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tv   Documentary  RT  December 4, 2021 6:30pm-7:00pm EST

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way pleaded for andrew on that news conference to come in like they wanted us to have him turn himself in. we love you and we want you home with us. everything will be okay. we, i frankly not recall the ride ha or anything. cuz yeah, we up and left, i was kind of in free fall, it just seemed like it was snowballing, rapidly, everything seemed to be fine. i mean, there were no red flags, no, nothing. that's what's making this so difficult for us as law enforcement, it's i mean, ah, with
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the school they had a vigil to other students put together. and they asked mander to talk. eric and i said some words from a little speech and noticed peg and farm to come home. if you are in trouble or just come home, want to help your friends ah, most of the electrical program missouri as far as the faculty and the students. you know, people are pretty generous and, and they're going to give of their time and they're gonna, they're gonna form these search parties and they're going to go all scour off or wherever law enforcement has identified us as potential places to walk. ah, the campus police should obviously when we go back to class, that basically turned us a very or any more students going missing?
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i was like, what makes no sense? is there a black hole, pine tree somewhere they didn't tell anybody about and people are falling into it? ah, we went just to places that we had gone or if we gotta go cruising or something all or smoke and we like drive down all the roads. we go and, but all or has together and tried her hardest to find something, get some sort of clues as to what happened or where he was or, and what was going on. but it didn't come up with anything and started to seem like there was something else going on. and we learned that the college police department was the ones investigating this situation. campus police are supposed to make sure that you behave, make sure you're following the rules of the campus. she snuck baron to your room, look out for the campus, place. that's their job. and the,
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the campus police should have turned the situation over to another agency immediately. they just don't have the experience and training necessary to deal with this situation and are static and b as c s student and disappeared on may 1st, last seen leaving is dharm at the campus of the north dakota state college of science as parents are john and tammy tammy, good to have you on news in this morning. give me an evaluation of where this search for andrew is at it. it's basically don cole went so far as the campus police are concerned. and we're, we're, we're not gonna stop looking for a living. hell, you know, that's the living. how it's july. 8th is the funds that are other than that. so, so it's, it's fairly, a bad time
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a year. and now he's got to how do you feel that the state college of science has been in dealing with this situation? it seems like they're not doing anything. answers case just made me feel frustrated. but once you start hearing that other stations are having just as much difficulty getting basic answers, you realize there's something more going on. people were just trying to come up with theories and i think that's natural when you don't have a lot of answers, you want to find something i would say probably after the 2nd week, i started having some doubts about whole tullison long been take care of their investigative skills were pretty limited as plants when i could see and all we
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thought that they were probably doing his best, they could, i don't know. i guess they didn't seem to frantic about trying to find them, i guess, but i asked him if they had checked out any of the other vit surveillance stuff in town. in all as far as seni and andrew or seen a movement at his car moved, you know though, i said well did you check with the train and the and the tax season? any that stuff if, if handers gotten any of that and checked in fargo, if any, anybody's seen him there or anything like that. oh no, that's a good idea. i think it was just i don't know what they were doing. i mean, they, other than waiting for a phone call, i guess i don't understand what you're doing. this went on for i say, weeks enough. ah, fresh news to day folks in the andrew sat
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a case the young man we've all been searching for since he went missing on may 1st and now warrant has been issued for andrew's arrest. static is wanted on drug charges. details of these charges are still emerging, but andrew was allegedly caught selling marijuana on 2 occasions on april 4th, in april night, 2013. 1 sale was for 20 bucks. the other was for $60.00. mm hm. was like, are you kidding me? all of this for $80.00 worth of pot. my son is missing for $80.00 worth of pot. i was wild wild show me a campus where you cannot find $80.00 worth of time . i remember waking up the news that he had been charged and also what is as
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i was this, even a thing they can do, this is completely or try your friend home. and now you're gonna throw some kind of bogus charge. yeah. like i had not put it together at all. how does warren just happened now that he's gone missing? what crime did he commit? where did they see him were like wow to why is that happening now? i knew it was. everything was as a confusing little mess for a waller like that whole month was the most confusing thing at summer happened. they ended up filing the warrants. i think i'm monday and they thought the other police have to get involved. or, you know, just kinda everybody's looking for him that i think that was the reasoning for filing the charges. so that kind of shut down the publics from willingness to help . nobody wants to look for a drug dealer in my own mother to this day
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believes that andrew was a drug dealer. anybody that knew him knew there was more to the story. i assume that, you know, he just took off. this is just more and he could handle, but at the same time i, i had this idea that yeah, but where's the, where's it going, where do you, where is he going to go in? charco won't be every so often that we see that if you don't check one more me, if i use contact with you, i'm just going to let you know our work any more than that. i'm just, i got the warranty for us. and i was having a panic here,
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sitting in the pedicure chair with my feet in the water and sergeant helmerson called he said, what are you doing? and i said, i'm having a panic hearing as are you alone? and i'm like, no the girls here, you know what? he goes? where is john? and i said he's on a fishing trip. get him home. ah, i was actually up fishing with my buddies, just kind of get a weekend away. ah, tammy had called me that they had found the body in the river. how often i knew it was, hadn't. ah, i just got to the house. of course we're waiting. the sheriff showed up with tammy's pastor and told that it was at her.
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ah ah ah the postal service delivers a 155000000000 pieces of mail every year, approximately 40 percent of the world's mail right now the us postal service is in the flight of its life to say that is really bad financial shape now facing diesel
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the postal service is a cash cow, and there was a way to pull money out of the postal service to put into the federal budget. there was a mandate that you bring a $100000.00, new revenue every month. the nature of privatization in the us postal service is very much hidden from public view. it's privatization from the inside out. that's a . 7 big business in money, it's not about the public and given them a service that they deserve. it's not about quality train workers, it's about with, well, the fund i make no, no borders to tease and
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users as a merge, we don't have a charity. we don't to look back, see a whole world needs to take action to be ready. people are judgment, common, and we can do better, we should be better. everyone is contributing each in their own way. but we also know that this crisis will not go on forever. the challenge is great. the response has been massive. so many good people are helping us. it makes us feel very proud that we're in it together. ah you were to there was bank your eyes and your post yet that it would stop you from having real friends and finding a girlfriend. but what they fail to mention is that you can make thousands of dollars every weekend by simply playing video getting a stacy from using
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a couple of them for the we formed definition of what it's a little under a georgia resident because president multiple to do so please know soon of course, to make video games a high paying job. you have to be gifted and quick with it. hang on to open up with bites to close to listening fitness to listen. you brought them in, miss thompson, with webpage, but you have to be able to produce park even started yet. gala boy, well, you mo, storm you my video it out or you mean it was it mules? florida guy of the owner. but i would that be cool with, with the se odd to do. i also use this in their interest for some financial pundents to see the value of the currency lose value because they can gain traction on social media saying it's somehow a good thing, but not everybody is an undertaker. not everyone is a grave. robert, you know,
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some people are actually out there trying to be productive and productive lives. and of course, that philosophy of, oh, the currency has gone to 0 and less than 0. and that's a good thing is a, is the, is a mat lunacy ah, you know what, what, where is he, you know, but it's all different. so when you finally, when they finally found the body and then you knew that he was dead enough, i murmured, just like i couldn't keep my eyes dry because this is just like the reality. now, you know, is tough to i mean, deep down, you kind of knew it because there's been a long time. you just didn't wanna accept it until it smacked in the face. ah.
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ah surgeon henson called us, i grant john. every time he spoke, he was something new in bizarre. he said andrew was shot in the head and he had a backpack or rocks tied to them. that's what he told us over the phone. he believed it was us a suicide. he was just waiting on the coroner,
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and once he found the gun, he would be confirmed that it was a suicide. who so the 1st day i met tammy, she decided aman talked to the news. so i walked in, i didn't know what to expect, you know what i mean, we had heard about what was happening, but i didn't know i was just walking into this. and tammy said my son was killed and i had to call my producers like, hey, this is actually your story today. i know you just wanted me to get a sound by here, but this is your story. she says her son was killed. mm. enter sonics mom tammy sat. i spoke at a local radio station today saying she believed her son was murdered. we discovered that when andrew was found on june 27th, he wasn't wearing the same clothes he might missing and cameras. in his dorm caught this footage, he was last seen wearing this sweatshirt, but one,
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his body was found he was wearing a different jacket. ah, he was shot in the head. his backpack was weighted down. he was thrown in the river. the backpack rocks was kinda the, the kicker for me. and like if you're going kill yourself, he can do that anywhere. why would you need to make your body disappeared? mm. andrew was shot with a 22. andrew went in to the red river and he came up on the minnesota side of the red river between him leaving that dorm. and when he was shot, there was a change of clothes. there were rocks in the backpack for me personally. andrew is murder. makes more sense and what the cost could come up was and all they could
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come up with is a suicide. like, well, i said guys are rocks in his backpack tied to his body. that doesn't sound like a suicide. that sounds like murder one on one. in this developing story, tammy static, as fighting back tears as she talks about not having answers in her son's death or just really hasn't been any effort to keep this. you know, we updated the static family is bringing their own attorneys to the fight. and now they want the f b i to investigate. i think people knew it was a major story right away. when that happened, people knew something was going on. that just doesn't happen. a rural college student does interest get shot in the head and found in a river like that. something else had to be happening. they're not going to do their jobs to let the f b. i get involved, somebody that can look at this case fresh without this suicide in the back of their minds, you know, planted by the campus police and everything. i want them to look at like the whole
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case objectively. when i met tammy that day and had a personal conversation with tammy, i thought, okay, we have the power of journalism. we have the power of finding public records. we have the power of being able to hold those who are paid by tax dollars accountable . ah, we talked about amy's, that she just has a lot of questions and can't seem to figure out where to get the answers. do you know where she should be looking? no, i really don't know where she should be looking on on that a it. i think a lot of people have a lot of question to understand the investigative process. you just really have to look at the timeline of events that took place when andrew was reported missing on i believe those may 2nd,
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the campus police at the dfcs were the lead investigators by shewn, shortly before andrew's body was found. there were, i would say 3 or 4 different law enforcement agencies that were involved. but it was really still to this point, hard to tell who was actually in charge who was actually doing anything the investigation was turned over to the b. c a in minnesota. but n dfcs was originally investigating the north dakota agee's office and b, c, i, in their report said it was a minnesota b c, a case, the b c. a said that's not true, they have nothing to do with it. as furious as angry at the way everything is be presented from start to finish. the way the police were handling it from pretty much de one and her static death investigation is being handled by campus police. the minnesota police are not working with the campus. police cops aren't sharing
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information. i was absolutely out. yeah. was the light away, very lay way of putting it, the f, b i's response was essentially that they weren't asked by local on foresman to be involved. unless they were asked by law enforcement to get involved. there was no reason for them to get involved at that point. all due respect to the campus, police, you know, they've got a job to do and it is not investigating a potential murder. i remember asking at this school official, do you feel like you're in over your head? and i don't really remember his response at that time. i don't know if he had a response or not, but that was one of the last times we ever got to talk to a school official about the case. no one wanted responsibility. and so if you didn't want responsibility in the front end by doing anything on the back end,
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you were taking responsibility. and so they were, it was much easier to use the narrative of he took his own life because then he was responsible. the police came here. oh, i can't remember how long after his body was found. it was a while low. and basically told us the progress or lack of progress that they were at what stage the investigation was. we didn't know all of particulars. they didn't tell us all the evidence of what was going on, but they weren't telling us everything. we were at that time just trying to find anything,
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any document or any video they had. tammy had told us that they had his cell phone . tammy had told us they had his laptop, things like that. so we were asking. okay, did you find information on his laptop? could we get a copy of that or do you have that video documentation of him being interviewed? i didn't know what i was expecting, but when i 1st pressed play, almost felt wrong. watching m a. jason lambert. ah. yeah, it was just slight me could and knocked me over with a feather. joy related with november 22nd. this 20th birthday. it starts off with some smart alec comment that you don't want to spend your birthday here. very well, you know,
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center say ok as a whole day, like i said, you're facing to bellies. of course miss manager. mr. it's a 25 minute video. it took me probably a week to get through it 5 hour where you start off you're, you're on hold all players incur. right. so the police came in and dish troy to his life for won. this was a kid. so college cd. so i mean that got me and it inspired me to really look at the case, but look at the case, i'm not looking to hang the police or any, but i'm looking at the fast the when i saw the fact i was scandalized. i was like, i'd never seen anything is bad is a good way is attacks me in the morning or the night before we use on for tomorrow
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while i'm off tomorrow and then you can find some of my analysis of it was really simple. line them up, not find criminals, and give evidence, line them up lanham of what, arrest and conversion to inform us. because we have, for asians, that i work with. we are, we, you know, you know, like we only see, we are working with other people when we were big area. when it was there for one mission to get another informant and another arrest number. and he did it. good thing is he investigates, you know, one that conducts the situation. what did you, for instance, when you interrogated him, find out what his source, what could it be that you didn't do it? because if you question too much, you'd find out that it was one of your other informants who gave it to him. and if
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that's the case, you understand, you committed a felony yield a police officer. if that's the case, just like you in your situation, you have no clue who probably around you all your know who, when this happens, you friday maybe trying to think of ideas and stuff, but i'm not gonna tell you if you haven't form giving go to subject subject gives just to inform it to where's the investigation, you the guy in charge of informers, you created the crime. and that's it. perfect. france. all. ah, ah, yes, yes. remember that we're in the middle of an opioid epidemic,
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a rhythmic opioid epidemic. and the 1st thing i see is they haven't made one o b o to read that one on a no wonder you didn't tell me. or tell anyone who are o service delivers 155000000000 pieces of mail every year. approximately 40 percent of the world's mail right now the us postal service is in the flight of its life. everybody that is really bad financial shape. now facing default. the postal service is a cash cow, and there was a way to pull money out of the postal service to put into
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a federal budget. there was a mandate that you're bringing a $100000.00, new revenue every month. the nature of privatization in the us postal service is very much hidden from public view. it's privatization from the inside out. that's a big business in money. it's not about the public and given them a service that they deserve. it's not about quality train workers. it's about with
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with oh no, no, no, but they did a my middle name, are you on my head up my lot that hey, love that i a new knuckle. alamba, you can thought no one lung up at a b a. well, i mean i have to be lation suburban young bonia. it's not in and
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