- 2 days ago
Sometimes, the truth comes out in the most unexpected ways. Get ready for a jaw-dropping compilation of moments where individuals incriminate themselves on camera! From unintentional slips to brazen admissions, we're diving into the shocking instances where cameras captured confessions. Witness the disbelief and the consequences as we explore these unbelievable moments of self-incrimination. You won't believe what people reveal when they think no one is watching (or when they are!).
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00:00I loved my wife, but she deserved what she had coming.
00:06Welcome to Miss Mojo, and today we're looking at 20 times people confessed to crimes on camera.
00:12There is no one who knows me, or who has ever known me, who knows anything about me really.
00:18For this list, we'll be looking at the most infamous people whose despicable confessions
00:22were caught on tape. Which of these cases sends chills down your spine? Let us know in the comments.
00:27Mark Castellano shared an apartment in Houston, Texas with his ex-girlfriend Michelle Warner and
00:37their young son Caden. In September 2012, the former couple got into a heated argument that
00:43ended in Warner's death at Castellano's hands. The 31-year-old mother was reported missing by her
00:56family, and all eyes soon turned to Castellano as the suspect. As the case gained traction,
01:02Castellano sat for an interview with Dr. Phil, in which he insisted that Warner had left the
01:07apartment after the argument and never returned. Just days later, however, Castellano turned himself
01:21in and owned up to the crime in a taped interrogation with the police.
01:25When I came back, I just got rid of her.
01:29Where did you get rid of her? He was later found guilty of Warner's murder and sentenced to 27 years
01:34in prison.
01:40Natavia Lowry. The 2007 murder of celebrity realtor and former music manager Linda Stein in her Manhattan
01:47apartment soon became the subject of a media frenzy. Upon close investigation, authorities
01:52narrowed in on Stein's personal assistant, Natavia Lowry, who was reported to have had a
01:56strained relationship with her boss. In her interrogation, Lowry seemingly confessed to
02:07her role in Stein's murder, claiming that the real estate broker had provoked her by blowing smoke in
02:12her face and uttering racially insensitive remarks. Apparently, Lowry had stolen $30,000 from Stein
02:26and likely killed her when she was confronted about it. Although she later recanted her confession,
02:32Lowry was convicted and sentenced to 25 years to life in prison.
02:35I felt bad. I felt sorry.
02:42Geordie Brooke. In November of 2014, Peter Steer, an Australian cameraman for Seven News,
02:48was sent to the coastal town of Noosaheads in Queensland to cover a shooting. On his way there,
02:53he was hailed down by a man on a motorbike named Geordie Brooke, who disclosed that he was the perpetrator
02:59of the incident in question. Steer then called the authorities as he filmed Brooke making a teary
03:04confession to the crime. Don't be silly. Don't be silly.
03:09While waiting for police, Brooke had a change of heart and stole the cameraman's car at gunpoint.
03:15He was eventually arrested after crashing into a gas station and brought up on multiple charges,
03:19including attempted murder and armed robbery. And he just walked up to me purposefully,
03:25looked me in the eyes and asked me for a cigarette lighter. Jared Murray. Jared Murray and
03:30Gennaro Sanchez were both freshmen at East Central University in Oklahoma in 2012.
03:35On December 5th, Murray lured Sanchez into driving him to a Walmart by offering to pay him $20.
03:40Uh, he panicked, uh, wanted to pull out his phone. I inked the phone out of his hand,
03:46and then he panicked some more, kept telling me not to kill him.
03:51This would be Sanchez's last ride, as he was gunned down by Murray in his own car.
03:56He kept telling me not to kill him. To make him feel more comfortable, I unloaded the clip,
03:59unloaded the bullet from the chamber, handed them over to him, and that eased his nerves.
04:05Murray fled the scene, but was eventually arrested while attempting to hitchhike to Canada.
04:09During police interrogation, Murray quickly owned up to the crime,
04:12giving a chilling confession, seemingly devoid of any remorse.
04:15He admitted to planning the murder weeks ahead, and believed he deserved the death penalty.
04:34Instead, he was found not guilty by reason of insanity, and remanded to a mental health facility.
04:39Christian Romero. Even before he became a teenager,
04:43Christian Romero had already committed murder. In November of 2008, Romero shot and killed his
04:49father Vincent and their tenant, Timothy Romans, after they got home from work. The crimes baffled
04:55investigators, who examined a bunch of other suspects before confronting the inevitable truth.
05:00Initially, Romero had stated that he returned home from school to find both men already dead.
05:09However, when police questioned him further,
05:12he admitted to committing the murders himself. In a deal with the prosecution, Romero pleaded guilty
05:17to the negligent homicide of Romans, but was spared from being charged with the death of his father.
05:22He was first committed to a treatment facility indefinitely, but gained his freedom when he turned 18.
05:28Russell Williams.
05:29A woman was at home alone. When she was surprised by a male intruder, she said he blindfolded her, tied her up.
05:37Having served in the Canadian Air Force for 23 years, Russell Williams rose to the rank of Colonel and was
05:43commander of the largest military air base in Canada. In February 2010, Williams was linked to the
05:49assault and murder of Jessica Lloyd through the tire tracks found outside her home.
05:53He was taken in for questioning and eventually broke, confessing to not only Lloyd's murder,
06:05but also to other assaults and burglaries in the area.
06:08Williams forcefully entered women's homes, not to steal any valuables, but to collect their underwear,
06:26which he would then wear and take pictures of himself in. He was tried on multiple charges,
06:31including murder, assault and 82 counts of breaking and entering, resulting in a life sentence.
06:36That's an involuntary reaction we call, but that's indicative of what's going on internally.
06:42And what he's nodding to is, holy shit, it's my boot.
06:46Earl Valentine.
06:47And I don't feel no mother f***ing remorse for what I did.
06:51While many individuals have confessed to their crimes in interviews or during police interrogations,
06:56Earl Valentine basically bragged about his on Facebook.
07:00She lied on me, had warrants taken out on me.
07:06She drugged me all the way down to nothing.
07:09In an eerie livestream in September 2016, Valentine admitted to shooting his ex-wife
07:15Keisha and their son Earl Jr. Keisha had moved to Norlina, North Carolina with Earl Jr. in an
07:20attempt to escape Valentine after her restraining order against him had expired. In the video,
07:25Valentine accused his ex-wife of trying to tarnish his image and claims to have shot her in retribution.
07:31I loved my wife, but she deserved what she had coming.
07:36Police later tracked down Valentine to a motel in Columbia, South Carolina,
07:41but found that he had already taken his own life.
07:44We're pretty angry about it, and especially because of the way he's acting over it.
07:49Daniel Wozniak
07:55A community theater actor in Costa Mesa, California, Daniel Wozniak was arrested in May 2010,
08:01after the body of Julie Kibuishi was discovered in his neighbor Sam Hare's apartment.
08:05At the time, police were on the hunt for Hare, who was presumed to have fled after ending Kibuishi's
08:10life. While in police custody, Wozniak initially denied having anything to do with the crime.
08:29But, after a few hours of questioning, he eventually confessed to killing Kibuishi and Hare,
08:34who was a war veteran in a bid to collect his combat pay savings.
08:44In 2016, Wozniak was found guilty of two counts of first-degree murder and handed the death penalty.
08:50Israel Keyes
08:51To describe Israel Keyes as terrifying will be quite an understatement.
08:56There is no one who knows me, or who has ever known me, who knows anything about me, really.
09:02The Utah-born serial killer orchestrated multiple, carefully planned murders across several states
09:08in the United States. After kidnapping and killing his last confirmed victim, Samantha Koenig,
09:13Keyes was arrested in Alaska when he tried withdrawing money from an ATM with her debit card.
09:19While in police custody, Keyes chillingly described his crimes,
09:23although leaving out just enough detail to avoid being directly linked with any confirmed case.
09:36Still, he confessed to the murders of Koenig and a middle-aged couple named Bill and Lorraine Currier.
09:42You might not get exactly what you're… not as much to choose from, in a manner of speaking, but
09:48there's also no witnesses, really. There's no deals around.
09:51Prosecutors were still putting their case against Keyes together when he took his own life in his jail cell.
09:57Steve Stevens
09:5937-year-old Steve Stevens became the subject of an extensive police manhunt in April 2017,
10:05when he uploaded a video to Facebook which showed him committing a murder.
10:09In the clip, recorded on his phone, Stevens randomly stops Robert Godwin, an elderly man
10:15walking down the street, who he briefly talks to before fatally shooting him.
10:22The crime was reportedly motivated by problems Stevens was having with his girlfriend at the time.
10:27That same day, he uploaded another video in which he also admitted to killing more people,
10:31although those claims were not verified by police. Two days later, Stevens was spotted at a
10:36McDonald's drive-thru, but ended up taking his own life before police could arrest him.
10:41We told him he was waiting on his fries for a minute, just to kind of buy some time for the
10:45cops if it actually was him. And he said he had no time to wait, he had to go. And at that point,
10:51he took his chicken McNuggets and left. Melissa Miller
10:54Just start at the beginning. Okay, let me take a couple breaths.
10:58In February of 2013, colleagues of Annie Meyer filed a missing persons report after she was absent from
11:04work for several days. Over the next few months, police questioned those who were close to Meyer,
11:09but found it difficult to gain any substantial information from her roommate and former partner,
11:13Melissa Miller. It wasn't until July, when Meyer's remains were found, that Miller decided to cooperate
11:26with police. In her taped interview with investigators, Miller painted a relationship with Meyer that was
11:31fraught with tension due to money problems. She then confessed to killing her while they were
11:36on a hike in the Colorado mountains. After pleading guilty to second-degree murder,
11:47Miller was sentenced to 20 years in prison. In court today, Melissa Miller is already making plans
11:54to see her friends and family next. Sean Vincent Gillis
11:58The crimes of Sean Vincent Gillis were so despicable that even he referred to himself as
12:07pure evil. Over a ten-year period, Gillis claimed the lives of eight women in and around the Baton
12:12Rouge area in Louisiana. Dubbed the Other Baton Rouge Killer, he was known to perform disturbing acts
12:19on the bodies of his victims. In 2004, he was arrested and charged with three murders and ended up confessing
12:32to all three, plus an additional five. Gillis went into detail about how he would hunt down his victims
12:39and the gruesome ways he ended their lives. He was, however, only convicted of the initial three murders,
12:52and sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
12:56David Tarloff David Tarloff had struggled with mental illness from at least his early 20s. In 1991,
13:03he was diagnosed with schizophrenia by a psychiatrist named Kent Shinbach, who recommended his involuntary
13:09commitment to a psychiatric facility. Fast forward to 2008. Tarloff visited Shinbach's office once again,
13:21only this time, his goal was to rob the doctor and use his money to care for his ailing mother.
13:26Instead, Tarloff ended up killing Katherine Fahey, another psychiatrist who shared an office with Shinbach,
13:32in what he claimed was self-defense. Police traced fingerprints from the crime to Tarloff,
13:37who rambled his way through a confession when questioned. Following two mistrials, he was
13:49eventually convicted and handed a life sentence in 2014. Mark Chopper-Reed
13:55One of the most notorious criminals in Australian history, Mark Chopper-Reed had a long rap sheet that
14:01included crimes like armed robbery, kidnapping and arson. Reed's notorious activities led to him
14:10spending a large chunk of his adult life incarcerated. While in prison, the infamous gangster contracted
14:16hepatitis C and was diagnosed with liver cancer years later. Just before his death, Reed sat for a
14:26televised interview with 60 Minutes Australia, where he admitted to having been responsible for the
14:31deaths of four people. What was your involvement in his murder? Oh, just a bloke that killed him.
14:37Perhaps the most shocking thing about the interview, which was granted just 16 days before his death,
14:43was the casual nature with which Reed described his graphic crimes. The pub's keg seller became Des
14:49Costello's temporary tomb. Robert Willie Pickton. Possibly one of Canada's most prolific serial killers,
15:05the crimes of Robert Willie Pickton sent shockwaves through the country when they were eventually
15:09discovered. Pickton had inherited a large pig farm from his family, and reportedly fed the corpses of
15:27his victims to his pigs. In 2002, police stormed Pickton's farm on an illegal firearms warrant, but
15:34ended up finding personal effects belonging to multiple missing women. He was charged with 26
15:40counts of murder, but in a chilling jail cell surveillance video, Pickton confessed to an
15:45undercover officer that he had claimed the lives of 49 women, and even, quote, wanted one more.
15:55For his despicable crimes, Pickton was sentenced to life in prison with no possibility of parole for 25 years.
16:03Gary Ridgway
16:07Dubbed the Green River Killer, Gary Ridgway terrorized girls and women in the states of
16:12Washington and Oregon in the 80s and 90s. While his victim count is believed to be as high as 90,
16:18Ridgway was convicted of 49 murders, the second highest number of confirmed killings in US history.
16:24Ridgway sat for multiple interviews with authorities, most notably with FBI profiler Dr. Mary Ellen O'Toole,
16:31in which he confessed to more killings and detailed how he picked up his victims.
16:36I'm driving down the road, so I whipped out my ID, and with my ID would be my, I put my finger over
16:43my driver's license to hide my name. Throughout these interviews, he owned up to the most murders
16:48for any American serial killer.
16:50They would know I wasn't probably a normal person.
16:53But you were really using your son as part of your ruse.
16:57Due to his plea agreement, Ridgway avoided execution and was instead sentenced to life
17:01in prison without the possibility of parole.
17:04Ed Kemper.
17:05I was getting better at it. I was getting less detectable. I started flaunting that invisibility.
17:12A truly disturbing figure, Ed Kemper was responsible for the deaths of 10 people,
17:16including his own mother and paternal grandparents.
17:20After killing his mother and one of her friends on April 20th, 1973,
17:24Kemper called the police and confessed to the crimes.
17:26One victim let me back in the car. I locked myself out. She opened the door for me.
17:33My gun was under the seat.
17:35Of the 10 murders, Kemper was charged with and convicted of 8,
17:39for which he was handed 8 consecutive life sentences.
17:42And I'm picking up young women, and I'm going a little bit farther each time.
17:46It's a daring kind of a thing.
17:48Throughout his life in prison, Kemper granted multiple interviews,
17:52such as for the documentary, Murder, No Apparent Motive,
17:55during which he opened up about his crimes in explicit details.
17:59So how come they get in a car with somebody at that time?
18:02She judged me not to be that guy.
18:06I didn't look like him.
18:07He was also profiled by agents of the FBI's Behavioral Science Unit,
18:11which was portrayed in the Netflix series, Mindhunter.
18:15Robert Durst.
18:16I am going to go use the restroom, which is right here.
18:20The Jinx was a six-part true crime docu-series that aired on HBO in 2015.
18:25The critically acclaimed show was centered around real estate tycoon Robert Durst, who,
18:30at the time, was suspected of killing his wife, Kathleen McCormick, and friend, Susan Berman.
18:35In the final episode, Durst is shown a damning handwritten letter about Berman's murder that
18:41seemed to match his writing. But he flat-out denies being the author.
18:45Then, in what is arguably one of the most shocking moments in TV history,
18:53he goes to the bathroom and seemingly confesses to the crimes, while his mic is still recording.
19:02Durst was later given a life sentence for Berman's death, but he died of cardiac arrest
19:07just three months later.
19:08The BTK Killer.
19:10The BTK Killer was the self-imposed nickname of American serial killer Dennis Rader.
19:15After you tied them up, what did they do?
19:19Well, they started complaining about being tied up, and I re-loosed their bonds a couple of times,
19:25tried to make Mr. Otero as comfortable as I could.
19:28Rader murdered 10 people in the state of Kansas between 1974 and 1991,
19:33and sent letters to the authorities bragging about it. He was eventually caught in 2005,
19:38after sending police a floppy disk with metadata that revealed his identity.
19:42I didn't have a mask on or anything. They already could ID me, and I made a decision to go ahead
19:50and put them down, I guess, or strangle them.
19:53On the day of his trial, Rader surprised the court by instead pleading guilty to all 10 counts of
19:59first-degree murder, and vividly recounted how he carried them out.
20:04Uh, tied his feet to the, uh, bedpost, on the bedpost so he couldn't run. Uh, kind of tied her in the other bedroom.
20:12Throughout the chilling, nearly one-hour-long confession, Rader offered no apologies for his actions,
20:18and was later handed to 10 consecutive life sentences.
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20:37Ted Bundy
20:38You'd be hard-pressed to find an American adult who hasn't heard the name Ted Bundy.
20:50The infamous serial killer claimed at least 30 lives over a four-year period,
20:54although that number is believed to be much higher.
20:57After he was caught and sentenced to death for three of the murders,
21:00Bundy appealed the decision up to the US Supreme Court to no avail.
21:05On the eve of his execution, Bundy sat for a taped interview,
21:08in which he admitted guilt to the crimes and described the true nature of his murderous tendencies.
21:14For the record, you are guilty of killing many women and girls.
21:22Yes. Yes, that's true.
21:24A few hours later, Bundy's reign of terror came to an end,
21:27when he was executed in the electric chair on January 24th, 1989.
21:31That I can't begin to understand the pain that the parents of these children that I have,
21:41and these young women that I have harmed, feel.
21:52So I can understand each other with alcohol so that I live in anxiety and 남성.
21:59Or put that in a silent and 부분.
22:00Those who have been trawritten by me,
22:02I can't believe that they benefit from those who have been attacked yet.
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22:06I can't withdraw along at these countries.
22:08In the other countries, so I thought,
22:09I could run back my way.
22:11But I was also going toют history.
22:12And they were too many people sadden to
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