chicoliving
Former Member
So is the office a separate room from the bedroom?? For some reason I've been stuck on the bedroom served as an office also....
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It's the 3rd bedroom in the house. As far as I know, it's set up as an office with no bedroom furniture.chicoliving said:So is the office a separate room from the bedroom?? For some reason I've been stuck on the bedroom served as an office also....
Good point.mysteriew said:If Raven is innocent, I would guess that he made some assumptions at the scene that he used in reporting to 911 and LE.
JerseyGirl said:Okay, in case it doesn't take you to the specific page, it's on page 10.
Swabbings & controls, (which means that they were swabbing a specific something, correct?), from:
- the kitchen counter
- the master bathroom floor
- opposite wall of victim in office
- desk door
- back of desk
- wall adjacent to the victim
- carpet from below the victim
I'm curious - why would they swab the desk door, (most likely the front of the desk), as well as the back of the desk? I don't know how the desk was situated in the room but that struck me as odd.
So then it is true that a swab with a control would be done on a specific stain that they would like to look into further, not just on a general area.mysteriew said:I don't know about in LE investigative terminology, but a control is usually a "clean" sample. For instance if they were to test a stain- a swab would be taken of the stain, and a control would be a swab of an area that was free of the stain. Thus in analyzing the control would help to establish what was diffent in the stained swab.
JerseyGirl said:So then it is true that a swab with a control would be done on a specific stain that they would like to look into further, not just on a general area.
My fiance' is in LE and that is indeed the way it works. Paramedics, Fire Department, etc are not allowed to go in until a scene has been cleared of any risk to them. I know that on occasion, it still happens but the rule is that they must wait for LE to access the situation and make sure that Paramedics and Fire officials are not at risk. That's the way it is here anyway...terminatrixator said:I believe Paramedics have to wait for police to arrive before going in on calls like this one. Does anyone know how this works. I thought this is something I have heard in the past, that the police must go in first BEFORE the paramedics because of the nature of the crime. Usually when someone in our family called the paramedics, though the paramedics arrived first, they basically wait until the squad arrives and the police enter the residence first.
Anyone know the rules of this?
texasgirl said:My fiance' is in LE and that is indeed the way it works. Paramedics, Fire Department, etc are not allowed to go in until a scene has been cleared of any risk to them. I know that on occasion, it still happens but the rule is that they must wait for LE to access the situation and make sure that Paramedics and Fire officials are not at risk. That's the way it is here anyway...
Makes perfect sense. And the articles and the information contained in the search warrant all seem to support the idea that the officer was indeed the first one to enter the residence that night.texasgirl said:My fiance' is in LE and that is indeed the way it works. Paramedics, Fire Department, etc are not allowed to go in until a scene has been cleared of any risk to them. I know that on occasion, it still happens but the rule is that they must wait for LE to access the situation and make sure that Paramedics and Fire officials are not at risk. That's the way it is here anyway...
Am I understanding you correctly - that a gunshot can look like a slit (stabbing)? We're wondering about it the other way around - can a stabbing look like a gunshot? ETA: In a link I posted earlier, there's a video with a diagram of the wounds, and next to the two wounds that were visible in the diagram, it says 1". I can't be sure but I was assuming that that was the width of the wounds. I don't know if that gives you a better idea of how likely or unlikely it would be that the wounds would appear to be gunshot wounds rather than stab wounds.mysteriew said:Yes a knife makes a slit wound and a gunshot makes a hole, so you think that they would look different. However, the truth is that after a gunshot- the tissue collapses into the void- sometimes leaving the appearance of a slit to an untrained, emotional observer.
JerseyGirl said:Am I understanding you correctly - that a gunshot can look like a slit (stabbing)? We're wondering about is the other way around - can a stabbing look like a gunshot? ETA: In a link I posted earlier, there's a video with a diagram of the wounds, and next to the two wounds that were visible in the diagram, it says 1". I can't be sure but I was assuming that that was the width of the wounds. I don't know if that gives you a better idea of how likely or unlikely it would be that the wounds would appear to be gunshot wounds rather than stab wounds.
JerseyGirl said:Okay, so a gunshot CAN appear to be a stabbing but not necessarily. BUT can a stabbing look like a gunshot?
I see what you mean. While one inch, (if I'm interpreting the diagram correctly), seems to be much to large to appear as a gunshot, I can honestly see how someone might confuse the two, especially if in a state of panic or shock at the time.mysteriew said:Yes, I edited my above post. If the knife is twisted just right in the wound, it can appear similiar to a gunshot. Depends on the size of the knife also.
Okay, that's enough of that!!! lol. We need SOMETHING to talk about!LTUlegal said:Might I add this....isn't this story the ONLY one that says she was found kneeling? If so, could this reporter be reporting the information falsely? It HAS happened before. Which means we could be going in circles, once again, over nothing? Sorry to throw that wrench into it.
Well here's my thought. The reporter who wrote the story had the ME report, didn't she? (It is a woman?) If we are right in determining that Raven was the only one in the house prior to the officer arriving and finding Janet on her back, then there are only two ways that the reporter could have gotten this information.LTUlegal said:Might I add this....isn't this story the ONLY one that says she was found kneeling? If so, could this reporter be reporting the information falsely? It HAS happened before. Which means we could be going in circles, once again, over nothing? Sorry to throw that wrench into it.
LTUlegal said:Sorry, JG...SOMEbody needed to pee on your Wheaties, I thought it'd be me.