They should look for fresh strikes/ballistics imo i like to get down nitty griddy to catch criminalsYou can tell if a gun has been fired since it was last cleaned, but you couldn’t pick one up and determine when it was last fired.
They should look for fresh strikes/ballistics imo i like to get down nitty griddy to catch criminalsYou can tell if a gun has been fired since it was last cleaned, but you couldn’t pick one up and determine when it was last fired.
I 100% agree with this. But, what about the friends and relatives?Yes. If he believed his wife was kidnapped, then his behavior makes absolutely no sense. Law enforcement clearly doesn’t believe that, so it’s actually in his best interest to “scream from the mountain tops.”
If he merely picked up the phone and talked to a reporter, this case would be front page news again. His priority is not finding his wife, because I believe he knows what happened to her.
I’ve said this before, but at a bare minimum, he’s the worst husband on the face of the earth.
He’s not the first man from Colorado that I’ve said that about. Incidentally, the others were cold blooded killers.
Why is he a horrible husband? Because if you didn’t kill her, someone took her. If someone took her, the only way you can help save her is via public attention.
Enough said. Pass the rotten tomatoes.
I 100% agree with this. But, what about the friends and relatives?
A woman in my area was missing for years before her body was found. Many people knew who the killer would turn out to be, but still, this womans face was everywhere you looked. Her friends and relatives held regular vigils, searches, shared SMedia posts, updated posters around town, etc. They wanted peace, and they wanted justice for her. IMO, while LE did the very best they could, it was the public interest (and continuous tips) that kept the case from going cold.
Where is Suzannes support team?
Even if he believed a mountain lion took her, wouldn’t he be out looking for her? Pleading with the public for help finding her?Yes. If he believed his wife was kidnapped, then his behavior makes absolutely no sense. Law enforcement clearly doesn’t believe that, so it’s actually in his best interest to “scream from the mountain tops.”
If he merely picked up the phone and talked to a reporter, this case would be front page news again. His priority is not finding his wife, because I believe he knows what happened to her.
I’ve said this before, but at a bare minimum, he’s the worst husband on the face of the earth.
He’s not the first man from Colorado that I’ve said that about. Incidentally, the others were cold blooded killers.
Why is he a horrible husband? Because if you didn’t kill her, someone took her. If someone took her, the only way you can help save her is via public attention.
Enough said. Pass the rotten tomatoes.
Respectfully, my opinion is quite the opposite. Even if not for her daughters (who are way too young to be dealing with this), she has siblings, and friends, and a church family, etc. If LE suspected she ran away, they wouldnt have dug up a perfectly good foundation looking for evidence. Jmho.That too makes me wonder if she could have gone missing of her own accord and LE has evidence to support that but it's not concrete enough to say for certain so they need to keep looking into it and into other possibilities until they are able to locate or make contact with her. But it could explain the sudden quiet from the family and their urgency in locating her. And not many would publicly gush over their wonderful friend or family member, or want to answer tricky questions when it's probable she is living her best life far from Salida with her lover.
I don't want to believe she'd abandon her children but I don't know what their relationship is. It appears they are close but those pictures are able lie just as well as her photos with BM. I've known teenage girls who make me relieved I've got a boy, and who are vapid, entitled, self-absorbed and have no respect for their parents. Maybe they weren't very close?
I see this mentioned often. It is because of BMs initial reaction or lack thereof that people are suspect of him. His immediate flex with a fistful of dollars and silence for so many days is what is fueling this fire. Add to it the bizarre 26 second video, guardianship, LE's actions and theBBM
snipped for focus
I have no idea how I would react in a similar position. I can say that if I were being accused all over the internet of murdering my loved one, and I was innocent and haven't been named a POI, that I would be scared to death to speak publicly.
We have a media thread FYI - discussion of the chatty fire chief took place in an earlier thread - he has quite a lot to say but now? Not so much ...I have read through a lot of posts, not all, and could not find this information before posting. BM alibis may stand up if Suzanne was killed before May 10th and he had a job already lined up for May 10th. Driving out to the job could have helped him to hide the evidence.
‘Pacing around, staring out windows’: Chaffee County Fire Chief addresses questions about missing Suzanne Morphew’s husband Barry Morphew
It is absolutely possible that her helmet was placed on her head. Just like the bike was placed where it was found. If so, and if it is still on her head, I hope that makes the likelihood of her being found greater. That would indicate, to my mind, that someone felt a narrative of abduction while biking would clear his involvement. That person might not fear her being found, if LE believed a particular timeline of specific events, the Mother's Day bike ride obduction. I'm trying to be hopeful that she will be found. MooAbout the pictures used on the posters and banners:
What if LE found that she was last seen with her helmet (bike, etc) just as described and pictured? That may be one of the things canvassing officers will share with the people they speak with in person.
I know this is getting annoying to hear this, but to say it again; just because LE hasn't announced it, doesn't mean it didn't happen. There are likely many "its".
I'm spending the weekend in a nearby town to Salida - about 25 miles away. About one in five shops in the downtown area have a SM missing person flyer (8.5 inch x 11 inch). I find these flyers small and for someone not familiar with the iconic image of SM in the bike helmet, one would have no idea it's a missing person flyer without walking up close to read. I asked a local shopkeeper who brought her the flyer and she said she thought it was a friend of one of the SM/BLM children. The shopkeeper said something to the effect that the flyer was delivered recently. Two years ago I had family trip to Iowa one town away (15 miles) from Brooklyn, IA about a month after Mollie Tibbets went missing. It was like night and day - most of the storefronts in this town in Iowa had large (probably four times larger) Mollie Tibbets missing person posters and I saw a few cars (and even commercial trucks) on the nearby interstate (I-80) had Mollie Tibbets flyers or posters on them.
The contrast is really interesting- does this seem like the public does not believe she’s missing and they should be on the lookout ? I think soBBM - I posted this last evening. And, after taking a more accurate accounting of how many shops on the main street in this "sister" town to Salida about 25 miles away have a SM missing person flyer posted, it's actually 4 out of 40 shops. (1 in 10). All the flyers are the same...no reward mentioned. Interestingly, on a bulletin board on the side of a building, a flyer was posted (not a missing person flyer) that read "IF YOU SEE SOMETHING SAY SOMETHING. Please stay vigilant within the "xxxxxxx" community and call in any suspicious activities to the "xxxx" police department at "xxx-xxx-xxxx" I'm not saying any of this means anything...these are just curious observations I've made that contrast with what I saw in Iowa a month after Mollie Tibbets disappearance. By the way, I'm not a local to this area (or Iowa), just a person who enjoys visiting the area just like someone from the east might visit the shore or a favorite lake destination for the weekend.
It is surprising that nobody has made any public statement- neither of the daughters, none of his family, none of her family, no friends, or anybody; except shortly after the event one nephew who has since gone silent.
That’s unfortunate. It would seem that loved ones would do more to generate interest in her case. Humanize her. Explain why it’s imperative to find her: “Two-time cancer survivor who beat the odds with two kids who need her.”
It is surprising that nobody has made any public statement- neither of the daughters, none of his family, none of her family, no friends, or anybody; except shortly after the event one nephew who has since gone silent.
Unless you are fb friends with SM, you won't be able to tell for sure, because of her privacy settings.From Suzanne's FB, Feb. or March 2019.
Speaking of that perfectly good foundation, on what strong premise could LE have gotten a SW? We know they didn't find her body so they wouldn't have told a judge they have strong evidence her body is there. I wonder what convinced a judge to sign a SW. Of course, I'm assuming there was a SW.Respectfully, my opinion is quite the opposite. Even if not for her daughters (who are way too young to be dealing with this), she has siblings, and friends, and a church family, etc. If LE suspected she ran away, they wouldnt have dug up a perfectly good foundation looking for evidence. Jmho.
Speaking of that perfectly good foundation, on what strong premise could LE have gotten a SW? We know they didn't find her body so they wouldn't have told a judge they have strong evidence her body is there. I wonder what convinced a judge to sign a SW. Of course, I'm assuming there was a SW.
We don't know if they did find something tho but obviously not enough for an arrest.
jmo