Thank you
@Mack the Knife for an excellent breakdown of the body cam footage.
That laugh, yikes. You are right, could be nervous awkward laughter. Could be the adrenaline kicking in. I mean how often does a judge get shot in a small town? I wonder how often anybody gets shot in that little burg. Does he dislike the judge personally? Is he simply excited and anxious because this is a pretty big deal?
I also keep in mind he knew the judge was shot. not that he was dead yet. and not that Stines had been the shooter. It is off putting. Not sure what I think about that laugh just now.
The sheriff's demeanor? Wow, odd. I realize the officer or trooper who was transporting him to jail was asking repeatedly about if this had to do with his family because he was probably aware of those calls to the daughter from both men's phones. But man, Stines gave nothing when questioned about it. Repeatedly, an almost obscene amount of times. One might think he was being fed his defense.
Now I do understand that that is an interview technique that is sometimes successful in getting a suspect to talk about the crime and investigators will give a suspect enough rope to feel comfortable telling their own version of the truth that makes their crime make sense in their own mind. Sometimes minimizing their role, sometime maximizing their victim's role in what happened.
But Stines gave them zip, nada, nothing. Otherwise he was quite vocal. Come on now. Come on man. Be fair to me. Come on now. Make sure there ain't no weapons in there.
The complaints: cuffs are too tight. I can't get up in there. I can't get back there. It's too hot back here. I'm going to die of heat back here. I can't breath. I can't breath. I can't breath.
The very sort of things he himself has probably heard from suspects he has transported to jail hundreds of times. Yet it sounded so flat, so by rote coming from him.
The apparent paranoia and concern that one of the officers would do him harm? That they were going to drag him off into the forest to do what? That they not turn him over to "somebody". That they not put him in the Lesley County van? And yet even for these type of comments he didn't sound particularly terrified or agitated.
I'm going to have to watch this footage several more times before I know what I think. The bits and pieces seem like they are from several different puzzles and I can't make them form one picture.