Christian Collins and his girlfriend. The true story of single mother Kristen Collins (Changeling)

Versatile entertainer and social media celebrity well known as WeeklyChris who has worked as an actor, musician, and businessman. He amassed over 3 million followers on his Vine account. His YouTube channel has over 2 million subscribers and he is also popular on Instagram, Twitter and Snapchat as well.

Before Fame

He enjoys hanging out with family and friends as well as sports. He set a goal for himself to spread a positive message with his reach. He launched his Vine channel in December 2013 and hit 1 million followers in less than 2 months.

Trivia

He is a singer, rapper, beatboxer, and drummer. In May 2015, he got his lip pierced and he showed a video of it on SnapChat.

Family Life

He grew up in Calgary the second oldest of 4 kids in his family. His siblings are , and . His parents are and John. In 2017, he began dating Courtney Saint.

Associated With

He frequently makes videos featuring famous singers" songs such as the song "Show Me." He also collaborated with all of his siblings.

The story, which took place in the 20s of the 20th century, shocked the whole of Los Angeles, but now it may be forgotten against the backdrop of other more violent stories.

Kristen Collins is a telephone operator, working from morning until early evening. She has a son, Walter. One day she goes to work and leaves her son alone at home. When she returns, she does not find Walter at home. She decides to call the police. The police arrive only in the morning. My son is still missing. The police soon find the boy and return him to his mother. But the mother does not admit that this is her son. She claimed that everything about him was bad, and besides, her son was not imaginative, but this one was. Despite all the external similarities, the boy behaves completely differently than her son. Instead of help in finding her real son, the unfortunate mother receives a registration in a psychiatric clinic. Soon she leaves, having made a friend there, who, like her, was imprisoned for the same reason. Kristen will eventually get all incarcerated mothers like her released.
Kristen continues her search. As a result, it turns out that her son became a victim of the Wineville killer maniac, who caught lonely little children and took them to his farm. There he kept them in a chicken coop, then brutally killed them. It followed from this that Kristen was not alone in her grief.
Wineville murders.
In 1926, Gordon Stewart Northcott took his 13-year-old nephew Sanford Wesley Clark (with the permission of his parents) from his home in Saskatoon in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan and moved him to his ranch in the suburbs of Vineville, California, where subjected to physical and sexual violence. In September 1928, Sanford's sister, 19-year-old Jessie Clark, visited her brother at Northcott's ranch and then reported the situation to authorities. In September 1928, Los Angeles police arrived at Northcott's ranch. Police arrested Sanford because Jessie said her brother had been smuggled across the Canadian border. Suddenly, Sanford began to give terrible testimony, declaring that Gordon Northcott had kidnapped and killed three little boys with the complicity of his mother (Sanford's grandmother), Sarah Louise Northcott, and also forced Sanford to participate in this by force and threats.

Sanford said lime was used to destroy the bodies and the remains were buried on ranch property. The police found the burials exactly where Sanford indicated, but there were no bodies in them, since Northcott, having learned that the police were looking for him, dug up the remains in advance and took them to the desert, where they finally decomposed. However, blood, particles of hair and bones were found in the burials. During a search of the ranch, axes with blood stains were also found.

The three boys killed were informally identified as brothers Lewis and Nelson Winslow and, presumably, Walter Collins. According to Sanford, in addition to these three episodes, Northcott committed the murder of one Mexican boy (who was never identified and was therefore listed in the case file as the "Headless Mexican"), but without the involvement of Sanford or Sarah Northcott. Gordon only forced Sanford to behead the already dead body and burn the head in an oven, and then crush the skull. Later, during the investigation, Gordon admitted that, unable to find another suitable place, he left the headless body near the road near La Puento. Having learned that the police were looking for them, Gordon Northcott fled with his mother to Canada, where he was arrested near Vernon (British Columbia).

On the left is Sarah Louise Northcott, on the right is Gordon Stewart Northcott.

Sarah Northcott ultimately accepted responsibility for the murder of Walter Collins and was sentenced to life imprisonment on December 31, 1928. She served her sentence at Tehachapi State Prison, where she was paroled after less than 12 years. During the sentencing, Sarah maintained that her son was innocent and made a number of strange statements regarding his parentage. In particular, she said that Gordon was actually the son of an English nobleman, or that she was actually Gordon's grandmother, and that he himself was the result of incest between her husband George Cyrus Northcott and their daughter Winifred. She also stated that Gordon was sexually abused by everyone in his family as a child. Based on her testimony, it followed that Sarah actually led Gordon in this case. According to her, when they arrived in Canada, Gordon was in such despair over what he had done that he was ready to confess everything to the carriage conductor. Sarah Louise Northcott died in 1944.
Although it was generally accepted that Gordon Northcott participated in the murder of Walter Collins, since his mother had already confessed and been sentenced for Walter's murder, the state was reluctant to bring any charges against Gordon for Collins' death. It was speculated that Gordon's number of victims may have been as many as 20, but the State of California was unable to provide the court with definitive evidence to support this theory, and ultimately the indictment against Gordon contained only the murders of an unidentified Mexican boy and the Winslow brothers.

The trial, presided over by Judge George R. Freeman, lasted 27 days, ending on February 8, 1929. Northcott was finally found guilty of the murder of an unidentified child and the murder of the Winslow brothers. On February 13, 1929, Gordon Northcott was sentenced to death by hanging. The execution took place on October 2, 1930 at San Quentin Prison)

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