I hope LS finds out the time and the location of BM and JP seeing each other on the Saturday.
If in the morning, interesting.
If later in the day, interesting.
Salida jobsite? Makes sense to me. (Is Salida the working-locally-for-the-next-four-days location AM related? BM, saying he was setting up in Denver/CS for his workers so he could work locally the next four days. What else was BM expected to do in Salida? More than just the backfilling? Did BM have reason to want to pull whoever was working in Salida and relocate them to another site? His vehicle and cellular data will be fascinating. Painful but fascinating.)
JMO
I agree with you, he's going to do what he feels comfortable with. Though I think a shovel is much quieter than a machine.Well if Barry used his phone for check in, that means he had his phone with him. Damned if you do... Regardless of the method, Barry’s presence would be recorded and time stamped unless he had someone else check him in. In which case, they are recorded in one way or another. It’s the darned digital footprint.
I think Barry is a construction/landscaper guy first and a hunter second. I see him excavating and burying, not hacking his wife into little pieces or throwing her into a wood chipper.
Ok, I didn't know the door registers when you leave the room (don't use the key card to leave).They'd have a pretty good idea when you left the room (if not the property) for the last time based on keycard access records.
It's so easy to talk the talk re hunting. I could sit around and talk about my .06 and compare it to a .300 caliber, and I've never killed a game animal. (bad eyes from birth but great mental osmosis from hunting camps) Unless a person has actually been hunting with the IMO bragger, there's no way to tell, ie even from a full rack on the wall derived from a road kill, (which I don't believe anyway, no one would leave that rack behind if it were worth collecting and I don't think it was a road kill).sbm
I think Barry is a construction/landscaper guy first and a hunter second. I see him excavating and burying, not hacking his wife into little pieces or throwing her into a wood chipper.
Well done!And look I used paragraphs!![]()
That makes sense—I can’t imagine bleach not at least damaging DNA. But any of us who follow true crime surely can think of all the times a killer uses bleach to clean up, but then luminol shows smeared blood everywhere. It’s not magic to making blood itself go away like many seem to believe.I think the bathtub soaking of something (in bleach) and then wiping that something off with towels is one of the tidier explanations.
I am not convinced LE has the actual towels used, as they would have been tossed in the laundry at the hotel by Tuesday night or Wednesday after JP left - I don't think JP had interacted with the FBI at that point.
I do think LE has looked into the drains, etc., of that room - but belatedly.
Some here have said that bleach doesn't destroy DNA - but it does if it is used directly and in strong enough solution. It breaks the bonds that hold the DNA together. It doesn't destroy hemoglobin proteins, but it can destroy/wreak havoc on DNA.
Effect of luminol and bleaching agent on the serological and DNA analysis from bloodstain - ScienceDirect
Species determination from remaining blood can apparently still be done, but profiling to whom the DNA belonged may be seriously inhibited by the use of (household) bleach.
Other chemicals work better, it's true - but bleach can do considerable damage to DNA evidence.
Given LE's early suspicions, I think they were at the Denver hotel very quickly. Is it possible JP was still there, waiting on BM, tools and work?
Maybe we'll find out in Lauren's interview tonight.
Believe it or not, this is no longer true. It's been about 4 years since I was able to bypass the traditional front desk check-in (and check-out). Use my phone app for elevator access, unlock doors, etc. This YT is dated Nov 2014.
Lolyou could always get someone ELSE who worked for BM to check in for you, too, like another employee, perhaps a woman, that was supposed to be there for the "job" fixing the wall. if she was an employee, surely they would have let her sign into a room early, if her name was on the list of workers.
Well if Barry used his phone for check in, that means he had his phone with him. Damned if you do... Regardless of the method, Barry’s presence would be recorded and time stamped unless he had someone else check him in. In which case, they are recorded in one way or another. It’s the darned digital footprint.
I think Barry is a construction/landscaper guy first and a hunter second. I see him excavating and burying, not hacking his wife into little pieces or throwing her into a wood chipper.
IMO- For all we know, perhaps BM actually DID leave cash for JP in the hotel room. He was quoted as saying he was paid. Maybe this is why JP stuck around for 2 days - paid to sit around and wait for the job.
We check in at the front desk, get our key cards. But leave them in the room at check-out, no one would know when we left, but for the cameras.
Most hotels these days have exits onto the parking lots.
How soon was his phone in the possession of LE? Might be why there was no further communication between BM and JP.
Makes no sense to use a hotel room for bleaching tools and then direct LE to it. But then murdering your wife lacks all sense.
LE will know when he entered and left that hotel room. I speculate he left early in the morning on Sunday (though I can't fathom where he went -- did he perhaps complete the Bloomfielf job -- and was, in fact, working?).
He AND his tools go to jobsite Sunday. Before leaving, he leaves room key at the desk, says he's got his crew coming, requests housekeeping. Which because of Covid/staffing may have gotten skipped! Would explain why he left the room as he did. Towels, trash, housekeeping would handle all of that. Maybe he hoped the chlorine would dissipate naturally. Had JP entered a spotless room, with fresh towels, no trash, bet he'd have thought nothing of the excessive smell. Covid, you know.
This compresses the timeline for me.
Something bad happened on Saturday, after 12:30... quite a few daylight hours to plan. CYA. SOMETHING happened at 11:30 at the jobsite. Risky. Calculated risk, necessary enough. What we DON'T know is whether those heavy equipment sounds were limited to that 30 minute period. As others have noted, it may have taken time for the neighbor to awaken fully to the noise. It also could've recommenced later, unheard.
I can't not hear "got herself in the river" and not go to a bad place.
We know what equipment the firecamp has. We can imagine what equipment a hardscaper might have. We don't know what equipment might naturally have been at the jobsite. To dig, to push, to clear, to mulch.
There's a reason the hotel was in Bloomfield. And not Grand Junction or Denver proper or Pueblo or any number of Colorado cities. I think he needed to be in Bloomfield. Perhaps as part of a legitimate contract.
Might've had a room already booked. Apparently he talked to JP on the Saturday about it....
Call for a late check in. Arrive at 2-3 in the morning. Cart in tools. Bleach the life out of them.
It's possible he thought he was in the clear.
Did the worst of it under cover of night.
Free up Sunday to work like a horse. I'll be really surprised if he was anywhere near that hotel room all day -- or had any reason to believe JP would find it in the condition he left it.
And the "family emergency", perhaps it was TOO SOON to identify the nature of the emergency, waiting to see what direction the day would take it.
Regardless, it was an impossibly busy 24 hours for someone.
By his own admission about remembering things, he wasn't right in his head.
JMO
There was UT businesswoman missing in Florida in Jan 2020, and this is when we learned that most hotels now know every time you enter and exit your room-- including when the door is propped open. It's all digital evidence today.
(I previously believed hotels had digital evidence when your electronic key used to enter your room but confirmed they also have record of guests exiting room which does not require use of key).