Does anyone know where the strands of hair were found? I don't mean area, I mean literally where? On the ground? It seems odd to me that strands of hair didn't blow away... were they caught on something?
The phone bothers me. If you're abducting someone and you have an extremely limited amount of time to do so, it makes absolutely no sense to remove a phone from whatever holder it was in. I mean, how would that be done even? At the presumption that she would struggle... how would you take the phone off her person?
The language used during the interview bothers me immensely. But I'll leave that where it is and try and focus on questions on the evidence that has been confirmed.
So... phone and hair. Bothering me!
They said the few strands of hair were caught in the earbuds. Which is exactly what long hair does, it gets caught in earbuds whether you use your phone to listen to music on the train to work or are kidnapped.
Why do we assume the phone was removed from its holder
during an abduction? I don't think we have seen anything that proves any of that happened.
Assuming she was abducted, there are very easy explanations as to why the phone could have ended up on the ground where it did:
1. She stopped to take a breather and check her phone, which is when she was grabbed. She certainly tries to fight back and doesn't care that her phone (with the earbuds) falls on the ground.
2. (This theory has been mentioned here several times before) She had been grabbed somewhere completely different, and her phone and earbuds (and possibly phone holder, which we have no idea if that's what it is on the video at all) were dropped at that spot either randomly, or on purpose to mislead LE.
As for the language used during the interviews: desperation (for the best possible reasons) brings out very different reactions in different people. Just because I
think I would have reacted in a different way, or even if someone who have had a person go missing in their life
did or didn't react in a different way, that really doesn't mean anything.
Think of another desperate and strong emotional process, which is something we all must have experienced and seen others experience: mourning. Is there a "right way" to mourn? Is someone that throws themselves on top of the coffin screaming necessarily in a greater pain than another, sitting quietly with a single tear in their eyes? They could be, or they could not be. We just don't know.
IMHO, from what's been released, there's been nothing that someone who's 100% innocent and 100% desperate
couldn't have said. Maybe you
think you wouldn't have. Maybe I
think I wouldn't have. The one thing we definitely have in common is that neither of us is a desperate family member trying to find Sherri.
MOO