I know that the three-storey version of Sonia's townhouse does have a door to the garage inside the unit. I have watched real estate sales videos for the complex.
[... RSNBM]
I find it amazing that no media (to my knowledge) picked up on the home-based towing company on Spring Street, at the entrance to the townhouse complex, and how the owner also owned another property at the entrance to the complex. Surely a tow truck driver would be out and about at various hours of the day and night, and would know what's going on like no one else. Why didn't anyone get insights from him? [... RSNBM]
Wow, Gina20: two really key bits of info here. I remember all the back and forth discussion we had here on WS and also on the now-defunct Canadian sleuthing site UC about the interior garage door. I cannot fathom why he removed Sonia via the front door -- I would imagine that's more work (stairs) and certainly more visible than putting her in the car via a private interior door. In the absence of other info, this details keeps wriggling at me. Someone on one of the sites was VERY sure that Sonia's townhouse did NOT have an interior door (seems wholly bizarre to me from a buyer's perspective that you'd always have to walk outside and navigate steps for access -- for groceries, heavy items etc) but IIRC correctly someone felt VERY sure this was the case for Sonia's home. If so, that's an easy explanation for the blood on the front steps. IF not:
there are far, far, far more questions. Did Sonia have the interior access blocked off and if so, why? (temporary storage items -- or maybe fear of someone waiting in her garage? I'm thinking of Audrey Gleave who was brutally murdered and apparently disclosed to her brother-in-law many years before that she suspected she would be attacked and killed in her home). Or? Was her car not parked in her garage that day/eve? Would it be typical or atypical for her to park in the drive? I think someone posted years ago they thought she always used the garage, but I'm not sure if that was confirmed. If she usually parked in the garage and this day was parked in the drive (does LE have that info??) -- why? Could she have taken a little run out, say, to the store (after the call with the bf in the eve) and was accosted? Is it possible someone didn't attack her in her home but forced her back there? Did he have her keys right from the start?
These questions all heavily challenge my own assumptions about what happened....
Further: I have
always assumed from my first encounters with the info that Sonia was attacked without opportunity to fight back, and that the blood on the steps is the result from (sorry for the awful details ) her body, wrapped in her bedding, being moved down the front steps to the car. But: IF her car was in the garage (?), and IF there was an accessible door from the inside to the garage (?), is another explanation required? Is there any possibility (and this is worse for me to speculate, and I'm sorry for the thought -- it's very painful): could Sonia have been fleeing? Hence the screams (which, to be honest, I have not credited as related in past)?
Or does this possibility (there IS an interior door, it was accessible, and Sonia's car WAS in the garage) support the LE profile about the "risky" behaviour and some posters' assumptions about drugs and disorganization (another theory that is distinct from mine) -- he panicked and ran out the door rather than thinking to use the garage? (But I'm back to the Q: how did he think to get her keys?)
My word. My head and heart both hurt in trying to figure this out. I think I'm feeling really, really weary waiting for this to be solved. I know all the many many people who knew Sonia well and who loved her deeply (which I know is a LOT of folks) will feel this exponentially worse....
Finally, Gina20: the tow truck co in the complex. Often such businesses have additional security (that may relate to the nature of the business): did this home-based business have cameras and if so, what views of the area would be covered? I'm sure LE has been on this. But it's tough not to be privy / be sure.