Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA minor disagreement between neighbors in Florida takes a lethal turn, with police body camera footage and interviews probing the aftermath of the state's controversial "stand your ground" l... Tout lireA minor disagreement between neighbors in Florida takes a lethal turn, with police body camera footage and interviews probing the aftermath of the state's controversial "stand your ground" laws.A minor disagreement between neighbors in Florida takes a lethal turn, with police body camera footage and interviews probing the aftermath of the state's controversial "stand your ground" laws.
- Récompenses
- 7 victoires et 7 nominations au total
Susan Lorincz
- Self - Killer
- (images d'archives)
Ajike Owens
- Self - Murder Victim
- (images d'archives)
Franklin Baez-Colon
- Self - Neighbor & Witness
- (images d'archives)
Michael Balken
- Self - Ocala Police Chief
- (images d'archives)
Troy Campbell
- Self - Reporter, News 6
- (images d'archives)
Pamela Dias
- Self - Mother of Ajeke Owens
- (images d'archives)
Bill Gladson
- Self - State Attorney, (R) 5th Judicial Circuit
- (images d'archives)
Afrika Owens
- Self - Ajike's Daughter
- (images d'archives)
Isaac Owens
- Self - Ajike's Son
- (images d'archives)
Israel Owens
- Self - Ajike's Son
- (images d'archives)
Titus Owens
- Self - Ajike's Son
- (images d'archives)
Lauren Smith
- Self - Neighbor & Witness
- (images d'archives)
Phyllis Wills
- Self - Neighbor & Witness
- (images d'archives)
Billy Woods
- Self - Sheriff, Marion County Sherrif's Office
- (images d'archives)
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Avis à la une
Brutally honest portrayal of the sad state of the world today
Absolutely devastating but an essential watch if you can face opening your eyes to the sad state of today's humanity. Beautifully put together piece of the awful state of society. My heart goes out to anyone involved in this or anything even slightly similar. Shame on humans in today's world. I wish I could make some significant change to this awful world.
Impactful
Unlike many documentaries, this movie does not have a narrator. The story is shown almost entirely through bodycam footage and police interviews, allowing you to form your own opinions and narrative. I found it extremely impactful and thought provoking. I was brought to tears on several occasions.
I'm still thinking about it hours later.
I'm still thinking about it hours later.
Common Sense Wasn't Applied Then or Now
Less than 10 minutes in, bodycam footage shows AJ being informed by the police "Keep away from over there. This is your home, that is hers." Owners, renters, all the same, Period.
Unfortunately AJ just kinda laughed it off while leaning on the back of her car, like whatever....
That was the moment. She was informed. That notice and those definitions weren't taken seriously or respected. Then it only escalated from there. She thought it was funny. Which led to her kids thinking the same. It wasnt. That notice should have been 1st warning.
Next callout should have been 2nd warning. Keep yourself and your kids away from her home. 3rd callout should have been strike three, police are pressing charges.
Why this was blown off by the officers called out after the 1st time, I will NEVER understand. They failed her. They failed Susan AND AJ. AND AJs kids.
As a mom, my kids are encouraged to play safely and joyfully, on their own property, at parks, at school, during appropriate hours, within noise levels, set by local laws. They know whats theirs and what isnt. They're taught how to be respectful of other people's boundaries and property. They're also taught how to think for themselves and how to take responsibility. Simply - Actions have Consequences.
Those kids were disrespectful in every scene of the documentary up until the end, where they were sadly in tears over the loss of their mom and friend, and at no point did they take any responsibility for their actions that led up to that moment.
Susan reached out to law enforcement repeatedly for assistance regarding her invasion of peace, the littering, loitering, noise, trespassing, destruction of Property, harrassment, etc. She had signs posted that were ignored and destroyed. There were noise complaints, after hours, and more. The part with the kid messing around in the bed of her truck, trying to put the dog in it, her getting a photo - that's Unauthorized entry and physical contact of her property. She reported them trying to break in/steal it once. Just continued insulting and provoking behavior towards her. There are local laws for every one of these infractions her neighbors committed that continued to stack up. I kept counting misdemeanor after misdemeanor committed by the neighbors the cops kept ignoring.
Thru the movie, people kept telling her to just move. This timeline began in early 2021. This story begins in the 1st 12 months of Covid times. Like most, she was struggling financially, trying to stabilize, working from home, and not ABLE to move. I found it interesting that major piece of the puzzle was verbally left out and many haven't commented about the quarantine mental health perils in reviews. Imagine shifting to a work from home environment with no other option and your livelihood slipping away due to screaming kids outside your window, can't sleep at night due to noise, and your one asset being vandalized while you watched, with nowhere to go, depleting funds, and the cops do nothing.
Police did nothing to uphold the laws. Thats their job.
Over a year of continued harassment and ongoing issues and criminal mischief in this neighborhood passed,... she went down to the police station to try to get some sort of resolution, take further action thru the correct legal ways. She was the only one taking steps. They told her they needed video proof, so she gathered that, as shown in the documentary. Still nothing was done.
Then finally, trespassing one final time, late at night, banging on her door, on her porch, after dark, with a sign posted and ignored, tells me more about AJ than Susan. I don't care if someone says words to my kids from inside their property. If my kids were doing something they werent supposed to be doing, yah, they would be in trouble with that person. And I certainly wouldn't be aggressive and put myself in harms way to go bang on a door at night to yell at them for it. If anything I'd be going over the next day holding my kid by the ear for them to apologize to the lady, sheesh.
The police told Susan to stay inside and just keep to herself, and that was literally what she'd done for years. Shockingly they didn't tell the neighbors to do the same, and they were able to run all over her.
She had been imprisoned in her own home for a long time at this point. At her wits end. Asking for help over and over. Who knows where she was financially at this point. Not good I'm guessing. Stressed beyond measure and not working well in that environment, ...and everyone is shocked that this ended with a gunshot?
I'm not. I'm only shocked it wasn't suicide. If it was, it sadly wouldnt have been a popular documentary like this, the public would have twisted it into a dark comedy. I'm shocked she's the only one serving time. At this point she needs mental health resources, not jail. And the police department needs some serious internal reviewing.
Over and over again all this documentary shows was how many laws her neighbors repeatedly broke and how many times law enforcement failed to do their jobs. People focus on the violent end, when they should be focused on the awful nightmare of repeated actions by so many she endured that led up to her final action.
It's sad these kids don't have a mom now. Tragic that over and over it could have been avoided if basic civil and property laws had been followed and upheld.
I'm also sad at how many view Susan as the monster, the kids as angels and the neighborhood as the victims. Mob mentality lacks critical thinking and common sense.
Unfortunately AJ just kinda laughed it off while leaning on the back of her car, like whatever....
That was the moment. She was informed. That notice and those definitions weren't taken seriously or respected. Then it only escalated from there. She thought it was funny. Which led to her kids thinking the same. It wasnt. That notice should have been 1st warning.
Next callout should have been 2nd warning. Keep yourself and your kids away from her home. 3rd callout should have been strike three, police are pressing charges.
Why this was blown off by the officers called out after the 1st time, I will NEVER understand. They failed her. They failed Susan AND AJ. AND AJs kids.
As a mom, my kids are encouraged to play safely and joyfully, on their own property, at parks, at school, during appropriate hours, within noise levels, set by local laws. They know whats theirs and what isnt. They're taught how to be respectful of other people's boundaries and property. They're also taught how to think for themselves and how to take responsibility. Simply - Actions have Consequences.
Those kids were disrespectful in every scene of the documentary up until the end, where they were sadly in tears over the loss of their mom and friend, and at no point did they take any responsibility for their actions that led up to that moment.
Susan reached out to law enforcement repeatedly for assistance regarding her invasion of peace, the littering, loitering, noise, trespassing, destruction of Property, harrassment, etc. She had signs posted that were ignored and destroyed. There were noise complaints, after hours, and more. The part with the kid messing around in the bed of her truck, trying to put the dog in it, her getting a photo - that's Unauthorized entry and physical contact of her property. She reported them trying to break in/steal it once. Just continued insulting and provoking behavior towards her. There are local laws for every one of these infractions her neighbors committed that continued to stack up. I kept counting misdemeanor after misdemeanor committed by the neighbors the cops kept ignoring.
Thru the movie, people kept telling her to just move. This timeline began in early 2021. This story begins in the 1st 12 months of Covid times. Like most, she was struggling financially, trying to stabilize, working from home, and not ABLE to move. I found it interesting that major piece of the puzzle was verbally left out and many haven't commented about the quarantine mental health perils in reviews. Imagine shifting to a work from home environment with no other option and your livelihood slipping away due to screaming kids outside your window, can't sleep at night due to noise, and your one asset being vandalized while you watched, with nowhere to go, depleting funds, and the cops do nothing.
Police did nothing to uphold the laws. Thats their job.
- One called Susan psycho.
- One fistbumped the kid that called her names, encouraging disrespect.
- Several other officers encouraged the ongoing behavior & 2 covered their bodycams, clearly showing they knew they were saying & doing something wrong by their professional standards.
Over a year of continued harassment and ongoing issues and criminal mischief in this neighborhood passed,... she went down to the police station to try to get some sort of resolution, take further action thru the correct legal ways. She was the only one taking steps. They told her they needed video proof, so she gathered that, as shown in the documentary. Still nothing was done.
Then finally, trespassing one final time, late at night, banging on her door, on her porch, after dark, with a sign posted and ignored, tells me more about AJ than Susan. I don't care if someone says words to my kids from inside their property. If my kids were doing something they werent supposed to be doing, yah, they would be in trouble with that person. And I certainly wouldn't be aggressive and put myself in harms way to go bang on a door at night to yell at them for it. If anything I'd be going over the next day holding my kid by the ear for them to apologize to the lady, sheesh.
The police told Susan to stay inside and just keep to herself, and that was literally what she'd done for years. Shockingly they didn't tell the neighbors to do the same, and they were able to run all over her.
She had been imprisoned in her own home for a long time at this point. At her wits end. Asking for help over and over. Who knows where she was financially at this point. Not good I'm guessing. Stressed beyond measure and not working well in that environment, ...and everyone is shocked that this ended with a gunshot?
I'm not. I'm only shocked it wasn't suicide. If it was, it sadly wouldnt have been a popular documentary like this, the public would have twisted it into a dark comedy. I'm shocked she's the only one serving time. At this point she needs mental health resources, not jail. And the police department needs some serious internal reviewing.
Over and over again all this documentary shows was how many laws her neighbors repeatedly broke and how many times law enforcement failed to do their jobs. People focus on the violent end, when they should be focused on the awful nightmare of repeated actions by so many she endured that led up to her final action.
It's sad these kids don't have a mom now. Tragic that over and over it could have been avoided if basic civil and property laws had been followed and upheld.
I'm also sad at how many view Susan as the monster, the kids as angels and the neighborhood as the victims. Mob mentality lacks critical thinking and common sense.
Compelling
A very good documentary which delves into the exploration of the legal implications surrounding the "stand your ground" law. It raises essential questions about self-defense, accountability, and the societal impacts of such legislation. Through interviews with legal experts, family members, and community members, the film presents a balanced perspective, prompting viewers to reflect on the broader implications of these laws beyond this specific case.
Visually, the documentary is well-crafted, with a somber tone that matches the gravity of its subject matter. The pacing will keep you engaged, as it skillfully shifts between the unfolding events and the subsequent legal discussions.
Overall, "The Perfect Neighbor" is not just a recounting of a tragic event; it serves as a poignant commentary on the implications of gun laws and personal safety in contemporary society. It's a must-watch for anyone interested in understanding the intersection of law, morality, and human behavior.
Visually, the documentary is well-crafted, with a somber tone that matches the gravity of its subject matter. The pacing will keep you engaged, as it skillfully shifts between the unfolding events and the subsequent legal discussions.
Overall, "The Perfect Neighbor" is not just a recounting of a tragic event; it serves as a poignant commentary on the implications of gun laws and personal safety in contemporary society. It's a must-watch for anyone interested in understanding the intersection of law, morality, and human behavior.
THINGS GOT HORRIBLY OUT OF HAND
I can completely understand how an older woman on her own could feel harassed under these circumstances.
Then you add in Florida's relaxed gun laws and "Stand Your Ground" and if a dispute between neighbours gets to escalate, then you have a potentially devastating outcome.
Here in the UK, people fence in their properties so boundaries are clear; in most areas kids do not get to run wild in the street; - if there's a backyard they can do whatever they like, but out in front in public areas there are limits, other people should be respected.
The police didn't take their initial visits nearly serious enough and appeared to side with the families over the road. Professional policing has to be impartial, and any body language not capable of misinterpretation as kids in particular are very quick to spot and interpret positive or negative behaviour.
People very quick here to blame the solitary woman as a monster; always 2 sides to any dispute.
Then you add in Florida's relaxed gun laws and "Stand Your Ground" and if a dispute between neighbours gets to escalate, then you have a potentially devastating outcome.
Here in the UK, people fence in their properties so boundaries are clear; in most areas kids do not get to run wild in the street; - if there's a backyard they can do whatever they like, but out in front in public areas there are limits, other people should be respected.
The police didn't take their initial visits nearly serious enough and appeared to side with the families over the road. Professional policing has to be impartial, and any body language not capable of misinterpretation as kids in particular are very quick to spot and interpret positive or negative behaviour.
People very quick here to blame the solitary woman as a monster; always 2 sides to any dispute.
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Détails
- Durée
- 1h 36min(96 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.78 : 1
- 2.35 : 1
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