Raging Ranter
Member
- Joined
- Mar 24, 2014
- Messages
- 66
- Reaction score
- 56
I think too that her remains will be found not so far from the accident sight. Its very easy to lose your bearings in a forest, especially in the dark of night. I've walked into a forest in daylight, following a trail. I left the trail and walked several feet away. When I turned around to head back, I paused....no matter which direction I looked, everything appeared to look the same. I panicked. It took me a bit of time to find my way back to the trail. I intially headed in the wrong direction but luckily heard and saw other trail walkers. My point is...alone, dark, in a forest, no trail to follow, Maura could have headed in one direction thinking she was near the road when in fact she was heading deep into the forest range. To lose your bearings only takes a few moments and a few steps.
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Exactly. Add in confusion from alcohol, and it isn't a stretch to think she got lost, became hypothermic, and died. The weather wasn't particularly cold that day, but it did take a turn for the worse that night, and got much colder. Had she run off and become injured or exhausted in the woods, wearing light clothing and running shoes, she would not have lasted the night. Even mild hypothermia can cause confusion, which makes a bad situation worse. Add in alcohol, and you've got a very dangerous scenario, even if she were only a few hundred yards from the road. Her demise could have happened within hours. \
Of course, I could be entirely wrong. I simply think that is the most likely scenario. There is the possibility that she never entered the woods. If so, the only reasonable alternative explanation for her disappearing so quickly before the police got there is that she was picked up by someone. A stranger. Or someone she knew. My problem with that theory is that she refused help from the bus driver. Despite being a large individual, B.A. was driving a school bus, which I would think would have made him appear somewhat less threatening compared to a random stranger in a regular car. If she refused his help, why then jump into the car of the first stranger that comes along? That makes little sense. But then, not much Maura did that day makes any sense. I suppose that's why some people insist that she was being followed by someone she knew in a second car. But where were they when the accident happened? And who? There's no sign of such a person to this day.
Every possible scenario (and they are all possible) keeps bringing me back to the "she's in the woods within a mile of the car" explanation. It's the most plausible to me.