littlehorn
Inactive
- Joined
- Apr 15, 2008
- Messages
- 480
- Reaction score
- 34
I noticed that the first officer was undercover and figured he would have a good idea who the key players were in the various student groups on campus, and if Betsy was involved with any of them. I don't know about SDS specifically but I do know a lot of groups along those lines tended to be overly paranoid due to gvt infiltration. --In reality they had reason to be, but there were cases where they believed people were gvt informants when they weren't. A good example of that was the murder of Anna Mae which was, most likely, a result of various members of the American Indian Movement believing she was working with the FBI. Sadly that type of paranoia exists to this day, and I'm sure there were many cases like Anna Mae's that haven't been exposed yet (and may never be).
So what about her ex brother in law? Did LE make sure that he had an solid alibi? He noted he'd spoken to her on Thanksgiving but he (or someone else from her hometown) had plenty of time to get to Penn State. I thought his explanation about why they wrote the letter asking that her killer not receive the DP was a bit odd - mainly because the police hadn't arrested anyone or named any suspects. I can see the theory behind the request but the timing makes it a bit suspicious?
Also in your experiment, what angle did you determine that she was attacked from? You stated it wasn't from behind, and I remember reading what you'd had on your page and it made a lot of sense -- I just can't remember :waitasec: TYIA!
I guess it's always theoretically possible that someone thought Betsy was an informant when she wasn't. But I would think there would have been someone else who might have known about this had it actually happened that way. A "true believer" would have likely talked about the great deed they did for the "movement."
The ex-BIL spoke with her, as far as I know, on the phone when she called her family to let them know she was fine and was back at school.
I think the death penalty letter was mainly because of her sister's involvement in Prison Ministry, since that was a hotbutton issue in '72 when the letter was written.
In '79 a postcard was mailed to the State Police's George Keibler, one of the original investigators, saying "You never caught the guy who killed that **** in the library over the holiday. We'll be back." It was mailed from a southern state.
It seemed most likely that she had been stabbed either from behind (very odd angle though) or from the front, at about a 45 degree angle, as though she was facing some shelves, someone came down the aisle, and she turned slightly to address them or acknowledge/see who it was.
I may not be around much longer, it's been a pleasure talking with all of you this past year.