Yes, Ackerman
Yes, Ackerman
Not the driver, Ackerman"Absolutely''!
2015
''0:40
absolutely Y where are we going 50th''
Its really hard to spot any circumstancial evidence that would suggest that RCMP was ever interested in investigating anything about Amber.Recently, I found a detail that made me ponder a bit more on this case.
Apparently a hockey bag was found in Calling Lake arena with Amber's ID inside.
Wondering who it belonged to.
Missing persons Canada - hockey bag found
The perp must have left DNA on the hockey bag. I wonder if it belonged to a guest at the same hotel? JmoIts really hard to spot any circumstancial evidence that would suggest that RCMP was ever interested in investigating anything about Amber.
But they know who that voice belongs to, for years. Women were coming forward, but they (allegedly) didnt seem particularly interested and showed as little effort as possible as far as I remember.Calling Lake is a Hamlet 2.5 hours North of Edmonton. The road it is on leads to Fort McMurray.
Note that there is a lot of traffic on this road at all times; Fort McMurray is Alberta's oil and gas producer - the bigwigs of oil and gas all have huge refineries there, and a lot of people go back and forth to the camps for work.
With that in mind, Calling Lake is a hamlet....it is very small, and people from Fort Mac would not "need to go there" to go skating.
My pondering:
1. The man/voice is someone who drives the road from Red Deer to Fort Mac (Alberta QE II highway) frequently. High traffic here - dropped the bag with ID as it was not found until early 2013.
2. The man is a truck driver or oilsands worker.
3. The man lives near Edmonton - when he says "50th street," that is a backroad area that would have taken them to Beaumont/Nisku area. This is not a main road at all, and Beaumont is not a large community.
Oh of course he did. But they either never got the bag or got it but not tested anything and lost it.The perp must have left DNA on the hockey bag. I wonder if it belonged to a guest at the same hotel? Jmo
Reminds me of Willy Pickton. LE on the take.But they know who that voice belongs to, for years. Women were coming forward, but they (allegedly) didnt seem particularly interested and showed as little effort as possible as far as I remember.
I might not remember that well, cause RCMP's attitude towards most cases I ever read about was out of this World outrageous.
Oh of course he did. But they either never got the bag or got it but not tested anything and lost it.
Sounds like a cop. Calming, authoritative voice. Maybe people are afraid to ID the guy.Explaining the Amber Tuccaro recording
The Globe and Mail
· 10 months ago
Jun 8, 2015
Solving the murder of Amber Tuccaro could hinge on identifying a man whose voice was captured in the background of this recording of her last phone conversation.
Cops in Canada have a long lasting tradition of abducting native people (mostly men but women too) and driving them far away from where they abducted them from (under some made up reason), then either kicking them out of the car without jacket in freezing cold, or beating them up and leaving miles and miles away from home.Sounds like a cop. Calming, authoritative voice. Maybe people are afraid to ID the guy.