@shrimp_is_the_best: #looneytunes #лунитюнз #fyp #foryou #viral

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Пробежка помидоров
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Sunday 12 July 2026 17:51:02 GMT
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pinkmoon331
Pipi :
можно еще Лолы?
2026-07-12 18:20:25
592
some_one_hahah
dana𐙚 :
Какой же кайф, она такая вайбовая
2026-07-12 20:16:43
246
nullsik62
Чечня :
Кошмар интроверта
2026-07-12 20:54:51
139
bloody_ladyyyy
𝔅𝔩𝔬𝔬𝔡𝔶 𝔏𝔞𝔡𝔶🩸 :
это же я
2026-07-12 21:23:34
5
linaknopka
лина кнопа🐾 :
так вот почему мой парень говорил что я Лола 2.0, а я не знала про какую Лолу он говорил...
2026-07-12 23:03:53
4
lishahweuh6
lazy :
как называется? давно хотела пересмотреть 😭😭
2026-07-12 21:04:23
18
kitagawa_azusa
Kitagawa_Azusa :
эх мне бы свою Лолу
2026-07-12 21:21:15
3
user384685348
#!@?_149 :
Пайпер
2026-07-12 22:15:57
7
leraaffqiot
Лера :
@Kinji_Hakari🎰
2026-07-12 21:49:44
1
furry_lime4
Liʍᴇ🍋‍🟩 :
@Лола Ромашкина!🦭🖇☁
2026-07-12 20:34:19
0
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Dylan Redwine was a 13-year-old boy who disappeared in November 2012 while visiting his father, Mark Redwine, in a remote mountain area near Vallecito, Colorado. He had traveled there for Thanksgiving, but the morning after he arrived, he was gone. His father claimed Dylan had left the house early, yet he left behind his phone, jacket, and other belongings—unusual for a child in such cold and isolated terrain. No one ever confirmed seeing him leave. Very quickly, the case raised concerns. Search dogs indicated that Dylan likely never left the property. At the same time, investigators learned that the relationship between father and son had been strained. One of the most disturbing details was that Dylan had reportedly discovered humiliating and deeply inappropriate photos of his father on Mark Redwine’s computer shortly before the visit. These images showed him in degrading situations involving women’s clothing and bodily functions. Prosecutors later argued that Dylan confronted his father about the photos, which may have triggered a violent reaction. Before the case turned into a murder investigation, Mark Redwine appeared publicly—most notably on the TV show Dr. Phil—where he attempted to defend himself and maintained that Dylan had run away. However, his inconsistent statements and behavior only increased suspicion rather than easing it. In 2013, hikers discovered partial human remains in the mountains not far from the house, and in 2015 additional remains were recovered. They were later identified as Dylan. The condition of the remains was deeply unsettling: experts found evidence of trauma to the skull, indicating he had been violently killed before his body was left in the wilderness, where exposure, time, and animals scattered what remained. There was no single piece of evidence that solved the case, but together the details formed a grim and consistent picture—conflicting accounts, forensic findings, and the absence of any credible alternative explanation. Prosecutors argued that a confrontation inside the home escalated, leading Mark Redwine to kill his son and dispose of the body in the remote mountains. In 2021, nearly nine years later, a jury convicted Mark Redwine of second-degree murder and child abuse resulting in death. He was sentenced to decades in prison. The case remains especially unsettling because of how quiet and personal it was: a boy visits his father for a holiday, discovers something deeply disturbing, and within hours, disappears—his fate hidden in the wilderness for years. #truecrime
Dylan Redwine was a 13-year-old boy who disappeared in November 2012 while visiting his father, Mark Redwine, in a remote mountain area near Vallecito, Colorado. He had traveled there for Thanksgiving, but the morning after he arrived, he was gone. His father claimed Dylan had left the house early, yet he left behind his phone, jacket, and other belongings—unusual for a child in such cold and isolated terrain. No one ever confirmed seeing him leave. Very quickly, the case raised concerns. Search dogs indicated that Dylan likely never left the property. At the same time, investigators learned that the relationship between father and son had been strained. One of the most disturbing details was that Dylan had reportedly discovered humiliating and deeply inappropriate photos of his father on Mark Redwine’s computer shortly before the visit. These images showed him in degrading situations involving women’s clothing and bodily functions. Prosecutors later argued that Dylan confronted his father about the photos, which may have triggered a violent reaction. Before the case turned into a murder investigation, Mark Redwine appeared publicly—most notably on the TV show Dr. Phil—where he attempted to defend himself and maintained that Dylan had run away. However, his inconsistent statements and behavior only increased suspicion rather than easing it. In 2013, hikers discovered partial human remains in the mountains not far from the house, and in 2015 additional remains were recovered. They were later identified as Dylan. The condition of the remains was deeply unsettling: experts found evidence of trauma to the skull, indicating he had been violently killed before his body was left in the wilderness, where exposure, time, and animals scattered what remained. There was no single piece of evidence that solved the case, but together the details formed a grim and consistent picture—conflicting accounts, forensic findings, and the absence of any credible alternative explanation. Prosecutors argued that a confrontation inside the home escalated, leading Mark Redwine to kill his son and dispose of the body in the remote mountains. In 2021, nearly nine years later, a jury convicted Mark Redwine of second-degree murder and child abuse resulting in death. He was sentenced to decades in prison. The case remains especially unsettling because of how quiet and personal it was: a boy visits his father for a holiday, discovers something deeply disturbing, and within hours, disappears—his fate hidden in the wilderness for years. #truecrime

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