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To my mind, there is.
I am merely sleuthing here. Following my own personal logic.
I remember when LE first asked for the driver of the white van sighted at Caseys to contact them. The language they used was very strong. I regret not copying and pasting this (the articles have since changed) but they said the driver DOES have knowledge that will help them.
Not that he may know something, or that he may be a witness, or they want to eliminate him, but that he "has information".
The strong language may indicate their belief at the time that a white van was used, or at the very least the driver of that white van was in a place at a time that he was almost guaranteed to have seen something...but it turns out, he didn't.
I also factor in the potential staging of the bikes. It follows to me that a van of some sort was used, to easily transport them. This was a quick abduction, so no stuffing two bikes in one car, tying the boot closed, bouncing along the road with two bikes hanging out, just pick up and go. A van fits.
I believe this was extremely well planned, and that is one of the reasons we have no answers as yet. The perp thought of EVERYTHING.
:banghead:
:cow:
"Agents released surveillance photos of a man and a white van they were searching for on Wednesday evening."
http://www.kcci.com/news/central-io...15935448/-/v255tnz/-/index.html#ixzz259iqheko
I don't recall investigators claiming that the man they were seeking absolutely had information about the disappearance of the children. In fact, without knowing who the man was, they could not have made a statement that he had information about the girls. As it turned out, he knew absolutely nothing about the abduction.
All we know is that police requested that the owner of a specific van speak with them ... he did, and he is not a suspect.
Police have not released any information about the type of vehicle used in the abduction.