turn almost anything into a weapon, deputies must be especially vigilant. during his six years as one of the jail s senior investigators, jonathan spinelli has amassed a significant collection of inmate-made weapons. this piece of evidence is a wall plate and this is a piece of metal but this can be filed down to a very sharp point. an inmate could use this as a cutting instrument where they could use it as a knife or some sort of sharp instrument to cut them in the throat, the face. these are metal rods filed down, most likely this looks like it was part maybe of a chair or the heating vents. they have these slats on the heating vents they can rip them off of. that s pretty common. you can carry this and no one would know it s in your possession. you can walk out of your cell with it and stab somebody with it, stab an officer with it. the ingenuity behind some weapons is almost beyond belief. this is a paint ball. it s very hard, probably about very similar to a small rock.
the hitchhiker grabbed a screwdriver he found on the floor and the fight continued outside. charles claimed the man threatened to kill him if he didn t drive him the whole way. so charles agreed. as they made their way back to the truck, charles got in first. charles was able to pull away before the hitchhiker could get to the passenger side of the vehicle. he drove off leaving the hitchhiker standing in the intersection. shaken by the experience, charles said he drove around for a while instead of going straight home. he doesn t want to go right home because he s afraid that the hitchhiker s going to see him and know where he lives. about 20 minutes later charles drove up the driveway to his home and to his shock and surprise, he saw the hitchhiker walking around his property. that s when he went to call police. the type of weapon was never conclusively determined by the medical examiner, just that it was a cutting instrument.
as they made their way back to the truck, charles got in first. charles was able to pull away before the hitchhiker could get to the passenger side of the vehicle. he drove off, leaving the hitchhiker standing in the intersection. shaken by the experience, charles said he drove around for a while instead of going straight home. he doesn t want to go right home because he s afraid that the hitchhiker is going to see him and know where he lives. about 20 minutes later, charles drove up the driveway to his home and to his shock and surprise, he saw the hitchhiker walking around his property. that s when he went to call police. the type of weapon was never conclusively determined by the medical examiner, just that it was a cutting instrument. it could have been consistent with a screwdriver or a knife. there are a lot of things going through investigators minds thinking, you know, the
during his six years as one of the jail s senior investigators, jonathan spinelli has amassed a significant collection of inmate-made weapons. this piece of evidence is a wall plate and this is a piece of metal but this can be filed down to a very sharp point. an inmate could use this as a cutting instrument where they could use it as a knife or some sort of sharp instrument to cut them in the throat, the face. these are metal rods filed down, most likely this looks like it was part maybe of a chair or the heating vents. they have these slats on the heating vents they can rip them off of. that s pretty common. you can carry this and no one would know it s in your possession. you can walk out of your cell with it and stab somebody with it, stab an officer with it. the ingenuity behind some weapons is almost beyond belief. this is a paint ball. it s very hard, probably about very similar to a small rock. and what inmates do with this is they chip the paint off the
the jail s senior investigators, jonathan spinelli has amassed a significant collection of inmate-made weapons. this piece of evidence is a wall plate and this is a piece of metal but this can be filed down to a very sharp point. an inmate could use this as a cutting instrument where they could use it as a knife or some sort of sharp instrument to cut them in the throat, the face. these are metal rods filed down, most likely this looks like it was part maybe of a chair or the heating vents. they have these slats on the heating vents they can rip them off of. that s pretty common. you can carry this and no one would know it s in your possession. you can walk out of your cell with it and stab somebody with it, stab an officer with it. the ingenuity behind some weapons is almost beyond belief. this is a paint ball. it s very hard, probably about very similar to a small rock. and what inmates do with this is they chip the paint off the walls and they stick it in a