little726
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k4kathy,I couldn't find your post about OSBI getting offers for help from Scotland Yard. But here's a link you might want to try:http://www.koco.com/video/16578520/index.html
Thank you, SS, for the information. Now my hope has diminished that any DNA recovered from this crime will be checked anytime soon.
I think the road was graded by the county and there was simply a miscommunication between agencies (Sheriff's Dept. and OSBI forgot to tell the County). I know the day of the killings the wind was really high. I believe the rain started that evening and it did rain heavily. This is why they would grade the roads because of the mud. I don't think it was any kind of cover up at all, but who knows? It is sure worth looking into from that standpoint.SS, maybe not a mistake, but a cover-up. The question is: What is the schedule or frequency the road is graded? Or was there another reason the road was graded? I thought there was a fair amount of rain right after the murders. Sounds far fetched, but who was the operator of the grader? Leave no stone unturned here. Maybe even find out who the supervisor was that supervises the road grading.
SS, maybe not a mistake, but a cover-up. The question is: What is the schedule or frequency the road is graded? Or was there another reason the road was graded? I thought there was a fair amount of rain right after the murders. Sounds far fetched, but who was the operator of the grader? Leave no stone unturned here. Maybe even find out who the supervisor was that supervises the road grading.
SS, maybe not a mistake, but a cover-up.
The question is:
What is the schedule or frequency the road is graded? Or was there another reason the road was graded?
I thought there was a fair amount of rain right after the murders.
Sounds far fetched, but who was the operator of the grader?
Leave no stone unturned here. Maybe even find out who the supervisor was that supervises the road grading.....
A measure that would prevent the release of certain medical autopsy reports stalled Wednesday when it was pulled from consideration by a House committee.
~snip~
The OSBI requested the bill partly as a result of the medical examiner's office releasing the autopsy reports of two Weleetka area girls killed last year, Brown said.
The reports, released two months after the bodies of Taylor Paschal-Placker, 13, and Skyla Whitaker, 11, were found alongside a gravel road, showed where the girls were shot and how many times.
We didn't want that information out because only the suspect or suspects and law enforcement know this information, Brown said. When we don't have a suspect and we don't have anyone arrested, that can be crucial information.
~snip~
Trent Baggett, assistant executive coordinator for the Oklahoma District Attorneys Council, said his office wasn't consulted about the proposed law, but doesn't think it's a bad idea.
Aside from law enforcement and the victim's family, the only reason the public would need to know some of that information is to satisfy their idle curiosity, Baggett said.
http://newsok.com/oklahoma-autopsy-info-bill-runs-out-of-steam/article/3343463 (Bolded by me)
And my answer to Mr. Baggett is: SUNSHINE LAW!!!! The Oklahoma Media needs to get on board with pushing for similar to what Florida Laws allow for public information.
I have been in contact with Vidocq Society in regard to murder of a friend 12 years ago. According to their intake man, Fred B., their guidelines are quite rigid: The murder must be a cold case, over 10 years old. And you must be a member of the immediate family, or a police organization, in order to request them in on a case. Vidocq Society will not allow a friend to make the request. In the case of my friend, a murder victim, they would not let me intervene.
So Weleetka murders would NOT qualify for Vidocq -- not 10 years old, not cold case, and we are not immediate family or LE.
Local police too proud to admit they blotched investigation refused to ask for help.
One method, however, will work: unrelenting organized prayer. Pray for the culprit(s) to turn themselves in, for their friends to call in solid tips, for solid leads to emerge, prayer for the police and prayer that anyone obstructing the investigation will be detected and arrested. I don't know why in God's providence some murders like Locust Grove aren't solved in 35 years, others like Molly Biss it takes 3 years to even find the body, and now maybe they've found the killer in jail on another murder after 6 years. But I do know the killers are known to God and He's working on them.
i don't understand why the road was graded either, usually they wait until the road is dry to grade. and where were the people suppose to be investigating the scene? wasn't there yellow crime scene tape around there? surely if the county grader seen that, they would of though hey maybe i should call the police before i grade this road. the county which grades the roads would of heard of these murders because its what everyone was talking about. my mother lives on a dirt road in another county and as far as i can remember the roads were never graded when wet.