There are so many little details and unanswered questions. I hate to treat one article as "the source", but the
WhitmanHanson article is pretty thorough. Anyway, several things stand out to me:
1. Do we know how MM was dressed? A lot of people like the exposure theory, but I'm not one of them. Maybe I simply do not know enough about hypothermia, but it would seem to me on the surface that it was warmer than most believe. A quote from the WhitmanHanson article reads:
It had been quite cold earlier in the day, but by 2 p.m. a warming trend drove the temperatures above freezing and they hovered around 33 degrees Fahrenheit for most of the night. (Later reports would erroneously state the high temperature at 12 degrees.)
It also late notes:
The night wore on but temperatures did not dip below 25 degrees.
2. Giving credence to the "exposure" theory are statements made by Atwood. This also could support what some view as MM being injured, or disoriented, even if her head did not slam into the windshield. The WhitmanHanson article reads:
She was "shook-up," but not injured, he (Atwood) reported to police.
"I saw no blood...She was cold and she was shivering," Atwood told the Caledonian Record.
But if she were disoriented, why lock the car? Why stuff the rag into the tail pipe? Why other to back the car parallel to the road (as one witness stated)?
3. I don't believe Atwood was involved in whatever happened beyond this point. He offered to help, and naturally, MM was afraid due to his size, unfamiliarity, etc. But it is worth noting that his house, per this acticle:
Atwood then left the scene and drove the 100 yards to his home.
Yes, 100 yards away. Didn't the dog track her 100 yards and then the scent vanished? Maybe I'm wrong, but Atwood lived in the same direction her trail led. I'm not implying he was involved, but, wouldn't he have seen her getting into a vehicle once he arrived at home. Here is why I am thinking this:
Meanwhile Butch Atwood backed his school bus into his driveway and went inside to call the police. He had difficulty reaching the 911 operator due to busy phone circuits. Atwood eventually got through to the Hanover Regional Dispatch Center, which in turn alerted the Grafton County Sheriff's department at 7:43 p.m., 16 minutes after Faith Westman's original call.
Atwood spoke to the 911 operator from the front porch of his house. He could see the road, but Maura's car was not in his line of sight. As he spoke, a few cars passed by but Atwood was not able to identify any of them.
Not only did he back his car into the driveway, but he called police from his porch, and even observed "a few cars" pass by his place. Unless the measurements are not exactly 100 yards where he trail ends and his drive begins, I am at a loss on this one. Thoughts?
4. Why not search east? It seems the trooper and Atwood both searched for MM, but neither went east? According to the article:
Evidence at the scene indicated the vehicle had been eastbound and had gone off the roadway, struck some trees, spun around, and come to rest facing the wrong way in the eastbound lane," according to the accident report filed by Sgt. Smith on February 15, six days after the accident.
5. Forcier, IMO, saw MM but didn't think anything of it at the time. Maybe he should have given the desolate road, weather conditions, etc. But he might have also been preoccupied and ready to get home.
A local contractor named Rick Forcier had reported seeing Maura on the night of her accident around 8 about 4 to 5 miles from the scene of her abandoned car. Forcier lived on Wild Ammonoosuc Road about 100 yards from where Maura's car was found.
Forcier was returning home from a contract job in Franconia about 17 miles away when he observed a young woman who fit Maura's description running eastbound on Route 112.
When Forcier was first questioned by police, ten days after Maura disappeared, he did not mention seeing the girl running because he was confused about the dates and mistakenly thought it had been two nights after Maura's accident.
Nearly three months later, after hearing numerous news reports about the search for Maura, Forcier checked his work records and realized it was the same night as Maura's disappearance.
All signs seem to point to MM needing or wanting to head east. She was driving that way, the dog picked up her scent heading that way, and Forcier believes he saw her running in that direction. Even her MapQuest directions were for a location to the east. But why? And did she make it?
I personally think, given her history as a long distance runner, than she could have been running at some point.
These are just garbled thoughts during my lunch break. Hope they fuel the discussion and are not a re-tread of stuff covered already.