Giggling Ganon@GigglingGanon
Damn! I was waiting for her to start breaking out receipts showing what he had for dinner next and what color his crap was the next day. Turn the oven off, this dude is cooked.
If you ever needed proof that the "perfect crime" is a myth in the digital age, this is it. This interrogation footage captures the exact moment the walls closed in on Shedrick Ray.
The body of Tshey Bennett, a 24-year-old mother, was discovered in a Texas creek. Investigators quickly focused on Ray, but it wasn't just old-school detective work that caught him—it was his own digital footprint.
Detectives didn't just have a hunch; they had a roadmap of his every move:
The Turo Paper Trail: Ray rented a vehicle to meet Bennett. Despite his attempts to delete his account, investigators recovered GPS logs that placed the car at the hotel and the exact location where Bennett’s body was found.
The Power Cord: A specific cord missing from the hotel room was linked back to evidence found at the scene.
This is the most chilling part. Ray’s Google searches were a play-by-play of his intent and panic:
"Can a m*rderer be convicted without a body?"
"How many prostitute m*rders go unsolved?"
"What happens to a body after two days in water?"
"How to delete Turo account."
When confronted, Ray claimed he was just "documenting reality" and searching for PlayStation cords.
The jury didn't buy it. Shedrick Ray was found guilty of Capital Murder and sentenced to Life Without Parole.
Justice for Tshey Bennett was served through the very technology Ray thought he could outsmart.
Amazing detective work by this detective. This what gathering the facts look like.