True Crime & Consequences: A Discussion with Radio New Zealand
The Collier Landry Show
Collier Landry
4.4 • 542 Ratings
🗓️ 6 April 2024
⏱️ 27 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | Say, can I live with this, with this decision I'm making right now down the road? And I think that if we all thought about the world that way, because that's most certainly how I thought about it when I was, you know, 11 years old and 12 when it went to trial, am I doing the right thing? Is this the right thing to do? Yes, it is. Without the support of my family, by the way, I was thrown to the foster care system, you know, so it was just like, there you are, there's the wolves. |
| 0:22.7 | Testimony continued today in the most notorious criminal trial. |
| 0:26.0 | When I was 12 years old, my testimony sent my father to prison for murdering my mother. |
| 0:31.6 | I decided at an early age that our trauma should not be what defines us. |
| 0:35.5 | It's what we choose to do with it that does. I'm here to |
| 0:38.7 | share my unique perspective on true crime, mental health, society, and popular culture, albeit with a |
| 0:44.4 | slight sense of humor. I'm Collierlandry and welcome to my show. Mover Nation, what's going on? |
| 0:53.6 | You know, I did an interview with Radio New Zealand and I thought, you know what? I'll post it here. I'll let you guys check it out. I thought it was a pretty good interview. I talked about some stuff, you know, I never really know randomly like what I'm going to say on an interview because people sometimes ask me the same questions and I always try to change it up. But check it out. This is with Radio New Zealand. I think it's called 9 to noon or something like |
| 1:14.9 | that. So check it out. I hope you guys enjoy. |
| 1:17.6 | So I am on Radio New Zealand. Lowered prices and markets, including the US, UK and China, |
| 1:23.4 | to compete with rival manufacturers. Earlier this year, Tesla's boss, Elon Musk, said he believed pursuing higher sales with lower profits was the right choice for the company. |
| 1:34.1 | Seven and a half minutes past 10, Collier Landry was just 12 years old when he was thrust into the national spotlight as the lead witness in his mother's murder in the Ohio town of |
| 1:45.4 | Mansfield. He told the jury how months earlier he overheard his father killing his mother, |
| 1:51.6 | Noreen Boyle, in the next room, and went on to provide police with enough information to secure |
| 1:57.1 | an arrest. This was against the wishes of family members. It was an extraordinary act of courage. |
| 2:03.1 | The story was widely reported on at the time, but much less is known about what happened to |
| 2:08.0 | young Collier in the years to follow. His father's relatives did not forgive him for testifying, |
| 2:13.1 | and his mother's side of the family distanced themselves from him out of fear he might take |
| 2:17.3 | after his |
| 2:17.7 | dad so to speak. He lost his house, his dog, the three-year-old sister his parents had just adopted. |
| 2:24.7 | Now 45, Colleen Landry's just released a podcast series which tells the unheard stories of survivors |
| 2:30.9 | and the impacts of our seemingly endless consumption of true crime as a form of |
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