I'm not really quoting any specific posts here, it could make this post seem confusing. I also have a head ache and I think it'll be easier for me to write down my thoughts without repeating myself too much if I'm not addressing individual posts but the last few posts in this thread and breaking my post down by subject. I hope this is ok.
DD, thank you so much for the maps. That makes a lot of sense. It still makes me wonder if someone from out-of-town could have done it. The area may be hidden but a few times when I was in a new place, I've gotten lost or just by wondering around I've come across streets that aren't obvious. I also wonder if there's something nearby that would be of interest to someone from out of town - because in trying to go to or from there to somewhere else, the perp may have found out about this spot.
Something I wonder is if maybe the perp didn't know the location prior to leaving the car there. I would have thought so, since it seems risky if he didn't know the odds of being caught or seen by someone. However, what if he got into the car, drove around looking for a place to leave it, and as soon as he found a convenient spot he left the car there?
Also, if that was the case, what if he was spooked by something - maybe another car driving past, a noise, his own fear of getting caught - panicked, and left the car right where he was?
From the maps, I have a question. I was under the impression that the B/L store was rather far from the street where the car was found. From the maps it seems like it was relatively close. Is this correct?
I have to wonder about the factors that led Robert Yates to be ruled out. I'm going to read this articles now and maybe this is clarified on those but - is there 100% certainty he was out of town? Even if he was on leave and could go anywhere, it doesn't mean he went very far. He could have just stayed right in town or at least nearby... especially if it was possible to lead people to think he was away and deflect attention from himself.
About the bike patrols, I too assumed we were talking about motorbikes. That seems far more common. When it comes to non-motorized bikes, it seems more likely to me that they'd be used for a very specific type of area like a downtown area with lots of traffic or streets closed off to cars, maybe residential areas during the day. I can't imagine that type of patrol being on duty at night in what seems to be an out-of-the-way location where a car would make more sense.
What if he was an off-duty bike patrol? It could make it seem odd that he was wandering around in his bike if he was spotted but it could also provide a good excuse - being just done with work elsewhere, his car breaking down and using his work bike instead... who knows.
I think it would be helpful to know more details about the bike patrol and how it operates. It seems rather unlikely to me if it's not a motorized bike patrol, though.
I don't think a bike would have easily fit into the car and IMO it would make it riskier to get caught. If he was driving around and got stopped by the police or someone, the bike could be seen. It wouldn't have brought up questions immediately. But while otherwise the perp could pretend the car was his and keep driving, in this case someone seeing the bike would link the case to the bike patrol in some way.
But I don't know. Maybe it did fit into the car. Maybe it was foldable - would local police own that type of bike in 1999? Another hypothesis is that maybe he hid it. Hiding a bike while he drove away in the car to leave it where it was found would be easy and even get less attention than a seemingly abandoned car or truck.
Also, one of my sons and his wife team drove long distance. When they were home to visit her mom, they parked the rig at a nearby truck stop because her mom lived in a subdivision where there was no room for the truck. So it was possible this was a local and a trucker who was parking his truck there. Crime of opportunity , and ties to the Herring St area possibly.......
Respectfully snipped. This makes a lot of sense to me, if not this exact scenario then something very similar.
I think there's a chance that the pick-up seen in the surveillance video was a red herring, but if it wasn't - maybe the perp could have a job on the side while in town or be driving a friend's truck while in town. Maybe if more than one person was involved, the driver of the pick-up may have been friends with a trucker.
Besides the obvious - A matching DNA sample and the keys I don't know.
If you think about it there's a ton of evidence in this case. DNA, fingerprints, ballistics, the bodies themselves, the car they were transported in, witnesses that interacted with them in the minutes/hours before the murders.
You also have state and federal agencies helping out as well as at one point a world renowned forensic psychologist in Richard Walter.
How has this case not been solved by now?
This is what I wonder too. :banghead:
As usual, this is just my :twocents:.