farfaraway
New Member
- Joined
- Jul 25, 2010
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I don't think anyone else was in her car that evening.
The beer bottle could have been there for days or weeks. Although, she may have had one beer in her dorm room and took it along on her trip up north and drank it before going to the liquor store. I don't think it was listed on the liquor store receipt.
On the back passenger window opened a crack, I sometimes open my rear windows instead of my front side windows, because I don't like to be blasted with cold air in the face. I do this because I only want some fresh air in the car, especially if I get overheated from a winter jacket and the car's heater. In other words, there are innocent explanations for what was found in her car after the accident. The police would have to do DNA tests and take fingerprints to settle these questions.
I wouldn't pay any attention to the window being open either I think the reporter just wanted to speculate. But I'm just thinking if it were my daughter who was missing and I knew the car had been left in a yard ( LaVoie's, was it? ) and if I thought the LE were treating it as a runaway or someone who'd fled the scene as a DUI but I really thought they'd been abducted, well, I'd want that car and everything in it preserved in case that sometime in the future something as trivial-sounding as a beer can could yield a clue or a fingerprint could point to a stranger being in the car. You just don't know. There would probably be a batch code on the can saying when it was manufactured which mightn't help but what if Maura hated beer or that brand of beer......? Same goes for the amount of gas in the tank. The car is the last known tangible place Maura was and there might be possible evidence but it is my understanding the car was left out in the open somewhere.