Criminal Motives

Michael Jackson Was Found Not Guilty — His Behavior Was Still Indefensible

28 min · 9 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Michael Jackson Was Found Not Guilty — His Behavior Was Still Indefensible

Descripción

Michael Jackson Was Found Not Guilty — His Behavior Was Still IndefensibleNetflix just dropped Michael Jackson: The Verdict — but the most damning parts of this story didn't make the cut. Behavioral analyst Matt Phifer breaks down everything the documentary left out, and what Michael Jackson's admitted behavior tells us regardless of what a jury decided.Get 15% off your first month of therapy with BetterHelp:👉 http://betterhelp.com/mattphifer🔔 New episodes every day — Subscribe so you never miss a case breakdown:👉 https://www.youtube.com/@CriminalMotives📝 Get exclusive case updates, & bonus analysis — join my free Substack:👉 https://substack.com/@criminalmotivesNetflix's Michael Jackson: The Verdict covers the charges, the trial, and the shocking not guilty verdict — but conveniently skips over Wade Robson's recanted testimony, the $20 million settlement, and the post-trial allegations that continued to surface for years. In this episode, behavioral analyst Matt Phifer reviews everything the doc missed and sits down with former federal prosecutor Nema Romani to break down why the prosecution lost despite having multiple witnesses. Matt also gives his behavioral analyst perspective on why Michael Jackson's admitted behavior — sharing a bed with children — was a boundary violation regardless of what happened in that courtroom.In This Episode:The critical evidence Netflix chose to leave out of Michael Jackson: The VerdictWhy the prosecution lost despite multiple victims and witnesses testifyingWade Robson testified in Michael's defense under oath — then reversed course entirely in 2013The $20 million settlement and what it signals from a behavioral standpointWhy a not guilty verdict is not the same as innocent — and why the behavior matters either way

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Criminal Motives!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

331 episodios

episode Every Single Witness Said It Wasn't Self-Defense — Even The Ones Karmelo's Team Called artwork

Every Single Witness Said It Wasn't Self-Defense — Even The Ones Karmelo's Team Called

Every Single Witness Said It Wasn't Self-Defense — Even The Ones Karmelo's Team CalledThe defense has rested. Karmelo Anthony will not take the stand. And twelve jurors are about to decide the rest of his life — armed with one question nobody in that courtroom answered: why was there a knife at a track meet in the first place?🧠 If this case brought up something personal about conflict, fear, or a moment that changed everything in your own life — real support is available.Get 15% off your first month of therapy with BetterHelp:👉 http://betterhelp.com/mattphifer🔔 New episodes every day — Subscribe so you never miss a case breakdown:👉 https://www.youtube.com/@CriminalMotives📝 Get exclusive case updates, court documents & bonus analysis — join my free Substack:👉 https://substack.com/@criminalmotivesAfter four days of testimony and 27 witnesses, the Karmelo Anthony murder trial is heading into closing arguments with the defense having rested their case — and Karmelo choosing not to testify in his own defense. In this episode, behavioral analyst Matt Phifer breaks down what that silence really signals, why not one single witness — including the defense's own — believed this was self-defense, and what the unanswered knife question tells us about the psychology behind this entire case. This isn't just a legal breakdown. It's a deep dive into the behavior, the decision making, and the human patterns that brought two seventeen year olds to a moment that changed everything.In This Episode:Why Karmelo Anthony choosing not to testify is more significant than most people realizeNot one witness — prosecution or defense — said they believed this was self-defenseThe knife question the defense never answered and why that silence is dangerousWhat the jury is carrying emotionally into that deliberation room tomorrowWhy a self-defense claim with a weapon against an unarmed person is an almost impossible argument to makeVideo Credit: @lawandcrime

9 de jun de 202629 min
episode Michael Jackson Was Found Not Guilty — His Behavior Was Still Indefensible artwork

Michael Jackson Was Found Not Guilty — His Behavior Was Still Indefensible

Michael Jackson Was Found Not Guilty — His Behavior Was Still IndefensibleNetflix just dropped Michael Jackson: The Verdict — but the most damning parts of this story didn't make the cut. Behavioral analyst Matt Phifer breaks down everything the documentary left out, and what Michael Jackson's admitted behavior tells us regardless of what a jury decided.Get 15% off your first month of therapy with BetterHelp:👉 http://betterhelp.com/mattphifer🔔 New episodes every day — Subscribe so you never miss a case breakdown:👉 https://www.youtube.com/@CriminalMotives📝 Get exclusive case updates, & bonus analysis — join my free Substack:👉 https://substack.com/@criminalmotivesNetflix's Michael Jackson: The Verdict covers the charges, the trial, and the shocking not guilty verdict — but conveniently skips over Wade Robson's recanted testimony, the $20 million settlement, and the post-trial allegations that continued to surface for years. In this episode, behavioral analyst Matt Phifer reviews everything the doc missed and sits down with former federal prosecutor Nema Romani to break down why the prosecution lost despite having multiple witnesses. Matt also gives his behavioral analyst perspective on why Michael Jackson's admitted behavior — sharing a bed with children — was a boundary violation regardless of what happened in that courtroom.In This Episode:The critical evidence Netflix chose to leave out of Michael Jackson: The VerdictWhy the prosecution lost despite multiple victims and witnesses testifyingWade Robson testified in Michael's defense under oath — then reversed course entirely in 2013The $20 million settlement and what it signals from a behavioral standpointWhy a not guilty verdict is not the same as innocent — and why the behavior matters either way

9 de jun de 202628 min
episode Is MacKenzie Shirilla Heading to OnlyFans? Her Prison Behavior Says Yes artwork

Is MacKenzie Shirilla Heading to OnlyFans? Her Prison Behavior Says Yes

Mackenzie Shirilla's Prison Record EXPOSED: Sexual Misconduct, Contraband & More | Criminal MotivesIs Mackenzie Shirilla sabotaging her own future behind bars? In this episode, therapist Matt Phifer dives deep into 58+ pages of conduct reports from Ohio's Department of Corrections revealing a pattern of infractions that could keep Mackenzie locked up for the rest of her life.From being out of place after hours, to possessing nude magazines and contraband clothing, to allegations of sexual activity and explicit behavior on video visits the records paint a troubling picture of someone who refuses to follow the rules, even in prison.Matt is joined by Justin Pernie, crisis manager at White Collar Advice and a former federal inmate, who breaks down what these infractions really mean for Mackenzie's future including her 2037 parole hearing and what she'd need to do to ever have a chance at getting out.In this episode:Mackenzie Shirilla's full prison infraction timeline revealedThe explicit video visit conduct report she couldn't denyWhat a prison advisor says about her chances at paroleWhy Matt Phifer believes Mackenzie may be heading toward OnlyFansThe role her parents may be playing in all of it.📝 Join my FREE Substack for exclusive case updates, court document insights, and bonus discussions:👉 https://substack.com/@criminalmotives🧠 Struggling with your mental health or a toxic relationship?Get 15% off therapy with BetterHelp:👉 http://betterhelp.com/mattphifer

Ayer30 min
episode He Ran Over a Woman 100 Times. His Fans Called It a Misunderstanding artwork

He Ran Over a Woman 100 Times. His Fans Called It a Misunderstanding

He Ran Over a Woman 100 Times. His Fans Called It a MisunderstandingWade Wilson the so-called "Deadpool Killer" was convicted of two brutal murders, yet somehow amassed a cult-like following of women who believed he was innocent. In this episode, therapist Matthew Phifer reacts to the shocking case of Wade Wilson, breaks down the psychology behind trauma bonding, and explains why so many victims and fans couldn't see past his looks and charm even after a death sentence.We cover the murders of Christine Melton and Diane Ruiz, the viral social media frenzy, the courtroom confessions, and the disturbing pattern of abuse that led here. If you or someone you know has ever said "it could never be me" this one is for you.Struggling in a toxic relationship? You're not alone.If this episode hit close to home, BetterHelp connects you with a licensed therapist online — on your schedule, from anywhere.👉 Get 15% off your first month: http://betterhelp.com/mattphifer📬 Subscribe to my Substack for case updates, resources & more:👉 https://substack.com/@criminalmotives

5 de jun de 202644 min
episode Karmelo Anthony Brought a Knife to a Track Meet — His Lawyers Have No Answer For It artwork

Karmelo Anthony Brought a Knife to a Track Meet — His Lawyers Have No Answer For It

Jury selection is officially underway in McKinney, Texas — and the tension outside the courthouse is already building. Demonstrators are gathering on both sides, the GiveSendGo fundraiser for Karmelo Anthony has now surpassed $600,000, and opening statements could begin as early as tomorrow.In Episode 2 of our ongoing trial series, we break down Karmelo Anthony's self-defense claim, why attorneys say it's an uphill battle, and the one question that could define this entire trial — why did Karmelo bring a knife to a track meet?I also share my perspective as a therapist on why being a victim and being legally wrong are not mutually exclusive — and why that distinction matters more in this case than most people realize.🔗 Resources & Links:Some links below may be affiliate links. I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.Betterhelp: http://betterhelp.com/mattphiferOpus: https://www.opus.pro/?via=criminalmotivesMonarch: https://monarch.com/referral/174kyzqlww?r_source=share📰 Subscribe to the Criminal Motives Substack for more:https://substack.com/@criminalmotives🔔 This is Part 2 of an ongoing series. Subscribe and turn on notifications so you don't miss an update.

5 de jun de 202622 min