we picked them up, took them out to a wooded area, and they were killed. how did they die? them got shotgunned. shot. in their confessions, stall and his co-defendant claimed the other pulled the trigger. in the end they each received life sentences. but stall s sentence went beyond what was handed down by the judge. it s not something i like to talk about a lot. i can talk about it more now, but it still bothers me a whole lot, even today. uh yeah. in fact, just talking about it, i don t know if i can. i don t know if i can do this. for me, lawrence stall was a rare experience doing lockup. he truly and genuinely seemed remorseful about his crime.
how did they die? they got shotgunned. they were shot. in their confessions, stall and his co-defendant claimed the other pulled the trigger. in the end they each received life sentences. but stall s sentence went beyond what was handed down by the judge. it s not really something i like to talk about a lot. i can talk about it more now, but it still bothers me a whole lot, even today. uh yeah. in fact, just talking about it, i don t know if i can. i don t know if i can do this. for me, lawrence stall was a rare experience doing lockup. he truly and genuinely seemed remorseful about his crime. talking about it has me shaking already. he had such a difficult time
how did they die? them got shotgunned. shot. in their confessions, stall and his co-defendant claimed the other pulled the trigger. in the end they each received life sentences. but stall s sentence went beyond what was handed down by the judge. it s not something i like to talk about a lot. i can talk about it more now, but it still bothers me a whole lot, even today. uh yeah. in fact, just talking about it, i don t know if i can. i don t know if i can do this. for me, lawrence stall was a rare experience doing lockup. he truly and genuinely seemed remorseful about his crime. talking about it has me shaking already. he had such a difficult time
Doesn t fit. he didn t fit in those surroundings. i think that s initially what brought us to him. he looked a little meek. the red hair. the glasses. he looked more like a college professor, versus an inmate. the social system in here is totally different. it s nothing like the free world. it s a totally different world, you know? i mean, it s like moving to japan and not knowing japanese, you know? you know, you re lost. and that s how i d be now if i got out. i d be lost. due to a fatal action he took as a much younger man, it is unlikely stall will ever get out. in 1981, he was convicted for the murders of two grocery store employees. stall claims he was high on pcp, when he and a co-defendant intercepted the employees on the way to the bank. we picked them up, took them out to a wooded area, and they were killed. how did they die? them got shotgunned. shot. in their confessions, stall
they got shotgunned. shot. in their confessions, stall and his co-defendant claimed the other pulled the trigger. in the end they each received life sentences. but stall s sentence went beyond what was handed down by the judge. it s not something i like to talk about a lot. i can talk about it more now, but it still bothers me a whole lot, even today. uh yeah. in fact, just talking about it, i don t know if i can. i don t know if i can do this. for me, lawrence stall was a rare experience doing lockup. he truly and genuinely seemed remorseful about his crime. talking about it has me shaking already. he had such a difficult time talking about it that it was a