

Investigative Producer: Leah Marie

🎧 Chapters

00:00 Introduction and Case Updates

02:00 This Day in History – Lincoln Assassination

05:30 Beast Mode: Online Predator Sting Case

10:30 Family Matters: Toddler Starvation Death

18:30 Investigation and Living Conditions

25:00 F’ed Up Professionals: Baby Cut From Womb Case

35:00 Premeditation and Motive Breakdown

42:00 Planes, Trains and Automobiles: Airline Assault

50:00 Victim Response and Airline Responsibility

57:00 Dum Dum in the Court: Traffic Stop Homicide Discovery

01:05:00 AI Hoax Crime and Viral Attempt

01:12:00 Closing Thoughts and Call to Action

true crime, baby cut from womb case, Reagan Simmons Hancock murder, Texas capital murder case, infant kidnapping murder, Indiana child neglect death, starvation toddler case, malnourished child abuse, online predator sting Texas, child exploitation arrest, airline assault case, drunk passenger attack, in-flight sexual assault, traffic stop homicide discovery, California homicide case, AI hoax arrest Florida, fake police video crime, social media prank crime, law enforcement investigation, true crime podcast



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[SPEAKER_00]: Hello everybody, welcome to episode of True Crime Time for Tuesday April 14th, 2026 and what are you over to?

[SPEAKER_01]: No, I'm Cindy over to you.

[SPEAKER_00]: We're back in the studio again, as time allows, right?

[SPEAKER_02]: Get it up.

[SPEAKER_00]: hashtag just for everybody right y'all on hashtag just for haily we are just under two thousand short for the money to pay Scott rather than the evidence for him to complete their testing and we're going to be released a small the test results said he did this week so if you can

[SPEAKER_00]: please go to GoFundMe in donating anything that you can and Ms. Barbara Johnson, Haley's Mama is responsible for giving all that money directly over to Scott Rotor and evidence for him.

[SPEAKER_00]: Hashtag what happened in Madison y'all continue calling your tips you'll get an episode this Saturday It's been two weeks.

[SPEAKER_00]: We've waited long enough and we're going to Bring you up to speed if you will and calling your tips three one three RL RC tip It's working believe me.

[SPEAKER_00]: It's working continue to share it hashtag what happened to Madison everywhere

[SPEAKER_00]: And we love and appreciate each and every one of y'all and hope you're doing well in the spring season.

[SPEAKER_00]: And let me tell you what happened on this day, April 14th, back in 1865.

[SPEAKER_01]: You can't calculate your birthday this time.

[SPEAKER_00]: I cannot.

[SPEAKER_00]: I might even begin to try.

[SPEAKER_00]: But this is a probably one of the most infamous crimes of all time in on this day in 1865.

[SPEAKER_00]: John Wilkes Booth snuck into Abraham Lincoln's private view of box at the fourth theater.

[SPEAKER_00]: You and I went to... You can say we can't connect, too.

[SPEAKER_00]: But to the boot we sat in the basement where they actually planned the assassination.

[SPEAKER_00]: He snuck into the view in box and shot President Abraham Lincoln with a 44 caliber single shot, Darage or pistol is shot him in the back of the head y'all.

[SPEAKER_00]: Dr. Charles Lee little quickly respond to the screams of the first lady, and found President Lincoln barely breathing and paralyzed.

[SPEAKER_00]: And now the President lived through the night, but he died the next morning.

[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, the sad and the, of course, they were all called in, I don't know, shitty time in American history.

[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_00]: So there you have it.

[SPEAKER_00]: That's what happened on this day in 1865.

[SPEAKER_00]: So that being said, let's get out some true crime time for this Tuesday, but you got it.

[SPEAKER_00]: Beast mode.

[SPEAKER_01]: We're going to San Antonio for this first story.

[SPEAKER_00]: San Antonio, Texas, we were just showing our son the airman's videos from their basic training.

[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, it's really cool.

[SPEAKER_00]: Air force personnel go through the basic training there.

[SPEAKER_01]: San Antonio.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_01]: Well, this is not basic training.

[SPEAKER_01]: or Air Force.

[SPEAKER_01]: A man was arrested after sending explicit messages and videos or images to an undercover U.S. secret service analyst, the she was posing as a 16-year-old girl.

[SPEAKER_01]: So on April 10, Oralio Benjamin Cardetta 47 was arrested after engaging in sexually explicit

[SPEAKER_01]: The internet crimes against children investigation was conducted on February 25th and they utilized an online profile on a messaging application called Whisper Secrets.

[SPEAKER_01]: and a search warrant was executed on March 25th at surveillance's house after a sting operation.

[SPEAKER_01]: And he attempted to seduce a detective posing as a 16-year-old girl.

[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, you have it a bad day.

[SPEAKER_01]: He was booked into jail on March 25th and bonded out two days later, but during the investigation detectives seized a cell phone that was in the man's possession and obtained a warrant to search it.

[SPEAKER_01]: And when they looked at the found, they found, of course, various files and deputies uncovered photos involving child pornography and bestiality, which is why I called it beast mode because he is a beast himself.

[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, absolutely.

[SPEAKER_00]: And then I mean, he just thought he was going to get hated on for rape and babies, adding rape and animals to that.

[SPEAKER_00]: They're going to have a good time in prison.

[SPEAKER_01]: The sheriff's office set investigators applied for and were granted three arrest warrants, one for possession of child pornography, a third degree felony, one for possession of child pornography involving a child under 10 years of age, which is a second degree felony and then one for bestiality, which is a state jail felony.

[SPEAKER_01]: So, thank goodness they caught him, but I mean, whisper, whatever.

[SPEAKER_00]: I don't know, who's fucking with it.

[SPEAKER_00]: I mean, it's fine, that.

[SPEAKER_00]: There's 70 apps and, and, you know, these people used for the various reasons.

[SPEAKER_00]: I remember when next tail came out, and we had them, uh, the share gave us.

[SPEAKER_00]: the Excel phones, you can communicate like a walkie talkie also.

[SPEAKER_00]: I mean, I call it a straight-up all-all phone.

[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_00]: I have announced apps, of course they don't even have apps like that back then.

[SPEAKER_00]: So there you have that.

[SPEAKER_00]: It's time for family matters.

[SPEAKER_00]: Going out to Indiana in a couple was arrested after their maligners toddler died in the poorville living conditions.

[SPEAKER_00]: and then Vescaire said the child had even pieces of diapers and drywall before his death and the parents waited roughly 14 hours after Lassie and him alive to call him a woman.

[SPEAKER_00]: So Trevor, Rishard, Hayes, 39, Katherine Carr, 31, are facing murder and neglect charges because of the death of their two-year-old Eric Rishard.

[SPEAKER_00]: And this according to the tail city police department.

[SPEAKER_00]: Officers found the child dead at around 120 p.m. on March 31st after Richard Hayes called now 111 to report that his wife found their son not breathing.

[SPEAKER_00]: Well, the cops get there and the couple tells them that the last time they saw their son alive was around 11 p.m. the day before.

[SPEAKER_00]: The Respondent Officer is a medics performed CPR to your old, but the child was pronounced dead the same.

[SPEAKER_00]: Said, I could tell based on my training and experience that the child had been deceased for several hours.

[SPEAKER_00]: The child was blue and pale.

[SPEAKER_00]: This was one of the detectives right at this problem called the rest of the world.

[SPEAKER_00]: The boy was extremely skinny and covered with dozens of sores or bug bites.

[SPEAKER_00]: He also weighed just 15 pounds, about half of what a child is, age of way.

[SPEAKER_00]: So, Carter told police that Eric had been eaten his diapers, and the detective suspected of the child had been eaten in his diapers due to the hunger, and saw in the rest for it.

[SPEAKER_00]: investigators found that the home, which also had two other kids in it, was in a horrible condition, and the other children were made, including one who was hospitalized severe malnutrition and dehydration.

[SPEAKER_00]: The text said he has our poor living conditions that included feces on the four and the two children's room, as well as an abundance of drywall and paint chips dirt and pieces of diaper lying everywhere, as well as a plethora of insects and bugs in the home.

[SPEAKER_00]: And in one bedroom, off-sus found a small child's bed, pieces of diaper, and drywall debris all over the floor, and a training toilet full of feces in urine that appeared, had been clean, and days, or perhaps even weeks, this all in the rest of the world.

[SPEAKER_00]: But despite the children's bedrooms being in the pool of a condition, the parents, they were living in a clean and well-cut bedroom.

[SPEAKER_00]: The war said the parents' bedroom had nice bedding and their bed was made and there was no extreme clutter and it was clean, unlike the remainder of the home.

[SPEAKER_00]: So an autopsy should the boy's colon contain four material with a gel-like substance in small, white pieces.

[SPEAKER_00]: These findings were consistent with the gel found in the diapers worn by the baby, as well as the material of the diaper itself.

[SPEAKER_00]: Some of the white material were removed from the colon was also consistent with drywall, paint chips, or spackling.

[SPEAKER_00]: Eric's call is the death was his term to be severe mal's nourishment and severity hydration as a result of neglect according to the affidavit.

[SPEAKER_00]: Indiana has the deaftowny.

[SPEAKER_01]: I was thinking about that when you said that he ate the diaper because those have that absorbance.

[SPEAKER_00]: How hungry do you have to be to eat drywall and diapers?

[SPEAKER_00]: I don't know.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, that is so awesome.

[SPEAKER_00]: Amber's age.

[SPEAKER_00]: It's time for after-up professionals.

[SPEAKER_01]: We have a 27-year-old Texas woman who, thank goodness, I hate to say it, but when you hear the story, she's been sentenced to death for brutally murdering a pregnant young mother who hired her.

[SPEAKER_01]: to photograph her engagement and wedding and in an elaborate scheme to steal the child.

[SPEAKER_01]: It's cruel.

[SPEAKER_01]: So, this all began to unfold after Taylor Renee Parker, who was then 27 years old, was pulled over for speeding on a highway.

[SPEAKER_01]: This happened way back in October of 2020.

[SPEAKER_01]: And she was just, she had just given birth on the side of the road and that her baby required medical attention.

[SPEAKER_01]: And she was into cab Texas and they decided that the closest hospital was going to be in Oklahoma.

[SPEAKER_01]: So they went over state lines and they went to Oklahoma to take her to the closest hospital.

[SPEAKER_01]: Like I said, the officer brought both of them to the nearby hospital in Oklahoma where the baby girl was pronounced dead.

[SPEAKER_01]: But suspicion began to arise among the staff at the hospital, which was McCarton Memorial Hospital and Ida Bell, Oklahoma.

[SPEAKER_01]: And investigators determined that the baby did not actually belong to Parker, but was rather torn out of the womb of 21-year-old Reagan Simmons Hancock.

[SPEAKER_01]: So then a authorities found that Simentancock was brutally murdered in Texas by Parker, while she was seven and a half months pregnant with her daughter.

[SPEAKER_01]: Simentancock had previously hired Parker to photograph her engagement and wedding.

[SPEAKER_01]: Then the victim's mother testified that she was surprised that the duo were in touch and believe they connected after her daughter announced her pregnancy.

[SPEAKER_01]: So, she goes on social media and now says that she's pregnant, the photographer gets back in touch with her.

[SPEAKER_01]: Well, the autopsy reported that the...

[SPEAKER_01]: Simmons Hancock's skull was budgeted with a hammer and her body was stabbed more than a hundred times before her unborn baby was taken out of her with a scalpel.

[SPEAKER_01]: The mother was then report, the mother then was left to die with her three-year-old daughter.

[SPEAKER_01]: with her.

[SPEAKER_01]: Parker was promptly arrested and booked into custody on third-degree murder and kidnapping charges.

[SPEAKER_01]: She was later convicted of capital murder in October of 2022 in sentence to death.

[SPEAKER_01]: She attempted to appeal the conviction in 2022 but was denied a new trial in 2025 which slept her on death row.

[SPEAKER_01]: investigators determined that Parker's premeditated the murder plot as part of a larger scheme to stop her boyfriend from leaving.

[SPEAKER_01]: And the district attorney described the woman as an actress of the highest order.

[SPEAKER_01]: And they said that she went to extreme lengths to convince others that she was pregnant, which included buying a fake pregnant belly, faking ultrasounds, having a gender reveal party and sharing her pregnancy on social media.

[SPEAKER_01]: She even after she took the baby murdered the mom and took the baby out of her.

[SPEAKER_01]: She grabbed the placenta and left it on the side of the road so that way her story would make sense when she, you know, if she was pulled over or whatever.

[SPEAKER_00]: Too much.

[SPEAKER_00]: That is way too much.

[SPEAKER_00]: planes, trains, and all the mobiles in, you know, cheerleading's a big thing and now it's a sport right back in our day of wedding.

[SPEAKER_00]: And they do these competitions all over the United States everywhere else, right?

[SPEAKER_00]: I got nieces and shit they did.

[SPEAKER_00]: We got a lot of friends, kids who do it.

[SPEAKER_00]: Well, they have to get from point A to point B for these competitions, and there was a teenage girl on her way to cheerlead in competition in Florida, and she got on front tier airlines, and shit didn't go real well for her.

[SPEAKER_00]: So she, this said there was an oversarved and unreasonably

[SPEAKER_00]: who drunkenly tried to force himself on this teenager, and of course a rear-roader trip and let his arrest.

[SPEAKER_00]: But prior to the assault, the 17-year-old suburban Philadelphia resident says a fellow pastor who started to, was visibly drunk and engaged in un-one-attaching of a flight attendant.

[SPEAKER_00]: but that the cabin crew still continue to bring him drinks.

[SPEAKER_00]: But I don't know what fuck I fight there or what, because they cut me off at a heartbeat a little more, right?

[SPEAKER_00]: For one time, I tried to feed me just to make it to use a set of a bloody Mary.

[SPEAKER_01]: Well, you weren't cropping anybody.

[SPEAKER_01]: No, I was just, I don't know what you were doing.

[SPEAKER_00]: I was just hammered, anybody.

[SPEAKER_00]: This team was drunk.

[SPEAKER_00]: And then look, if you grow up on a flight attendant, you may think you're asked to go on a jail, but maybe even flight attendant wanted to, I don't know, well, speculate on that.

[SPEAKER_00]: And, but they kept bringing them drinks.

[SPEAKER_00]: And when the team was finally able to break free, flight attendant's joked with each other while mocking the situation in front of her, the cell on that flight.

[SPEAKER_00]: Now, what cops came aboard the plane, when it landed, the pasture became combative with police as he was dragged away.

[SPEAKER_00]: Let's go, drug him.

[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_00]: And the point guys want to say that the experience wrecked the girl's ability to perform in the cheer contest.

[SPEAKER_00]: And the last student, the psychological effects have since forced her to abandon her dream of becoming a firefighter.

[SPEAKER_00]: Well, the frontier airline officials, I think, have only flown in like once.

[SPEAKER_00]: And the attorneys defend in the budget carrier, they haven't responded to the alleged complaint.

[SPEAKER_00]: But the guy he was booked in for in crew recharge for resistance and a rest, but not for the solid itself.

[SPEAKER_00]: What?

[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, it didn't really make sense to this.

[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_00]: Sounds like they got a problem, right?

[SPEAKER_00]: Mateo, you're a couple more of the details of what actually happened.

[SPEAKER_00]: Said this, this teenager board at this flight, three, eight, five, five.

[SPEAKER_00]: Um, but so on the way to Orlando in.

[SPEAKER_00]: the team was unaccompanied.

[SPEAKER_00]: You don't have to be right or teenager.

[SPEAKER_00]: You can fly by yourself.

[SPEAKER_00]: You should be that all the time.

[SPEAKER_00]: So she took her seat in a window towards the rear of their craft.

[SPEAKER_00]: As the passenger behind, the passenger who did the assault made his way down the aisle and sat down in the middle seat next to her.

[SPEAKER_00]: And she said he already had a smell alcohol

[SPEAKER_00]: and a woman traveling with the team was a sign, a seat, and the middle of the cabin, which is obviously some distance away as she's in the back.

[SPEAKER_00]: They said almost immediately, and throughout the flight, the passenger of the drunkade, manifest it disruptive behavior, including unwanted physical contact, what a flight intended.

[SPEAKER_00]: And the head said he became intoxicated to a very high level during the flight.

[SPEAKER_00]: The point specifically says an unidentified flight attendants serve the pastor three T.O.s.

[SPEAKER_00]: Baca cocktails at the beginning of the flight after which he attempted to strike up a conversation with the team.

[SPEAKER_00]: She made it clear she did not want to engage with the pastor and began playing a game with her phone.

[SPEAKER_00]: Tim size point like literally along with motherfucker.

[SPEAKER_00]: Still the pastor persisted in trying to interact with her.

[SPEAKER_00]: And despite the past years, continue to disrupt the behavior and increasing signs of the toxications, agents, the marijuana, the fights in the soul.

[SPEAKER_00]: Two more tears vodka to the pasture.

[SPEAKER_00]: They must be fucking hard for some money.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, they might get money and commission off of their sales.

[SPEAKER_00]: Five vodka's in, in,

[SPEAKER_00]: after five boxes took a dark turn with roughly an hour to go to the past to begin to grope the teenager's legs, arms and hands while attempting to kiss her neck.

[SPEAKER_00]: This is the Islamic plan that says the team recalled in response for the past to keep at it, touched and attained inappropriately as he pressed his nose and mouth, tore her, trying to kiss her.

[SPEAKER_00]: And then the teams trap between the wall of aircraft and his throat to you.

[SPEAKER_00]: Who by now,

[SPEAKER_00]: had her in a reasonable, which I grew up with, a spear of farther, imminent assault, right, when you're not going to stop.

[SPEAKER_00]: Eventually, the person in the seat on the other side, the drunk baby realized what was happening in Bocaway objective to his behavior.

[SPEAKER_00]: I ain't even going to part of you need to quit.

[SPEAKER_00]: When the other passion got up to notify a flight attendant, the team also tried to exit the row.

[SPEAKER_00]: But the passenger, the drunk need, refused to let her pass, so that's fucking kidding out.

[SPEAKER_00]: Several minutes later, the client says the passenger finally permitted the team to get out as she reported the assault to one of the flight attendants who put her in a different seat for a remainder of the flight.

[SPEAKER_00]: And that's what she said, some of the flight attendants joke with each other about the salt right in front of the team.

[SPEAKER_00]: And when Korsa told you the rest, so when the cops got a one he became combative, well, dumbass, you're not going to win that fight.

[SPEAKER_00]: And they struggled, bounced them around and just scored right at the mall.

[SPEAKER_00]: Um, and again, he was charged with a solid wall force with all serve resist and rest and but what's about missed the meaners, but Nothing on on attacking the kid or the fighter.

[SPEAKER_01]: I don't understand that.

[SPEAKER_00]: Oh, no, neither.

[SPEAKER_00]: So there you go, planes, trains and automobiles.

[SPEAKER_00]: this time for dumb dumb in the court.

[SPEAKER_00]: It's a two-fer.

[SPEAKER_01]: All right, back to back.

[SPEAKER_01]: Well, a routine traffic stop in Northern California.

[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, it's nice.

[SPEAKER_00]: It gets you killed.

[SPEAKER_01]: It quickly escalated into a double homicide investigation in which led to the arrest of two individuals.

[SPEAKER_01]: The incident was a seemingly minor infraction, and just completely demonstrates how rapidly what you say is not no one's ever.

[SPEAKER_01]: There's not a routine traffic stop.

[SPEAKER_01]: So what they were considering, like every day encounter with all enforcement.

[SPEAKER_00]: You know, you don't call every team.

[SPEAKER_00]: If you think it's going to miss me another routine traffic stop is when you get killed.

[SPEAKER_01]: Exactly.

[SPEAKER_01]: Will California Highway Patrol share details in a press release about the two individuals who were taken into custody after officers made a horrifying discovery?

[SPEAKER_01]: They found a dead body in a car while attempting to stop a vehicle for an expired registration in clear-light California.

[SPEAKER_01]: officers initially tried to pull over a 2000 Chevy suburban, which was traveling on state Route 53.

[SPEAKER_01]: Registration violation is a fairly common reason for police officer to stop a car.

[SPEAKER_01]: The driver of the suburban refused to stop and obviously that immediately raised red flags

[SPEAKER_01]: The officers followed the car to 18th Avenue near Oak Street where the vehicle finally came to a stop.

[SPEAKER_01]: But at that point, the passenger ran like a little bit.

[SPEAKER_01]: and then police eventually managed to capture the man and identified him as 37-year-old Alex Kenneth Schusselin.

[SPEAKER_01]: Meanwhile, the driver remained with the vehicle at the scene and he was identified as 32-year-old Jasslyn Pearl Cricut and both are from Clear Lake.

[SPEAKER_01]: Right.

[SPEAKER_01]: While the officer was talking to the driver,

[SPEAKER_01]: blood inside the vehicle.

[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, it's in light.

[SPEAKER_00]: See the little blood, it's better.

[SPEAKER_01]: And the officer tries to blood to the near passenger area of the suburban, where they also then made the next discovery, which was an unresponsive adult male.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_01]: The person was later pronounced dead at the scene, and officers immediately launched a full-scale

[SPEAKER_01]: The initial traffic spot stop, obviously, despite its tragic outcome was legally justified from the start and it just happened upon it, which happened to us.

[SPEAKER_00]: I was thinking about it all the way back from Dallas this weekend when y'all were sleeping in the car and I'm driving down the interstate late at night.

[SPEAKER_00]: I'm thinking.

[SPEAKER_00]: how many of these cars have a dead body?

[SPEAKER_01]: Right.

[SPEAKER_00]: It's the perfect chemistry.

[SPEAKER_00]: Pretty sure I'm the one with things like that.

[SPEAKER_00]: No.

[SPEAKER_00]: They don't seriously think about it.

[SPEAKER_00]: If it passed the thousand cars at night, that one of them had a dead body.

[SPEAKER_01]: How many times was Derek Todd Lee on the road plan?

[SPEAKER_01]: Someone kind of in that area?

[SPEAKER_00]: How many did you say that?

[SPEAKER_01]: No, I'm saying it's rightfully so.

[SPEAKER_01]: Like your thoughts, I believe.

[SPEAKER_00]: Well, anyway, under the Fourth Amendment pulling over a vehicle and detaining its occupants counts as a seizure, but according... Well, see, you can pull them over, but there's not a reasonable end to the stop and sight, meaning like, yes, for vicious arts card to tell you get fuck yourself, that you can hold the car if you have probable calls to get a K-man.

[SPEAKER_00]: If the K9 is going to not be there in a reasonable amount of time, then you have to let them get, you're still going to hold the car till the K9 gets there three hours later or whatever.

[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_01]: Well, they said according to Cornell Law School, a routine traffic stop like this one is permissible if the police officer had a reasonable suspicion that the argument is occupant is unlicensed or in this case the vehicle was unregistered.

[SPEAKER_01]: Right.

[SPEAKER_01]: So the officer doesn't

[SPEAKER_00]: So, like everything you just said, if it's not registered and then it's breaking the wall.

[SPEAKER_01]: And then when the driver refused to stop and the passenger fled, the situation then escalated.

[SPEAKER_01]: Right.

[SPEAKER_01]: So, this is the discovery of blood and a unresponsive person then provided a very clear, reasonable suspicion of criminal activities and there's, which is given rise to a legitimate, what they're calling a Terry stop.

[SPEAKER_01]: the state versus Terry and which allows officers to expand their investigation but not beyond the initial.

[SPEAKER_00]: That's not true the case.

[SPEAKER_00]: If I stop you for a traffic violation, and then I notice that you have a odor about college beverages on your person, never say, I'll ask about beer or one more whiskey or whatever.

[SPEAKER_00]: You have to always write up this odor of, then that takes you into a whole different criminal area.

[SPEAKER_00]: And that's permissible because you stop them for the risk of a violation.

[SPEAKER_00]: If your risk of a violation is bullshit, it's fruit of the poison's tree, and everything that's found out, of course, dead by the car, but it got thrown out.

[SPEAKER_01]: This leads to another horrible discovery.

[SPEAKER_01]: Officers continued their investigation and identified a possible additional victim who was

[SPEAKER_01]: most likely connected to the incident and led them to search an area surrounding state route 175, which is located near Mendocino County line and led them to a woman's body found on an embankment.

[SPEAKER_01]: So yeah.

[SPEAKER_01]: So they didn't release any additional details about the two deceased individuals, but yeah, you know what, and by the purpose of the trouble now,

[SPEAKER_01]: They found a gun somewhere around the scene too.

[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, some explaining to do.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_00]: You bees in trouble.

[SPEAKER_00]: All right, I'll talk about this for a minute because I knew when A.I first came out, I'd really like much about it.

[SPEAKER_00]: and then we all got on our phones and now I'm like pretty much the fucking king of using AI like we're in a nurse for getting shipped her a garden and I'm shooting pictures of different plants or yesterday that we had this big fucking swarm and then look like Turbites I don't think they were but

[SPEAKER_00]: That because I saw them all over Facebook last night everybody's like it's a little bit of a biblical proportions of these bugs Started out and so everybody had it all the watch and there were else all the way down to here I'm talking all walked outside Doesn't watch race and barbecue

[SPEAKER_00]: drink a beer and then an outdoor kitchen and shit, I couldn't breathe.

[SPEAKER_00]: There were millions of these things and I texted you and I said, can't sit out here and then we're back inside and we're back out like 15 months later, they're all gone.

[SPEAKER_00]: But anyway, A.I.B.

[SPEAKER_00]: took a picture of them.

[SPEAKER_00]: A.I.

[SPEAKER_00]: right, and the use it for everything.

[SPEAKER_00]: And A.I.M.O.

[SPEAKER_00]: and just use it all the time.

[SPEAKER_00]: Well, some people, and I know they use it for sex sheds and stuff now too, but some people use it for different raises.

[SPEAKER_00]: And this is actually a dumb dumb in the court.

[SPEAKER_00]: Gonna be a dumb dumb in the court.

[SPEAKER_00]: So we're going to Florida.

[SPEAKER_00]: Now check this out.

[SPEAKER_00]: cops are just like firemen.

[SPEAKER_00]: You don't make you real money.

[SPEAKER_00]: You don't do it to get rich.

[SPEAKER_00]: But you know, I used to make my all my side money on my court subpoenas.

[SPEAKER_00]: Back then, they paid you $25 a subpoena up to three a day.

[SPEAKER_00]: But 75 dollars.

[SPEAKER_00]: When I was in the uniform trouble with the hell of a lot of money and all those there, I had a lot of days.

[SPEAKER_00]: I had five or six subpoenas.

[SPEAKER_00]: But that's how I made my money.

[SPEAKER_00]: We didn't have XDD tales.

[SPEAKER_00]: Well, most of the major departments did like your big retail stores or whatever.

[SPEAKER_00]: You'll see a deputy in there and uniform in their vehicles parked out from what it's a crime turn, right?

[SPEAKER_00]: Until it's not.

[SPEAKER_00]: In some people, take this AI thing, and then people say that, you know, this can be in the world and AI is doing this or whatever well, you do this pretty crazy shit.

[SPEAKER_00]: And it's doing Florida, it's facing criminal charges and they stick with me on this one.

[SPEAKER_00]: After authorities say he's AI to stage a fake patrol car breaking that triggered a real police response and investigation.

[SPEAKER_00]: And you know, I did it.

[SPEAKER_00]: all to become, to go viral, listen to this, according to the Seminole County Sheriff's Office, 25 year old Alex Martinez, Arizona, was arrested after he presented a deputy.

[SPEAKER_00]: with a fabricated video, which showed people breaking into this deputy's more patrol car outside of sport and goods store in Lake Mary, Florida.

[SPEAKER_00]: But this I mean, you can't think this is going to end well for you.

[SPEAKER_00]: This obviously wasn't thought for you.

[SPEAKER_00]: So the incident happened when Martinez or Zala approached the deputy inside of the store and said, Hey, I just saw a bunch of people breaking

[SPEAKER_00]: And then he's like, yeah, look here, man.

[SPEAKER_00]: And he shows him a short video on his phone.

[SPEAKER_00]: And it showed the suspects breaking into the police car.

[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_00]: And he's like, what the fuck is going on?

[SPEAKER_00]: And he goes in.

[SPEAKER_00]: So the deputy runs out and goes outside and he's supposed to patrol car.

[SPEAKER_00]: I mean, I'm sure he had his hand on his weapon.

[SPEAKER_00]: Okay, so still there.

[SPEAKER_00]: But he gets to the vehicle in.

[SPEAKER_00]: It's all locked up and nothing's been to start.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_01]: For me, well, what's smart boy doing?

[SPEAKER_00]: It definitely is like, what the fuck?

[SPEAKER_00]: And then he's like, you know what?

[SPEAKER_00]: Per sure about the call of sin.

[SPEAKER_00]: He's got it on video, right?

[SPEAKER_00]: I mean, it's legit.

[SPEAKER_00]: Is, well, the best skaters got caught out of the best skaters.

[SPEAKER_00]: looked at the video and they looked at the car and they were like, you know what?

[SPEAKER_00]: The more one came around, this motherfucker said they pull the surveillance cameras and they determined that no one had gone near the patrol vehicle during the timeframes shown in this assholes AI clip.

[SPEAKER_00]: So, being the brilliant detects as they are, they concluded the video had been digitally manipulated using artificial intelligence or otherwise known as a deep fake.

[SPEAKER_00]: Deputies compare the video with the store surveillance footage and investigators were able to confirm that the crime never occurred and then what do you think they did?

[SPEAKER_00]: He, he's now viral because he's on our show.

[SPEAKER_00]: They are arrested more teenagers are a Zala.

[SPEAKER_00]: Well, they've made a war form and then they had a good finding.

[SPEAKER_00]: And they found him in San Juan, Puerto Rica.

[SPEAKER_00]: Why is this so far?

[SPEAKER_00]: It's not even in San Juan.

[SPEAKER_02]: He's led the country.

[SPEAKER_00]: It's a free flight back to the country and to some local and face charges, but check us out.

[SPEAKER_00]: The tech to set the stunt was not random, and they found Martinez or Zala had posted content related to the encounter, which suggested the incident was staged to generate views and engagement online.

[SPEAKER_00]: In the case, they said, reflects a growing trend on platforms like TikTok, where creators use AI tools to produce increasingly realistic print videos, which are designed to go viral and law enforcement officials warn that while such content may even peer harmless, you can have real world consequences, especially when you go in and you show it's a cop and every

[SPEAKER_00]: You know, they're going to respond and submerge the response.

[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_00]: I mean, it's just what a fucking idiot.

[SPEAKER_00]: The Martinez-Arzalla is now facing multiple charges, including fabricating physical evidence.

[SPEAKER_00]: making a false report to law enforcement, unlawful use of a communication device, and knowingly providing false information about a crime.

[SPEAKER_00]: And at least one of those y'all is a felony, which is a fabricated evidence.

[SPEAKER_00]: And he is, he's only got a $7,000 bond when he returns to Florida.

[SPEAKER_00]: He gets out for $7,000 grand.

[SPEAKER_00]: So to tell you real quick about him, the cops say that Martinez-Arzalla, he's a social media content creator whose video is often involved, AI generates scenarios.

[SPEAKER_00]: The reports indicate he is built a following about producing similar prank style content, sometimes involving the captive or state situation.

[SPEAKER_00]: Long force days in Florida say they have encountered him before and unrelated incidents, involving AI-generated content.

[SPEAKER_00]: That's why I'm dumb in the court.

[SPEAKER_00]: You know, this motherfucker's going to court.

[SPEAKER_00]: If I was a judge, I'd be like, okay, I'm about to set a world-wide presence with your ass by the fucker because then I mean, you can't tell.

[SPEAKER_00]: I don't know how to do that, but you can't you cannot tell.

[SPEAKER_00]: the difference between the fake video and the real video.

[SPEAKER_00]: That's how good AI is.

[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_00]: Man, what do you do?

[SPEAKER_00]: Good AI, say create a video, take a picture of the cop car, say create a video, people.

[SPEAKER_00]: Yes.

[SPEAKER_00]: So you can say take a picture of the cop car, create a video of it, fly into the meat.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yes, you can.

[SPEAKER_00]: So I could do that right now.

[SPEAKER_01]: You could do that right now.

[SPEAKER_00]: That's crazy.

[SPEAKER_00]: I don't want to get good on that fucking wormhole.

[SPEAKER_01]: There's a page in Baton Rouge, I don't remember the name of a Baton Rouge, something or other.

[SPEAKER_01]: And a guy, I thought it was real the first time I saw it, I was like, this is some crazy stuff opening day at Turkey season, who's like the turkeys or whatever, and there's turkeys crossing the street and downtown Baton Rouge.

[SPEAKER_01]: I'm like, there's no way that happened.

[SPEAKER_00]: That's what I'm saying.

[SPEAKER_00]: That's the kind of shit I would get into doing.

[SPEAKER_01]: And it's obviously fake.

[SPEAKER_01]: It's obviously fake.

[SPEAKER_01]: And he does little things like that all the time that are very creative and funny, not philonious or malicious in any way.

[SPEAKER_00]: What?

[SPEAKER_00]: What?

[SPEAKER_00]: Okay.

[SPEAKER_00]: I get it on the turkeys and and maybe different funny things.

[SPEAKER_00]: But

[SPEAKER_00]: What possesses you to think that it's funny, that you're going to create a video of multiple people breaking into the same cop car, you're running a store, it's a hey dude, they're breaking in your pal car.

[SPEAKER_00]: My fucker is not going to in well for you.

[SPEAKER_01]: And then why would that go viral?

[SPEAKER_00]: I guess it'd be a video of the cop running out and they said, hi hi, it's fake.

[SPEAKER_00]: That's that's wrong.

[SPEAKER_00]: He probably won't get the five T.D.'

[SPEAKER_00]: 's vodka's home frontier airlines on the way back.

[SPEAKER_00]: Anyone get to grope a cheerleader or in a flight attendant and get skull drug, but he's going to be flying con air and his ass is done as it should be.

[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_00]: I don't want to give our all that bad.

[SPEAKER_01]: Think of the alarm in the court.

[SPEAKER_01]: The new laws that are going to have to create it.

[SPEAKER_00]: And they have a positive, positive, seizure manual, everything in there is because some life fucked something up.

[SPEAKER_00]: They say, I stuff is just why.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_00]: I mean, I like to use it.

[SPEAKER_00]: I got to the point.

[SPEAKER_00]: I mean, I was thinking about the other day, when I'm shooting a picture or something, something fucking random.

[SPEAKER_00]: And then you can get AI.

[SPEAKER_00]: it gives you a brief thing that says you want to go in full way, I may know like, yeah, and sometimes that not always get it right, but you have all that and I'm thinking, fuck me, when I was a kid, we had in psychopathias and if you were very lucky, if you had a full set at home, because in some bitches cost like $100,000, really, but they were expensive.

[SPEAKER_00]: but that even schools were lucky if they had a full set and do you want to know about the little bug that was flying around yesterday you go look up in the psychopedia and guess what it probably wasn't there exactly how can you do you can't look for it you can't put everything in print i'm in the in the shops with my mom and auntie shop looking to support shit and taking pictures to see

[SPEAKER_00]: the value.

[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, or if it's real.

[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, or you know, what is they I say about this and what have you?

[SPEAKER_00]: Are you using for everything?

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_00]: It's crazy.

[SPEAKER_01]: I know.

[SPEAKER_01]: Well, the things that I bought with your mom this past week and I scanned it and immediately it came up the regular like what's stored ago to get it and I went the regular price of it was and it's crazy.

[SPEAKER_00]: When he started to figure out the idea is

[SPEAKER_01]: I can guarantee you the ones you think are fake are actually real.

[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_01]: Because he does some crazy stuff.

[SPEAKER_00]: I did do some stupid shit.

[SPEAKER_00]: Yes, they would have been hilarious.

[SPEAKER_00]: Oh, that's AI.

[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_02]: That's going to be a lie.

[SPEAKER_00]: You don't want anybody to know.

[SPEAKER_00]: No.

[SPEAKER_00]: In the family.

[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_00]: I'm lucky.

[SPEAKER_00]: Like a monkey.

[SPEAKER_00]: I'm trying to get leaves out from the wintertime.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_00]: There's a beer in the other hand.

[SPEAKER_01]: That's true.

[SPEAKER_00]: Get anything else?

[SPEAKER_00]: No.

[SPEAKER_00]: Right.

[SPEAKER_00]: Hmm.

[SPEAKER_00]: What do you ever see?

[SPEAKER_00]: You have a true crown.

[SPEAKER_00]: What, what's your name?

[SPEAKER_01]: I'm Cindy Hoverton.

[SPEAKER_00]: It's what he has in the Everton.

[SPEAKER_00]: You have a true crown.

[SPEAKER_00]: Time for this Tuesday, April 14th, a holiday later.

[SPEAKER_00]: Love you.

This transcript was automatically generated by the podcast creator and may contain errors. Aggregated via the PodcastIndex API.