JMO.
I wanted to emphasize this from the article linked above by
@dotr (RBBM):
“Ethan Chapin captured photos of the event on his phone, but the family has yet to see them.
The device [phone] is being held by law enforcement as potential evidence in the homicide investigation.''
There are so many questions surrounding the phones, what phone contacts were made when and by/to whom, and why there weren’t any reported emergency calls by the victim that I thought it of interest that LE has at least EC’s phone.
Also wanted to note that the NYT link above by
@sds71 clarifies the call was made from the phone of a surviving roommate (does not state identity of caller) (RBBM):
“Investigators said they did not believe either [surviving roommate] was involved in the crime and suggested that they had possibly slept as their roommates were being killed. No one called 911 until just before noon on Sunday — many hours after the attack, which the authorities have said took place in the early morning hours.
That call came from one of the surviving roommates’ cellphones.”
@Kaykedi I’m not sure which investigators you are referring to and when they entered the house. My understanding is that the initial LE response would have been for an unconscious person, so their priority would have been to reach that person and determine his/her status.
Subsequent photos and video do show investigators with Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), and the area being marked / taped off. The difference may be crime scene/forensic investigators vs first responders.
All JMO.