But they have no motivation to target her. They supposedly didn't know her and had no direct connection with her, and lived a fair distance away (meaning they would not have known her incidentally either). Why would they have gone to all that trouble to abduct someone miles away that they didn't know for no apparent reason?
If they were targeting anyone, it was someone else and involves a connection that person is choosing not to share.
<BBM for Focus>
Tugela, although I honor and respect all opinions and theories. I'm at a loss as to why folks continue to introduce conspiracy theories and sleuth completely innocent friends, acquaintances, and family members in the tragic Holly Bobo abduction.. The writing has been on the wall since the early morning hours of 04/13/2011 as to the most likely scenario and motive for the abduction.
RE: No
Motive to target Holly;
Tugela, "there is a phrase you hear in addiction circles about meth; meth makes a good guy go bad, and a bad guy even badder. Most sexual predators/serial killers of late that I have researched, more often than not, there seems to be a common denominator of methamphetamine either directly or indirectly. It was not by accident that TBI Director Mark Gwyn compared Holly's abduction to the methamphetamine-related murders by James Christopher Tatrow, back in the 1990s.
<see link below>
Two effects of meth is increased labido, and an extreme unpredictably brazened and violent behavior..
The meth epidemic seems to be creating psychopathic personalities in otherwise normal law abiding citizens.
http://www.websleuths.com/forums/sh...-from-TN-2014-discussion-2-***ARREST***/page4
TN Senators convened March 11th, 2014 for a judiciary committee hearing to look at several bills aimed at curbing meth use in Tennessee, and
TBI Director Mark Gwyn shared some pains of the drug from the front lines of law enforcement. It’s relevant in this hearing because TBI Director Mark Gwyn said Holly Bobo’s murder kidnapping case has to do with meth. “I worked one of the first methamphetamine-related murders back into the 90s, where a guy kidnapped two young men, tortured them for seven days, killed both of them, threw them off into Center Hill Lake,”
Gwyn said. “Fast-forward to 2014, and I thought in my career that would be the only time I would ever see anything like that.”
Tugela, we have discussed on many occasions the probability that the perps in this case had many direct and indirect connections to Holly and the Bobo family over the years.. In small rural towns such as Darden/Parsons, TN, everyone knows everyone, or knows of them. I feel that it is obvious as to why the A-Train would travel miles away to abduct an unsuspecting innocent victim; 'jurisdictional linkage blindness'..
http://prtl.uhcl.edu/portal/page/portal/USN/TheSignal/Life?articleId=402
Steven Egger, associate professor of criminology at the University of Houston-Clear Lake, is a nationally recognized expert in serial murder.
Not only is it difficult to figure out why serial killers continue to kill, it is also hard for law enforcement agencies to identify a serial killer due to "linkage blindness," another term coined by Egger, in the 1980s. "Police don't share information across jurisdictional boundaries," Egger said. "There's always some friction there." Agencies prefer to worry only about their own jurisdiction, instead of sharing information to work together to solve a murder.
Egger says a serial murder investigation may, but not always, have as many as seven different crime scenes: the place the victim was initially lured, transportation to a different location, the place the victim was kept, transportation to another location, where the victim was killed, where the body was dumped, and where the weapon was dumped.
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Methamphetamine
Profile
Methamphetamine is a highly addictive and very potent central nervous stimulant, also known as "meth," "crystal meth," "ice," and "glass."1 A Schedule II drug, methamphetamine is an extremely powerful amphetamine. The effects are long-lasting, and users have been known to stay awake for days on end during binges; these potent stimulant effects are the reason the drug is often labeled as a "club drug."
http://www.cesar.umd.edu/cesar/drugs/meth.asp <snipped>