10 GUILTY TEENAGE Convicts REACTING to LIFE SENTENCES

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• 10 GUILTY TEENAGE Conv...
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Пікірлер: 66

  • @darthlaurel
    @darthlaurel2 жыл бұрын

    I do feel sorry for the kid who set the fire. That judge was out of line and I don't see life in prison as a just punishment for him.

  • @j0hnn13K

    @j0hnn13K

    2 жыл бұрын

    Same here, the judge basically caused a mistrial by judging on his emotions. But he got away with it because the kid was given a terrible lawyer who was only there for the numbers, not the client. Now if there was intent to kill someone in that building, then the punishment is correct, but if there was no intent (or knowledge of someone being in the building) than its a case of arson/vandalism with deadly outcome and that is not a life in prison offence. But the fact that life in prison was on the table and the judge was not addressed by the kid's lawyer on the judge's own conduct, tells me the lawyer didnt care either. Sadly i dont know the case other than what we've seen here, so its a guess on what actually was the backstory here, did the kid know there was someone in the building? if yes... then F that kid, if he didnt, then its F that lawyer and judge.

  • @daniirage1382

    @daniirage1382

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@j0hnn13K thats crazy!

  • @jfk64kennedy95

    @jfk64kennedy95

    2 жыл бұрын

    google the story, he set a fire that killed his toddler brother, he not as innocent as appears in this video

  • @melissabill1640
    @melissabill16402 жыл бұрын

    If they took a life at that age, they could do it again, regardless of how sorry they are. Unfortunately they probably need to be separated from society to protect the public.

  • @Wellch

    @Wellch

    Жыл бұрын

    Even if they sang Sorry by Adele to the judge, it won’t matter.

  • @christianh.2950
    @christianh.29502 жыл бұрын

    What's really sad is that even though they have to see the same walls for the rest of their lives. They get free food,drink, bedding, clean clothes, toilet, health care and dental. They probably smile because they get to be lazy and live a easy life in confinement.

  • @tammystranger9512
    @tammystranger95122 жыл бұрын

    Theres a show called kids behide bars life or parole its the second season should check it out

  • @tinaadcock-thomas8671
    @tinaadcock-thomas86712 жыл бұрын

    Regarding Dylan Schumaker: "The judge said he took note of a comment Schumaker made in a phone conversation with his mother last July while in the Erie County Holding Center awaiting trial. 'I’m a 16-year-old blond. Probably all I have to do is cry, and they’re going to feel sorry for me,' Schumaker told her, referring to the jury." (from The Buffalo News 01/10/2014)

  • @Telenaus
    @Telenaus2 жыл бұрын

    the judge wishing the kid dies in prison should be removed, he is not supposed to do shite like that. the one before that i could understand by his reaction if the judge had said that. wish they had linked the stories

  • @IOSPeteCho

    @IOSPeteCho

    Жыл бұрын

    That video was edited to make it that way. The judge said that in a completely different case, which involved a horrific killing. Search on KZread Judge explodes at Camia Gamet

  • @latoyawalton6010
    @latoyawalton6010 Жыл бұрын

    The kid that you said looks off looks like Sid from Toy Story

  • @mannyhernandez374

    @mannyhernandez374

    Жыл бұрын

    So true 😂😂😂😂

  • @j0hnn13K
    @j0hnn13K2 жыл бұрын

    All of them deserved what was coming to them, but there was one case among these that raised an eyebrow for me. The kid who started a fire and that cost someone's life, now i obviously do not know the in's and out's of that particular case but that seemed to me as a failure of justice for a few reasons. Going with the notion that there was no intent to kill someone in that building (he might have intended it, i dont know), then its a case of arson with a fatal outcome, what would that be, manslaughter in the 3rd/2nd degree? Normally that isnt serious enough, within law, to get life for that, a long jailtime yes, life.. no, which leads me to believe he was assigned a bad lawyer because the kid got life in prison and the judge added insult to injury without protest from said lawyer. No judge should ever be allowed to say "i hope you die/rot in jail" like this one did, it shows he sentenced the kid on emotions rather than stone cold law, and that would be a mistrial in just about any nation... except the USA ofc. Now dont get me wrong, i am not defending that kid, i'm rather pointing out that it seems that this whole case was played on emotions rather than the facts. (and no, i am not familiar with the case, if the kid intended to kill someone in that building, then its a different story all together, and he deserves life.. but the judge still should've kept his mouth shut on his personal views in this, that alone could've caused a complete mistrial.. probably should've but... i'm pretty dang sure that kid was given a lawyer who's in it for the numbers, not the clients.)

  • @j0hnn13K

    @j0hnn13K

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Jeffrey Hinkel While i agree with you, a judge cannot be (and is not) allowed to make decisions based on emotions. This is also why a judge is not allowed to be the judge in cases where he knows the defendant or perpetrator in person, because his emotions/feeling toward such person, would influence his judgement. A judge is obligated to leave his or her own personal opinions outside of the courtroom. (and for good reasons!) This judge did not follow those rules of conduct as a judge. you do not have to agree with that but that is how the rules are. He lost his professional demeanor and any lawyer who is worth his money, would've called out on that and demanded a retrial, the lawyer assigned to that kid did not do anything to get the kid a fair judgement. (if he had, the demand for life in prison would not have been on the table to begin with, that is.. if this was a case of arson/vandalism with deadly result, like i said in my main post, if it was intent.. then the kid got what he deserved, if it wasnt intent, then its a different story and i'll point out the bad lawyer again)

  • @ElayaHell

    @ElayaHell

    2 жыл бұрын

    The fire starter has autism and there is apparently doubt that he started the fire. It is believed cops forced him to confess which won't be the first time. And he didn't get life, he got 15 yrs. His name is apparently Jacob Morgan. He ended up killing his baby brother with the fire, if he did it.

  • @j0hnn13K

    @j0hnn13K

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ElayaHell thanks for sharing some background, and sadly yes... police often dont care if they have the right person, they only care about a confession, not the truth or facts.

  • @IOSPeteCho

    @IOSPeteCho

    Жыл бұрын

    I am not defending that judge, but that judge who said "I hope you die in prison as well" did not actually say it to that kid. Whoever made that video edited that part of the video to make it that way. Search on KZread "Judge explodes at Camilla Gamet", and that's where that judge actually said that. That was in a horrific murder case, where the defendant was completely unremorseful and disrespectful. You may not agree with me here, but the judge's outburst there was completely justifiable in that case.

  • @j0hnn13K

    @j0hnn13K

    Жыл бұрын

    @@IOSPeteCho so basically, this video has elements of "spicing it up", that's makes the whole video questionable for me then. But eventho i fully get why he said it in the case you described, he still should not have said it, at risk of a mistrial because it can be seen as biased judging. mind you, i am not in defense of the criminal, rather wanting judges to not get personal because that causes mistrials in cases you really do not want mistrials in.

  • @taylorlentz7786
    @taylorlentz77862 жыл бұрын

    Dylan Schumaker (3:14) beat his girlfriends 2 year old son to death

  • @coktoe4487
    @coktoe44872 жыл бұрын

    Jodi Arias, the woman at 5:20, wasn't a teenager when she was convicted. She was 26. IDK why they would include her. 26 ain't no teen.

  • @ElayaHell

    @ElayaHell

    2 жыл бұрын

    Fire starter didn't get life sentence either, he got 15 yrs

  • @darthlaurel
    @darthlaurel2 жыл бұрын

    This was framed badly....not by you, but by the original makers. These people didn't have their lives taken from them. They took someone else's life and paid the consequences.

  • @jfk64kennedy95
    @jfk64kennedy952 жыл бұрын

    don't fall for the "fake" remorse...that typical psychopathic, sociopathic behavior...they aren't remorseful for the crime they committed, they emotional because they going to jail...

  • @Ayaforshort

    @Ayaforshort

    2 жыл бұрын

    Sure but clinically teenagers can't be diagnosed with personality disorders. They don't even like to diagnose teens with depression, just manage their symptoms and help with coping. Their brains aren't fully formed yet.

  • @saraheart2804
    @saraheart28042 жыл бұрын

    Everything about this is sad. You have to wonder what went wrong in their lives to make such horrific decisions. In the end they have to pay.

  • @tammystranger9512
    @tammystranger95122 жыл бұрын

    Don't know why they crying they was grown enough to do what they did to put them selves in that situation

  • @Wildflower687

    @Wildflower687

    2 жыл бұрын

    Actually teenage brains are highly underdeveloped, which points to the sad reality that most of these offenders don’t realize the gravity of what they did.

  • @Someonesburner404
    @Someonesburner4042 жыл бұрын

    zero lack of remorse? uh, try that one again

  • @radioactive_moose
    @radioactive_moose2 жыл бұрын

    You might want to change your thumbnail. I was expecting you to find the video hilarious based on it.

  • @sarahdouglas9119
    @sarahdouglas9119 Жыл бұрын

    I commend the mother of the teenager in the first video… She understood why the judge had sentenced her son and accepted it.. She must have thought she had done everything she could to raise her son to be better than what he became… and her son had chosen to commit murder all on in his own

  • @sherryheim5504
    @sherryheim55042 жыл бұрын

    I think it is sad that people so young have no concern for human life, but I do believe that they need to be permanently removed from society so that they cannot harm more people. Each one of them deserved life in prison or the death penalty. It was probably only their age that saved them from the death penalty in some states. Nothing is going to bring back their victims who should have still been living their lives. I feel more sympathy for the families of the victims than I do for the murderers.

  • @amoscardoza5253
    @amoscardoza52532 жыл бұрын

    Yo Rome, you should a top 10 ranking on the "all the way up" challenge" that's on YT. I'd luv to hear your list!

  • @susancannon1905
    @susancannon19052 жыл бұрын

    Do the crime... Do the Time. BAM 💥

  • @carokann1802
    @carokann18022 жыл бұрын

    you shouldn't judge a person the moment they hear the convict. what you can read out of the evidence is the important thing, how they acted while murdering. that's what shows you what's real and what's not. they never act while murdering, they only act before and after that.

  • @vodkarage8227
    @vodkarage82272 жыл бұрын

    The way I see, this is the only life we get. I don't believe in an after life. I believe that once you die, that was it, that was your one brief shot of existence, so for someone to take a life, is unforgivable. I don't care if they are sorry, if they learned their lesson; it should be a life for a life. Doesn't matter if it is an accident either. Your stupid actions ended a life, you have to pay. Every drunk driver who has ever killed, deserves death. Criminals are very lucky I don't chose the penalties. I would go old school eye for an eye, but only for crimes against fellow humans.

  • @newcreations1929
    @newcreations19292 жыл бұрын

    Wowwwwww!!!!!

  • @sandym6760
    @sandym67602 жыл бұрын

    When you commit murder, you have acted as judge, jury and executioner. Just as their victims would have been crying +/or pleading for their lives, and THEY didn't listen, THEIR cries and pleas need to be ignored.

  • @f.mahlaoui2472
    @f.mahlaoui24722 жыл бұрын

    Ok, I’m French. So, don’t hate me for asking you guys questions. But what’s the deal with life sentences? In movies or tv shows, I see people getting sentenced for 200 years or even more. Could you explain it to me? Why does the system allow that? In France, the maximum you can get, is 30 years and you can get paroled after 22 years. I mean, people being put away for their crimes, I get it but I honestly don’t understand how this works. Can someone explain it to me, please? Big hugs from France.

  • @billhicks6449

    @billhicks6449

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's the US man. Everything goes harder here. I mean we're still arguing as to whether or not to kill murderers. It all depends on the crime and where you did it. In my state only the worst of the worst get life. And I'm talking a history of violent crimes, extreme violence in the act, intent, and little to no chance of rehabilitation. Even then most of them can get paroled late in life. Each state has different guidelines. In general the justice system is harsher in the south and a bit more lenient in northern cities. There's also different guidelines for federal crimes like terrorism, crimes done on federal property or to federal employees or institutions. All depends on what you do and where you do it.

  • @mts982
    @mts9822 жыл бұрын

    turn down your mic and turn up the other sound.

  • @robertretzlaff985
    @robertretzlaff9852 жыл бұрын

    Satan is what happened.

  • @crhu319
    @crhu3192 жыл бұрын

    In USA very likely some are innocent.

  • @thepunadude

    @thepunadude

    2 жыл бұрын

    WHICH ONES?

  • @stephenmichalski2643

    @stephenmichalski2643

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@thepunadude NONE.......animal pig dogs ....the people they killed didn't get to exist after what they did....they got off too easy......most of them should be executed.....the ones that show no remorse should be dipped slowly into a vat of acid.......we shouldn't have to pay for their worthless existence

  • @Wildflower687

    @Wildflower687

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@thepunadude - statistically, at least 4% of inmates are innocent. The number is probably higher considering the tens of thousands of untested evidence kits, along with the high number of cases which are plead out.

  • @Someonesburner404

    @Someonesburner404

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@stephenmichalski2643 god damn I hope you get yours one day

  • @jackdanereacts4527
    @jackdanereacts45272 жыл бұрын

    The hell with them. Glad they are getting justice.

  • @EnTitledTown
    @EnTitledTown2 жыл бұрын

    I’ve watched a few of your videos and I pretty much enjoyed them all. You seem too intelligent to be doing the hoodie and hairnet thing, stop being a stereotype.

  • @themoonformending

    @themoonformending

    2 жыл бұрын

    Are you seriously judging people’s intelligence on what they wear? Do you really not see the irony of stereotyping someone’s chosen attire to suit your own political agenda? I’ve watched all your comments and pretty much enjoyed them all. You seem too intelligent not to recognize the irony of all this in the first place. Judging someone like that is easy… realizing that someone like you will never know the difference in the first place? Sad at best, consigned to make a fucking difference in my own life? Fuck yeah

  • @EnTitledTown

    @EnTitledTown

    2 жыл бұрын

    If it walks like a duck, quacks like a duck, it’s probably a duck.

  • @catherinerothe4374
    @catherinerothe43742 жыл бұрын

    The American justice system is disgusting. It is cruel, to harsh, the punishments are draconian. The sentences that I have heard off just blow my mind. I'm speechless, and in disbelief. The American justice system has ruined so many lives. It destroys families.

  • @seanharkin8999
    @seanharkin89992 жыл бұрын

    Please, let us hear the video, or turn your mic down.

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