zenzen
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 7, 2020
- Messages
- 242
- Reaction score
- 3,054
to quote the great man Joe K "guilty people lie"
when your average person formulates a story to avoid being truthful, they rarely stop to consider the psychology of lying and the way lying impacts our choice of wording and also out body language...
when you combine that with lying on the fly compared to having taken time to create a cohesive story that you maintain, the lies become fluid and changeable.
Tee has tried from the beginning to mislead and deceive but with little consideration for consistency rather each lie is reactive to the moment she is in.
We have very little evidence here to actually speculate or form a clear image of what truely happened to G.
The facts, blood in significant amounts, taking a "sick" child driving and not returning with him.
her history of lying and criminal charges.
most everything else we have has come from the mouth of Tee.
we can try to pick apart her lies to find the truth hidden inside them but if what we focus may not lead any where close to the actual reality, the more we complicate the less likely we are to being right.IMO
if you put yourself ( horrid as it is) into Tee's shoes, what choices would you make?
the more convoluted a cover up plan the more chance it has of coming undone, the more steps you take the more likely you are to make mistakes.
i believe that Tee thought she understood forensic investigation, watch enough crime shows you think you understand how it all works. I think everything she did that day was based on her perceived understanding of LE techniques.
If G had a head injury, push him off a height to cover the origin of the wound, not understanding or considering that injuries after death do not present the same way as injuries cause prior.
I think Tee went simple, convoluted but in reality not complex.
i think LE have ridiculous amounts of evidence, that in her haste to create a reasonable account of G's disappearance she never even stopped to consider.
when your average person formulates a story to avoid being truthful, they rarely stop to consider the psychology of lying and the way lying impacts our choice of wording and also out body language...
when you combine that with lying on the fly compared to having taken time to create a cohesive story that you maintain, the lies become fluid and changeable.
Tee has tried from the beginning to mislead and deceive but with little consideration for consistency rather each lie is reactive to the moment she is in.
We have very little evidence here to actually speculate or form a clear image of what truely happened to G.
The facts, blood in significant amounts, taking a "sick" child driving and not returning with him.
her history of lying and criminal charges.
most everything else we have has come from the mouth of Tee.
we can try to pick apart her lies to find the truth hidden inside them but if what we focus may not lead any where close to the actual reality, the more we complicate the less likely we are to being right.IMO
if you put yourself ( horrid as it is) into Tee's shoes, what choices would you make?
the more convoluted a cover up plan the more chance it has of coming undone, the more steps you take the more likely you are to make mistakes.
i believe that Tee thought she understood forensic investigation, watch enough crime shows you think you understand how it all works. I think everything she did that day was based on her perceived understanding of LE techniques.
If G had a head injury, push him off a height to cover the origin of the wound, not understanding or considering that injuries after death do not present the same way as injuries cause prior.
I think Tee went simple, convoluted but in reality not complex.
i think LE have ridiculous amounts of evidence, that in her haste to create a reasonable account of G's disappearance she never even stopped to consider.