smr
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I have a question: When exactly did Chase become a person of interest or suspect (before being arrested)?
Also what exact were his parole violations?
I have a question: When exactly did Chase become a person of interest or suspect (before being arrested)?
I think what stymied the investigation was the murderer's incredibly ruthless decision to annihilate the whole family, including the young children. And to somehow do it without leaving any evidence of it having happened. And to do it to a family who didn't appear in any way to be a target of a mass murderer.And this ...
The sheriff said he had support from the McStay family throughout his department’s investigation and it was the family that reinforced the belief that the Joseph McStay and his immediate family had gone to Mexico.
As detectives combed through the McStay’s Fallbrook home, they found no evidence that the family was killed inside, according to Gore.
"Trust me, our homicide detectives are very thorough and very experienced,” said Gore. “Had there been any signs of blood stain or blood spatter or dents in walls, those would have been discovered."
SD County Sheriff Defends Investigators on McStay Case
Hindsight is 50/50. The biggest fear in family and police's mind, I think, would have been that one or both of the parent's had snapped and might have done something to each other or the children.
When was that stated, in 2010, or many years later?Actually, according to MM, his worst fear was "looking for two adult shallow graves" and his nephews crosses. More seemed like foresight.
When was that stated, in 2010, or many years later?
I wonder with all this touch/contact DNA info. why Merritt's DNA was found on the drivers side of the vehicle, mainly on the steering wheel and gear shift, but no DNA from Merritt in the passengers side where he would of been sitting when he was in the McStay vehicle with JM when questioned about it by investigators that he admitted to? Strange that, IMO.
Sadly, his greatest fear came true.
He got very low grade results I think, much below the standard. But the fact that he got anything does give me a bit of pause and I'm open to believing they could get results using a better method for the items being tested, whether it will mean anything is another story.
Just how degraded was it? Could the DNA come from people handling the items before they ever came into contact with the family, i.e., manufacture, store, secondhand, etc. An extension cord could be handled by a multitude of people.Yes - it wouldn't really surprise me at all that you would find human DNA in the grave
It becomes a statistical issue - can you get enough of a profile to prove it likely comes from a person in particular?
This has been the issue in other cases, especially with methods of amplifying the sample.
Also where there has been cleaning, you can find forensic traces of humans which are so degraded you cannot say which person they came from.
Sadly, his greatest fear came true.
An extension cord could be handled by a multitude of people.
They're available via public records if you care to look them up.Also what exact were his parole violations?
Sadly, his greatest fear came true.
Exactly, and I think lawyers use DNA evidence to baffle jurors with science because many people don't understand about probability or the alleles & how those factors can be interpreted, but only understand "the dna is there" or "it isn't". If I were a juror I would accept that Chase's dna is in the trooper, but not that he ever had driven it.Yes - it wouldn't really surprise me at all that you would find human DNA in the grave
It becomes a statistical issue - can you get enough of a profile to prove it likely comes from a person in particular?
This has been the issue in other cases, especially with methods of amplifying the sample.
Also where there has been cleaning, you can find forensic traces of humans which are so degraded you cannot say which person they came from.
Exactly! This was the beginning of CM’s gaslighting IMOMuch of this, including Merritt's interview, happened after the warrants were executed on the home though. Dugal walked if luminal was used in the home and he stated the warrants wouldn't allow it. That's very curious to me. This is probably why the cadaver dogs were only outside as well.
While I can't place direct blame on family members, I think particular actions and comments made to detectives steered the case to voluntary missing. Then there's the video. Then you have Mike hiring the PI to go into Mexico to find the family, etc., etc.
CMs DNA is on the steering wheel. The defense wants us to believe it got there via secondary touch. The DNA expert also testified there is no way to know how and when the DNA was deposited onto the steering wheel .
IMO, it is much more likely and much more reasonable his DNA got onto the steering wheel because he put his lying, thieving, murderous mitts onto the steering wheel. IMO, the two timed felon was wearing gloves when he drove the trooper, therefore only a limited amount of DNA was found.
The DNA expert can cite studies with 32 test subjects all she wants, I ain't buying it.
Bottom line is CMs DNA is on the steering wheel. Just one more unlucky coincidence for the gambling addict who didn't even care enough to keep his own family together.
I hope they ask the expert if the secondary transfer could occur when an individual puts on gloves, leaving a small amount of DNA on the outside of the gloves which then got onto the steering wheel.
MOO IMO etc etc