Michael Lee
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
she could say, oh, well, she got it in September of whatever year at this place, right? That's a direct answer. That's what we would expect a truthful person to do.
Instead, she takes us on this long journey where she has to predicate everything that she's about to say by taking us through this whole medical journey, and now she's throwing out medical lingo, and she's really kind of encapsulating this very, very muddy, confusing medical picture, in the way that she feels like it to us, like she answered that question. There was no answer in that.
Instead, she takes us on this long journey where she has to predicate everything that she's about to say by taking us through this whole medical journey, and now she's throwing out medical lingo, and she's really kind of encapsulating this very, very muddy, confusing medical picture, in the way that she feels like it to us, like she answered that question. There was no answer in that.
Instead, she takes us on this long journey where she has to predicate everything that she's about to say by taking us through this whole medical journey, and now she's throwing out medical lingo, and she's really kind of encapsulating this very, very muddy, confusing medical picture, in the way that she feels like it to us, like she answered that question. There was no answer in that.
The problem is, with these types of interviews, is that law enforcement are often doing these cold, like they're being brought into them with very little information or not all of the information. especially in homicide cases, they're, you know, typically they get called to a dead body, right? And they have to go in and, hey, did you do it? What happened here?
The problem is, with these types of interviews, is that law enforcement are often doing these cold, like they're being brought into them with very little information or not all of the information. especially in homicide cases, they're, you know, typically they get called to a dead body, right? And they have to go in and, hey, did you do it? What happened here?
The problem is, with these types of interviews, is that law enforcement are often doing these cold, like they're being brought into them with very little information or not all of the information. especially in homicide cases, they're, you know, typically they get called to a dead body, right? And they have to go in and, hey, did you do it? What happened here?
They're asking these kinds of questions. They don't really know the facts. And the idea there is to kind of like nail down a story. And, you know, as we go through the facts and the forensics on a homicide scene, we may be able to ascertain, you know, how much of what they said aligns with the evidence, right? And that becomes the discrepancy there is the thing that's relevant.
They're asking these kinds of questions. They don't really know the facts. And the idea there is to kind of like nail down a story. And, you know, as we go through the facts and the forensics on a homicide scene, we may be able to ascertain, you know, how much of what they said aligns with the evidence, right? And that becomes the discrepancy there is the thing that's relevant.
They're asking these kinds of questions. They don't really know the facts. And the idea there is to kind of like nail down a story. And, you know, as we go through the facts and the forensics on a homicide scene, we may be able to ascertain, you know, how much of what they said aligns with the evidence, right? And that becomes the discrepancy there is the thing that's relevant.
But I think one of the big red flags that we have to have is, you know, if we have a child and let's just say, apart from mother, I offer her a little hostess cupcake and you want this? And she's like, yeah, I want it. And she eats it. We immediately have a problem. That's a discrepancy between the two.
But I think one of the big red flags that we have to have is, you know, if we have a child and let's just say, apart from mother, I offer her a little hostess cupcake and you want this? And she's like, yeah, I want it. And she eats it. We immediately have a problem. That's a discrepancy between the two.
But I think one of the big red flags that we have to have is, you know, if we have a child and let's just say, apart from mother, I offer her a little hostess cupcake and you want this? And she's like, yeah, I want it. And she eats it. We immediately have a problem. That's a discrepancy between the two.
If I can see her, if I can observe her and I see that there's no indications of this, even if we do some legitimate test for it and it doesn't align with the thing that mom's saying. I mean, mom, during her interview with the police officers, she literally told them that
If I can see her, if I can observe her and I see that there's no indications of this, even if we do some legitimate test for it and it doesn't align with the thing that mom's saying. I mean, mom, during her interview with the police officers, she literally told them that
If I can see her, if I can observe her and I see that there's no indications of this, even if we do some legitimate test for it and it doesn't align with the thing that mom's saying. I mean, mom, during her interview with the police officers, she literally told them that
that she was telling the people at Seattle Children's, I feel like you want me to force this child to have a certain reaction, a certain symptom that presents in front of you, even if it takes harming my child to do so, just so that I can prove to you That what I'm saying is true.
that she was telling the people at Seattle Children's, I feel like you want me to force this child to have a certain reaction, a certain symptom that presents in front of you, even if it takes harming my child to do so, just so that I can prove to you That what I'm saying is true.
that she was telling the people at Seattle Children's, I feel like you want me to force this child to have a certain reaction, a certain symptom that presents in front of you, even if it takes harming my child to do so, just so that I can prove to you That what I'm saying is true.
I mean, that was one of the most loaded statements of that entire interview, just chock full with great indicators that we have to look in in behavior and like psycholinguistics, right? But she's giving these things to us. She's telling us.