BeanE
Inactive
http://www.kptv.com/news/23842774/detail.html
Kyron's classmate, said he last saw his friend at about the same time when Kyron told him he was headed to look at another student's science project.
"He walked by the hallway and I'm like, 'Hi, Kyron,' and he's like, 'Hi. I'm going to go see this cool one. It's electric.' I'm like, 'Alright, bye.' And that's the last time I saw him," Tanner said. "He never did make it back to class."
What time did he see him, did he have a watch and did he see Kyron's mom with him? I have trouble keeping track of time when i'm busy, I can imagion that kids do too. Also, this could have been earlier in the day just as it could of been after his mom left. I am just saying it is hard for me to make this a "fact" that he was seen after his mom left within the 15 minute time frame going to another project...possiable yeah. But not a fact.
If he couldn't tell time or there wasn't a clock nearby, LE would have questioned him to determine where he was in his schedule, e.g., did the late bell ring yet? was it a long time after the late bell? where were you? what were you doing? what was your class supposed to be doing at that time? who else did you see and what were they doing? what was your teacher doing?
They can pin it down to within a few minutes I would think, comparing his answers against answers from adults as to what they were doing and what the schedule was around that time.