Found Deceased CO - Shanann Watts (34), Celeste"Cece" (3) and Bella (4), Frederick, 13 Aug 2018 *Arrest* #40

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  • #361
NUA will be wonderful in Court.:):)
The Prosecution, will uncover all these points, and we will hear about the nature of her beautiful friend SW.

She is a natural.
I wish she knew how many of us feel the same. And wash away all the aweful stuff people have said and done to here. (her tearful video).
 
  • #362
Found it odd, too.
Most distraught husbands would stay at home at night, waiting and praying for their missing wives to show up with the children. During the day I'd expect him to help search teams and hand out flyers with his wife and toddler's photos.

The Thayers reported to Police, about CW's odd behaviour: not interested in searching for the family, wondering how he had appeared in the interviews to the public. o_Oo_O
He was not acting like a distressed man, wanting to locate his family.
 
  • #363
A thought occurred to me as I was reading the posts about the interviews. If some or all of the dogs were tracking dogs, would there have been a trail, since SW and the girls never left the house (alive)? Would there have been a trail to the garage, ending where the truck had backed in? Since he carried the bodies to his truck, would there have been a trail to the truck? Could that be why he was so nervous, because he knew the trail ended in the house and he feared that's what the dogs would sense?
 
  • #364
The Thayers reported to Police, about CW's odd behaviour: not interested in searching for the family, wondering how he had appeared in the interviews to the public. o_Oo_O
He was not acting like a distressed man, wanting to locate his family.

I think this is important to remember. He was acting SO strange about his family's disappearance that his own friends turned him in. It's not just us, strangers, reading too much into his performance-even those who supposedly knew him well thought he'd done something bad.
 
  • #365
I think this is important to remember. He was acting SO strange about his family's disappearance that his own friends turned him in. It's not just us, strangers, reading too much into his performance-even those who supposedly knew him well thought he'd done something bad.
Can you imagine the conversation the couple had, just previous to calling the police. Probably chilling when they started exchanging glances, talking to each other, comparing notes.
 
  • #366
Smart catch. However, they talked to him before they began filming (recording?) so I imagine they got stuff from him first.

ETA: I think it was just good, journalistic instinct. Innocent people don't act like him. IMO.

The Police, knowing about body language, most probably have known CW was involved in his family's disappearance, from their first conversation, and with what NUA had to say.
Some of us, certainly thought the same.
MOO.
 
  • #367
Do you know what? When he mentioned in his interview his house seemed to him like a "ghost town" and he had the lights up all night just in case they would "return" - I thought he might have been really afraid of their poor souls haunting him. If it was not that sad it would be somehow funny... :cool:
I don't know if it was just me but "ghost town" was one of the parapraxes in the interviews. Adding those to the body language, my family and I all knew after the interview that no one would ever be seeing them alive again.
 
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  • #368
IIRC, the Frederick Police Department verified SW and the girls never came home on Monday night, and they called in the CBI and FBI by 7 a.m. Tuesday morning, but in all three interviews on Tuesday afternoon, CW only talks about the FPD. He seems completely oblivious the other LE agencies were called in. He gave his interviews Tueday afternoon, IIRC, but there are dogs heard barking inside the house, throughout the neighborhood and an officer even parades a dog into the house, through the front door within view of CW and the camera.

My guess is investigators with the CBI and/or the FBI were sitting inside CW's house with the FPD, setting up his interviews and watching them live as he gave them. INO, the FPD knew by Monday that the only way SW and the girls left the house was in CW's truck early Monday morning. By very early Tuesday, they knew they never came back.

When would LE bring dogs into a house to find scents? Would it take hours and hours to find a scent, in a big house? I think dogs were brought inside the house roucea ASAP - first thing Tuesday morning and I think by the time CW gave his interviews, if scents were found,

c In a case > has good reason to think a crime has happened in a house, when would they bring in dogs? I think would be ASAP on Tuesday morning and I don't think it would take hours and hours, all day long of sniffing to find a scent, even in a big house. JMO, if a dog alerted, it was Monday morning and if that happened, I think LE knew what it meant.

JMO - what would be the purpose rmdIthey hadI

rbing indogs e has Le would LE bring dogs in to get scents in a house they How longCW thought it was only the FPD. directing his media interviews, when I think LE sat inside his house and gave directions to other LE to get the dogs to bark loudly, inside the house and throughout the neighborhood. In one interview, an officer is bringing a dog into the house, in direct view of CW and the camera.

CW was lying and they knew it, but he wouldn't stop lying.


I agree. I don't have your professional credentials working with children, but I was once a little girl. My sisters and I still talk about how much fun it was on the summer afternoons our mother would surprise us with the water hose in the back yard.

We ran and screamed - not in fear, but in joyful anticipation. No one ever got hurt, and no one was even remotely psychologically damaged because we got squirted with water. Quite the opposite. It was really fun when our mom acted silly and played with us.
They probably told him the interviews will be the quickest way to raise Go fund me money for the ransom.

But the reporter already had inside information because they asked him about a stupid shirt he was wearing.

So I think LE and the reporters collectively played him like a fiddle. Lol.
 
  • #369
I don't know if it was just me but "ghost town" was one of the parapraxes in the interviews. Adding those to the body language, my family and I all knew after the interview that no one would ever be seeing them again.
Not just you.

parapraxes
Thank you for the word, I see all of his interviews LADEN with parapraxes.
 
  • #370
A thought occurred to me as I was reading the posts about the interviews. If some or all of the dogs were tracking dogs, would there have been a trail, since SW and the girls never left the house (alive)? Would there have been a trail to the garage, ending where the truck had backed in? Since he carried the bodies to his truck, would there have been a trail to the truck? Could that be why he was so nervous, because he knew the trail ended in the house and he feared that's what the dogs would sense?
Yes, either that or if they were cadaver dogs that were making all the noise we heard, his goose was crisping up nicely as he talked...
 
  • #371
Yes, either that or if they were cadaver dogs that were making all the noise we heard, his goose was crisping up nicely as he talked...
LOL! I believe you're correct.
 
  • #372
Yes, either that or if they were cadaver dogs that were making all the noise we heard, his goose was crisping up nicely as he talked...
I wonder about that too, also, interesting those dogs barked to alert instead of sitting silent like the one on AB ( @LittleFleurDeLys mentioned ruse, agreed) . I really hope he was none the wiser to how quickly the smell of death happens. A jackrabbit was hit while we had stopped at the mailboxes (rural area), it was dying near our feet, by the time husband got my gun out to help the poor thing as it was in bad shape (seconds, literally), it died, several fleas ran off it's face instantly. Instantly. I have no doubt the dogs knew just like the fleas.
 
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  • #373
The Thayers reported to Police, about CW's odd behaviour: not interested in searching for the family, wondering how he had appeared in the interviews to the public. o_Oo_O
He was not acting like a distressed man, wanting to locate his family.
Didnt Cw tell someone that LE told him not to search?

So they already knew. Maybe they should have warned the Thayers that he is the main focus and shouldn't be trusted.
 
  • #374
I think this is important to remember. He was acting SO strange about his family's disappearance that his own friends turned him in. It's not just us, strangers, reading too much into his performance-even those who supposedly knew him well thought he'd done something bad.

It can’t have been easy for them either, I bet they doubted their suspicions and were torn on what to do, but thankfully they followed their instincts.
 
  • #375
I think the reason ppl are tentatively suggesting that is because the 8" diameter hole is so small, if that turns out to be accurate, which I think it is. I'd think that it would be more a matter of shoving, disgusting as that imagery is. Even I don't think he would actually cut them up, the point I was making is that there is an obvious difference in a body where the bones have naturally disarticulated vs one that has been butchered.
I asked one of my who has worked in the oil and gas industry in Weld County about the ideas expressed by the experts on AB's show because, frankly, I was hoping there was another possibility and it preyed it on my mind. He confirmed their opinions about the easiest point of entry being the thief hole, particularly for someone with limited time.
 
  • #376
Anadarko petroleum corporation definitely has grounds for a civil lawsuit against CW.

Both oil tanks had to be completely drained for the body recovery operations. That probably cost quite a bit of money. I am sure that they just want it to go away, and their name be mentioned as little as possible.
 
  • #377
They probably told him the interviews will be the quickest way to raise Go fund me money for the ransom.

But the reporter already had inside information because they asked him about a stupid shirt he was wearing.

So I think LE and the reporters collectively played him like a fiddle. Lol.
 
  • #378
I think that probably would be of interest to CW.

My post was really messed up. I didn't think I posted it! I was going to work on it before posting. Oh well!
 
  • #379
Anadarko petroleum corporation definitely has grounds for a civil lawsuit against CW.

Both oil tanks had to be completely drained for the body recovery operations. That probably cost quite a bit of money. I am sure that they just want it to go away, and their name be mentioned as little as possible.
I hope they threw the oil away out of respect.

I know its not for human consumption. But still.
 
  • #380
I asked one of my who has worked in the oil and gas industry in Weld County about the ideas expressed by the experts on AB's show because, frankly, I was hoping there was another possibility and it preyed it on my mind. He confirmed their opinions about the easiest point of entry being the thief hole, particularly for someone with limited time.

Did they say how difficult or easy they thought it might be to get the girls in through the holes ? Sorry I know it’s a morbid question!
 
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