I find the fact that they have taken the actual trailers super weird! I wasn't sure if this was common practice with crime scenes where mobile homes were concerned, so I did some looking around and could only find one instance of a man who'd kidnapped a girl and they wanted to take the mobile home they suspected he took her to as evidence....and his attorney was arguing against it. Otherwise, I can't really find any other cases where this has been done? Has anyone else ever heard of such an extreme measure to preserve an entire crime scene? Am I off base in thinking this is bizarre?
As for Bobby Jo's interview? The only thing I find truly odd about it is the time lag in there between getting to ChSR and Gary's trailer....to actually calling the police.
From Chris Graves' article..
"That Friday morning started out much like every other morning, she said. Manley got up about 6:10 a.m. to wake her 15-year-old daughter by 6:30 a.m. and get her on the bus to school by 7. Then -- as she did most every weekday morning -- she drove over to the trailer of Christopher Rhoden, Sr., 40, to feed his dogs and chickens. Rhoden was her brother-in-law."
She goes on to say...
"She had a friend and his wife with her when she pulled into the driveway. She left her cellphone charging in the car and went up to the trailer. She turned the handle of the door and thought it was odd it was locked, she said. She also thought it was odd that Rhoden's two pit bulls were outside on the front porch, one sitting in a recliner. The animals normally stayed inside the trailer, she said.
She found the key and opened the door."
If we take the word of the writer, who instead of using her direct quotes, summarizes her words FOR HER....there is a fairly large time lag here between 7:00 AM when she gets her daughter on the bus and 7:49 when she makes the call to 911.
There are gaps in this reporters reporting that I don't like. The reporter either doesn't ask, or doesn't bother giving us fairly vital information in what is an incredibly important interview in a HUGE murder investigation. What we don't know is...
-Did she have to pick up the woman and the woman's husband between dropping her daughter off for the bus and finding Chris and Gary, or did she pick them up BEFORE she dropped her daughter off for the bus? This could account for that time lapse in there, and would make it seem a lot less vague to the people reading this article.
-Exactly what time does she believe she got to ChrisSR's house? Surely she can estimate about how long it took her to get her daughter on the bus, etc.
You cannot report exact times in an article and then not fill in the gaps, especially when you're dealing with this kind of information! It drives me crazy. If you get something as exclusive as this, I would think you would check, check and triple check both your quotes (when you bother using them) and your thoroughness!
(Sorry! Rant over...moving on....)
We also now know that, once she'd found Chris and Gary, she went over to tell Frankie Jr. that she'd found his dad dead. In the end of her 911 call I am pretty sure she says, "I have to go and check on Frankie!" Which, given what she'd just seen and their close proximity, makes total sense to me.
I know people have been questioning the 3 year old "unlocking" the door, but I can think of an explanation for that. The back door of my home, if I turn the tiny locking mechanism on the knob (in the middle), it will lock the door from the inside, and nobody can get IN. However, I do not have to turn it again to get OUT-I simply have to turn the knob and the door opens. I have, sadly, done this and locked myself out of my own house more than I care to admit...because once that is turned, you're not getting back in without a key! It's truly aggravating sometimes, especially when you're forgetful like me. Granted, this is just an opinion on how he might have done it because I have no way of knowing what kinds of locks they had. But, it's certainly possible!
She also confirmed the open windows! Their weather cannot have been much different than ours lately since we're fairly close counties, and our nights here (particularly when the murders happened) have been CHILLY. With FR and HG having a 6 month old baby in bed with them and a 3 year old sleeping in the house as well, I can't imagine they'd need too much cool air coming in. The fact that BJR even thought to note that the windows were open is a good indication that it's probably not their norm. That leads me to another question the reporter didn't ask, or just didn't mention...
-Which windows were open?
We know she said bedrooms, but were they open into the bedrooms where she found the bodies, or were these different rooms? You can safely assume these places probably had at least two bedrooms, right? Most trailers that size, even if they're tiny...have at least two bedrooms. Could someone seriously sneak in the window of these trailers, DIRECTLY into the room where these people are sleeping, without making a sound? BJR says FR was laying on his back (with one black eye) and HG was laying on her side in the fetal position...so they clearly didn't get up an put up any fight. SURELY they would have heard someone creeping in their window?!? In an old trailer, that would have to make some noise. Not to mention, they'd really need something to stand on to hoist themselves up and into it if they had any hope of being even semi-quiet. That trailer metal likes to rattle!
This is not to mention that someone in ChrSR's home, be it either him or GR, were dragged from the front room to one of the bedrooms. This kind of helps to solidify my initial theory about how they were found and what might have transpired there when they were killed. I won't bother posting it again, but it was one of my first posts here on Websleuths if you want to read it....
Again, there are my two cents. If there's something I've missed with the times, the door or the windows, please let me know. I have tried to be very careful about being thorough when I read this stuff, but sometimes I get it all backwards!