You don't see the films are biased because they simply leave things out. Do more than watch the films, read Blood of Innocents or look at both supporter and non-supporter websites.
You don't see the films are biased because they simply leave things out. Do more than watch the films, read Blood of Innocents or look at both supporter and non-supporter websites.
Oh and that's great. They've made so much money from these documentaries that they now live in the South of France. And the only way they could do that was to keep feeding their audience mistruths about the murders. I'm sure they're well aware of some of the things I've mentioned in my comments, but they've left them…
@Badass Badlan You're just repeating a lot of the mistruths in the documentaries. There was no 12-hour interrogation. Misskelley was informed of his rights and his father gave permission for him to be questioned. And Misskelley is not retarded—or even borderline retarded.
@Badass Badlan You're just repeating a lot of the mistruths in the documentaries. There was no 12-hour interrogation. Misskelley was informed of his rights and his father gave permission for him to be questioned. And Misskelley is not retarded—or even borderline retarded.
Badass Badlan That's a myth, Misskelley was not interrogated for 12 hours. There's no evidence to back that up , in spite of what the filmmakers claim.
Similar story to the WM3, worth reading…
http://wayofthemammoth.com/…
"Mr. Bojangles" was wearing a cast on his arm, bleeding, and had a serious bout of diarrhea. I highly doubt he had anything to do with the crime.
While we're talking about it, I'm glad I wasn't born in the 15th Century.
Misskelley later told investigators he lied about certain details of the crime to downplay his involvement. What's more knew things that had not been made public… he knew which boy had been cut in the face, which had been cut in the groin, and which hadn't been cut at all.
@avclub-e053e4f47a7ccbc51be254596e483d7c:disqus Colonel Gentleman Haven't read Leveritt's book. Does it mention that his final confession to police was with his lawyer present pleading with him not to? He even went on to tell them he had thrown a whiskey bottle off an overpass. The cops went there and they found a…
Sorry, it was the 90s.
Er, it was the 90s.
I could believe one coerced confession, but multiple coerced confessions? Misskelley insisted on his guilt, but you wouldn't know this if you had only watched the films.