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tv   Documentary  RT  November 12, 2020 6:30am-7:01am EST

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sure, it was world courage where it all sources show up over a word or severe storm right
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now here she is. see the court is in there, right. would you bring that phone cord in? the guy's somebody up, you know, not only did kareem bring that in, but he brought it in and drop the other. another portion of it in the purse. that's yes, that's absurd. i bet what happens here is she says he knocks her out on the kitchen floor and they're like, it doesn't work, doesn't work, renee, not good enough. didn't, didn't he do in the living room? look at this photo, look, i want to see you. oh yeah. that certainly doesn't sit with renee's not concise. no, i want to see your little place before. i think you heard that some wishful thinking. mike. i don't think there is a real police report. i mean, i just don't maybe they sort of knew they were names,
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confession was not so good or not true. and so they didn't really want kareem because they didn't really believe that he was there. that or that it happened like that. and so if they get him in there and then they could end up with nobody one taking on a case like rene's, the danger is always the case, evidence or other crime scene evidence has not been preserved. if there's no crime scene evidence, or case evidence, then there's nothing to d.n.a. test. and if there's no d.n.a. to test, it's extremely hard to prove that your client is innocent. that's from the ukraine.
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in rene's piece, it was a very bloody crime scene. the murder weapon was never found, but there was a purse that had a bloody fingerprint in it, and there was a drawer in the bedroom with a bloody fingerprint on it. they d.n.a. tested some things, but not those. and the only d.n.a. found at the crime scene was the victim's phone. and you know, the, i think out of $41.00 pieces of evidence, they tested 7 for d.n.a. . and so, you know, they're in trouble right at trial because you can't get convicted on your own confession alone. so they go and they try to round up, jailhouse snitches, but only one worked so it was her confession, and a jailhouse snitch, which is so common in false confession cases and you have the confession and then the extra evidence because there's no physical evidence and the corroboration to
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the confession is snitch. i know by your name, i am not. ok to call you ok. who do you mind if i said this is all good. that's ok. you know already i don't have a stream for you for the body will feel fine. no writing will try and do you remember interacting with any of the police officers back then? mr. rake, as judy was name was very, it is some of my impression looking back that thank you all here. she's guilty.
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well, she's guilty and he go make sure you know who sometimes it was a bloody crime. so now we know i was my last year's eve d.n.a. . so these are all somebody else to be how i was also one of the things that's one of the things that we hope to be able to do is retest. the d.n.a. . there's knowledge, she has no chance, some cases we get and we look at them and we, even if we believe the person is innocent, we can say, well, i mean there's just for a variety of reasons, nothing we can do. there's something we can do here. but not a lot of people get exonerated. do you really are useless.
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and the reality is this workout chanted, reach around. i just want to talk to you because i'm helping rene trying to get her out. can we come by? we want to drive to don't just talk to me. i think you so much we need to ask most the most important thing to me is so how she was what her actions, what the police were coming out with young with on drugs. you know, and i live with me every day and he didn't have a car with a promise you anything like where you're going to get out to let me out no matter where when you write right? i want to get out. and so you actually did get out. thank you. we really appreciate it. ok, so that's good. that's helpful. being the greedy
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move let's
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renzo montoya. here's one 0 time was right now is when you will to hear a little reading of the worst person being interviewed. lauren stone, more and more to the end of montoya was arrested in the year 2000 and accused of a murder of a young schoolteacher in denver. he's 14 years old lorenzo when this happened, and he is tiny, like maybe 110 pounds on a one year old or near the overlap between male and lorenzo is a mountain they tell him there's these videotapes that show him abusing children, which there aren't in lorenzo's. they actually go as far as to have him take his
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shoes off and they do this whole charade where this very angry cop comes back in with the shoe and says, well, i'm a shoe print expert, and your shoe matches the print at the crime scene. was untrue you're going to be sent away. your daughter already in there as you well the days are at rest. and it's going to have to go to one of the windows. were you there so you are there goals for the daily rooms of your a very, very well for you. there are your friends a lot of firms if you are there, that's interesting. you can say we had your blood, we had your saliva, we have the to be tested. basically, right?
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there is a bar usually the only thing is a little unusual in the united states police a permitted to lie about evidence and say right out of order that we have a lot of fast that is a shocking discovery to most people. most western countries don't permit it. the
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u.s. supreme court permits it. so consequently you have 2 detectives making it seem as if we have independent evidence. they something very specific about what that evidence is telling us that you were involved in something. they've already started that it's shaping process, and the mother already is believing it. l. look forward to talking to you all. that technology should work for people. i robot must obey the orders given by human beings, except where such orders would conflict with the 1st law show your identification for should be very careful about artificial intelligence. and the point, obesity is to create trusts, conflict take on various jobs and with artificial intelligence. will summon the demon
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of the obama's protect its own existence. let's go next to this is a story of women, women with troubled histories and complex court cases. you know, some of us did leave leave who lives out there where not even the, person that there's a cheesiness and b., they are considered the most dangerous of criminals. she's in a still all be off, 23 hours of the day. tell me that it's not enough punishment. it will do the women on death row. is your media a reflection of reality?
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in a world transformed what will make you feel safe from the isolation or community? are you going the right way, or are you being led somewhere to direct? what is true? what is right? in the world corrupted, you need to descend to join us in the depths. or a maybe in the shallowness. zillah going to see both of you. dead already is a little bit, isn't it? is it true that the brain is you that you are sure you know that even better to
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savor it. so you did you mean mistake? so he just introduced the word mistake. he's about to develop this theme that enables lorenzo to admit some degree of involvement while minimizing his own role as part of a package of techniques that in which you communicate to is suspect that i think you're a good person. i understand what you've been through. i sympathize with what you've been through. often you hear normalising statements like, you know water. if i were in your situation, i would have done the same thing. and all, by the way, i don't think you intended to do this. i think it was an accident or maybe your friends put you up to it, or maybe you were provoked me to feel that it was the red zone. i don't do that. i haven't done it. i did want to jack the car into one that did the communication moves in one direction. it is designed to leave the person the
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suspect. think the police don't think this is such a big deal and therefore be treated with leniency. ok, so one of my choices, either i can be the accomplice who refuses to speak, or i can admit to what they want me to admit to, given all of the minimisation that they've given me and enjoy the benefit of that. who are going to go? you know, how do you presume they're going to do that big look at how much they have communicated already. he now knows so much about this crime that whether he was there or had anything to do with it or not, he now knows enough about it to give you a description. so why are you here? we're here at sleaze house through the computer, and here nature jr, who kicks you in the head. of course, the building
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a story for him to tell or is it, you know, a great ridge those shoes wrote part of the dre shoes. brazill position. your job is just right. he's now being set up. so that when he's ready to give a statement, he knows exactly what that statement should convey that. again, you know, he's kicked in the head shoe dragging her through the blood. he's got a call, so later a judge and the jury is going to watch the final confession and they're going to be so impressed and unable to look past that because they keep on asking themselves what happened. you know, those things if he was in there, right? stare me down. oh, you need to back up. i just stand here. i want your prior 5 minutes. you wait it up, you know, you're not going home tonight. i can guarantee you that. and they do not
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put you in juvenile hall or her, which will be boys, you know, talk now or say goodbye to your mom. it's a pretty clear and your cousin and your sister. it your goal and your life. because you're ready to do what kim and in this person do solve the situation. and he said, i guess you could hold out rank for everyone. you just fall down doesn't everybody have a breaking point? so we must he was imprisoned
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for 14 years, so he got out at 28. he was in solitary confinement for 4 years because when he goes into a grown up prison, he's 14 and he can't be in with the general population. so he goes to solitary confinement for 4 years, for 14 to 18, lorenzo was exonerated, and we have a similar right suit pending for him. and the opposition are, you know, they're, they're moving to have the case dismissed based on qualified immunity for that. and if you're being interrogated, you're not being interrogated because they're just looking for information you're being interrogated because they want you to confess. so today we have a 1st on wrongful conviction, which is that we have a retired n.y.p.d. homicide detective, among other things, current private investigator. i'm pleased to introduce you j. sol. peter, welcome. thank you very much and thank you for having me. so are we going to get
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this fixed a we believe a remedy seems like a long shot to me it's going to take forever. well, the beginning is basically that all, you know, all interrogations are video and audiotapes. and i think that would stop at least 75 percent of these fools confessions, i don't know how you're going to get away with it. i'm a but a criminal justice system as a store looking at prosecutor is we review which false, confessions, faster with making noise that make prosecutor culpable? i mean that's the frustration with the civil rights work is that the prosecutors are always absolutely immune. it doesn't matter what they did, they could have gotten right and punched the kid in the face and they would, we cannot get any liability. and of course the police are allowed to use trickery. and i know every defense attorney in the world is against that.
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so we talked about how out of these 4 cases have all been exonerated, you know, her case remains active in june and she's been in prison now for 20 years. and her son grew up without a mom. she, you know, he has his grandkids now that she's never met other than on a phone through glass. if she said to heart attacks while she's been in prison and it's probably not getting the right medical treatment for that. you know, we're just hoping that you know, time could be on our side and we can get her out sooner rather than later. but i mean, she is a, a life that's wasted. good morning. how are you? how is your heart out.
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a i know you don't deploy yourself together, it's ok. i understand and i know that it's taking a lot of time but we don't want to mess it up, renee, going to get one shot at this. so just hang in there. i promise you there will be and i hope it's a good one, but there won't be any and develop
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their missing their season is nigger matters and it seemed to her those 2 new system is missing. the biggest turns into when not there is a city where you do really you believe that god bless. does he in any way, blame himself for i think so. control ending and confessing,
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they all knew that. but my own observations from talking to wrongfully convicted people is those who were wrongfully convicted by confession are not doing as well. the stigma they attach to themselves, they feel weak, national, stupid, they don't understand what happened, how to done that to themselves. and even when the convictions overturned, if the reason they were convicted of the confession as opposed to something else, the stigma that attached to them the state, even after they were exonerated, right, people are not quite 100 percent. sure, right. yet the confession is so powerful that even ever in supposed to evaporate. so cory, today is, he's living well, right. he got a huge settlement, but it doesn't take away those demons in his head. you know, he's,
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he was in from 16 to almost 30. so what are you now when you come out? he's never going to have the mental peace and rest that you know you and i can probably accomplish sometimes. but if he has lost his whole family, there's no relationship with them really. and that's something that the then why m.p.t. in the city in the prosecution took away from him. right? that money can't replace. when you come back to society, you don't. you don't know what to do in cherry. you don't know what to do or your brain will be the morning star over here. john no longer, you know, whatever the journey may be. if you're going to stand in the hollows,
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you know, from wonder really is a problem that, you know is systemic. it's a problem that victimizes, a lot of people. you have the person who falls in compresses whose life is ruined. you have their family, whose lives are ruined. you have the victim. if they're still alive and the victim's family who think they're getting justice, but they're not. and then you have multiple other problems that come from this main one being that by definition, when we walk up the wrong guy, we stop looking for the right guy. it's really a, it's a, it's a tremendous challenge. i think it's a cultural problem. we need
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a whole societal education about this. our criminal justice system is based on the premise that it's better for 10 guilty. people to go free than one innocent person to go to prison. right. i mean, that is a fundamental concept of the american justice system. but i think that the lying is one of the main things that over there somebody is. well, i just guess the courts don't get it. every story of a false confession is not just a story that gets at the question of why in god's name, the innocent person doesn't cry and he or she didn't commit. it's the 2nd story in the 2nd story line is how come the prosecutor, the judge, the jury, the appeals court. all mr. here is now able to research actual cases, laboratory studies, field studies. and in 100 plus years of basics like culture tells us when you lie to people about evidence, you know why the people about reality. you can change their perceptions and change their memories. or you can change just about every aspect of the called function of
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the british human. but it's more of a disparate point. you know, because will snoop wolf who wish to be lovable
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was she who are sure to put a gun to go with us because all of those who used to be game we will see in the movie confused with who we've seen in the news but it's the most severe, some of it is in your speech, come home and use the in the 20th century was being in a revolution the great depression and world war, the 21st century of mental illness. those aren't my words. that's what service some psychiatry is. the only question it is a fact max kaiser financial survival guide. stacey, let's learn
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a salad fill out. let's say i'm not so i get the fight spot. thank you for destroy. 6 that slavery there's a lot in the building, but i'm pleased to show you a big city bright lights, you jump, but you need jesus and many dangers because of the risk that the glacier that lead to it's also a city when up to 300 sounds and crimes are committed every day for the last. when you begin with your most need still through the reserve least one police officer, if you've read 200 residents in russia's capital cost on the list, i think you missed most. we all put the numbers here to make me think i'm not going to come up boysen, you know,
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that's what i'm to most of the breaking news here on our t.v. . russia's top diplomat suggests that opposition leader. i'd like to see another volley was allegedly a poison with a nerve agent this summer could have been just at the toxin in germany on the plane, taking him to a german clinic. also this hour pro-democrat media trying to eliminate all traces of doubt about the integrity of the 2020 us election running reports about probes into voter fraud, misinformation clashes and arrests in the armenian capital. as crowds demand the prime minister resign over a peace deal that they see as a computer.

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