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The Most Intense Police Interrogations In Netflix True Crime

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    [Narrator] Hands up, who's been watching Criminal
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    season 2, the cat and mouse drama
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    that takes place entirely in police
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    interrogation rooms, with investigators
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    locked in a psychological battle of wits
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    with suspects?
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    Woman: Do you want to say it, or shall I?
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    [Dramatic music]
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    Woman: We don't believe you.
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    [Narrator] The very nature of
    interrogations is
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    intrinsically dramatic, full of
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    deception, tension, and injustice.
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    And while we love Criminal,
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    Nothing hits quite like the real thing.
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    So here from Netflix's catalogue of
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    true crime shows and documentaries,
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    are some real life interrogations
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    we just can't stop thinking about.
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    A warning before we dive in:
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    This video explores some of the
    darkest aspects
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    of these cases, including murder
    and sexual violence.
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    Making a Murderer was one of the first
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    true crime series to really
    get people talking,
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    and years later, it remains
    truly compelling
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    and deeply shocking.
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    The series focuses on Steven Avery,
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    a Wisconsin man who was
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    convicted of sexual assault in 1985
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    and spent 18 years in prison.
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    In 2003, DNA evidence secured his release,
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    but Avery believed the police had a vendetta against him,
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    and the stakes got higher when he launched
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    a lawsuit seeking damages.
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    [Kim Ducat] They weren't going to
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    hand that man $36 million.
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    They weren't going to be made
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    a laughingstock, that's for sure.
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    [Narrator] Two years later, photographer
    Teresa Hallback
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    disappeared. Her last assignment
    had been to
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    take pictures of a vehicle belonging to Avery,
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    which put him firmly under suspicion.
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    He was found guilty of murder,
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    but as the series explores,
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    there are questions over much of the evidence
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    that put him there. The most
    shocking moment, though,
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    involves Avery's nephew, Brendan Dessey,
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    who was charged with being an accessory
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    to the crime. With little evidence
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    to support the state's case,
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    everything depended on a confession,
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    and they got it.
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    Dassey was ultimately convicted,
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    and handed a life sentence.
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    In the three and a half hour interrogation
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    without his lawyer present,
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    Dassey spilled everything they asked him to.
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    The trouble was, some of what he said didn't
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    line up with the case against Avery,
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    and some of it barely made sense at all.
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    In the interrogation, a mumbling Dassey seems
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    more worried about making his mother happy
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    than about how confessing might affect him.
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    [Interrogator] Did you cut her hair off?
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    [Dassey] Yeah.
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    [Interrogator] Where did that happen?
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    [Dassey] In the bedroom.
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    [Interrogator] What did you cut the hair off with?
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    [Dassey] The knife.
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    [Interrogator] The knife you guys found in the garage?
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    That doesn't make sense, it's impossible.
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    You took her out to the garage and that's
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    when you got the knife.
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    [Narrator] In 2016, a judge overturned
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    Dassey's conviction on the grounds
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    that the confession was coerced.
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    But legal wrangling means he remains
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    in prison to this day.
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    True crime show, The Confession Tapes,
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    is all about miscarriages of justice,
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    and how police have used interrogations
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    to convict the innocent.
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    It looks at several cases across the series.
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    But one of the most haunting is that
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    of Wesley Meyers. Meyers didn't just
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    confess once to the 1997 murder of his
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    girlfriend, Teresa Hort, he confessed three times
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    and even made a public apology to the family.
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    Meyers was duly found guilty.
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    The only problem? Confession aside,
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    the evidence didn't really seem to point to him
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    being the one who committed the crime.
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    And while the police were pursuing him,
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    they were ignoring plausible leads on another
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    suspect. But it's when you watch the
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    interrogation itself that alarm
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    bells really start to go off.
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    Over many hours of questioning,
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    the police railroad a compliant Meyers
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    into believing he's got no choice
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    other than to cooperate with them
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    and the story they've constructed,
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    even telling him they have physical evidence
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    against him that proved to be nonexistent.
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    [Police] We both know Wesley, and let's
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    be honest with each other,
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    the people that generally get you the
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    most pissed off in all the world
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    are the people you love.
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    [Narrator] All this was being secretly
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    recorded, so Meyers didn't know
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    his words could be used against him.
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    In 2012, a judge ruled that Meyers'
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    constitutional rights had been violated
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    and ordered a retrial. He pled guilty
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    to a lesser charge and was
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    released based on time already served.
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    Meyers remains bitter about the legal process.
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    [Meyers] They have hardened me.
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    [Narrator] Henry Lee Lucas was America's most
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    prolific and notorious serial killer.
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    A drifter, with no home territory,
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    he claimed responsibility for
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    over 600 murders, starting with his own
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    mother, although the number
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    eventually settled around a more believable
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    200. Unlike most known serial killers,
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    he had no established MO.
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    He said once that he used anything but poison
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    on his victims. How did police
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    catch this slippery shapeshifting
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    operator? Because he confessed,
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    and confessed,
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    and confessed, and confessed.
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    [Lucas] Well after that I cut her
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    up into little pieces.
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    [Narrator] After Lucas was
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    arrested in 1983 on suspicion
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    of committing a double murder,
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    he began claiming responsibility for more and more crimes.
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    Police came from all over the country
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    to clear up old cases by pinning them on Lucas.
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    But in exchange for these confessions,
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    Lucas was receiving special priveleges,
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    like cigarettes and milkshakes.
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    He was also getting attention from law
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    enforcement, praise from the police
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    whose intrays he was helping to empty,
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    and a feeling of purpose for the
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    first time in a life that had been
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    chaotic and cruel.
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    [Lucas] I've tried to show law enforcement,
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    I've tried to teach 'em.
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    [Narrator] He had basically become a
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    celebrity, and every confession
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    only helped to grow his fame
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    and importance.
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    In this series, The Confession Killer,
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    you can see just how unreliable this process was.
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    It's not just one interrogation that stands
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    so much as the sheer mass of them,
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    which all show a cheerful Lucas
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    enjoying his chats with investigators.
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    Did he commit any of the crimes
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    attributed to him? Later in life,
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    after his wild claims had come apart
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    under scrutiny, he was telling a different story.
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    [Lucas] My mother, back in 1960,
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    that is the only murder I've ever committed,
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    and I'm not positive I committed that.
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    [Narrator] The kind of 'ah-ha!' moments
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    that feature in fictional interrogations
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    rarely happen in real life, but sometimes,
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    real life gets close. Before 2012,
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    Steubenville, Ohio, was a normal small town
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    with a typical American passion for
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    its high school football team.
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    After 2012, the word Steubenville meant
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    something very different. It became a byword
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    for toxic masculinity and victim blaming
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    after a harrowing rape case became
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    a source of international outrage.
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    Documentary Roll, Red Roll,
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    tells the story of the investigation, the prosecution,
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    and the public reaction, and shines a light on the
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    misogyny and entitlement that contributed
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    to the crime. At a party that August,
Title:
The Most Intense Police Interrogations In Netflix True Crime
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
08:47

English subtitles

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