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June 3, 2024 - MyronGainesX
01:34:52
Fed Explains The Murder Of Vanessa Guillén
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Time Text
And we're alive.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to FedReax.
Today we're going to be talking about the murder of Vanessa Guyenne.
This one is a big one, guys.
Let's get into it.
Our special agent with homeless investigations, okay, guys.
HSI.
This is what Federica covers.
Defender Jeffrey Williams and Associate Weisel did commit the felony.
Well, here's what 6ix9ine actually died here to serve this hat shifted the whole U.S. government.
This guy got arrested for espionage, okay?
Trading secrets with the Russian on Wayne Gacy, aka the killer clown.
Okay, one of the most prolific serial killers of all time killed 33 people.
Zodiac Killer is a pseudonym of an unidentified serial killer who operated in Northern California.
Serial killers got they really get off on getting attention from the media.
Many years, Jeffrey Epstein sexually exploited and abused dozens of minor girls at his home.
It was OJ working together to get Nicole killed.
Gonna go over his past, the gang guys, so that this all makes sense.
All right, we're back.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to FedReacts.
Give me ones in the chat, guys.
You should be able to hear me.
Give me ones in the chat if audio is good.
Give me ones in the chat.
All right, awesome.
Awesome.
Okay.
All right.
Since you guys can hear me, good to hear because I can't hear myself, but that's probably just my headphones being stupid.
But regardless, Angie, say what's up to the people.
Okay, that's what I wanted to check.
I'll turn your light on.
Don't worry.
Hey, people, what's up?
We're here.
We're here.
We're finally covering Vanessa Guillen.
You guys been asking.
I've heard about this case because you guys have been asking about this for like over a year now.
Ever since I've been on FedReax, you guys have been asking for Vanessa Guillen.
And this is going like this is very interesting because Myron was the one who brought it up.
Like, he was the one who sent me the affidavit for one of the people that were implicated in the murder.
And oh, shit.
That's right.
No, it's fine.
I think that's how I usually have it.
Yeah, he sent me the affidavit.
And I didn't know who the person was until I actually read it.
And I read the Vanessa Guillen name there.
And I was like, oh, okay.
Yeah, this guy's been asking for this forever.
So yeah, let's cover this.
And it was this and Diddy, right?
Yes, this one and Diddy, I believe, yes.
Yeah.
So we're going to cover, yeah, finally Vanessa Guyen.
I think Myron is very familiar with this case.
And yeah, we're here for you guys.
So it is what it is.
So yeah.
So this one, so yeah, we'll just get right into it, man.
And the reason why I wanted to do this one, because it's a federal case as well.
That's another reason why I want to do this, which, by the way, just for you guys.
How is it a federal?
Okay, it's not common.
It's not common for a murder case to go federally.
And obviously, the reason why this one went federally, guys, is because it happened in a military base, et cetera.
And we're going to talk about that a little bit.
So I thought that was another reason, too.
I was like, okay, this is going to be really interesting because it's a federal murder case, which you don't come across often.
And this case was viral back in 2020, right?
At the height of the, you know, the scandemic, as you would say.
Do we have any chats here?
Let me look here.
We just have one, I think.
Someone mentioned the planet of the apes.
Yeah, we're going to go see that later, actually.
Which one?
What?
Someone asked to talk to us.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
When we were live the other day.
Myron and I have a date.
Yay.
Finally.
And we're going to watch a movie tonight.
So we're going to watch Planet of the Apes.
And it was Planet of the Apes or Furiosa, which is one of the Mad Max saga series.
So, yeah, I think Myron wouldn't like, he wouldn't have liked Furiosa because it's kind of like, I don't know, this movie is more like, I always thought of Mad Max like a man's movie, like a man's movie.
And this one is kind of like feminist in a way.
So yeah, I was like, yeah, no, let's watch Planet of the Apes.
That or Garfield?
Have you seen that movie Garfield?
No, I haven't seen that one.
But yeah, I'm taking Angie on a date tonight, guys.
That's what's happening.
It's been a bit.
So we're going to go out to something.
That's why I was starting to show a little bit earlier.
Let me know.
Do you guys like this 8 p.m. start time better than the 9 or 10 p.m. start time?
If you guys do, then maybe I'll start doing the shows at 8 if you guys want.
So just let me know if that's what it is.
Also, guys, we're streaming to CastleClub.tv as well.
I figured that out.
We should be live on Castle Club right now.
Live on YouTube, Rumble, Castle Club.
We're on everything.
Just so you guys know, we're going to use a documentary here.
If it doesn't work and we get hit with the whole stream of suspender crap, then I will just go ahead and use another documentary.
I got backups, baby, so we're good to go.
But we're live on all the platforms.
YouTube, Rumble, Twitch, Castle Club.
We're on everything, guys.
Classical.tv.
If you guys want to support the team, we got 60, like 6,250-something of y'all in there, man.
So shout out to you guys, man.
We're trying to hit the 10K strong.
I'm in the process of building up, getting our generals in different cities.
So, yeah.
But anyway, without further ado, let's get into it, guys.
So the murder of Vanessa Guillain.
A 20-year-old United States Army soldier took place inside an armory at Fort Hood, Texas on April 22nd, 2020, when she was bludgeoned to death by another soldier, Aaron David Robinson.
Guinea had been missing for over two months when some of her dismembered remains were found buried along the Leon River on June 30th.
Upon hearing about the discovery, Robinson fled at Fort Hood and fatally shot himself when law enforcement intended to apprehend him nearby Colleen, Texas.
So what is bludgeoned?
Bludgeon as in like he hit her with he hit her with an object.
Like he beat her.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So we're going to go and watch this ABC News special, guys.
If they hit me with the whole copyright thing or whatever, we'll just stop it, okay?
And I got another documentary backup.
But we'll watch it.
It's a six-parter, but each one is like, you know, five to ten minutes long.
So, yeah, let's go ahead and get into it, ladies and gentlemen.
And give me what's it?
We got a really important chat here.
AHS181 says, Myron, I'm 25 and a loser.
I'm going nowhere.
I can't make money.
I can't get women.
I feel like giving up before I end up myself because I can't take this misery anymore.
Any advice?
Yo, AHS, man, you got to ask yourself, man, could it be worse?
And the answer is yes.
You could be in Gaza right now getting bombed to death.
You could be starving somewhere in Africa.
You can have a debilitating disease that, you know, where you don't have an arm, you don't have a leg.
You have two eyes, you got two ears, and you were able to talk to me on high-speed internet.
My friend, your life is not that bad.
Trust me, there's someone else that would kill to have the opportunity that you have.
So don't be a pussy.
Understand that as a man, you have the privilege, right, of being able to make yourself the best version of yourself.
And the byproduct of that is going to be the women.
But the problem is that you're a loser because of your own life choices, my friends.
You got to go ahead, self-improve, and trust me, everything around you is going to become better.
The thing about being a man is that you choose whether you live a miserable life or not.
Okay?
That's your choice.
So don't fucking give up on yourself.
Okay.
Do not do that.
Do not do that.
There's people right now that would fucking kill to be in a position that you're in.
Okay.
Facts.
Real me this.
They're a lot of obnoxious.
They like music that rhymes.
They're a fraction of the population that commit half the crimes.
Who are they?
All right, but talk about Fort Hood, guys, is in San Antonio, Texas, which if you're to look at the state of Texas, okay?
How far is it from Houston?
It's here, I'll show you right now.
Texas.
It's about three to four hours.
Okay.
So they can drive right up there.
Yeah.
So here we go, right?
You got San Antonio right here, which is pretty much like in the heart of Texas, by the way, right?
And Texas is a huge state.
So you come in here, boom, here's San Antonio, right?
Interstate 10, 35, the 410 loop, which takes you all around the city, right?
That's San Antonio, Texas.
Very, I have a very fond place in my heart for San Antonio.
And then Houston is over here, right?
So it's about a three-hour drive between the two.
You just take Interstate 10 and it takes you all the way in.
It looks far.
Right here.
Yeah, it's a few hours.
So, but yeah, these are the two.
I would say the two main major cities are Houston and Dallas, right?
But San Antonio is pretty big too.
Right?
And then like all the South Texas, you know, bleeds into San Antonio.
You know, anytime I was do smuggling cases, whether it's from Laredo all the way down, right, all these border towns, the drugs, the illegal aliens, they're always trying to get to San Antonio.
That is the main hub right there.
That's destination one.
And then from there, it'll go either north to Dallas or east towards Houston.
Major General Donna W. Martin, what's her title?
U.S. Army Provost Marshal General.
So her responsibilities included.
Oh, hold on.
And she's also okay.
U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command.
So that's important, guys.
You guys are probably wondering, what the fuck is Army Criminal Investigation?
Well, guys, I got y'all, right?
Abilities.
Right?
If you go here, Army CID.
And we're going to talk about them in a little bit here.
But the Army CID guys, this is their website.
I didn't mean to go to the website.
Government websites are always trash.
Let's go to the Wikipedia.
Okay.
The Department of Army Criminal Investigation Division, Army CID, previously known as United States Army Criminal Investigation Command, is the primary federal law enforcement agency of the United States Department of the Army.
Its primary function is to investigate felony crimes and serious violations of military law and the United States code within the U.S. Army.
The division is an independent federal law enforcement agency with the investigative autonomy.
CID special agents, both military and civilian, report through the CID chain of command to the CID director who reports directly to the Undersecretary of the Army and the Secretary of the Army.
Unlike their counterparts, OSI, NCIS, Army CID does not have primary counterintelligence responsibility.
So that's one of the big differences between them and OSI and NCIS.
So they're not really as big with intelligence, right?
So again, 1811s, right?
Or they might not necessarily be 1811 job series, but they're special agents is the point I'm trying to make here.
And yeah, guys, they do anything that goes on in the Army, they investigate.
On a military base, whatever it may be, they're the ones running it.
So, yeah.
And the other thing I was going to say, they investigate the UCMJ, right?
And you guys wrote, what the fuck is UC?
UCMJ, right?
Sorry, UC.
I said USMJ.
Right, boom.
Right.
Uniform Code of Military Justice.
Uniform Court of Military Justice.
UCMJ is the foundation system of military justice of the Armed Forces of the United States.
The UCMJ was established by the United States Congress in accordance with their constitutional authority per Article 1, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution, which provides that the Congress shall have power to make rules for the government and regulation of the land and naval forces of the United States.
So basically, guys, there are military courts that you can be prosecuted under if you're a service member, okay?
So, and the reason why I tell you guys this is with the UCMJ guys, they have way higher conviction rates and service members have less.
Yes, they still get some of the same rights as a civilian does, but military court is a lot easier to convict you than it is civilian court, right?
You're not afforded a lot of the same protections in the military as you are as a private citizen.
I'm a Roman Catholic, right, Angie?
Yeah.
Well, yeah, Catholic, but the thing is that Mexicans are crazy with their religions because they believe in this crazy virgin that is the virgin of death, and it's literally like a skull.
It is literally like a skeleton.
And they pray to that shit.
You know, I remember when I used to smugglers and the drug traffickers, they used to pray to, damn it, I'm going to find out.
All the drug traffickers used to pray to this one saint.
Oh, is it like the saint of it?
It's like a hood saint kind of thing?
Kind of.
It's like a skull.
And I remember when I used to do raids at their houses.
That's the one I'm talking about.
They would always have that stuff all around their house.
Yeah.
I'm looking at the chat right now.
That's the one I'm talking about.
That's not what I'm saying.
They pray to the best.
Santa Morte.
Santa Muerte, yeah, that's the name of it.
Or the Santa Ria.
Okay.
All right.
Yeah, yeah.
Like anytime I went in a smuggler's house, we were doing like a search warrant or whatever, they would have that stuff all over their house.
And I was like, what do you think?
That's basically Sandraia.
That's sorcery.
Okay.
So we got a little summary of that, guys.
We got a little bit of background on who she is, right?
Obviously, young girl from a Mexican family based out of Houston, Texas.
Joined the military right after high school.
And it's really sad because you could.
No, we already got hit with the stream unavailable.
Oh, we did?
Oh, yeah, we did.
Yeah, we live on Rumble.
It's cool.
You know what?
I got another documentary that we could play that might be a little bit.
Yeah, the other one isn't bad.
We could play that one.
It's only 15 minutes long.
Yeah, it's only 15 minutes long.
And the good thing about it is that the other good thing is we got an intro of who she is.
I think that was important.
Don't worry, chat.
We'll be back in like five minutes.
Not even five minutes.
It's going to be back in like a few minutes.
I got a chance to check her Twitter because it's still up.
Yep.
Oh, she has a Twitter.
She had a Twitter, yeah.
Because on the Netflix documentary, they show like a few tweets that she posted before she died.
And she basically will post just random shit through her day, just like random phrases.
But every now and then she will post shit that will be like very deep.
You know, like, yeah, I want to get out of here.
Life sucks, whatever, whatever.
Damn.
Stuff like that.
So her Twitter's still up?
Yeah, it is.
It is.
I think it's Vijan underscore 30.
I don't know.
Look it up right now.
While we wait for this thing to be back.
Okay, we're back on YouTube.
Hold on one sec.
I'm going to look her up real fast.
It's V?
Ven?
V. Gijen, Gijen?
Like, J?
V. No, G?
V G U. I-L-L-E-N.
Uh-huh.
Oh, 30?
Yeah, this is her right here.
Yeah.
Okay, so this is her Twitter.
Yeah.
Okay, so hold on.
Let me go ahead and share screen with y'all ninjas.
We're back.
Don't worry, guys.
Yeah, I know.
YouTube is being lame, but don't worry.
We got another documentary.
I predicted this might happen, so you got to have the backups, right?
So we were talking about her ex, guys, for some of you guys that are on Twitter that missed it.
Or sorry, on YouTube.
Let me share a screen with John Ninjas real fast.
So here's her ex right here.
Jimaholic, her Instagram, VGen30.
VGGen30.
Current Gold270.
Okay, deadlifted and stuff.
Yeah, she used to do deadlift.
This is my best friend.
Yeah, so she, so she was pretty active on Twitter up until she passed away.
Yeah.
Can't wait to be out.
Just like random shit or songs and stuff.
Yeah.
And every now and then she will like, you know.
Here, let me make it a bit bigger for the audience so they can see what's going on here.
Okay.
And then she has her Instagram here too.
I mean, at the end of the day, man, she's a kid.
You know what I mean?
It's very unfortunate.
And it's really sad because you can tell that she really liked being like in the military, you know?
So we got this other documentary here, guys.
Don't worry.
We'll play this one.
It's only about 15 minutes long.
So we'll put this bad boy at a 1.2 playback speed, 1.25.
So I think that at least, here's the thing.
At least you guys know now who she is.
Don't worry.
We're going to stay on YouTube, guys.
Some of y'all I know want to already go to go to Rumble.
But we're going to stay up on YouTube.
I know YouTube could be lame or whatever, but we got to back up.
We got another documentary here we're going to play.
So summary.
We know what Army CID is.
We know that she was in the Army.
She joined in Young.
She comes from a Mexican immigrant family that came to the United States.
She was born in the United States, first generation, it seems.
And she goes missing and her sister calls her and doesn't get an answer.
Okay.
So we're still early states.
She was going to go hiking that day with because she, like they mentioned before, she will visit her family every weekend.
So she was going to go hiking with her sister and her sister's boyfriend and her boyfriend.
And she stopped responding the messages.
That's why they got the like, you know, the ick that something was going on.
Yeah.
Okay.
22nd.
Find Vanessa Guillen.
After she went missing nearly a week ago.
My sister was also shit from her ass.
How could this happen on military base?
I am Vanessa Guillen.
It's a hashtag.
Starting a larger conversation on sexual harassment and abuse in the ranks.
And we still don't get answers as to who, what, where, exactly, and why.
Missing now for seven days.
As of today, it marks 30 days.
Within 50 days.
There are so many gaps and holes that I am going to demand a congressional investigation.
I don't deserve this.
My family does not deserve this.
Vanessa Guillen did not deserve this.
That's what's more.
One thing I will say is that her family really gives a shit about her.
They pushed so hard throughout this entire situation.
It goes to show you guys the importance of a family unit.
A mother, a father, and I think she has two or three sisters.
And they all pushed so hard to find her.
If they didn't put the amount of pressure that they did on the base, on the police, on search parties, etc., they would a whole social media push.
They probably wouldn't have found her at all.
Because they found her in the middle of nowhere.
I guarantee if she didn't have the family that she had, they would have never found the body.
Yeah, no, but think about it.
Like, 50 days and they haven't heard anything about her.
Like, where is she?
Like, what happened to her?
They don't even, they didn't even know if she was like alive or dead.
You know, they must have been.
They got to be excruciated.
They might have been like angry AF.
Yeah, especially for it to happen on a military basis is even worse.
Exactly.
If it already happened, they wouldn't even like answers.
Who's going to be the third one?
Specialist Vanessa Guillen was 20 years old when she disappeared from Fort Hood military base in Texas for two months.
Three weeks before she disappeared, she told family and friends of her experiences at the base.
On the day she vanished, Guillén was called in to work on her day off.
She worked in one of the base's armory rooms.
She was last seen in the parking lot of her squad's headquarters wearing a black shirt and purple leggings between 11:30 a.m. and 1 p.m.
Okay, so there she is.
That night, she also didn't report back to her barracks.
Her family was contacted after leaders failed to locate her.
Search teams looking called in to work on a day that you weren't supposed to for a missing soldier at Fort Hood, Texas, as they investigate her disappearance.
An investigation was opened after she was reported missing the next day.
Guillen's family also made the trip to Fort Hood from Houston.
And this happened in Panda.
When they arrived, they were greeted by a specialist.
Yeah, that's another thing, too.
Guys, this is crazy because this was literally in the middle of the lockdowns.
Because I remember in Miami, we shut down in early March.
Everything was shut down.
They said you can't leave your house, nothing.
So this was all going down literally at one of the worst times where you're trying to call people.
No one's answering.
Sorry, there's lockdowns.
I can't leave.
Oh, I don't know what we can do.
We don't know where your daughter is.
Oh, man.
Named Aaron Robinson.
When I first went up to that base, that subject, I met him.
He still had the nerve that thing day to laugh in my face.
According to an affidavit on the case, Robinson was not the last person Guillen saw.
And don't worry, guys.
I got the affidavit right here, which we will go ahead and go through later on.
Down the monk.
I know you guys like to turn your thing down.
Don't worry.
I know you guys like me to go through the court documents and everything, and we will go ahead and go through this one as well.
I also got the indictment here for this case.
Okay.
So don't worry, man.
We're going to give you all the classic good stuff with the FedReacts.
Don't worry.
We got y'all.
And texted on the day she banished.
A witness said Guillen visited Robinson's army room to check serial numbers for equipment, leaving behind her keys, ID, and wallet.
When interviewed by the Criminal Investigation Division on April 28th about their Army CID, like we discussed with you before, they're the first ones that take on any case that's going to come through with violations on a military base or with personnel.
Counter, Robinson said he had texted her about being in his army room.
He said she later came, confirmed serial numbers, filled out paperwork, and left to what he thought was the base's motor pool.
Others in the motor pool said she never showed up.
As for the rest of his day, after seeing Guillen, Robinson said he went to his off-base residency he shared with his girlfriend, 22-year-old Cecily Aguilar.
Okay, don't forget that name.
He said he returned to the base at 6:30 p.m. to complete computer training.
On May 18th, two witnesses interviewed about the case said they saw Robinson pulling a large tough box from his army room on the day Kien vanished.
It appeared heavy and he put it in his vehicle and drove away.
On May 19th, he consented to a search of his phone, which showed him and Aguilar being in contact throughout the day of April.
Okay, so you guys are probably wondering, why the hell would he consent to a search of his phone?
Well, you know, when you're in the military and Army CID says we need to search your phone or whatever, do you mind us searching your phone?
It looks kind of suspicious if you say no.
So, you know, it was either you comply or they're going to go get a search warrant for it.
Because at this point, she had been missing for a bit and he was one of the last people to see her alive.
April 22nd.
It even showed that he called her multiple times throughout the night and early morning.
Now, that's important, guys.
When I used to be an agent, obviously, anytime a crime was occurring, I would always do a subpoena for someone's phone records.
And you guys are probably, oh, let me, so you clip this, right?
Yeah.
The reason, so anytime a crime is going down, right, and you're looking at a suspect, what you want to do is you want to subpoena their phone records.
And what's a subpoena?
A subpoena, guys, is when you're able to, it's a, not a, I don't want to say a court order because it's not as strong as a court order, but it's basically something that makes the phone companies, it's a legal document request that makes phone companies comply with your request.
So when you do, hey, I want a subpoena for subscriber information and phone tolls.
Well, first, it's going to tell you who the person is, who the phone is subscribed to, right?
So if you subscribe, if you do a subpoena on like my phone, right?
It's going to come back to like my dad because I'm on his plan, right?
And then it's going to show the people that use the different phone numbers on that plan, right?
And it's going to identify each individual.
So you get the subscriber information.
Then you go ahead and you do a, you say you want phone records, right?
Phone toll analysis.
And what will happen is they'll give you the phone tolls and you'll be able to look at the phone tolls and you'll be able to see who they called, how often they called them, and it has a dates and times for all the calls.
Now you're probably wondering, well, Maya, why the fuck do I care what this person, who's he calling or whatever?
Well, when you know that a crime took place at a certain time, it's important to look at the phone tolls because whoever they're calling during the time that the crime was going down is more than likely a co-conspirator.
For example, when I was on a job and I knew that we were doing a drug trafficking case, right?
Let's say I had my undercover call the bad guy, right, to facilitate a buy.
Hey, I'm trying to get some meth.
Cool.
My undercover hangs up with him.
The bad guy calls somebody else.
I look at the phone records and see who the target talked to after talking to the undercover.
He might make one phone call, two phone calls, three phone calls.
All those people that he calls after the fact, I'm going to figure out who they are.
Once I figure out who they are, they're identified.
Then, more than likely, that's going to be someone who's like a source of supply, right?
So the undercover, whoever he's talking to, that individual is going to go to that person, get the drugs, and come back.
And then after the drug transaction is done, I'll do phone tolls again and see if he spoke to that same individual.
If you talk to that same individual both before the deal, during the deal, and after the deal, more than likely, that is going to be the source of supply.
All right, guys.
So I blow my own eardrums for you guys.
That is how phone tolls work.
So in a murder investigation like this, that's relevant because she went missing and you could see a high phone call frequency between him and his girlfriend, right?
More than normal because what they're going to do is they're going to look at the phone toll frequency, how much he calls her on regular days.
Might call her two times a day, three times a day.
Maybe he loves her, maybe calls her five times a day.
But I guarantee you, the day that this murder happened, he called her 10, 20, 30 times.
And then not only do you can you look at the phone calls, the amount of times they talked on the phone calling, you can also look at the text message as well.
Now, with that said, you're not going to actually be able to look at the actual text messages unless you have the phone, but you will see that SMS messages were sent between the two individuals and you'll see the frequency.
You won't be able to see the contents, but you'll be able to see the frequency, which in itself is huge.
Guys, give me ones in the chat.
That gave you all some knowledge.
Why won't you see the content?
You have to do a search warrant for that.
Oh, okay.
You'd have to get the phone and do a search warrant for that to actually see the contents of the conversation.
Okay.
So the subpoena just get to one point.
Yeah.
Oh, did it turn on your YouTube stream again?
No way.
It's here.
Oh, okay.
Oh, you're watching, Angie?
Thank you.
All right.
Without enough evidence.
Let me bring it back up for you guys.
The Army didn't act against Robinson, and Guillen's case slipped under the Army's radar.
For the next two months, her family, friends, and local community were the main ones talking about her.
My sister's a human being.
And I want justice!
It's just my life, it's my heaven, it's my everything.
We will keep fighting.
I'll tell you behind bars!
On June 19th, Aguilara was interviewed and says she was with Robinson all night between April 22nd and 23rd.
When pressed about the late night phone calls from him, she said she had lost her phone.
When that was found to be a lie, she said her and Robinson went on a long drive to look at the stars in Belton, Texas.
Robinson's and Aguilara's cell phone records put them there in the early hours of April 23rd along the Leon River near Belton.
In a search of the area where Robinson's phone was peeinged along the river, a burn site was discovered.
All that was left were the remains of a plastic box.
However, no human remains were found.
A week later, Aguilara's story about the events of April 22nd changed again.
She admitted that the stargazing story was a lie.
This time, she said Robinson had hit a female.
Yeah, they went to go stargazing.
That's comical.
Oh, shit.
She said Robinson had hit a female soldier multiple times in the head with a hammer at his arms room killing her on Fort Hood.
With the hammer.
Was that Angie?
I don't know.
Stargazing me.
Oh, start looking at stars.
The sky.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
Killed her in his arms room.
On the night in question, she said Robinson picked her up from the gas station she worked at and took her to a site near the Leon River.
There, a large box with a female inside was waiting for them.
Aguilar and Robinson then dismembered the body and attempted to burn it and buried its parts in three separate holes.
That's sick, man.
That's so sick.
Cut it up.
Both then returned on April 26th to further cover the body with concrete.
In the interview, she also called Robinson alongside investigators, and in the conversation, he never denied committing the murder.
Oh, crap.
So they got a consensus recorded phone call of him confessing to the crime.
That's huge evidence right there.
They sent a text and he sent a text, maybe they found the pieces.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that's probably what kept her from getting a death penalty.
Her cooperating with them and that saved her, I'm saying.
Oh, save her.
Like, she, like, her cooperating and getting him to admit it is what kept her from going, probably getting the electric getting executed or the death.
Her confession came after contractors working on a fence near the Leon River made a disturbing discovery.
Unidentified remains near the Leon River have been found in the search for a missing soldier.
After this news broke out, Robinson fled from his barracks on foot that evening and was found four miles from base in the early morning of the next day.
Overnight video shows the scene where Khaleen police confronted the suspect.
They say he ultimately took his own life, but the army says there's another suspect in custody, a civilian, the estranged wife of a different man, who they say is a former Fort Hood soldier.
Aguilar remained in custody after her final interview and was later charged with tampering with evidence.
She also confirmed that the female soldier Robinson killed was, in fact, Guillen.
Yeah, that's crazy.
Yeah.
Yeah, so if we look, Leon River.
I really hope they didn't get to see their body, to be honest.
That will have destroyed them.
Yeah.
Let's see here.
Oh, man.
What the?
So it looks like it's a pretty big rip.
Yeah, because we're.
What is that, Mario?
Okay, so, oh, it's far away.
From Far Hood?
Yeah, it doesn't look like it's close.
This was the same area near the Leon River that was searched by Army investigators.
Oh, okay.
So, no, here's Colleen right here.
So, okay.
Interesting.
Securities on June 21st, and where plastic box remains were found.
Witnesses also told investigators that Robinson had left the base on April 22nd with a heavy plastic box.
Between the overwhelming evidence in favor of foul play, Texas Rangers and the slow action by investigators, questions arose throughout the Army's investigation.
As a soldier in Fort Hood, YouTuber Lifeway Jordan attested to the Army's soap action not long after Guillen's disappearance.
I've witnessed a shooting here on post myself across from my barracks.
I heard at least five, five, four to six gunshots go off.
When I looked at my window, like an hour later, an hour or so later, the MPs finally finally showed up.
The response time for things, I don't know when this information got out, but the response time to things is really like poor.
The effort to respond to things is poor.
Because of the lack of urgency, Guillen's family has demanded a congressional investigation into the matter.
I want everyone on that base to be to be reported on.
I want a congressional investigation to find out who lied and why.
The investigation was pushed even more so after they were left with little answers for two months.
I think that's another reason why this case went federal as well.
Because, number one, the feds don't lose.
Number two, their cases are typically airtight.
The FBI ended up taking this case.
Army CID did not take this case, guys, which is cut from, I'll be honest with y'all.
That's kind of embarrassing.
You got a military personnel that committed the murder on your base and the FBI's taking it?
Bruh, that's fucking disrespectful.
That's not good.
The FBI are still seeing like civilians, right?
Yes, they're a civilian law enforcement agency.
So, yeah.
Yeah.
That's not a good look.
So, and we're going to talk about, we're going to read the complaint and actually go through it.
But this was the FBI case, surprisingly.
They lied to our faces every single day.
The hashtag Shutdown4hood also began trending on social media.
The world wanted to know why investigators hadn't solved her case quicker.
Guienne's murder took place in the armory during the day.
In this video, Guyan's family visits the armory where she worked.
In her arms room, there is a window used to pass equipment through and to see all that happens inside.
Robinson likely worked in the identical unit with the window that granted similar access to potential onlookers.
In the July 2nd episode of the podcast, Crime Stories with Nancy Grace, Attorney Natalie Coleman, recounted what the Army's Criminal Investigation Division told her about Guienne's last day.
The whole place was filled with blood.
He took her body and put it in, I want to say, Pelican brief.
He wheeled it out.
He put it on the side.
He went home.
6 p.m. comes around.
He enters the base.
They tell us that he did this crime between 10:23, 10:30, and 11:13 in the room.
How can no one have seen this in the video cameras?
How can no one have heard her screaming?
There's no towels in there.
There's no cleaning solutions in there.
How did he?
Oh, he went down across the building.
They made it up, obviously.
But I said, so he must have had to go out and got them, but there's no way he could have done that in 43 minutes.
This is where I believe that there's some cover-up here.
There's so many holes.
They continued, I want to say, to use conformatory bias.
It couldn't be him.
Guien was also not the only soldier to have died at Fort Hood in recent years with few leads.
One of them was even found during Guien's search, Gregory Weedle.
Yeah, that's kind of unacceptable that you got soldiers dying in our Army base.
It's like, what the fuck, man?
So on November 5th, 2009, a terrorist mass shooting took place at Fort Hood near Clean, Texas.
Nadel Hassan, a U.S. Army major and psychiatrist, fatally shot 30 people and injured more than 30 others.
It was the deadliest mass shooting on an American military base.
God damn nigga, his name is Hassan.
Hello, Abbot.
Come on, man.
Why are you making this look bad, bro?
It's also been the site of multiple mass shootings, and many Army members there have been affiliated.
On April 2nd, 2014, a shooting spree was perpetrated at several locations on the Fort Hood military base near Clean, Texas.
Four people, including the gunman, were killed while 14 additional people were injured, 12 by gunshot wounds.
Perpetrator Ivan Lopez, goddamn.
Aided with prostitution rings on and off base.
What the hell?
Six Fort Hood soldiers, 14 tonnes, arrested private stand.
God damn.
Oh my god.
Beyond Fort Hood, Army bases across the country have struggled with crime.
According to a 2018 crime report by the Army, a criminal offense occurs every six minutes and 11 seconds.
Beyond the Army, the U.S. Armed Forces in general has a cover-up culture when it comes to internal issues.
An anonymous A1C airman told Aldia of just some of his experiences as a member of the Air Force.
There is a lot of toxic male buddy-buddy relationships within the Air Force, whereas I think the buddy-buddy system that they had going on helped them turn the blind eye, or they thought nothing of it because they knew this person and it would never suspect them of doing something.
In Guillen's situation, that culture in the army cost her her life and forced her to endure instances of sexual harassment, according to her family.
Yeah, she did talk about being sexually harassed by some of her.
I think in the military that is very common within women.
Yeah, it can be.
I think it's a big reason why I personally don't think women should be in the military.
I don't think they should be in combat positions or in units where there's like way too many men because it just causes problems, man.
It just causes problems.
Yeah, my dad used to say that even, well, even in Venezuela, whenever he will be like the boss of any squadron or something, there will be women complaining about sexual harassment all the time.
Yeah, it's just common.
Yeah, so I don't think like the military is for men, man.
We got here a chat.
We got a few shots.
Yeah.
Steelboy says, just watch four hours of the video that you sent in locals, bro.
Thank you for not saying it.
Do people get canceled for talking about the Rothschilds?
Yeah, bro.
They definitely do.
They definitely do.
She's not a sexual object.
Before she disappeared.
Oh, and then another chat here by Molo goes, I fuck with Myron's energy.
Pussy?
Hashtag TexasBabyFNF Forever.
Okay, I don't get it.
What happened to senior Madre Soltera Hombre, LOL?
Did he really get mad because nobody knew who he was on the panel?
That's crazy.
It was a bit too sassy, man.
Hell y'all, an apology for that mess.
Yeah, Uncle Luke.
I don't know, man.
It was a dumbass.
Yeah, I don't know what to say.
Like, some people really think that, you know, you get famous off a parody song and you think you're the shit, man.
It's wild, bro.
You know, we don't even act like that.
That shit wild.
Guy told her best friend and family she was being sexually harassed.
There are many theories about who these members were, although it's as unclear who they may be.
They would reportedly watch Guillen shower.
She told her family that she feared retaliation if she told anyone of the misconduct.
On the whole, sexual harassment is something that runs rampant in the army.
In the same 2018 report by the Army, it calculated a sexual assault happened every four hours and 25 minutes.
Wow.
Of the victims of those assaults, 93% of them were young women.
I've encountered or witnessed firsthand of newly found airwomen being sexually harassed by sergeants.
If you are one of the you are advocated of joining the U.S. armed forces, don't trust anyone that you have just met in the military because they will turn their backs on you if they need to.
In addition to being a young woman, Guillen could have also been a target because she was Latina.
The people will be the most sought after or sexually harassed women are are unfortunately being minorities because they are less likely to believe a minority or Caucasian.
But her revelation inspired service women from all backgrounds to share their sexual harassment experiences under the hashtag I am Vanessa Guillen.
I went to my chain of command and I told them what happened and I was immediately told to bury this.
They had all the evidence of him saying, yes, I yes, I do remember that night.
Yes, I did do that.
And they still, for some reason, said there was not enough evidence.
I chose like Vanessa not to report it.
Like a lot of people say the only difference between me and her story is that I walked away alive.
The Army will not rule on whether Guillen was sexually harassed or not.
But her name has made its way to Washington, D.C. in the name of reform on sexual harassment in the military.
On July 30th, the Guienne family made the cross-country trip to meet with U.S. President Donald Trump about planned legislation in Guien's name.
It would not require those experiencing sexual harassment to report to their superiors.
The hashtag I am Velissa Guienbill would have.
I mean, they went viral if they went ahead and met up with the president, man.
Our men and women have the confidence into reporting the sexual harassment.
They still don't have a clear and consistent answer as to why their sister and daughter was murdered on April 22nd.
For now, they will continue to keep her name alive.
All right, let's go through the criminal complaint, guys.
So we got the, we know who she is.
We want to got the general overview of the case, but let's go ahead and go into the real nitty-gritty of the investigation, okay?
In the Netflix documentary, they mentioned that she refused to be in a threesome with this guy and his girlfriend.
Oh, with this dude?
Yeah.
The Robinson guy.
That could have been a reason.
That could have been a reason.
That could have been a motive.
Yeah.
That could have been a motive.
Yeah.
That could have been a motive right there.
Because he might have got scared that she would report him.
Yeah.
For even trying.
All right.
Western District of Texas, guys.
United States District Court.
So this is federal.
Okay.
Criminal complaint.
Real quick.
Do you guys want me to explain what a criminal complaint is or not?
One, if you guys want me to explain what a criminal complaint is, or two, if not.
I explained what it was, I think, on last week's show with Sean Kingston.
But again, we got a lot of new viewers.
We got 2,000 plus y'all watching on Rumble.
We got 500 plus you guys watching on YouTube.
A bunch of you guys came over to Rumble after we got hit with that thing.
One of you guys want me to explain what a criminal complaint is.
Two of you guys don't want me to.
But I did explain it last week, but I know we got a lot of new viewers and stuff like that.
So let's see what we got here.
People just want you to explain things, Marsh.
You got a few twos.
I'm looking at both YouTube and Rumble.
Well, Rumble is mostly twos.
Okay.
All right.
We'll just get right into it.
All right.
I, the undersigned complaint and bailing duly sworn, state the following is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.
From on or about April 23rd, 2020 through June 30th, 2020 in Bell County in the Western District of Texas, defendants did unlawfully and willfully combine.
Remember, and they charged who they charged here, guys, Cecilia and Aguilar.
Combined, conspire, confederate, and agree together and with others to corroborately alter, destroy, mutilate, and conceal an object or attempt to do so with the intent to impair its integrity and availability for use in an official proceeding in violation of Title 18 United States Code, Section 1512.
So see, guys, look, they don't even have an actual murder statue.
They're using Title 18, 1512.
This is, this is, I've never even seen this shit.
Let me look here.
But obviously, all the aggravating circumstances.
Let's just go 151.
the other shit.
Debtor.
What?
Oh, 1512.
Okay, constitutes a broad prohibition against tampering with a witness, victim, or informant that prescribes conduct intended to illegitimately affect the presentation of evidence in federal proceedings or the communication of information in federal law enforcement officers.
So it's a very broad charge.
And I'm not surprised they use that because let's see, did she get indicted for the same crime?
Oh, wow.
Okay.
Because so since she tried to cover it up, they hit her with this.
So look, guys, even on the federal statue, it's very difficult.
There's not many murder federal statutes, guys.
It's normally a state case.
But in this one, obviously, they killed a service member.
They did it on a military base.
So the feds went ahead and took it and they hit her with a charge of basically like this is kind of like a higher level of obstruction to justice.
So anyway, let's keep going.
I further state that I'm a special agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and this complaint is based on the following facts.
When I saw this, I was like, oh, Lord, CID dropped the ball on that one.
That's a hell.
It's fucking embarrassing.
That's really embarrassing.
I'll be fucking damned if I'm going to have the Phoebes come in and take a case that was done on a goddamn military base.
If I'm, you know, OSI, if it happens on an Air Force base, it's mine.
If I'm fucking NCIS and happens on a, you know, on a naval ship or some shit like that, it's mine.
If it happens to an Army base and the FBI comes in and takes it, that's fucking embarrassing.
Anyway, Jonathan Varga, special agent, FBI, okay?
So, and this was done out of Waco, Texas, actually.
So, one of the officers.
So, I, Jonathan W. Varga, being duly sworn, deposed, and state the following is true according to my knowledge and belief.
Your Afian is a special agent in the FBI, United States Department of Justice.
I've been employed as an F SA or special agent of the FBI for over 16 years, and I'm currently assigned to the San Antonio Division, Waco Resident Agency in Waco, Texas.
The San Antonio FBI office is very nice, actually, guys.
Super nice.
I'll show you how real quick.
Has like a fucking museum in there.
Been here many times.
Yeah, that's the building.
Been here many times whenever I would have case briefings or anything else like that.
But anyway, I'm currently assigned to a violent crime squad where my responsibilities include enforcing federal, but this guy's out of Waco.
So, okay.
So, the SAC office, guys, right, FBI San Antonio, this is where the special agent in charge is, right?
The SAC office.
There's field offices, though, that are smaller that are called RAC offices or resident agent in charge, right?
And those are like, think of them as like satellite offices.
Waco is a satellite office within the area of responsibility of the San Antonio office.
Does that make sense?
Give me ones in the chat if that makes sense, guys.
And that's how all the federal offices operate, right?
Whether it's HSI, FBI, you have a SAC office, and then within the SAC office, you have your RAC offices, resident agent in charge, which are satellite offices.
Give me ones in the chat if that makes sense for y'all.
Sweet.
Okay, we'll keep going.
Okay.
So he's assigned to a violent crime squad where my responsibilities include enforcing federal criminal statute, including investigating violent crimes to include murder, witness tampering, obstruction, justice, and conspiracy to commit a crime occurring within the Fort Hood military installation.
Fort Hood is a place of special maritime and territorial jurisdiction for the federal government.
As a part of these duties, your affian has become involved in the investigation of suspected violations of Title 18, United States Code 1512, that is conspiracy to corrupt, corruptly alter, destroy, mutilate, or conceal an object or attempt to do so with the intent to impair the object's integrity or availability for use in an official proceeding.
Obviously, as you guys know, this chick went ahead and tampered with the body so it wouldn't get found, et cetera.
So it falls under this charge.
The facts of this affidavit come from your Afghan's personal observations, his training and experience, and information obtained from other law enforcement witnesses.
Your Afrian is currently involved with U.S. CID, Texas Rangers, U.S. Marshal Service, and other agencies regarding the activities of U.S. Army specialists, Aaron Robinson, and Cecilia Aguilar.
As you guys know, Aaron Robinson is the murderer and his girl is Cecilia Aguilar.
Okay.
So he did this case with CID, Rangers, U.S. Marshal Service.
The reason why the Rangers are involved, guys, is Texas Rangers guys do all major investigations in Texas that have, you know, that are high profile.
So obviously the disappearance of a service member is going to be a big deal, right?
And it's a murder case as well, so they're automatically going to be involved.
All right.
Think of them as the state's FBI.
The statements contain this affidavit are based on information provided to your affian.
Oh, sorry.
Now we're at, since this affidavit is being submitted for the limited purpose of securing an arrest warrant, your affian has not included each and every fact known to him concerning this investigation.
Your affian has set forth only facts that I believe are necessary to establish probable cause.
What does that mean, guys?
That means that they're only going to put the bare minimum required so they can go ahead and get an arrest warrant, right?
So they filed a criminal complaint in support of getting an arrest warrant to go pick this chick up.
Then, when they go to trial, everything's going to come out.
But they don't want to go ahead and put everything out there if they don't have to.
They're just trying to establish probable cause, get their arrest warrant, go pick her up, all right?
So background investigation.
On April 23rd, 2020, U.S. CID was notified by a captain in the Regimental Provost Marshal 3rd Cavalry Regiment at Fort Hood that Private First Class Vanessa Guillen had been reported missing by her unit.
A witness stated that PFC Guillen left the arms room where she was working to visit the arms room at another location at Fort Hood, one controlled by SBC Aaron Robinson, in order to confirm serial numbers for weapons and equipment.
The witnesses verified that PFC Guillen left the arms room without her U.S. Army identification card, bank card, or car keys with her barracks key attached.
The witness stated that her property was still in the arms room when he secured the arms room for the day.
That's suspicious.
So why does she not have her stuff?
A search of Guyanne's phone records revealed that the last ongoing text message from her phone was a message to SPC Robinson's phone.
Oh shit.
SPC Robinson was one of the last people known to have seen Guyan.
On April 22nd, 2020, SPC Robinson stated he texted Guyan to inform her he was in the arms room.
He said she read serial numbers for equipment.
Oh, he said she read serial numbers for equipment and afterward he gave her paperwork and the serial number for a 50 caliber machine gun which needed to be serviced.
He said she left the arms room and he believed she would have next gone to the motor pool.
Witnesses at the motor pool prepared to receive the paperwork from Guienne stated she did not arrive with the papers.
Hmm.
On April 28, 2020, Army CID interviewed SPC Robinson.
So what?
This is about six days later.
Among the things he said concerning his activities on 422, Robinson stated that after he finished his work, he went to his off-post residence he shared with his girlfriend, Cecilia Aguilar.
It did not leave the rest of the night except around 6.30 p.m. when he had come on post assigned to a government computer to enroll in training.
Well, you know why he was honest about that, guys, because they have all your logins saved.
So if he didn't, if you didn't come clean about that, they would have found out anyway, right?
And on top of that, guys, when you're a service member and CID wants to talk to you, it's not like you're going to be like, ah, you know what?
I don't want to talk to y'all niggas.
No, you got to talk to them.
Okay.
You better talk to them.
So he told the truth about that because they can go ahead and check and see, did he put in his piv card?
Did he actually log in?
Did he do his training, et cetera?
So he can't lie about that.
On May 18th, two witnesses were interviewed who stated that on April 22nd, they observed SPC Robinson pulling a large tough box with wheels that appeared very heavy in weight coming out the arms room, the same room where Robinson worked.
The two witnesses observed SPC Robinson load the tough box into his vehicle and drive away.
On April 19th, so a day later, Robinson consented to a search of his cell phone by UFED extraction.
A review of the cell phone calls revealed SPC Robinson called Aguilar multiple times during the night of April 22nd, 2020, and as late as 3.30 a.m. on 423, 2020.
Robinson also received calls from Aguilar throughout the day.
What did I tell y'all?
That is weird because I guarantee you they looked at his phone records talking with her on other days that she might, he might have called her one time, two times, three times.
But they talked to each other that day a whole bunch.
Why?
Because they were coordinating the cover-up.
Also, you guys are probably wondering, what the hell is a UFED?
More than likely, guys, this is a Celbrite, okay?
A Celbrite is a tool used by law enforcement to extract phones.
Let me see here.
And yeah, boom, yeah.
You fed.
Yep.
I fucking knew, man.
I'm good.
Yeah, so a Celbrite, guys, is a device that's used by law enforcement to extract your phone and get all the data out of it.
Okay.
It pulls text messages, phone calls, logs, contacts, even social media stuff, emails, all that stuff.
And it puts it in a format for you that you can read and go through.
All right.
Like kind of compiles report for you.
Cecily Aguilar, a girlfriend of Robinson, was interviewed on June 19, 2020.
Aguilar stated she was with Robinson all night on 422.
She was asked why Robinson would call her after midnight if he was at the residence with her.
She stated she could not find her phone and Robinson called the phone to help her find it.
Yeah, okay, bro.
Nope.
This statement, however, is inconsistent with the lengths of the calls.
Robinson called Aguilar several times throughout the night and the calls after midnight were for lengths greater than one minute.
Ah, fucking got her.
And also, guys, keep in mind, she probably didn't know that the police or law enforcement had extracted his phone and looked at the call logs and seen that he actually had full-on conversations with her.
If you're just calling someone because the phone is missing and you're at the house, like, hey, yo, call my phone, I can't find it.
What?
It's two rings, three rings, four rings, but you don't actually pick up and talk because the other person's in the house with you.
What the fuck?
That doesn't make sense.
So they got her debts of rights on there because they actually had phone calls there and were speaking to each other.
So that's how they knew that she was lying.
But Aguilar probably didn't know that her boyfriend consented to law enforce it, checking his phone, and they had all this stuff before.
So they pretty much, you know.
You what?
And knew she was capping.
All right.
Gotcha, bitch.
Aguilar, during a re-interview, stated that she lied in her previous statement.
She stated that she did leave her residence because of what she copes is by taking long drives.
Okay, nigga.
Stop the cow.
Aguilar, I'm getting like fucking like PTSD right now.
Like when criminals lie to me, they say stupid shit like this, and I'm just like getting all fucking mad.
Like, bro, what the fuck?
Like, anyway.
Aguilar stated that she was with Robinson on the night of April 22nd, 2020, where they took a long drive to a park in Belton, Texas to look at the stars.
Stop the cow.
Aguilar stated that after going to the park, they returned home.
Stop the cow.
An analysis of phone records pertaining to Robinson's cell phone was conducted.
The review of the location data revealed that at approximately 1.59 a.m. on April 23rd, 2020, Robinson's cell phone was identified in the vicinity of FM 36 and West Main Street in Belton, Texas.
Let's go ahead and look that up, gentlemen.
Okay.
Ladies and gentlemen.
Is that the one?
Yes.
Looks like it's the middle of nowhere, though.
All right.
So let's go back.
Specifically, on or around a bridge.
S.B. Robinson's cell phone then tracked along the Leon River in a northward direction.
Robinson's cell phone remained in the area for approximately two hours.
Oh, boy.
So now they're able to look at the phone's location data, guys, and they knew where he was.
So they were able to track him on the Leon River.
Okay?
You cannot hide anymore.
Yeah, you can't, bruh.
Tip, if you're going to commit murder, don't have your phone with you.
Aguilar's cell phone telephone, cellular telephone location data also was also analyzed later and revealed that she and Robinson were near the Leon River together on April 23rd and on April 26, 2020.
Based upon this data, personnel from CID, Bell County Sheriff's Office, and Texas Rangers searched the Leon River in Belton, Texas on June 21st, 2020.
A burn site with disturbed earth was identified.
What appeared to be burned remains of a plastic tote or tough box were found nearby in an area near where Robinson's phone pinged.
The soil beneath the burn site was remarkably softer and moister than the soil found at similar depths merely feet away and had an odor of decomposition.
However, no remains were located.
So guys, remember, this is important, right?
Because earlier, witnesses told them that they saw Robinson walking around with a big ass tough box.
And then they found where the tough box was burned, the smell and everything else like that.
So that corroborates the witness's statement.
Then the phone records brought them there.
So everything is starting to line up now.
And her story obviously doesn't make sense.
Yeah, we went on a drive in stargazing.
Yeah, okay, bitch.
Stop the cap.
So about 1 p.m. on June 30th, 2020, CID was notified that contractors working on a fence adjacent to the Leon River in Bilton, Texas, discovered what appeared to be human remains.
CID, along with FBI, the Sheriff's Office, U.S. Marshals, and the Texas Rangers searched the area and identified scattered human remains that appeared to have been placed in a concrete-like substance and buried.
So now they officially got a homicide, right?
About 8.30 p.m., June 30th, 2020, Aguilar was interviewed and admitted that Robinson told her that on April 22nd, 2020, he struck a female soldier in the head with a hammer multiple times at his arms room.
So they brought her ass in that day, right?
So at 1 p.m., they find the body.
Seven hours later, they bring her in to interview her, right?
They're like, bitch, we know that you were lying.
And they probably confronted her with all the inconsistencies, right?
So he struck a female soldier in the head with a hammer multiple times at his arms room, killing her on Fort Hood.
Affian, that's the agent that wrote this, by the way, knows that this arms room is located within the Special Maritime and Territorial Jurisdiction of the United States and in an area of exclusive federal jurisdiction.
Okay, so I like that he put this in here.
Okay, you guys write, well, why?
Meyer, why the fuck did he put that in this complaint?
The reason why he put that in the complaint, guys, is because, number one, he's an FBI agent, right?
FBI agents don't do traditional murder investigations.
That is typically reserved for the state.
The Rangers would normally do a murder case like this.
However, he's showing how he had his venue here.
He says, this arms room, right, is located within the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States and in an area of exclusive federal jurisdiction.
It's on a military base.
So he put that in the affidavit to give himself venue, right?
He didn't have to, but, you know, maybe the AUSA or whatever it may be, because like I told y'all before, a million times, feds don't do traditional murder investigations, okay?
Aguilar advised, the female soldier never made it out the army alive, referring to Fort Hood.
Robinson then placed her in a box and moved the box to a location near the Leon River in Belton, Texas, which, as you guys, we discussed before, witnesses saw him with this box.
Paragraphs 14 through 19 are a summary of Aguilar's statements to law enforcement on June 30th, 2020.
So now we're going to get into her specific statements, what she did, okay?
On the evening of April 22nd, 2020, or early morning of April 23rd, 2020, Robinson picked Aguilar up at a gas station she worked at and took her out to a site near the Leon River and near a bridge.
A box with wheels and handles was already at the site.
Robinson walked Aguilar over to the woods and opened up a box for Aguilar, and she saw a dead female inside the box.
Aguilar, on a later date, identified the dead female as Vanessa Guien.
To more easily dispose of and conceal the body of the dead female, Robinson and Aguilar proceeded to dismember the dead female's body.
Sick bastards.
They used a hatchet or axe and a machete-type knife.
They removed the limbs and the head from the body.
Oh my God.
Fucking sick bastards.
Matter of fact, I think the reason why they were able to identify when they found the body because it was so badly decomposed because she died in like April.
They didn't find her until June.
And just so you guys know, South Texas gets extremely hot.
And after a few days, guys, the animals get to it.
You know what I mean?
So the reason they were able to tell it was the hair.
The hair.
They saw like her hair, a hair on the skull.
Robinson and Aguilar attempted to burn the body.
However, the body would not burn completely.
They placed the dead female in three separate holes and covered up the remains.
Chat, give me ones if the audio is good.
I think the audio is good.
I turned it up a little bit for y'all, but give me ones if the audio is good, like as far as you can hear me nice and clearly.
Oh my God, how do you chop a head off, man?
Yeah, I know.
I'm just trying to imagine the thing and I can't.
It's just, how can you chop a head off?
Yeah.
And it's like an innocent person, too, that didn't do shit to you.
You know what I mean?
Anyway, Robinson and Aguilar returned to the site on a later date.
This date was believed to be on April 26, 2020, according to seller telephone site analysis.
Remember, guys, they proved with the phone analysis that they were there on the 23rd and on the 26th.
Prior to the return, they obtained hair nets and gloves.
Aguilar purchased a bag of what she referred to as concrete from someone utilizing Facebook Messenger.
Oh, stupid bitch.
God damn.
Stupid.
Facebook's marketplace, probably.
Huh?
Favorite marketplace, probably.
Oh, Facebook marketplace, probably.
Yeah, could you imagine?
Hey, I need some concrete.
We got to put this body away.
My boyfriend went crazy because this chick didn't want to do a threesome with us.
Like, bro.
Stupid.
On that day, Robinson and Aguilar uncovered the remains of the dead female, removed them, and continued the process of breaking down the remains of the dead female.
The remains were then burned again, along with their gloves and hair nets.
Robinson and Aguilar placed the remains back in three holes with the concrete purchased earlier.
Robinson and Aguilar burned their clothes later that night at their residence.
Robinson and Aguilar concocted the story about Aguilar and Robinson taking a long drive to a park in Belton as an alibi.
Yeah, it didn't work for you guys.
You stupid.
Prior to June 30th, 2020, Robinson had been confined to his barracks room on Fort Hood.
However, he absconded from the Fort Hood that night.
So guys, as you guys know, right?
The 30th, they find the body, right?
The FBI Rangers and Marshals and everybody, they find the body.
So they tell the people over at Fort Hood, hey, don't tell this idiot, but we need him like secure somewhere.
We need to talk to him.
So they go ahead and they put him in a room.
But the people that put him in the room were like military members and they didn't have guns.
So he runs out the fucking room.
This is the paragraph where they're talking about that.
So they're confined to his barracks room on Fort Hood.
However, he absconded from Fort Hood that night.
At the request of law enforcement, Aguilar placed a controlled telephone call to Robinson wherein he never denied anything they did to Vanessa Guienne and her body.
Robinson texted, I think, honestly, this right here, this control call that they made, kept it from getting the death penalty, guys.
A control call is like...
A control call is when the police instruct you to make a call to a target to develop evidence, and they record it.
Okay.
It's kind of like what I did with that pedophile when we were with Vitalian theme we were going to bring the other guy in.
That's considered a control call.
And you guys are wondering, go ahead and watch the kick stream where I did with Vitali.
We caught that guy, Burger King.
Robinson texted Aguilar, pictures of the news articles, advising of recovered human remains.
And they probably, she did that on purpose to see how he would respond.
In a later control telephone call, Robinson advised, baby, they found the pieces, they found the pieces.
This is referring to the human remains recovered near the Leon River.
Aguilar continued to assist law enforcement in locating Robinson as he was on foot in Clean, Texas.
Robinson was approached by law enforcement, however, he brandished a pistol and shot himself in the head, killing himself.
The identification of human remains recovered is still pending.
Conclusion.
Based upon the aforementioned facts, there's probable cause to believe that a violation of Title 18, United States Code 1512, that is conspiracy to corruptly alter, destroy, mutilate, or conceal an object or attempt to do so with intent to impair the object's integrity or availability for use in an official proceeding was committed by Cecily Aguilar.
Additionally, the original offensive murder was committed on the Fort Hood military installation located within the Waco Division of the Western District of Texas, a place of special maritime territorial jurisdiction of the federal government.
Murder, guys, they have to keep saying that because murder is almost always exclusively left over to the state, right?
A murder foothood and any related obstruction offenses would be pursued as a criminal proceeding in the United States District Court Wrestling District of Texas.
Accordingly, your affian respectfully requests that an arrest warrant be issued for Cecily Aguilar.
Further affiant naith, not saith not, which means I have nothing else to say.
Jonathan Varga, boom, signed by United States Magistrate Judge Jeffrey Manskey.
Man, I hope that guy is rotating here.
I hope so too.
What a fucking piece of shit.
He took the easy way out.
He did.
Made his girlfriend deal with it.
Yeah.
Here's the indictment, guys.
You guys know, have I told you before?
When you get hit with a criminal complaint, they have to indict you within typically two weeks.
And let's see here.
Yeah, they did it on the dot.
Let's fucking go.
They really cut it close on that one because she got arrested probably June 30th was when they did the interviews.
This complaint got signed on the second day of July.
So yeah, within 12 days, they had it indicted.
See, I told y'all, 12 days.
Oh, how did she?
Oh, Cecilia Aguilar.
Look her up real quick.
So yeah, this is the indictment, guys.
Boom, count two or three, you know, short indictment, right?
And then, and then here's the case right here.
Here's the PACER case.
Let's go ahead and go through this thing.
She's 25.
Here we go.
She's 26 now.
Sealed statement.
Judgment and commitment.
She was 20.
She was 21.
Oh, when this happened?
Yeah.
Yeah, I believe it.
Wow.
So she got, let's see how much time she got.
Imprisonment.
Okay.
The defendant is hereby committed to the custody of the United States Bureau of Prisons to be imprisoned for a term of 180 months.
And for a term of 60 months, S account eight to run consecutively for a term of 60 months, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Yeah, so 180 months, that's yeah, the feds always do it by months.
180 divided by 12.
15 years.
She got 15 years.
15?
15.
Yep.
And the state can still come after her later, guys.
That's nothing.
Yeah.
Well, remember, she cooperated.
Still.
She cooperated with.
She helped him chop her head off, man.
That's crazy.
I know.
I know.
But they were going after him, and they probably cut a deal with her.
And then he killed himself.
So, so this is, yeah, that's what she ended up getting.
Let's see here if we can.
I think there was a YouTube video on this, too.
Cecily Aguilar?
30 years in prison.
Hold on.
We clearly just saw 15.
Tonight, a woman who helped mutilate and conceal the body of U.S. soldier and Houston native Vanessa Guillain is headed to prison for 30 years.
A federal judge in Waco handed down the sentence for Cecily Aguilar today.
She pleaded guilty.
Because they're running consecutively, not running concurrently.
My bad.
So yeah, so she got 180 months for one of the counts.
And then 60 months.
And then 60 months.
Yeah.
So that's that.
Yeah.
Okay.
They run.
They all ran.
They're running consecutively.
They're not running concurrently.
Sorry about that, guys.
That's why.
What does that mean?
So when it runs concurrently, right?
Let's say you get hit with a bunch of charges and each charge carries 10 years or whatever.
If they run concurrently, it's like you're serving time for both the two charges.
Let's say 10 years, two, two, you got two charges that are both 10 years and it runs concurrently, right?
Then it's only 10 years.
But if they run consecutively, then you go, you do your 10 years here, then you got to do your next 10 years for the other charge.
Oh, okay.
So they run, so she would do 20.
Let's see here.
Let's see.
Guilty in November to helping her then-boyfriend.
Look at this dumbass nigga, bro.
Fucking idiot, man.
Dude, look like a clown.
Specialist Aaron Robinson.
Fucking bitch.
Dispose of Guinness's body near the Army base, formerly known as Fort Hood, back in 2020.
He's an ugly nigga, too, man.
You with this fat bitch.
Robinson took his own life before authorities could arrest him.
Guinness's sister says her family is breathing a little easier tonight.
This is why it's so important that you do like a psychological profile before joining a military force.
I used to do, I used to do that with my dad.
I used to sample Psychological profiles to let people in into the force.
It's great to know that Cecily will finally be held accountable for her actions, although she wasn't entirely at fault.
But we hope that someday the truth will prevail as to what really happened that day.
Guillen's death inspired protest across the country and led the army to discipline more than a dozen officials and change how women in the military can report sexual abuse.
Yeah, so, um, guys, crazy stuff.
Um, very, very crazy stuff with um with what happened here.
Uh, cool.
I think, um, what do we got here?
Yeah, I think you got anything, Angie, you got you, what are your thoughts on this case, Angie, overall?
With what I was just, well, you were reading this and all the evidence that we're getting into all the evidence and stuff from April to July, right?
Yeah, that's when they got the remains.
Did she try to hold on?
Let's see.
I got another thing right here that they might she let's see.
Did she try to in our top story tonight?
A Waco judge denied a motion to throw out the confession of Cecilia.
Oh, she tried to get her confession thrown out.
Aguilar, she's the woman charged in connection to the death of Vanessa Guillen.
Sex News reporter, that's her defense attorney just trying to throw anything out there.
Jasmine Caldwell was in court all day.
She has more on what it was like for the Guillain family seeing Aguilar for the first time.
Jasmine?
Oh, there.
Well, yeah, I sat behind Vanessa Guillen's family.
Could you imagine sitting in the courtroom and the person that's sitting there was cutting your daughter's head off?
In the courtroom today, and as you can imagine, seeing Cecily Court with Jeffrey Dahmer.
Remember the lady that went like barsack and tried to go at him?
Yeah, yep, yep, yep.
She must be Aguilar for the first time.
Brought a lot of emotions up for them.
Now, before the judge denied that motion to throw out Cecily Aguilar's confession, we heard about two and a half hours of testimony from the Texas Ranger and the Waco police officer who interviewed Aguilar the night she confessed.
We also got to see video of those officers interviewing her.
Now, Aguilar's attorney argued.
Yeah, they tried, they probably tried to.
That was a suppression hearing, guys.
Especially what they do is they try to suppress evidence in a case, you know, to obviously get it thrown out so it won't be used.
Let's see what her defense tried to do it for.
That the night she was questioned by police.
She thought that she was being arrested.
Her attorneys say that the officers did not read her her Miranda rights until rookie fucking mistake, guys.
You stupid.
They didn't read her Miranda rights.
After she confessed, the judge did not buy that.
And a tape did not read her Miranda.
Aguilar's attorney argued that the night she was questioned by police, she thought that she was being arrested.
Her attorneys say that the officers did not read her her Miranda rights until after she confessed.
The judge did not buy that.
In a taped interview, we saw Aguilar on camera admitting she wasn't being okay.
So, Miranda, let's talk about this real quick, guys.
So, anytime you're having a custodial interview with a subject, right, in a criminal investigation, you have to read them their rights, right?
You have the rights to remain silent.
I think you say abused against you in a court of law.
You have the right to consult an attorney, blah, blah, blah, right?
The thing is, this, though, it gets murky when you're doing something like a custodial interview is when the person's not free to go, right?
But if you do an interview with a subject and they don't feel like they're free to go, but they are free to go, it could still be considered a casodo interview, right?
So, what I would do anytime I had an interview with someone and they weren't, I knew I wasn't going to arrest them, or I was just trying to gather evidence.
Um, what I would do is I would put them in an interview room, it'd be very chill, the door would be open, right?
And I would always bring them in the interview room.
I'd have the door open, and I'd let them know that they're free to go at any time, right?
I'm just asking some questions, they're not under arrest or whatever, and I'd let them know this stuff so that if they did make an incriminating statement, right, I can use it.
But if you bring someone in and you don't read them their rights and they feel like they're not free to go, even if they are free to go, but if there's a reasonable, um, a reasonable person, that's that's typically like the metric they use a lot of times.
If a reasonable person would not feel like they were free to go during the course of that interview where they might have made incriminating statements, they could go ahead and get that statement thrown out if you didn't read their Miranda rights.
So, a good practice is, I would say, 90% of the times, whenever I brought somebody in, I would read them their Miranda rights.
Whether I was going to arrest them or not, I would read them because you kind of just get it out the way and anything that's said to you is clean.
However, I can see why people don't read people their rights because they might get nervous and they might not want to talk.
They'll clamp.
They'll think that they're getting arrested or something like that.
When a lot of the times you're just gathering information, you're not going to arrest them then.
They're actually free to go.
But when you do that, you make them clam up and not want to talk.
So there's a style twist.
So everyone has a different style, right?
Obviously, they probably did some stuff here good.
The Texas Ranger and the officer, where, you know, obviously it's a rookie mistake to not read someone their Marina rights.
But what I'm thinking is what they probably did is this.
They probably put her in a room, had her door open, told her multiple times, hey, you're free to go anytime, et cetera, et cetera.
And she still went ahead and confessed.
Then after she confessed, then they read her rights because at that point, now it's a criminal case, right?
And she's incriminated herself.
So now they have to read her rights.
So they did their due diligence.
But when you know you got somebody, right, and you know that they're your prime suspect, you read them their rights, man.
Like, you just to be safe.
Because they would have saved themselves the suppression hearing if they had just read her rights off rip.
You got the phone evidence.
You got the forensics.
You know that she was more than likely involved, right?
Like, just read the rights because you know what it is.
They were dancing on fire there, right?
And they ended up in the suppression hearing.
Thankfully, they probably did some things, right?
Had the door open, read her rights after the fact, whatever.
But you could lose a case like this, guys.
You can literally lose a case like this.
And if the judge was like, you know what, now you did violate her rights.
You didn't read the Miranda rights and she didn't feel like she was free to go, boom, done.
That confession's gone.
It's getting thrown out.
So you would have to rely on only the forensic evidence for any type of trial.
Give me what's in the chat if that makes sense, by the way, guys.
Miranda and custodial interviews versus interviews where they're free to walk.
Give me ones if that makes sense while I wait for you guys to tell me.
Hey, Martin, have you heard of Maury Travis, the St. Louis killer?
Would you be interested in covering that case?
Never heard of it, but we can look into it.
Angie, does that come up on your feed?
No.
When renting your properties, do you know a person, a difference between people prefer furnished homes or non-furnished?
People prefer furnished if you're like renting out apartments, but when you got a house, bro, why is it Hispanic people be so quick to say, BLM, R.I.P.P.
George Floyd, but when a Hispanic dies, there's no large crowds and riots.
Latinos need to team up the right.
Okay?
That's from Bruce Shark.
No one Billy says there's a documentary called the Invisible War, exposed all this stuff.
It's been out since 2012.
I'll leave it at this.
A court ruled, and I quote, ape is an occupational hazard of military service.
Oh, grape.
Okay.
Hey, Martin, have you heard of one?
Okay.
Being held against her will, and that the only reason she confessed is because she thought she was going home and the confession would help her case.
Now, Vanessa Guillen's sister says it was hard sitting through today's hearing.
Seeing her in person for the first time ever, it brings back a lot.
Hearing certain details of what she was capable of doing and still having the face to fight us.
You know, it's really hard to maintain cool, but I know it was for the best of our interest in order to keep coming to the courts and for the best of our interests, you know, in order for her not to.
Oh, that's her.
This dude is her boyfriend.
I think they were engaged, right?
Yeah.
This guy.
Yeah, they were engaged.
To use, like, me acting out in any way in her favor to get any type of motion going like she has in the past.
So now, during the hearing, Aguilar sat stoically with her hair braided in an orange jumpsuit.
As for what's next with this case, the judge told the attorneys to take their time to build.
So, yeah, so that suppression hearing failed.
So, it is what it is.
They didn't even get to bury her.
That's sad.
Yeah, that's really sad.
You have a chat here that says, Do you parabellum says, If Aguilar helped dispose of the body but immediately went to the cubs and said she did it because she was afraid he will kill her too, will she walk?
They'd have to prove it.
Yeah, but I mean, she'd probably still get charged with something.
Ivan Leal says, El Mexwa, they just elected the first female president of my country of origin is about to get even worse.
Hey, man, and I think she's from a certain nation, if you know what I'm saying.
Okay, anyway, guys, I think that'll do it.
That is the Vanessa Aguilar case.
Angie, what are your thoughts?
No, as I was saying before, from April to June or July when they discovered the remains, the parts, the people in the base, they might have seen something, like know something.
Well, the two witnesses came forward and saw him with the more people, though.
Because if he pulled out the body through that window from the arms thing, the arms room, how could nobody have seen something, you know?
Just two people came out for people.
Field a strong kid.
That's crazy.
Let me look here.
Maybe.
The family was so mad.
They were so angry because nobody came forward in three months waiting for somebody to come.
You know, that's what they said in the Netflix documentary.
They were so angry because nobody came forward until they found the remains.
You know?
That was on a Wednesday.
So yeah.
Weird.
But it was late.
It was at night, too.
Keep in mind, it was at like 10 p.m.
Yeah, but still, it's a fort, Marin.
It's a base.
It's people walking all the time.
Yeah, I know, not at night.
Like that at 10 o'clock at night.
Ain't nobody going to be there.
It's going to be dead.
I don't buy that.
And he probably, maybe he had a plan because he told her to show up at night.
No, military base, Angie, by 10 p.m.
It's dead.
No one's there.
People said that she was last seen with him, with Robinson.
I know, I know, but I'm telling you that at 10 p.m. on a military base, no one would, not many people would see anything.
Now, I'm shocked that they even got those two witnesses to see him moving the plastic.
I don't believe that.
Angie, I've been on a military base.
10 p.m., there's not going to be people walking around like that.
They're on their barracks.
They're asleep.
They're tired.
The military people wake up early a lot of the time.
Yeah, that is true.
By 10 p.m., their lights out.
So the fact that they were able to get two people to come forward and say, hey, we saw him.
But keep in mind, notice guys.
They didn't come forward until like a month later.
But it might have took them like hours to chop her off, though.
Well, they chopped her off off base.
They chopped her up like off base.
They took her to the river.
To the river.
In the woods.
They didn't chop her there on base.
Yeah, no, I know.
He hit her upside the head on base, though, which that doesn't make sense.
I mean, he must have cleaned that place up, too.
That's what they said, that they didn't find any cleaners or disinfectants or anything like that.
And that was suspicious.
Yeah, the Army CID fucked up.
I think that's why the FBI took this case.
So, and that's why they mentioned it multiple times in the complaint.
Like, hey, this happened on a military base.
Her older sister said in the documentary that when they got to Farhood to look for her, one of the sergeants asked her if she wanted to go to the and it was in the middle of COVID, so nobody was there, probably.
Yeah, that is true.
But the girl, one of the sergeants said, asked her if she wanted to go to her room to check for stuff to see where she was.
And she was like, why isn't nobody investigating this?
And why would she let me go to her room?
Isn't this contaminating a crime scene or contaminating?
Well, at that point, they probably didn't think a crime happened.
No, they didn't know.
Because the problem is this, yeah.
The problem is that with the military, right, people, so many people go AWOL that they don't take it seriously a lot of the times.
Which AWOL guy stands for absent without leave.
So it happens all the time where people just sneak away from base and do stupid shit.
Right?
Yeah.
So it's just so common with the military that they don't open criminal investigations all the time.
All right, cool.
So guys, I hope you guys enjoyed that episode, man.
Give me some fire emojis in the chat if you guys enjoyed that one.
You guys have been requesting this one for a while, according to Angie.
So I'm glad they were able to do it.
It was a federal case, you know, rest in peace to Aguian.
You know, I think it's terrible.
Again, I'm sorry, Vanessa Guillain, for what happened.
Obviously, absolutely terrible.
This fucking piece of shit guy, Robinson.
It's a loser.
The fact that he killed a young, innocent woman, we don't know the exact reason why we could speculate.
Completely unacceptable.
And then, you know, dismembering the body, sick fuck.
Yeah, man.
Anyway, he's probably rotting in hell and this girl is going to be spending the next 30 years of her life in jail.
So it is what it is.
You have a few chats.
Yeah, a few what chats?
You have like four chats, five chats.
Where?
Rumble.
On Rumble.
Would you say, would you stay or leave if your girl got SA?
Malik Tov?
Who is SA?
Student man.
Asking stupid questions.
Brussel Shark, Meyer, check out Mexico.
They're about to elect a female to Ching president Crazy Times.
Yeah, I know, bro.
Shit, wild.
My Andrew helped me take control of my life.
Thanks for doing what you do.
And then new gen Dan goes, Myron, can you react to the Black Ops 6 trailer?
It has Bill Clinton, George Bush, John F. Kennedy, Saddam Hussein, 9-11.
It'd be amazing to watch you play a new game, especially at them boys-based games.
Okay.
And yeah, if your girl got essayed, bro, obviously, I think you should stick by her side, right?
Unless she didn't listen to you.
You told her, hey, don't do nothing, something, and she didn't.
And then it happened, then that's different.
But if it just happened, yeah, bro, you stick by your chick.
What the fuck?
It's a crazy world.
Like, why weren't you there, nigga?
Don't worry.
We're on YouTube.
So, anyway, with that said, guys, with that said, guys, I'll catch you guys on the next episode of A Fed Reacts on Sunday.
Tomorrow we got Sami Silomera for Money Monday.
And he's only going to be on for after hours as well.
So that's going to be a good time.
Sorry about this dude throwing a fucking tantrum like an idiot, but you guys are going to get time to be by himself tomorrow night.
So we'll catch you guys tomorrow.
Love you, Ninjas.
Peace out.
Our special agent with homelands investigations, okay, guys?
HSI.
This is what Fed Reacts covers.
Defender Jeffrey Williams and Associate YSL did commit the felony.
Here's what 6ix9ine actually got.
This attack shifted the whole U.S. government.
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