Denise Hess, a longtime family friend who worked tirelessly on efforts to find the missing teenager, suggested it would be more appropriate to rename a park in Bayfield for the boy.
“Dylan was murdered and put up there, and I don’t feel like when we go up there that is something we want to be reminded of,” Hess said. “I don’t want to go up there and say, ‘That’s where he laid for seven months.’”
The U.S. Board on Geographic Names oversees the naming of geographic features. The process to rename a feature is a long one, requiring extensive geographic information, community support and biographical information of the person to be commemorated.
Maybe the perp did use shoelaces. But MR would have better tools at his disposal seeing that Dylan was at his home. So if the perp did use shoelaces, that points to a perp other than MR, imo.
Maybe the perp did use shoelaces. But MR would have better tools at his disposal seeing that Dylan was at his home. So if the perp did use shoelaces, that points to a perp other than MR, imo.
Do we know that both shoelaces were found? If so, were they tied together? Its just so strange to me that very few bones were found but both shoelaces in the same area! What are the odds of that!?!
L I think there is a fundamental and functional reason to show the remains to a parent who was last seen with the child. It serves to gauge reaction and to possibly gain more information into the psychological and subconscious reactions that trained professionals can notice. Am I alone in this approach?
I believe that all we know of the non-bone items came from an interview with Mark Redwine. There is no mention of them being knotted, but that is something I have speculated on as explaining the LE conclusion of homicide and the finding of both laces.
http://www.denverpost.com/breakingn...edwine-remains-found-middle-mountain-colorado
"Investigators also found a piece of the boy's shirt, one sock and his shoestrings but not the backpack or other items he had when he went missing, [Mark] Redwine said."
The discrepancy is that MR claimed they found a particular set of bones and a piece of a shirt, a sock, and shoestrings (plural). A recent MSM news article instead claimed that a shirt and a shoe had been found, but there have been no other reports like that. I have always thought the shirt and shoe report was just terribly sloppy reporting, mis-remembering what MR had divulged (which we still don't know is the actual set of items found since LE has never released that list).
I've also always thought it odd that the shoestrings were found but no shoes. Someone pointed out that shoes are often leather and the animals might well eat them. If so, the soles would still be somewhere, but perhaps more difficult to find. I still find it odd that the laces wouldn't have gone with the shoes. So, that leads me to speculate that the laces may have been removed from the shoes and used by the perp.
Completely off topic, but anyone know why my cat licks my toes? I'm a dog person and this cat behavior is freaking me out a little....sometimes he pounces on my foot like it was prey except he licks.
Completely off topic, but anyone know why my cat licks my toes? I'm a dog person and this cat behavior is freaking me out a little....sometimes he pounces on my foot like it was prey except he licks.
He has a foot fetish!![]()
Completely off topic, but anyone know why my cat licks my toes? I'm a dog person and this cat behavior is freaking me out a little....sometimes he pounces on my foot like it was prey except he licks.
Is this new behavior in an adult cat or consistent behavior since he was a juvenile? Any time you get new behaviors in an adult cat I think it's worth a talk to the vet. Cats do weird things when they don't feel right. If he's always done it, it's probably just how he bonds with you, like a cat family would bond.
ETA my cat attacks my older son's legs as he walks by, if he doesn't get played with enough. Kind of a "pay attention to me now!" Thing
Completely off topic, but anyone know why my cat licks my toes? I'm a dog person and this cat behavior is freaking me out a little....sometimes he pounces on my foot like it was prey except he licks.
O/T I found this:Completely off topic, but anyone know why my cat licks my toes? I'm a dog person and this cat behavior is freaking me out a little....sometimes he pounces on my foot like it was prey except he licks.
Long time lurker and other than posting on whether or not I loved my job, this is my first real post. I listened to the show with MR and TG not too long ago as well as DR's mother's interview and personally felt a disconnect between the two regarding urgency and passion for this young man's disappearance. Hearing this news not only saddens me but increases the well of anger I feel any time I read or hear about cases such as these. This is, of course, only my opinion and anything I say here is based upon my own emotional and mental capacities of reason and logic which do not always coincide perfectly. I suppose most people feel there is more to the story when it is found that a parent was the last to see a child and cannot give (or will not) give more detail. To me, the parent, is the responsible party as they are the adult in charge. Off that soapbox, sorry. I think there is a fundamental and functional reason to show the remains to a parent who was last seen with the child. It serves to gauge reaction and to possibly gain more information into the psychological and subconscious reactions that trained professionals can notice. Am I alone in this approach?