Its striking to revisit
the abduction theory I presented months ago, especially given the resistance I faced from those who refused to engage with the physical evidence. After investing countless hours in terrain analysis, mapping potential routes, and working with AI to systematically evaluate different scenarios, I knew something fundamental didn't align with the narrative that had taken hold.
The persistent problem in these discussions has been the tendency to fabricate evidence rather than work with
what evidence actually exists. Criminal investigations don't operate on invented theories. I won't claim every detail I proposed was flawless, but I recognized early on that the fixation on the parents lacked evidentiary foundation.
Now an eyewitness report may corroborate both the abduction scenario and the vehicle staging location I identified months ago through terrain analysis. An effective investigation requires following evidence, not forcing evidence to follow a theory. Yet Occam's razor gets constantly misapplied in online discussions, as if it constitutes proof. That principle requires an
absence of evidence. Here, we have substantial physical evidence pointing in a specific direction.
I'll also add that in a follow up post, I believe I brought up the question of where the offender would've parked. In one of my posts I had gotten a location wrong, and didn't cite my Google Earth photo, so I'm not sure if I deleted it, or if it was deleted by a moderator. Anyways, if there were two offenders, this would make perfect sense. One to watch the vehicle and the other (less threatening?) accomplice to take the kids.
I had been operating on the assumption that there was only one offender—a male who had experience in hunting/fishing and who used the pipeline trail before. An ATV was something I thought could've been used to transport the children from the home. Someone questioned the lack of tracks, but if you look at photos, you can see the terrain would allow people to move along it without leaving any. It isn't soft soil, it's rocky and compact. The gravel shifts under pressure.