rosesfromangels
Amateur opinion and speculation only
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2010
- Messages
- 12,448
- Reaction score
- 64,207
And about his deleting comments (and Jenny's entire travel log), I just don't get it at all.
Perhaps he was advised to do so.
And about his deleting comments (and Jenny's entire travel log), I just don't get it at all.
Maybe they are not deleted, but hidden via privacy settings.And about his deleting comments (and Jenny's entire travel log), I just don't get it at all.
Maybe they are not deleted, but hidden via privacy settings.
How specific are those GPS tracking systems on a truck? Will it be able to see if the truck has driven somewhere unusual and for how long? If one or both of those two truck drivers is responsible for Jenny's disappearance, I wonder if something would look wrong with the route driven for the time after Jenny was picked up. If the truck drivers were "in a convoy together" then it must mean it is believed they are complicit in whatever was done to Jenny.
If they become suspects, can their phone records be looked at? If they handed her over to someone else, say for human trafficking purposes, for example, someone would have been contacted for the exchange.
Their refusal to take a polygraph test may cast suspicion, but then again, what if they are fully innocent and just distrustful of the test and interrogators.
I'm glad to see that the case is finally moving forward.
I am back, my daddy passed.
I am just reading tho because I am so far behind.
I do wish we would have gotten to read more of Jenny's adventures.
Sent from my SCH-I545 using Tapatalk
Seems too, that the family convoy driver (and family) could vouch for the other guy if they were in fact driving along together. They both would have been aware of the other's stops for the most part. This whole Corona driver thing is way too convenient and flimsy. I'm just not convinced it's more than a convenient finger pointing by a Mexican PI who said "whatever" to collect his fee then disappear.Bbm
If they were in a convoy together, and the one driver had his family with him (which should be pretty easy to confirm), then one would think the family would have to be complicit as well. And at that point, imo, it becomes a bit far fetched.
I don't think refusing a lie detector test means anything. If some random person out of nowhere started accusing you of some crime, involving some woman you've never heard of, and you had nothing to do with it, would you agree to a polygraph (which are not reliable enough to be used in court)? Frankly, i would tell him to pound sand. And i certainly would never agree to one in Mexico due to the corruption.
Moo
You can indivually set the privacy on every post from your timeline. It takes only a moment.They're deleted (I'm a member of the group) or he has WAY too much free time on his hands to mess with privacy settings
You can indivually set the privacy on every post from your timeline. It takes only a moment.
How specific are those GPS tracking systems on a truck? Will it be able to see if the truck has driven somewhere unusual and for how long? If one or both of those two truck drivers is responsible for Jenny's disappearance, I wonder if something would look wrong with the route driven for the time after Jenny was picked up. If the truck drivers were "in a convoy together" then it must mean it is believed they are complicit in whatever was done to Jenny.
If they become suspects, can their phone records be looked at? If they handed her over to someone else, say for human trafficking purposes, for example, someone would have been contacted for the exchange.
Their refusal to take a polygraph test may cast suspicion, but then again, what if they are fully innocent and just distrustful of the test and interrogators.
I'm glad to see that the case is finally moving forward.
Bbm
If they were in a convoy together, and the one driver had his family with him (which should be pretty easy to confirm), then one would think the family would have to be complicit as well. And at that point, imo, it becomes a bit far fetched.
I don't think refusing a lie detector test means anything. If some random person out of nowhere started accusing you of some crime, involving some woman you've never heard of, and you had nothing to do with it, would you agree to a polygraph (which are not reliable enough to be used in court)? Frankly, i would tell him to pound sand. And i certainly would never agree to one in Mexico due to the corruption.
Moo
Sent from my SM-N920V using Tapatalk
Good questions regarding the GPS capability. If there is a travel record generated, versus only a real-time locator, then any unusual variations from the route (detour route included) or prolonged unusual stops made en-route, might suggest possible search locations. If the GPS in those vehicles does generate a travel record, hopefully it has been saved for the four+ months since Jenny's reported disappearance.
I just can't believe she is or was still traveling after her date of disappearance and not contact anyone.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk