heartgoesout
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Maui News has article up. Mileka Lincoln's testimony.
Finally got time to read the article for Wednesday.
http://www.mauinews.com/page/conten...cribes-different-Capobianco-alibi.html?nav=10
Was there no court today?
What I find significant from Cass is that he had a plan for Sunday evening he told her about Saturday night and again Sunday at 5 pm, where he set up a thing he was going to do that would be work and keeping him off Skype. The faux story being to work on his friend's truck.
The fake story doesn't matter. What matters is he planned it. He planned something physical and out of touch by phone that would take a block of time. This does not at all sound like a plan to meet Charli and have a talk. For that he could do a cover story of hanging with friends, but instead it's a job using tools that he plans. And afterwards, his hands are a mess, and that fits with the fake story he made up in advance of working on a vehicle. So he knew and laid the groundwork for something where he might show some wear and tear.
No question in my mind he planned violence and murder. I think this should make an impression on the jury. It really does away with the likelihood that they met to talk and things got out of hand, and he lost his temper and hurt her. He planned it.
right, certainly no arrangement to work on a truck. Ride to work would only be if he had planned his alibi, not because he actually needed the ride, so it does nothing for him even if it happened, but agree most likely all these stories are made up.I believe it will come out that there was no working on anybody's truck or rides to work on Monday. Lie's to Cassafrass...lie's all around
Doubtful because once you turn off Kalipo the road gets busier. Once past 5 corners you are good till AlohaAina and then busy again and then still having to cross Hana Hwy.
People would hhave remered a doorlesss 4 runner driving down the road
Yes, drugs and sex are about the only candidates for a lie that would protect her, and he was so candid about hookups with her that reluctance to talk about sex is not too likely to sell.I think the big lie is going to be they met regarding drugs and he didn't want to get her in "trouble".
Changes nothing. Lots of people meet for drugs that doesn't end in a heinous murder.
If that is the big lie, maybe we'll get a whole new set of his movements.
I agree with your point. The lack of doors would be noticeable to cross traffic at an intersection but not so much from facing or behind. Just FYI, moon that night was approaching the full moon on Friday the 14h, and was in the sky from before sunset until after 3 AM; depending on which night it was. But of course rain can negate the moon.
Are we sure that it wasn't MPD that removed the doors? There was a long discussion here at the ime about how the only pics published were from the police yard and none at the site. I know some parts were removed, but did we ever hear doors?
I still don't think Nala was ever driven to Nahiku. There was no time and no reason to go to Nahiku, it would take unnecessary time and would be added risk of exposure . I think Nala was let out of the on the side of the road to Pee, and left there. And then someone found him wandering on the side of the road and took him to Nahiku. If that person wasn't Mr. Young and he did indeed find him on Monday morning, it's very possible that whoever found Nala figured they would drop him off in a more populated area. That type of dog is highly prized on Maui, Nala looked to be in great condition, healthy, a very nice specimen of a dog . Then Mr Young took him home, and it was only when he realized that it was a dog associated with the missing woman that he brought the dog to the authorities. I'm not saying he's a bad guy, but he never called the animal control. Anyone who owns a nice dog like that would surely want someone to call animal control so it could be reunited with its owner . I'm sorry to say but I believe he intended to keep the dog . That's what makes me question if his account of where and when he found the dog is entirely true . Does anyone know if Nala had tags? Was registered?
At 1 o'clock in the morning the Hana police station is not open. He brought that dog to the officers house, and the officer then took the dog to the station ( this I know for a fact ). Mr. Young claims that he was woken up at 1 AM by a neighbor telling him about the dog, says that he drove it to Hana police station (it is a 20 minute drive from the top of Nahiku road to Hana police station), The officer or he called Charli's family, and his testimony is that the family picked the dog up at 1:30, as reported in the Maui Now article. It's probably not intentional, but Mr. Young's timeline is off somehow, because he wouldn't even get into Hana town until almost 1:30, and there's no way that anyone can drive from haiku to Hana and could've gotten there by 1:30. It's an hour and a half if you know the road REALLY well, with no traffic.
This gives Steven a lot more time in the Keanae area.
That's a really interesting theory, Alohaj.I still don't think Nala was ever driven to Nahiku. There was no time and no reason to go to Nahiku, it would take unnecessary time and would be added risk of exposure . I think Nala was let out of the on the side of the road to Pee, and left there. And then someone found him wandering on the side of the road and took him to Nahiku. If that person wasn't Mr. Young and he did indeed find him on Monday morning, it's very possible that whoever found Nala figured they would drop him off in a more populated area. That type of dog is highly prized on Maui, Nala looked to be in great condition, healthy, a very nice specimen of a dog . Then Mr Young took him home, and it was only when he realized that it was a dog associated with the missing woman that he brought the dog to the authorities. I'm not saying he's a bad guy, but he never called the animal control. Anyone who owns a nice dog like that would surely want someone to call animal control so it could be reunited with its owner . I'm sorry to say but I believe he intended to keep the dog . That's what makes me question if his account of where and when he found the dog is entirely true . Does anyone know if Nala had tags? Was registered?
At 1 o'clock in the morning the Hana police station is not open. He brought that dog to the officers house, and the officer then took the dog to the station ( this I know for a fact ). Mr. Young claims that he was woken up at 1 AM by a neighbor telling him about the dog, says that he drove it to Hana police station (it is a 20 minute drive from the top of Nahiku road to Hana police station), The officer or he called Charli's family, and his testimony is that the family picked the dog up at 1:30, as reported in the Maui Now article. It's probably not intentional, but Mr. Young's timeline is off somehow, because he wouldn't even get into Hana town until almost 1:30, and there's no way that anyone can drive from haiku to Hana and could've gotten there by 1:30. It's an hour and a half if you know the road REALLY well, with no traffic.
This gives Steven a lot more time in the Keanae area.
Nala was found between 7:00 - 7:30 AM Monday morning. Mr. Young did not find out it was Charli's dog until late Monday night/early Tuesday morning.
But you are right, and I had noticed, too that the time between when his neighbor woke him up and the time the family picked Nala up seemed off.
That's a really interesting theory, Alohaj.. Appreciate the local knowledge. You make a convincing case that Young meant to keep Nala. He should indeed have called Humane Society. Especially as microchipping is the way they reunite dogs and owners now, and a finder can't know if there's a chip. Has to be scanned. So anyone trying to do the right thing should immediately get the dog scanned.
I have two reservations about the dog not being found in Nahiku.
1) the consequences of maintaining really important false evidence at trial seems huge to me. I would think that sometime in two years he might confess to the fib in order to avoid perjuring himself in court.
2). There are ways around this, but I recall Kim stated at the time that Nala would not leave a conscious Charli. So being let out to pee I wonder would the dog have been quick to jump in a stranger's truck? Wouldn't the dog feel he should stay where Charli last was?
In the Marketplace story, the dog has been abandoned all night, so at that point it makes a bit more sense to go with a stranger. It is a good theory. The original story only makes sense because of how Steven is about treating dogs well. Apparently it would bother his conscience to hurt Charli's dog, but butchering fetus is acceptable. Smh
So maybe the phone records will tell us if any phone went to Nahiku. What are the towers between Honomanu and Nahiku, do you know?
I don't recall seeing that the dog had been abandoned all night, was that posted somewhere or it's a theory? Again if the dog is out alone all night, it rains almost every night in Hana, and even more so in Nahiku, Nahiku gets even more rain than Hana and it's often raining in Nahiku when it is not raining in Hana... So the significance of the dog being totally clean and not muddy, if true, is a very important fact.
More great points. Noted, the dog was anxious. Maybe just separation anxiety, maybe witnessed harm to Charli. The Scotts described Nala as dopey back then, said Zoe was the smarter and more sensitive of the two. Nala was relatively new to Charli and not well trained. I remember reading a comment from Steven that he disapproved of Nala's behavior and thought Charli wasn't training him well.Sometimes, self-preservation is very strong. This is a man who kept someone else's dog for two days . As I said, it is very possible that he actually did find the dog in Nahiku Monday morning. We do know that the dog was said to have not shown any dirt or wear, and yet that additional two hours it would take to bring the dog to Nahiku and return makes no sense. If Steven was going to take the time to bring the dog somewhere, wouldn't it make more sense to bring him up to her house? Or at least somewhere in that area ? That would take a lot less time, and be much kinder to the dog, since we know he loves dogs . He also could have kept the dog in the vehicle that he used, whether it was his or hers, while committing the crime, & after she was already dead and possibly disposed of, as he's Leaving the Keanae area he leaves the dog off somewhere near Naai'ula Bay. I'm sure Nala is a fine dog as everyone says, but if the dog was hiding under a vendor table and then going out to traffic and running back that morning, as Mr. Young said he was in testimony, that dog was obviously spooked. That does not sound like a dog that is in a confident, calm Condition. Perhaps he was spooked wherever he was dropped off also? Traumatized? Just ruminating on possibilities that might make more sense.
I am getting confused, lol. At various times, both the news media and people involved have stated the wrong days.
Nala was found Monday morning, and the news of him being found was definitely Tuesday night, so Young had him a day and a half (or more if fibbing).
As a timeline test, remember Kim called the police late Monday night, and she called the news stations the next day out of frustration. The first coverage of missing Charli on news begins Tuesday night, with the search of Hana Highway areas in full progress Tuesday day. Young's friend could not have known about the missing woman and seen a pic of her dog until Tuesday.