
Austin Drummond: Four Dead, One Baby Left Behind — And He’s Still Playing Games
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14:33
Four people murdered in cold blood. A baby left sitting in a car seat in a stranger’s yard, alone. And somehow, the man accused of doing it — Austin Drummond — is still trying to control the narrative from behind bars.
This is what happens when evil gets too comfortable with itself.
Drummond isn’t some unhinged mystery; he’s a career predator who’s been testing limits since the day the system let him out early. Robbery. Attempted murder. Released in 2024. On bond when he wiped out nearly an entire family in Lake County, Tennessee. He killed the people closest to him — his girlfriend’s family — and then abandoned their baby forty miles away like an afterthought.
Now he’s behind bars, and still performing. Guards say he’s been caught with narcotics, covering his cell door in paper and feces, causing chaos every way he can. He’s not losing his mind — he’s working the room. This is how narcissistic psychopaths survive: they create chaos, force the world to orbit around them, and call it control.
You can take away the gun. You can lock the cell. But you can’t cage the ego.
Drummond has turned his cell into a stage. Every disgusting act, every tantrum, every outburst is another move in his game. Because if you’re talking about him, he’s still winning. The same control he exercised with a trigger, he now wields through manipulation. You can see it in every report, every court motion, every moment he refuses to act human.
He’s not insane. He’s addicted — not to drugs, but to dominance. This is the man who’s learned that if he can’t rule the outside world, he’ll rule the one inside his cell. He’ll make guards disgusted, psychologists confused, and the public fascinated. Because to him, that’s oxygen. That’s relevance.
And the system? It keeps giving him what he wants. The headlines. The coverage. The spotlight. The endless “what went wrong?” debates. What went wrong is simple: we keep mistaking performance for psychosis. We call it mental illness when it’s just manipulation with better lighting.
Austin Drummond isn’t broken. He’s hollow. He’s the kind of human shell that feeds off outrage and fear. He’s the same man who once looked at a baby and saw disposable evidence. That’s not insanity — that’s the pure absence of empathy.
This isn’t a story about one killer. It’s about how a system so obsessed with “second chances” keeps handing them to people who only use them to destroy. He was already on bond for attempted murder. He should’ve been locked away. Instead, four lives were wiped out, and a child will grow up knowing the only reason they’re still alive is because the killer got bored of holding them.
And now, that killer sits in a state prison cell, convinced he’s still in control.
This is what narcissistic collapse looks like — a man whose only identity is the chaos he can still create. Every time we give him airtime, every time a headline drops, he gets what he wants. But what he’ll never get again is freedom. And that’s the one thing his ego can’t perform its way out of.
Four people are gone. A baby grows up without a family. And the monster who did it still thinks he’s writing the script.
He’s not. He’s the ending.
#AustinDrummond #HiddenKillers #TrueCrime #TonyBrueski #Murder #Psychopath #CriminalMind #JusticeSystem #Control #PrisonPsychology #Narcissism #Manipulation #Ego #DeathPenalty #LakeCounty #TrueCrimePodcast
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This is what happens when evil gets too comfortable with itself.
Drummond isn’t some unhinged mystery; he’s a career predator who’s been testing limits since the day the system let him out early. Robbery. Attempted murder. Released in 2024. On bond when he wiped out nearly an entire family in Lake County, Tennessee. He killed the people closest to him — his girlfriend’s family — and then abandoned their baby forty miles away like an afterthought.
Now he’s behind bars, and still performing. Guards say he’s been caught with narcotics, covering his cell door in paper and feces, causing chaos every way he can. He’s not losing his mind — he’s working the room. This is how narcissistic psychopaths survive: they create chaos, force the world to orbit around them, and call it control.
You can take away the gun. You can lock the cell. But you can’t cage the ego.
Drummond has turned his cell into a stage. Every disgusting act, every tantrum, every outburst is another move in his game. Because if you’re talking about him, he’s still winning. The same control he exercised with a trigger, he now wields through manipulation. You can see it in every report, every court motion, every moment he refuses to act human.
He’s not insane. He’s addicted — not to drugs, but to dominance. This is the man who’s learned that if he can’t rule the outside world, he’ll rule the one inside his cell. He’ll make guards disgusted, psychologists confused, and the public fascinated. Because to him, that’s oxygen. That’s relevance.
And the system? It keeps giving him what he wants. The headlines. The coverage. The spotlight. The endless “what went wrong?” debates. What went wrong is simple: we keep mistaking performance for psychosis. We call it mental illness when it’s just manipulation with better lighting.
Austin Drummond isn’t broken. He’s hollow. He’s the kind of human shell that feeds off outrage and fear. He’s the same man who once looked at a baby and saw disposable evidence. That’s not insanity — that’s the pure absence of empathy.
This isn’t a story about one killer. It’s about how a system so obsessed with “second chances” keeps handing them to people who only use them to destroy. He was already on bond for attempted murder. He should’ve been locked away. Instead, four lives were wiped out, and a child will grow up knowing the only reason they’re still alive is because the killer got bored of holding them.
And now, that killer sits in a state prison cell, convinced he’s still in control.
This is what narcissistic collapse looks like — a man whose only identity is the chaos he can still create. Every time we give him airtime, every time a headline drops, he gets what he wants. But what he’ll never get again is freedom. And that’s the one thing his ego can’t perform its way out of.
Four people are gone. A baby grows up without a family. And the monster who did it still thinks he’s writing the script.
He’s not. He’s the ending.
#AustinDrummond #HiddenKillers #TrueCrime #TonyBrueski #Murder #Psychopath #CriminalMind #JusticeSystem #Control #PrisonPsychology #Narcissism #Manipulation #Ego #DeathPenalty #LakeCounty #TrueCrimePodcast
Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video?
Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/@hiddenkillerspod
Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/
Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod
X Twitter https://x.com/tonybpod
Listen Ad-Free On Apple Podcasts Here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/true-crime-today-premium-plus-ad-free-advance-episode/id1705422872
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