PaulR
Verified Software and Computer Tech
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Because it took him five hours to check on him?
Cite?
Because it took him five hours to check on him?
one might text anyway, so that if LE looked at their cell history, they would look innocent.
(1) They gave the mother a lie detector test too.
(2) Of course they searched his house, that's where Dylan was last seen. That's good police work. If your child went missing and the last place they were seen was your home, LE would search your house too even if they had proof you had nothing to do with it.
(3) Again, with searching the cars, good police work. Even if they think MR innocent they have to do this to clear him, otherwise a good defense attorney will rip LE to shreds.
(4) Can you cite where you read about an extended/"intensive" interview? All I've heard about was the polygraph which they gave to the mother too.
Cite?
"Mark Redwine also agreed to give an official interview to the task force for the case made up of agents from the La Plata County Sheriffs Office, Durango Police Department, Bayfield Marshals Office, FBI and Colorado Bureau of Investigation after investigators asked if he would be willing to do an in-depth interview, said Lt. Ray Shupe, spokesman for the task force.
Redwine has given several cursory interviews in the past, but this was the first in-depth interview he has given, Shupe said."
http://durangoherald.com/article/20...96/0/SEARCH/Investigators-end-search-of-house
No attorney was present for the interview, and Shupe said Redwine has not retained an attorney.
Speaking of looking at MR's cell history, I wonder if his phone was on and pinging the whole time. When did he take time out to charge it if that was the case? Or is he one of those people who only turn the phone on when he wants to use it?
Then again I suppose as it has been mentioned earlier, there would be a broad range of area around any pings in the vicinity of the Durango to Vallecito route due to limited cell towers?
It has been linked and posted here many times. Dad himself says that he went to the friends and began asking about Dylan at around 4 pm.
Mark said he tried texting Dylan all afternoon in an area with spotty cellphone service. When he didn't hear anything back by late afternoon, he went to Dylan's friend's house in Vallecito. That friend hadn't seen him.
Cite?
Thanks.
I would not think a guilty person would give an in-depth interview to the FBI, CBI, and local police, especially without an attorney present:
Remember that LE is under some obligation to give the public updates but they are under no obligation to tell us everything they have. And they don't...ever. They pick and choose what they release and they do it very carefully.
Thanks.
I would not think a guilty person would give an in-depth interview to the FBI, CBI, and local police, especially without an attorney present:
Unless that person was the parent and the last person to see the victim. Because in that case the person might feel it more suspicious NOT to give that interview.
Thanks.
I would not think a guilty person would give an in-depth interview to the FBI, CBI, and local police, especially without an attorney present:
Thanks.
I would not think a guilty person would give an in-depth interview to the FBI, CBI, and local police, especially without an attorney present:
OK, I just want to understand.
Mark is asked to give an interview with a number of LE agencies.
What can Mark do?
(a) Decline - suspicious, and so he's probably guilty
(b) Says yes but only with attorney present - suspicious and so he's probably guilty
(c) Says yes and declines right of having attorney present - also evidence of guilt because doing anything else would be evidence of guilt
I'm not picking on you, but it seems that no matter how MR could have responded, people would have interpreted his actions as indicative of guilt.
And frankly MR does not strike me as the type to be able to outsmart a large number of LE officials at an interview.