one speculation was made that 2 women would make her feel more at ease to approach the vehicle. Well if that did happen she would have seen them. If they had hoods on I highly doubt she would go willing with these 2 people.
Another question I have I saw the show last night and I want to know what they meant about the area they lived in having skeevy undertones even more than most people would realize. That is not a quote but paraphrased. It looked to me like a very rural nice area not too far from Redding. What did they mean by that statement? Pot farms, and let's assume it was pot farms they were talking about, how does that make it a threat to her?
10 Cities Where Violent Crime Is Soaring
Feb. 12, 2014
http://time.com/6729/10-cities-where-violent-crime-is-soaring/
5. Redding, Calif.
> 5-year increase in violent crime rate: 53.8%
> Violent crime per 100,000 (2007): 470.2
> Violent crime per 100,000 (2012): 723.4
> Murders per 100,000: 3.9
There were 1,298 violent crimes in the Redding metro area in 2012, up from 851 violent crimes in 2007. On a standardized, per 100,000 resident basis, violent crime rose more than 53% in that time. Additionally, property crimes rose by more than 50%, the most of any metro area reviewed, despite a nationwide 12.7% decline in such crimes during that time. According to the Redding Record Searchlight, some area residents believe that the areas high crime rates may be related to marijuana cultivation. Officials in Shasta County which makes up the Redding metro area recently elected to ban outdoor growing, although the city of Redding is not included in the ban.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/meghanc...women-anchorage-fairbanks-flint/#5f21e8b438fe
The Most Dangerous U.S. Cities For Women
At No. 5 on the 2012 list of the most dangerous cities for women is Redding, California, where there were 797 incidences of violent crime and 65 rapes for every 100,000 citizens. For a metro area whose population is just over that number at 182,000, a total of 120 rapes occurred over 12 months. Redding, a Northern California city located in Shasta County, is also becoming proactive about rape prevention. At a recent Sexual Assault Awareness Month event, spokeswoman Jean King of the Shasta womens Refuge noted that the county suffers twice as many sexual assaults as the rest of the state of California. "We don't want to have that in our community, she said before continuing that by making the issue a local one she hopes to see a decline.