Momma2cam
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OK where is the press conference or interview with the FBI's public information officer or for that matter the lead agent alerting the public how to contact them directly?
Not like all other cases. I have followed cases for over 40 years. And every state has a set of protocols they use when it comes to missing people. And the FBI can't just enter any missing person case - they have to be invited. And there are plenty of cases where they are asked to help but they don't send agents. They handle evidence or particular leads which cross jursidictionally.
In this case, we see lots of FBI shirted folks but whose in charge? I would respectfully disagree. with you.
MY posts have by and large been about the way the investigation and the subsequent or here maybe the word confusing media information is being delivered to the public.
I was shoulder to shoulder the the Walshes when they began their work to change the way missing people cases are handled in our country. And the last time I checked IOWA is not SMART compliant. More Indian Tribal lands are compliant than states! It was put on a back burner during the Obama administration - seemed sex offenders became almost a protected class at one point -- I could go and on.
Bottom line - I am not sure how IOWA works - some states counties feed their information directly to the FBI. Other states send their information to their State Police or their Public Safety or Bureau of Investigation or whatever they are called. I think it is DCI, ( Department of Criminal Investigation - interestingly the same acronym is used to identify a specific officer in England Detective Chief Inspector) And it is someone from the State level who coordinates with the FBI. The difference may seem minor but it can actually means hours or days lost while the right people are brought in. And when local agencies have folks who communicate routinely with the FBI I believe it makes a difference in how easily the two are able to hit the ground running.
AND in some cases you will hear from a SHERIFF even after the FBI is there- that is because the SHERIFF is leading the investigation. Until the local or state guy says I hand the baton off the FBI have protocols which do not allow them to take over any missing person case unless the evidence pushed the investigation across a jurisdictional line and the crime jumps from state crime to federal crime.
I have seen tiny hamlets in coastal communities quickly turn the batton over to the FBI because there was a chance he was viewed as having a conflict or being too close. In Mollie's case have we heard from the SHERIFF there? Who is the SHERIFF there? Can you recognize him? Have you seen him leading this investigation? His name is Sheriff Tom Kriegel. But the person I have seen on TV or referenced in media reports is a man with IA's DCI. There is someone who is leading the FBI team. I would sincerely like that person to step into the limelight and bring the fear of GOD to the town and neighboring counties, if necessary. I wouldn't mind if it rippled all the way to Chicago!
The perception of the public and the fear factor can be a very helpful tool IMO. The FBI can go anywhere in our land and they have the finest labs and manpower (hopefully still). We live in a land of sanctuary cities and where political party affiliation is tainting some areas.
I am wondering if there are any C.A.R.D. members in this investigation. CARD was, may still be, a specialized team who investigate missing children. Their success rate is over 90 percent. There are I think 60 or so teams - task force who make up CARD. As I have watched Mollie's case I wonder if we need to be creating such a team for missing adults? Or maybe we need to ease into it by widening the parameters to include missing folks aged 19 -24, college aged?
Just thinking... I mean no disrespect to anyone here. I am only offering my opinions based on what I see, hear, and have witnessed and learned along life's way.
Respectfully, it is not unusual to not be given a lot of details in an investigation. We are not privy to all of the details and the lack of public clarity or "putting the fear of God" into the community may be because they are hard at work with the details they already have. I think it is far too early to jump to accusations that the investigative team is not doing enough. JMO.