"Extraordinary accustations must be followed by extraordinary proof."
To which the accuser said,
"Why not be followed by just proof?"
Does anyone recognize who made this statement?
Saturday, October 24, 2015
Friday, October 23, 2015
Hillary Clinton: 600 Requests for Security's Straight Face Test
Paul Ekman said that "I don't recall" is the number one deceptive response during testimony. We may take this in various forms, but there is a reason why it is easy to lie this way, making it popular. This same principle can be applied to "yes or no" questions, which is why opened ended brief questions are always best.
The lapsed memory is a low-stress form of deception as it completely avoids going into the stored memory and choosing words from this source. Hence, the stress of deception is greatly reduced since no "speed of transmission" disruption exists.
Here is the video clip:
Note the contrast to the emails from Sidney Blumenthal.
Body language analysts may wish to weigh in on this as well.
This is what people often call, "the straight face test" in seeking to discern truth from a lie.
Without bringing the subject's focus to the event, itself, by forcing her to utilize her own wording, the stress of lying is all but eliminated, leaving only those with tender consciences prone to stress.
Sociopathic liars experience stress in lying, but only when the subject, herself, or himself, is choosing words from the actual event which are stored in their own personal dictionary.
This is how polygraph examiners can obtain 100% success by the careful screening of the subject before the test, and constructing questions that came directly from the subject's own dictionary when the subject was talking about the event.
Thursday, October 22, 2015
Snopes, Deception, and Agenda
Snopes is often quoted as the 'final word' on something, but a closer look at Snopes' editorializing suggests a less than stellar record and some rather superficial 'analysis.' One may also wonder if the editorial stance holds to a level of politically correct bias.
Recall the Snopes' "investigation" to the European No Go Zones, well known to police, citizens, and those who live both in and near them. How well known? Not only to those who live in or near them, nor to those who have had to enter them as professionals, but with actual addresses given by law enforcement revealing them.
Snopes' "research" showed it to be an 'internet rumor' at best, with Fox News cowering in dhinnitide with their apology over what amounts to semantics.
Europeans do not call them "no go zones", which is an American military expression. They have other names for them, and, since then, we've learned that there are not "dozens of no go zones" but hundreds, and are growing in an unprecedented rate (historically unprecedented excludes military invasion) throughout Europe.
Sweden is now the "rape capital" of Western civilization and is the number one most dangerous country for women, outside of a single country in Africa. Swedish officials and corporate media conspired, similar to the migrant crisis in Germany, to withhold information from the public (for their "own good") and actually attempt to re-classify perpetrators of crime, in order to be incapable of identifying the rapists' common ideology.
It took a string of embarrassing turns in Germany, including a Merkel loyalist breaking rank, and a police union official breaking silence, to reveal the deception agreed upon by both German officials and their corporate or "Main Stream Media" to have the truth reach the public.
Recently, an email was published reportedly from a Czech doctor working in Germany containing details of the migrant crisis' impact upon a hospital.
Snoops covered it and did "analysis" to discredit the authenticity of it, with the inconclusive conclusion.
The conclusion may be inconclusive, but the attempt to persuade by the article's author is clear.
Statement Analysis is best done in first language, yet when we analyze something in second language, we must "step back" and "step away" from small detail, and only analyze the larger context, including communicative language.
Even in second language, we are often able to discern deception from reliability as well as bring forth a general profile of the author including age, gender, experience, and priority.
The following came from Czech TV and is an email from a Czech anesthesiogist working in Germany. She is not under the same restrictions that we saw, even in the language of the Police Union leader, but if she stays in Germany, may face criminal charges for her language, as well as deportation. Germany reports being in a crisis to find doctors and has advertised throughout Europe to bring in doctors and nurses.
Her name has not yet been released.
Here is the English Translation of the broadcast. What can we say about the author of the letter?
First, we should note that the letter asserts the experience of trauma, therefore, we expect the subject to, in any language, give us signals of "personal, close up" experience.
When someone experiences violent crime or high level fear, we do not expect to hear the word "gentlemen" as in "...the gentlemen broke into my home and proceeded to rape and assault my daughter."
What is the expected?
"The ^*&% animals raped my daughter!"
Recall the soft, passive and minimizing language of several "fake hate" accounts, including Charlie Rogers.
If three masked men held you down and cut into your skin, your language is going to show very close contact fear and rage, and not passivity.
Even in rape victims who disassociate we do not find passive or soft language about the perpetrators.
Scopes, however, saw it differently, thinking that anger showed an agenda (as they project their own).
The author of the email is not only angry, she is very angry. Is it justifiable (in her mind; remember, you are not commenting on a political situation, but seeing if the letter was, indeed, written from a female medical professional who was present as claimed) in context?
Next, they questioned the strange way the hospital is conducting the seeing of patients.
Have you never seen a hospital go into emergency mode when over run, and turn into make shift triage and emergency quarters?
All Snopes would have to do is look at some video from 9/11 in New York to see the overall chaos and "on the fly" medical assistance given when numbers exceed the norm.
Snopes, even when indicating falsehood, seems to "go lightly" on certain topics.
Truth cares not for appearance sake. Truth is truth whether it is convenient, digestible, old, new, in vogue, or quite out of favor.
Statement Analysis gets to the truth.
News Announcer: "We will return to the topic of the migrants because I have another letter here regarding the effect of immigrants on the everyday flow of operations. Eyewitness from a Munich hospital: A friend in Prague has a friend, who, as a retired physician, had returned to work at a Munich area hospital where they needed an anaesthesiologist. I correspond with her and she forwarded me her email. "
Here is the email.
Since our words reveal us, without looking too deeply, what do you know about the author? Please note that emphasis has been added to assist you in discernment.
Some questions for you to consider, with none being very deep, as we would go in first language analysis:
Does the language indicate a close up traumatic event?
Does the subject connect herself with this event (or events)?
With the topic of threat, is the response expected or is it soft, passive, and inconsistent with the threat?
Does the language reveal a familiarity with medical procedures and terminology?
Note the external context: this came out shortly after Germany admitted that the estimate was not accurate, and quickly backed away from the open border, no refusal statements.
Are the pronouns consistent? Deceptive statements will sometimes be evident by a single pronoun 'error.'
Where distancing language is used, is it appropriately used? Or, does it signal a disconnect?
Statement Analysis deals with what one says, but also with what one does not say:
Are there areas in which hyperbole and exaggeration could have been used but were not?
Generally, heavily emotional statements contain lengthier sentences. Do you find emotion to "get the better of" the author, or does the author show herself more willing to protect her own image?
In other words, sometimes people embarrass themselves because they are telling the truth.
"I never used the "n" word", Mark Furhman. Here is a calm and collected lie. When one is angry, words fly past the filter, even in second languages.
When there is a change in language, is it justified by the context? Is there a difference, for example, between "Muslims" and "migrants" in the language?
Always note order, and which topics are given the most volume of words; does the order show consistency? Does the order make sense?
Where the volume of words increase, is there an emotional force driving this? If so, you are seeing indicators of veracity.
Lastly, in general terms, does what is reported match here with supremacist ideology? Is there a consistency of thought?
For those of you with experience, you may go further, including gender and background of the author.
Although some of the techniques are advanced and used in advanced trainings, even basic techniques applied evenly here should bring you to a conclusion:
Is this letter from a female medical professional, as claimed, or is it a hoax?
"Yesterday, at the hospital we had a meeting about how the situation here and at the other Munich hospitals is unsustainable. Clinics cannot handle emergencies, so they are starting to send everything to the hospitals.
Many Muslims are refusing treatment by female staff and, we, women, are refusing to go among those animals, especially from Africa. Relations between the staff and migrants are going from bad to worse. Since last weekend, migrants going to the hospitals must be accompanied by police with K-9 units. Many migrants have AIDS, syphilis, open TB and many exotic diseases that we, in Europe, do not know how to treat them. If they receive a prescription in the pharmacy, they learn they have to pay cash. This leads to unbelievable outbursts, especially when it is about drugs for the children.
They abandon the children with pharmacy staff with the words: “So, cure them here yourselves!” So the police are not just guarding the clinics and hospitals, but also large pharmacies. Truly we said openly: Where are all those who had welcomed in front of TV cameras, with signs at train stations?! Yes, for now, the border has been closed, but a million of them are already here and we will definitely not be able to get rid of them. Until now, the number of unemployed in Germany was 2.2 million. Now it will be at least 3.5 million.
Most of these people are completely unemployable. A bare minimum of them have any education. What is more, their women usually do not work at all. I estimate that one in ten is pregnant. Hundreds of thousands of them have brought along infants and little kids under six, many emaciated and neglected. If this continues and German re-opens its borders, I’m going home to the Czech Republic. Nobody can keep me here in this situation, not even double the salary than at home. I went to Germany, not to Africa or the Middle East.
Even the professor who heads our department told us how sad it makes him to see the cleaning woman, who for 800 Euros cleans every day for years, and then meets young men in the hallways who just wait with their hand outstretched, want everything for free, and when they don’t get it they throw a fit. I really don’t need this! But I’m afraid that if I return, that at some point it will be the same in the Czech Republic. If the Germans, with their nature cannot handle this, there in Czechia it would be total chaos. Nobody who has not come in contact with them has no idea what kind of animals they are, especially the ones from Africa, and how Muslims act superior to our staff, regarding their religious accommodation.
For now, the local hospital staff has not come down with the diseases they brought here, but, with so many hundreds of patients every day – this is just a question of time. In a hospital near the Rhine, migrants attacked the staff with knives after they had handed over an 8-month-old on the brink of death, which they had dragged across half of Europe for three months. The child died in two days, despite having received top care at one of the best pediatric clinics in Germany.
The physician had to undergo surgery and two nurses are laid up in the ICU. Nobody has been punished. The local press is forbidden to write about it, so we know about it through email. What would have happened to a German if he had stabbed a doctor and nurses with a knife? Or if he had flung his own syphilis-infected urine into a nurse’s face and so threatened her with infection? At a minimum he’d go straight to jail and later to court. With these people – so far, nothing has happened.
And so I ask, where are all those greeters and receivers from the train stations? Sitting pretty at home, enjoying their non-profits and looking forward to more trains and their next batch of cash from acting like greeters at the stations. If it were up to me I would round up all these greeters and bring them here first to our hospital’s emergency ward, as attendants. Then, into one building with the migrants so they can look after them there themselves, without armed police, without police dogs who today are in every hospital here in Bavaria, and without medical help."
Recall the Snopes' "investigation" to the European No Go Zones, well known to police, citizens, and those who live both in and near them. How well known? Not only to those who live in or near them, nor to those who have had to enter them as professionals, but with actual addresses given by law enforcement revealing them.
Snopes' "research" showed it to be an 'internet rumor' at best, with Fox News cowering in dhinnitide with their apology over what amounts to semantics.
Europeans do not call them "no go zones", which is an American military expression. They have other names for them, and, since then, we've learned that there are not "dozens of no go zones" but hundreds, and are growing in an unprecedented rate (historically unprecedented excludes military invasion) throughout Europe.
Sweden is now the "rape capital" of Western civilization and is the number one most dangerous country for women, outside of a single country in Africa. Swedish officials and corporate media conspired, similar to the migrant crisis in Germany, to withhold information from the public (for their "own good") and actually attempt to re-classify perpetrators of crime, in order to be incapable of identifying the rapists' common ideology.
It took a string of embarrassing turns in Germany, including a Merkel loyalist breaking rank, and a police union official breaking silence, to reveal the deception agreed upon by both German officials and their corporate or "Main Stream Media" to have the truth reach the public.
Recently, an email was published reportedly from a Czech doctor working in Germany containing details of the migrant crisis' impact upon a hospital.
Snoops covered it and did "analysis" to discredit the authenticity of it, with the inconclusive conclusion.
The conclusion may be inconclusive, but the attempt to persuade by the article's author is clear.
Statement Analysis is best done in first language, yet when we analyze something in second language, we must "step back" and "step away" from small detail, and only analyze the larger context, including communicative language.
Even in second language, we are often able to discern deception from reliability as well as bring forth a general profile of the author including age, gender, experience, and priority.
The following came from Czech TV and is an email from a Czech anesthesiogist working in Germany. She is not under the same restrictions that we saw, even in the language of the Police Union leader, but if she stays in Germany, may face criminal charges for her language, as well as deportation. Germany reports being in a crisis to find doctors and has advertised throughout Europe to bring in doctors and nurses.
Her name has not yet been released.
Here is the English Translation of the broadcast. What can we say about the author of the letter?
First, we should note that the letter asserts the experience of trauma, therefore, we expect the subject to, in any language, give us signals of "personal, close up" experience.
When someone experiences violent crime or high level fear, we do not expect to hear the word "gentlemen" as in "...the gentlemen broke into my home and proceeded to rape and assault my daughter."
What is the expected?
"The ^*&% animals raped my daughter!"
Recall the soft, passive and minimizing language of several "fake hate" accounts, including Charlie Rogers.
If three masked men held you down and cut into your skin, your language is going to show very close contact fear and rage, and not passivity.
Even in rape victims who disassociate we do not find passive or soft language about the perpetrators.
Scopes, however, saw it differently, thinking that anger showed an agenda (as they project their own).
The author of the email is not only angry, she is very angry. Is it justifiable (in her mind; remember, you are not commenting on a political situation, but seeing if the letter was, indeed, written from a female medical professional who was present as claimed) in context?
Next, they questioned the strange way the hospital is conducting the seeing of patients.
Have you never seen a hospital go into emergency mode when over run, and turn into make shift triage and emergency quarters?
All Snopes would have to do is look at some video from 9/11 in New York to see the overall chaos and "on the fly" medical assistance given when numbers exceed the norm.
Snopes, even when indicating falsehood, seems to "go lightly" on certain topics.
Truth cares not for appearance sake. Truth is truth whether it is convenient, digestible, old, new, in vogue, or quite out of favor.
Statement Analysis gets to the truth.
News Announcer: "We will return to the topic of the migrants because I have another letter here regarding the effect of immigrants on the everyday flow of operations. Eyewitness from a Munich hospital: A friend in Prague has a friend, who, as a retired physician, had returned to work at a Munich area hospital where they needed an anaesthesiologist. I correspond with her and she forwarded me her email. "
Here is the email.
Since our words reveal us, without looking too deeply, what do you know about the author? Please note that emphasis has been added to assist you in discernment.
Some questions for you to consider, with none being very deep, as we would go in first language analysis:
Does the language indicate a close up traumatic event?
Does the subject connect herself with this event (or events)?
With the topic of threat, is the response expected or is it soft, passive, and inconsistent with the threat?
Does the language reveal a familiarity with medical procedures and terminology?
Note the external context: this came out shortly after Germany admitted that the estimate was not accurate, and quickly backed away from the open border, no refusal statements.
Are the pronouns consistent? Deceptive statements will sometimes be evident by a single pronoun 'error.'
Where distancing language is used, is it appropriately used? Or, does it signal a disconnect?
Statement Analysis deals with what one says, but also with what one does not say:
Are there areas in which hyperbole and exaggeration could have been used but were not?
Generally, heavily emotional statements contain lengthier sentences. Do you find emotion to "get the better of" the author, or does the author show herself more willing to protect her own image?
In other words, sometimes people embarrass themselves because they are telling the truth.
"I never used the "n" word", Mark Furhman. Here is a calm and collected lie. When one is angry, words fly past the filter, even in second languages.
When there is a change in language, is it justified by the context? Is there a difference, for example, between "Muslims" and "migrants" in the language?
Always note order, and which topics are given the most volume of words; does the order show consistency? Does the order make sense?
Where the volume of words increase, is there an emotional force driving this? If so, you are seeing indicators of veracity.
Lastly, in general terms, does what is reported match here with supremacist ideology? Is there a consistency of thought?
For those of you with experience, you may go further, including gender and background of the author.
Although some of the techniques are advanced and used in advanced trainings, even basic techniques applied evenly here should bring you to a conclusion:
Is this letter from a female medical professional, as claimed, or is it a hoax?
"Yesterday, at the hospital we had a meeting about how the situation here and at the other Munich hospitals is unsustainable. Clinics cannot handle emergencies, so they are starting to send everything to the hospitals.
Many Muslims are refusing treatment by female staff and, we, women, are refusing to go among those animals, especially from Africa. Relations between the staff and migrants are going from bad to worse. Since last weekend, migrants going to the hospitals must be accompanied by police with K-9 units. Many migrants have AIDS, syphilis, open TB and many exotic diseases that we, in Europe, do not know how to treat them. If they receive a prescription in the pharmacy, they learn they have to pay cash. This leads to unbelievable outbursts, especially when it is about drugs for the children.
They abandon the children with pharmacy staff with the words: “So, cure them here yourselves!” So the police are not just guarding the clinics and hospitals, but also large pharmacies. Truly we said openly: Where are all those who had welcomed in front of TV cameras, with signs at train stations?! Yes, for now, the border has been closed, but a million of them are already here and we will definitely not be able to get rid of them. Until now, the number of unemployed in Germany was 2.2 million. Now it will be at least 3.5 million.
Most of these people are completely unemployable. A bare minimum of them have any education. What is more, their women usually do not work at all. I estimate that one in ten is pregnant. Hundreds of thousands of them have brought along infants and little kids under six, many emaciated and neglected. If this continues and German re-opens its borders, I’m going home to the Czech Republic. Nobody can keep me here in this situation, not even double the salary than at home. I went to Germany, not to Africa or the Middle East.
Even the professor who heads our department told us how sad it makes him to see the cleaning woman, who for 800 Euros cleans every day for years, and then meets young men in the hallways who just wait with their hand outstretched, want everything for free, and when they don’t get it they throw a fit. I really don’t need this! But I’m afraid that if I return, that at some point it will be the same in the Czech Republic. If the Germans, with their nature cannot handle this, there in Czechia it would be total chaos. Nobody who has not come in contact with them has no idea what kind of animals they are, especially the ones from Africa, and how Muslims act superior to our staff, regarding their religious accommodation.
For now, the local hospital staff has not come down with the diseases they brought here, but, with so many hundreds of patients every day – this is just a question of time. In a hospital near the Rhine, migrants attacked the staff with knives after they had handed over an 8-month-old on the brink of death, which they had dragged across half of Europe for three months. The child died in two days, despite having received top care at one of the best pediatric clinics in Germany.
The physician had to undergo surgery and two nurses are laid up in the ICU. Nobody has been punished. The local press is forbidden to write about it, so we know about it through email. What would have happened to a German if he had stabbed a doctor and nurses with a knife? Or if he had flung his own syphilis-infected urine into a nurse’s face and so threatened her with infection? At a minimum he’d go straight to jail and later to court. With these people – so far, nothing has happened.
And so I ask, where are all those greeters and receivers from the train stations? Sitting pretty at home, enjoying their non-profits and looking forward to more trains and their next batch of cash from acting like greeters at the stations. If it were up to me I would round up all these greeters and bring them here first to our hospital’s emergency ward, as attendants. Then, into one building with the migrants so they can look after them there themselves, without armed police, without police dogs who today are in every hospital here in Bavaria, and without medical help."
Wednesday, October 21, 2015
911 Call and Lawyer Statement DJ Creato

From: Inquirer
The father of a 3-year-old boy whose body was found in the woods in Haddon Township last week is not a suspect, and spoke to investigators without a lawyer present, the attorney for D.J. Creato said in an interview Wednesday.
"The police have told me unequivocally that there are no suspects, that my client is not a suspect, and that they're trying to piece together what happened here," said Richard J. Fuschino Jr., a Philadelphia attorney. "And in truth my client and his family are trying to do the exact same thing."
It is interesting to note that the lawyer felt the need to add the unnecessary word, "unequivocally" to his sentence.
Also note the order of his sentences.
"The police told me that my client is not a suspect" would be a very strong statement.
Yet, it is not what he said.
"The police have told me..." instead of "the police told me", which, even in this small change in the verb status, tells us of a 'lengthening of time', which suggests that it took some time to get this information.
What does that mean?
It may be that it took quite a bit of time to get a police officer to say this.
Or, it may have taken time and more than one police officer to say this.
In any case, it is a subtle weakness which is then further weakened by that which is not necessary:
"unequivocally" means, clear, having only one meaning.
Was this part of a much more elaborate conversation?
I am now wondering: during a lengthy conversation or even multiple conversations, did, at some point, police say that his client was not a suspect in a specific allegation within the investigation?
Since, "police said my client is not a suspect" is "clear, and having only one meaning", the importing of the word "unequivocally" means that there must have been a complexity of information within the communication to which the lawyer wishes to 'boil down to a simple conclusion.'
It is not a strong statement as would have been this:
"Police said my client is not a suspect." He has indicated to us that there is more to this than his simple conclusion.
Creato, 22, reported his son, Brendan, missing in a 911 call around 6 a.m. on Oct. 13, causing residents to scour their Westmont neighborhood after police sent out an automated call to the community about the disappearance.
Three hours later, Brendan's body was discovered in the woods near South Park Drive and Cooper Street, about half a mile from his father's apartment.
An autopsy last week was unable to determine a cause of death, and authorities have stayed mostly silent about their investigation. The Camden County Prosecutor's Office said earlier this week that the state medical examiner's office has assisted.
A Creato family friend advised D.J. to hire an attorney to help him navigate through the unfamiliar legal process, not because he has anything to hide, Fuschino said.
"In any situation where you have something this complicated and involved, it is smart and good advice to have a lawyer," Fuschino said.
It sounds pretty simple. A toddler got out while his father was sleeping and was found dead, hence, "my client is not a suspect."
It is not simple, but it is complex and it is involved.
How did the boy die?
How did the boy get out?
Why did the father need to communicate, first, that he just woke up?
What is the father's history?
Has child protective services been involved?
Was the father drug tested?
Did the father polygraph?
What does the house look like?
Was the door locked as claimed?
Toddler don't "leave."
Upon discovering Brendan was missing, Creato called his mother, who lives a block away, and then 911, Fuschino said. The calls happened within minutes, he said.
In the background of the 911 call, Creato's mother, Lisa, can be heard yelling Brendan's name.
"I just woke up and he wasn't in my apartment. I don't know if he wandered out or what happened. I don't know where he is. The door was locked, I guess he unlocked it and left."
The analysis of a 911 call has no special "rules" nor any different set of applications. It simply has the same "expected versus unexpected" setting, with the reference point of the larger context:
The initial report to police about a missing child.
The is the larger, or external context, and is our reference point. We speak that which is most important to us.
For the subject, the first thing he wanted police to know is not that his child is missing, but that he just woke up, which establishes his 'innocence.'
What caused this?
It could be many different things, including a shady background where he felt that this report was clearly going to be looked at as his fault.
One thing it does not show, however, is the priority of his missing child.
Ask yourself, what would you say first?
I asked several new parents recently, from this case, without referencing it.
"Hey, role play with me, for a minute. It is 6 o'clock in the morning, you just woke up, got out of bed, and found ***** (toddler) gone. Here we go:
911, what is your emergency?"
Each parent used similar wording and each parent reported the child first. It was natural.
Granted, it is not real, therefore, there is an absence of hormonal rush, but there are lots of 911 calls as a reference point for analysis.
Recall when Haleigh Cummings, 5, went missing.
Misty Croslin, baby-sitter soon to be step mother called 911:
911: “911, what’s your emergency”
Misty Croslin: “Hi…umm…I just woke up…and our backdoor was wide open and I think…and I can’t find our daughter”
Misty Croslin: “Hi…umm…I just woke up…and our backdoor was wide open and I think…and I can’t find our daughter”
1. It is not expected that an emergency statement would begin with a greeting. See several 911 calls here, including the one made by the Falcon Lake, Texas case of David Hartley by his wife, Tiffany, who re-told the story from the re-make of the re-make of the Hollywood movie, Titanic, to describe her husband's death.
2. Order speaks to priority:
a. I just woke up
b. our backdoor was wide open
c. I can't find our daughter
3. "our" daughter shows need to share, signaling that this is either not the biological mother (it wasn't) and/or the need to share is evidenced. This need to share is not necessarily limited to biology, but is especially noteworthy when a biological parent uses it and has a profound need to share guilt and responsibility. See Deborah Bradley for example.
Would you have said, "...and he wasn't in my apartment"?
This is very unusual language.
Even if he started with "I just woke up", what would be expected?
"My son is missing!" is the number answer.
"I can't find my son!"
That he said he just woke up first, speaks to priority but to then say "he wasn't in my apartment" sounds very much like the avoidance of internal stress that comes from a direct lie:
"he wasn't in my apartment", by itself, (its form) it is very likely to prove reliable.
In fact, we learned that it was a reliable sentence.
He was not in the apartment, he was about a half mile away.
This avoids saying what circumstances caused him to not be in the apartment and it brings the focus on to at what location the child is.
It is supposed to be that the innocent caller does not know where he is.
He knows where he is not, which thus hints to us with the natural, "Well, do you know where he is?" question.
This is the language he chose to use in the call and it is not expected language.
We consider what might sound reasonable, even in a panic.
What if you had been heavily drinking and slept through his normal wake up, and felt guilty about it. What might that sound like?
"911, what is your emergency?"
"My son is missing!"
911: What happened? Where is your son?
Caller: "I don't know! I just woke up and can't find him. I looked everywhere but I can't find him."
911: Did you check outside the house?
Caller: "hell yes! I looked everywhere here. Please hurry. He is only 3 years old! It is cold outside! Last night I was drinking and overslept. Oh please hurry and find him!"
This is just speculation, but it is what most would say.
Addressing concerns that Creato sounded too calm in the call, Fuschino said the father believed Brendan was somewhere near the apartment.
By the time one calls 911, panic has set in and you, the caller know, he isn't near by.
This happened to me, in 1991.
I had 4 children, with my third, a monkey of a boy. I could not find him and ran through the house searching, and calling his name. I searched the front yard and backyard, next door, and finally, down the block in some local stores.
I came to the shocking conclusion: I must call 911.
By then, we used cordless phones and I could not find it, but looked in my young daughter's room where her crib and changing table were.
On top of her changing table, was my little boy, fast asleep.
To climb up on top of the changing table was a feat of no small measure, but he was a superb athlete and had wanted his diaper changed. He was always in a hurry, as to never miss out on playing with his brothers, so he went into the room, climbed up on the changing table (high enough for adults to comfortably change babies) but fell asleep waiting!
The panic I felt, to this day, can come back to me in a flash. By the time I knew to call 911, it was because he was gone.
That this young man called 911 confident that his son was right around the area will likely cause people to roll their eyes. It is quite a stretch.
Yet, it is his need to justify his client's voice inflection that is of concern. If he didn't cause, by negligence, for example, his son's disappearance, and police have simply said, "He is not a suspect", why the need to even explain away the criticism of his calm demeanor?
If I knew my client didn't do it, I would say "I don't know."
Truth is like this. It is strong, confident and often cares not for a need to explain.
Voice inflection.
We do not use voice inflection in our analysis. I recognize that some people are good at such things, but in terms of "knowing" truth from deception, it is not something that can be scientifically applied, case by case.
I prefer the extreme high percentages of Statement Analysis results, instead.
We use the "speed of transmission" where the brain tells the tongue which words to use in a rapid fashion, and the interruption of such, through awkward or additional wording, to signal to us that more attention is needed, to guide us. This is why "unnecessary" words are so valuable: the subject could have said the sentence without, therefore, what was it that caused the brain to signal to the tongue to add in this unnecessary word?
We know that emotion is the number one impact upon change of language.
We know that the law of economy means that shorter sentences are best, and truth is often stated with brevity since it does not require layers of proof, while one is speaking.
Sometimes employees that call out sick and are lying will not only make their voice sound sick, but give an overabundance of detail, thinking their words may be more convincing this way.
Ignoring voice inflection is important for accuracy in analysis, however, after analysis is complete, this is something that can be looked at.
For example, 7 year old Isabel Celis was reported "kidnapped" by her father, Sergio, who giggled in the 911 call and had no indication of nervousness.
Lawyer statements are always fascinating. They often reveal whether or not the lawyer believes in his client's innocence, or if he knows his client is guilty. Lawyers will even issue reliable denials when they believe their client did not commit the crime accused of.
"No one thinks at first the worst has happened," Fuschino said. "So I think it's certainly a level of concern you hear in his voice, but he's not hysterical.
"It would be rather astonishing to me," Fuschino added, "if he had any level of terror in his voice that suggested he knew more than he did."
When I was resigned to call 911, I thought that my son was missing. Missing.
Even as I type this, all these years later, with time passage and processing richly done, it still bothers me. I was about to call police because I could not find him.
D.J.'s parents, Lisa and David Creato, also have retained legal counsel to assist them during the investigative process, Philadelphia attorney William J. Brennan said.
"My clients are devastated," Brennan said in an interview. "They're in the process of attempting to bury their grandchild, and they are cooperating with law enforcement. We hope to have some answers as to how this tragedy occurred."
Funeral services for Brendan, which the family has said will be private, are scheduled Thursday at Blake-Doyle Funeral Home in Collingswood.
Tuesday, October 20, 2015
Study of Psychopathic Language Patterns
The following is a study from Cornell. Take careful note of the need to explain why something is done.
In analysis, we flag, "so, since, therefore, because, to..." and so on, if someone has a need to explain why they did something without being asked.
This indicates a high level of sensitivity and anticipates being asked, "but, why did you.." and seek to answer it without having to be asked. It shows a high need to explain, making the action, itself, very sensitive.
Many crimes are solved by this highlighting, alone.
Also note that they claim the word "match their personalities", which is profiling in reverse. We note the personality trait (or type) from the words.
Here is the article:
The language of psychopathic murderers provides a window to their souls, new research shows.
The words they use "match their personalities, which reflect selfishness, detachment from their crimes and emotional flatness," says Jeff Hancock, a professor of computing and information science at New York State's Cornell University. He conducted the study with colleagues at the University of British Columbia.
Their findings appear in the journal Legal and Criminological Psychology.
The team says it analyzed stories told by 14 psychopathic male murderers held in Canadian prisons and compared them with 38 convicted murderers who were not diagnosed as psychopathic. Each subject was asked to describe his crime in detail and their stories were taped, transcribed and subjected to computer analysis.
"Psychopaths used more conjunctions like "because," "since" or "so that," implying that the crime "had to be done" to obtain a particular goal. They used twice as many words relating to physical needs, such as food, sex or money, while non-psychopaths used more words about social needs, including family, religion and spirituality," the paper says. "Unveiling their predatory nature in their own description, the psychopaths often included details of what they had to eat on the day of their crime."
Psychopaths were more likely to use the past tense, suggesting a detachment from their crimes, say the researchers. They tended to be less fluent in their speech, using more "ums" and "uhs."
These are more likely to be pauses with the need to think.
These are more likely to be pauses with the need to think.
The exact reason for this is not clear, but the researchers speculate that the psychopath is trying harder to make a positive impression, needing to use more mental effort to frame the story.
"Previous work has looked at how psychopaths use language," Hancock said. "Our paper is the first to show that you can use automated tools to detect the distinct speech patterns of psychopaths."
The study's authors say their research could lead to new tools for diagnosis and treatment, and have implications on law enforcement and social media.
FBI: 51 Police Officers Killed in Felonies 2014
From the Washington Post:
FBI says 51 police officers murdered in the line of duty during 2014
Of 96 American police officers who were killed in the line-of-duty in 2014, 51 of them were killed as a result of felonious acts, according to new statistics released by the FBI on Monday.
While the number of officers killed feloniously was up significantly year-over-year — there were just 27 officers killed feloniously in 2013, according to the FBI, the lowest number of officers murdered in the line of duty in at least a decade — it remains fewer than the 56 officers murdered in 2010 and 55 officers murdered in 2005.
Despite the year-over-year increase, the number of officers that the FBI says were murdered in the line of duty in 2014 was in line with the 10-year average. On average, 50.5 police officers per year have been murdered in the line of duty during the last decade. The FBI’s release last year gave no reason for 2013’s uncharacteristically low number of officers feloniously killed.
Only one of the officers feloniously killed in 2014 was by an unarmed person.
Of the other 50 officers, 46 were killed using firearms (33 were killed with handguns, 10 with rifles, and three with shotguns). Four officers were killed when they were struck or run over by a vehicle.
The FBI says that all of the officers killed were male, while 47 of them were white, two were black, and two were Asian.
In 29 of these cases, the suspect was charged with murder; in 19 cases, the killer is dead; and in three cases, the homicide is being investigated as capital murder of a law enforcement officer
Monday, October 19, 2015
Crystal Rogers Case: Houck Named Suspect
Analysis of Brooks Houck, fiance of 35 year old Crystal Rogers, when he appeared on The Nancy Grace Show, indicated:
1. That Crystal Rogers was deceased;
2. The Brooks Houck was deceptive, and deliberately withholding information about her what happened to Crystal.
We then learned that Brooks Houck brother was suspended, and his vehicle impounded. The following information has been released by the town.
If a lengthy interview transcript of Brooks Houck interview exists, it is possible that the location of Crystal Rogers' remains may be within the wording.
It is very difficult for anyone to suppress guilty knowledge of a crime during an interview. This is because the subject goes into memory to answer questions, while carefully seeking to pick and choose his words and struggles to concentrate on what happened in one moment, while choosing words to avoid disclosure.
- The Mayor of Bardstown, along with the Bardstown Police Department inform that Nick Houck was terminated on the grounds that he interfered with the Rogers investigation. Houck reportedly called his brother Brooks with knowledge that he was being interviewed as part of the case.
- Nelson Co. Sheriff tells media that "Rogers is presumed dead" and that Brooks Houck has officially been named a suspect in her disappearance.
Deception Indicated!
One of the best things about a Statement Analysis® 101 Course is that it will get some of the attendees interested in learning analysis.
They go through a day of statements and they learn some of the basics, by circling (or underlining, or highlighting) pronouns and are often able to conclude, "Deception Indicated!" but it does not always translate into justice, nor even into accuracy.
In various criminal activities we are likely to find statements that are "Deception Indicated" but it is not a deception about the crime itself, nor an indication that the subject "did it."
The inevitable formal study must be done.
Many years ago I faced this in a theft statement and sought the counsel of seasoned analysts. I am glad I did.
"Yes, the subject is deceptive, but she didn't do it. You are looking at another crime that has taken place there!"
I went back to learn just that.
The subject was deceptive, but was not the thief of this particular crime, but was giving indiction that she had helped facilitate another, much larger crime.
From that point on, I have regularly had statements where deception was indicated but it was a tangent, away from the issue; most of these had to do with drug crimes of some sort.
Next, we have the extreme rise is psychotropic medications impacting not only our country and crime, itself, but of statements. Statistics showing how many violent crimes are committed while one is on anti-depressants, for example, is combatted by pharmaceutical companies desperate to eradicate such.
Prescribing to the population under 30 has become so common that it, too, shows in the language.
"Got a rough test this morning so I'm gonna pop a Xanax."
This now leads to the need to pay even more close attention to language.
Did the crime happen as the subject stated, but if so,
Did it happen to him, when he claimed it happened?
It is not enough to rely upon such things as "sensory description" where the detail indicates experiential memory. Yes, "his hands smelled like motor oil" is something that comes from memory, but was it:
a. memory from a book?
b. memory from a movie?
or
c. if it was experiential memory, did it happen when the subject claimed?
Next, to facilitate the greatest flow of information, the Interview must not only know the indicators of sensitivity like he knows the back of his own hand, he must know what causes them, psychologically which greatly aids mnemonics, but will be the single strongest guide on how to construct the question.
To host a training seminar for your department or company, please contact us at HYATT ANALYSIS
The two day seminar has Day 2, afternoon, dedicated solely to Analytical Interviewing: the single most powerful tool to get information, including confessions, which is not only useful for law enforcement, but has never been more needed than today in hiring. We teach how to recognize the profile of a
Thief, who will find some way to separate you from your money;
The Agenda driven subject, who will find a way to raise the issue most important to her, at the cost of your company or department;
The Violent, who will harm others, hurt morale, harm reputation, and cost you money through suits and insurance.
It is not enough to learn that one is not truthful.
Content must be obtained.
They go through a day of statements and they learn some of the basics, by circling (or underlining, or highlighting) pronouns and are often able to conclude, "Deception Indicated!" but it does not always translate into justice, nor even into accuracy.
In various criminal activities we are likely to find statements that are "Deception Indicated" but it is not a deception about the crime itself, nor an indication that the subject "did it."
The inevitable formal study must be done.
Many years ago I faced this in a theft statement and sought the counsel of seasoned analysts. I am glad I did.
"Yes, the subject is deceptive, but she didn't do it. You are looking at another crime that has taken place there!"
I went back to learn just that.
The subject was deceptive, but was not the thief of this particular crime, but was giving indiction that she had helped facilitate another, much larger crime.
From that point on, I have regularly had statements where deception was indicated but it was a tangent, away from the issue; most of these had to do with drug crimes of some sort.
Next, we have the extreme rise is psychotropic medications impacting not only our country and crime, itself, but of statements. Statistics showing how many violent crimes are committed while one is on anti-depressants, for example, is combatted by pharmaceutical companies desperate to eradicate such.
Prescribing to the population under 30 has become so common that it, too, shows in the language.
"Got a rough test this morning so I'm gonna pop a Xanax."
This now leads to the need to pay even more close attention to language.
Did the crime happen as the subject stated, but if so,
Did it happen to him, when he claimed it happened?
It is not enough to rely upon such things as "sensory description" where the detail indicates experiential memory. Yes, "his hands smelled like motor oil" is something that comes from memory, but was it:
a. memory from a book?
b. memory from a movie?
or
c. if it was experiential memory, did it happen when the subject claimed?
Next, to facilitate the greatest flow of information, the Interview must not only know the indicators of sensitivity like he knows the back of his own hand, he must know what causes them, psychologically which greatly aids mnemonics, but will be the single strongest guide on how to construct the question.
To host a training seminar for your department or company, please contact us at HYATT ANALYSIS
The two day seminar has Day 2, afternoon, dedicated solely to Analytical Interviewing: the single most powerful tool to get information, including confessions, which is not only useful for law enforcement, but has never been more needed than today in hiring. We teach how to recognize the profile of a
Thief, who will find some way to separate you from your money;
The Agenda driven subject, who will find a way to raise the issue most important to her, at the cost of your company or department;
The Violent, who will harm others, hurt morale, harm reputation, and cost you money through suits and insurance.
It is not enough to learn that one is not truthful.
Content must be obtained.
Saturday, October 17, 2015
The Complete DeOrr Interview Analyzed
I have been displeased with my work on this interview and have reviewed my analysis after lengthy thought about the close linguistic context. Although I find no errors of commission, I find that a deeper study of the linguistic context affirms my "suggestions" however, with more strength than I originally allowed for. Linguistic context is different from topical context (missing child, interview, both parents present, etc). Linguistic context seeks to learn what words triggered other words that may be leakage, or inadvertent disclosures.
This is, therefore, not a revision of my analysis, but an addition to my first work.
The change in here: What I draw as "possible", I now find should have been "probable."
Yet, are there enough "probables" in the overall interview to make a solid conclusion?
Answer: Yes, there is.
The interviewer conducted one of the poorest interviews I have ever analyzed. This frustrated me and it has helped to return to this again. Please note that there is no new case information brought to this analysis.
The 40 Percent Theory
In analysis, an emotionally and disconnected revisitation of a statement can yield up to 40% more information. For the understanding of this principle, see: The 40% Theory and then see the parts 1 through 3 of "Why did I miss this?" that explain the principle further. Reviewing analysis through dispassionate eyes is critical.
Updated Analysis Question: Does the father, who does most of the talking, possess guilty knowledge in the disappearance of his son?
Answer: At the conclusion of the analysis.
I: Interviewer
D: Father
J: Mother
******************************************************************************
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DeOrre Sr:.i'm not sure what day it is today!
This is to seek sympathy for himself, as if he is so tired from searching, and not sleeping.
It is not expected that the father of a missing child would speak about himself, instead of his son.
He may be tired, but how is his son doing? Is his son tired? Is his son getting sleep? Is his son being fed? Is he in warm clothing? Is he alone? Is he afraid?
The interview began with the father "front and center", which is nothing we expect to hear of an innocent father.
I : today's Monday.
This is not expected as "the clock" and "D-Day" are often very important to the hormone-elevated parents. The exception may be due to extreme fatigue. Generally, the loved ones are on high alert, and know exactly how many hours, including days, that the loved one is missing. The interviewer played into the father, and we will soon learn that this was the first mistake of a pattern of mistakes by the Interviewer as the father controlled the interview.
Analytical Interviewing teaches to never interrupt one talking to let them talk, but even this principle must be applied in a sane and reasonable manner, lest the subject absolutely control the interview and move it away from the missing child.
*Although we allow some runaway tangents, in specific questions, seeking "leakage" or inadvertent release of information, we do not allow it to reach a point where the interview itself is completely hijacked.
The father did de rail this interview and we note:
The father had a reason to bring tangents to the interview, to move the information away from what happened to his son.
Analytical Interviewing teaches to never interrupt one talking to let them talk, but even this principle must be applied in a sane and reasonable manner, lest the subject absolutely control the interview and move it away from the missing child.
*Although we allow some runaway tangents, in specific questions, seeking "leakage" or inadvertent release of information, we do not allow it to reach a point where the interview itself is completely hijacked.
The father did de rail this interview and we note:
The father had a reason to bring tangents to the interview, to move the information away from what happened to his son.
J: It was Friday.
D: Friday, about 2.26 was when I, was it 2.26?
Please note that he self-censored which means he stopped himself from whatever he was going to say.
What was he going to say?
"Friday, about 2:26 was when I..." which means that the exact time, precisely reported, was when he did something. Thus, the center of this statement is the pronoun "I", which means it is also about him, and not about his son.
Should the same parent know exactly the hours (culmalative) the child has been missing ? This is to draw attention away from what happened to his son, or what his son is experiencing and make it about himself.
Again.
J: It was 2.36 when I called.
D : 2.36 when she called and I was in the truck hauling down to the road trying to get service because I didn't think one bar would get it. So I, she got very very lucky. I was blessed that she was able to get service because I didn't think, I didn't want to try and risk getting half way through my talking to 911 and have it cut off. So I went down to where I knew I could get a little service, about a half mile down the road.
The interview is with both parents seated next to each other; therefore, the use of "we" is appropriate. With this established, when either parent moves from "we" to the pronoun "I", it becomes even more important to the subject. (For new readers, the "subject" is the one speaking).
We have here an extreme point of sensitivity and it is about the father's location and the father calling.
1. He immediately moves from her calling to himself. This is about him.
2. He tells us where he was when she called. This is unimportant information; that is, it is not necessary to reporting his missing son, yet, it is of extreme importance to him.
3. He was not only in his truck, but "hauling" which is to be in a hurry, as in an extreme situation.
This is unnecessary information, which, in analysis, is deemed "doubly important" leading to a question:
Question: Who would have a need, as a father of a missing child, to convince us that he was in a hurry?
Answer: one who is not in a hurry.
This is a signal that not only was the father in no hurry, but he has a need to persuade his audience that he did.
This should lead investigators to suspect that the father may know that by calling 911, he may have been "risking" something. Please note the inclusion of the word "risk" is taken in context; not the context of the situation, but the "linguistic context" that is, the context of the words he chose to you. Going only by his words, and not Jessica's, I find:
The word "risk" comes with him calling, with broken pronouns, and concerns thus far only expressed about himself.
![]() |
| No words expressed showing concern for what DeOrr was going through |
Therefore, calling 911 was to put himself at some risk.
***************************************************************************
We note that the father, "D", explains why he did something without being asked. This indicates a need to explain why he drove in his truck. This means that he thought to himself, "I better explain why I was in the truck because they are going to ask me about it."
First:
The exact time was off and was corrected by the mother. He did not remember the day, but used the word "about" when giving the exact time. There is nothing "about" when stating "2:26" as "about" is used to estimate. We use estimation with round numbers, and round times.
"It was about 2:30" is consistent.
"About 2:26" not only shows preparation, (and failed memory or communication) but to say "about" shows the inconsistency of using estimation and exactness.
The time when police were called is a sensitive topic, but this is not as sensitive as the truck.
The Truck
This is very sensitive to him, as is the time line.
Why is it so important to him that we, the audience know, he was in his truck?
Even without training, the journalist should recognize his need to explain and his repetition and simply ask about the truck again. With training, the interviewer pounces, but even without, many recognize the sensitivity intuitively.
The interviewer should have recognized how the father is talking about himself, and not about his son.
That he was "hauling" is not only unnecessary to say (no one would consider this a leisurely drive) but it is also 'story telling', which is to make us consider the location of the emotions within his statement. The location of "hauling", if it expresses an emotion of urgency and fear, would be considered artificially placed in the editing process.
The father in the truck rushing to call 911, has produced intense sensitivity in his language. It is such that it appears he is withholding information.
Uh, we searched for - after about twenty minutes in a dead panic, not knowing where he was in such a small area, and not knowing, never being there, I knew I was in trouble.
He began with "we searched" indicating unity, but then gives an 'editorializing', or inclusion of emotion ("dead panic"). The emotion here is not necessary since the child is missing. This is to identify a specific emotion, in the logical part of the account, meaning that it is likely to be artificially placed here by the father. Should an argument be made that "hauling" was a word that only denotes speed and not emotion, no such argument can be made about the words, "dead panic."
Example:
I could not find him;
we searched everywhere in the area;
I called 911.
I was in a panic.
This shows that the emotions take time to process, especially since parents are on "auto pilot", that is, zoned to find their child.
The father has a need to cause us to believe that he was in a dead panic which suggests that there was no panic about searching for his son.
The word "dead" is used:
"dead panic", however, is not a word ("dead") we expect a parent of a missing child to use.
We should consider that at this time, his rushing is not genuine, nor are the emotions of "panic" expressed. Then we should consider that he was able to use the word "dead" which is not expected from a parent of a missing child and may be leakage.
This may be an indication that his son is not going to be found alive.
"I knew I was in trouble" is an interesting statement and may be an embedded admission.
Some very responsible parents will take full ownership and responsibility of the situation, making his son's disappearance his own trouble. But in this case, this is not supported by context: the context is seen in language: it is about him and nothing about his son.
Therefore, if we believe the father, we may conclude:
Calling the police has caused him to be "in trouble" of some form.
I originally wrote, "It is also possible that this is 'leakage', that is to say, he, himself, is in trouble. "
UPDATE: Given the context (the words surrounding this), I move to strike the word "possible" from my analysis, and replace it with "likely."
He put himself as "risk" and he knew he was "in trouble" but only when it came to having to call police.
He did not want to call police.
He has thus only spoken of himself and has sought sympathy for himself.
Um, so we decided to call search and rescue, uh, and that's when I drove down.
With a missing child, there is no need to pause, nor to "share" the responsibility of calling. I wrote originally that this was a debate of sorts, as this shows the need to "decide" in a situation where no "decision" is made: you just call!
That "we decided" not only suggests a delay (during the 'debate') but likely due to fear of, first, over-reacting ("he's got to be here!), and, possibly, fear of being blamed. Since he has:
a. used words to gain sympathy for himself
b. artificially placed emotions in his statement
c. given signals of having not rushed, nor been in panic
d. hinted or leaked that the child is "dead"
e. spoken only of himself, and not the child
f. added "risk" to the equation;
it is likely that he did not want to call 911 and Jessica did.
Original analysis: There was a delay in calling and they initially did not "agree" about making the call.
Fear of being blamed is also something that shows itself, in the specific sensitivity indicators, and must be categorized in context.
Update: calling 911 put the father in "trouble" and in "risk" and this interview is all about the father.
"we" turns into "I" when driving; that is, likely driving without his wife.
Next, "that's when" speaks to time. He returns to the truck, further making this a very sensitive point to him.
The truck, the truck, the truck...it is repeated in his language, and it is something that is of great importance to him and even includes editorializing language, which often belies the need to persuade.
We need to wonder if something happened to the boy involving the truck. Did he run over his son? Did someone back over him?
Did an accident befall him and he went somewhere with his son in the truck?
Something is very wrong about the truck.
She tried getting a signal out - um, as soon as I got a hold of the,, I kind of, they told me that she was on the other line with them and they had our location, and they were on our way. They, they were amazing, they are amazing and they still continue to be. Ah, Lhema High County Sherriff and Salmon Search and Rescue, you could not ask for a better group of people, volunteers, and search and rescue, and just everybody. You couldn't ask for better people - so sincere, so concerned, and they were - everybody was emotionally attached to this, as you, anybody would be of a two year old.
Lots of self censoring by him as a way of stopping information.
a. "Tried" in the past tense, indicates failure.
b. Praise of authorities.
Parents want their child found. When not found, they see authorities as having "failed" them, and it is not time for praise.
When do we find praise of "authorities"?
1. We find that authorities are praised by the innocent when the child is found safe.
2. We find that authorities are praised by the innocent parent when the child is found no longer alive, after a long period of time has passed, and the parent has significantly grieved and processed the trauma, and recall, at moments of sheer terror, kind faces, or the 'small cup of water' offered in consolation. This is similar to language in parents who outlived their child, and warm themselves with memories of the wake or funeral, and remember the kind comments of friends and relatives. It generally takes time, however, to hear this.
3. We find the praise of authorities who fail to find a child by the guilty (those indicated for deception regarding the disappearance of the child): the guilty did not want the child found, hence, the praise.
4. We find the praise of authorities who fail to find a child in the language of the guilty who reveal a desperate need to "make friends" with "police" (that is, "authority") and quickly align themselves.
They sometimes even "name drop", and talk about how good "Sgt. Smith" was, and so on. This can belie a need to be seen as 'part of the solution' rather than the cause of the problem.
The father may have been treated well, but because at the time of this statement, his son had not been found, the praise is not expected.
This appears as a way of attempting to ingratiate himself with law enforcement which would, psychology, make it harder for them to arrest him, (as to his thinking) and paints him as one of the "good guys."
*This is indicative of an accident more than an initial criminal act.
"Was attached" may indicate that he is thinking of the specific time period during the search; this is evidenced in how he breaks up time period of them being "amazing" including the future.
I wrote: The praise of unsuccessful searching is concerning.
Update: I am willing to move from "concerning" to to an attempt to ingratiate himself as part of the "good guys" by someone who is withholding information about his son's disappearance.
Next:
How will the father relate to his son?
We will listen carefully on what names, pronouns, etc, he uses. We will listen carefully to see if his son is described in a
a. positive light (expected)
b. negative light (guilty parents will find a subtle way to blame the victim)
c. deified, or "angelic" manner. This is sometimes done, romanticizing about a child which is more associated with death, where the parent loses the reality that exists in all of us, as the imperfections are forgotten, and the deceased is now deified in language. When a child is missing, we do not want to hear the child blamed, nor defied.
He's pretty small for his age but he moves pretty good, and that was our concern.
b. Note next that he uses the word "that", which is distancing language; and
c. He uses the past tense "was"
Taking the distancing language of "that" and the past tense "was", it suggest that this is not his concern, any longer.
This is a signal that investigators should consider: does he know his son is dead?
About the "movement": this is another indication of an accident that may have happened to the child.
d. Next note that this is not his concern but "our" concern. This is to share concern and is something indicative of guilt: the need to share a concern that no longer operates in the present tense.
"He's pretty small for his age but he moves pretty good and this is my concern..." or even "this is our concern";
Question: Has anything changed that has led the father to believe that he no longer left the area on his own?
If so, (kidnapping), the past tense use here is appropriately consistent. Since he has given no indication that his son is kidnapped, the past tense is a signal that he knows his son is dead.
Thus far, there is nothing within the language to indicate child abuse on the part of the parents. This does not mean guilt or innocence, but of how they relate to their son indicates quality of relationship. We have a signal of death and a focus from the father upon himself.
He, uh, was right with us, where it's at, I mean I thought it would be perfect to go camping there because it's enclosed by walls and mountains, and there's not much space around there he could go, and our biggest concern was the creek, which was knee deep and a few feet wide, but he's a little guy.
This also speaks to an accident.
The need to explain the location is sensitive and this may be the words that are consistent with very responsible parents. It may be that he blames himself for choosing this location, therefore, he feels the need to explain (justify) its choosing: enclosed by walls and mountains (positive) and not much space (negative; what there isn't).He knew he was in trouble, but the concern is "our" and not, "my" concern.
Note that context of the concern is the creek, and he is specific about it, its depth and its depth in relation to his son's size.
Thus far, he has not used his son's name, only using "he", but here he is a "little guy", which is consistent with being small for his age, and the concern about the water. Even if he was not a victim of child abuse, we may hear distancing language due to psychological weight of guilt of having allowed an accident to happen via negligence.
Um, they finally, yesterday, we were able to put that to rest and have HC Sheriff Dave and the rest of the sheriffs have put out that there is, they assured me, there is 100% chance that he is not anywhere in that water, around that water. They have torn that creek upside down and in and out. The divers have gone through with wetsuits, along with the helicopter - that was the world's most advanced search and rescue helicopter, volunteered out of Montana, and those guys were just amazing, the accuracy they had with the night vision ability it has and the heat range it can see,, they were - . The one guy, I can't remember his name, um, I've met so many people, so many good people, but he was - his own safety, he was, he was more or less,, he was strapped in, he was on the side of that helicopter, looking, and I - he was looking down. I remember them telling me they asked search and rescue to look over, because there was an orange insect repellant can, they think by the bank, and they were dead on, that's what it was, how accurate these guys are.
Now note how no words have been used to show concern for his son.
Follow the pronouns: When he says "they", he immediately stops himself and says "we", connecting himself to authorities. He has a need to be part of the good guys. I think this supports the theory of unintended death.
The praise of authorities in an unsuccessful search is not expected unless he knows the child is dead.
Innocent parents who believe their son is out there and must be found, do not generally praise searchers for failure, and certainly not to this extent.
It becomes even stranger when considering he has not talked about the needs of his son, or what his son might be going through.
We also note the word "dead" again in his language.
This is not something we expect a parent of a missing child to say. He has now used it twice. If we are listening, we should consider that this father may not be showing concern for his son because he knows his son has no more needs, and he, the father, "had" (past tense) concerns, but does not need to concern himself with things now.
We have not heard him use his son's name. This is not expected.
J: They thought it was, it might have been, a part of a shoe, or something, but they said, go check that out.
D: These guys search miles, so the miles radius they have - it's very rocky terrain, it's very open, it's not -.the helicopter they used is used to back very deep Montana, it is designed for a lot worse situations than this, and there was not a trace of my son found - there still isn't but the search is on, that's - the hearsay of things has kind of gotten way out of hand, the search is so far as it's been put on, that it's been suspended, and that is not entirely sure or true. Sheriff Dave of Lhema HC, I just spoke with him on the phone this morning - he has got horseback riders and trackers up there right now, and very advanced professionals. I'll be going up, and I've just come down to get any resources I can get to go back, right on back up today. Um, what questions do you guys have?
Please note that here he uses a lot of words, and none of them use his son's name, and none of these words express concern for his son's daily or even hourly survival.
He continues to rave about the efficiency and adds horseback riders to the helicopter and use of technology, further giving linguistic indication of why has was "amazed", that is, to praise authorities. This is even more shocking when one considers that they all failed to find his son. Please note that guilty parents often seek to exercise control over the flow of information. This sometimes shows itself in the strong tangent of "running with the ball" and going on and on about the searchers, their equipment and their dedication...while failing.
This is to be compared with the words used about his son: nothing.
Ask yourself what you would say in this precise setting.
Would you spend your time talking about equipment that failed searchers use? Or would you call out to your son's kidnappers, or openly wonder, "is he being fed? does he have his blankie? is he cold? is he crying?"
A father of a toddler who takes responsibility for his son would be all but pulling his own hair out in anxiety, wondering about every little detail of his son's moment by moment existence.
Something got "out of hand" with DeOrr and he did something his father did not expect him to.
Interviewer: Tell us a little bit about, first of all, how are you guys holding up? I know everybody, a lot of people, are praying for you all.
This question angered me as it played right into the father's babbling about equipment and searchers and helicopters and so on...and it allowed him to continue to control.
The interviewer should have said:
"People are suspicious of you and that something may have happened. What do you say to this?"
It is the 800lb gorilla in the living room and the interviewer is clueless.
DeOrre Sr.: Friends and family, and hoping to be strong for him.
Jessica:. Pretty...the support around us is what's, I know, keeping us together because if we didn't have all of our family - the minute I called my mom, and she was up there in a matter of hours and the same with the rest of our family, they were just up there, around us.
What about your son?
D: Luckily, we - a few phone calls Is all it took at first, and we had, as Sheriff David said in the news, a hundred and seventy five plus people up there in the grid searches, volunteers, uh, professionals, and anybody I called. The service up there is very hearsay - here, there - it's camping, you know. Um, we're trying to hold up the best we can, but with - we have hope, is the thing. Hope is what keeps it going because the search is not over, the search is not done. We will find him, no matter what.
He continues to be impressed with the search, and here gives the large number in the turn out. He did not talk about himself, but name dropped. This is concerning.
For a father who said he was "in trouble" and who has controlled the interview, the expected is: "I will find you, son" with "I" and his son addressed. The "we" is very weak. It shows his need to be part of a law abiding team.
I: You were in the truck so you were the first to realize, ' Oh, no, DeOrr is not here.'
leading question....
D: No, we both did, I -
This is to avoid personal responsibility which is something we expect biological parents to do; even when seated together.
The switch from "you" to "no , we" is a rebuttal, but "no, we both..." has an even stronger need to share.
This is more consistent with guilt than innocence.
J: We both did.
Recall "we decided" is something that indicates a delay, a possible debate or discussion and the joint sharing of responsibility. This is a sensitive point to them both.
This is to now bring the mother into the guilty knowledge classification as she joins herself to him, and was part of a debate over 911. This means that she had to know that the father had a reason to not want to call 911, and she is in agreement with him.
D: After twenty minutes of up and down the creek and up and around the camp, and he wasn't there, that's when I got in my pick up truck and drove down the road to try and get some service.
J: - especially after screaming his name, we have nicknames for him, no sound of him, no crying.
The father goes right back to the truck again. This is very sensitive to him.
The nicknames are not given here, which affirms my original analysis that the chill was not a victim of chronic abuse. When nicknames are used, as if on display, it is a bad signal.
This further affirms that an unintended death occurred: something happened that the father did not mean to happen, but both parents considered the consequences and conspired to not report things. I do not know how much the mother knows, but it is enough to know:
if your son was missing and someone tried to get you to NOT call 911, you would know something was wrong.
D:.he's a goer and a mover but he does not go away from his parents, he does not.
He has not used his son's name for himself. This is distancing language that has been consistent throughout.
This is a positive and actually not an insult as he both praises his ability to move, and recognizes that he doesn't drift too far from his parents. The repetition is sensitive: did the child move in a way that the father did not expect? In the water? Behind the truck?
J: Yes, he's very attached to us.
I like this better than "we are very close" not because the closeness can be a two-way street (it is) but because the father was talking about the son's mobility in relation to not going a certain way. Some toddlers will bolt. If this came in a different context, it might be more concerning, but here, it may be due to physical proximity more than emotional. Emotional attachment in an open statement is often an indication of a poor relationship.
I: So this is unusual.
D: Very unusual, sir.
J: And we didn't hear people around us, we didn't see anybody, we have -
Off camera: social media, that needs to be addressed.
I: Yes, social media can be a good thing but it can also -
D: That's, that's one of the -
J:.We just don't want anything to twist it
I: Yes, we don't want to twist it, so clear up any rumors that you've seen or heard
J: We've-
Off camera [inaudible] - we
need to talk about -
J: One thing that concerned me -
D: We wanna get to that. Most of the biggest rumors that are going around is - I mean, I have heard everything from the - I mean, why you would make up a rumor that has to do with a three year old is - if you're not going to help, please, don't - if it's not helpful - it's -
J: Yeah.
D: This is a two, almost three year old we're talking about, please help us. But I've heard everything from my company won't let me come home off the road to look for my son - I was there the entire time, and my employer, four hours after my son went missing, has been up there day and night, has not slowed down - um, and that, that one bothered me, and then they just came, they got worse, and they got worse, and they got worse - but that's a handful of bad with a bunch of good. The amount of support is overwhelming, and it's good.
He has not used his son's name, but has used the pronoun "son";
He has used many words to praise the failed searchers, and here he is expending energy defending his boss and company, while not saying, thus far, a single word about his son.
Please help "us" is a good time for him to say what his son might be going through.
He does not.
Interviewer : is there any rumors or anything you've seen that you want to clear up, Jessica?
As in all missing child cases, it is better to ask, directly, about their own involvement, to let them issue a denial. What is this he asks? Is this something they discussed off camera first? Perhaps.
It is difficult to imagine a worse interview.
Jessica: I just, somebody at the store, um at Leador, said, it was one of the ladies that had worked at the store, said that they saw, um, a gentleman and a younger blonde boy matching our description of our son, really filthy, buying candy for him, and he was just bawling, in a black truck. That is the only other...
This bothers me. Here is why:
1. "gentleman": do we really think a lady at a store used the word "gentleman" in this setting? This is to make a positive point about the man in the story.
2. "our" description? Why the need to share description?
3. "our" son is not the language of biological parents --unless they are in trouble and have openly talked about splitting up and sharing custody.
DeOrre Sr.: There's a problem, my pick-up truck is black..
If this was not him, nor his truck, where does a "problem" exist.
Jessica: he drives a black truck.
DeOrre Sr.: as a family, we went down to get a few things. It was me, but they claim it was at six o clock...that afternoon, evening, but we..were...
What is missing here?
The allegation is a "gentleman" and a boy. He does not mention that DeOrr was with him but it is the time period that he focuses upon.
Jessica: Earlier, it was earlier that day
DeOrre Sr.: ..with search and rescue until what, a quarter to four..?
Jessica: yeah..
DeOrre Sr.: we didn't, we never, haven't left the camp since one o clock that afternoon, so it's just a lot of hearsay, and..
The polygraph would have to be properly conducted and should get conclusive results if it focuses upon the father's own words.
interviewer: was anybody camping round you?
D: that we don't know is...I come to find, I didn't know the area, and I didn't know, I ..there, it's very open but you can't see much ...there's a road that goes up and along the top - we're camped underneath the reservoir, basically right below it, and you can go up above the reservoir, and I didn't even know the road was, did that, I didn't know the road was up there, and as I travelled up there myself, I could've found out [?] I could see everything that was going on at the campsite, but you can't see out - you can't see up, you can't see round and if anyone comes to the bottom of your camp ground you can't even see they are...
interviewer: So they could've come to your...
The father's habit of speech is to speak rapidly and lots of self censoring. We note that this does not seem to change or shift much, from topic to topic.
D: they could've come in and you could never know it. The water was not very, it was not a fast running creek, but it is quite loud moving through the logs and things like that, so hearing range is not all that far either..so's you couldn't hear anyone coming up either.
Interviewer: so he was just kind of playing, you guys were doing your thing and then you noticed...
D: he was playing with grandpa
J: he, yeah, he was with my grandfather
D:.he was over, he was getting ready for a nap, uh say it was almost, by that time it was almost two, and he usually takes his nap, um...we was just, yeah, we decided we were going to go a little exploring, and he was going to be good with grandpa by the campfire, we weren't more than fifty..
J: ten minutes
D: fifty yards away and ten minutes, but for time, we, I, seen him to the point I figured out he was gone and I come back up to the creek and I actually seen, there were some things down by there, some little minnows that I thought he would just love, so when I come back up to get him and I yelled over to grandpa, um, where, you know, where is little DeOrr? He, immediately shock. He says, he came up to you, because it's such a small area. That's what a lot of people, they don't understand, they just assume how could you let your child out of your sight? This area is pretty well blocked in and you can see, you, there is no way you couldn't not see him, in what we thought, and just a split second your whole world is upside down and - vanished, there's not a trace found. That's the reason why they, this been called on the news a suspension, because it is not a suspension, but there's not s single trace of him. This child loses stuff. He's two, almost three, anybody who has a child that age range knows, they leave trails, they lose stuff..
Here the name is used, but not towards or about his son, but in a quote of what was said to someone else.
Note the references to "child" again.
The confused pronouns suggests deception.
This is very likely to prove to be deceptive and stemming from his imagination of a scenario rather than what happened. He has literally imagined the time frame of when his son "would have" been "gone", and what he "would do" at this time, with a pleasant story about seeing minnows. This portrays him in a positive role, which, the need itself, tells us otherwise.
The constant use of child shows awareness of risk.
Even if the death was unintended, did it come from parental negligence? Is he signaling this by his repetition of "child."
J: shoes come off..anything
D: There's just nothing. There's a possibility that he may be with somebody, and that's giving us some hope. It's a bad thing that he will be not with us right now but it also means there is a good chance that he is alive and with somebody, so we're trying every aspect we can, any aspect we can..
As a biological parent, we expect him to speak of hope for himself. He does not. Here is someone who doesn't mind saying, while his son is missing, that he does not even know what day it is, but when it relates to his son, it is "we" and "us" and "our." It is an unnatural refuse to pull close to his son.
Interviewer: is that what your gut tells you?
D: Yes. As his father I believe and I think after being up there, and a lot of people agree with me a lot, that he is no longer up the mountain anymore. The searching advances they used, and was just very thorough for miles, there wasn't a stone left unturned, there still isn't, and we're going to continue to search, but being his father also, that's what my heart and my gut tell me but I'm not sure, so that's where I'm asking the public's help -anything - I'm, Lhima HC Sherriff are handling this but they're not designed for systems quite like this, they've got two phone lines, and please be patient, they're doing the best they can, and we all are, and we will find him.
"I believe and I think after being up there..." is weak, and shows an insecurity and need to "have others join in" with "a lot of people agree with me a lot"
This is to join himself with all of police, officials, rescue, etc...the good guys. He and they are one. He and they think alike. He cannot be on the suspicious list, he is one of them.
There is linguistic indication that the parents had some form of argument when they first discussed the child being missing and it was directly related to some delay in calling 911.
The father does most of the talking, while the mother does less. The mother does not give signals of deception, but in context, this is a small sample, compared to the father.
The father's use of "my son" precludes child abuse particularly because it comes during the time of the child missing. What does this tell us?
If the father has done anything to the child, it was not intentional. The same could be said if the grandfather or someone else did something by accident; was not watching him when he fell into water, and so on.
The child is not likely a victim of ongoing child abuse but of an unintended death likely from negligence.
This means an unintended event.
The father's intense focus upon the rescue operation is in stark contrast to his silence about what his son would be experiencing.
The self-censoring and change of pronoun is duly noted, especially for topics.
We also have the word "dead" used twice; which in context, is most unexpected and unsettling and should be considered as possible leakage.
The father and mother both express confidence in the search and plead for it to not end. This may be due to the professionals they encountered and not realistic hope since they have said nothing about DeOrr.
Question: What do you make of no reliable denial?
Answer: There is no context for it. This is the fault of the interviewer, but even so, the parents could have issued it when they talked of "hearsay", including the sighting of a "gentleman" in a truck that was a "problem."
The father showed how he controls the interviewer (not the interview) by turning the tables with asking if media had questions for him. Was the interviewer unprepared? Did he miss all the indications of sensitivity including the delay in calling for assistance?
Did he not want to ask about calling "Search and Rescue"?
We let the subject "control the interview", but not us. By the we mean that we let the subject talk on and on, but not at the expense of noting his sensitivity and missing grand opportunities for information.
We let them speak on and on (a good point) but we ask the relevant questions and do not let ourselves be 'de railed' in the way he was. (the major failure, thus far, in the interview).
Thus far, the Interviewer has not gone to this point, which is critical and should be central for the Interviewer: clear the parents, especially the father, and then move in the same extending circles in the interview, as law enforcement does in its investigation, and as search and rescue does in its own action. It is the most natural and sensible manner.
The Interviewer fails to raise suspicion nor does he ask outright: "Have you taken a polygraph?"
"What would you say to people who suspect you might have had an accident and hidden your son?"in any form.
Lastly, the father' extreme need to place himself in the truck:
What caused this sensitivity?
I : do you plan to hold a vigil down here? I guess you haven't even thought about it. Do you want the community in Idaho Falls to rally? I know they don't want a lot of people up there.
D: that's what we're not real sure. I don't, yet again, as a father who's very concerned, with the whole family, we'll tell you 'yes, if we can get the whole state of Idaho up there we would love to' - but in such a small area that has been combed and combed and combed, something may have been missed but I don't know.
Please note that he says, "as a father who's very concerned" is a need to persuade his audience that his is concerned. This is sensitive.
What makes him feel a need to be perceived as a "very concerned" father, so much so, that he is repetitive with it?
Speaking for himself and for his wife, seated with him, the word "we" is appropriate. While using "we" as a norm, based upon this standard, the use of "I" becomes very important.
The pronoun "I" comes in "I don't know", of which context is him not knowing if his son could still be there, but missed since they searched "combed", "combed" and "combed" (3 times).
The broken "I" earlier, where he introduces himself as a father (see above), this broken "I" is not completed.
I've been trying,,,I'm gonna be getting with the Lhima HC Sherriff in Snake River, sorry, the Salmon - Snake and River-.Salmon Search and Rescue, to see what their thoughts on everything is, and trust me with such a small area, one hundred and seventy five people, there was nowhere to park, nowhere to walk, there was grid searches up from one end - there's ridges from one side to the other and they're not very far apart, and they was all searched, all the way down to the bottom all the way above the reservoir. The rest itself, not a lot of people know the place. The reservoir itself isn't but maybe a few feet deep. If you're up on top you can see the bottom of the centre. If you're looking at the middle you can see the bottom of it, so everything has been 100% thoroughly checked but nobody can guarantee me 100% so I'm gonna keep looking.
In Statement Analysis, we highlight the word "sorry" no matter what the context is, when we are viewing a possible suspect in a crime.
It could be "leakage" regardless of context.
It shows up in the language of the guilty.
Note the volume of words dedicated to the searchers and compare it to the utter absence of words about his son.
Jessica: I just, somebody at the store, um at Leador, said, it was one of the ladies that had worked at the store, said that they saw, um, a gentleman and a younger blonde boy matching our description of our son, really filthy, buying candy for him, and he was just bawling, in a black truck. That is the only other...
Note that the "younger blonde boy" did not match "my son", nor even "our son" but it only matched "our description of our son", which is distancing language.
The maternal instinct, no matter how powerful a paternal instinct, is seen as stronger. Recall a "mother bear robbed of its whelps" in history, along with Solomon's note worthy decision, and that mothers will remain in "denial" longer than fathers, in language of acceptance of the death of a missing child.
It is not what I expected to hear at this point.
The maternal instinct, no matter how powerful a paternal instinct, is seen as stronger. Recall a "mother bear robbed of its whelps" in history, along with Solomon's note worthy decision, and that mothers will remain in "denial" longer than fathers, in language of acceptance of the death of a missing child.
It is not what I expected to hear at this point.
DeOrre Sr.: There's a problem, my pick-up truck is black..
Why is it a "problem"?
Better yet, why didn't the interviewer ask him at this point?
Also: as my expectation is to hear a biological mother say "my" at this point and not "our", please note that "our" is more often the language of step parenting but when it is biological and not two parents speaking together as one, it is often a signal that the parents have seriously discussed divorce; hence, distancing language.
Is it possible that even the delay in calling 911 along with the pressure of a lost child has caused this in the mother's language? Listen to what she says next:
Jessica: he drives a black truck.
Not, "my husband drives a black truck" or plainly, "DeOrre drives a black truck..." but "he."
DeOrre Sr.: as a family, we went down to get a few things. It was me, but they claim it was at six o clock...that afternoon, evening, but we..were...
Note the immediate "rebuttal" of sorts:
1. He drives a black pick up truck" answered with:
2. Not, "yes I do" but "as a family" (plural) "we went down" and then why "we went down" giving the reason why they went down, followed by:
3. Admission, "It was me"followed by rebuttal:
4. "but" and to the time period.
This is not to deny going but to classify it within time, but before time, company.
Jessica: Earlier, it was earlier that day
DeOrre Sr.: ..with search and rescue until what, a quarter to four..?
Jessica: yeah..
DeOrre Sr.: we didn't, we never, haven't left the camp since one o clock that afternoon, so it's just a lot of hearsay, and..
This statement is very concerning.
a. "we didn't" is stopped.
b. "we never" is stopped.
c. "haven't left" is a dropped pronoun, removing himself from this.
d. Note the need to dismiss as "hearsay"
The poor quality of the interview leaves not only the father in control of information, but leaves the reader with more questions than answers. It is very poorly done.
interviewer: was anybody camping round you?
D: that we don't know is...I come to find, I didn't know the area, and I didn't know, I ..there, it's very open but you can't see much ...there's a road that goes up and along the top - we're camped underneath the reservoir, basically right below it, and you can go up above the reservoir, and I didn't even know the road was, did that, I didn't know the road was up there, and as I travelled up there myself, I could've found out [?] I could see everything that was going on at the campsite, but you can't see out - you can't see up, you can't see round and if anyone comes to the bottom of your camp ground you can't even see they are...
interviewer: So they could've come to your...
We note the self censoring coupled with broken pronouns. It is concerning.
"I come to hear" is present tense.
"I come to hear" is present tense.
D: they could've come in and you could never know it. The water was not very, it was not a fast running creek, but it is quite loud moving through the logs and things like that, so hearing range is not all that far either..so's you couldn't hear anyone coming up either.
Interviewer: so he was just kind of playing, you guys were doing your thing and then you noticed...
Interviewer: so he was just kind of playing, you guys were doing your thing and then you noticed...
D: he was playing with grandpa
J: he, yeah, he was with my grandfather
Jessica: we'll continue to look until he is found - we don't care how long it takes, we, and we think as many people that have shared the story and continue to share his pictures and things like that, if somebody has him, they'll eventually bring him back...and they will come forward with some sort of information.
D: somebody will come forward wondering where this child has come from. That may not be the case, but it could be, so that's why we're trying to look at this aspect as well.
The use of the word child could:
a. Be a signal that he, father, was a victim of child abuse in his life
b. a signal of abuse of the son, which is not consistent with other language
c. a signal of fear that a child molester has him
it is associated with child abuse, but it is in the follow up questions that we learn the details, should the context not tell us.
I: and you want people to keep sharing?
The interviewer's own inexperience, or nervousness could be the reason for this. It is difficult to learn and often helpful to have video taped sessions reviewed, something very few enjoy, but most all say helps them grow in their use of the principles of analytical interviewing.
J: yes, please keep sharing photos.
D: yes. Keep sharing his photos, keep him in your mind, your hearts and your prayers, and just keep looking, keep your eyes open, please. Social media in general, in public just keep your eyes open and keep sharing.
I: tell me about the blanket.
Jessica: this is his blanket. He doesn't go anywhere without his blanket, his cup, or his monkey, and all three of them were left at the campground. And since he..
D: All three has to be with him.
It is not unusual for husbands and wives to finish each others' sentences. The majority of finishing sentences comes from wives. Here, he is the dominant speaker
J: Yes.
D: He will trip over them if he has to, but they are going with him, and this is the first time since he's been born, pretty much, that he's been without these things...and that's another reason why we were wondering.
I would have liked to hear the child's name. If this is an accident/cover up, the guilt can cause such distancing language.
J: Yes, because this is the blanket that we brought him home in from the hospital, this is his, this is what comforts him and at all times.
D: This is an exact replica of a security blanket, for everybody this is his actual blanket - he does not go anywhere without it, that's our other concern of why.
J: Yeah, and I..
Interviewer: should he be out there and happen to see this, what would you say?
Keep in mind that the Interviewer directed them to speak directly to their son:
D: We're looking for you, son, and we will find y,oh, and we love you more than anything in the world. You have a lot of people who love you and who are looking for you, buddy, we'll find you - Daddy will find you.
J: We won't stop looking until we get you home.
I: [inaudible].- is there anything you want to add?
J: Just if somebody has him, please don't hurt him, just bring him home safely to us.
Mother introduces "hurt" which causes us to wonder if the unintended death (truck, water, falling, etc) caused hurt.
D: No matter what it takes.
J: ..where he belongs. Even if you have to just leave him at a store where somebody else will see him and bring him home safely to us. I don't - just drop him off somewhere where -
D: And if that's not the case..
J: - somebody is at so they can see him and bring him home.
D: And if that may not be the case, I will, we will search for you, and search for you, and search for you, until we find you, no matter how long it takes, no matter what we gotta overcome, we will find you,son.
Analysis Conclusion:
Does the rest of the analysis affirm or deny this?
*The father used distancing language regarding his son, avoiding his name.
*The father showed no concern, whatsoever, as to what his son was experiencing at the time of the interview. Nothing is said about his son's food, shelter, health, sleep, and so on. This is to affirm his death.
*The father lavishes heavy praise upon searchers and recuse who failed to find his son. This is done only after innocent parents have accepted their child's death, or by guilty parents wishing to psychologically allign themselves with those who are law keepers.
The father also had a need to run the interview's topic away from his son.
The father had a need to seek sympathy, not for his son, but for himself.
The father had a need to persuade his audience that in an emergency, he acted like someone in an emergency. This need tells us that he did not act like he was in an emergency because he knew no emergency for his son existed.
The father used the word "dead" twice.
The father stated that he, himself "was in trouble."
The father used the word "risk" in linguistic context of calling 911.
The father debated the mother about calling 911.
This child is deceased and the father knows it, which is why he does not have any present tense concerns for his son, and dedicates no wording to any possible concern a father would have for a toddler.
There is great sensitivity about the truck, which is problematic for the father.
At the time of this interview, the father is withholding information about what happened to his son, revealing that his son is dead, and suppressing information.
In my first analysis, I covered all of these concerns, but only with "maybe" and "possibly" but while considering the overall written context, there are too many "maybe's" and far too many "possibly" points that come together to bring me, as analyst, to a conclusion:
The father has guilty knowledge over his son's disappearance, signaling to us that the son is dead.
The mother has gone along with the father's lead.
The father controlled the interview and the interviewer allowed him to, and avoided brining the father to the point of critical information.
The poor quality of the interview, notwithstanding, this father knows what happened to his son, and is covering up.
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