Much of this documentary is given over to a face to face interview with McFadden himself. He may look like an imam and sound plausible, but his short romance with Islam appears to have been a purely pragmatic one. At the age of sixteen, he and three other juveniles broke into the house of an elderly woman, who ended up dead. He says the murder was an accident, which would reduce it to manslaughter. The talking head who interviews him says he is minimising his role.
Tried as an adult, he was paroled having lost his entire youth, and went to stay with an Islamic organisation that had helped him. He repaid society for this second chance by murdering two, possibly three people over the next three months. Jeremy Brown - a woman - was the only survivor. He makes no mention of her brutal rape, and claims in effect that his male victim Robert Silk brought it on himself because he came on to him. There is no evidence that Silk was a homosexual, but he was a Jew, and that was all the justification McFadden needed. His first victim was also a Jew, and he said after his conviction that he hated white people.
By 2009 when this documentary was screened, he admitted openly that he was a danger to society and there appeared to be some genuine regret in his voice. Many killers deserve a second chance, especially when they kill so young. Looks like the system got it wrong this time