How far was it from were the bodies were found and the counselors tent? I figure what happened to Denise happened there with the testimony of several people talking about the dirt being pushed. I figured it was done during the early dawn so the killer could see without the flashlight. It probably was the alarm clock that caused the quick exit of the killer and thus leaving the flashlight. Now what really puzzles me is why bring the other bodies out of the tent clean it up then do this to Denise. Poor Denise took the brunt of this attack, and by that I mean how long was she subjected to God knows what. She was definetely the target.
Huxley ...
"The civil trial included discussion of the threatening note as well as the fact that
tent #7 lay 86-yards from the counselors’ tent." - abandonedok.com
IIRC, the bodies were found 150 yards (1 1/2 football fields) away from tent #7. Let me check those specifics again, and where the bodies were in relation to the counselors tent.
Just came across an article I read last month about the sounds and happenings that night. Cicadas are not mentioned once.
http://www.reddirtreport.com/oklaho...camp-scott-girl-scout-murders-remain-unsolved
The source of the article is "The Camp Scott Murders" by C.S. Kelly
Kiowa tent number 7 (sometimes called 8 when counted with the counselors' tent) was the most remote tent in the unit and in the camp. It couldn't be seen from the counselors' tent.“Before and during 1977, Camp Scott had no lights in the wooden platform tents. Aside from the campers' flashlights, the only light source provided at the camp units were the kerosene lanterns which were lit at night. These lanterns hung at the unit latrines,” as is described in The Camp Scott Murders written by C. S. Kelly and published in 2014.
Just past midnight, Willhite was awakened by a noise.“
It was a cross between a frog and bullhorn or something. It was low and kind of guttural. It wasn't language. It didn't seem like language. It didn't seem human. It didn't sound like any animal I've heard," said Willhite in the documentary, Someone Cry for the Children: The Girl Scout Murders, produced and directed by Mike Wilkerson, who co-authored a book with his brother Dick Wilkerson Someone Cry for the Children, that was published in 1981. Both were members of the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation.
Willhite awoke another counselor in her tent, Dee Elder, and asked if she had heard the strange sound. She hadn't. Willhite went outside with her flashlight to survey the woods. Each time she flashed her light, the sound stopped. She walked the tents. Everything was quiet. She went back to bed.
Many saw a strange light and heard guttural sounds throughout the night. Tent 6 was flooded by light and then it disappeared. A girl was heard crying for her momma.“
Two counselors had been frightened by two men at the camp, the night before the murders. Some campers said they saw a man in army boots behind a tent;” whereas another man was seen by a latrine the night of the murders," as is reported in Kelly's book.
And these quotes from girlscoutmurders.com :
A storm hit the area around 6PM, causing heavy rain. Because of the weather, the campers were sent back to their tents.At approximately 1:30AM, moaning was heard near camp Kiowa. Carla, a counselor at the camp, checked out the noise and
described it as a low guttural moaning. It would stop whenever the beam of her flashlight came near.
Carla was standing at the intersection of the trail, 150 yards from Tent 8 and a dirt road leading to the main camp.
At approximately 2AM, the tent flap of #7 was opened. Three of the girls inside were sleeping. The fourth girl stated that she noticed a beam of light moving about the interior from outside, with the silhouette of a large figure behind it. The figure moved off toward Tent 8. Moaning sounds were heard throughout the night, not just by those in the Kiowa section but in four other units of the camp.At approximately 3AM, a girl in the Cherokee section across the woods heard a scream come from the direction of Kiowa, located about two city blocks away. A girl in Quapaw also heard a scream. The scream seemed to be cries of "momma! momma!"The girl thought it may have been the voice of Lori Farmer.
This, from a scout who was in Kiowa Camp that night, via girlscoutmurders.yuku.com, which is reportedly a reputable site that some here have suggested we glean our information from:
I was one of 12 girls who were with the ones who were murdered. I believe there were four "tents" three girls to each tent. I have very distinct memories of that morning, including being told there was a problem with the water. There was no counselor in our tent. i was an only child used to quiet and it was my first time to be away from my parents.
I remember a lot of screaming that night which really unnerved me, but i had no idea mingled among the screams from ghost stories were the screams for real of the girls being murdered.
*Those are her words, not mine. You may choose not to believe her, which is IMO a slippery slope ... who will you believe? I was not there.*
...... all of that, yet nothing was changed in their procedure that night.
As a mom of 5, I have always been a light sleeper and have been woken in the night countless times by my children due to crying, nightmares, fears. I got up each time, sometimes sitting with them throughout the night, sleeping next to them, praying with them. Oftentimes, I have woken because I myself heard a strange sound that alarmed me. Through the house I would search, I would look outside, sometimes I would stand outside and listen. People have been lurking on our property in the middle of the night, and I knew it before they even came into sight. I would wake my husband and tell him to get his gun ... sure enough, it would be someone coming to our door at 1, 2, or 3:00 in the morning. My children have woke to loud disturbances outside, gunshots. They wake us up and my husband and I will investigate and I will not sleep soundly until I know all is well. I will stay up listening, ready to call the police. So I do not at all understand going back to sleep with all of the unnerving activity. Maybe the counselors were not nervous people, maybe the happenings didn't set them on edge like it would me. But me sleeping soundly under those circumstances would not have been an option.