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Episode Transcript

True Crime Time For April 17, 2026 | Walmart Parking Lot Murder, Quadruple Homicide Death Sentence, Death Row Bride Case

In this episode of True Crime Time For, Woody and Cyndi Overton deliver a powerful mix of tragic, shocking, and downright bizarre cases — all underscoring how quickly violence can erupt and how unpredictable human behavior can be.

The episode opens with a look back at the infamous Menendez brothers case, revisiting the brutal murder of their parents and the long-standing debate over motive, abuse claims, and justice.

From there, the episode moves into a heartbreaking case out of West Virginia, where a woman was shot and killed by the father of her children while sitting in her car during a work break at Walmart. Surveillance footage helped quickly identify the suspect, who had been inside the store prior to the attack.

In Nebraska, a disturbing quadruple homicide case leads to a death penalty sentence, after a man murdered multiple victims and set their homes on fire — all stemming from ongoing disputes and escalating violence within the neighborhood.

Additional cases include:

  • A South Carolina domestic violence case where a woman shot her child’s father in front of their young child
  • A complex, multi-state homicide case involving a man who killed his roommate, stole identities, and committed another murder while on the run
  • A tragic Washington, D.C. case where an innocent bystander was killed after 45 rounds were fired into a crowded street
  • A brutal international case where a woman was randomly attacked and killed after a suspect crashed his car and began assaulting strangers
  • A bizarre and controversial story involving a British woman traveling to Texas to marry a death row inmate just days before his scheduled execution

The episode also explores how advancing technology — including smart glasses and AI — is beginning to impact courtrooms, raising serious concerns about fairness, coaching, and the future of legal proceedings.

Throughout the episode, Woody and Cyndi emphasize one core truth: violence often comes from the people closest to us — and sometimes from complete strangers — but awareness and accountability are key to preventing it.

🎧 Chapters

00:00 Introduction and Live Event Announcement

03:00 This Day in History – Menendez Brothers Case

08:00 Family Matters: Walmart Parking Lot Murder

15:00 Nebraska Quadruple Homicide and Death Sentence

25:00 South Carolina Domestic Violence Shooting

31:00 Alaska Murder and Identity Theft Case

40:00 Washington D.C. Mass Shooting Case

47:00 Worldwide Crime: Random UK Attack Case

55:00 Death Row Marriage Story

01:05:00 Smart Glasses and Courtroom Cheating

01:12:00 Closing Thoughts and Call to Action

true crime, Menendez brothers case, Beverly Hills murders, Walmart parking lot shooting West Virginia, domestic violence murder case, Nebraska quadruple homicide death penalty, South Carolina shooting domestic dispute, child present shooting case, Alaska roommate murder case, identity theft homicide, Washington DC mass shooting case, innocent bystander killed, Leicester UK random attack murder, international crime case, death row inmate marriage Texas, prison relationship case, smart glasses courtroom cheating, AI in court cases, law enforcement investigations, true crime podcast



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Privacy & O

[SPEAKER_01]: Hello everybody, welcome to this episode of True Crime Time for Friday, April 17th, 2026, and I'm Woody Overton.

[SPEAKER_02]: I'm Cindy Overton.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, and Nelson, when is it coming out tomorrow?

[SPEAKER_02]: It's coming out on Monday.

[SPEAKER_01]: Monday.

[SPEAKER_02]: Monday.

[SPEAKER_02]: Monday.

[SPEAKER_02]: Monday.

[SPEAKER_02]: Monday.

[SPEAKER_01]: Monday.

[SPEAKER_01]: Better next live show.

[SPEAKER_02]: Yes.

[SPEAKER_01]: So I had a record and tell about it, right?

[SPEAKER_01]: Yes.

[SPEAKER_01]: And we were releasing that Monday.

[SPEAKER_02]: We will release it.

[SPEAKER_02]: We can really, whenever you're ready, whenever we can.

[SPEAKER_01]: Just ask you, you said Monday.

[SPEAKER_02]: So tickets will go on sale on Monday.

[SPEAKER_01]: We'll release it whenever you want to release it.

[SPEAKER_02]: it sounds great.

[SPEAKER_01]: And then y'all, it's gonna be a fire ash, so bring the back home to roots in hope to see everybody there and I will tell you what to be what's the date.

[SPEAKER_01]: July 18th, July 18th.

[SPEAKER_01]: So if you don't have anything scheduled and you want to see a great show and I know as of this time, Big J side porch will be doing the catering, right?

[SPEAKER_01]: And that would be a lot of the details to come hotel discounts and and everything else.

[SPEAKER_01]: So look forward to seeing

[SPEAKER_01]: In the last, we have a break in the last table, what happened to Madison, we could do the whole thing on Madison, and that's going to be a total total shit show, and it goes, her case is going to lead to many more, so whenever you share it, has to have what happened to Madison, very, very important, the tips are rolling in, because life first rule, I mean I just got another one while we were sitting here.

[SPEAKER_01]: Well, so y'all the more you share has tagged what happened to Madison the better chance we have at this and we're not against law enforcement in this I think this guy is an end of the best that they can and just oh God at this case was it is it's just it's just made to be solved so

[SPEAKER_01]: would keep pushing on that.

[SPEAKER_01]: Hashtag just for everybody.

[SPEAKER_01]: And that being said, I'm going to tell you what happened on April 17, 1996 and everybody in the world knows about this because they were in the news recently.

[SPEAKER_01]: Well, this day in 1996, the Monday's brothers, Lyle and Eric were found guilty of fatally shooting their parents and Beverly Hills.

[SPEAKER_01]: Let me tell you about that.

[SPEAKER_01]: You have faithfully shooting, just think about it.

[SPEAKER_01]: What have you?

[SPEAKER_01]: They bully their daddy apart with a shotgun.

[SPEAKER_01]: Why you sat on the couch?

[SPEAKER_01]: You can popcorn watching them, maybe.

[SPEAKER_01]: Shot their mama as you try to get away.

[SPEAKER_01]: Run out of shotguns, shells.

[SPEAKER_01]: When it walked outside to their car, got more shells, reloaded the shotgun, wall back in, execute their own mother.

[SPEAKER_01]: But,

[SPEAKER_01]: They claimed it was self-defense due to extensive sexual abuse that they suffered from their dad.

[SPEAKER_01]: That was never proven.

[SPEAKER_01]: And the brothers were initially tried separately, but resulted in hung dearies in the summer of 1993 and then.

[SPEAKER_01]: they got them by, they got the hungry because of the mother of the wine and she had just fucked them.

[SPEAKER_01]: And recently they had a DA who was going about to the political pressure and probably going to let them out.

[SPEAKER_01]: That's what they were saying and guess what happened.

[SPEAKER_01]: Uh, he didn't get the fuck out because then you DA got elected and he was like, hmm, no, they're done.

[SPEAKER_01]: Leave their ass in prison, but about all the other people who were sexually abused, if, yeah, it didn't kill up here.

[SPEAKER_01]: Exactly.

[SPEAKER_01]: Execute brutally, brutally, it's not even good enough.

[SPEAKER_01]: War for it.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_01]: Co-blooded bullshit.

[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, that's horrible.

[SPEAKER_00]: So anyway.

[SPEAKER_01]: Hi, let's get out of the true crime time for this Friday, what you got.

[SPEAKER_01]: It's time for family matters.

[SPEAKER_02]: In West Virginia.

[SPEAKER_02]: A man is accused of fatally shooting the mother of his children in a Walmart parking lot while she was a one-brake from work.

[SPEAKER_02]: Oh Lord.

[SPEAKER_02]: Eric Duane Richards 54 years old has been charged with first-degree murder in the death of 40-year-old Misty Rose Williams.

[SPEAKER_02]: and he is being held without Bill in the South Central Regional Jail.

[SPEAKER_02]: On Monday, around 9 a.m., Williams was working at the Walmart Supercenter on Nitro Marketplace in cross lanes West Virginia.

[SPEAKER_02]: And she decided to take a break.

[SPEAKER_02]: We have to take, they have to take breaks,

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, 15 minutes.

[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, that's right.

[SPEAKER_01]: So she all more has pretty good benefits for their employees.

[SPEAKER_01]: They, the, the brakes and the, the retirement and the stock buying options and stuff like that.

[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, well, when she went for her break, she went to her vehicle and she never went back.

[SPEAKER_02]: So, the sergeant Jeremy Burns with the Sheriff's Office that reported to the scene says, I believe that they get a 20 minute break and she didn't return in over and it had been over an hour.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_01]: Might be one of those empty cash registers.

[SPEAKER_01]: Not making fun of it.

[SPEAKER_02]: Williams' co-workers went to check on her and noticed her inside her vehicle in the parking light, but she was slumped over.

[SPEAKER_02]: Investigators realized Williams had been shot in the chest, and they searched through video surveillance at the time, and it showed Richmond inside the store before the shooting and then walking outside during a break.

[SPEAKER_01]: Wal-Mart has more cameras than the Casina.

[SPEAKER_02]: Richmond could also allegedly be seen getting in and out of Williams' car several times before leaving the area.

[SPEAKER_02]: At one point, he moved the car forward and struck a parked vehicle in the parking lot.

[SPEAKER_02]: The sheriff's office noted that Richmond shares children with Williams, and Burns said that they brought Richmond in for questioning and arrested him, and a nine millimeter hand gun was found in his home when law enforcement searched it.

[SPEAKER_02]: Richmond is expected to be a random one.

[SPEAKER_01]: What's that?

[SPEAKER_02]: This was one.

[SPEAKER_02]: What's state?

[SPEAKER_02]: Dates.

[SPEAKER_02]: West Virginia.

[SPEAKER_01]: West Virginia.

[SPEAKER_01]: I'm pretty sure they don't have it.

[SPEAKER_01]: Make a woman.

[SPEAKER_01]: You're going to get a weight for your wife.

[SPEAKER_01]: To have her bright.

[SPEAKER_01]: She's working hard a Walmart.

[SPEAKER_01]: Not getting rich.

[SPEAKER_01]: Right.

[SPEAKER_01]: And she's there trying to support you.

[SPEAKER_01]: I asked you about ex-heater in the car.

[SPEAKER_01]: Uh, well, I'm going to take you to a state that is in the red Nebraska, they do have the deaf pill on the end, do you got it in this yellow story and a man from Nebraska has been sentenced to death for committing a quadruple homicide.

[SPEAKER_01]: the man killed his neighbor after his wife complaining about him and how difficult he was to deal with.

[SPEAKER_02]: Wow.

[SPEAKER_01]: Like, you come in and say, I, when we had a little issue with a neighbor, right, you did.

[SPEAKER_01]: And I didn't go down there and kill everybody in the fucking house.

[SPEAKER_02]: No.

[SPEAKER_01]: All right.

[SPEAKER_01]: So.

[SPEAKER_01]: Now, he faces multiple felony charges, including murder, so his name, he's 46 years old and his name is Jason Jones, and Jones was convicted on a total of 10 felonies, including murder charges and connections with the killings of 86 year old jeans, twyford, his wife, 85 year old Janet twyford,

[SPEAKER_01]: their daughter, 50-5-year-old, Danah's, to life, and another neighbor, 53-year-old, Michelle Evelyn.

[SPEAKER_01]: I mean, it's just like his kill a bunch of dairy actors, all you have to say, yeah, the defense wife is a 46-year-old woman identified as Carrie Jones, was convicted in August of 2025,

[SPEAKER_01]: In November of 2025, she was sentenced to life in prison for first three of Marra, along with an additional 21 to 30 years, for accessory to Marra and evidence tampering, and the when Jones went, Jason Jones went before the court, he found guilty, then a three judge panel sentenced him to death, so it was a little bit different in Nebraska.

[SPEAKER_01]: It's so we are grateful to the work of the three judge panel and their thought and well reason or this quarter of the Nebraska's turn in general Mike Hilvers.

[SPEAKER_01]: The panel laid out the horrific details surrounding the quadruple homicide, Jason Jones committed, and explained why the death penalty is the appropriate sentence.

[SPEAKER_01]: Well, let me tell you about it.

[SPEAKER_01]: in August of 2022, the twifers in the evening were bound murdered in two separate homes in Laurel, which is a town about 130 miles northwest of Omaha.

[SPEAKER_01]: Both houses were then set on fire after the kilns, if you ain't dead enough, then we're going to do the embarrant evidence.

[SPEAKER_01]: However, investigators said Carrie Jones had often complained that her husband about James Wyford accused him of burglary abusing her for years.

[SPEAKER_01]: This has got to stop, or I'm going to kill him.

[SPEAKER_01]: She said, in this quarter portion of the breast of probably media, investigative said, the older man who lived blocks away from the Jones family, had a reputation for Barley harassing others in the area and had been asked to leave certain places.

[SPEAKER_01]: Okay, well, you know it, I'm pretty sure every neighborhood has the old cranky fucker.

[SPEAKER_01]: There's a guy up on the phone, fucker, but that's not where they murder.

[SPEAKER_01]: Well, the night before the martyrs, the couple had a violent argument during which Carrie Jones threatened her husband with a gun in knife.

[SPEAKER_01]: Now, this is Jason, the killer, right?

[SPEAKER_01]: And told him to take care of twice or else.

[SPEAKER_01]: She would do it herself.

[SPEAKER_02]: Damn.

[SPEAKER_01]: Right?

[SPEAKER_01]: She sounded like she's a cranky one.

[SPEAKER_01]: Jason Jones said during her trial that his wife was a very difficult woman.

[SPEAKER_01]: I guess he fears she's going to present.

[SPEAKER_01]: He ain't got to catch any backlash.

[SPEAKER_03]: Why do you look at me so intently when you said that?

[SPEAKER_01]: Why do you think I look at you so intently?

[SPEAKER_01]: Alright, so on the night of August 4, 2022, Jason broke into the twifers home and shot him to death.

[SPEAKER_01]: He did not realize Janet twifers and Dana, Dana twifers were also inside, but when he did, he shot them as well.

[SPEAKER_03]: Nice.

[SPEAKER_01]: Alright, kill one, kill them all.

[SPEAKER_01]: After killing them, he set the house on fire.

[SPEAKER_01]: James later returned to his home with severe burns.

[SPEAKER_01]: Tell my ass.

[SPEAKER_01]: Bruce Kerry Jones said, look like melting in buis.

[SPEAKER_01]: So he's burnt to fuck up.

[SPEAKER_01]: He did not seek medical attention because the couple believed it would raise suspicion about the source of his injury.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, two houses in your fucking neighborhood burn down four people are dead and you're burn up.

[SPEAKER_01]: I hope it hurt like hell.

[SPEAKER_01]: Jones later confessed the crimes to his wife, who left for work while he drifted in an out of consciousness, from the pain, I guess you can't call the hospital.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_01]: I mean, can you release one to the corner store and get me some fucking something put on my barns?

[SPEAKER_01]: Well, she actually went to jail the whole neighborhood for you.

[SPEAKER_02]: Exactly.

[SPEAKER_02]: Was she had to go to work to not raise a suspicion?

[SPEAKER_01]: who was the last person put to death in Nebraska.

[SPEAKER_04]: The last person executed in Nebraska was carried in more, who was put to death by lethal injection on August 14, 2018.

[SPEAKER_04]: He had been convicted for the 1979 murders of two Omaha cab drivers.

[SPEAKER_04]: This execution marked Nebraska's first use of lethal injection, and was notable for being the first in United States to use fentanyl as part of the execution protocol.

[SPEAKER_04]: Damn that was from chat GPT.

[SPEAKER_01]: That was too fucking easy because the fentanyl just put it in the sleep necessarily.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, but anyway It's not taken lightly, but if you break into a home in the kill one because you had the intention to kill them You wouldn't with specific intent and then you kill two more and these people are older mamma.

[SPEAKER_02]: I know what's the

[SPEAKER_01]: What are they doing to you?

[SPEAKER_01]: Honestly, if you want to do something to beat their ass or something, then don't kill them.

[SPEAKER_01]: I'm sure this gap was the cranky old fucker in the neighborhood.

[SPEAKER_01]: And that's, I know it is.

[SPEAKER_02]: It's a cranky old fucker in our neighborhood.

[SPEAKER_02]: I'm not being you.

[UNKNOWN]: I'm never right.

[SPEAKER_02]: But this is our neighborhood.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, I shoot everything that bothers me.

[SPEAKER_00]: Oh gosh.

[SPEAKER_01]: It's three hogs and different things.

[SPEAKER_01]: Right?

[SPEAKER_01]: All right, what you got?

[SPEAKER_01]: It's time for family matters.

[SPEAKER_02]: A woman and South Carolina.

[SPEAKER_02]: is accused of hitting and shooting her ex-boyfriend in front of their young child as he checked on the kid.

[SPEAKER_02]: Very good parenting.

[SPEAKER_02]: Kyla Wood, 29 years old, has been charged with domestic violence of a high and aggravated nature and neglect by a legal custodian.

[SPEAKER_02]: She's being held on $125,000 bond in the Alvin S. Glenn Detention Center.

[SPEAKER_02]: One Thursday, about 7pm, would was in the area of Nancy Avenue in Dintsville, South Carolina.

[SPEAKER_02]: She was with her child who was under the age of three, and the child's father.

[SPEAKER_02]: The two adults are believed to have been arguing when would hit the father of her child in the head with a gun, and then they fought over the gun.

[SPEAKER_02]: Would apparently,

[SPEAKER_02]: would maintain the control of the gun, and the Richland County Sheriff's Department said that as the man walked to a vehicle to check on their child would shot him, and the child was not physically hurt, but obviously psychologically, it's cruel.

[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, deputies responded to the scene and saw two pools of blood.

[SPEAKER_02]: A witness who said she shot him as officers approached was also reportedly present.

[SPEAKER_02]: Wood and the shooting victim reportedly left the area together and he was later dropped off at a hospital to be treated.

[SPEAKER_02]: Wood then told law enforcement where she was and they went to a restaurant.

[SPEAKER_02]: the child was placed into the care of a grandmother in denseville, South Carolina is a suburb in northeast Columbia at the state's capital.

[SPEAKER_02]: So.

[SPEAKER_01]: That's crazy.

[SPEAKER_01]: I know.

[SPEAKER_01]: The sparked up.

[SPEAKER_01]: All right.

[SPEAKER_01]: But I'm going to tell our kids, see if you can remember this, when they went to college and shit like that, what kills a friendship faster than anything.

[SPEAKER_01]: Rhumating with them.

[SPEAKER_01]: Absolutely correct.

[SPEAKER_01]: You've got to have some boundaries of shit, right?

[SPEAKER_01]: Yes.

[SPEAKER_01]: You've been working at the bar all night long.

[SPEAKER_01]: I mean, like...

[SPEAKER_01]: balance and whatever, Barton and you had half a subway sandwich left every and having money and it's back then nothing was open and you get home at three o'clock in the morning and motherfucker sitting on the couch eating subway sounds.

[SPEAKER_01]: The little shit like that, right?

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_01]: And then different things.

[SPEAKER_01]: Well,

[SPEAKER_01]: When I say we kill the relationship, I don't mean they'd like this, and Alaska Man pretended that his roommate was dying, and texting his family on his deathbed.

[SPEAKER_01]: He's at the roommate, and I'm dying, I'm on my deathbed, right?

[SPEAKER_01]: Okay, this texting his own family.

[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.

[SPEAKER_01]: Well, in reality, he killed the man,

[SPEAKER_01]: ran like a little bitch to Oregon, where he then murdered another person and stole their identity.

[SPEAKER_01]: So Aaron Hag, his 37, his found guilty last week of manslaughter, and other charges related to John Mackellen's 2020 disappearance, and presumed death in what Fairbank's prosecutors say was a

[SPEAKER_01]: Man, there's a so fucking rare, but I mean, yeah, if you have enough evidence, right, he's like charging up balls.

[SPEAKER_01]: I know people who just don't have enough balls to do the prosecution, even though evidence there, but like there's no body, like motherfucker, and never going to be a body.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_01]: And y'all know some of the cases I'll talk about, but anyway, so,

[SPEAKER_01]: Hague is currently charged in Oregon with first-degree murder, for learn a man, Anthony Alcorn, from Anchorage to Gresham, with the promise of a good paying job.

[SPEAKER_01]: and rush we got there to get the good pay and job and Alcorn beat him to death in the woods.

[SPEAKER_01]: And to perfect his death of Alcorn's identity to avoid prosecution from McCallence death, right?

[SPEAKER_01]: So kill roommate.

[SPEAKER_01]: go down there, learn to stand, get tried, D, kill him, too.

[SPEAKER_01]: So McCallence, well, let's tell the Oregonian, the newspaper in 2022, that he began receiving text messages before McCallence disappeared.

[SPEAKER_01]: They were both ominous and alarming.

[SPEAKER_01]: They claimed McCallence had been hospitalized after becoming very ill.

[SPEAKER_01]: McCallan's brother Dan, who was out of Michigan, had received suspicious text messages, supposedly sent from McCallan that indicated that McCallan was sick and in the hospital, according to FairbanksDA.

[SPEAKER_01]: that they said the messages also requested that Dan wire mccillin over $8,000 and them down in hospital and $8,000 police or strippers that are coming later and around the same time mccillin stopped showing up for work and also stopped reporting to the probation approval office, frequent fire, according to Dan mccillin the money was supposed to be

[SPEAKER_01]: Okay, but I'm dying in hospital.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, and I need red money and I'm trying to make sure that I can't drive because I'm dying.

[SPEAKER_01]: He told the Oregonian that one message asked a Dan called Hague directly with him claiming to be about McHellen's side while he was dying from a cargo pulmonary issue and then needed emergency surgery.

[SPEAKER_01]: I don't believe you by the design because I already killed to the last, but just call me how I walk through it.

[SPEAKER_01]: Then McCallon said he wonder why his brother would sit there texting those deaf bad, but not call a sibling, and then or any family members themselves.

[SPEAKER_01]: Right.

[SPEAKER_01]: He said, we believe that he was 100% murder sergeant Jeremy Reed, who's the best

[SPEAKER_01]: A month before the tech started coming in, Dan McKellon said his brothers sent him three separate checks for $4,000 each.

[SPEAKER_01]: He asked Dan to hold the money for him, and if anything were to happen to him, Dan was told to divide the cash between him and his two nephews.

[SPEAKER_01]: He or any of us, I was about to get killed when he was sitting on 12 grand.

[SPEAKER_01]: One of the techs sent by Hank asked Dan McKellon to send back at least half of those checks.

[SPEAKER_01]: The Amicalen said he'd check with a care center and two different hospitals and fairbanks with none of them ever receiving John McAllen as a patient.

[SPEAKER_01]: He called the last state police and asked for what's our favorite?

[SPEAKER_02]: a welfare check.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yep, that which sparked the investigation that led to hay being suspected of killing John and using his fun to take stand.

[SPEAKER_01]: And they said at the time of Kellenwood Missing, he was living with hay at a residence in North Pole.

[SPEAKER_01]: He quickly became a person of interest in McCallus disappearance, and he told troopers that lightning, he had received text messages from McCallin that indicated that McCallin was sick in the hospital.

[SPEAKER_01]: And when I asked to show the troopers to the messages, however, he said that he lost the final.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_01]: Imagine that.

[SPEAKER_01]: He claimed he last saw McCallin when he dropped him off in an emergency care facility in Fairbanks.

[SPEAKER_01]: This is one of the centers that Dan McCallon says she he called the troopers investigation term that never happened the drop off on August 26, 2020, he ran like a little bitch.

[SPEAKER_01]: in his sight to Anchorage a day after being interviewed about McCellan's disappearance by the state troopers.

[SPEAKER_01]: He went to his cousin's apartment and told them that he and McCellan got into it and a murder happened.

[SPEAKER_01]: All right.

[SPEAKER_01]: Hey, began staying at a temporary homeless shelter in Anchorage where he befriended

[SPEAKER_01]: In October 2020, Hague took Alcorn's Ohio identification card and used it to fly under Alcorn's name to see out of Washington.

[SPEAKER_01]: Hague then traveled to Oregon and learned as a buggo buddy, Alcorn, to the state.

[SPEAKER_01]: Poison to be him.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_01]: So in the Alcorn case, Hague used Alcorn cell fun to text the man's mother and poses him after the slaying.

[SPEAKER_01]: Right.

[SPEAKER_01]: This is essentially, this is the same in my way as it was in Alaska as an Oregon.

[SPEAKER_01]: And it's another state trooper in Oregon.

[SPEAKER_01]: It's his father trying to look it out.

[SPEAKER_01]: Oregon's on the

[SPEAKER_01]: uh... hagg was eventually called in arrest from a kennel's death and it's a trial prosecute said he purchased almost three thousand dollars worth of property with a kennel's debit card but from a killing gong hagg also found himself in so possession of the kennel's jeep gmc truck boat and trailer and during that same period hagg also filed an unemployment insurance claim on the calisthenic guy this is a fact that don't stop

[SPEAKER_01]: He had confessed to his trial that McCellum was dead, and then he calls his death.

[SPEAKER_01]: But he claimed he did not murder him.

[SPEAKER_01]: hey test fire that he shot McCallan himself defense yeah jury didn't believe that bullshit either and jurors however quit it had a first to remember and instead found him guilty of manslaughter theft and tamper on the evidence he faced up to 20 years of prison for the man's sort of charge and up to five years on the other two charges

[SPEAKER_01]: So, um, and he had to go into the Oregon case, right?

[SPEAKER_01]: So, fuck him.

[SPEAKER_01]: Well, there's a common example of a guy that is just a total fucking shit at.

[SPEAKER_01]: I am a shithead.

[SPEAKER_01]: I'm pretty sure if his mother is still alive.

[SPEAKER_01]: She's like, he's always been a shit at.

[SPEAKER_03]: Always.

[SPEAKER_01]: And his mother would not help him.

[SPEAKER_02]: No, his mother would not.

[SPEAKER_02]: Not giving you all, right?

[SPEAKER_02]: Now you get it.

[SPEAKER_02]: And when the guy is killed in Texas, I've got a wife for him from London.

[SPEAKER_02]: She would probably.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_02]: They could get, I mean, because he's not on death row, they could get conjugal visits.

[SPEAKER_02]: So.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, that's not true.

[SPEAKER_01]: They're the...

[SPEAKER_01]: Possibly.

[SPEAKER_01]: Most states don't have conjugal visits.

[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, I don't know.

[SPEAKER_01]: Well, let's check it.

[SPEAKER_01]: Does the state of Oregon have conjugal visits for prisoners?

[SPEAKER_04]: Since Oregon does not grant inmates' conjugal visits, the couple might have to wait years to consolidate their marriage.

[SPEAKER_01]: All right.

[SPEAKER_01]: This is from Discus places, not here in Texas, never yet.

[SPEAKER_01]: But let's just check because the next statement's going to be, well, what is he's going to the last to present first?

[SPEAKER_01]: Does Alaska have conjugal visits for state inmates?

[SPEAKER_04]: Here's an answer from Wikipedia.

[SPEAKER_01]: you can business up to 72 hours within spouses or registr partners or relatives are permitted at least once every half a year.

[SPEAKER_01]: This permitted assuming no safety issues within made or lack of confidence and reputed a visitor visit the last 24 hours by the fall but maybe since 72 hours reward them is good to ever.

[SPEAKER_01]: That's.

[SPEAKER_01]: Since you had a last guy, you get life and you get all the sex you want.

[SPEAKER_02]: Get all the play you want probably more than you would get at home.

[SPEAKER_01]: I'm not touching that one.

[SPEAKER_01]: I'm not touching that one.

[SPEAKER_01]: I'm not touching that one.

[SPEAKER_02]: Going to Washington, D.C. Well, D.C. used to be the right.

[SPEAKER_02]: A man has been sentenced to 18 years in prison for killing a 53-year-old man who was walking on the street with his wife and friends after dinner at a nearby restaurant.

[SPEAKER_02]: Derey Wilson, who was 30, shot Jeremy Black in June of 2021.

[SPEAKER_02]: In according to U.S. Attorney Janine Ferris Piro, Wilson pleaded guilty on February 13th of 2026, and he pleaded guilty to 2nd degree murder while armed in the 2nd degree murder

[SPEAKER_02]: Judge Neil Kravitz said Wilson's present term will be followed by five years of supervised release, and he was also ordered to register as a gun offender.

[SPEAKER_02]: So this is what happened.

[SPEAKER_02]: On June 29, 2021, Wilson and three other individuals

[SPEAKER_02]: Once there, they fired multiple shots at a group of people outside of an apartment building in the 1,400 block of our street northwest.

[SPEAKER_02]: A black was an innocent bystander walking through the area with his wife and two friends after eating at a restaurant that night.

[SPEAKER_02]: And this is according to U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia.

[SPEAKER_02]: Black and a friend were crossing Johnson Avenue when Wilson and the other shooters fired over 45 rounds on a busy public street.

[SPEAKER_02]: Black was struck once in his torso and died at the scene.

[SPEAKER_02]: After the shooting, Wilson and the other shooters fled the scene in a stolen vehicle.

[SPEAKER_02]: And a neighbor, Janice Hallen, who heard the gunfire, said that she ran outside to see what happened.

[SPEAKER_02]: And she's quoted us saying, I saw a man laying on the ground.

[SPEAKER_02]: His wife in the background, calling out his name, telling him, I love you.

[SPEAKER_02]: And then another neighbor said that his window was shattered during the shooting.

[SPEAKER_02]: And he said, I kind of got covered in glass in a bit of bullet strappin' a landed on me.

[SPEAKER_02]: And the attorneys statement says, this sentencing sends a clear and necessary message.

[SPEAKER_02]: Violent crime will not go unanswered.

[SPEAKER_02]: Derey Wilson and other shooters indiscriminately fired over 45 rounds into a busy public street, killing Jeremy Black, an innocent man walking with his wife and friend after dinner.

[SPEAKER_02]: And our thoughts remain with his loved ones.

[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, same all right.

[SPEAKER_02]: Same all I hate to say.

[SPEAKER_02]: Same all right.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, right that love the victims in our stories Says yeah the same thing yeah, yeah, I say all right Well, I was gonna do this one because it's kind of cool, but I'll save it This one is not so cool

[SPEAKER_01]: It's time, the war, world, wide crime.

[SPEAKER_01]: Chokamawika Makala Kanui, who would go call him CMA for short, his 24 years old, violently attacked.

[SPEAKER_01]: Nala Patel, who was 56.

[SPEAKER_01]: After targeting her at random, after flipping his car in Leister on June of 24th, the last year.

[SPEAKER_01]: the CCTV because they have it everywhere there.

[SPEAKER_01]: They said it's shocking and it also captured the crash and I know who to drive in a racially through the town center, swarb and across lanes, through traffic lights, toward a busy bus stop and pedestrians who are crossing the road.

[SPEAKER_01]: Well, of course, can you guess what

[SPEAKER_01]: nice, a drug dealer.

[SPEAKER_01]: So, a drug dealer at Nahungu, emerged from the records of his BMW, unscathed before he saw Miss Nala, who tell their standing there.

[SPEAKER_01]: And then he just said random,

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, well, he said just dealing.

[SPEAKER_01]: She sadly died in the hospital two days later after suffering and injuries including a fractured skull and a brain injury.

[SPEAKER_01]: Well, our asshole is originally from Peckham, which is south east of London, but is now living in Leicester.

[SPEAKER_01]: Any admitted manslaughter, but not denied murder on the grounds of diminished responsibility.

[SPEAKER_02]: And what is that diminished responsibility?

[SPEAKER_01]: Well, being an idiot, I guess, I don't know.

[SPEAKER_01]: He was found guilty of murder at the Leicester Crown Court.

[SPEAKER_01]: It was jailed for life with a minimum of 21 and a half years.

[SPEAKER_01]: Now, the court was told how Nala is, here we go again, the scrub is a beautiful, private soul, and one of the most kind, heart of people you ever met in the Spire family.

[SPEAKER_01]: and she'd been on the bus in the area at the time of collision.

[SPEAKER_01]: She got off the bus, start to walk home.

[SPEAKER_01]: That's when I asked hold a tractor.

[SPEAKER_01]: Security officer near about a lightster role in Farmory had rushed out to the scene where they managed to restrain the asshole into the police for a ride.

[SPEAKER_01]: And after he was arrested, it was found that the asshole had been smoking cannabis and had dealer bags of cannabis with him in the vehicle.

[SPEAKER_01]: I dare in the police interview, asshole stated he could only remember the collision.

[SPEAKER_01]: It could not remember attacking the Miss Patel.

[SPEAKER_01]: he said that was his diminished response right he said he actually this is in quotation he tells all sources quotations I don't remember doing this I can't remember anything do you understand well after they shouldn't the CCTV footage of the incident he begins laughing yeah it's been somebody else and what officer says why are you laughing

[SPEAKER_01]: and asshole replies, because if I don't laugh, I'll cry.

[SPEAKER_01]: If I don't laugh, I'll cry.

[SPEAKER_01]: I'm in so much pain.

[SPEAKER_01]: He's laughing.

[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, he's in pain.

[SPEAKER_01]: He previously pleaded guilty to dangerous driving, possession of the tent to supply class be drugs and assault of an emergency worker.

[SPEAKER_01]: What detectives expected Emma White, so let's your police said, asshole was unknown to Miss Patel.

[SPEAKER_01]: After crashes vehicle,

[SPEAKER_01]: ran like a little bitch and she said this was the most horrific violent and random attack by a stranger on a kind, gentle and loving woman who was simply making her way home.

[SPEAKER_01]: His hard to imagine what Miss Patel went through in those moments.

[SPEAKER_01]: My thoughts continue to remain with her and her family and friends who have suffered and continue to suffer the most horrendous distress and pain.

[SPEAKER_01]: I said, footage we obtained during our quarries, which showed asshole's movements in the vehicle, just prior to the collision, is frightening and disturbing.

[SPEAKER_01]: At the time of the incident, there were a lot of people in the area who witnessed collision in assholes attack, but a number bravely trying to help Miss Patel and also apprehending the asshole.

[SPEAKER_01]: A lot of witnesses all spoke to us following the incident, which undoubtedly helped us in securing the conviction, and goes on to say, yeah, I commend the bravery that they see helped, etc.

[SPEAKER_01]: And I want to take everybody above a block, they said this has been a difficult investigation, and I also do want to thank the officers to staff, but the

[SPEAKER_01]: I don't know, I mean, the lady had kids and she had, and since she was 11 mother of a daughter and the sister of the friend and the heart of their family, she was a best friend and big supporter.

[SPEAKER_01]: Now, anyway, and it just goes on and we'll talk about how she's shooting the situation it is, which it is, but this dude's laughing about it.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, I can't get out of that's me on tape killing.

[SPEAKER_01]: I killed her, but I might guilty.

[SPEAKER_02]: No, because I was under the influence.

[SPEAKER_02]: There are no what I did.

[SPEAKER_01]: So I got in the source.

[SPEAKER_01]: This is an epitome of a dumb dumb in the court.

[SPEAKER_01]: He thought he was being smart.

[SPEAKER_01]: Okay, all right.

[SPEAKER_01]: So this the big thing like Tom and my attorney sent me the

[SPEAKER_01]: I got so much technology that's coming out like that and one of them is the smart glasses and how long you think it's going to take for people to use smart glasses to cheat a poker and

[SPEAKER_01]: All right.

[SPEAKER_01]: You could.

[SPEAKER_02]: And but I don't know if those glasses give you X right now, but I'm saying they might one day.

[SPEAKER_02]: They might they might.

[SPEAKER_01]: So the, the, the, the, the, they have markers.

[SPEAKER_01]: It's a smart glasses, which feature largely concealed cameras, microphones and speakers has turned to a major headache for those presiding over court proceedings.

[SPEAKER_01]: When made to see Mark Zuckerberg entered a court room in Los Angeles last month while wearing one of his company's smart glasses, for instance, Judge Carolyn Cool was not impressed.

[SPEAKER_01]: And she threatened to hold anybody in the ring using them in contempt of court.

[SPEAKER_01]: She said, this is very serious.

[SPEAKER_01]: in another risk that someone on the stand could receive communication from outside counsel or even an AI chatbot in real time.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_01]: Right.

[SPEAKER_01]: So it looks into this like they could use now the local poker game.

[SPEAKER_01]: You can communicate with parts in across tables saying that look at what is wise cars.

[SPEAKER_01]: Look at what is wise cars.

[SPEAKER_03]: They don't have to say that

[SPEAKER_01]: say about it said, it's a clever scheme, at least until you get caught in the BBC reports on this.

[SPEAKER_01]: And the UK High Court judge noticed something was seriously off during the January case, brought one by the Monus Jack Stiles, who's the co-owner of a little with Lithuanian company, who's trying to get his firm off and then solve a sea loss, right, bankruptcy or something.

[SPEAKER_01]: but the judge instructed Jack Sass to remove a pair of smart glasses after noticing that he seemed to pause quite a bit before answering the question during cross-examination.

[SPEAKER_02]: He's just thinking, making sure he answers it correct.

[SPEAKER_01]: Right, well, after he took him off, it became pretty obvious that Finn had been cheating by using them to get real time advice.

[SPEAKER_01]: said, in my judgment, the smart glasses were clearly connected to his mobile phone during his cross-examination, because no voice was heard out loud until the smart glasses were removed and disconnected from his glasses.

[SPEAKER_01]: She said that there was clearly someone on the mobile phone talking to him.

[SPEAKER_01]: Well, he was later found to have made multiple phone calls to a mysterious caller, let's say it has Abercadabra in his phone.

[SPEAKER_01]: Who he claimed was a taxi driver?

[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, okay.

[SPEAKER_02]: Who's Abraham, Cadabra?

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_02]: Someone on his attorney.

[SPEAKER_01]: Judges in Bible, she either.

[SPEAKER_01]: And when the judge wasn't convinced saying, it didn't matter who the secret of color was.

[SPEAKER_01]: It included that this jackstas was being assisted or coach.

[SPEAKER_01]: He said, not only have I held that jackstas was untruthful and denying his use to the smart glasses and his calls to Abraham.

[SPEAKER_01]: But the effect of this is that his evidence is unreliable and untruthful.

[SPEAKER_01]: Now what I'll wear in the glasses, the defendant appeared to be at a loss for words.

[SPEAKER_01]: And not because of the language barrier as they had an interpreter.

[SPEAKER_01]: Once Jack Stass was no longer had his mark glasses, he has to take quite a bit before providing answers to the questions, frequently he was asked a question and he would pause for some time before asking for the question to be repeated, or he would say he did not understand the question.

[SPEAKER_01]: And this occurred frequently when it was clear to me, he simply did not know what his reply should be.

[SPEAKER_01]: And in conclusion, I reject his evidence in its entirety.

[SPEAKER_01]: He was untruthful in relation to his used about a smart glasses and it'd be encroached through smart glasses.

[SPEAKER_01]: He had a blatant disregard for the signing of the questions of certificate and carrying out his disclosure obligations.

[SPEAKER_01]: Given the wide profolution of smart oasis, like meta-rails, Ray Bansauhware, it's unlikely to be the last time we'll hear about instance like this.

[SPEAKER_01]: And I'm like, I'll quit the story there.

[SPEAKER_01]: Pretty interesting then.

[SPEAKER_03]: It is.

[SPEAKER_01]: It's happening.

[SPEAKER_01]: This shit is for real.

[SPEAKER_01]: Mm.

[SPEAKER_01]: And we'll be long to their x-ray classes.

[SPEAKER_01]: You don't need to waste.

[SPEAKER_03]: For your card game,

[SPEAKER_03]: you don't need it.

[SPEAKER_03]: No, you got the skill.

[SPEAKER_01]: I got the skill.

[SPEAKER_01]: You do have the skills.

[SPEAKER_01]: So, all right, let's sit.

[SPEAKER_01]: I hope you all have a wonderful wild and wonderful weekend.

[SPEAKER_02]: Definitely.

[SPEAKER_01]: All right, and I'm Woody Everton.

[SPEAKER_02]: I'm Cindy Everton.

[SPEAKER_01]: We'll haul our child later.

[SPEAKER_02]: Love you, peace.

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