IN - Abigail Williams & Liberty German, Delphi, Media, Maps, Timelines NO DISCUSSION

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[video=twitter;859138461676298240]https://twitter.com/wane15/status/859138461676298240[/video]

NewsChannel15‏
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@wane15 May 1

3 months after the murders of 2 young girls, how is the Delphi community coping with the unsolved crime? @wanehollycamp will take you there.
 
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https://www.facebook.com/590519011044153/photos/rpp.590519011044153/1249421495153898/?type=3&theater
 
DELPHI, Ind. — Rain last weekend thwarted Delphi's efforts to relieve the tainted image of horror associated with the Monon High Bridge trail and the Feb. 13 killings of Liberty German and Abby Williams, so at 1 p.m. Sunday, the community is invited to symbolically reclaim the trail by hiking the half-mile from the Freedom Bridge — the blue, steel-framed bridge over Indiana 25 — to the Monon High Bridge trail head.

http://www.jconline.com/story/news/local/2017/05/03/delphi-aims-take-back-historic-trails/101253858/
 
“You just never know how dangerous the world can be just by one person deciding to do something,” Indiana State Police Sgt. Kim Riley said.


“We want to find this person or persons that did this,” Riley said. “We want to find them and bring them to justice. That’s the bottom line. Whether it takes one more day, six months or two years we will work on this case until it’s solved.”


“I’m disappointed that we haven’t caught the person,” Riley said. “Am I giving up? No. I still feel we’re going to catch this person or persons that we’re looking at.”

In the nearly three months that have passed, the investigation has drastically scaled back as officers catch up with the thousands of tips pouring in. At one point more than 100 officers a day were working the case. Now, a little more than a dozen are on it day-in and day-out.


“I’ll never forget how this affected me. How I look at my kids, how I look at my grand kids who aren’t quite that old,” Riley said.

http://wane.com/2017/05/04/on-the-trail-a-community-coping-nearly-3-months-after-delphi-homicides/
 
With months of no answers and no arrests, Riley said the support from the community has never ceased.

“It’s just really hard to imagine just how much this community has sacrificed and they just continue to sacrifice even more to help us get this case solved,” Riley said.

As the clock ticks on, investigators aren’t giving up and they aren’t letting this case go cold.

“We’re going back and looking at everything that we’ve already done once, we’re going back and looking at it again and we’ll probably look at it again to make sure that we’ve covered every base that we have out there,” Riley said.

http://wane.com/2017/05/04/on-the-trail-a-community-coping-nearly-3-months-after-delphi-homicides/
 
Police down to fewer than 1,000 leads in killings of Delphi teens, memorial walk Sunday

“Some evidence testing has come back in, but not a lot of it,” Carroll County Sheriff Tobe Leazenby said in an interview May 5, adding ... that evidence that he previously said was sent to two locations – the Indiana State Police lab and the FBI lab in Quantico, Va.

[....]


http://www.newsbug.info/monticello_...abfaeb475d.html#tncms-source=article-nav-next
 
'I know that they're going to do this. I believe them when they say today's the day and they're not gonna stop,' Abby's mom Anna Williams, 33, told ABC News. 'Our faith in the detectives and the local department and our faith in God. Between those two, we're gonna get 'em.'

Libby's grandmother Becky Patty, 57, hasn't given up hope either.
'I have faith and I'm thankful to law enforcement, to the media, to all the private individuals helping. Between everybody, I'm confident we can catch him,' she said.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...d-Indiana-teens-speak-case.html#ixzz4gduavC6W
 
'There is so much you can't talk about' because of the criminal investigation, said Williams. 'The grieving process is so much different.'

What would have been Abby's eighth-grade dance is coming up this weekend.
'As much as I would love to go over there and be happy,' Williams said, 'I also don't want to bring down their day. It's their day. And to remind them of the girls not being there ... I don't want to bring anymore hurt than what they already had.'

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...d-Indiana-teens-speak-case.html#ixzz4gdv2x9CJ
 
During the memorial, Randy German, Libby German's great-uncle, led the crowd in several verses of "Amazing Grace," which was followed by the pouring of the water onto the ground. The crowd then set off on the hike to the trail head to the Monon High Bridge. The trail to the bridge, however, is closed for construction at the site.

Carroll County Sheriff Tobe Leazenby was among the hikers Sunday.

Asked for an update on the investigation, Leazenby said more analysis of some of the evidence has come in, and detectives are revisiting some of the 18,000 leads they received in the weeks after the killings. Additionally, the detectives now have fewer than 1,000 leads left to sift through, he said.

http://www.jconline.com/story/news/local/2017/05/07/hundreds-reclaim-delphis-trail-peace/101297052/
 
Williams is working to keep her daughter's spirit alive. She's now putting it in God's hands to make sure justice is served.

"Every day my goal is to get up, get dressed and go to work. And just keep moving," said Williams.

Moving forward and taking one day at a time, is how Anna Williams continues to deal with the loss of her 13-year-old daughter Abigail.

"She was my one and only," said Williams.

http://www.wlfi.com/story/35409653/mom-of-slain-delphi-teen-shares-her-story-with-new-18
 
“The pictures are a little harder to come across now and it is the ache that we fell that was not there, to begin with, and now with Mother’s Day around the corner, we are trying to figure out what do we do…because I don’t feel like celebrating much this year,” said Abby’s mother, Anna Williams.

Every day for the past three months, Anna Williams and Becky Patty wake up with hope in their heavy hearts.

“We are going through a year of firsts,” said Libby’s mom, Becky Patty.

“We are not prepared for it…but we know it is coming and we know this year is going to be a hard one,” said Williams.

http://fox59.com/2017/05/12/ahead-o...lphi-girls-family-pushes-forward-for-answers/
 
“They were taken way too early to do this, make their own mark in life. This is a good way to remember them,” said Mike Patty, Libby German’s grandfather.

Organizers of the event say more than a thousand people came throughout the day. There was food, raffles, crafts and music. Family members and organizers say softball fields will be a great way to remember Abby and Libby.

“It just seemed to make good sense. Libby really loved that. Abby would play softball as well, but Abby also loved the parks part of it, music, the arts, so we are going to do something along those lines as well. Good things are going to happen inside there,” said Patty.

http://wishtv.com/2017/05/13/celebration-of-life-event-held-for-murdered-delphi-teens/
 
The lives of six girls were honored in Carroll County Tuesday night by a local Girl Scouts troop who dedicated a several benches in their memory.

The benches placed outside of Carroll Elementary School, were in memory of four girls killed in a Flora house fire, which police believe was intentionally set, in November 2016 – Kionne Welch, Kerrielle McDonald, Keyara Phillips and Keyana Davis.

The benches also honored the two teens murdered in Delphi in February – Abigail Williams and Liberty German.

As both crimes remain unsolved, Girls Scout Troop No. 198 and community members collected more than 2,200 pounds of small bottle caps and other recyclable materials to help make the project possible.

http://www.theindychannel.com/news/...carroll-county-honor-delphi-teens-flora-girls
 
"A lot of people will miss them and this will be a great way to remember them,” said Barnard of the six benches they ended up getting made. “When I saw the plaques, I wanted to start crying.”

Tears did fall from Barnard’s eyes as the troop leaders explained the project to the crowd and how much community support went into making it happen. She wasn’t alone in being overcome with emotion.

“It was hard for me, coming into the school, but as I walked into the courtyard, I felt a little different,” said Gaylin Rose, the mother whose children died in the fire. Rose hadn’t been back to the school since her daughters’ deaths.

http://fox59.com/2017/05/17/424975/
 
More than 600 people came out, all of them to “A Concert for Libby and Abby,” a fundraiser to help the families of Libby German and Abby Williams, the teens girls murdered while walking on a trail in Delphi this past February.

“We couldn’t ask for a more supportive community. Everybody is doing everything and we’re just so grateful,” said Anna Williams, Abby’s mother.

http://www.wthr.com/article/sold-out-crowd-turns-out-for-fundraiser-for-delphi-families
 
“I mean we really just do what we can to make sure that they’re always going to be around,” said Melissa Freimiller, benefit concert organizer. “I mean they’re never going to be forgotten, period. I mean family is family. No matter whose family it is.”

The benefit concert is just one of several events happening this year to raise money. Family said it’s going take hundreds of thousands of dollars to build the softball field and park in Delphi.

http://wishtv.com/2017/05/19/hundreds-attend-benefit-concert-for-delphi-teens-found-murdered/
 
[video=twitter;864606942387478528]https://twitter.com/deannaTVnews/status/864606942387478528[/video]

Deanna Allbrittin‏
Verified account
@deannaTVnews May 16

Girls started out making 1 bench, but were so successful w/ donations, they made 4, 1 for each girl. After Delphi murders, they made 2 more.
 
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