Omnipotent - Don't Ask - Don't tell

Omnipotent - Don't Ask - Don't tell

We expect that criminals will lie but not the police. Bill Dorsch a retired Chicago homicide detective understood that people when accused of committing crimes, especially in homicide cases, would make conscious decisions to lie when questioned. He...
53 Minuten
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Join PI Ed Opperman with expert guests and authors as they discuss true crime stories in the news, conspiracy theories, issues of social injustice and NWO resistance. Follow on Twitter and Instagram @OppermanReport

Beschreibung

vor 1 Jahr
We expect that criminals will lie but not the police.

Bill Dorsch a retired Chicago homicide detective understood that
people when accused of committing crimes, especially in homicide
cases, would make conscious decisions to lie when questioned. He
hated being lied to but his task as an investigator was to discover
the truth no matter where it would take him.

He worked hard to gather evidence and testimony from individuals
that could lead to the arrest of the perpetrator. The accumulation
of his work was always focused on the presentation of his
investigation at a later time in the courtroom. Only then, could
the families of homicide victims find the answers that would
hopefully bring closure to the loss of a loved one.

John Wayne Gacy was a monster of a man who walked among us. Not
only the families of his victims; but citizens, especially those
who lived in the Chicago area expected that law enforcement had
done a complete and thorough investigation.

Dorsch knew Gacy and even had dinner in his home, the very home
where the bodies of so many of his victims were later found. After
Gacy's arrest, Dorsch responded to law enforcement requests to the
public for information about possible victims and locations.
However, that information was not welcomed and he was told "We
don't want any more bodies" The City of Chicago rushed to get the
case into court and obtain a conviction.

The authorities had ended their investigation with Gacy's arrest.
With a heartless disregard for the victim's families, known and
unknown, they not only buried Gacy but the truth along with him. At
first, Dorsch felt betrayed and alone but it was the stories and
the pleas for help that came from the families of some of Gacy's
victims that persuaded him to begin his own investigation. Now,
more than twenty years later he is able to reveal all that he has
learned. He will reveal never-before-know information that should
have been discovered in the weeks and months that followed Gacy's
arrest. However, that never happened because law enforcement and
certain people in government had decided that it was more important
to protect themselves than to get the answers for the families of
Gacy's victims.

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