Found Deceased TN - Riley Strain, 22, missing after leaving bar, Nashville, 8 March 2024 #4

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New video details the night 22-year-old Riley Strain went missing


:57 Riley follows a friend through the bar to what appears to be their table. They sit for awhile and then Riley follows a friend up to the bar. It is about at this time security sends out the alert that Riley was verbally aggressive with staff.

1:20 Not long after that, an employee points Riley out to a security guard, who then goes to talk to him. After a few minutes of conversation, you see Riley's friend trying to get him to go back to the table, but he stays.

1:35 After more talking, the security guard then moves to lead Riley out of the bar. The friend in the backwards baseball hat turns to go tell the others, and that brings us to the video of the stairway...

1:53 "By the time Strain's fraternity brothers made it down to try to find him, he was gone."
Thank you for that summary.

I wonder how this fits in with the family spokesman's early reports that Riley was actually trying to be helpful. Maybe it was as simple as him telling the bartender she made a drink incorrectly or that it wasn't cold enough, or some sort of "suggestion" that rubbed her the wrong way:

"Additionally, Dingman disclosed that Strain’s removal from the bar was not due to confrontations but rather a conversation with an employee.

“There was no argument … Riley was actually trying to do a good deed,” Dingman said. “They felt like, you know, maybe he had had enough.”"


 
Thank you for that summary.

I wonder how this fits in with the family spokesman's early reports that Riley was actually trying to be helpful. Maybe it was as simple as him telling the bartender she made a drink incorrectly or that it wasn't cold enough, or some sort of "suggestion" that rubbed her the wrong way:

"Additionally, Dingman disclosed that Strain’s removal from the bar was not due to confrontations but rather a conversation with an employee.

“There was no argument … Riley was actually trying to do a good deed,” Dingman said. “They felt like, you know, maybe he had had enough.”"


I think the family spokesperson existed to paint Riley in the best light, even if that involved massaging the truth.
 
Thank you for that summary.

I wonder how this fits in with the family spokesman's early reports that Riley was actually trying to be helpful. Maybe it was as simple as him telling the bartender she made a drink incorrectly or that it wasn't cold enough, or some sort of "suggestion" that rubbed her the wrong way:

"Additionally, Dingman disclosed that Strain’s removal from the bar was not due to confrontations but rather a conversation with an employee.

“There was no argument … Riley was actually trying to do a good deed,” Dingman said. “They felt like, you know, maybe he had had enough.”"


Even persistence, how ever well-intentioned, can be aggressive. "Trying to help" can be helpful... or pushy. Probably, more than anything, it called attention to him. Tragic how it ended but entirely unforeseeable. He wasn't falling-down drunk, so good on the bar for policing the place.

As for his friends, it was essentially a pub crawl, within walking distance of the hotel. No risk of drunk driving, no need for a designated driver. That's fairly responsible....

Should someone have walked Riley back to the hotel? Well, sure. We especially know that NOW, but then? His friends were also drinking, at varying degrees of buzzed themselves. Critical thinking hampered all around.

Understandable that Riley got turned around. Could he, would he have made it back to the hotel then? But woulda, coulda, shoulda. Officer could have given him directions, a rode, a citation. But no one, least of all Riley, knew he was headed to death. Series of unfortunate events.

Why was he running? Nature calls. Ultimately I think that's what cost him his life in the end, off the path, lost his balance.

It is a cautionary tale, but America's favorite pass-time will probably always have pull.

I feel for Riley's family, friends and even fraternity brothers -- because the loss never goes away.

JMO
 
Thank you for that summary.

I wonder how this fits in with the family spokesman's early reports that Riley was actually trying to be helpful. Maybe it was as simple as him telling the bartender she made a drink incorrectly or that it wasn't cold enough, or some sort of "suggestion" that rubbed her the wrong way:

"Additionally, Dingman disclosed that Strain’s removal from the bar was not due to confrontations but rather a conversation with an employee.

“There was no argument … Riley was actually trying to do a good deed,” Dingman said. “They felt like, you know, maybe he had had enough.”"



I don't understand the secrecy around this incident.
 
I don't understand the secrecy around this incident.
MOO - I think that whatever the argument was would paint Riley and/or the frat in a way that would have dissuaded the public from trying to help. Parallels can be drawn to the ongoing Caleb Harris investigation where the family and police chose to leave out details initially.
 
MOO - I think that whatever the argument was would paint Riley and/or the frat in a way that would have dissuaded the public from trying to help. Parallels can be drawn to the ongoing Caleb Harris investigation where the family and police chose to leave out details initially.

I'll look the case up ty.
 
I don't understand the secrecy around this incident.
What secrecy? Imo, I feel they have been fairly forthcoming. Not it to suggest they haven't been more forthcoming. Would you care to elaborate on your feeling of secrecy?
 
Last edited:
What secrecy? Imo, I feel they have been fairly forthcoming. Not it to suggest they haven't been more forthcoming. Would you care to elaborate on your feeling of secrecy?

who has been forthcoming about it?

we still don't know what was said or to who or why his family said they thought he was actually trying to be helpful when the bar said he was being aggressive
 
who has been forthcoming about it?

we still don't know what was said or to who or why his family said they thought he was actually trying to be helpful when the bar said he was being aggressive
Okay, I understand you. I don't think what he said really matters or has anything to do with what happened to him, but I understand your statement. Thanks for the clarity.
 

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