Second, photographs of the remains revealed no signs of dead insects or their larval shell, as one would expect at a decomposition scene. “It is not a question of a few,” Ferris said. “There should be hundreds.”
Pg 60
“Three months of heartache and brain fatigue were ending in a board full of bones, frozen maggots and a head wrapped up in a ball of clothing.”
No one noticed this for Christine and there were people around to notice. One can't have have a different odor for a different location, unless the body is buried/frozen or something similar.
I understood the lack of insect avtivity to mean she had been protected for a while.
Maybe RR was not quoting a literal statement by LE that had just lost the missing persons case to a neighboring force for a homicide investigation - rather what one would have expected if she had lain in the field for that long.
Yes - Woodland - the scenario has problems.
How would I move a potentially putrid corpse? Off the top of my head, I'd wear gloves. I'd bring a plastic tarpaulin and spread it out like a blanket. I'd put everything (the body parts) on the tarp, then drag it through the trees and then place everything where I wanted.
The big question: what is to be gained by moving the whole body?
If continued media attention is the goal, why not just bring part of the body to a spot where it could be found? Or, just the recorder with her name on it? The discovery of that item would activate a massive search and the body could be eventually found and I wouldn't have to deal with the messy job of moving the whole thing.
Maybe that shoots down the "relocation from a nearby location" theory?
The big question: what is to be gained by moving the whole body?
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