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Joe Kelsoe II
Dr Insanity
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Comments by "Joe Kelsoe II" (@nsahandler) on "Dr Insanity" channel.
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@stevienguyen2047 It's pretty obvious if someone is asking you about a specific individual that you know has a clean nose
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@THE-X-Force 1) You have to be declared disabled to receive Medicare/Medicade coverage without having to come out of pocket for anything, 2) of all those "facilities" - only a handful are long-term inpatient facilities, and 3) there is not NEARLY ENOUGH for everyone who needs it. Most places are literally revolving door facilities where they give someone a prescription that they will have a hard time fulfilling or keeping up with due to their mental condition. Most people with serious mental issues end up homeless, then jailed for being homeless, and unable to make money to pay premiums on their medication
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I'm a current paralegal and you're full of it lol. Paralegals are just paper-pushers and contract drafters. You have the literal verbatim understanding of the law as-written and not the actual law as-applied in context via case law. They had the ability to elect 1st degree murder because he started the confrontation while knowingly armed then lied to cover up his actions. In every state - even "stand your ground" States - you don't get to confront someone then kill them for responding to the confrontation. The person who is armed has the obligation to deescelate the situation. If they had been the ones to initiate the confrontation, then you would be correct. But they weren't. If you watch the full video it's clear that he doesn't explain himself and is looking around at them under the water, then they ask him wtf he is doing, and he accuses them of stealing a phone. Since it's weird that he is looking underwater and also accusing them of stealing a phone, they call him out for it. Then he punches the chick that comes down to break up the fight. Then they push him. Then he comes up from the water and starts stabbing.
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As a paralegal, are you hiring? Jkjk But for real all you have to do is be reasonable and point out how absurd the officer's assumptions are. When you are talking to police - innocent or guilty - remember that you are not talking to a police officer. You are talking to the court. And your entire act is being caught on film. The only issue I really have with videos like this is that it leads to escalation WHEN THEY ASSERT RIGHTS THEY DON'T HAVE. Guarantee you that one jack-dawg here will think that being parked on the side of a busy freeway in their half-broken vehicle means that they don't have to show their license because the guy parked on a local municipal easement awaiting a customer didn't have to.
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They not only suspected it was Brenda: They were the school deans who personally knew it was Brenda because they had resolved all of her behavioral problems and appeals via phonecall.
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No. This is how detectives act when they have all the evidence that they need and confessing is not necessary. Every time you have officers bring friendly or pretending to cozy up to killers are trained tactics to deliberately get the accused to fumble up, contradict themselves, and to confess from the stress of putting their false narrative out to bare. They don't need any of that when they have 20 + witnesses and video evidence of the actual murder from start to stop
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@Mermare I know it's fantasy but Columbo got a lot of mileage out of being polite, slightly annoying, and appreciative of the criminals ego.
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@dirkaminimo4836 ahaha Honestly I think he's one of those guys who does pre-workout too much. At least Cocaine is fun
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He's not a secret genius. I'm in the industry. Performers don't collect money. In most cases, they don't even see the transaction - to obscure managerial pay cuts. ESPECIALLY large sums of money. That's not even a car rented under his name and there is no way he is driving himself before a major event. The ENTIRE music entertainment industry is designed to shield artists from the actual industry. Your job is to show up, entertain, and leave. Here's my perception, based on experience in the industry: Manager took security to pick up money for their event from promoter. There was not enough money. Manager throws a fit about the pay, and says artist isn't performing. Promoter gets mad because now he has to inform a mob of people and says shit hot-headed. Fight ensues. Promoter claims he was robbed of $80 and a cellphone to get them arrested (if you can cuf 20k you aren't crying over $80 and a phone). He's chill because he wasn't even involved in the transaction.
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Americans need to have their licenses revoked more often. Maybe we would get funding for public infrastructure and less idiots on the road
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The last one is sad. You can't get yourself committed in the US unless you commit a crime and are charged by a court to go there. If you try to commit yourself then you have to pay out-of-pocket. You can tell that she really doesn't want to hurt anyone and the fact that she copped up to her actual intent from her mental illness was the only way she could ensure that she was able to get unequivocally committed.
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@PupcakesDogCare I don't think you properly grasp what they are experiencing... they aren't crying and whining because it's hard - they are crying and whining because they are legitimately on deaths door (the last stage is paralysis which finally ends the person). Look yeah they are messed up and imperfect and did messed up stuff... but let's not overlook the fact that these guys almost succumbed to carbon monoxide poisoning. It literally kills brain cells as it displaces oxygen into the brain like a stroke would - but you would be experiencing toxic-induced atrophy.
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@shimmer8289 ... you know that you can drag those plastic totes, right,
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@JohnFink-p5l detainment is a form of arrest without probable cause. Officers need probable cause and to give a lawful order to someone for a detention. Which is a good thing. We want officers to be able to stop people when there is actual reasonable suspicion (my friend from High School was cuffed and detained but he was wearing the same color shirt and pants as the people who'd just robbed a bank. He had prior run-ins with the police so he didn't take it personally). But they have to have that actual suspicion that someone committed, or is about to commit or is committing a crime in order to detain someone. If they do not have any of those factors then a detainment is an Unlawful arrest.
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@gabejohnson97 That is a YouTube prank I actually would like to see. Literally walking around like a cartoon villain with monopoly money in a big bag with an $$$ on the side. Not for a suit but for the lulz. Cops are still human. They'd get a kick out of it
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@arranmc182 Police officers get disqualified for having too high IQ This is not a joke. The claim unilaterally is "officer retention" aka "the smart people will get sick of this and quit." This was upheld in the year 2000 in the State of New York Appeals 2nd Circuit. This is not me trolling.
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@jeffmead4670 Under Color of Law is a Federal offense. People are just ignorant and don't go to the correct authorities to press charges. No States (that I am aware of) have the crime "under color of law." Go to a Federal Courthouse or a Federal Agency like the FBI then file the complaint. They have time. They will follow up.
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@aidanc9396 What's worse is that you don't have to be important for that to happen. Do you live in the boondocks or something?
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@awKtn32-_- That is veritably false. In fact there is an entire interrogation technique aimed around getting a person to confess to smaller crimes to make themselves seem like a petty crook or criminal in the face of a completely-fabricated serious charge. Ex they suspect you for breaking into cars. To get you to confess to breaking into cars, they tell you that Grand Theft Auto is a serious charge. You say "Grand Theft Auto? I just busted windows out. I never stole a car." Yes, this is highly controversial and unethical. Yes, this has led to false arrests and convictions. Yes, that is allowed by police in the USA.
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@that.ll_do_pig it's not tho
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Not only that. I've fought people and nobody ended up maimed or killed over it. And I had a knife at the time: I just didn't use it, because it didn't come to that. You don't get to confront someone then pull out a weapon when it's not going your way. That's not how this world works.
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@Mayhamsdead I haven't been duped in the slightest. You don't get to confront people then kill them when they meet you with confrontation. That's not a world you or I want to live in. The person with the weapon has the responsibility to deescelate the situation. You bare the weapon and issue commands. This is responsible concealed carry 101.
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Ayedidyae you don't get to START the confrontation then kill people for responding just because you are armed and they aren't. That's an unhinged and brain dead take. This guy STARTED the confrontation while armed. Then elevated it to deadly force.
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@Ayedidyae >regardless of who started what Nope. Not in the least. When one person goes to confront others armed they don't get to kill them for meeting their confrontation. That would mean if you got out of your car to confront someone for hitting your car, they could start a fight with your and then shoot you dead if they start losing. Your line of thinking gives the power of judge, jury, and executioner to every armed, hot-headed loser in the US.
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