faefrost
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:banghead:I'm just now catching up.
GA/CA picked up the Pontiac between 1-2pm. CA made the 3rd and final 911 call around 10pm. It was more than just a few hours. Hours to clean the trunk, throw pants into the wash, clean mama doll, place Fabreeze sheets into it, later said she sprayed a full bottle of it, rummage threw the car looking for incriminating evidence, remove steak knife and wash it and THEN return to work and tell her story. Drive to get Amy. Drive to TL. Drive Amy back home. Drive ICA to a closed LE sub station. Drive back to the As. Let LA interrogate ICA, and finally hearing, "Caylee was kidnapped", she calls LE as GA arrived there with LE driving up being told they were summoned for a stolen vehicle and thief.
Oh good grief, I am gonna edit the post and put a disclaimer on it. I made it up. It is only a fantasy in JBs mind. It is not true as of this date. JB may well decide to go with it or some similar version.
We make a lot of noise about how damning the smell is. yes it is an extremely distinct smell. Once you smell it you know what it is as nothing else is quite like it. But it is still just a really really bad smell. Humans are really not wired to react to smells in all but the most general ways unless it is patterned behavior. Until something is put in context smells tend to be overlooked. We as humans will not typically use them as direct and immediate evidence to mentally recognize the story or scene that is in front of us.
This is something that experience and familiarity can get us to focus past. Parents of toddlers can almost always pick up the smell of a dirty diaper before anyone else in the room notices. A firefighter can recognize the smell of a burning house from that of a fireplace from a mile away, while a typical person would not. and someone like Dr. Vass can pick up on that decomposition smell immediately as it is part of his daily routine. Everyone else would need some sort of context for it. It is just a really bad smell until it becomes clear that someone is dead or missing. Then the mental pieces drop into place. Even for an experienced cop, it will still take some sort of context to make it all click. This is why that stench permeated a neighborhood around a serial killers house for years and the cops and the health department kept blaming it on the butcher next door. We tend to give far more weight to our eyes and ears then we do to our nose.