Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace, a pearl wearing brat Spie says,
one hundred and thirty three thousand dollars Mercedes right over
an officer down. I don't mean he mowed the officer down.
(00:22):
I mean he mowed over the officer while the officer
was already down, defenseless.
Speaker 2 (00:30):
On the ground.
Speaker 1 (00:32):
Imagine that one hundred and thirty three thousand dollars Mercedes
Monster machine plow a G wagon. You ever seen one
of those. They're huge, plowing over you. You see it
coming and you are helpless to do anything to stop it.
That is allegedly what happened at the wheel a silver
(00:56):
spoon bratt I, Nancy Grace, this is crime Store.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
Thank you for being with us.
Speaker 3 (01:02):
Dolton Jane Check twenty one from Gwyneed, Pennsylvania is no
stranger to the finer things.
Speaker 2 (01:07):
He lives a lavish life.
Speaker 3 (01:08):
In a one point four million dollar home and attends
Loyola Marimon University. However, his reckless behavior has taken a
dangerous turn, making headlines for all the wrong reasons.
Speaker 1 (01:22):
A lavish life. Do you know how many jobs police
officers have to work just to pay for their house?
The house payment the children's school, the cars, the braces,
this the dance lessons.
Speaker 2 (01:41):
That I've had.
Speaker 1 (01:43):
Cops that work a shift all day or all night,
then they have two other extra jobs. And this guy,
this brat is driving one hundred and thirty three, yes him,
thousand dollars Mercedes g Wagon and he allegedly plows over
(02:05):
an officer down to Dave Matt, Crime Story's investigative reporter,
what do you mean by lavish life?
Speaker 4 (02:15):
We are talking about a young man, Nancy, who has
grown up in a powerful, multi million dollar household. He's driving,
as you've mentioned, a very expensive car. He went to
a very exclusive school where he was on the rowing
team in high school, and then went to Loyola Marymount
(02:38):
where he once again was on the rowing team for
two years. This is a young man who has been
given every possible financial advantage in life, Nancy.
Speaker 1 (02:53):
Guys, when I say lavish lifestyle, I couldn't think of
a better word. Let me understand something. Alexis Tereschuk joining
US Crime Stories investigative reporter.
Speaker 2 (03:07):
His father is a partner at a huge law firm.
Speaker 1 (03:13):
I've been trying to count out how many satellite offices
they have. It's the Brisboy law firm, and I quit
counting at one, two, three, four for six seven eight,
nineteen eleven, twelve, thirteen, fourteen, fifteen, sixteen, seventeen, eighteen, nineteen
twenty times two to three sixty satellite offices.
Speaker 5 (03:36):
That I know of.
Speaker 1 (03:37):
So they're rolling in money but obviously not in good judgment.
So explain to me this brat, the one wearing the
pearls driving the one hundred and thirty three thousand dollars
Mercedes g wagon that allegedly not only runs out runs
over an officer down, but then circles around.
Speaker 2 (04:02):
Come to me, please, circles around, According.
Speaker 1 (04:05):
To my reading of the fact, circles around, comes back
to run over the officer was in an accident, he
circled around the parking lot and came back to run
over an officer. Then also rams another cruiser with officers.
(04:25):
And it tell me about the daddy's law firm, Brisboy.
Speaker 6 (04:30):
So briz Boy, his dad. They live outside of Philadelphia,
a very wealthy area. He went to private school his
whole life, and the dad's firm covers everything from cannabis
and regulated substances to entertainment and media and sports. This
is their corporate, they do mergers and acquisitions, a huge,
huge law firm. And in fact, his grandfather was a
(04:53):
very well known attorney as well. So it's three, well,
two generations of successful lawyers and then him.
Speaker 2 (05:00):
So he actually has.
Speaker 6 (05:01):
His parents live in a one point four million dollar
house in a suburb of Philadelphia's Beautiful Home Again private school.
All these years driving this one hundred thousand dollars car,
this was not his first run in with the law.
Speaker 1 (05:15):
This day which starts, are going to get to his
record one thing at a time. Hold on, Alexis Tereschuk.
You got me drinking out of the fire hydrant right now.
I want to hear it all.
Speaker 5 (05:27):
But in order, and I learned this trying.
Speaker 2 (05:29):
Felony prosecution cases.
Speaker 1 (05:31):
You have to go a to Z one at a time,
all right, to set forth your facts clearly.
Speaker 2 (05:38):
In plane fashion.
Speaker 1 (05:39):
I'm on the dad right now, because this little monster
did not just happen overnight. This took a good twenty
plus years of careful breeding to make him what he
is today. I want you to hear about daddy's law firm. Okay,
listen to this.
Speaker 7 (05:57):
I ad my prior for some people left and they
were telling me about Lewis Brisboy and they were telling
me it's better culture, better firm. You're going to really
enjoy it. And my first thought was I was at
a big firm. This is even a bigger firm. It's
just a different letterhead, you know. I couldn't get my
hands around that they would be a difference. And then
(06:18):
finally one day I decided it was time for a change,
and they were absolutely one hundred percent dead on.
Speaker 2 (06:25):
This firm is very different.
Speaker 1 (06:27):
It's more transparent, more transparent, more opportunity.
Speaker 5 (06:31):
Well, maybe Dad's going to.
Speaker 1 (06:32):
Be transparent when he shows up for his son in court.
You know, Alexis Tereschuk as awesome as you are. I
have a veteran trial lawyer on with me right now,
Ryan Brown, veteran criminal defense attorney at Jryanbrownlaw dot com.
Speaker 2 (06:49):
Ryan, thank you for being with us.
Speaker 1 (06:51):
I noticed that Daddy's specialty among many specialties listed for
his law firm, Lewis.
Speaker 2 (06:56):
Brisboy, is liability.
Speaker 1 (07:00):
Could you explain in a nutshell do not give me
a law school lecture? What does that mean if you
specialize in liability law?
Speaker 8 (07:10):
Nasie quickly.
Speaker 9 (07:11):
He represents insurance companies when they're getting sued that's the
elevator speech. So at a firm like this, it's going
to be big insurance claims you as best as litigation
stuff like that. So big, massive, big time claims against
big insurance companies.
Speaker 8 (07:27):
He's going to be representing my ability.
Speaker 1 (07:29):
Liability to me, Ryan Brown means you're liable. You did
something wrong and someone was harmed. That's what when you're
liable for something, you're responsible for something.
Speaker 2 (07:43):
Let's get back off.
Speaker 1 (07:44):
Daddy's big law firm all around the country, sixty satellite
offices that I know of. It takes a lot to
become a lawyer at a big firm like that. Lewis Brisboy.
The spawn of this partner in this law firm is
the son Dalton Jana check Listen.
Speaker 4 (08:04):
In a shocking video going viral online, the attempted murder
of a police officer is caught on tape at eleven
fifty six am with pain Township police attempt to stop
a white Mercedes g Wagon. When the vehicle speeds away,
driving erradically high rate of speed, crossing over the concrete median,
the officer sends out an APB to area departments.
Speaker 1 (08:23):
That from at Kels and Dale's on TikTok okay. I
need to slow that down to understand exactly what happened
to Alexis Tereschuk. A Crime story's investigative reporter, break it
down for me exactly what happened. I've researched, and what
really stood out to me was the claim all of
these allegations Jana Chik presumed innocent until proving guilty in
(08:46):
a court of law.
Speaker 2 (08:48):
If there's not.
Speaker 1 (08:48):
Some sweetheart plea deal behind closed doors that said, think
how we've heard about cases covered up and the next
thing you know is all done. Like know, just example,
Jeffrey Epstein got basically house arrest for molesting little girls.
Speaker 2 (09:06):
That kind of.
Speaker 1 (09:07):
Cover up that hasn't happened yet, and I want to
make sure it doesn't happen. Alexis terrestro because I do
not like it when police officers put.
Speaker 2 (09:17):
Their life on the line and.
Speaker 1 (09:19):
Some spoil brat wearing his pearls and his Mercedes g
Wagon does big three sixty and comes around to run
over one of our officers.
Speaker 2 (09:31):
What happened?
Speaker 6 (09:34):
So it started about ten o'clock in the morning on Friday,
October twenty fourth. He is driving speeding. Police officers try
to stop him, try to pull over his car and
he flees. Instead of where I live in Los Angeles
would have turned into a car chase. They did not
do that. They let him go, but they send an
alert out to all the other officers, all the local
(09:55):
police areas, Hey, we've got a car that we're looking for.
This other police lif officer notices. He says, a sergeant
is hearing that there was a young man in town
who had threatened to blow up the police department. So
they were on hi alert looking for this man. This sergeant, Okay,
wait a.
Speaker 1 (10:14):
Minute, Wait a minute, Alexis Tereschuk, I feel like you're
mixing up a lot of stories. You're not, You're not.
I just need to get the order correct. I'm talking
about an officer that gets mowed down and two other
officers rammed.
Speaker 2 (10:29):
That's where we get the attempt apartment.
Speaker 1 (10:30):
Okay, but I heard you say threatened to blow up
the police department. You certainly got my attention on that.
Would you repeat that part? Police?
Speaker 6 (10:40):
So police officer, a sergeant in the area was told
that there was a threat against the police department and
that this young man, Jana Check, had threatened to blow
up the police station, so they were on alert about
him as well.
Speaker 1 (10:54):
Then he gets okay, stop right there, stop right there,
stop right there.
Speaker 2 (10:58):
I'm going to circle back to you, Alexis.
Speaker 1 (11:00):
Because I'm focused on the officer lying on the ground
that got rammed.
Speaker 2 (11:04):
They got run over, plowed over with a g wagon.
Speaker 1 (11:07):
But Ryan Brown, terroristic threat that is a serious felony.
Speaker 8 (11:13):
As you're right, it is a serious felly. But you've
got to remember we're not trying these cases in the press.
Speaker 9 (11:18):
Right on a case like terroristic threats, there's got to
be something that coroborates this story, right.
Speaker 8 (11:23):
It can't just be, Hey, this guy threatened to blow
up the police station. Let's send in the prison for years.
Speaker 1 (11:27):
No.
Speaker 8 (11:28):
No, they're going to have to prove this in court
with outside evidence other than just somebody he did it.
They're going to have to have more, and we're a
long ways away case. That's why we don't try these
things on TV.
Speaker 1 (11:40):
You know, Ryan Brown, nobody asked you to try the
case on TV. And earlier you mentioned that terroristic threats
were very illegal. Now I'm sorry, they're not just illegal,
they're very illegal.
Speaker 2 (11:51):
Okay, note to self, Alexis Treschuk.
Speaker 1 (11:55):
We've clearly gone down the garden path, but rightfully done.
A terroristic threat is very serious. I'd be curious to
find out if it was recorded, if it was on
an answer machine, if it was called in somewhere where
we have corroboration that Ryan Brown accurately described. It's necessary
(12:18):
to prove a terroistic threat. But we're getting far afield.
I want to get back to running over an officer down.
Speaker 4 (12:25):
Listen twelve thirty nine pm Ploymouth Township Police respond to
doublete guest suites where the Mercedes G Wagon is spotted
bulling directly behind the Mercedes, activating lights. The Mercedes is
thrown into reverse and used as a battering ram multiple times.
Out of his patrol car. The officer orders Janechek to stop.
Janet jack Floor is the Mercedes attempting to hit the officer,
(12:46):
who discharges his firearm in defense. A bullet grazes the
head of Janicheck as he accelerates toward the officer, knocking
him to the ground.
Speaker 1 (12:55):
Okay, so if a bullet did graze him, straight out
to Rob Drake, joining US behavior expert, former FBI Special
Agent Chief of the FBI Counterintelligence Behavioral Analysis Program, and
author of Sizing People Up, a veteran FBI agent's manual
for behavior prediction. You can find him at Robindreke dot com. Robin,
(13:20):
thank you for being with us, Robin. What personality does
this when an officer has pulled me over before? I
say yes ma'am, yes sir, and I shut my pie
hole and I do what I'm told? You know why,
because I don't want to get beaten up outside of
the car. Number one, but arguing with the cop much
(13:41):
less running the cop over while the cop is down.
Also the fact that he was graised when the officer
fired back. It's going to be really hard for him
to say, oh, that wasn't me with a trickle of
blood running down his forehead.
Speaker 10 (13:59):
Yeah, this is We've got a couple of things going
on here. One, this is an individual clearly without guardrails.
He has no life reps and consequences for any actions whatsoever,
and zero empathy for any of the actions that he
plays out. His emotional intelligence is bottomed out at pretty
much zero, if not totally zero and under it. And
the other thing that's really curious to here is I
(14:20):
think they're going to find a lot more through this
investigation because he so clearly targeted law enforcement, both prior
potentially as well as during this I think there's a
reason behind that that we're not quite sure of yet
because it just doesn't fit a pattern that we've seen established.
Speaker 5 (14:35):
Yet, what do you mean by that?
Speaker 10 (14:40):
It's curious that all right? So here we have a
young kid without guard rails, with impulse control.
Speaker 5 (14:46):
Agg why are you saying a young kid.
Speaker 1 (14:47):
He's in his twenties, because you know that my Fosher
by this age, had already been all around the world
fighting for his country, had come back, was trying to
go to college, which to become an accountant and support children,
had to drop out of calls because he couldn't do
his job at the railroad and go to school. So
(15:08):
but you're calling Janechek a kid, and I'm curious why.
Speaker 10 (15:14):
Because his mindsets that out of a five year old
without any regulation or emotional control.
Speaker 2 (15:17):
I mean, you mean a spoiled brat. That does not
make him a kid, all right, So semantics on spoiled brat.
Speaker 10 (15:24):
But yeah, he's so he's an adult making adult choices
as an infantile brain.
Speaker 5 (15:29):
No doubt.
Speaker 10 (15:29):
And it's a broken brain because it hasn't been given
US regulation, and so I really think that there's targeting
going on here, especially if there's the claims of targeting
law enforcement and wanting to bomb something. So there's a
reason why that we're not seeing yet about why this
anti law enforcement binge in his life.
Speaker 8 (15:48):
I'm really curious about that.
Speaker 1 (15:50):
I mean, looking, Wow, we're just showing the ramming. At first,
it didn't look too bad. Ow ooh he hit that
other car too that I'm at Kells and Dale's on TikTok,
Thanks Kills and Dale's. I'd like to see that again. Okay,
hold on, there's a cop coming up behind him, just
as we learned it the double tree Oh, runs right
(16:11):
into him, takes off and then oh whoa Okay, one
ramming wasn't enough.
Speaker 2 (16:18):
The cop gets out fires.
Speaker 1 (16:22):
Oh, and he went right at the vehicle with the cop.
Speaker 2 (16:28):
Oh that that's not good. That is not good. Okay.
Speaker 1 (16:33):
Dave Mack joining me, Crime Stories investigative reporter. What happens
after the video we're sitting from at Kells and Dale's
on TikTok.
Speaker 4 (16:41):
After he tries to run over this officer, Nancy. The
officer is on the ground, you know, he's actually having
to put a tourniquet around his leg, that's how bad
he's bleeding. It feels like he's gonna die. And here
goes this idiot again, driving over him three times, not once,
(17:04):
not twice, three times. Then he pulls out of the
parking lot, back on the lamb, and of course the
APB goes out and the city everyone around there is
starting to look for this vehicle that they know who's
driving it, they know what he's already done. This is
such a dangerous situation because anybody that is willing to
(17:25):
purposely hurt, name try to kill a police officer, what
does that mean to the rest of us on the street.
The injured officer on the ground putting a tourniquet on
his wounded leg, Janichek circles the parking lot and heads
back to hit him again and again and again.
Speaker 2 (17:43):
Three times.
Speaker 4 (17:43):
Janichek runs over the defenseless officer laying on the ground,
caught on video by shocked witnesses, Janichek flees the parking lot.
Speaker 1 (17:51):
He runs over the same officer three times. Did I
get that correct, alexis Terschak is that he ran over
the officer three times?
Speaker 6 (18:03):
It is but these three times are after he already
hit him once. When we in the video is where
you see him backing up in the police car twice.
Well you can't see it's obstructed by the other car,
but you can see the white car there.
Speaker 2 (18:16):
So he backs up.
Speaker 5 (18:17):
There's the first ship.
Speaker 2 (18:18):
There's the first hit right there.
Speaker 1 (18:20):
Let's watch the Plymouth township vehicle. Okay, second hit. Cop
gets out of the car, fires off one shot, grazes
Jana check and now the cop and it's this is
where he's right there when he mows over the officer
(18:40):
for the first time. By the way, this video from
at Kills and Dell's on TikTok.
Speaker 2 (18:45):
Now, this is where Dave Matt is telling us.
Speaker 1 (18:49):
He circles around and does a three sixty and comes
back for more.
Speaker 6 (18:54):
Alexis that's exactly right. He loops around this park that
he comes back. This officer is on the ground, as
Dave said, he's tying a tourniquet on his leg. He
is trying to stop the bleeding. It's a major artery
in your leg. So he's injured. And this guy runs
him over one, two, three times and then please, so
he has literally tried to kill him.
Speaker 1 (19:15):
That video, fortunately fortuitously from at Kelsendale's on TikTok.
Speaker 2 (19:20):
I want to look at that video one more time.
Speaker 1 (19:23):
With one officer down and fighting for his life in
the parking lot and all points bulletin APB goes out
for the G wagon. Plymouth Township officers try to stop
an out of control driver. Doesn't work, was not successful.
Look at this, you know sometimes if you don't have
(19:45):
the video, no one would believe it. And off he goes,
only to do a three sixty and come back and
run over the same officer down on the ground trying
to apply a tourniquet to stop his femeral artery from
pumping out all of his blood onto the parking lot.
(20:06):
That video from at Kelson Dell's TikTok.
Speaker 3 (20:09):
With his whole life ahead of him, Janet Check's time
at LMU has been overshadowed by risky choices. His latest
escapade involved a series of poor decisions behind the wheel
of his high end Mercedes G Wagon.
Speaker 1 (20:25):
Who and H said that his poor decisions. This is
more than a poor decision. He ran over police officer
down on the ground trying to self administer a tourniquet.
Speaker 2 (20:46):
Crime stories with.
Speaker 1 (20:47):
Nancy Grace, you know what to Doctor Kendall Crown's joining us.
He is a famous chief medical examiner out of Terrent
Counting Fort Worth. He is an esteemed lecturer in the
Burnett School of Medicine at TCU, and he is now
the star of a hit podcast, Mayhem in the Morgue.
Speaker 2 (21:11):
The femeral artery, Explain.
Speaker 1 (21:13):
What is it and how quickly can you die if
that has been severed?
Speaker 11 (21:19):
So the fimlaral artery is a branch off of your aority.
It's a large vessel that runs through your thigh. It's
about the width of a little bit bigger than a pencil.
And if this artery gets torn, you can bleed out
in a manner of minutes. It's actually a very severe
artery to tear or rupture, and it often happens in
compound fractures of the femur that can occur when you
(21:42):
get hit by a car.
Speaker 1 (21:43):
Okay, slowly down for me, doctor Crowns, because I want
to hear every word that you just said. Could you
say that really slowly? You're saying that you believe I'm extrapolating.
You're saying you believe that when the officer down was
run over. It may have broken a femur. A what's
(22:04):
the femur? And B how does a femur break result
in a ordinal bleeding?
Speaker 11 (22:12):
Okay, the femur is the large bone in your thigh.
When you look at the video, the g wagon fits
awful high. So the bumper I feel could have hit
the officer in his thigh, causing his femur, which is
the bone in the thigh, to break. And when that breaks,
you can get a compound fracture where the fracture itself
(22:32):
breaks apart and then pierces the vessel and then pots
out of the skin and causes extreme hemorrhage. So the
fracture of the femur can tear the femeral artery, which
then results in hemorrhage and you can die in a
matter of metas.
Speaker 2 (22:46):
The femur is about how thick.
Speaker 11 (22:50):
The femur is about biggest round as a toilet paper roll,
maybe a little bit smaller.
Speaker 1 (22:56):
So cracked in two, it functions as basically a spear
because the end of the femur when it's broken, is jagged.
It doesn't break nice and cleanly. That it's jagged with
points and that going into your A order, your femeral
(23:16):
your femeral A order would cause I guess, almost immediate death.
Speaker 11 (23:24):
So you're correct. It would be like a spear because
no femur breaks or no bone breaks in a clean fracture.
And yes, it would cut through the femeral artery. You
wouldn't die immediately, but you would bleed to death in
a matter of minutes.
Speaker 1 (23:37):
How many minutes if you didn't get a tourniquet on
with a severance, you seve your femeral artery how quickly?
Speaker 2 (23:44):
I mean, it's like a pump.
Speaker 1 (23:46):
It's like somebody's got a bike pump doing this and
the blood is just gushing out with every heartbeat how quickly?
When you say minutes, how many minutes did the officer
have before he would have bled out without.
Speaker 11 (23:58):
That tourniquet, Possibly at the short end three to five,
maybe at most ten, but it is going to be
quite quickly. It's a very severe injury and it's not
something you want to mess around with, and you're going
to want to treat it as quick as you can.
Speaker 2 (24:15):
Okay, refresher. You have the femeral artery.
Speaker 5 (24:19):
Which is in the leg.
Speaker 1 (24:20):
You have the jugular what are the other major arteries?
Speaker 11 (24:27):
Major arteries is crowded artery jugular in your neck, the
brachiocephalic that's coming into your shoulders, subclavian artery as well,
which is in the kind of upper chest shoulder region.
Then you go down a ordas of course, the big
one coming off your heart, which branches into the iliac
artery in your pelvis. That then branches into the femoral
(24:49):
artery in your thigh, which then branches into the tibial
and it's the poploteal and tibual artery.
Speaker 5 (24:57):
In your leg.
Speaker 11 (24:58):
There's also the radius and ulnar argory.
Speaker 8 (25:00):
In your arm.
Speaker 11 (25:00):
That again, are all these arteries you don't want to
cut in half because you'll bleed out. And you know,
the smaller ones maybe a half hour or longer. The
larger ones, it's a matter of minutes.
Speaker 2 (25:14):
Doctor Crown's, I'm not sure how to phrase this.
Speaker 1 (25:18):
If I had you on across, I would have already
written out the question, practice it and practiced it with you.
A tourniquet a tourniquet is tied very tightly. I don't
know what the officer used as a tourniquet. You know
on TV in the movies, there's always something very handy
close by and is used to like, you know, a.
Speaker 2 (25:39):
Strip of material.
Speaker 1 (25:41):
Somehow this officer managed to create a tourniquet lying out
there in the parking lot. The tourniquet is tied above
the severed artery to cut off the blood pumping out right,
So isn't it true that very often when a tourniquet
is used, you end up getting that limb amputated if
(26:04):
it's not seen to immediately. I mean, you got to
worry about not only death, but an amputation.
Speaker 11 (26:12):
That's correct, the tourniquit. He could have used his belts.
He could have used a rope from like a hoodie
or anything like that. Some officers have medical kits that
have turnkits with them, the fancy turnkits the paramedics used.
But you can use a belt and what you're doing.
Speaker 1 (26:27):
I think that there's any way, Hey, while he's talking,
let me see the video again. Because the cop is
run over away from his cruiser. I don't think anyway
that he would have time keep watching that he would
have been able to crawl from the parking lot.
Speaker 2 (26:47):
To get back to his cruiser to get a medical kit.
Speaker 1 (26:50):
I'm just thinking about this police officer Jake Hennessy out
there on the parking floor the double tree. See how
far away his cruiser is. There's no way, with his
femeral artery spurting blood that he can get over there
for a medical kit. And he knows he's going to die.
Speaker 2 (27:13):
Forget about the amputation. He's going to die.
Speaker 1 (27:17):
There's no way he can get back to that cruiser
and can get a medical kit out.
Speaker 2 (27:20):
So what could he have used?
Speaker 1 (27:21):
By the way, thanks at kelson Dale's for this video
on TikTok.
Speaker 5 (27:25):
What would he have used? His jacket?
Speaker 2 (27:28):
I don't know now He's probably used his belt.
Speaker 11 (27:32):
Usually tourniquits are a belt belt like, so tourniquit belt,
if you have it on you is a very good
tournique because you just put it around the limb and
you pull it tight and then that'll pinch off the
blood vessels so you can stop the hemorrhage. And if
you want to try and keep the limb alive, you'll
release the pressure over time slowly to allow the blood
(27:53):
to get back into the limb for a while, and
you bleed when you do that, but you can keep
the limb oxygenated or keep blood with oxygen in it
getting to the limb, so you might not have to
get an amputation. But the problem is it's depending on
the severity how long the tourniquets on. He could have lost.
He could have had above the knee amputation if his femur.
Speaker 1 (28:13):
Is broken, Dear Lord in Heaven, Dave Mac, Crime Stories
investigative reporter, just think about it for a moment. Officer,
this officer, Jake Kennessey, lying out there, nobody to help him,
bleeding out from his federal artery. After this POC runs
(28:36):
over him and then he's out there trying to self
apply a tourniquet and the guy doubles back and runs
over him three times. How did that go down?
Speaker 5 (28:48):
Dave Mac?
Speaker 4 (28:49):
As we see on the video, you know there's vehicles
in the way blocking our direct view of exactly what's happening.
So we're going based on the description that is given
to us. But as he's laying there on the ground
fighting for his life, you mentioned trying to apply a tourniquet,
even though the best of circumstances, when you're not in
such an incredible time, getting a tourniquet on a leg
(29:14):
is not an easy feat and he's also You've got
to remember, in this whole process, he also has had
to pull out his service revolver and he is taking
shots at the windshield of this van coming towards him.
So he's fighting for his life like it's in a movie, Nancy.
And as this person aims his vehicle lining him up
(29:36):
to run over this officer who cannot defend himself, and
he just aimed right at him and comes at him again.
He doesn't just do it once, he does it three times. Nancy.
It is truly an attempted murder. It wasn't an accident.
(29:59):
He had a line up to hit this man on
the ground, totally defenseless.
Speaker 2 (30:04):
Dave Max says, this is like a movie. It's no movie.
Speaker 1 (30:09):
If I hadn't seen the video from at Kells and
Dale's on TikTok, we're showing you many people would not
have believed it.
Speaker 5 (30:17):
You better believe it.
Speaker 4 (30:19):
The injured officer on the ground, putting a tourniquet on
his wounded leg, Janichek circles the parking lot and heads
back to hit him again and again and again three times.
Jane Check runs over the defenseless officer laying on the ground.
Caught on video by shocked witnesses, Jani Jack flees the
parking lot.
Speaker 3 (30:37):
In a shocking display of recklessness. Jani Check tore down
the street in his luxury suv, attracting the attention of
law enforcement. Instead of complying with officers, he chose to flee,
leaving chaos and serious injuries in his wake.
Speaker 5 (30:54):
Again, who is that?
Speaker 2 (30:56):
First?
Speaker 1 (30:56):
He said, a lapse in judgment. I think now I
said recklessness. Ryan Brown joining me veteran trial lawyer, criminal
defense attorney at Jaryanbrownlaw dot Com.
Speaker 2 (31:09):
Recklessness. No, this is intentional.
Speaker 1 (31:12):
I would argue this was intentional because you break it down.
He puts the car reverse, that was the conscious decision,
slams into the officer's vehicle, then forward, then back, then
forward to run over the officer, then does the three sixty,
comes back and runs over him three times. This is
(31:35):
not negligence. This is an intentional act times three.
Speaker 8 (31:41):
You keep saying that word intentional.
Speaker 9 (31:42):
I think that's where the defense is going to start,
is by attacking whether he's intentionally making these decisions or not,
whether there's some sort of snap that's happening in his head.
He's having some sort of mental breakdown or something. He
doesn't know what he's going on?
Speaker 5 (31:56):
Came up?
Speaker 1 (31:57):
Did you say snap? You've been watching two months too
much Oxygen? Man, There is no such thing as snap.
Snap is the name of a program on Oxygen where
women have finally had it and they kill their partner.
Speaker 2 (32:12):
That's what snap is.
Speaker 5 (32:14):
There.
Speaker 1 (32:15):
Do you know one official code section that has the
word snap in it as a defense?
Speaker 5 (32:21):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (32:21):
I snapped? I'm about to snap right now? Does that's
not a defense?
Speaker 5 (32:26):
I snapped?
Speaker 9 (32:28):
Snaps may not be, but it's certainly a defense if
you don't know what you're doing, and if you can't
make decisions with the knowing what's right or wrong.
Speaker 8 (32:33):
And I think that's exactly where the defense is going.
He can't intentionally make these decisions wrong.
Speaker 5 (32:39):
Then why did he flee? Ryan?
Speaker 2 (32:43):
It was wrong?
Speaker 5 (32:44):
Why did he flee?
Speaker 8 (32:46):
He came back around for more? He didn't flee, He
left and came back around for more.
Speaker 1 (32:51):
And then what did he do after he ran over
the officer three times?
Speaker 2 (32:54):
What did he do? Ryan Brown?
Speaker 8 (32:56):
Wait? Runs after he's getting shot at?
Speaker 5 (32:58):
No, he had already been he fled? Go ahead?
Speaker 1 (33:01):
Or can you bring yourself to say it? He fled
because he knew.
Speaker 2 (33:07):
What he had done was wrong.
Speaker 1 (33:09):
There you go, That's what I call a fleeing fellon, Okay,
but it didn't end there.
Speaker 4 (33:15):
Listen with one officer down fighting for his life in
the parking lot and APB goes out for the Mercedes
g Wagon. Plymouth Township officers attempt to stop the out
of control driver. Janitcheck attempts to flee, using his Mercedes
as a weapon, crashing head on into a Plymouth patrol vehicle,
injuring a second officer, sending him to the hospital.
Speaker 1 (33:37):
Alexis Terschuk what so he leaves the officer lying in
the ground bleeding.
Speaker 2 (33:44):
Jay Kennessey, Then he does what?
Speaker 6 (33:50):
Then he flees and the police start chasing him. And
then he sees a police car that is parked and
he plows into it head on, just drives into it
straight head on and smashes the police who was also
injured in his legs because he's sitting in the car
and when with the force of the g wagon hitting it,
it hurts him and he is injured in his legs.
Speaker 1 (34:10):
Joining me now is doctor Angela Arnold, a steam psychiatrist
at angela Arnold MD dot Com from a professor at
Emory University, former medical director of the psychiatric clinic at
Grady Memorial Hospital. Never a lack of business at Grady,
(34:31):
Doctor Angela Arnold. This guy the brat, the pearl wearing
brat with one hundred and thirty three thousand dollars Mercedes
g wagon.
Speaker 2 (34:39):
That one.
Speaker 1 (34:41):
The spawn of the partner at Lewis brisboy.
Speaker 2 (34:47):
He has been.
Speaker 1 (34:47):
Categorized as having a lapse in judgment and acting recklessly.
That's certainly putting perfume on the pig, is it not.
Speaker 12 (34:57):
He is twenty one years old, know right from wrong.
His mind has developed enough to know right from wrong, Nancy.
He has never had a consequence for any of his actions.
If you can run a police officer down, then you
don't care for anyone else on the face of this earth.
And now that this boy has finally been caught doing
(35:19):
something like this, and then he's done this, I shudder
to see what his past is going to show about him.
Speaker 2 (35:27):
Daughter, Angie, I know you've seen this.
Speaker 1 (35:28):
How the parents have a child, they do everything they
can to raise it correctly.
Speaker 2 (35:34):
They you know, put it in a good school.
Speaker 1 (35:36):
They fuss it up when it does something wrong. Why
am I hearing something. It's like a gnat. Oh it
isidra angie. They make it, go to church or synagogue.
They try to teach it right for wrong, but yet
deep down they know there's something wrong that's and they
don't know what to do with the child, so they
(35:57):
just keep on plowing forward. I don't know if the
parents had any idea, not Angela Arnold. You haven't treated
this guy. I haven't treated this guy. I don't know
that he is a sociopath. But what is the textbook
definition of a sociopath.
Speaker 12 (36:16):
A sociopath is someone who does not have They're not
driven by a conscience, so when they do things, they
don't see the difference between right and wrong in doing something.
The reason I said that that could certainly be in
his differential diagnosis is because Nancy there, we all know
(36:36):
that if you are going to run over a police officer,
there is no telling what you would do to someone
walking down the street the sidewalk.
Speaker 2 (36:48):
You mean a regular person, not somebody.
Speaker 5 (36:50):
With a shield.
Speaker 1 (36:56):
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace, Robin Drake joining US behavior expert,
former FBI special agent and author.
Speaker 2 (37:07):
What do you make of all this?
Speaker 10 (37:09):
What we have is a total lack of impulse control
that has been just exasperated by the people that he's
been around. You know, and the ancient philosopher Gerta once said,
you know, tell me who you can sort with, and
I'll tell you who you are. So you don't want
to blame the parents. You don't have to blame anyone
because he's totally in control of his own actions and
his own choices. But I guarantee you as they start
(37:30):
doing this investigation, diving deeper, he's going to be surrounded
by a lot of people with a lot of similar
thought processes as his and his This is what evil
incarnate looks like when you are willing to I mean,
just think about this. He left the scene where he
mowed down an officer he shot at, grazed in the head,
and then as he's thinking in that little brain he has,
(37:51):
as he's leaving, he thinks it's a great idea to
turn around, go back and finish the job. That is
someone extremely broken brain going on.
Speaker 1 (38:02):
Earlier, I was duking it out with Ryan Brown, criminal
defense attorney on a terroristic threat. To prove a terroristic threat,
you must have corroboration to support the claim. But I
think we've got it, and yet another alleged threat, multiple
(38:23):
witnesses hearing the threat. By the way, this video from
at Kels and Dell's on TikTok.
Speaker 5 (38:28):
Listen to this.
Speaker 4 (38:29):
Janet Jack, the twenty one year old screaming at police,
I will kill you, is taken to the hospital to
be treated. The officer Janicheck allegedly ran over three times
has to be airlifted to an intensive care unit for
the first of what doctors say will be several life
saving surgeries. The second officer injured in the head on
collision is ambulance to the hospital with injuries to both legs.
Dalton Janecheck is no stranger to local police. In the
(38:52):
week before his arrest, he's been involved in several incidents
in the area, including a threat to bomb a police station,
multiple brushes with the all while driving, including speeding at
more than eighty five miles per hour, careless driving, and
driving without a license. His criminal complaint notes that police
were familiar with Janichek and the white Mercedes G wagon
he operates.
Speaker 1 (39:14):
People all over the world have nothing and this guy
with everything, According to reports, has done nothing but terrorize others.
Ending now with the police officer being era lifted having
been run over three times. What a life of privilege
(39:37):
he has enjoyed so far.
Speaker 4 (39:39):
Janicheck lives a life of privilege with high flying famous
attorney father Lee Janicheck and growing up in a one
point four million dollar home. Janetjeck graduated from LaSalle College
High School in Widmore, then spent two years at Loyal
and Merrymount on the rowing team. Grandfather, doctor Lee Janijek,
the longest serving commissioner in Springfield Township, retiring in twenty
nineteen after forty four years of public service. Janet Check
(40:03):
left Loyal and Merrymount after two years, without revealing why
he left college. Janet Jackie working at a local restaurant recently,
but left that job and was living at.
Speaker 2 (40:11):
The Double Tree Hotel.
Speaker 1 (40:13):
Specifically Alexis Tereschuk Crime Stories investigative reporter. There have been
I think eleven criminal charges as twenty twenty three.
Speaker 2 (40:21):
Would that be accurate?
Speaker 6 (40:23):
That would be There have been speeding, there have been
changing the license plate on your car. It's all been
related to the car. Multiple driving, I believe it was
without insurance and perhaps one time with a suspended license.
So it's all around him, driving and multiple run ins
with the law.
Speaker 1 (40:41):
Now, just recently there was a bid for bail a
bond in court.
Speaker 2 (40:47):
Alexis what happened.
Speaker 6 (40:48):
The judge denied that. He said, absolutely not. You're not
getting out on any amount of money. No money. He
has to stay in jail for now.
Speaker 1 (40:55):
At one point during his most recent incident, Jennet allegedly
told police put me in the car or I'll kill you. Okay,
Ryan Brown, you got your work cut out for you
on this one.
Speaker 2 (41:09):
That's like what the third terroristic threat?
Speaker 9 (41:12):
Yeah, certainly, you know they start to pile up. But again,
if the defense is going to be, which I believe
it will, that that he's got a mental health problem
that keeps him from knowing right from wrong.
Speaker 8 (41:23):
And know everybody's assumed, oh he knows right from wrong.
He's old enough.
Speaker 9 (41:26):
There are plenty of adults who cannot, for whatever mental
health reason, determine what's right and what's wrong. And if
so that, you know, that's all you can't tell the
right from wrong, and that's what they're doing.
Speaker 1 (41:37):
Wait, are you let me see him again? Do I
look like I just fell off the turnip truck? You
are trying to use the old McNaughton rule verbiage, which
was brought over to the US from British common law.
You just quoted the litmus test for in the insaneanity defense?
(42:00):
Did you know right or wrong at the time of
the incident? What do you actually think? I don't know
what you're talking about. That does not apply here Archie
Tipperary insanity.
Speaker 9 (42:13):
Everyone keeps saying he knew the difference, and I don't
think we know that yet. I think we've got to
investigate this and find out.
Speaker 1 (42:19):
Okay, Robin Drake and doctor Angie Arnold, we can see
where the defense is going. That's why Ryan Brown has
won so many cases.
Speaker 2 (42:26):
Did you notice he said that with a completely straight face.
It's amazing. So, Robin Drake, he is mixing up various criminal.
Speaker 1 (42:34):
Defenses and he's using the litmus insanity defense? Do you
know right from wrong at the time of the incident?
If he didn't know it was wrong, Wife Lee the scene,
he would have just sat in his g wagon enjoyed
the ambiance. It's two hundred thousand dollars car, So could
you make sense of what we are learning?
Speaker 2 (42:53):
Tony A.
Speaker 1 (42:55):
The cops lived, including the one that had to be airlifted,
so his leg has not been amputated. We're on standby
to see how all three of the cops are doing.
Speaker 2 (43:07):
But I want to focus on the spawn.
Speaker 5 (43:12):
What do you make of him?
Speaker 10 (43:14):
Yeah, the fact that he's still circled around after he
did the first assault and ran over multiple times. You know,
as soon as the good lawyer was talking about, you know, insanity,
the only thing I started thinking of is like Lori
dabel Valo, they didn't find her insane, and Brian Coberg
they didn't find him insane, and they killed people left
and right. And so the chances of him being able
(43:36):
to get off on that after he circled back around
and doubled down on trying to kill this cop after
multiple threats, and then later on rammed another car, I
think it's a big stretch at they'll never.
Speaker 1 (43:47):
Make Speaking of various defenses, this reminds me almost a
fingerprint of another young privileged man who mows down victims
allegedly bomb Remember him, I'll never forget.
Speaker 13 (44:02):
And listen, I remember getting a call that night saying,
you know, don't freak out, there's been an accident and
we think it was Ash's car. So I immediately drove
down there.
Speaker 8 (44:16):
I was like to have new.
Speaker 13 (44:18):
Family, all their families out of state. You know, they
need someone in Bridge and met me at Bridge, met
at the scene or as close to the scene as
we could get. But we just sat on the curb
all night, not really knowing what was going on. But
then you know, news broken. Once we hadn't heard from
them for a couple hours.
Speaker 5 (44:38):
Because we were.
Speaker 13 (44:39):
Always in contact with our friends, we knew that that
something was wrong.
Speaker 3 (44:42):
The son of medical executive Chris Boham, Fraser Bohm grew
up in Malibu, California, surrounded by the rich and famous,
living in a nearly nine million dollar Sea Cliff Malibu estate.
The six foot four inch Boem was a star baseball
player at Oaks Christian School in La prep school with
a thirty one thousand dollars a year to wish. Boehm
had celebrated his twenty second birthday days before crashing his
(45:04):
cherry red twenty sixteen BMW into four sorority sisters, killing
them instantly. The BMW was gifted to him for his
eighteenth birthday.
Speaker 1 (45:14):
If you know or think you know anything about what
happened to these three officers, if you were a witness,
if you were in the DoubleTree Hotel looking out the
window anything. The case is being built now please contact
Whitpain PD six one zero two seven nine nine zero
(45:36):
three three repeat six one zero two seventy nine nine
zero three three.
Speaker 2 (45:43):
We remember an American hero.
Speaker 1 (45:45):
Deputy Shriff Joshua Bushers, Jackson County Sheriffs, Mississippi, killed in
the line of duty after twenty one years on the force,
leaving behind two children without a dad. Sheriff Joshua for
shars Nancy Grace signing off goodbye friend.