Probably, but there are a lot of cases on here that make no sense.
IMO..This grandmother didn't just wake up one day and decide to make this big plot up. I'm sure she is grieving very hard. Maybe grief clouds her "thoughts" on what could have really happened and if Morgan did/ or didn't commit suicide. I don't know.
I agree with you for the most part. Clearly, the mom did not suddenly make this up. There were calls to the police and discussions with neighbors, friends, etc., for months before Morgan died. They felt they were being stalked for months and reacted to that on a daily basis.
But really, virtually every case on websleuths makes sense to me and has a logical explanation. Yes, there may be a couple of things here and there in a case that don't totally fit, (like the double prints in the Jason Young case) but nothing so big as this. When something as big as whether or not a murder actually took place at all is what doesn't fit, it may be time to reevaluate what you're looking at.
Like I said before, I'm going to stay open, especially as we have not heard yet everything Morgan's mom has to say.
But for now, a murder scenario in which a frighteningly persistent and cunning stalker manages to break into the house of people who have been prepared for such a break in and guarding against it, and then murders his victim by forcing her to drink something, or he injects something in her, all the while as she calmly lays there and allows him to do it, no sign of any struggle or forced entry of any kind, and/or he somehow manages to track her and pre-drug her in the night before breaking into a heavily guarded house to finish the job in a perfectly timed masterpiece of murder that displays not one iota of a connection to the types of murders stalkers commit (i.e., no sexual assault, no violence, no signs of rage), defies any kind of reasonable logic, fits zero profiles for this kind of case and seems implausible.
(The death occurred at night, BTW. On the website about Morgan's death, they state she came home and went to bed early, that a doe went by her room at 3:45 a.m. to say goodbye and that her parents found her lifeless body that morning).
I love a good story just like the next person. But when it comes to crime and the actual deaths of actual people who existed, I count on verifiable facts and logic.
I see problems with this case. Big ones, on both sides of the fence. So,
I am on the fence and waiting to hear more. But so far, there are certain things I can't get past. The second opinion of Dr. Doberson certainly raises questions but does not help explain how the murderer would have pulled off such an incredibly Bondesque feat and why he would commit a murder in that fashion, a manner that does not indicate obsession or jealousy or the desire to instill fear and torment, at all. :moo: