
Dr. Mozelle Martin
Bio
✍️ 38-Year Forensic Analyst | ⚖️ Constitutional Law Studies | 🧠 Writer | 🔍 Cold Case Consultant | 🕶️ PET VR Creator | 🔭 Licensed Investigator | ✈️ USAF
Stories (108)
Filter by community
Digital Hunting Grounds of Roblox and Discord:
Watching interviews on the Shawn Ryan Show reminded me to write this article as a follow-up to a previous one. You see, there is a moment in every digital-exploitation case where the denial dies. It usually happens when a predator stops pretending to be a decent human and speaks plainly. A Discord user once admitted, without hesitation, that he “has little children because it’s all fun,” then listed the things he tells them to do.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin2 months ago in Criminal
Animals Are Warning Us
Wildlife is not getting meaner. Animals are not “turning on us.” What is changing is something larger and far less comfortable for people to admit: the energetic field we share with them. For months now I’ve been hearing real accounts from the field and reading incident logs that all point in the same direction.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin2 months ago in Earth
The Man With the Walker:
I was walking into a retirement home for routine business when I saw a man who stopped every part of my attention. His back folded into a shape the spine never willingly chooses. Every step depended on the stability of a metal walker that had already lived long years of compensating for uneven ground and vulnerable joints. Two worn grocery bags hung from each of his hands on both sides of the frame. They pulled downward in a way that made the entire structure feel compromised before he even moved. He wasn’t taking them inside the building for himself. He was working.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin2 months ago in Humans
The Confession Clock
The public imagines interrogations as shouting matches, lightbulbs, and theatrics. Anyone who has ever actually sat inside one knows how uneventful most hours can be. The real changes happen quietly, almost invisibly, and nearly always when the clock should be winding down. I’ve watched people lie with the stamina of an Olympian for 6 hours straight, only to fall apart in the last 7 minutes. That’s the 11th hour. And it’s the closest thing to a universal law you will ever find in a custodial room.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin2 months ago in Criminal
The Myth of the Death Barge
There is a story that has circulated in criminal justice classrooms for decades. The version I heard in 1998 sounded like this: Old English authorities chained criminals to the bottom of a ship, set the vessel adrift for weeks, and returned later to dump the bodies after the prisoners starved to death. It is the kind of story that sticks. Brutal. Efficient. Strange enough to feel like a secret that survived through oral retellings.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin2 months ago in Criminal
The Proof of Loyalty:
MRI scans have a way of humbling assumptions. For years, people argued whether dogs love us or simply tolerate us for food, shelter, and convenience. But when neuroscientists began placing trained dogs inside MRI machines, they didn’t find appetite—they found affection.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin2 months ago in Petlife
The Great Cheese Takeover:
This article is biased—and I’m fine with that. I do not like cheese. Not in casseroles, not on sandwiches, and not melted over anything pretending to be healthy. I even order my pizza without it, which most people consider a culinary crime. I also don’t love cooking, even though I’m good at it. For me, it’s not joy—it’s pressure. The kitchen feels like a performance space where precision meets anxiety. My mother, a chef-level cook, thrived there; I definitely don’t. About twice a year, though, I feel a strange urge to create something. That’s why I follow a handful of cooks on Facebook. Sadly, unless they’re baking sweets—which don’t tempt me at all—the excitement dies the moment cheese appears. It smothers the color, the texture, the intention.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin2 months ago in Feast











