RiverPirate
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From CBS News.
PENSACOLA, Fla. (CBS/AP) For two weeks now, rumors have swirled that the murdered wealthy Fla. family, who had numerous adopted special needs children, were the victims of a contract hit, possibly tied to shady business connections. We felt those rumors were not solid enough to report.
Questions were also asked about how the Billings made their fortune. The answer to that is still not clear.
But Florida police have now unequivicably stated they are not investigating the murder of Byrd and Melinda Billings as a contract hit.
Sheriff's spokesman Ted Roy said Tuesday that investigators only considered a contract hit as a possibility for “a fleeting second during the initial phase of the investigation.”
“Could it still be a motive? I guess it could, but someone else other than the investigators assigned to the Billings case will have to investigate it because investigators working the Billings case sure don't believe so,” he said.
Investigators also said they did not anticipate further arrests.
http://www.cbsnews.com/blogs/2009/07/22/crimesider/entry5179371.shtml
Not sure what to think here. More smoke and mirrors?
The thing that stuck out to me about the contract hit angle was the pay thrown out there for the hit. They said the price for the hit was between $20,000 and $50,000. That's a lot of wiggle room for when it comes time to collect.
PENSACOLA, Fla. (CBS/AP) For two weeks now, rumors have swirled that the murdered wealthy Fla. family, who had numerous adopted special needs children, were the victims of a contract hit, possibly tied to shady business connections. We felt those rumors were not solid enough to report.
Questions were also asked about how the Billings made their fortune. The answer to that is still not clear.
But Florida police have now unequivicably stated they are not investigating the murder of Byrd and Melinda Billings as a contract hit.
Sheriff's spokesman Ted Roy said Tuesday that investigators only considered a contract hit as a possibility for “a fleeting second during the initial phase of the investigation.”
“Could it still be a motive? I guess it could, but someone else other than the investigators assigned to the Billings case will have to investigate it because investigators working the Billings case sure don't believe so,” he said.
Investigators also said they did not anticipate further arrests.
http://www.cbsnews.com/blogs/2009/07/22/crimesider/entry5179371.shtml
Not sure what to think here. More smoke and mirrors?
The thing that stuck out to me about the contract hit angle was the pay thrown out there for the hit. They said the price for the hit was between $20,000 and $50,000. That's a lot of wiggle room for when it comes time to collect.