Foxfire, in a earlier post you referred to subliminal message in a video at Gretawire...it took me a few minutes to see it, playing it over and over, but I finally saw it...a quick flash of the words on the bottom about the FBI descending on the State...and that story was about the most recent possible link...I think the fact the FBI was involved so quickly after the murder in Windsor speaks volumes to what is going on here...but they are not going to tell us ... I was reading about the Beltway Sniper and never realized before that the pair actually started shooting people in February of that year and then in other places around the country before they got to DC in October...I can't help but think there is something much bigger going on here...and since I'm here and fear for my safety and that of my family...well, I do wish they would give us more info...it concerns me that the former FBI guy is saying that LE should give us more but they haven't ...I wonder why that is?
<BBM for Focus>
SearchinGirl, once aware of the extremely high number of vehicle windows being shattered on roadways in such a small geographical area. It is very possible that the local CO LEAs contacted the FBI to check the VICAP database for similar occurrences, either in CO or elsewhere in the USA. In many cases the FBI CIRG agents at Quantico, VA may observe a pattern of crimes in the database confined to an area and contact unsuspecting local LEAs.
In the 2009 DC sniper case, the VICAP database website had only been accessible to local and state LEAs for less than a year.
Imo, the dots were collected<shattered vehicle windows> by different local LE jurisdictions, but the dots may have not been connected due to
jurisdiction linkage blindness; a phrase coined by Dr Steven Egger in the 1970s..
There are only two investigative resources/tools that prevent or combat linkage blindness; an informed aware citizenry & VICAP, imo.. The silent investigative strategy combined with linkage blindness has enabled many predators/serial killers to remain stealth for years or decades undetected while preying on unsuspecting innocent victims in the past, imo..
Hope this link helps, SearchinGirl..and stay safe..
FBI VICAP <Violent Criminal Apprehension Program>
http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2010/august/vicap-anniversary
Fighting Violent Crime for 25 Years - 08/26/10
When serial killers or rapists strike in different communities or even across multiple states, it may be hard to identify and capture them—because information about their crimes is stored separately in the files of various local police agencies.
But for the past 25 years, the FBI’s Violent Criminal Apprehension Program, or ViCAP, has been used by state and local law enforcement across the nation precisely to help find and stop such dangerous villains by drawing links between their seemingly unconnected crimes.
VICAP serves as the national repository for violent crimes, specifically those involving homicides, sexual assaults, missing persons, and unidentified human remains. The VICAP Web National Crime Database is not available to the general public or the media—it’s strictly for law enforcement. Its information—obtainable through a secure website since 2008—is protected by strong encryption, controlled access, and strict adherence to federal privacy laws.
VICAP is part of the FBI’s National Center for the Analysis of Violent Crime, and both operate under the auspices of our Critical Incident Response Group.
How it works. Investigators from participating agencies electronically enter in-depth data on their case directly into ViCAP Web. This can include details on the victim(s), type of trauma, weapons used, information about the suspect and any composite images, crime scene specifics, vehicle descriptions, modus operandi, and more.
Investigators can then search ViCAP Web for cases similar to theirs…anywhere in the United States. If any are found, investigators can read the details and—if they’re convinced there might actually be a link—reach out to the law enforcement agency point of contact for further discussion.
Meanwhile… At the ViCAP office in Virginia, FBI analysts review all incoming cases. First, they examine each submission to ensure the quality of the data. But then—based on public safety concerns and requests from investigators—they delve deeper into certain cases, looking for similarities, searching other FBI and non-FBI databases, and preparing reports that offer fresh investigative leads.