3.9 • 7.6K Ratings
🗓️ 6 May 2024
⏱️ 44 minutes
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Chris Gregor carried his son, Corey, into the hospital the day he died. According to a Nurse Practitioner at Southern Ocean, Corey's arms and legs dangling with little visible movement. His head rested on his father's shoulder.
The nurse practitioner said he could tell something was wrong, but there was no urgency coming from the parent. Corey died later that day.
We have also learned that text messages between Breanna Micciolo and Christopher Gregor about their son Corey Micciolo have been made public on the Facebook group Justice for Corey. Breanne Micciolo posts a text exchange that took place two weeks before Corey died.
Micciolo writes 'Corey came upstairs upset and almost crying because he was trying to ask you about playing football in high school and you smacked the ball out of his hand and walked out,' Gregor replies, "I smacked the ball out of his hands and he didn't say a word to me."
Gregor then texts that if hitting the ball out of the six-year-old's hand 'makes him cry, that maybe he needs to be a little tougher because that's soft tissue.' After Gregor makes another comment about Corey being “over-emotional."
Breanne Micciolo responds, "He's not over-emotional, you hurt his feelings, he got upset, he's six years old."
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0:00.0 | Crime Stories with Nancy Grace. |
0:05.0 | Caught on video, the sick moment a deadbeat dad is caught carrying the limp body of his son, Corey, just six into urgent care. |
0:19.8 | This after physically forcing Corey to run full speed on a treadmill because the boy was quote too fat. |
0:28.0 | Six year old Corey is now dead tonight. why did daddy go on the run and hide out in a Tennessee motel? |
0:38.0 | While his defense lawyer claims daddy had nothing to do with Corey's death from chronic abuse and bruising to the heart. |
0:46.8 | We want justice. |
0:49.7 | Good evening. |
0:50.7 | I'm Nancy Grace. |
0:51.7 | This is crime stories. I want to thank you for being with us. |
0:55.0 | Corey was in Chris's arms. His arms were over Chris's shoulders. His legs were dangling. His arms did not look like they had much movement to them. |
1:08.0 | His legs did not look like they had much movement to him. His head was rested on Chris's shoulder. His head was difficult to, |
1:17.3 | or his face was difficult to visualize. So when I first approached them, I knew that something was concerning, but I couldn't see everything I needed to see. |
1:28.0 | So I was depending on Chris to convey a sense of urgency or on wellness that I did not get from him at first. |
1:38.0 | It was more of a clinical description. |
1:40.0 | You are hearing William Doyle, a nurse practitioner at Southern Ocean, urgent care. |
1:48.0 | And when you hear a professional speak, the way he, it just doesn't even make sense he says his face was |
1:56.6 | difficult to visualize I think what he meant to say is the little boy was near death and he couldn't even hold his head up. |
2:10.0 | That's why his face is difficult to visualize. |
2:15.3 | And as a nurse practitioner says, |
2:17.6 | Chris, I believe he is referring to the bio dad, |
2:21.4 | Christopher Greger, the deadbeat dad, that didn't seem upset and |
2:26.9 | wouldn't really articulate what had happened. Gee, I wonder why. In the last hours in court, the chilling texts are revealed and this |
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