Criminal Lawyer Reacts to Craziest Interrogation Moments Of ALL TIME..

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Published 2023-10-02
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Criminal Lawyer Bruce Rivers Reacts to Taylor Schabusiness Sentenced to LIFE in PRISON

Linktree: linktr.ee/clrbrucerivers

Original Video: youtube.com/watchv=bjLHKWdzbtI&t=902s

Producer: Michael Rivers
Instagram: @Michaelhrivers

Instagram: @CLRBruceRivers
Twitter: @BruceRiversCLR

Intro Song by Jaylap from CRAM
CRAM Soundcloud: soundcloud.com/xxcramxx
Instagram: @jaylapp


You can find Bruce Rivers on Facebook here:
www.facebook.com/RiversLawOffice/

Business Inquiries: [email protected]
Rivers Law Firm, P.A., www.riverslawyers.com/

All Comments (21)
  • @BirdGang6
    You don’t need a medical degree to know that the second guy wasn’t medically fit to answer questions. Knowing that this kid lost his life due to this is disgusting
  • @TheClumsyMUA
    I don’t think any video has ever made me more uncomfortable than this video of Ryan. Absolutely heartbreaking.
  • @rnangel69
    I'm an RN, 15 years, and it was painful to watch how Ryan was treated..he was showing blatant signs of neurological decompensation..it would have been so easy to just bring him to the ER for an evaluation..and by the way I now work in a jail after 15 years in critical care..and treating people with dignity doesn't mean you're "soft" on crime...
  • That cop needs to be in prison for so much longer. What a joke of a human
  • The Ryan Waller case is so infuriating and heartbreaking, I almost turned this off when I saw it was being featured. This poor kid lost his girlfriend, FINALLY got medical care, and eventually succumbed to his injuries which was totally preventable, by all medical accounts. I hope that cop can't live with himself. He deserves no sympathy for his mishandling of this young man's life.
  • @jeannelipham2583
    My husband fell out of our attic and was unconscious for a few seconds. He wouldn't go to the ER, but I made him promise to see his GP the next morning, first thing. He ad an MRI and it showed everything was okay. Six weeks later, when he came home from work, I saw he was dragging his foot. I made him to back to his GP the next day. When he came home, he said he had an another MRI and they would call in the morning with the results. He called me at work and told me to meet him at a neurological surgeon's office because he had to have emergency brain surgery. I left work and got to the surgeon's office before he did. When he got there, the surgeon was talking to us and my husband wanted to know if we could go home to get his car home. The surgeon was dumbfounded. "You *DROVE* here?!?! No, you cannot go home, you are going across the street (the hospital was across the street) and we are doing brain surgery NOW. When he fell out of the attic, it started a very slow bleed. By the time he saw the brain surgeon, he had a massive subdural hematoma. One side of his brain had been pushed into the other side of his brain. Half of his skull was literally empty of brain matter. The doctor couldn't believe my husband was even alive, never mind working and driving. We were very lucky as the surgeon had helped develop the particular surgery my husband needed. He did tell me that once this surgery was done, he couldn't predict how my husband's brain would react. He wanted me to be aware it could be fatal or catastrophic as in, vegetative state, disabled, unable to use his bowels, paralyzed etc. When it was over, he told me I could go see my husband. I expected him to be on a ventilator and out. When I walked in the room, he was surrounded by giggling nurses. He was sitting up and flirting and joking with them. That's my boy! He is good looking, and is a hit with the ladies. But he has never had an affair. That could be because I told him before we married that if he ever had an affair, I would not divorce him, but I would make him wish he had stayed with his ex-wife, terrifying thought, indeed! Anyway, that was around twenty-five years ago and he is fine.
  • @tiffanypitts2668
    I have a traumatic brain injury, I've lived with this for 18 years. What the lawyer is saying in this video is absolutely 100% true. It's very frustrating I have to explain myself more than one time.
  • The video about Ryan mixed up a small detail but makes it all the more horrific. Ryan hadn't been found after a few hours, he was found after over two days. For two days he had been struggling to survive right next to his girlfriends dead body, his brain injury made him believe that she was just asleep. When he finds out shes dead in the interrogation its heartbreaking. RIP Ryan
  • @hannahreed2451
    Everytime I watch Ryan’s interrogation I feel physically sick. It doesn’t matter if the cop believed him or not, this man clearly has an injury and he’s claiming he was shot…there is absolutely no excuse to deny him medical attention. He was so ready to be “that guy” who solved the case that he sacrificed his morals and empathy to do so. He knew Ryan needed medical attention and intentionally denied him his right for almost a hour in the hopes he would just confess. It’s lazy detective work, and I hope he suffers from living with this guilt for the rest of his life.
  • Ryan's situation breaks my heart. He's exhibiting all the classic signs of a head injury. Irritability, confusion, slurred speech and wanting to go to sleep. Not to mention the blatant appearance of his eye. That detective should have sent him to the ER before he even spoke a word to him.
  • @SuperSpud01
    Engineer here. Your point on the humbling experience of college is something I experienced too. I finished my 4 year degree feeling less well equipped than when I started. That ego check is something I think everyone should go through.
  • @joko09010
    The story of Ryan Waller is so tragic. The interrogation is just insane. So sad.
  • @penilescab
    16:10 "I just want to go to sleep" paired with the child-like inflections in his voice like he is just annoyed and genuinely wants to go night-night would immediately make me think they're in medical shock. especially with the obvious head injury. it's unacceptable that they didn't get medical care before interrogation
  • @kimlerner389
    As one of the posters said, it's not lack of education, it's lack of empathy. Absolutely despicable.
  • @KathyAnne28
    Ryan's situation is appalling to me. It just screams of callousness from overexposure due to their jobs but the man is wanting to go to sleep, has obvious injuries and bruising to his face with the same weapon his girlfriend was just murdered with. As someone in the medical field, it's disgusting and i hope he sued the HELL out of that department.
  • @KcRose
    Ryan who got shot in the eye also sat in a police car for HOURS before the interrogation!! My deepest sympathies to his family and the family of Heather, who he did not shoot. I think it was apparent to 99.9% of us watching this that there was something terribly wrong with Ryan and he was in serious need of medical care. Tragic..
  • @dreamchaser_4813
    That cop putting that kid through that is absolutely disgusting. Anyone with ANY SHRED of common sense should be able to tell he is seriously injured and needs medical attention urgently. I am so beyond disgusted by this, it’s making me sick.
  • @cicada2022
    Poor Ryan! He was not making any sense at all. I had a concussion & had to take cognitive therapy. My speech slurred. I sounded drunk in the beginning of recovery. I felt mentally challenged at times & looked perfectly normal. It was extremely frustrating. I could not imagine being interrogated for 4 hours with two bullets in my eye. 😔 RIP Ryan. 🕊
  • @GEOMETRICINK
    Listening to that innocent kid groaning in pain just makes my stomach turn. Those cops were negligent. Not believing he was shot in the eye, with the amount of obvious damage to his face is just sickening.