Snowyowl
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It is a lot to give up. But, irrational people don't think like that.
anyone else remember the Texas cheerleader mom willing to kill??It's a scary world out there.....
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It is a lot to give up. But, irrational people don't think like that.
It is a lot to give up. But, irrational people don't think like that.
I'm not sure what to make of LE's tight lips.
My :twocents:
I have family members who are right handed but wear their watch on the right because it's easier for them to read timing when they are target shooting.
Well, we'll see who thought they could pull this off.
I don't recall when her roomie left for Florida-maybe this person was aware of date and knew this would be the perfect opportunity to lie in wait and exact revenge-or maybe Heather was followed for a while??
I don't know if Heather stopped at her house to pick up mail regularly,but wonder if she thot she was being followed might head home to let perp think she LIVED there.
Maybe she told somebody to meet her at her house or maybe she was good at avoiding perp and they knew they'd find her there?
I also mentioned B4 placing her in a fishing bait type of container for moving her.Since she was a petite lady that might be fairly easy..:moo:
Maybe we will. Something like half of all murders in US go unsolved...I am getting to be such a cynic, I know. But she needs to be found, or we may not ever see an arrest.
It is a lot to give up. But, irrational people don't think like that.
~Quote shortened for space and reading~
IMO - Myrtle Beach, Horry County, and surrounding areas have a history of keeping crime out of the media. I worked as a Paralegal the past few years and had to search through the prior days bookings. If I had to guess, I would say that less than 1% is actually reported, and even less is actually followed up on. It gets swept under the rug.
I think this one will be solved. I'm so sad for her and her family that she still hasn't been found but I think whoever did this was smart enough to plan and complete the crime and avoid consequences thus far, but I don't think that gift will keep on giving.
Slightly O/T, but before my fiancé took his life; his ex wife would stalk me (and we lived over an hour apart).. She tried to lure me to meet with her at her house "to talk if you ever need to".. And she would call and text me obsessively throughout the early mornings. When he passed; she laughed and said "well at least now we both don't have him. It's a shame though I won't be getting my alimony". She was absolutely loony. She went as far as to create different pages to see who I was on SM. All this and she had children. She risked a lot with her actions; IMO. Women can really run high off emotions and not even think of the consequences.
But she does need to be found for an arrest, IMO. Look at how many people here think it is at least possible she ran off. I do not think this is a case that would go forward without a body. JMO
My apologies if this is a repeat. I don't think this is Heather, but hope it's one of the 28 missing in SC.
Bones Found In Wooded Area Off Groce Rd. In Greenville Co.
Posted: Jan 23, 2014 7:40 PM
Updated: Jan 24, 2014 5:06 AM
According to reports the sheriffs office has not yet made a determination as to the cause of death, the identity of the remains or the period of time in which they were located in the area. Further testing will need to be done to in order to confirm such details. Authorities are also waiting on those same tests, to determine the gender.
more
http://www.wspa.com/story/24535557/...-co?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter
I'd agree,except 1 thing sticks in my mind. Her dad TE said something like police were friends,etc...Therefore if the family was known, I'd think they'd want to pull all stops out to help. And to get justice.
If it were any other tourist/missing person/serial killer maybe not so much because concerned about tourist dollars/publicity.
It seems to me they're overwhelmed and could certainly use bigger budgets to combat all these peoblems. If I had the governors ear (or was the press) I'd certainly be calling her out on funding:moo:
I also think you have to have some serious arrogance to go there.
Arrogant and narcissistic people are often risk takers. That's different than a 'snapped' kind of crazy. I don't think anyone snapped here.
That's the area that Robert McCraffrey drove to the night his wife Gayle disappeared.
Stumbled over this during a research project for HIPAA compliance and text messaging (SMS is not HIPAA compliant in most cases, but I digress):
[URL=http://s1220.photobucket.com/user/kimi_SFC/media/threat_level_celldata-chart_zps89efb018.gif.html][/URL]
This image was released via a wired.com post that disclosed a secret LE memo regarding wireless carriers, and what is/isn't retained.
Here is a link to the PDF file to the U.S. DOJ memo:
http://www.wired.com/images_blogs/threatlevel/2011/09/retentionpolicy.pdf
I am still searching for the original wired.com post, but it is referenced here:
http://www.thebellforum.com/archive/index.php?t-59187.html
and here:
Secret memo reveals which telecoms store your data the longest
America's biggest wireless providers are holding on to sensitive data about
by David Kravets, wired.com Sept 28 2011, 9:10am PDT
(snip)
The single-page Department of Justice document, Retention Periods of Major Cellular Service Providers, (PDF) is a guide for law enforcement agencies looking to get informationlike customer IP addresses, call logs, text messages and web surfing habitsout of US telecom companies, including AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon.
(snip)
Verizon, for example, keeps a list of everyone youve exchanged text messages with for the past year, according to the document. But T-Mobile stores the same data up to five years. Its 18 months for Sprint, and seven years for AT&T.
That makes Verizon appear to have the most privacy-friendly policy. Except that Verizon is alone in retaining the actual contents of text messages. It allegedly stores the messages for five days, while T-Mobile, AT&T, and Sprint dont store them at all.
(snip)
The biggest difference in retention surrounds so-called cell-site data. That is information detailing a phones movement history via its connections to mobile phone towers while it's traveling.
(snip)
I dont think there there is anything on this list the government would concede requires a warrant, said Kevin Bankston, a staff attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation
More @ Link
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2011/09/secret-memo-reveals-which-telecoms-store-your-data-the-longest/
This article references the original wired.com article - I will edit / post once I can find it. These are interesting points to consider, as LE undoubtedly has a lot to go on by just accessing Heather's phone records and analyzing them. Granted, if she was with Verizon, they would've had more (text messages).
I have no doubt they are actively using all cell phone data as an investigative tool to rule others in/out. All it takes is a phone number......