gitana1
Verified Attorney
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- May 31, 2005
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Make sure to watch the whole video. It's nearly 30 minutes long.
The bf, he's not lying. He is a straight shooter. moo
I agree. I don't see any indication of deception at all. No shifting eyes, no odd body language, no deceptive speech patterns, nothing. He may share traits of people posters know who are losers but I don't think he's a loser at all. Seems like a normal, baffled kid trying to understand.
He seemed to be aware of what somewhat normal parenting skills look like. He remembered things many men that age do not, like how Shelby parented the child compared with how his sisters parent their kids. How she handled teething, or messy eating, etc.
He is Hispanic and many, many Hispanic men are very involved in child rearing and love little kids, much more than say a young man at that age from another ethnic background. In other words, they do not mind having a kid around them, they enjoy helping girlfriends out with the baby. They don't mind the child sleeping over.
Think of casey anthony's one boyfriend who allowed Caylee to spend the night and sleep in his bed as opposed to Anthony Lazarro who was fond of Caylee but was opposed to having her spend the night and really just wanted to be a free young adult without a child around to worry about.
Hispanic men don't tend to be that way. In their culture, children are a part of daily life. There is no compartmentalization. In other words, kids don't stay with sitters. If there is a wedding or quinceanera, babies and small children attend. So young men from that demographic tend to be a bit more cognizant of the needs of babies, than others young men.
I think this young man is credible. He was aware of how Shelby acted with her son and found nothing disturbing about it. He enjoyed Tyler and saw no reason why Shelby would have wanted to get rid of him.
I think Shelby fooled a lot of people. I think she hid her true feelings about Tyler from her friends. But I think her mom may have had just a bit of an inkling more. I don't think grandma could have anticipated something like this, but she saw more of the reality of Shelby and Shelby's feelings. Thus, she came home and immediately fell to the ground in the driveway when she got the call that Tyler was missing. I think, in that moment, it came together for her and she knew that Shelby was likely involved.
I am curious though. He confirms that Grandma was in the house. Is it possible that she didn't hear him or Shelby assaulting him? What do you all think? I'm pondering this hard.
I really believe that Shelby killed Tyler after grandma left the house for work.
I agree.. I'm sure she's just trying to do something nice for another baby.. I don't think id want it.. Just saying
Yes, but it is not going to a particular baby. I wouldn't want it either. But it is going to a crisis center that desperately needs supplies. It is morbid and I would not want my baby in that crib. But no one is really going to know. The babies sure won't, poor things. Cribs are expensive. They can probably really use it, murder scene or not.
I think that Grandma probably heard the baby waking up as she was leaving for work. She knew he needed to be changed and given a bottle. I doubt that she would leave for work with a baby crying and a sleeping mother. So I think it is most likely that she went to Mom's room and asked her to please wake up and take care of Tyler. That may have been the trigger, imo. :rose:
Bingo. I think grandma might have had it out with Shelby on a few occasions about this. Poor grandma working her tail off while her lazy daughter has a lovely lie in and her precious grandson is left to be ignored, crying, in the crib.
Someone had to bring in the income in that house to maintain it. Whatever Shelby got from SSI and welfare surely was not enough. Yet, Shelby couldn't even get off her behind and care for her crying child while grandma got up at 6:30 to get to her job. I am betting there were a few rows in that house about such situations. Hence, Shelby wanting to get out of Afton as soon as possible.
It makes me think back. I remember my friend's mom telling her, when she became pregnant at 16, "You want to have and keep this baby? Fine, but you will get no help from me. You get a job. You figure out how to support him. You want to party? Hire your own babysitter. I won't be taking care of him. You want to continue living here and you will continue to do all your chores along with caring for your baby." One day, the mother came home and found that my friend had still not done the dishes. I had been with the friend all day and knew she had been very busy with the baby. Grandma didn't care and tore her a new one. At the time (at age 17), I thought grandma was so darn mean. I felt differently when I matured a bit.
Her daughter got government -funded housing for herself and her son. She got her GED. She got a full time job at the chamber of commerce. She cared for her son herself with no child support from dead beat and no food stamps or welfare monies.
She made mistakes. In retrospect, she was not the fantastic, mature mother she later was when she had children as an adult, with her husband. But, she didn't abuse her kid. She didn't beat her son to death.
Years later, I told her mom how much I respected her attitude and how she dealt with her daughter's teen pregnancy. She wouldn't put up with nonsense and it compelled her daughter to strive to do the right thing and to try to put her baby first and her own needs second.