COULD Shan’ann have killed her children? What do the stats say?

The question of whether Shan’ann COULD have killed her own children will be at the center of the defense case in the Chris Watts trial. Whatever the merits of this case, and in spite of what appears likely, in court a case is only as strong as what can be proven in court.

As much as we’d like to believe a parent killing their child [born or unborn] is monstrous and complete anathema to society, the reality is it’s not only common, it’s an every day occurrence around the world.

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About two decades ago, the stats from a UN census showed that in a single year approximately 90 million fetuses or small infants were aborted/murdered throughout Asia. This number isn’t pertinently about mother’s killing their offspring per se, but rather the pre-selection of female first-born children for killing.  The abortion-of-girls-scourge is so serious in South Korea, women have to be actively recruited to immigrate to the country because of the mismatch between male and female adults in that country.

What this proves is that cultural incentives [in this case in favor of male first borns] can completely dominate the psychology of adults in terms of their offspring. How the family appears is thus mercilessly enforced within certain cultural and/or socioecomomic constructs.

Child Murder by Mothers: Patterns and Prevention is a peer reviewed [if somewhat dated] research paper published in the US National Library of Medicine. This study pertinently focuses on the mother’s role in the murder of infants. The research paper’s conclusions read as follows:

A mother’s motive for filicide may be altruistic, acutely psychotic, or due to fatal maltreatment, unwanted child, or spouse revenge. In addition, many mothers who do not attempt filicide experience thoughts of harming their child. Maternal filicide motives provide a framework for approaching filicide prevention. Suicidality, psychosis and depression elevate risk, as does a history of child abuse. Mentally ill filicidal mothers have very different risk profiles than mothers who fatally batter their children. Prevention is difficult, because many risk factors, such as maternal depression and social disadvantage, are common among non-filicidal mothers.

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In Wikipedia’s introduction to the concept, the final sentences reads, troublingly:

In many past societies, certain forms of infanticide were considered permissible…

But further exploration on the topic reveals all-too-common economic and practical imperatives, both in humans and the animal kingdom. In many societies, including progressive Japan, having twins was considered bad luck, or a taboo, and one or both children were often killed to restore the fates.

Marvin Harris estimated that among Paleolithic hunters 23–50% of newborn children were killed. He argued that the goal was to preserve the 0.001% population growth of that time…A frequent method of infanticide in ancient Europe and Asia was simply to abandon the infant, leaving it to die by exposure (i.e. hypothermia, hunger, thirst, or animal attack).

In at least one island in Oceania, infanticide was carried out until the 20th century by suffocating the infant,while in pre-Columbian Mesoamerica and in the Inca Empire it was carried out by sacrifice…In Kamchatka, babies were killed and thrown to the dogs. American explorer George Kennan noted that among the Koryaks, a Mongoloid people of north-eastern Siberia, infanticide was still common in the nineteenth century. One of a pair of twins was always sacrificed.

According to studies carried out by Kyoto University in non-human primates, including certain types of gorillas and chimpanzees, several conditions favor the tendency to infanticide in some species (to be performed only by males), among them are…the absence of nest construction…

In Eskimo societies, children born in winter were killed by smashing their heads with a rock, or a block of ice, stuffing grass into the baby’s mouth or tossing them into the sea. Research differs, but infanticide among the Inuit was believed to reach as high as 80% amongst some groups.

We can see that though the idea is taboo in Western society, the practice remains fairly common in some present societies too, including those referred to above.

There is a world of difference between killing an infant in a bad season, so to speak, and the wiping out of an entire family – unborn Niko, Celeste, Bella and the children’s mother Shan’ann. No matter how common the killing of a single child is, the annihilation of a family by the head of the household [as is being alleged here] is exceedingly exceedingly rare.

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In terms of the particulars of the Watts case, we must also draw a distinction here between infanticide and filicide. I’m not sure that infanticide is the correct definition to use in the Watts case, from the defense case perspective. This is because, strictly speaking, the ages of Bella [4]  and Celeste [3] place them outside the strict definition. An infant is up to 1 year of age. But the statistics around filicide are nevertheless similar to those of infanticide, until a particular inflection point.

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First the definition:

Filicide is the deliberate act of a parent killing their own child. The word filicide derives from the Latin words filius meaning “son” or filia meaning daughter, and the suffix -cide meaning to kill, murder, or cause death.

“Filicide” may refer both to the parent who killed his or her child, as well as to the criminal act that the parent committed.

Now the inflection point. At what age do the statistics show fathers to be the more likely killers of their children?

A 1999 United States Department of Justice study concluded that between 1976 and 1997 in the United States, mothers were responsible for a higher share of children killed during infancy, while fathers were more likely to have been responsible for the murders of children aged eight or older.

Furthermore, 52% of the children killed by their mothers (maternal filicide) were male, while 57% of the children killed by their fathers (paternal filicide) were male. Parents were responsible for 61% of child murders under the age of five. Sometimes, there is a combination of murder and suicide in filicide cases. On average, according to FBI statistics, 450 children are murdered by their parents each year in the United States.

Strangely, in America the trend is the reverse to that in Asia. Male children are slightly more likely to be killed by their mothers, and almost two thirds more likely to be killed by their fathers. Although the data is fairly stale, the preliminary evidence from a purely statistical approach is that fathers are significantly less likely to kill their own children than their mothers, especially when they’re female.

Just as in infanticide, spousal revenge is also a potential factor in filicide. Whether these numbers or trends are fielded in court by Chris Watts’ defense team or not, what remains clear is that the reverse is also true. If the case is made that one parent killed their children out of spousal revenge, the possibility exists that the other parent could just as easily be culpable of the same accusation. What really has to be shown is which spouse had the bigger bone to pick with the other, and ultimately, if it was revenge, revenge for what? 

 

Chris Watts: What possibilities exist for his Defense Case?

“It’s too early for conjecture.” “Wait for the case to be heard in court.” “We’re missing key evidence so we can’t possibly know what happened…”  These are some of the responses to an analysis of the case. If you’re Chris Watts’ defense team, then your job is going to be conjecture. Your job is going to be collecting evidence and drafting a reasonable-as-possible version to field in court. What might that entail?

As it happens, when you’re in the business of true crime [as I am] then it’s also your job to figure out these cases. To apply your mind from a lawyer’s perspective, from the cop’s perspective, from a narrative perspective [as narrator], and from the perspective of the media impact on everything. Someone writing a book about a case is similar to the lawyer’s perspective in that one has to present a theory about what happened. In layman’s terms – you have to tell a story that integrates all the evidence and adds up.

A narrative and what the media say isn’t the same thing. The media highlight fragments here, and fragments there, and basically play the role of passing on information. For this reason the media can become a PR vehicle for a particular angle in a case, especially high profile cases. Media that doesn’t serve an agenda in this regard isn’t doing its job, but it’s important to bear this in mind.

Usually one can quickly identify particular journalists who trumpet a particular narrative. Some become useful if not vital tools for the defense case. We’re not quite there yet with this case, but it’s early. We’re getting there.

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Before drilling down into the possibilities of the defense case, it’s worth noting what the value is in thinking about a case before it goes to trial. The value in thinking about something – that’s the value. We can make up our own minds, we can listen and look for information. And we can think about it. When the trial unfolds, we can and should hold the court accountable to uphold the law, and to pay attention to and care about the details of a case just as we do. In other words, when we’re discerning about a particular set of legal circumstances, we hold the justice system to a high standard.

It would be good if we could do so in general, rather than only when a high-profile crime comes around, but paying attention to a crime and how its dealt with is always better than paying no mind whatsoever.

Those interested in the Watts case – everyone – ought to be encouraged to think about it. To personalise it. To try to understand it. And most important, to learn from it.

Now, without further ado, let’s see what the defense are dealing with, and what’s likely to play out in the Weld County Court.

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  1. It has been confirmed, of course, but the Chris Watts case is looking more and more like it’s headed to being heard as a death penalty case. For reference, Jodi Arias, and Casey Anthony were both tried in death penalty hearings in cases that looked and felt like slam dunks. Neither Jodi nor Casey were sentenced to death, and Casey was famously acquitted.  The O.J. Simpson case – involving double murder, premeditated – was also a candidate for a death penalty trial. The district attorney decided not to set the bar that high, and OJ still beat the charges. So not having a death penalty trial is no guarantee of success either. In the Scott Peterson case, he was found guilty and sentenced to death. That was on March 16, 2005. Thirteen years later, Scott Peterson is still around, and still appealing his case.
  2. Can he afford a decent defense lawyer? Top defense lawyers don’t come cheap, but that doesn’t mean Chris Watts won’t be able to afford one, regardless of whether his finances are hanging by a thread or not. Steven Avery and Damien Echols of the West Memphis Three were all in far worse shape financially than Chris Watts, and both were able to attract not only top defense lawyers, but some of the best and brightest defense teams in the country. The same applied to Casey Anthony. Jose Baez wasn’t in it just for blow jobs, in his book he describes the “priceless” marketing involved in simply being associated with the country’s most high-profile defense case. This case promises to be that too.
  3. What will Chris plead? Guilty or not guilty? Don’t be too surprised if he pleads not guilty, arguing that this was a case of justifiable homicide.
  4. Accidental death? It’s not unusual for the defense narrative to evolve. The Casey Anthony and Jodi Arias trials are classic examples of a flip-flopping defense. A flip-flopping defense isn’t good, but that doesn’t mean it can’t or won’t create reasonable doubt. Strangely though, the same standard [or lack of] doesn’t apply to the prosecution side of things. Any flip-flopping from a prosecutor makes his case seem frivolous and unfairly targeted – and thus unfair.
  5. Defense assets. What are the main assets, the best cards the Watts defense have to play [or to hold]? In the same way that the survivor knows best what the true family and relationship dynamics are, he’s also in the best position to reveal the stuff that makes him look good. We saw the relationship dynamic memorably contested in the OJ Simpson case, but it’s pretty standard in criminal cases. The defendant is going to field his best case why he’s a nice guy and a loving family, and why Shan’ann’s not. Soon the court will be left wondering – wow, if this family was so happy, how’d everyone end up dead? The Henri van Breda case is another classic example of the survivor speaking on everyone’s behalf, telling the court what a normal, loving family they all were [including the triple axe murdering accused of course]. Another big asset in Chris Watt’s pocket is his inside knowledge of the house and the work site. He knows family dynamic, he knows the crime scenes, he knows the home, he knows what evidence could incriminate but the prosecutors don’t. They have to play catch up.
  6. The biggest hurdle. At this stage it may be too early to say. One could argue that the video surveillance footage showing him leaving, and no one else, is irrefutable. We’ve seen similar footage in, for example, the Zahau case. In the Jodi Arias case a camera’s metadata was incredibly damning, but incredibly, still not sufficient on its own to condemn Jodi. The confession may also be a huge hurdle, but as we saw in the Amanda Knox case, if it can be shown to have been made under any kind of duress, or violating any protocols, it can be thrown out.  The same applies to the interview given by Watts himself on the morning of August 14. This statement could be argued prejudiced Watts his right to a fair trial, irrespective of whether he consented to do the interview voluntarily. All of Chris Watts’ lies, like Casey Anthony’s, don’t necessarily amount to a strong case for the prosecution. The defense could conceivably shrug it off and say, he was dishonest, it was foolish, it was self-preservation, he was emotionally compromised.
  7. Biggest asset. #5 touched on a few assets, but chief among them is:

A. Shan’ann’s emotional state of mind. If the defense can prove that Shan’ann was overwrought, exhausted, angry, angry, vindictive, and vengeful because of the affair, and perhaps because of the difficulties of her job, then she can be cast as the “real” enemy in this story. She’s the villain of the tale. Jodi Arias did this to devastating effect during her murder trial, and arguably, Casey Anthony did an even better job accusing a phantom nanny, her father, her brother as well as implicating a utility worker.

B. While sketching a portrait of Shan’ann as unhinged, emotional, even suicidal, Chris Watts can contrast himself [with some basis in fact] as the perfect husband, and a loving father. In this respect, Shan’ann’s own endorsement on Facebook will likely come into play on his behalf. Oscar Pistorius did something similar in his criminal trial. 

8. Court TV? Will the case be broadcast live? The defense will argue against it, and it’s possible the court may not allow it. It’s a tough one. But Colorado courts seem to be fairly strict, and their policy towards the media thus far has been somewhat closed and conservative.

9. Who’s in his corner right now? At present [and subject to change and correction] Chris Watts’ defense team appear to comprise:

James Merson [Defense lawyer]

Richard Eikelenboom [Forensics expert and blood spatter analyst, worked on JonBenet Ramsey case]

Megan Ring [Public Defender]

The fact that a woman appears to be involved in Chris Watts’ defense will be good for the so-called “optics” of the trial. Also relevant to the defense side of things, though not necessarily integral to it is Kathryn Herold [Deputy State public defender].

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Chris Watts may also have been given a prison diary to jot down notes by his defense team. The idea would be to use these notes in court to address issues such as state of mind, changes in state of mind, and the evolving defense side of things.

The trial narrative is still a long, long road ahead for Chris Watts and trial watchers.

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CT Brown is at it again – this is a call to all genuine readers of true crime to report abuse on this troll reviewer

I’d hoped C.T Brown had moved on, but alas, two more troll reviews on the same day today, one for TWO FACE and the other for Treachery. C.T Brown also reviewed a third book on the same day. This brings the number of reviews from C.T. Brown targeting my books to 21.

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C.T. Brown also has a UK account, and there are more troll reviews there too. Please report this reviewer. Not one of these reviews for my books are verified reads either.

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Blueprint and Interior of Watts Home

The Watts home is model type MLS®# 1846125. The same model can be viewed at this link with interactive map and photos. Local realtors describe the model as “the largest floor plan in the neighborbood in the highly desirable Wyndham Hill.”

It offers a main floor bedroom/office complete with beautiful shelves and desk, formal dining, formal living room, family room, gas fireplace & builtin off the large kitchen with upgraded cabinets and island. Appliances are 5 yrs new & include a double oven for holiday baking! From the kitchen/family room area, walk out to your beautiful wrap around trek deck so you can enjoy the mountain views! On the 2nd level you’ll find a large loft and 4 bedrooms, including a spacious five piece Master Suite! Your laundry is also conveniently located upstairs and yes, the high end washer and dryer stay! That is not all…head to the basement for an incredible Man Cave entertainment area, complete with a pool table, wet bar with bar stools, home theater room with 120″ HD screen, stadium seating & dimmer lighting! Just move in & enjoy! HURRY! Fullscreen capture 20180922 003310

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The schematics below are unfortunately barely large enough to make out, and probably not 100% accurate either. My sister is an architect. I will try to get a rough draft of the ground floor and upstairs from her, assuming she has time available for a side job.

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Crime Scene at 2825 Saratoga Trail?

The real mystery in this case isn’t what happened at CERVI 319, it’s the crime scene at 2825 Saratoga Trail. That’s where all three victims [and the unborn child] were murdered, wasn’t it? This will also be the epicenter of the defense case. What did Chris do versus what does he say Shan’ann did? Where did the actual homicides play out? In the house or outside in the real world?

She’s no longer here to defend herself, so Chris Watts could field any plausible story in court, roll the dice and hope for a good outcome for himself.

What does he say Shan’ann did?

In a recent episode on HLN Ashleigh Banfied describes potential breakthrough evidence regarding the Apple watches, and their ability to “track” their users. Banfield suggests that if Chris Watts went up or downstairs at a particular time, the watch will confirm – or contradict that.

While it’s an interesting line of inquiry and fairly new to true crime, in legal terms it’s probably neither here nor there. In his affidavit he doesn’t specify when Shan’ann strangled the two girls. He doesn’t specify when he went downstairs either.

If Chris Watts went up or downstairs, or if Shan’ann did, well, they both lived there didn’t they? So whether the recording [if there is one] is of any incriminating movement, the handy counter is that the defendant lived in the crime scene, so obviously he or she moved from A to B – even a few times – for whatever reason. Ditto fingerprints, DNA and other evidence.

Where murderers actually live in their crime scenes, and where there are multiple victims and multiple murderers [or the suggestion of the latter], the case suddenly becomes far more complex. How does one know when evidence is evidence or just random debris from ordinary domestic comings and goings?

A classic example of just how unfathomable a homicide inside a large house can be, is the still officially unsolved Ramsey case. Not only did the sheer volume of evidence overwhelm the investigation, but the size and scale of the crime scene did too. More than 20 years later we’re still not 100% sure of the basics in the Ramsey case – was the murder weapon a torch or a golf club, a softball bat or a hammer? We’d have some handle on at least this aspect if we knew where in that damn house the crime was executed, and by whom.

The Ramsey mansion, 749 15th Street in Boulder, was a four story labyrinth.  2825 Saratoga Trail has the makings of that too. Instead of the basement, in the Watts case there’s the labyrinth of CERVI 319 to distract us from Saratoga Trail.

If the basement was meant to distract the investigation from somewhere else in the house [or someone else], what are we being distracted and distanced from in the Watts case – by the CERVI 319 site?

What are we really dealing with here, legally speaking?

This is a case that involves one murderer and three victims [plus Niko], or two murderers, murderer A with one victim and crime scene [plus Niko], and murderer B with two victims and crime scene/s.

In theory, if Shan’ann did kill her two living children, Chris might claim she killed her unborn child as well. Perhaps she intended to kill herself too, in his argument? He might argue that he was trying to save her as she did whatever she did to kill the unborn child, and accidentally killed her. See how complicated it’s becoming?

So how do we figure it out? True Crime Intertextuality.

Since this is a crowded crime scene with four people plus an unborn child inside it, we can exclude other crime scenes where there was a sparring match between a single murderer and a single victim.

Crime scenes that aren’t a match are Oscar Pistorius and Jodi Arias. But there are at least three reference cases that reveal the legal complexity we’ll be dealing with in the Watts case.   Let’s deal briefly with just one.

Amanda Knox.

If you want to skip through this section, it ends after the italicized text.

In the clip below, Knox defends herself by saying “my DNA is not there”. Where’s there? A few seconds after saying “my DNA is not there” she’s saying “well of course our DNA was there, we lived there…” And then, moments later: “But I’m not there, and that proves my innocence.”

See the problem?

Now regardless whether we believe Amanda Knox is guilty or not, this was a crime with an unknown number of assailants inside her little home in Perugia. Even if we’re adamant that that’s not true, let’s go back to the case as it was before it went to trial. There were three suspects. There was uncertainty if it was one, two, or all three involved.

Even so, it should have been a pretty open and shut case, right?

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In a case with a crime scene as small as the cottage on Via della Pergola, it’s tempting to see it as a slam dunk. But as soon as the number of prime suspects increases, that automatically increases the size of the crime scene, not just doubling it in size, or tripling it, but inflating it by orders of magnitude.

Instead of looking for evidence for a single specific person, there are now multiple layers of evidence, each set, each criminal layer, must be sequestrated from everyone else’s and tied directly to the suspect. For normal criminal cases there’s just one set of criminal data. In a case like this there were three. Again, it’s not just how the individual layers tie in with the victim, but how do the perpetrators tie in to one another?

How does A tie into B and A tie into C. Also, from B’s lawyer’s perspective, how does B tie in A and C. And then the same for C.  Then there’s also the defense lawyer’s counters to how others say the other parties knew each other…

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When you have an intruder, this process is easier. When you have a boyfriend, as Knox did with Raffaele Sollecito, suddenly the evidence has to be cross-referenced and excluded from other random visits. And when you have the person who lives there, it’s most complicated of all, because what evidence matters and what doesn’t?

An additional dimension that adds to the complexity is that by separating the evidence of two or more individuals from themselves inter alia, one is effectively isolating their narratives. And yet criminals and their victims, or criminals in concert, are never operating in a vacuum.

The dynamic between murderer and victim, or the murderers and their victims, is the key to unlocking the crime scene, and solving the case. So by the very process of isolating evidence, we tend to do the thing that hurts our intuitive analysis the most – we isolate the individual from the reality they experienced while living there.

What was Chris Watts’ reality inside that house? That’s the real crime scene, and it goes beyond the time and space constraints of the crime scene itself, if that makes sense.

In my own analysis of the Knox case one of my arguments was to say: where does the crime scene begin in this case, and where does it end? It’s an exceedingly simple question, but the boundaries of crime scenes are often impossible to establish in fact, especially when there are digital breadcrumbs to follow, social media, cellphone data, social obligations etc.

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But the issue remains, besides all that, in the pure physical dimension, where is the crime scene? Where does it begin? Where does it end?

In my latest book on the Ramsey case Black Star Over Bethlehem III, I deal with this question directly. Where in that labyrinth on 15th Street was the Ground Zero of the crime scene? 

The Ramsey case is a good analogy for a crime scene that ought not to extend beyond the walls, ceiling and basement of the Ramsey residence. And physically that’s true. Whatever happened, probably happened inside the house. 

But the Ransom Note breaks that virtual barrier, and the child beauty queen pageantry does so, in a way, as well. If you believe the Ransom Note is real, or that the pageantry attracted an infinite number of pedophiles, then suddenly a limited crime scene becomes infinitely complex, and perhaps that was the idea.

In the Knox case, the Ransom Note comes via the allegation of a break in. This is important, because it means someone who doesn’t live there enters the scene and that’s the explanation for the murder. Now instead of looking at the obvious suspect, the obvious suspect becomes the clearly pointed out intruder. It has to be him!

 

How do we apply this to the Watts case? Well, the Ramsey case feels like it doesn’t involve an intruder. But if we throw away the Ransom Note as a fabrication, then we’re faced with an inescapable conclusion – that something went wrong late on Christmas Night, and led to the little girl’s murder by someone who lived there.

But even if that’s true, then someone living in the house went from being a trustworthy companion and blood relative to an intruder [and then back to being a trusted member of the family]. How does that happen?

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Well, that’s the real question, and that’s the real mystery in this case. This is the stuff that won’t be revealed at the crime scene, in part because that stuff is the secret reason the crime happened in the first place.

In the Watts case there seems to be no question of an intruder but there is. There is an intruder at 2825 Saratoga Trail. It’s the mistress and the effect she had on Chris Watts’ heart. Think about what impact adultery has on a marriage, on a pregnant wife. It absolutely is an intrusion.

And where is she now? Has she been visiting him in jail? Are they both lovelorn, and desperately missing each other? Does she have any feelings of guilt? The heart is the real crime scene.

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TWO FACE is available on Amazon Kindle at this link.

 

Dr OZ gets into shit for promoting the shit that’s in THRIVE

DR OZ: This little bean has scientists saying they’ve found the magic weight-loss cure for every body type.

“Do you believe there’s a magic weight-loss cure out there…”

DR OZ [Stuttering]: Ah-eh-uh…the word ma-mag… 

According to a People magazine article from June 20, 2014:

Dr. Mehmet Oz recently got a dose of tough medicine after being publicly reprimanded on Capitol Hill for spotlighting certain dietary supplements.

Appearing before senators on Tuesday to testify about the marketing behind a dietary supplement known as green bean coffee extract, Dr. Oz became the target of some harsh words from Sen. Claire McCaskill, chairwoman of the Subcommittee on Consumer Protection, who accused the daytime host of giving viewers “false hope” in products.

“I don’t get why you need to say this stuff when you know it’s not true,” McCaskill said. “When you have this amazing megaphone, why would you cheapen your show?”

Sen. McCaskill also called out Oz for endorsing FBCx, Forskolin, Garcinia cambogia and raspberry ketones as viable weight-loss supplements.

He countered by insisting that he is a “cheerleader” for the audience and his intent is to “engage viewers” with “flowery language.”

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Forskolin

What Dr. Oz says: In 2012, Oz called this herbal compound “lightning in a bottle. It’s a miracle flower to fight fats.” 
What we know: The foremost trial that supports the use of Forskolin in weight loss was sponsored by the Sabinsa Corporation – an herbal supplement manufacturer that boasts Forskolin as one of its products.

Garcinia cambogia

What Dr. Oz says: Also known as tamarind, “it may be the simple solution you’ve been looking for to bust your body fat for good,” he said about the small pumpkin-shaped fruit. 
What we know: There have been no large-scale trials suggesting it’s an effective weight loss supplement. “Garcinia seems to be more effective when there’s more concentrated exercise,” says Dr. Margolin, adding, “exercise across the board is always going to help weight loss.”

Raspberry ketones

What Dr. Oz says: He called this chemical found in red raspberries “the No. 1 miracle in a bottle to burn your fat.” 
What we know: Raspberry ketones have only been tested in animals; no study has officially been done on humans to support weight loss. 

Further Developments at the Chris Watts Crime Scene

The Colorado Bureau of Investigation has “developed possible bare foot impressions” from “items of evidence.” The items of evidence are not described in the motion, but Rourke does say they were collected at the scene where police found the bodies of 34-year-old Shanann Watts and her children, 4-year-old Bella and 3-year-old Celeste. – Times-Call, September 19, 2018

The scene described here is CERVI 319, the oil site where all three bodies were dumped. The details of the motion suggest that Chris Watts dumped the bodies without wearing protective footwear. This may mean he didn’t want to get incriminating substances on his clothing, or conversely, it was an endeavor not to leave incriminating boot or shoe prints behind.

The items of evidence [plural] could include:

– Access ladders

-Access Hatches

-Access tools

-Fence posts or perimeter metal posts

-Sections of the storage tank

-Pipe sections

According to the Times-Call newspaper:

An agent from CBI used a normal latent print process for nonporous items to develop the impressions, according to court documents. Latent prints are impressions created by rigid skin, found on fingers, palms and the soles of the feet. Nonporous surfaces would be those that do not absorb sweat, such as glass or metal, and thus can hold the prints for a long time. The prosecution also has filed a motion requesting prints of Watts’ palms and his fingerprints, as well as digital photographs of his hands.

Watts’ defense attorneys have objected to the request, saying that government requests for the defendant to provide evidence are “subject to constitutional limitations.”

What the latest evidence conjures is the impression of Chris Watts, just before dawn on Monday August 13th, energetically clambering over and scampering between Anadarko oil infrastructure –  bare foot – as he worked to dispose of his wife and children’s corpses.

Latest Review of TWO FACE

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I have not followed the news like I am now since Casey Anthony. This is so heart breaking. I’ll never understand humans.

*Shan’ann Watts doesn’t know it, but this is the last time she will see any of this again. It’s a one way road for her.*

This is a hard review for me to write. It is based on a real life tragedy and it made this read an emotional read.

“People who are two faced, usually forget which mask they are wearing at some point in their life.” – Anthony T. Hincks

This author has a remarkable way with his words. There are some great points in this novel, that I haven’t thought of and I have been following the story since it first aired on television…It scared the living crap out of me right now…just that, knowing it’s come to this…so soon…

This novel is basically a breakdown of the case and situations that has happened. I had many questions before, after reading this, I definitely have more…

*There’s a revealing snippet of reverse psychology going on right here.*

I do hope this author writes more on this story as there are more breaks in the case. It is limited because there aren’t many facts to go by. It is limited. But, the author did a good job writing it.

A question so many people want to know… no matter what excuse his mental mind thinks of, could ever make me understand how someone is capable of doing this to their family. He was her husband, the father of her children, Her provider, Her lover, Should have been their protector, not their KILLER.

*Why’d you do it? Why’d you kill your wife? Why kill your kids? *

In this novel you read about everything you have seen on news channels, facebook, etc.. This novel is worded better than any magazine clipping I have read, and hearing the authors input on certain situations was interesting to read.

*We’ll revisit the fabric and examine it, but now let’s drill down into the content of Shan’ann’s half hour spiel.*

I am going to end this review,. I’m not gonna add anymore parts further into this novel, I don’t want to ruin your interest in it. If you have been following this case like I have from the beginning then I think you should read this. This author pointed out some aspects, and will leave you wondering even more. He wrote a significant amount of details and dug deeper into videos and much more. I do hope as the case progresses he writes more. I would definitely read each book he writes on this case. I enjoyed his input on this tragic, heartbreaking case. It held my attention from beginning to end. I couldn’t stop reading once I started.

Original Review here.

Two Face is available for sale on Amazon.com at this link.

Two Face Chris Watts Updated

What did Chris Watts HATE about Shan’ann?

What did he hate the most about her? What did she hate most about him? What this question really addresses is not only the family dynamics, or the interpersonal dynamics between the husband and the wife in their marriage, but also just two individuals living under the same roof. What was Chris Watts like to live with? What was Shan’ann like – as a person?

What are the things that generally agitate people in a marriage, after a length of time together? What things would have specifically chafed at these two particular personalities?

To adequately answer these questions we have to know more about who Chris Watts is and was. Fortunately we get to have a little peek into that area thanks to Ashleigh Banfield’s recent interview with Richard Hodges, a former roommate and college classmate of Chris Watts.

Take a look.

On the surface, and bearing in mind Hodges last made contact with Watts in 2005, there’s an impression of a hard working kid who is also very hard on himself. He’s trying hard and working hard to elevate himself into some significance. He’s trying to become someone.

Skip to ten years later and Chris Watts is in Colorado in a picture-perfect house, with a picture-perfect wife and picture-perfect family. One has the impression this is what he always wanted – the picture-perfect side of things. This is significance. He’d spent a good fifteen years building himself up, and for that matter, so had Shan’ann. Both of them came from humble beginnings and both worked their asses off to build what they had by August 2018.

So if they had so much in common, what did Shan’ann do “wrong” in Chris Watts’ eyes?

Let’s examine that through 3 prisms. Firstly, the Scott Peterson case. Secondly, the particular circumstances of the Watts case. And thirdly, through my personal experience with someone involved in MLM.

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A. What did Chris Watts Scott Peterson HATE about Shan’ann Laci?

Like Shan’ann, Laci also saw Scott as a sort of trophy. She hero-worshiped him in public. She idolized him. Scott was part of her idea of a fairy tale. It’s not clear that that was the case so much behind closed doors.

If Scott murdered Laci, then clearly what was happening was the desire to believe in something that wasn’t true overpowering the reality. In other words, Laci was more in love with the idea of being in love, than with the actual person. The same was true with Shan’ann and Chris, wasn’t it?

And this idea is mirrored in the fantastic amount of fairy tale but ultimately fake happy snaps associated with the Watts case.

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B.  The circumstances of the Watts case

Chris was dedicated to what he was doing, so was Shan’ann. Chris was working hard. Shan’ann was working hard. So what was the thing wedging its way between them?

In my opinion it was primarily two things. Shan’ann was suffering from a serious auto-immune disease, and this made her into a particular kind of person with a particular psychology. Although it manifested in some ways positively [wanting to better herself, developing a fighting spirit], she may have overcompensated in the sense of becoming a perfectionist and a control freak. Managing her anxiety about her health ended up becoming managing her world, and everyone in it.

In the oft played clip where she tells Celeste in a singsong voice to say “hi” to the camera, when Celeste doesn’t, Shan’ann barks at her: “Say hi!”. How often was that merciless tone used behind closed doors, when the camera was off? Because it’s a tone that brooks no truck with dissent. It’s my way or the highway.

In Two Face I explore this aspect in a lot more detail, using another example from her social media to reinforce this impression of an always-on pushy, controlling, oppressive person.

There is definitely something more to this, because even her colleague, Nickole Atkinson, describes Shan’ann as OCD. Her scheduling alone describes a very anal attitude to time management, a key trait of the perfectionist, and OCD. Some folks on the Websleuths forum have also picked up on the same thing. Chris Watts may have put up with this throughout their six-year marriage, and all things being equal, he may have taken it on the chin, and on both cheeks. But all things weren’t equal, and they weren’t equal in a very key, and very crucial sense.

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C.  My personal experience with someone involved in MLM

We can’t prove – at this point – that Shan’ann wasn’t making the sort of money she claimed she was making. Until we have access to the forensic files and financial data, we have to resort to some extent to speculation. What we do know is that as recently as 2015 the couple were bankrupt. We also know that their money troubles were still with them in August 2018 – they had a date in court with the local homeowners association which proves this. So even without delving into the debits and credits, we know the Watts finances for reasons unknown were fucked.

What were those reasons? Was it because a third kid was on the way? The finances were already fucked before that happened. Was it because Chris Watts was spending the money, or not bringing the money in? We see that he was in a stable if relatively low paying job, but he was reliable and hard working, and doing double time for Shan’ann in her job.

It’s her job, see, that’s the unknown factor. One way to decipher this aspect is to personalize it. What does it feel like to live with someone who is a multi-level marketing [MLM] type? What are their finances really like?

Below, in italics, I’ve provided a brief anecdote of my experience. This isn’t to indulge you, or myself, but as a way to better understand what Chris Watts may have despised, even hated, about Shan’ann. Before you begin reading, just be aware that this isn’t about transference. Whatever my feelings about MLM or yours, all this is is my experience with a particular person. It may or may not provide insight into this case, and it may shed more light on the unknowns that went on behind closed doors.

Harriet – let’s call her Harriet – lived in a big, beautiful double-story house in a posh suburb. She was a young, single mom. Pretty. Blonde. Blue-eyed. The house wasn’t hers. It belonged to her wealthy parents. Harriet was involved in AMWAY and Herbalife. Sometimes packages would arrive, and if Harriet wasn’t around, I’d sign for them. It was invariably AMWAY shit, sent by courier. I often heard her telling people  AMWAY’s “not a pyramid scheme”.

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I also often heard her rationalising about how great MLM was because once you’ve done the initial work you don’t need to do anything any more, other people work for you. She didn’t seem to recognize that that’s what everyone else was planning on too. If people allow themselves to be recruited [for a fee], and all the recruits rely on the fact that other recruits will do their work for them, who actually works? Who actually makes money? The only real money comes from the way the cumulative memberships and profits from product sales are distributed from those at the bottom to those at the top of the pyramid.

Although Harriet called the AMWAY MLM “her business” or “the business” over the course of five years she very seldom worked. I don’t know how much money she made from AMWAY but I do know she never had any money, and that her parents were always giving her money, and buying her things.  Often this money was given to her as part of an agreement or incentive to do something. She’d take the money but they never got her to execute on her end of the bargain. At one point when I was there they even bought her a brand new car as a gesture of faith. She took the car but later fell out of the arrangement they made.

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Occasionally, when her parents grew desperate and threatened her, there were spurts of activity. She’d have a few meetings at home or she’d travel off to AMWAY’s motivational workshops. Each time she’d arrive back from these workshops inspired, pumped up and ready to get to work. Harriet was someone who often overstated things, often exaggerated.

Harriet had friends but they were weird. While she saw herself as upper class, none of her friends were. One long-term boyfriend was about 15 years younger than her, whom she asked me to keep secret from her parents. The next was about 15 years older, who worked in a junk yard. Many of her female friends were over-the-hill housewives, almost all overweight, uneducated and ragged in some way. Since I’d known Harriet through a prior circle of mutual friends, now it was clear that virtually all those solid middle class friendships had fallen away. Had she pushed the MLM stuff onto them until they shut the door? I know she tried several times to recruit me but instead of buying into it or rejecting it, I simply said “I’ll think about it” even though I’d made up my mind.

What started annoying me over time was how hard I was working and her constant and very apparent laziness. And her inclination to complain about small things. I wasn’t the only one aggravated by this. Her parents, who often loaned her money, increasingly demanded that she find a real job. All told, in the five years I lived there she worked less than a total of six months in real jobs, and for the rest, told people she had her own MLM business. 

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Harriet’s finances weren’t my concern as a lodger, but what got extremely irritating was because she didn’t work, she had to find something to do. Since she was home all day, she soon began to worry and complain endlessly about whether I was dirtying her furniture by sitting on them, or dirtying the carpets by walking on them. She was pedantic about cleanliness. Her kitchen and lounge had those gadgets that puffs out toilet spray every few seconds. The carpets were repeatedly dry-cleaned, the house repeatedly painted. Everything was constantly being washed and cleaned.

Sometimes she’d arrive home with bags of shit-smelling compost, which would make the entire house smell of guano. Landscape designers would arrive every so often to deal with her garden.  The pets in the house began to gravitate towards me, because I paid attention to them.

In the end I placed sheets and towels over the furniture and carpets I used upstairs so that my filthiness wouldn’t disturb her. And so on and so forth. Harriet’s MLM didn’t bother me, but it didn’t endear her to me either. I simply thought of her as extremely high maintenance, a self-centered alien species that had lost her mind. I put up with her OCD, no matter how unreasonable it was, because while I lived there, I had to. So I did with minimum fuss.

I wasn’t married to her and I was never her boyfriend, but the OCD was a symptom of a larger malaise. Had I been involved with her, the MLM would have been the first to go.

All that is a very long way of saying something very simple. Someone with OCD is tolerable when they’re holding up the fort, and when there’s a fort that you also have a stake in. But it’s intolerable when they aren’t holding up the fort and you are, or when they’re ruining your stake in your own home.

There definitely is a certain point, an inflection point, when that happens. Everybody knows in a domestic situation that moment when they decide, irrevocably, they’re done. Some people tell those they share their living spaces about their change of heart, but that only makes everything worse. You’re wiser if you don’t, but then, for as long as you continue living there, you feel like you’re pulling on the short end of the straw.

I know I reached that point with Harriet and her junkyard boyfriend. A few months before I left, I felt I’d had enough of their bullshit. Obviously I didn’t tell her this, I simply started preparing myself and my affairs to move out. I spent less and less time at home and tried to manage things so that I never encountered either of them, even in passing. I was just trying to avoid communicating and thus confronting. So I was living with the enemy but eager not to be. I didn’t let on that I was pissed off about anything.

The exit, when it happened, wasn’t pretty. There were no dead bodies, and no one was strangled, but there was some anger, shouting and unhappiness. I won’t go into the details but it wasn’t pleasant.

I suspect that like Harriet, Shan’ann wasn’t actually pulling in 80K a year. Either the money wasn’t coming in, or it wasn’t coming in consistently. What happened to her mandatory Live videos in August? And if she was still bringing in the money, why didn’t they have any money? Why were they an ongoing foreclosure risk?

If it was Shan’ann’s fault that they were losing their home because she wasn’t holding up her end of the deal, because of the MLM hocus pocus bull crap, then Shan’ann’s OCD and cheery Facebook mindfuckery had to have become harder and harder to live with. Then, with the announcement in May of a third child on the way, Chris Watts had a serious sense of humor failure.

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Two Face is available right now on Amazon.com