murraydwyer
New Member
- Joined
- May 18, 2004
- Messages
- 244
- Reaction score
- 12
While I respect the amount of time and thought you have put into thinking about Maura's case (especially after reading of your own family trials), I strongly disagree with your conclusions...although, I can only hope that they are accurate.
I can't and won't speak for Maura...I don't know her, I don't know what might have upset her beyond her pressing schedule and the accident with her dad's car, and I don't know how her mind might have worked in a given situation.
Although I was a bit more daring at Maura's age (aren't we all), I can't imagine that, if I were planning on starting a new life, I would have done some of the things you assume Maura did. Her car hadn't been working well, why not just leave it in the lot at school, buy a ticket to one place and then go to another at another bus depot. Amherst is a University town...the University provides bus service to the town and other areas where buses are available to many places. Abandoning the car whether she had an accident or not is the one thing that would have hastened the contact with her father, putting him on notice that something was off...it was registered in his name. Regardless of where it was abandoned, it would have been noticed within a few days.
I don't know what Maura's financial arrangements were in terms of scholarship and what that scholarship paid for or how much her family helped, but I do have an idea of what campus jobs at UMass pay....not much...and I do not believe Maura was working full time even with two jobs. I seriously doubt that she was able to 'squirrel' away much money. According to your scenario, she would probably have needed quite a bit of money...especially if she were buying a new car, attempting to establish a new identity...police can and presumably have checked her social security earnings....her license was not renewed, her credit cards have not been used. She has no degree to fall back on, not even a high school diploma. You can't even open a bank account without an id these days, so if she had opened another bank account, there would be a record.
As a woman, I find your scenario very difficult to fathom. Having taken time off to raise children (even with part time jobs in between), I am well aware of how difficult it is to make a living wage. Her background includes some nursing skills and chemical engineering...but what types of jobs are there in those fields that wouldn't require some kind of background check.
Lastly, her father who is one of the people who knows her far better than any of us, still goes to NH to try to find out what happened to Maura...is he being negative in his belief that something happened to Maura or realistic?
I can't and won't speak for Maura...I don't know her, I don't know what might have upset her beyond her pressing schedule and the accident with her dad's car, and I don't know how her mind might have worked in a given situation.
Although I was a bit more daring at Maura's age (aren't we all), I can't imagine that, if I were planning on starting a new life, I would have done some of the things you assume Maura did. Her car hadn't been working well, why not just leave it in the lot at school, buy a ticket to one place and then go to another at another bus depot. Amherst is a University town...the University provides bus service to the town and other areas where buses are available to many places. Abandoning the car whether she had an accident or not is the one thing that would have hastened the contact with her father, putting him on notice that something was off...it was registered in his name. Regardless of where it was abandoned, it would have been noticed within a few days.
I don't know what Maura's financial arrangements were in terms of scholarship and what that scholarship paid for or how much her family helped, but I do have an idea of what campus jobs at UMass pay....not much...and I do not believe Maura was working full time even with two jobs. I seriously doubt that she was able to 'squirrel' away much money. According to your scenario, she would probably have needed quite a bit of money...especially if she were buying a new car, attempting to establish a new identity...police can and presumably have checked her social security earnings....her license was not renewed, her credit cards have not been used. She has no degree to fall back on, not even a high school diploma. You can't even open a bank account without an id these days, so if she had opened another bank account, there would be a record.
As a woman, I find your scenario very difficult to fathom. Having taken time off to raise children (even with part time jobs in between), I am well aware of how difficult it is to make a living wage. Her background includes some nursing skills and chemical engineering...but what types of jobs are there in those fields that wouldn't require some kind of background check.
Lastly, her father who is one of the people who knows her far better than any of us, still goes to NH to try to find out what happened to Maura...is he being negative in his belief that something happened to Maura or realistic?