H.E. and the M's (specifically SM & SM's phone) are linked together in this case. Even if one surmises that somehow either SM or TM or both went to HE's apartment and did something to her there and then transported her, her cell phone, and her car to PTL, they're still linked together in time and space.
Then you have cell phone pings which can show movement. HE's cell phone was pinging showing movement to PTL and calling SM's cell phone. Still linked in time and place.
It doesn't matter if the defense suggests something happened to H.E. before she got to PTL -- that doesn't absolve the M's since they remain linked together to H.E. by video (truck on video seen at a few points), time (verified with phone calls and pings between SM's cell and H.E's cell), and HE's cell phone movements (not to mention her call to her roommate in FL which verifies H.E. was alive at that time and had confirmed she got a call from SM).
The only change is if one of the M's rolls over and blames the other, claiming it was that one who did something to H.E. and they knew nothing about it. Otherwise, they're in this together.
If a jury is considering this case they will easily infer, using just common sense, that H.E. and the M's encountered each other that particular night and H.E. is missing and deceased.
There was a post that noted we don't know for sure whether or not it was Heather in control of her phone as the morning progressed, and I disagreed with a subsequent remark that whether she was or wasn't is irrelevant at trial. So, there is a difference between saying that who had control of Heather's phone and when could be an issue concerning timeline and crime scene, and arguing that the M's and Heather didn't have contact that night/morning, or Heather isn't dead. A jury can 'know' the M's did it, but not be able to square the state's claims under a reasonable doubt standard, particularly if the state's timeline is viewed as untenable, or other claims aren't stacking well.
In regard to pings, neither LE or the state have released information about pings. There was a rumor that the last ping from Heather's phone was at PTL, but it was never publicly substantiated by LE. The carrier records are what LE used to determine overall phone activity, and GPS indicated Heather's phone/car location as referenced by police. If they also obtained ping information, they've kept it to themselves.
FWIW, here is some interesting food for thought on cell phone information and what it can tell LE:
http://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/what-your-cell-phone-cant-tell-the-police
I also wanted to respond to your post #666 in this link concerning the location of the murder:
http://www.websleuths.com/forums/sh...VIDENCE-Pro-and-Con-2&p=12073890#post12073890
I strongly disagree that language in a probable cause warrant such as Heather was "kidnapped and murdered at Peachtree Boat Landing on December 18, 2013" is a figure of speech a layperson can't understand. The state's case is predicated on a claim that there were phone exchanges that led to Heather driving to PTL at a particular time, and being kidnapped and murdered at that location. The state's speculation and claims of what occurred that early morning abruptly end there. For the state to potentially say later at trial that they didn't really mean the 'actual' murder took place there is not going to fly. Such a broad interpretation - on which a judge's signature on a probable cause warrant was obtained - reminds me of that graphic going around Facebook where a grinning Bob Ross (the late painter) is working on a landscape and the caption reads: "Ever make a mistake in life? Let's make them birds, yeah, they're birds now."
If the murder didn't 'really' take place at PTL, the state can't say in a trial 'let's make it another scenario...yeah, it happened another way, and our probable cause claims were just 'happy little mistakes'.
I have no doubt that a jury can infer the three parties encountered one another, just as we figured it out before we even saw the warrants, but the state still has to make the case under a legal standard, and the defense is not going to be silent about the PTL claim. So, in addition to my question of whether or not this case will see trial, I'd like to know along with PeterThomasFan, why do they believe she was kidnapped and murdered at PTL? If there's a reason besides it's the only place they can reasonably argue that all three parties were together, I'd like to hear the reason. But it looks to me like PTL is where the murder happened because they don't know where, when, or how, and hey, her car was parked there, right?
Let's make it a murder scene, yeah, it's a murder scene now....
JMO