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Transcripts For CNNW Inside Evil With Chris Cuomo 20191215



remembered what turned out to be the most devastating case of her career. 911. hello? aboilene, 911. go ahead. i am hallucinating. i woke up and i killed her. did anybody warn you when you were getting ready to enter the house of what it was in there? it was all bloody. haunting for you and the cops and the mother. one of the bizarre tips here, it did not seemed to be haunting for the person who did it. no. abilene, texas, a city where churches are an easy reach, football is its own religion. now home to an unholy crime. i still see her lying on the floor. those gruesome. it was awful. just as disturbing. the killer, a child. 13 years old. when first responders got there, where was he? he was still on the phone with the 911 operator when he answered the door. i accidentally killed somebody. you think you killed somebody? no, i know i did. what did it looked like in there? it was a bedroom, there was a lot of blood on the right side of the head board. what kind of weapon? a kitchen knife and it was laying in bed. were you able to be shocked that man, this is a cute little innocent kid who did this most grizzlies murder, basically unimaginable. it looks deceiving. i want you to start cpr, okay? take her off the bed. i know for a fact that she s dead because i stabbed her. you want to go ahead and try, it may still help, okay? i don t think come on, work with me. i know i stabbed her a lot of times. we are talking about a four-year-old victim. she s got little pajamas on. her name is ella bennett. a four years old with a love of butterflies and her favorite color was purple. brutally murdered by the child who made that 911 call, paris lee bennett. charity lee had no idea that her children s babysitter left early and her home was an active crime scene. she was busy serving patrons when police delivered her the tragic news about her children. the first thing they said was ella been hurt. i am a parent, if you think your child is hurt, what s the first thing you want to do? leave. you told me she was hurt. they were like, well, she s dead. that just stopped me i am like where is paris? well, we have him, paris is the one who killed her. that s when everything stops making sense. which child did you see first? it was around 5:00 in the morning when they finally told me that they were going to bring her out. i needed to see her to accept the fact that she was gone. they unzipped the bag and right under her chin, i remember screaming, i am so sorry, i am so sorry. i was not there. i remember kissing her and having her blood in my mouth and what that tasted like. i just remember just collapsing. as the sun came up and the school bus, her daughter would never ride again passed by her home, charity was in a bewildering state of agony. they let me back into my house, the crime scene. and then four hours later, i was sitting in a defense attorney s office to talk about paris. charity lee remembers visiting her son that morning, less than 24 hours after he murdered ellen. how was it? very cold. when i saw him, the only thing i felt was so happy to see my child. because he was the only one left. i started hugging him and just crying and cried forever. and then i realized that at some point that he was not hugging me back at all. soon charity would see her son s mask fall away. he laughed at me. when we return. forget about vacuuming for months. the roomba i7+ with clean base automatic dirt disposal and allergenlock™ bags that trap 99% of allergens, so they don t escape back into the air. if it s not from irobot, it s not a roomba™ up here at the dewar s distillery, all our whiskies are aged, blended and aged again. it s the reason our whisky is so extraordinarily smooth. dewar s. double aged for extra smoothness. [fa mers bell] (burke) a rock and wreck. seen it. covered it. at farmers insurance, we know a thing or two because we ve seen a thing or two. we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum charity lee loved being a mother. then the son she called her first great love killed her second great love, ella. she faced 13 years old paris within an hour of the murder. he said to me, you always said that you would never be able to kill somebody unless they hurt one of your children so what are you going to do now? i expected tears or insanity, i didn t know how to process it either. he never said i am sorry ? no, not once. what did you feel about this be kid? i felt he was very manipulative. i thought he was lying about the whole thing. he shows no emotion. do you think he s in shock. i felt there was something darker. he killed her was full intent of killing her and had no remorse whatsoever. during that first meeting, charity made the decision to consider loving her son, paris, now a murderer. i told him i was always going to love him no matter what and i promised him that i was always going to do the best job to be his mother. a mother who also had to say good-bye to her baby girl. ella wanted to be a singer. i don t know what to say because the next few weeks were a cruel, twist of loyalty. when i go talk to a district attorney, i had to meet ella s mother. when i talked to a defense attorney, i had to be paris mother. if i try to put paris and ella together in my brain, i got close to insanity. that division wound up playing in a very odd confusion when you went to court, mother of the victim, mother of the perpetrator. that literally you didn t know where to sit. at one point, i sat in the middle. because i can t choose sides. they re both my children. detective glenn investigation of the murder took months. we are able to show that there was a question about whether he was having ha hallucinations even though his father was diagnosed with schizophrenia. within the six-hour period, he already had three different stories. the findings changed the way charity saw her son. she was like charity, we have the preliminary results back. ella was stabbed 17 times. and so i went to see him that night. i was like - i don t believe you anymore. i think you killed your sister on purpose. did you? all of a sudden he became a complete different person. it is like he no longer had to keep up this act. he looked at me and said, y all are all so [ bleep ] stupid. he laughed at me. so now you become convinced that my son is very sick. yes. on august 15th, 2007, the state of texas convicted paris lee bennett and gave him the maximum sentence, 40 years. you referred to paris, your son as a murderer. yes. do you believe that he meets that definition that he knew what he was doing? yes. he wanted to do it? yes. he was rational when he did so. i believe he understood the nature of his actions. it is difficult to be a mother of a psychopath. why are you confidence that s a diagnose that applied to your son. i did have tests administered when he was 15 or 16 years old. paris scored in the moderate range. charity remembers her desperate struggle to get him to psychiatric help he needed. paris had everybody convinced. i would go to these monthly meetings, oh, he s so intelligent. he s so well-mannered and he s so charming and i would be like you know what, he is. he also brutally murdered his little sister and gained some sort of sexual satisfaction from that. i requested sexually assaulted test. i don t know if he had been molesting her and if he was going to tell on him. what else in the scene help you in that direction? paris admitted to watching pornography. he admitted that he got off a little bit off on it and that was right before he kills ella. they had forensic evidence of semen. i don t know if ella was a victim of sexually assault. he keeps that very cloudy. he was sadistic. he said yes, i assaulted my sister and told me about it. around the age of 16, oh, i was lying to y all the whole time. when we come back, i traveled to texas to separate the truth from the lies, face-to-face with paris lee bennett in maximum security prison. okay. well, good? all right. apps are used everywhere. except work. why is that? is it because people love filling out forms? maybe they like checking with their supervisor to see how much vacation time they have. or sending corporate their expense reports. i ll let you in on a little secret. they don t. by empowering employees to manage their own tasks, paycom frees you to focus on the business of business. music (paul) america s best network. the best network is even better. the best deals on the best network. how can everyone be the best? well, sprint s doing things differently. they re offering a 100% total satisfaction guarantee. while i think their network and savings are great, you don t just have to take my word for it. try it out, decide for yourself. hurry in for exciting holiday deals and save your family money. get both an unlimited plan and one of the newest phones included for just $35 a month. for people with hearing loss, visit sprintrelay.com finally a little oh my goodness.? i love you, yes it s true there s no one else i d choose this may not completely rhyme but i d be totally lost without you. save on a gift that says it all. jared choose the longest lasting thiaa battery.son (music) energizer ultimate lithium backed by science. matched by no one. i remember charity lee s insight into the son who killed her daughter. i landed into houston. who ll i meet when i go to prison and meet paris. he ll tell you, yes, i killed her. yes, it was my choice. but he s lacking emotionality about it. he walks away with that feeling of something s not quite right. my journey to midway, texas. we amaximum security prison e paris lee bennett had been incarcerated since 2012. he had nothing but time on his hands. will paris be selling me a story or will he be revealing something that was surprising? okay. good? uh-huh. all right. first question. are you ready? i want to know did you think you belong where you are right now? yes, i do. i am actually glad to have been sent the prison because i feel like being here has given me time to feel deeply into the darkest corner of my mind and i think that had i not come here, i would not be happy with the man that i would eventually grow into. do you think that you are sick? no. i think that my fault some where along the spectrum and i would not argue with you and say i was healthy because i did do something that was heinous and brutal. and your mother believe that you can t feel remorse and it is missing from you. why do you think your mother think that? i don t express my remorse in the way she thinks i need to express my remorse. what do you think your mom expects? whaling, ripping my hair out. as a young boy, charity remembers paris had a hard time hearing he s going to share her with a new sibling. he didn t want anything to do with any pregnancy, nothing. how did paris adjust with a little sister. the day ella was born, i remember putting ella in his arms and he was looking down at her and i am like please, waiting the see what their reaction was going to be and he had this huge smile on his face and he said to me, oh, mama, she s beautiful and from there, it seems like we were fine. within the hours and hours of happy home videos, a hint of what s to come. people that have had siblings, they wrestle and sometimes you have to pull them apart and be like everybody calm down. regular occurrence. in our case, they hardly had those moments. 95% of the time, they got along well. did you love your sister? very much. you had no fundamental problems with her existence? it is a question i can t give an easy answer to. there were times i adored my sister and there was the time she was the wind that blew the storm cloud out of my sky and there was time she was the one that s blowing the wind. i am not the only person who ever killed a sibling. before the crime. who was paris? he existed in a world of pain. he he spent so long living in it that he wanted to bring into other people s lives. paris expressed himself through these drawings. he attribute much of the emotional pain he felt to see his mother started using drugs again. charity struggled with addiction during adolescence, she s been clean during his entire childhood until she relapsed 12 months before the murder. paris was aware of the relapse. yes. how did you know? it was obvious. i was telling him. i was using it enough where he noticed there was a change in his mother. how did you think it affect him? it made him angry. i get that you are angry and have problems. a lot of people process those emotions but they don t whine up buchtering their siblings. i feel that was a way to get back to my mother. that answer does not encompass everything, it would be redundant to say that i kill my sister because she was using drugs. when i was trying hard to convince everyone that i am just a damaged little boy, please love me. i wanted to shell all the blame onto her and make it seem like it was not my fault and as the years go by, i become stronger, i want to make very clear of that. yes, her failures and her actions formed me into who i am today and they did not lead to that but it was not the only thing. there are thousands of children who my parents struggle with. when i relapse, we did start to see changes in his behavior. none of those changes were directed towards ella. he was angry at me. it made sense, it was justified anger. i was his mother. did you have a plan about what to do to your sister? not really, no. i had since that i was going to lash out at someone. you were fighting yourself? yes. why did you lose that fight? i think a lot of it had to do with the fact that i was so young and my brain had not mature and at no point did i think of the consequences of my actions. have you thought about why didn t i stop it? yes, i have thought about that. and, it was almost as if once i had begun, i could not stop. passed a certain point i felt like i was watching myself, i felt i was strapped in on a nightmare ride and forced to suffer until the end of it. when we return, is murder in paris dna? is it everybody in my close immediate family? what is it with the murder that s going on? find great gifts at great prices. during the kay friends and family event. come in and get 25-50% off everything. like this diamond necklace, now under six-hundred dollars. every best. gift. ever. begins with kay. 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you have concerns of this interview. what matters more that you be honest or that you get out? i want to be able to be honest about who i am and how my brain works and i want to understand what made me murder my sister. the age old question, nature verses nurture blooms over this crime. for it is not the first time murder had struck this family. in 1980, charity was 6 years old. her father, james bennett jr. was gunned down at his home in an affluent atlanta neighborhood. his body was lying right within the door way. he was laying faced down, four gunshot wounds. charity s parents ran a successful trucking company and enjoyed a comfortable life together despite being divorced. just 57 hours before the murder, the couple had flown to vegas and remarried. it was one of the reasons kyla bennett became the chief suspect as the master mind of her husband s murder. she needed to cement the marriage back so she can gain control back of the company. she s 29 and beautiful and there is money involved. we legislative in the atlantic country club. allegation of murder for wealthy people right out of the movies. the police interviewed kyla within hours of her husband s murder. she literally talked about it. i am going to look somebody to knock off my husband. but, investigators were never able to locate the gunman or the murder weapon. after an 11-day trial. kyla bennett was acquitted of murder. that s a turn out. she won the odds on that one. we wanted to sit down with kyla bennett now in her 60s but turned down. she gave investigation discovery, kyla described her family being good man good mani. her most revealing admission. i don t have a jury to manipulate. so just jumped out at me. wow, we were right in prosecuting kyla bennett. she was involved in her husband s murder. what happened when the murder of your grandfather, it was not until i was incarcerated for my crime that i found that my grandmother had been suspected of my grandfather s killing. i never spent a lot of time dwelling on that. charity has, diving into her mother s criminal case file. what did you come into as a conclusion? lousy question to have to answer. your mom is still alive. trying to build a relationship with her. she knows how i feel about it. she was acquitted. she was acquitted so i think why it is a difficult question for me to answer while i sern certainly have my opinions and thoughts on it. there came appoint in time where i had to learn to forgive my mother also. now, that implies there is something to forgive, correct? right. there is enough suspicion in my mind and i think it could be possible. she tried to understand the violence echoing over generations. detectives who s transporting my mother to these stations wrote to headquarter, kyla appears to be calm and appears happy at times. it struck a nerve with me because one of the investigators in paris case told me he was very unnerved by the fact that at 13 years old, he murdered his sister, paris, and appeared to be very calm. paris described his grandmother being a cold and collected woman and he s the same way. part of the dysfunction surrounding you of the relationship with your mom, she does not see paris the same way. i was having issues with some materials that my mother was sending paris. she was asking for and sending him some very graphic, violent novels like the watchmen. why would she do that? i am not sure. she does not believe he would hurt anybody else. but she does believe he s a danger to me when we return - i think my brain works differently and i want to be able to figure it out. up here at the dewar s distillery, all our whiskies are aged, blended and aged again. it s the reason our whisky is so extraordinarily smooth. dewar s. double aged for extra smoothness. (smoke alarm) apps except work.rywhere. why is that? is it because people love filling out forms? maybe they like checking with their supervisor to see how much vacation time they have. or sending corporate their expense reports. i ll let you in on a little secret. they don t. by empowering employees to manage their own tasks, paycom frees you to focus on the business of business. music you don t need to go anywhere dad, this is your home. the best home to be in is your own. home instead offers personalized in-home services for your loved ones. home instead senior care. to us, it s personal. home instead senior care. i don t make compromises. i want nutrition made just for me. but i also want great taste. so i drink boost for women. new boost women with key nutrients to help support thyroid, bone, hair and skin health. all with great taste. new boost women. all withwit s the sleeps number 360 smart bed. can it help me fall asleep faster? yes, by gently warming your feet. can it help keep me asleep? absolutely, it intelligently senses your movements and automatically adjusts to keep you effortlessly comfortable. will it help me raise my game? yup! so, you can really promise better sleep? not promise, prove. so i can be my best for these guys? yes, and those guys. sleep number. this is not a bed it s proven quality sleep. from $999. look, it s just like when i tell people abbe confident.th geico. stand up straight. and speak with purpose. yeah? go on, give it a practice run. kelsey. kelsey. marriage? oh. okay. look maybe you should just show her this beautiful helzberg diamond ring? that s a better idea. yeah, maybe not in the bathroom. oooh! oh my word! geico. it s easy to switch and save. i don t base my love for my child on how well he can love me. i love him because he is paris. it is truly unconditional. yes. i love me child. that does not mean that i will always like my child. paris remembers their first face-to-face immediat meeting a killed his half sister. when she hugged you, you did not hug her back. did you remember that? that s what surprised me the most. her first reaction was to hug me. your reaction was not to hug her back, why? i didn t know how to respond to that. i knew i would never be able to match that monumental display look. do you think a child in that situation clings to the parent? i was still struggling to untangle myself from my hatred from my mother. we had frank discussions about what he did to ella. he ll give lip service, yeah, i regret it. you don t buy it. it is not authentic. when he goes into the place in his mind and he opens the drawer where he knows guilt and remorse for what he did to ella or supposed to be it is empty. it is an empty drawer. he does not feel it. he feels regret over where he is. very different. very different. how often do you think about the murder of your sister? everyday. i am reminded of what i did and i am reminded of my sister every single day. do you feel things when you think about your sister s murder? i feel it is wrenching in my chest. i feel a twisting of my guts. there are times where i am overcome of loathing. there are times i am thinking why am i still even alive? do you believe that you express remorse for what you did? yes, i have expressed remorse. there you go. but it has never been i don t emote very well. why? that s how i am. do you think that s normal? i don t think there is such thing as normal. dr. abigail marsh said the capacity to care about other people exists on a spectrum ranging atriuism to psycho. she studies brains, her trait is using functional magnetic imaging, or fmra. we found the more severe a child s traits are, the less response of their medulla is. and whether it is acceptable to cause somebody to feel afraid. i have asked that child so many times if i can figure a way to have an fmri done, would he participate in it? he would not do it. he s afraid it would be used against him at a parole hearing. i am resistance to the idea of professional therapy because i feel like i didn t really benefit. paris did receive some counseling in the juvenile system when he was still in his teens. i was not ready to confront it with the darkness of myself. but now you are ready to confront it? i stare it down and i wake up to it and fall asleep to the sound that whispers in my ear. the question i was advised to ask last. i don t understand why it bothers you so much, why you are so resistance to it? when we return (snowman paul) snowman paul here! hurry in and switch to save your family money on the samsung galaxy s10 for just $0 a month. (snowman paul) $0 a month! i was literally built for this. for people with hearing loss, visit sprintrelay.com and you know what they isay about curiosity. it ll ruin your house. so get allstate and be better protected from mayhem, like meow. finduring the kayat friends and family event. come in and get 25-50% off everything. like this diamond necklace, now under six-hundred dollars. every best. gift. ever. begins with kay. only roomba i7+ uses two multi-surface rubber brushes. and picks up more pet hair than other robot vacuums. and the filter captures 99% of dog and cat allergens. if it s not from irobot, it s not a roomba™. ( ) wthat s why xfinity hasu made taking your internetself. and tv with you a breeze. really? yup. you can transfer your service online in about a minute. you can do that? yeah. and with two-hour service appointment windows, it s all on your schedule. awesome. so while moving may still come with its share of headaches. no kidding. we re doing all we can to make moving simple, easy, awesome. go to xfinity.com/moving to get started. save hundreds of thousands of lives. but after the emergency, time and again, insurance companies deny coverage, second guessing doctors, nurses and first responders. now big insurance is lobbying congress. asking for restrictions on air medical services. eliminating patients access to life-saving care and destroying jobs all in exchange for bigger profits for insurance companies. tell congress, put patients first, not big insurance. you think you ve been damaged by being in prison? i don t like the word damaged because it suggests that i was whole before. i think i ve been stained by prison. i think that it s rubbed off on me. and it remains to be seen whether we can bleach it out. you see yourself? say hey, baby. paris has served 12 of his 40-year sentence. nearly half of his life in prison. he s willing to reflect on the terrible night that he stabbed his little sister. was there any satisfaction? no. i thought there might be. but there wasn t. what was there? a very deep sense that i had ruined everything. and i think part of my inability to shed tears is sometimes i wonder whether people are still going to question whether they re real or not. charity has done her best to move forward from this tragedy. six years ago a new relationship led to her third child. she s now raising her son on her own. a new opportunity for you to love, to give love, and to be a parent again. phoenix. phoenix. then you find out that there s a problem with the baby s heart. yes. the news of his baby brother s serious heart condition had a stunning effect on paris. he actually cried. i had not heard him be emotional like that over anything. when you heard that your brother wasn t well, phoenix, your mother says you cried. i did. no remorse about his sister for all these years but sadness about a half brother that he doesn t know and may never know. i still don t understand it. only paris knows what s real and what s not. the aspect of the crime that you bristle at the most is the suggestion of any type of sexual motive or sexual dynamic to it. because everyone always wants to make it simple math. you were molesting your sister, which i was not. and you killed her so she wouldn t tell, which i did not. that s not the case at all. okay. i can t account for where they found semen and why. i can tell you that i masturbated earlier in the day. i was a 13-year-old boy. i don t know why they said it was on the bed. i don t know how it got there. but you want to know why you did it and did i get off on trying to hurt my sister? have i ever felt like that again? aren t those questions that should be just banging around in your head all the time if you re open to understanding why you did this? you say that as if they re not banging around in my head. because i was coached not to talk to you about it. your mother was like oh, don t go there. because i thought it made me look worse. i didn t want anyone thinking that i got some sexual thrill from what i did. but i ve been thinking about it for years. those questions are banging around in my head. they re rattling around in my skull all the time. paris will be 33 years old when he s eligible for parole in 2027. are you worried if this guy got out what he might do? i have some concerns about it. he enjoyed killing ella. is he going to need that? whenever he visited with his psychiatrist when he was in juvenile detention center he indicated i think now i know what a serial killer feels after they ve murdered somebody. i think we all know i m capable of doing unspeakable things. the question now is will i ever do something like that again? do you love your mom? yes. what does that mean? that means that just the sound of her voice when she picks up the phone straightens my day. even when it s crooked. would she ever have anything to fear from you if you weren t here? no. charity isn t so sure. she plans to never let paris meet his new half-brother. you in fact have personal concerns for your safety and the safety of others if he were out. yes. yes, yes. i wrote a victim impact statement and said i think my son is dangerous and i think if he was to be released he would hurt somebody, he would be dangerous. charity is determined to not live in the horror of the past or in fear of the future. this is the humble abode of the ella foundation. she built an organization to honor her daughter, increase awareness about violence, mental illness, and to advocate for proper treatment. any given day will find her promoting an ella foundation event. part of healing from trauma is to tell your story and realize your story has meaning. and then you start to get your power back. and moderating discussions about childhood trauma. i think about my son paris who has anti-social personality disorder. he s one of the most amazingly intelligent people i have ever met. he could have really made a contribution to the world. you know? not a day goes by where charity doesn t talk about death and violence. but also survival. why? it won t bring your daughter back. no. you re right that it will never bring ella back. but it does keep ella alive in some way. people all over the world talk about ella. i can t change paris today. but maybe by doing this i can help with changing somebody else s child. she moved here to savannah, georgia to be near her mother. charity s home is a loving safeguard of her daughter s memory and her final resting place. ella s urn is surrounded by her beloved butterfly wings. down the hall is a favorite painting she picked out during a vacation in mexico that ella said must be what heaven looks like. and at the heart of her life is 6-year-old phoenix. she knows he will one day want to know more about ella and paris, the family she lost. what will you tell phoenix? he knows that his brother is in prison for killing his sister. we do not discuss details. when he asks me why his brother killed his sister, i tell him there s something about his brain that does not work quite the way that yours and mine does. as i think about the nature of evil, i m struck by something that charity told me. paris and those like him are not monsters, she says. they re children with mental health disorders who need help so they won t hurt anyone else ever again. dada. say mama. dada. that s ella. ella. the ozarks in southwestern missouri has a lawless reputation, featured in the movie three billboards outside ebbing, missouri and the netflix show ozark. this is kind of a hillbilly survivalist area. you come shoot my calf, i ll come shoot your calf. you know, things like that. it s kind of a redneck mentality and it s basically i m going to take care of mine. i ve come to neosho, missouri, where a group of teenagers took justice into their own hands one cold february night 30 years ago and committed one of the most heinous crimes the ozarks has ever seen. i m delving into this story with a question on my mind. can people change? can they be forgiven? you could actually smell death when we walked in.

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Transcripts for FOXNEWS Jesse Watters Primetime 20240604 00:38:30

Transcripts for FOXNEWS Jesse Watters Primetime 20240604 00:38:30
archive.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from archive.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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Ubuntu 24 10 Oracular Oriole | Rilascio della Beta a Settembre e Versione Finale il 10 Ottobre

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Date-set , Ubuntu , Racular , Coriole , Rilascio , Ella , Eta , Ettembre , Ersione , Inale , Ttobre

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Sonic-rumble , Fall-guys , Fall-guys-inspired-spin-off-name-gets-leaked , Monkey-ball , Banana-rumble , Sonic , Umble , Prossimo , Pin , Ff , Ella

Superman | James Gunn svela il look di David Corenswet nella prima foto ufficiale dal set

Il regista James Gunn ha condiviso online la prima foto di David Corenswet nell iconico ruolo di Superman, svelandone anche il costume e il look nel film. .

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