I used to think the same way until I actually met LE. Being in LE is a job for them. Criminals keep committing crimes and there are more criminals and more crimes than just the Delphi murders.
Life goes on for the police and for the criminals they are tasked with apprehending. Maybe there is some type of other reasons police have that led them to their conclusions, but I really do think the police are just guessing with the second sketch because they are looking for an unknown. Maybe they get lucky with a tip that they can connect the forensic evidence they have to? I think they figured if they just cover their bases by saying the killer lives or lived, works or worked, and visits or visited that any type of association past or present will be seen as having an association to Delphi. Because in order to know any place usually it is because of one of those three reasons.
Just because police have not told us why they put out the second sketch does not mean they are not guessing either.
I used to think the same way until I actually met LE. Being in LE is a job for them. Criminals keep committing crimes and there are more criminals and more crimes than just the Delphi murders.
Life goes on for the police and for the criminals they are tasked with apprehending. Maybe there is some type of other reasons police have that led them to their conclusions, but I really do think the police are just guessing with the second sketch because they are looking for an unknown. Maybe they get lucky with a tip that they can connect the forensic evidence they have to? I think they figured if they just cover their bases by saying the killer lives or lived, works or worked, and visits or visited that any type of association past or present will be seen as having an association to Delphi. Because in order to know any place usually it is because of one of those three reasons.
Just because police have not told us why they put out the second sketch does not mean they are not guessing either.
With all due respect, @somequestions, I think you have a bias that strongly skews how you view this case, and the bias is that you have actually tipped a person to authorities. If I understand correctly, you based your tip on the video, and the person you tipped doesn't closely match the official sketch. So either you are guessing or police are guessing, since in your view only one can be correct.
You've seen a snippet of a video of a man walking, heard four words he said, and read a bunch of articles where police said "we aren't going to tell you everything we know." The police, on the other hand, have all the evidence from the crime scene, the victimology of the girls, official interviews, and all of the video and audio. I'm trying to ask this as gently as possible, but who is more likely to be guessing, you or the investigators?
I'm not trying to say that police don't ever make mistakes but if they have in this case, I don't think it was because they were making guesses.
Four years is a long time to wait for justice but it's by no means unheard of or always indicative that the investigation is derailed or police are incompetent.
If you want to look up the murder of five year old Evelyn Miller, you can see an example of this. She was sexually abused and killed by her mother's boyfriend and though LE knew fairly early on that his behavior was suspicious and that he had tons of child sexual abuse material on his computer (including videos depicting the very specific, exact kind of abuse perpetrated on Evelyn when she died), they weren't able to fully develop their case against him for the murder for over six years. And he lived in her home and incriminated himself in multiple ways! They didn't even need to figure out his identity, it just took that long to get the evidence that would convict him of the crime.
As in the Delphi case, police held back all information about what had been done to Evelyn and how she died, and were highly criticized for this. Ultimately they were able to show, however, that the suspect incriminated himself in interviews through knowledge of the crime that could not have been known by anyone other than the perpetrator. The criminal complaint is available online, it's a master example of why and how police use holdback information in cases like Delphi.
You and I may wish there was more visible movement that the Delphi case is progressing, but just because we don't see it does not mean it isn't happening, and certainly doesn't mean police are using mere guesswork to inform their investigation. Have there been cases police weren't diligent about solving, for whatever reason? Sure. Is Delphi one of those? I doubt it.
waiting for someone connected to the victim to incriminate himself is one thing...waiting for an unknown stranger is another .
there is only too many questionable things about this investigation....
ONE that I can easily question is how they decided to name ( second sketch ) as def BG ???
there is no way they would know that...all they have is what one witness reported suspecting ( like the sketch artist himself said ) .....in this case the way it should have been displayed to the public is ( there a POI who we want to speak to ) .is the logical thing to say
I remember a YouTube audio-only interview with Tobe Leazenby in which he said all the original focus was toward local, but when that didn't lead anywhere they switched to non-local emphasis. I think that interview was with Katt. It was prior to the two-year anniversary.
It must have been something regarding the car that caused authorities to switch back to local. Through subsequent digging they apparently had reason to believe the CPS car ventured through Delphi earlier in the day, and seemed to have familiarity. I think that's why they shifted back to local in the 2019 presser.
It could also be a case of local authorities deciding to do it their own way, to follow their own instincts, once the FBI and national presence was not as great.
A defense attorney’s dream, I think, would be knowing that an investigation had been based on a lot of guessing. Educated guesses perhaps in order to explore a certain aspect, but I can’t imagine LE, in this or any case, just guessing and making stuff up to present to the public as true to the case, just to see if maybe something might happen. First, it’s a waste of time, second, if found out, all credibility in LE is lost. And again, a field day for the defense at trial.
I want to clarify. I never wrote that LE is simply making things up to present to the public. I meant that I think in April 2019 they looked at the Delphi murder case investigation and said to themselves: "We tried the video, we tried the first sketch, and we have nothing. We have this sketch from February 2017 (2nd sketch) with information that may tie this individual to a car parked nearby so let's just put this out this. Maybe we get lucky with a name and this witness ends up being the one who actually saw this man leaving the trail. It is worth a shot."
I think today LE are still investigating the Delphi case. They have thousands of tips to go over and over. Now based on what I wrote above, is that considered guessing or not? That is each individual person's opinion to determine for themselves.
I want to clarify. I never wrote that LE is simply making things up to present to the public. I meant that I think in April 2019 they looked at the Delphi murder case investigation and said to themselves: "We tried the video, we tried the first sketch, and we have nothing. We have this sketch from February 2017 (2nd sketch) with information that may tie this individual to a car parked nearby so let's just put this out this. Maybe we get lucky with a name and this witness ends up being the one who actually saw this man leaving the trail. It is worth a shot."
I think today LE are still investigating the Delphi case. They have thousands of tips to go over and over. Now based on what I wrote above, is that considered guessing or not? That is each individual person's opinion to determine for themselves.
my feeling is we are looking for the Evansdale killer. I think even the names of the victims are even so similar.
and the dates too...
two very specific sets of victimologies and killing areas,
2 victims
young girls together
rural setting
daytime
both cases close by geographically
Snipped and bolded by me...
The cases may turn out to be linked but they are not in any way close geographically, or not how I would define "close."
Evansdale, IA and Delphi, IN are 400 miles apart, or over 6 hours driving distance.
my feeling is we are looking for the Evansdale killer. I think even the names of the victims are even so similar.
and the dates too...
two very specific sets of victimologies and killing areas,
2 victims
young girls together
rural setting
daytime
both cases close by geographically
he has a specific fantasy
that has escalated
hence the showy display.
although I think he may have wanted to get them into a vehicle but it didn't work out for him.
if it had he might have moved the girls some miles away to create distance.
mOO