PickleChris
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- May 4, 2011
- Messages
- 547
- Reaction score
- 398
His name has been said before but just google TV services on Long Island and look at owners names.
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*Whispering to anybody within ear shot*
Who is "D"?
A fellow arm chair detective shared this with me to share here. What do you think?
https://www.findthemissing.org/en/cases/6427/2/
these are two woman that police speculate are connectted to the woman in the above link
http://www.charleyproject.org/cases/m/morrissey_kelly.html
This girl went missing in 1984. No way would her remains be "nearly skeletal" in 2013. Unless, of course, she was alive for many years after she went missing.
Where does it say "nearly skeletal"? I see "nearly complete skeleton" - a 200-year-old skeleton with a foot missing would fit that description.
Sometimes you just gotta laugh a little just to keep from crying.
No kidding. I've now been reduced to making jokes about Edgar Allen Poe and murderous orangutans. :blushing:
I guess a healthy mind just instinctively knows when to hit the emergency humor button.
Sometimes you just gotta laugh a little just to keep from crying.
Good to know that it's a sign of a healthy mind! I thought I was losing mine!
View attachment 29297
Newsday
"The chain necklace, which also has a gold pig pendant, is the best lead police have so far, said Det. Lt. John Azzata, commanding officer of the homicide squad. The remains show signs of trauma, leading investigators to believe they are dealing with a homicide victim, he said. He would not say what the signs of trauma were, pending investigation.
The chain is stamped as being 24-karat gold but analysts were able to determine it is actually 22-karat gold, Azzata said.
Investigators are pursuing the lead that 24-karat gold is popular in Asian and Indian community jewelry stores. Azzata said Chinese astrology has also been taken into account and that perhaps the pig could point to clues. In Chinese culture, among the year of the pig were 1995, 1983 and 1971, he said.
Azzata stopped short of confirming the remains are of a woman, pending a forensic anthropologist examination. He did say that women's clothing, a pair of pants and undergarments were found with the remains."
The only male at Gilgo was Asian and between the ages of 17 and 23. Police said he was found wearing women's clothing and believed he died a violent death at least five years ago.
I've been lurking, and later posting, on websleuths for a long time now, and I've seen some posters become so emotionally invested in a case that they develop insomnia, cry frequently, give in to feelings of hopelessness, emotionally withdraw from friends and family, etc. etc. I myself experienced some of these things due to one particular case. Most WSers learn coping mechanisms early on, and I'm guessing they, like me, learned them the hard way. You HAVE to find ways to stay balanced in mind and body. Sometimes that means, stepping away from the forum for awhile, sometimes it means forcing some emotional distance, sometimes it means giving yourself permission to laugh. To newcomers and outsiders, this might seem callous, I suppose...but we're in the trenches every day. You don't walk away from that sane and healthy without employing some kind of armour.
And that's all I have to say about that.
broken bones?
so, if the remains were skeletal, yet they were able to see "trauma" which made them classify this as a homicide (in addition to the remains being bagged) ...what sort of trauma would be evident do you think?
gunshot hole in the bones?
ligature around the skeletal neck?
broken bones?