I like what you did with the overlay here and you do some amazing work. Though the bridge in that picture i have seen before and it is not the deer creek bridge imo. I have seen many pics online and this bridge is only about 1/4 of the length. My guess is the newspaper grabbed it from somwhere and it was mislabled
I just checked. Nothing. They're likely using a closed channel.
I am Canadian, living in NJ and have been asked multiple times if I am from the Midwest because of my accent... Just sayin'
That would be an awfully huge coincidence. I posted my two theories.Thanks. The timing is strange - just seems like it's related, but maybe we're all so hyper-focused on the case we're jumpy.
jmo
The tip about a possible car under the bridge has been called in. I don't know that reiterating over and over that some see it and some don't is helping anything. JMO! Not to ruffle feathers.
Until you say, "about," eh?
I thought I heard "Go" this morning before I read any news or listened to the press conference. IMOHate to obsess about a piece of media which has been released, but listening to this loop I can hear it clearly, now. "Git down the hill...".
It's clipped in such a way that you can tell it's a fraction of a sentence. The "hill" is of a higher pitch, as if LE clipped it so that someone could latch on to the lilt/higher pitch in "hill", and the sound of how he says it
It's clearly "Git down the hill", but "hill" sounds like he's about to say "and...". So he's giving them instructions, commands, somewhat muffled, perhaps by whatever is in front of his face. There's an upswing in the pitch, not a "schwaaa" sound, not sing-songy, but the pitch increases across "hill".
Sounds like "...git down the...hill?". Distinctive. Combined with the image grabs, I'm hoping someone can piece them together. "That guy I know sounds and looks like that". That sort of thing. "Oh, and he smokes. Maybe I should call it in.".
At the moment, I think that'what LE are banking on. Now that the shock of the recording has wore off, I can analyze it
Another thing. Did the LE guy throw it out there that there are 4 words on the recording, then was corrected on it indicate the "correction" was done on purpose? I swear, it's another ploy by the FBI to get people to listen closely. People will listen to it, alone, in groups, will share on SM, etc., the loop. People will say "Hey, wait, I hear 4 words", and they'll listen more closely because of that. Maybe even have the media post on their sites "Listen closely to the three words in the audio clip", when really there are four.
Or, are there two different clips out there, and they're using that as part of a ploy? They're messing with this dude, either way, and the fact that we now have a superb audio clip is going to seriously mess with his head.
MOO, they did it on purpose, and (wait for it) they're not only making people listen closely, but maybe trying to trip up the perp.
To me, the voice sounds white, middle-aged, gravely, like a heavy smoker's, and evenly-pitched, except for the "hill" part, because he's going to continue the sentence.
My heart is breaking. I can't imagine what is on the complete audio/ video.
Sent from my SM-G935V using Tapatalk
I am Canadian, living in NJ and have been asked multiple times if I am from the Midwest because of my accent... Just sayin'
I just listened to the FBI pages audio. It is not the same as the first audio that was put up just after the press conference. It just is not
I reported this.. which from the original photo, looks to be an area below the bridge, at ground level.
http://i.imgur.com/wgNDO4r.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/NtWCQNL.jpg
I'm from the Midwest, served in the military all over the world and now live in Southern California and I'd never confuse a Canadian with a Midwesterner. Besides, the Midwest doesn't have one accent. People from Kentucky, Illinois, Ohio, Michigan etc all sound completely different that each other. Then within each Midwestern state there are completely different regional dialects. Someone from Chicago sounds completely different from someone from Cleveland. People from the big city of Louisville sound completely different than the country folk in southwestern Kentucky. There are countless dialects throughout the Midwest.