Bryce Hall’s true feelings for Addison Rae exposed by lie detector - Dexerto

Bryce Hall’s true feelings for Addison Rae exposed by lie detector - Dexerto


Bryce Hall’s true feelings for Addison Rae exposed by lie detector - Dexerto

Posted: 07 Oct 2020 12:00 AM PDT

A small Twitch streamer became emotional after YouTube king Felix 'PewDiePie' Kjellberg donated to him. The personality thanked the star for bringing attention to his channel.

For many viewers around the world, PewDiePie has been the face of online entertainment over the last decade. The 30-year-old boasts 107 million YouTube subscribers in 2020.

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In September, the content creator went viral when he gave a small Twitch streamer his very first donation ever. And on October 15, the personality became emotional when the Swede donated to him for the second time.

pewdiepie donating to small twitch streamer
YouTube: PewDiePie
The YouTuber donated money to small streamers on Twitch.

Small streamer emotional after PewDiePie donates

On September 24, Twitch streamer BluWolfie123 was playing the wildly popular title Among Us when he received a donation from PewDiePie. Stunned and not sure if it was really the YouTuber, the personality exclaimed "That's f**king insane. What the hell! It's my first donation!"

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On October 15, the entertainer decided to donate to the streamer a second time. "This is the same [streamer] from last time. Hey, he grew in viewers, good for him!" Pewds said, as he donated another $100. Shocked, BluWolfie exclaimed, "What the f**k?!"

The Twitch streamer then asked if PewDiePie was watching him live, before thanking him: "Holy s**t, thank you! I wanted to say thank you. I commented on your last video, but it got buried. Yo, if you're there, I wanted to say thank you before. I wanted to thank you directly. If you're here, thank you! You're f**king awesome! I can not thank you enough."

(Topic starts at 5:00.)

Kjellberg thanked Wolfie for his kind words and then told viewers to check out the user's Twitch channel. "Check out BluWolfie, he's so wholesome," he said. The streamer further commented on the situation on his About page. "I got super lucky thanks to the Pewds and his community and I'm super happy."

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Pewds also gave away money to several other small channels on the Amazon-owned streaming platform – a few of whom cried over the popular YouTuber popping in to watch their broadcast.

This isn't the first time PewDiePie has donated money. For months, he has been donating all of his streaming subscriber money to various charities. In October, he sent a mental health charity $144k.

New lie detector looks in your eyes to see if you're telling the truth - WTHR

Posted: 24 Feb 2020 12:00 AM PST

A former Indianapolis homicide detector is showing a new cost-effective and very accurate lie detector to police across the country.

INDIANAPOLIS (WTHR) - There's a new high-tech lie detector test that has been put it to the test by Eyewitness News.

It's called EyeDetect and it's nothing like the polygraph many of us have seen over the years.

Eyewitness News Crime Beat Reporter Steve Jefferson challenged two staffers here at Channel 13 to try to beat EyeDetect at the truth. Compared to a polygraph exam, EyeDetect is fast, cost-effective and very accurate when it comes to finding out if you're telling the truth.

WTHR promotions writer and producer Chauncey Baker agreed to see if he could beat EyeDetect. Lie detector examiner John Larkins instructed Chauncey to not be truthful about a number he chose between two and eight. Chauncey did not disclose the number he chose on purpose until after Larkin's revealed the test results.

"I wrote down five. But it also said I was contemplating 4 and 7 and I thought that is crazy, because that was my exact thought process," Baker said. "I am terrible at telling a lie anyway."

EyeDetect analyzes eye behavior using an infrared camera during a series of questions. The device is portable and looks like a regular carry-on piece of luggage.

Larkins, a retired Indianapolis homicide detective, believes EyeDetect can help solve some of the city's violent crimes. He spent more than 20 years as part of the Homicide Division at the Indianapolis Police Department before it merged with the Marion County Sheriff's Department. Larkins' law enforcement career coincides with some of IPD's top homicide investigators like Michael Crook, Roy West and William Reardon to name a few.

Larkins travels the U.S. teaching other law enforcement experts how EyeDetect works. There are two law enforcement agencies in Georgia already using EyeDetect, according to Larkins.

He strongly believes the new technology could help investigators across the country trying to solve cases especially those involving violent crimes like murder.

"There are so many families out here right now that want closure to so many homicides and so much crime," said Larkins.

Although lie detection results are not admissible in court, Larkins calls EyeDetect's accuracy amazing compared to polygraphs. Polygraph results can include a final reading of inconclusive, but EyeDetect results do not require any human interpretation based on how it scores the examinee.

"It is extremely accurate. It is 90% accurate," Larkins said.

Larkins also tested WTHR.com digital desk editor Camille Hayes, known as the most honest person in the newsroom. Camille was also asked to choose a number and keep it secret from Larkins.

She described the EyeDetect like some of the computer tests with true and false questions she took in college. Camille concentrated on the questions and when it came to not being truthful about the number between two and eight, she tried to convince the device she was telling the truth.

"I felt like I was more in control than a regular person who would be telling a lie, but it still caught me," she said.

When it comes to finding the truth, Larkins told Eyewitness News in addition to police, there are others who have contacted him about EyeDetect.

"I have had girlfriends bringing in boyfriends, I've had wives and husbands tested for infidelity," said Larkins, "and that is one of the busiest times for us, too."

Larkins believes EyeDetect is the way to go for people who say they've been falsely accused and want to prove their innocence. The device can help exonerate the innocent based on its high accuracy level.

Larkins keeps up with the crime trends in Indiana, although he and his family resides in Georgia right now. He calls the crime trend in Indianapolis heartbreaking, saying it has left him wanting to help. So after investigating homicides for more than 20 years in Indianapolis, When John Larkins moves back to the Circle City he's considering offering EyeDetect for free to victims' families to help with closure.

In the meantime, he hopes law enforcement agencies around the country take advantage of the new technology to help investigate and solve crimes.

Netflix's chilling true story of evil dad Chris Watts slaughtered wife and daughters - Mirror Online

Posted: 16 Oct 2020 12:06 PM PDT

Sensing her marriage to the man of her dreams was in trouble, there was nothing pregnant mum Shanann Watts would not do to get it back on track.

Though juggling a well-paid new job that took her away from Chris and their two young daughters, she would spend hours planning romantic breaks.

Carrying their first son, she was still deeply in love with the man she had married in November 2012.

Amid their struggles, which included filing for bankruptcy, she texted him: "I miss and love you so much. I am still in shock that we are having a little boy. I am so excited and happy."

Weeks later, on August 13, 2018, when a colleague dropped her at home following a business trip, it was the last time anyone would see her alive.

The next day, she and her daughters Bella and Celeste were reported missing.

Chris with wife Shanann Watts, 34, and two daughters, four-year-old Bella and three-year-old Celeste

Her husband was appearing on local news, pleading for his family's return.

But Watts, then 33, already knew he would never see his family again.

Hours earlier he had brutally strangled his pregnant wife.

As he dragged her body down the stairs, the couple's four-year-old daughter, Bella, asked her dad: "What is wrong with Mommy?"

After he laid Shanann in the footwell of his truck, he loaded Bella and Celeste, three, into the back seat and drove them to an oil site owned by his employers.

There, he used a blanket to smother his youngest daughter, who was nicknamed Cece, and dropped her in an oil tank.

He did the same to her sister.

"Is the same thing gonna happen to me as Cece?" Bella asked before she died, Watts later confessed.

The site where killer Chris stashed his family's bodies

Devastated family, friends and neighbours watched as the man they knew as a handsome, loving husband and father was arrested and charged with murder.

The harrowing case is told in a Netflix documentary by British director Jenny Popplewell.

Unusually, the film does not use interviews to tell the story.

American Murder: The Family Next Door uses social media posts and videos by Shanann along with text messages, police and news footage, all with her family's blessing.

The 83-minute documentary begins with Facebook footage showing the family playing happily together.

Shanann introduces herself and the children before gushing about Chris.

It then cuts to the moment she returns home, unaware her husband was about to kill her. Shanann, 34, was filmed by the doorbell camera at her home in Fredrick, Colorado, after getting out of her friend's car at 1.48am.

The moment Chris Watts confesses to his dad he murdered his wife
Chris Watts is serving five life sentences and will spend the rest of his life behind bars for the murder of his wife and two daughters

The footage shows her colleague waiting until the 15 weeks-pregnant mum is inside her five-bedroomed house before driving away.

Shanann's disappearance was first reported by Nickole Atkinson, the friend who dropped her off 12 hours earlier.

Nickole was worried when Shanann missed a doctor's appointment that day, saying: "She was going to get to hear the baby's heartbeat."

On the day of Shanann's disappearance, Nickole also remembered going to talk to Watts and being struck by his failure to give a detailed explanation of his wife's whereabouts.

He said she had gone to meet a friend but was unable to give a name.

As news of the disappearance spread, oil-field operator Watts spoke from his doorstep to news crews.

He said, as police officers searched the house: "In my heart, I believe she is somewhere, and I hope she is safe."

The moment Chris Watts returned home from burying his wife and disposing of his daughters' bodies in an oil tank

The illusion held up for a day or so, at least on TV, but investigators were immediately suspicious after finding Shanann's purse and keys still in the house. A day after Shanann's disappearance, Watts' colleague Nichol Kessinger contacted police after seeing him on the news.

She told investigators she had been dating him for several weeks.

She had been under the impression he was finalising his divorce and was moving out with his daughters.

"He lied about everything," Kessinger later said.

Another source of tension in Chris's life was Shanann's feud with his mother Cindy, sparked when Cindy gave allergy sufferer Cece ice cream containing nuts.

When a friend later asked Watts about the fallout, he told them he was "done with Shanann". So between his mistress and these family tensions, it was clear Watts wanted to start a new life.

The last sighting of Shanann before she was murdered
Chris and Shanann on their wedding day

Attempting to clear his name, Watts agreed to a lie detector test.

His plan backfired terribly.

He scored minus 18 on a test where anything below minus 4 is considered an indicator of dishonesty.

At times, Watts even referred to his daughters in the past tense, though at that stage the police investigation was still treating them as missing.

Watts then changed his story completely. He claimed he had seen his wife strangling Celeste via the baby monitor, with a lifeless Bella lying on the bed.

He told police he then strangled Shanann in a vengeful rage before disposing of all three bodies.

When he changed his story for a final time, it was to confess to all three of the vicious murders.

Evil Chris and his daughters

He explained that he and Shanann had got into a heated conversation on the night of her death. When he told her he wanted a divorce, he said, she told him he would never see the
children again – so he murdered her.

In November, he pleaded guilty to nine charges including murder, the unlawful termination of a pregnancy and tampering with a dead body.

He was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole.

In a sick twist to his tale, Watts now gets mailbags full of fan letters in prison, from women who believe he is somehow the "victim" in the case.

In court Shanann's father, Frank Rzucek, said: "I trusted you to take care of them, not kill them.

"And they also trusted you. You heartless monster. You have to live with this vision every day of your life, and I hope you see it every time you close your eyes at night."

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