00:00Hi, my name is Susan Constantine. I'm a human behavior investigator and today I'm going to show you and talk
00:06to you about new released video of the missing Nancy Guthrie case. I analyze this video and I'm going to
00:13share with you some of the things that really popped out at me. The first thing that I look at
00:18as a behavioral analyst is I want to see their actual structure, their body. So I use what we call
00:25outside perimeter types of static
00:30things that you can't change like the walls or archways, etc. is when the perpetrator or a suspect might be
00:36walking through. So the one thing that I noticed was when he was close to the wall, there were like
00:42three levels of brick that was above his head. So if you were to measure those three levels of brick
00:49and then where the top of his head was in that area down to the ground will give you a
00:54height. So then when I'm looking at proportional measurements from, you know, the upper region to the
00:59bottom region, he's definitely higher torsoed or longer torsoed and shorter legged. The other thing that I noticed was what
01:05really stood out to me were his eyes. His big brown almond shaped eyes and more manicured type of eyebrows.
01:14Now I know that he had the mask that was around it and it was surrounded around it, but still
01:20you could see it peeking around outside of the corner. The other thing is to pay attention to is the
01:26actual facial
01:27structure. The dimensions between each corner of the eye from eye to eye and the outside corners. That is something
01:36you can't change. So what I like to point out is there are certain things you can change, which is
01:41I could shave that beard or that little patch that he had or that little thing that he had underneath
01:46his chin. He could very easily shave that off, but you can't change his height, his body structure, and maybe
01:56even his shoe size.
01:57So now those are the things that I look at. So I set that aside. He's about 5'10", maybe
02:015'11". He's in good shape, very physically good shape. The other thing is I noticed is his pace, his
02:08gait when he was walking in and out. He was a little bit broader in the hip region with a
02:15little bit larger thighs. So why is that important? Well, because everybody is designed differently. We have our own body
02:22language DNA, how we walk, whether you're pigeon-toed
02:25or whether you're bow-legged or what one foot that kind of goes out further than the other one. These
02:31are characteristics because when they do find a person of interest, these are the things they can measure them by.
02:37You measure them by the actual video that you already have. The other big thing is about that backpack. I
02:44do not believe that this was a robbery.
02:46And the reason being is because the backpack was already full. So if you're going to go in, I mean,
02:53just logic will tell you if you're going to go in and you're going to kidnap somebody and also maybe
03:00harm them, you're going to have a backpack that's somewhat full, but not fully.
03:06Because you're expecting to take things out and put some things in it. And he wasn't doing that. There were
03:11no other people that were in that video. So whether there were somebody that was parked out on the street,
03:16that could be, we don't know that yet. But generally speaking, robberies, especially these times, you're going to see them
03:23in a cluster. They're going to be a group because they're all assigned to different tasks.
Comments