Interrogation of Jennifer Pan (hired hitmen to kill parents)
Nov 6, 2021 16:07:27 GMT -5
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Post by Tixxx Tixxx on Nov 6, 2021 16:07:27 GMT -5
Who: 24 year old Jennifer Pan.
What: In 2010, Tired of her 'tiger' parents strict regime and demands of her, she hires hitmen to murder her parents in a staged home invasion. Her mom is killed, her father paralyzed for life. He tells police she was acting strange during the robbery.
Why is it good? She keeps trying to fake her victim story throghout the entire interviews, but the police just keeps letting her dig herself into a hole.
Result: Life imprisonment. Up for parone in 2040.
Police interrogation of a vietnamese-american girl who hired hitmen to target her parents.
First interview is done right after the murder.
Second interrogation is where the cops suspect she is guilty, and boy does it show.
Third interrogation. The final showdown. Will she crack?
Jennifer Pan, 24 at the time, arranged for three killers-for-hire to break into her family home where she lived with her parents. On Nov. 8, 2010, she unlocked the front door to their house in Markham, Ontario, Canada, north of Toronto, went upstairs and turned on a light to signal. Soon after, three armed men walked in through the door and attacked the family. Jennifer’s mother, Bich Ha, and father, Huei Hann Pan, were led to the basement, covered by a blanket and shot. Her mother died. Amazingly, her father survived.
Pan said her parents smothered her in a display of classic Asian “Tiger Parenting” that allowed her little free time, no boyfriends and few decisions to make on her own. “Living in my house is like living under house arrest,” she wrote on Facebook in 2009.
After the shooting, York Regional Police interviewed Jennifer three times — at first as a witness and then with increasing suspicion. The first interview shown here came just before 3 a.m. on Nov. 8, 2010. She stuck to her story of gun-toting men looking for money who tied her to the banister upstairs and then shot her parents.
She had two more interviews — that became interrogations, one of Nov. 10, 2010 (Part 2 of this video series) when they asked her to recreate how she managed to twist and turn to be able to call 911 when she supposedly had her hands tied. Holes were emerging in her story.
The third interrogation took place on Nov. 22, 2010 (Part 3 of this video series). This one took on a different tone and tenor. Faced with a new interrogator, Det. Bill Goetz, Jennifer is about to be confronted by a dramatic shift in interview style. As described by Jeremy Grimaldi in his book A Daughter’s Deadly Deception, Goetz switched between playing good cop to bad cop with Jennifer: “His interview will contain a series of outright lies as part of the Reid Technique.” He eventually got her to admit to her duplicity.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jennifer_Pan
What: In 2010, Tired of her 'tiger' parents strict regime and demands of her, she hires hitmen to murder her parents in a staged home invasion. Her mom is killed, her father paralyzed for life. He tells police she was acting strange during the robbery.
Why is it good? She keeps trying to fake her victim story throghout the entire interviews, but the police just keeps letting her dig herself into a hole.
Result: Life imprisonment. Up for parone in 2040.
Police interrogation of a vietnamese-american girl who hired hitmen to target her parents.
First interview is done right after the murder.
Second interrogation is where the cops suspect she is guilty, and boy does it show.
Third interrogation. The final showdown. Will she crack?
Jennifer Pan, 24 at the time, arranged for three killers-for-hire to break into her family home where she lived with her parents. On Nov. 8, 2010, she unlocked the front door to their house in Markham, Ontario, Canada, north of Toronto, went upstairs and turned on a light to signal. Soon after, three armed men walked in through the door and attacked the family. Jennifer’s mother, Bich Ha, and father, Huei Hann Pan, were led to the basement, covered by a blanket and shot. Her mother died. Amazingly, her father survived.
Pan said her parents smothered her in a display of classic Asian “Tiger Parenting” that allowed her little free time, no boyfriends and few decisions to make on her own. “Living in my house is like living under house arrest,” she wrote on Facebook in 2009.
After the shooting, York Regional Police interviewed Jennifer three times — at first as a witness and then with increasing suspicion. The first interview shown here came just before 3 a.m. on Nov. 8, 2010. She stuck to her story of gun-toting men looking for money who tied her to the banister upstairs and then shot her parents.
She had two more interviews — that became interrogations, one of Nov. 10, 2010 (Part 2 of this video series) when they asked her to recreate how she managed to twist and turn to be able to call 911 when she supposedly had her hands tied. Holes were emerging in her story.
The third interrogation took place on Nov. 22, 2010 (Part 3 of this video series). This one took on a different tone and tenor. Faced with a new interrogator, Det. Bill Goetz, Jennifer is about to be confronted by a dramatic shift in interview style. As described by Jeremy Grimaldi in his book A Daughter’s Deadly Deception, Goetz switched between playing good cop to bad cop with Jennifer: “His interview will contain a series of outright lies as part of the Reid Technique.” He eventually got her to admit to her duplicity.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jennifer_Pan