how was the tesla even impounded in the first place?
The post you replied to basically has that answer, but this is something I have more questions about as well. Because it says that for at least a month, the Tesla was parked in various places near the house his manager was renting (and where I believe David was staying when he was in town.) Sounds like they would park it on a street near the house for a few days and then move it to another nearby location, still near the house, for the next few days, and then move it again to a different spot for another few days, and this continued (corroborated by witness statements made by people who lived in the area and saw the car parked in different locations in that area during that month.)
Then, after about a month of this moving it around, it was parked in one location for about 5 days, which was apparently long enough in the same spot that someone reported it as an abandoned car, and a tow truck was called (I assume by the police), and it was towed to an impound lot, where soon the awful smell was noticed, and police were called, and her body was found in the car.
So apparently, some person who had access to David's car had been moving it around, parking in different spots for short periods, because that was the way to avoid the car being towed as an abandoned car. And it was working fine, as long as they left it one spot for only a few days, but as soon as they (forgot?) and left it in the same spot for 5 days in a row, someone (possibly the person whose house they parked it in front of that time) called to have it towed. I think this was in a residential area, since they said it was near the manager's rental house, and I would guess that someone didn't like the car being parked in front of their house for 5 days in a row. Maybe they noticed the smell too. Or maybe it was blocking their driveway or just seemed suspicious to them after being there those 5 days in a row.
So I wonder who was moving the car? Seems like it would have to be whoever David had left the keys with. (Or someone that person had lent the car to?) Seems like they'd be able to figure this out and question them, and maybe already have.
But why would they have to keep moving the car around like that? If the point was to keep it near the manager's house, sounds like they were staying in the house. So could have been David himself?
But why did they have to keep parking it in the street at risk of getting towed? They couldn't park it in the driveway of the house, or even the garage? Maybe the smell was obvious all that time, and that's why they didn't want it too near the house. I would've parked it in the backyard, assuming it was fenced, but maybe that's not possible there. Probably had a pool, like seemingly every house in Hollywood does!
But they couldn't have parked it right in front of the house? Maybe that would still be at risk of being towed. Maybe there's no parking on the street allowed at all in that neighborhood? I think that's possible. So maybe no resident actually would have been the one to call it in after that 5 days, maybe the police who regularly patrol the area noticed it in the same spot for 5 days and called a tow truck, since there's no parking on the street allowed.
And the cop wouldn't have noticed the smell, because they might not even have gotten out of their car to inspect it when they called the tow truck. Just reported it as they drove by it for the hundredth time or whatever.
That all sounds plausible. So was the person who was moving the car around for about a month just moving the car while they tried to figure out a better place to put the body permanently? Would they have continued to do this (forever?!) except that they finally messed up, and maybe forgot to move it soon enough, or maybe something happened that they weren't able to move it in time that time? Maybe they had to go out of town or maybe they went to jail or in the hospital, or maybe the car actually was stolen by someone else at that time? Probably not, or it wouldn't have still been found so nearby.
Maybe they finally just got tired of moving it and still didn't know what to do with the body, so just left it. But knowing the car was registered to David, would they do that? Knowing what trouble that would cause for him? Definitely need to find out who was moving that car.
Maybe it was someone who was staying in the house that his manager was renting but who suddenly couldn't keep moving the car around, because he left to go on the World Tour with David? (Or maybe it was David?) Knowing a precise timeline if possible will be crucial here.
All MOO