Bored Panda works better on our iPhone app
Continue in app Continue in browser

The Bored Panda iOS app is live! Fight boredom with iPhones and iPads here.

Man Who Sent His Mom To Prison At Age 7 For Drowning His Sister Speaks Out After 17 Years
Man Who Sent His Mom To Prison At Age 7 For Drowning His Sister Speaks Out After 17 Years
113

Man Who Sent His Mom To Prison At Age 7 For Drowning His Sister Speaks Out After 17 Years

46

ADVERTISEMENT

At just seven years old, AJ Hutto took the stand in a Florida courtroom and pointed a tiny finger at his mother, accusing her of taking his 7-year-old half-sister Adrianna’s life.

His harrowing testimony in court sent his mother Amanda Lewis to prison for life.

Now, 17 years later, AJ is now living a completely different life, with a new family and a new identity. And he stands by every word he said in court during his mother’s trial.

Highlights
  • AJ Hutto’s testimony in court at the age of seven sent his mother Amanda Lewis to prison for life.
  • The boy said he witnessed his mother drowning his sister in a pool.
  • Amanda maintained her innocence and passed a lie detector test.
  • As the now-24-year-old looks back at his childhood, he mostly remembers “just darkness, trauma.”
BP Daily - Your Source for Unbiased Reporting

    At the age of 7, AJ Hutto’s testimony in court sent his mother to prison for life

    Young boy in a courtroom setting, wearing a vest and white shirt, related to the life sentence story.

    Image credits: Court TV

    Warning: This article contains details of child maltreatment which some readers may find distressing.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    “One hundred percent guilty,” the now 24-year-old man told the Daily Mail about his mother.

    “I stand by every word I said,” he said.

    “I stand by every word I said,” the now 24-year-old man said

    Woman in court looks emotional, related to son sending mom to prison for life sentence.

    Image credits: True Crime Central

    AJ, who recently gave the interview under the condition of keeping his new identity a secret, said he was adopted by a “good Christian family” in a “happier household,” much different from the home he was used to for the first seven years of his life with Amanda.

    He said the difference between the two families “was night and day.”

    “My childhood with Amanda was, it was almost a 360 difference, completely different,” he told the outlet.

    Two children dressed nicely, sitting on a couch, relevant to a story involving a life sentence.

    Image credits: ABC

    ADVERTISEMENT

    It was “just darkness, trauma. A lot of ab*se. Physically ab*sed, both Adrianna and I were hit,” he continued.

    For the most part, it is the maltreatment that AJ remembers from his life with his mother.

    “Sometimes we wouldn’t even see it coming,” he said. “It was literally sometimes we were blindsided.”

    Adrianna’s passing was initially thought to be an accident with “no signs of foul play”

    Childhood photo related to son who sent mom to prison, smiling girl in a pink dress.

    Image credits: ABC

    ADVERTISEMENT

    On an ill-fated day on August 8, 2007, Adrianna was rushed to the hospital and eventually lost her life at 5:05 p.m.

    “We were best friends,” AJ said.

    It was initially believed that Adrianna’s passing was an accident.

    AJ said Adrianna did “some stuff” she wasn’t supposed to before his mother allegedly drowned her

    Young boy describing a situation, sitting in a chair with a TV behind him.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Image credits: True Crime Central

    “She went in over the side of that pool, leaned too far. She went down into the water and hit her head,” local fire chief Charles Corcoran said at the time.

    Holmes County Sheriff’s Office Lt. Michael Raley said at the time that there were “no indicators of foul play.”

    “It was just a child playing in the pool drowned,” he added.

    A child in a courtroom, appearing upset during testimony related to his mother's life sentence.

    Image credits: Court TV

    He told his step-grandfather Charles Burns and Amanda’s mother Brenda Burns that his mother repeatedly dunked his sister in a 4-foot-deep, above-ground pool and drowned her.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Adrianna had “done some stuff that she ain’t suppose so my momma got mad, so she throwed her in the pool,” AJ told the police in a videotaped interview.

    “That’s my momma,” the child said in court, explaining his drawing of stick figures by the pool 

    Woman sitting in court with a worried expression, wearing a white sweater.

    Image credits: Court TV

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Although his story fluctuated under questioning in court, the key moment in his testimony took place when prosecutor Larry Basford asked him to explain a drawing of stick figures around the pool, with one watching from a tree.

    “That’s my momma,” he said about the drawing of stick figures around the pool. “K*lling my sister.”

    When asked how she was doing so, he said, “putting her hand over her face.”

    The words “She did” were also part of the drawing, which the court took to mean “she died.”

    ADVERTISEMENT

    AJ still remembers being “nervous” about the trial even today 

    Young boy sitting pensively in front of a TV, relating to a son’s emotional story.

    Image credits: Trial By Error

    Today, AJ remembers being “really, really nervous” about the trial. He didn’t fully understand at the time that his words would send his mother to prison for life.

    “I just told them what happened,” he said. “Having all those people looking at you and all that. But I was just glad it was over.”

    Amanda’s co-workers also revealed that she had previously spoken about taking her daughter’s life after she damaged the interior of her car by writing “loser” with permanent marker.

    Child in court with lawyer, related to son's silence after mom's life sentence.

    Image credits: Court TV

    ADVERTISEMENT

    According to the mother’s version of August 8, 2007, Adrianna was trying to clean bugs from the pool and accidentally drowned.

    She told ABC News in 2010 that her son and daughter were playing outside when AJ came back into the house to tell her that Adrianna was in the pool.

    “At first I thought he meant maybe she was by the pool and I said, ‘OK, well, tell her to come in,’” she said.

    But when she looked out the back door, she said she saw AJ “raking in the water” as if he was trying to grab her.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    “When I got to the pool … she was face down. … She was very purple, very blue,” she said.

    The accused mother maintained her innocence and passed a lie detector test

    Woman in blue prison uniform, facing camera; related to life sentence story.

    Image credits: Georgetown Prisons and Justice Initiative

    Amanda passed a lie detector test during the investigation and turned down a plea deal of 10 years for manslaughter. Her four-day-trial ended with the jury giving her life without parole plus 30 years for child ab*se.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    “It’s court appointed that we cannot see each other, and I’ve wanted to keep it that way, just so nothing’s getting brought back up… all the feelings and emotions and the traumas getting brought back into light,” AJ told the Daily Mail.

    Still, he’s been keeping an eye on any developments in Amanda’s case. She recently appointed a new attorney and has undertaken measures to reopen her case.

    Image credits: True Crime Central

    7-year-old AJ’s prized possession of a red and white toy fire truck was present during his testimony.

    His childhood passion followed through, as he is now a firefighter, happily married to a wife who knows about his traumatic childhood.

    He wants to continue maintaining his no-contact relationship with his convicted mother.

    “Such a horrific thing for a child to go through,” a social media user said

    Tom Jayden Wilson expressing disbelief about an event from 17 years ago.

    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT

    Comment about a son who sent his mom to prison, being called brave.

    Comment expressing sympathy about a boy whose actions led to his mom's prison sentence.

    Facebook comment by Lena Jenkins, expressing relief about someone's life improvement through adoptive parents.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Comment discussing a boy's testimony sending his mother to prison for life.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Comment by user expressing sympathy, related to a son's decision about his mother's imprisonment.

    User comment about a son feeling guilty for sending his mom to prison.

    Online comment discussing a person's guilt related to a trial.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Comment on truthfulness about a son who sent mom to prison.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Text comment on reliability of a child's testimony in a conviction case discussion.

    Comment expressing doubt about the boy's testimony sending his mom to prison.

    Comment discussing inconsistencies in a case, mentioning a tree, dark conditions, and a charged medical examiner.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Comment discussing the conviction based on a child's testimony and its implications.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Comment by Shantel Hutchison on son's testimony about mom's life sentence.

    Text from online forum discussing complexities of child testimony in court cases.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Comment highlights polygraph test success by a woman.

    Comment questioning use of a 7-year-old as the witness in a case involving a son's silence over a life sentence.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Poll Question

    Total votes ·

    Thanks! Check out the results:

    Total votes ·
    Share on Facebook

    Explore more of these tags

    Binitha Jacob

    Binitha Jacob

    Writer, Entertainment News Writer

    Read more »

    At Bored Panda, I dive into breaking celebrity news, Hollywood updates, and viral pop culture stories that spark global conversations. My background as a reporter at International Business Times and Latin Times gave me experience covering fast-moving entertainment stories for international audiences. Today, my work regularly appears on Google News, AOL, and MSN, reaching millions of readers. What excites me most is capturing the pop culture moments that people can’t stop talking about.

    Read less »
    Binitha Jacob

    Binitha Jacob

    Writer, Entertainment News Writer

    At Bored Panda, I dive into breaking celebrity news, Hollywood updates, and viral pop culture stories that spark global conversations. My background as a reporter at International Business Times and Latin Times gave me experience covering fast-moving entertainment stories for international audiences. Today, my work regularly appears on Google News, AOL, and MSN, reaching millions of readers. What excites me most is capturing the pop culture moments that people can’t stop talking about.

    What do you think ?
    2bwhctmvgn
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    So, to be clear, we can read about a mother intentionally drowning her daughter, but we can't see the whole word "abuse"?

    Binky Melnik
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Advertisers don’t make rules about content (well, save for p**n); they just make rules about words.

    Load More Replies...
    Cody Greenwood
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It doesn't matter.If she passed a polygraph test or not, polygraph tests are invisible in court and don't hold up to any validation. The polygraph test is a misnomer.

    OpheliaPoe
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I have to wonder if someone is a pathological liar if they could pass a lie detector test having truly convinced themselves that what they were saying was actually what happened.

    Load More Replies...
    Ruth Watry
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    She told a coworker that she wanted to k**l her daughter for using a permanent marker to write inside her car

    FranSinclair
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I was thinking like "im gonna k**l her for writing on my car!" Is something i certainly wouldnt say to my own kids but ive heard that used primarily as a dramatic phrase and not an actual intention. Im definitely gonna learn more about this bc purely my opinion...but a traumatized little boy and a lie detector test dont vary that much usually. I wonder (hope) there was more evidence than these 2 things. Terrible for both babies though💔

    Load More Replies...
    El Dee
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Passing a lie-detector means nothing, it's junk science..

    Jcusack
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Bro. "it was almost a 360 difference"........... Ugh.

    Tamara Kroonen
    Community Member
    8 months ago

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    So he either lied and his first mom was not a*****e, or his new parents were a*****e too.

    Load More Replies...
    Jan
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    The comment that kids don't lie always gets me. Have these people that say this never been around a child in their life. They have vivid imaginations and if they think or know they are in trouble they will and have lied. With that and the fact that it has been proven that even adult eyewitness testimony is not reliable and it is easy to imagine that there could be a misinterpretation of what he saw even though it seems there was an a*****e situation going on.

    winterwidow87
    Community Member
    8 months ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Sadly there have been multiple cases of kids being influenced by adults in saying what they wanted to hear making up stories of abuses that never happened. In Italy an infamous case of this sort is the one the media labeled "I diavoli della bassa modenese" (the devils of the bassa modenese in english). 15 children at the end of the 90s were taken away from their families because they told horrific stories of abuse and satanic rituals, allegedly performed by their own parents and a local priest. There's a book about it called "All the lies they did not tell" by italian journalist Pablo Trincia. The kids were basically convinced by social workers and psychologists that their parents actually did all those horrible things, so much that they never returned home even when they grew up, because of the false memories that have been implanted in their brains. I am not in any way saying this is a similar case, just disputing the "kids never lie" argument.

    Load More Replies...
    Barbara Panda
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    In that picture of her in her prison blues...is that a lizard coming out of her pocket?

    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I watched the video that the pic is a screenshot from - yep, it's a lizard. Then again, this happened in Florida, so I'm somehow not surprised that a convict in Florida keeps a lizard in her pocket.

    Load More Replies...
    Scott Rackley
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I have problems with a 7 yr old testifying in open court. That should have been videotaped in judge's chambers.

    Royal Stray
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Yeah that's something that's stressful enough for adults, children aren't ready for that stuff. They also won't necessarily be able to choose the best words to describe a situation in that state, because they're children and scared

    Load More Replies...
    The Starsong Princess
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Polygraph tests are very unreliable especially for sociopaths.

    Ben Aziza
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I am gonna be the obnoxious guy and clarify something. Psychopaths is the word you would want to use guseeing by what you mean to convey. Psychopaths can pass these "tests" as they dont "feel" as we do so no real change in the squiggly lines readings if they lie or not. These tests are overall unrealiable and doubelly so for Sociopaths for the opposite reason. As they tend to feel too much. Some even get misidentified by this b******t sharlatan test as the experience couses stress and a hightened emotional response that can trigger those sguiggly lines that can somehow magically allow these magic truth tellers to tell what is a lie and what is not...

    Load More Replies...
    Emilu
    Community Member
    8 months ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    People can pass polygraph tests and still be lying; it’s happened numerous times before. Wouldn’t out an ounce of weight on that. For the people that say that kids are easily influenced, make stuff up etc… I don’t have kids (and yes, I’ve seen them lie/“exaggerate” etc) but I don’t know that the average kid of 7 would have enough outside knowledge to make up “hey, I saw Mum holding my sister underwater until she stopped breathing”. At that age I was more worried about being awful at Wario Land 3 (still am, lol). People with kids, thoughts?

    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I don't have children, but I had an abúsive childhood. My mother abúsed me in every way you can possibly abúse a child, including physically. I recall very clearly (even to this day, and I'm 43) that once when I was 6, she got into an argument with my father (who she also abúsed physically/verbally) because he was going on a business trip (he worked for IBM.) She grabbed a gun her father had given her, pressed its muzzle into the underside of my chin, and said she would k!ll me if he left on the business trip. I told my teacher at school about it the next day, as I was scared of my mother actually k!lling me. The principal called my mom in to ask about it, and my mom said I'd seen a western movie with a gun in it and that I was lying. I also clearly remember the times she took a kitchen knife to my dad and would cut his arms/back multiple times. So, I CAN say that I clearly remember the abúse, down to small details. What AJ said in testimony wasn't childish exaggeration, IMO.

    Load More Replies...
    PenguinEmp
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It is her right but it won't go anywhere. Like Bernardo. Also stop using the word allegedly. She was found guilty. It is now fact. She didn't allegedly drown her daughter. She just drowned her daughter.

    maswartz
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    He didn't send her to jail, the jury did.

    Tiffany
    Community Member
    8 months ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Personality Disorder of denial and delusion (Yes, and they fully believe it)

    Peter Griffin
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Passing the polygraph test only proves she is a psychopath

    Sue
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Polygraph machines are useless. Sociopaths & psychopaths can easily pass them. That's why they don't use them in court any more.

    Ben Aziza
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    That is a really brave child... And one thing pisses me off. His poor sister had an increased % of going unavenged because of a lie detector test....AHAhah a test where some shaman guy or oracle gal reads some lines and can tell if one lies or not. How distant is it from Fking taro card? What about we throw in astrology in there maybe the moon was aligned in a way that could influence the court case hun? HOW IS THAT SNAKE OIL B******T still used in a court of justice? HOW MANY FKING NEURONS ARE IN THE BRAIN! How many different neurodivergents exist? And you are somehow going to account for that by a polygraph test to read if someone is lying or not?

    Cin
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    His new family is like "night & day....a complete 360...." 😒😒🙄🙄

    Poppy
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Seeing the poor boy give his testimony and just break down breaking his heart on the stand was just awful to watch.

    Pelle Lövet
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    ”Kids don’t lie” Really?

    Verena
    Community Member
    8 months ago (edited)

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    Some things not adding up. "360 different" - he is a firefighter, so this glitch is strange. "Kids don't lie" - of course they do, even in the "funny parents"-section of BP are numerous examples. "I could k**l him/her/them for [doing something annoying]" is all over BP posts, mostly those about dumb partners acting stupid. Only very few people never use that sentence. "Good christian family" - emphasizing this is very strange. If the mother is guilty of active murder, she would have accepted the 10 years, knowing that the judges would believe the only testimony by a 7 year old. Story lacks evidence of actually traumatic childhood. A 7 year old would think rules are abuse. If they were abused there is evidence by family members, teachers, pediatricians, neighbours. The hand on face position, if watched from far way, could be slightly different and then a normal position when rescuing someone out of the water. Did they do a polygraph-test with the boy, too?All in all not enough hard evidence for neither decision.

    Royal Stray
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Rules wouldn't be considered abuse by a 7yo who lived with an a*****e parent. Especially not before kids had constant social media access. As someone who grew up in an a*****e home I used to think that the abuse was normal rules and punishments and that perhaps my parents were just strict. That's why so many people from a*****e homes also end up in a*****e relationships, because they don't recognize that certain behavior is a*****e. Not the other way around, especially not over 10 years ago. I could get your point if it was a 13-15 yo today who called their parents a*****e on an internet forum because they got limited internet access or something. But like this, probably not. I do agree that he could have seen it wrong had it only been once, but he said that his mother dunked her up and down, if you found someone drowning the first thing you do is get them tf out of the water. You don't keep them in there

    Load More Replies...
    Chris Ironside
    Community Member
    8 months ago

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    How was his mum only 7?!?!

    aybensermi
    Community Member
    8 months ago

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    I don't know if i am wrong but she looks so innocent and sad in the court photos. She could really have been trying to save her. It is so sad if she mistakenlly sentenced to a lifetime in prison.

    Sven Grammersdorf
    Community Member
    8 months ago

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    This kid is a liar and a psychopath

    PenguinEmp
    Community Member
    8 months ago

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    Funny how the good Christian house is always the one with the abuse.

    Lyone Fein
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Go back and read it again. You got it wrong.

    Load More Replies...
    2bwhctmvgn
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    So, to be clear, we can read about a mother intentionally drowning her daughter, but we can't see the whole word "abuse"?

    Binky Melnik
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Advertisers don’t make rules about content (well, save for p**n); they just make rules about words.

    Load More Replies...
    Cody Greenwood
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It doesn't matter.If she passed a polygraph test or not, polygraph tests are invisible in court and don't hold up to any validation. The polygraph test is a misnomer.

    OpheliaPoe
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I have to wonder if someone is a pathological liar if they could pass a lie detector test having truly convinced themselves that what they were saying was actually what happened.

    Load More Replies...
    Ruth Watry
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    She told a coworker that she wanted to k**l her daughter for using a permanent marker to write inside her car

    FranSinclair
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I was thinking like "im gonna k**l her for writing on my car!" Is something i certainly wouldnt say to my own kids but ive heard that used primarily as a dramatic phrase and not an actual intention. Im definitely gonna learn more about this bc purely my opinion...but a traumatized little boy and a lie detector test dont vary that much usually. I wonder (hope) there was more evidence than these 2 things. Terrible for both babies though💔

    Load More Replies...
    El Dee
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Passing a lie-detector means nothing, it's junk science..

    Jcusack
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Bro. "it was almost a 360 difference"........... Ugh.

    Tamara Kroonen
    Community Member
    8 months ago

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    So he either lied and his first mom was not a*****e, or his new parents were a*****e too.

    Load More Replies...
    Jan
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    The comment that kids don't lie always gets me. Have these people that say this never been around a child in their life. They have vivid imaginations and if they think or know they are in trouble they will and have lied. With that and the fact that it has been proven that even adult eyewitness testimony is not reliable and it is easy to imagine that there could be a misinterpretation of what he saw even though it seems there was an a*****e situation going on.

    winterwidow87
    Community Member
    8 months ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Sadly there have been multiple cases of kids being influenced by adults in saying what they wanted to hear making up stories of abuses that never happened. In Italy an infamous case of this sort is the one the media labeled "I diavoli della bassa modenese" (the devils of the bassa modenese in english). 15 children at the end of the 90s were taken away from their families because they told horrific stories of abuse and satanic rituals, allegedly performed by their own parents and a local priest. There's a book about it called "All the lies they did not tell" by italian journalist Pablo Trincia. The kids were basically convinced by social workers and psychologists that their parents actually did all those horrible things, so much that they never returned home even when they grew up, because of the false memories that have been implanted in their brains. I am not in any way saying this is a similar case, just disputing the "kids never lie" argument.

    Load More Replies...
    Barbara Panda
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    In that picture of her in her prison blues...is that a lizard coming out of her pocket?

    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I watched the video that the pic is a screenshot from - yep, it's a lizard. Then again, this happened in Florida, so I'm somehow not surprised that a convict in Florida keeps a lizard in her pocket.

    Load More Replies...
    Scott Rackley
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I have problems with a 7 yr old testifying in open court. That should have been videotaped in judge's chambers.

    Royal Stray
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Yeah that's something that's stressful enough for adults, children aren't ready for that stuff. They also won't necessarily be able to choose the best words to describe a situation in that state, because they're children and scared

    Load More Replies...
    The Starsong Princess
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Polygraph tests are very unreliable especially for sociopaths.

    Ben Aziza
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I am gonna be the obnoxious guy and clarify something. Psychopaths is the word you would want to use guseeing by what you mean to convey. Psychopaths can pass these "tests" as they dont "feel" as we do so no real change in the squiggly lines readings if they lie or not. These tests are overall unrealiable and doubelly so for Sociopaths for the opposite reason. As they tend to feel too much. Some even get misidentified by this b******t sharlatan test as the experience couses stress and a hightened emotional response that can trigger those sguiggly lines that can somehow magically allow these magic truth tellers to tell what is a lie and what is not...

    Load More Replies...
    Emilu
    Community Member
    8 months ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    People can pass polygraph tests and still be lying; it’s happened numerous times before. Wouldn’t out an ounce of weight on that. For the people that say that kids are easily influenced, make stuff up etc… I don’t have kids (and yes, I’ve seen them lie/“exaggerate” etc) but I don’t know that the average kid of 7 would have enough outside knowledge to make up “hey, I saw Mum holding my sister underwater until she stopped breathing”. At that age I was more worried about being awful at Wario Land 3 (still am, lol). People with kids, thoughts?

    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I don't have children, but I had an abúsive childhood. My mother abúsed me in every way you can possibly abúse a child, including physically. I recall very clearly (even to this day, and I'm 43) that once when I was 6, she got into an argument with my father (who she also abúsed physically/verbally) because he was going on a business trip (he worked for IBM.) She grabbed a gun her father had given her, pressed its muzzle into the underside of my chin, and said she would k!ll me if he left on the business trip. I told my teacher at school about it the next day, as I was scared of my mother actually k!lling me. The principal called my mom in to ask about it, and my mom said I'd seen a western movie with a gun in it and that I was lying. I also clearly remember the times she took a kitchen knife to my dad and would cut his arms/back multiple times. So, I CAN say that I clearly remember the abúse, down to small details. What AJ said in testimony wasn't childish exaggeration, IMO.

    Load More Replies...
    PenguinEmp
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It is her right but it won't go anywhere. Like Bernardo. Also stop using the word allegedly. She was found guilty. It is now fact. She didn't allegedly drown her daughter. She just drowned her daughter.

    maswartz
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    He didn't send her to jail, the jury did.

    Tiffany
    Community Member
    8 months ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Personality Disorder of denial and delusion (Yes, and they fully believe it)

    Peter Griffin
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Passing the polygraph test only proves she is a psychopath

    Sue
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Polygraph machines are useless. Sociopaths & psychopaths can easily pass them. That's why they don't use them in court any more.

    Ben Aziza
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    That is a really brave child... And one thing pisses me off. His poor sister had an increased % of going unavenged because of a lie detector test....AHAhah a test where some shaman guy or oracle gal reads some lines and can tell if one lies or not. How distant is it from Fking taro card? What about we throw in astrology in there maybe the moon was aligned in a way that could influence the court case hun? HOW IS THAT SNAKE OIL B******T still used in a court of justice? HOW MANY FKING NEURONS ARE IN THE BRAIN! How many different neurodivergents exist? And you are somehow going to account for that by a polygraph test to read if someone is lying or not?

    Cin
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    His new family is like "night & day....a complete 360...." 😒😒🙄🙄

    Poppy
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Seeing the poor boy give his testimony and just break down breaking his heart on the stand was just awful to watch.

    Pelle Lövet
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    ”Kids don’t lie” Really?

    Verena
    Community Member
    8 months ago (edited)

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    Some things not adding up. "360 different" - he is a firefighter, so this glitch is strange. "Kids don't lie" - of course they do, even in the "funny parents"-section of BP are numerous examples. "I could k**l him/her/them for [doing something annoying]" is all over BP posts, mostly those about dumb partners acting stupid. Only very few people never use that sentence. "Good christian family" - emphasizing this is very strange. If the mother is guilty of active murder, she would have accepted the 10 years, knowing that the judges would believe the only testimony by a 7 year old. Story lacks evidence of actually traumatic childhood. A 7 year old would think rules are abuse. If they were abused there is evidence by family members, teachers, pediatricians, neighbours. The hand on face position, if watched from far way, could be slightly different and then a normal position when rescuing someone out of the water. Did they do a polygraph-test with the boy, too?All in all not enough hard evidence for neither decision.

    Royal Stray
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Rules wouldn't be considered abuse by a 7yo who lived with an a*****e parent. Especially not before kids had constant social media access. As someone who grew up in an a*****e home I used to think that the abuse was normal rules and punishments and that perhaps my parents were just strict. That's why so many people from a*****e homes also end up in a*****e relationships, because they don't recognize that certain behavior is a*****e. Not the other way around, especially not over 10 years ago. I could get your point if it was a 13-15 yo today who called their parents a*****e on an internet forum because they got limited internet access or something. But like this, probably not. I do agree that he could have seen it wrong had it only been once, but he said that his mother dunked her up and down, if you found someone drowning the first thing you do is get them tf out of the water. You don't keep them in there

    Load More Replies...
    Chris Ironside
    Community Member
    8 months ago

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    How was his mum only 7?!?!

    aybensermi
    Community Member
    8 months ago

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    I don't know if i am wrong but she looks so innocent and sad in the court photos. She could really have been trying to save her. It is so sad if she mistakenlly sentenced to a lifetime in prison.

    Sven Grammersdorf
    Community Member
    8 months ago

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    This kid is a liar and a psychopath

    PenguinEmp
    Community Member
    8 months ago

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    Funny how the good Christian house is always the one with the abuse.

    Lyone Fein
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Go back and read it again. You got it wrong.

    Load More Replies...
    You May Like
    Related on Bored Panda
    Popular on Bored Panda
    Trending on Bored Panda
    Also on Bored Panda
    ADVERTISEMENT