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Who Killed Garrett Phillips? (2019)

उपयोगकर्ता समीक्षाएं

Who Killed Garrett Phillips?

39 समीक्षाएं
8/10

Nerve-Wracking Mini-Series

  • gsandra-26876
  • 24 जुल॰ 2019
  • परमालिंक
8/10

Gripping documentary exposing shocking bias (if not racism)

"Who Killed Garrett Phillips?" (2019 release; in 2 parts; 185 min.) is a documentary about the death if a 12 yr. boy in Potsdam, NY on October 24, 2011. As the movie opens, it is "Summer, 2010", and several neighbors talk about the 12 yr. old boy, his brother and his single mom moving into the apartment building, keeping to themselves. Then on that fateful day in 2011, the neighbors hear some noises next door, including a cry for "no!" and "help". One of the neighbors calls 911, and within minutes, the police is there. But no-one answers the door... At this point we are 10 min. into the documentary.

Couple of comments: this is the latest documentary from producer-director Liz Garbus, a well-respected and award winning documentarion whose previous work includes "Bobby Fisher Against the World" and "There's Something Wrong With Aunt Diane", among many others. Here she brings the true crime story of the mysterious death (by strangulation) of 12 yr. old Garrett, and the subsequent investigation of a black man (who happens to have dated the boy's mom in the previous year), to the exclusion of other options or possibilities, and despite the scant evidence. It is, frankly, shocking to see it all develop and play out. Part 1 (80 min.) looks at the investigation, and Part 2 (105 min.) zeroes in at the eventual trial and its aftermath. Potsdam's local police and district attorneys (yes, plural) come out bruised and battered in this documentary, and have no-one but themselves to blame for that. If it wasn't for the actual footage that we watch, it wouldn't be believable. Check out the scene in part 1, where the suspect is tricked into coming to the police station, and then is prevented (in multiple ways and with a slew of lies and tricks) from leaving for 8 hours, even though he is "not under arrest". The underlying bias (if not racism) to focus almost exclusively on this suspect is obvious to all. Meanwhile, the director gives each side prominent screen time to explain what happened, and amazingly the local police and prosecuting team all do it with a straight face. For shame. If you are worried that the documentary's running time of just over 3 hours seems a bit long, let me reassure you that it is not too long, and in fact these 3 hours flew by in no time (for me anyway). Yes, there is that much ground to cover.

"Who Killed Garrett Phillips?" premiered this week on HBO (and is now available at HBO On Demand), as part of HBO's excellent summer series of true crime documentaries. If you love a good documentary or true crime stories, I'd readily suggest you check this out, be it on VOD or eventually on DVD/Blu-ray, and draw your own conclusion.
  • paul-allaer
  • 24 जुल॰ 2019
  • परमालिंक
8/10

A Botched Murder Investigation Leads to the Eventual Indictment of an Innocent Man

A video surveillance camera showing briefly the victim riding his skateboard on a sidewalk and the defendant's SUV turning left instead of right from a school. That was basically the entire case against defendant Nick Hillary in the killing of a pre-adolescent boy, Garrett Phillips. Everything else was conjecture which had no supporting evidence. If that's enough evidence to bring a case to trial, we still have serious problems with our justice system. It seems the case should have been thrown out immediately, which actually it was initially.

In 2011, a pre-adolescent boy residing with his single mom was murdered in their small apartment in Potsdam, NY, a mostly white small town in Upstate New York. He was alone at home except with the killer(s). Some neighbors working on a car outside heard strange noises but didn't see anything. No one saw anyone enter or leave the apartment, except one of the windows were broken from the inside, which was the only trace of physical evidence of the killer, save the dead boy, who was determined to have been strangled.

Garrett's single mother, Tandy Cyrus, had had two relationships before the murder. One with a deputy sheriff, John Jones, and the other with a black soccer coach, Nick Hillary. For all intents and purposes, Hillary and Cyrus had broken up about a month before the murder. The locals of Potsdam become obsessed with the case, putting signs all over NY state "Justice of Garrett".

What the documentary shows concerning the investigation is the local police's and eventual prosecution's obsession with only one suspect: Nick Hillary. And yet they could find no evidence against Hillary at the crime scene. Even before the end of the night of the murder, the police decided they were convinced it was Nick Hillary. They even bring him in for questioning before they've explored all leads. Interestingly, John Jones, a local sheriff's deputy, was not only seen near the crime scene on the day and near the time of the murder, but his ex-girlfriend Cyrus had written a statement saying she feared Jones. He became heavily involved in the case. It seems maybe he should have recused himself from the case because of his relationship with the victim's mother.

They interrogate Hillary shortly after the murder, claiming they want information about his soccer team. When they start asking him questions about his whereabouts at the time of the murder, he becomes defensive. They also take his cell phone, behaving as if he's under arrest. I thought law enforcement couldn't deprive someone of their property unless they're being indicted or under arrest.

Interestingly, during the entire time, Nick Hillary seems very composed for a guy supposedly who had just killed a boy. They even interview his coaching assistant asking him over and over again if Hillary seemed agitated the day after the murder, and over and over again, the coach says he didn't. During the trial, they paint Hillary as this man obsessed with Cyrus who sought revenge for their break-up by murdering her son. If he was, I didn't see the prosecution's evidence that this was true, except for when Hillary becomes agitated, naturally, with his interrogation.

A poignant documentary about the trouble with rush-to-judgements and a public obsessed with "justice". Justice should mean finding and indicting the right person who is guilty of the crime, not just indicting a scapegoat to satisfy the public's need for closure. Even in one of the final interviews of one of the prosecutors, he admits that the case probably should be thrown out. But he says "But I couldn't do that to Tandy Cyrus and her family." That is NOT what prosecution is or what it should be about.

The documentary proves that prosecutors shouldn't t indict people and bring cases against them to give the family members of victims closure, as much as that may be a motivating factor. Cases should be brought against defendants who are highly likely to be guilty of a crime or crimes in which the case brought against them meets the "beyond a reasonable doubt" threshold. A lot of people in our country do not understand that people should be convicted a crime if the evidence against them is beyond a reasonable doubt. It's not about whether a bunch of people want someone to be guilty. The community wanted someone to be found guilty but many criminal cases go unsolved. Finding someone guilty who is innocent is not justice.
  • classicalsteve
  • 22 मार्च 2020
  • परमालिंक
6/10

Good but incomplete

  • lhmosca
  • 14 जुल॰ 2021
  • परमालिंक
10/10

I am so utterly sad and embarrassed by our judicial system.

This is startling to watch. My heart bleeds for Mr. Hillary and to the young victim in this case, Garrett; neither of which are given justice. The law enforcement officers illegally and blatantly ignored Mr. Hillary's miranda rights and held him without a warrant and he wasn't even under arrest.This is a grievous miscarriage of justice. Somehow though, this arrogant cop who interviewed him has the audacity to paint Mr. Hillary as something else when the video clearly shows the pose, respect, and restraint he had towards the officers during this cruel strip search.

Justice for Garrett! Arrest ALL these corrupt cops.
  • jldivelbiss
  • 24 जुल॰ 2019
  • परमालिंक
6/10

Where are the details about Garrett

After watching this documentary I'm struck by how little information there is about the boy who died. We don't learn anything about this boy who should be central focus of his own murder. The defendants is shown as a loving father but it is never explained why the victim and the defendant did not get along. The defendant himself never talks about the victim whatsoever but instead is always focused on himself. I feel like there are missing pieces to this picture.
  • nobo-88338
  • 2 अप्रैल 2020
  • परमालिंक
10/10

Potsdam Police are the real criminals in this story

Watching the documentary is heartbreaking. The entire town singles out the black man instead of trying to find the real killer or killers! Completely trampled on his rights outright lies and does everything possible to ensure that an innocent man with a solid alibi is put away just so they can say justice was served.
  • alainashilling
  • 6 अग॰ 2019
  • परमालिंक
6/10

Very One Sided

This special is a very good idea to help spread national awareness of the effect of small town murders. However Liz Garbus did not properly show both sides of the case evenly and managed to portray Potsdam as a racist town that tried to put all blame on one man. Garbus shows how Potsdam went against Hillary but by doing so she managed to make Hilliary the victim when in reality she failed to show the injustice for the Phillips' family. If there would have been more information provided about the case in general instead of victimizing Hillary then this documentary would be a more credible and reliable source.
  • nichalosburke
  • 13 फ़र॰ 2020
  • परमालिंक
10/10

Potsdam sucks

A gripping tale of shoddy, lazy police investigation and a shocking level of racial bias that should convince even hardened skeptics that racism is alive and well in America
  • rochanmaheshwari
  • 24 जुल॰ 2019
  • परमालिंक
6/10

Why did the storytellers choose not to include more of the story?

  • sendbriceemail
  • 29 अग॰ 2023
  • परमालिंक
10/10

Innocent Man Exonerated

  • fandomly
  • 16 अग॰ 2019
  • परमालिंक
6/10

of course, he's guilty

He was exonerated because of the lack of evidence against him, not because he's innocent. Of course he killed the boy, angry that his mom and him don't want him. He was very talkative in the police station UNTIL they've asked him when did he had a practice that evening. THEN, he refused to answer and wanted to leave. He didn't want to say what piece of furniture he hit his ankle against, knowing that is a lie and that they will not find any of his DNK there. The police was a bit rough but that is a standard procedure to pressure the suspect into talking, it has nothing to do with racism. People, you are so naive and the authors of this documentary are so deceptive.
  • leopoldjoshuaenoch
  • 25 जुल॰ 2021
  • परमालिंक
5/10

misleading title, shoddy documentary

  • wonderlandzzzzzz
  • 3 सित॰ 2021
  • परमालिंक
10/10

Wow!!!Amazing!!!

I cant even believe that this case even made it to trial....unbelievable that this is still going on in small towns ...by small minded people...
  • hickeytaraann
  • 26 जुल॰ 2019
  • परमालिंक
10/10

Heads up!

Moto of this story. If your black in redneck Banjo country move out. No need for pioneers. John jones has a lot to answer.
  • pumpkinlove-03006
  • 3 अग॰ 2020
  • परमालिंक
10/10

Potsdam Police you are disgusting

  • WhoMadeYouGod
  • 19 अक्टू॰ 2019
  • परमालिंक
8/10

Disappointing power play by police

  • adetolla
  • 7 नव॰ 2020
  • परमालिंक
2/10

Misleading

I really wish some of the docuseries would at least pretend to care about the victim. It's absolutely possible to make a documentary about how the justice system screwed over Hillary without throwing a murdered child to the side. There could even be different episodes focusing on different subjects but instead, Garrett Phillips is essentially ignored. The docuseries does not do a good job of explaining the murder, Hillary's relationships with the family once he'd broken up with the mom nor the piles of evidence you could find from a cursory Google search. This series was 100% made because the filmmakers could exploit the issues in the justice system- not to give a voice to a murdered child.
  • kannetidwell
  • 24 सित॰ 2022
  • परमालिंक
9/10

Injustice in all it's Glory

Compelling and heartbreaking story. The injustice of being a black man accused of murdering a white 12 yr old kid. He was the son of his ex-girlfriend and how she even turned against him despite no corroborating evidence that Nick Hillary committed the murder.
  • debrahnava-52496
  • 23 जुल॰ 2019
  • परमालिंक
8/10

Welcome to Portsdam, NY

  • stephenljenkins
  • 26 जुल॰ 2019
  • परमालिंक
9/10

Kudos, Liz Garbus

  • gfunkbsafe
  • 25 अग॰ 2020
  • परमालिंक
10/10

Excellent investigative journalism

The movie clearly depicts the racism prevailing in United States. As a legal immigrant myself, I am shocked by this documentary. The part 1 was executed very well and excited to watch part 2 shortly.
  • rishan_muneer
  • 23 जुल॰ 2019
  • परमालिंक
4/10

Agenda Driven

  • Astaroth22
  • 14 सित॰ 2020
  • परमालिंक
8/10

HARD TO SWALLOW/ WATCH

  • macfonty
  • 7 नव॰ 2020
  • परमालिंक
8/10

'we're not that racist' LOL

Typical small-minded, small-town yahoos and Keystone cops: zoom right in on the black guy and totally disregard the white, vindictive cop who also happens to be an ex-boyfriend. He can't even look at the camera. Cops protecting their own as usual and they wonder why they're so hated and not trusted?
  • monikamarie
  • 8 फ़र॰ 2022
  • परमालिंक

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