The story about the Lloyd going to a security guard at the mall seems very questionable to me. First, we have Lloyd's stepmother's statement that Lloyd, sitting on her couch in her home, stated to her that he was going to call in a tip for the $7000 reward AND that he subsequently did that. This on 1 April 1975, the day that the Tape Recorder Man story broke, the day that the $7000 WMAL reward was offered, and the same date that MCP has in their records with Lloyd's name and his mother's Baltimore Ave, Hyattsville address.
Why would Lloyd travel all the way from Hyattsville to Wheaton Plaza on 1 April 1975 to look for some unnamed rent-a-cop to relate his story to? And if he really did do that, why would MCP have been asking (in 2014) if anyone could give them information regarding the security guards at Wheaton Plaza??? They would have had all that in their files if a security guard had been the one to hold Lloyd and call them in.
None of the security guard tale makes any sense - unless the reporter some how got the story wrong. Perhaps a security guard was in the mix some how, but the Washington Post article misstated it. If Lloyd wanted to collect a large reward, he would not have included a security guard who could also claim it for his part in contacting MCP. There is the possibility that the unidentified girl who described the Long Haired Man following her and the Lyon girls might have reported her information first to a security guard.
A big problem with Lloyd is that he couldn't tell the truth if he stepped in it - according to many different sources. As a witness in court, he would be a very poor one. Also, there is probably a substantial amount of information in records available concerning Lloyd's mental condition.
Unless the police come up with DNA evidence, I was about to give up hope this case would be solved since all the police have is a good suspect, decades old rumors, and a mentally ill liar.
Telling the security guard does not seem odd to me. First, Lloyd loved to hang out at the mall, so it would actually be a struggle for him to keep away from the mall, just as I would have to go out of my way to avoid the mall/plaza since I live near it. Of course Lloyd liked checking out jailbait at the mall, while it's just stores to me.
One might speculate that someone who committed a crime at the mall would try to stay away until the heat died down. If Lloyd did more than look at the girls, he would have no idea if anyone saw him with the girls. Of course Lloyd could have been a total idiot and for some reason, some criminals do return to the scene of the crime.
I don't think we know for sure if Lloyd telephoned the police, although he told his stepmother he would do so. If Lloyd was shooting his mouth off to his stepmother and girlfriend (later wife) about knowing something, it's likely he was shooting his mouth off to his mall friends. Just as his stepmother did not believe Lloyd enough to insist on him calling the police right there, it's likely anyone else Lloyd told did not believe him, or thought what he saw was not important. Just seeing the two girls at the mall is not the same as seeing someone push them into a car. The two boy in the car that saw (the?) girls on Drumm (only one boy knew the girls) did not think it was important enough to contact the police until a week later.
It would be nice to know if Lloyd walked up to the security guard, maybe a security guard he was slightly friendly with, or if some other kids pointed out Lloyd out as someone who was mouthing off about knowing something.
The police obviously did not believe Lloyd in 1975 and gave him a lie detector test. Lloyd may have flunked the lie detector test if he lied about why he was watching the girls; even idiot Lloyd would not say, "I like young girls to a cop." Lloyd was likely up to other petty criminal activity such as shoplifting and underage drinking or drugs. Or Lloyd could have read the description of TRM in the newspaper and added that to his seeing the girls to increase his chance of getting the reward.
It looks like very bad record keeping by the Montgomery County Police to not have recorded the security guards names. Likewise, not to notice that Lloyd was the person in the sketch was very bad luck (for the police). The only excuse I can think of for the bad/no record keeping is that the police were putting all their effort into trying to find the girls alive.
It's odd that Lloyd never mention the police interview and lie detector test to his stepmother.
It's possible that Lloyd has half a brain, and if he is guilty was/is trying to send the police down the wrong path, away from where Lloyd knows the bodies are buried, which would be near the mall.
But I think it's more likely that Lloyd's recent statements are a combination of the his mental weakness and the police using tricky tactics. A smart detective could have talked someone like Lloyd into saying "maybe" or "it could have happened" to almost anything. I have no idea if the American Sniper murderer is legally insane, but it's obvious that the police talked a mentally ill person into saying he knew what he was doing was wrong with leading questions. My guess is that the police know anything Lloyd said is worthless, but they just used the statements to get the search warrants.
Besides DNA, if any, the only other evidence the police may have is a half dozen or so women who came forward in 2014 saying someone (one of the two persons of interest?) tried to lead them to the parking lot (using a fake security guard badge?). Even if one of the persons of interest was doing a sex-for-getting-away-with-shoplifting scam, it's a far cry from kidnapping and murder.