Does anyone know the context of this tweet re: prior calls to law enforcement by KG (or lack thereof)?
Does anyone know the context of this tweet re: prior calls to law enforcement by KG (or lack thereof)?
That statement is crazy important. Coroners see death every day, and law enforcement sees horrible things on a frequent basis, too. There is something about this crime that is so heinous that the first thought that comes to mind is these people are going to be irreparably harmed mentally.
This must have been a rough crime scene, so incredibly sad.
No, but makes me wonder if she was the "target". May have gone to clearing a boyfriend?Does anyone know the context of this tweet re: prior calls to law enforcement by KG (or lack thereof)?
There are people on Twitter, who think that they know who did it based on a baseball cap. It’s ridiculous, and it’s the kind of thing that’s going to get somebody sued for libel.Does anyone know the context of this tweet re: prior calls to law enforcement by KG (or lack thereof)?
Nothing linkable. But I could guess that would imply no reports of a harassment, vandalism, peeping, assault, concerns, or problems this year.Does anyone know the context of this tweet re: prior calls to law enforcement by KG (or lack thereof)?
Gotcha. Thank you.There are people on Twitter, who think that they know who did it based on a baseball cap. It’s ridiculous, and it’s the kind of thing that’s going to get somebody sued for libel.
IMO the email tip line is great. This happened in a college town, very close to the college campus on a weekend night. Most people out and about that night in the bars at parties etc are of a certain age.It's easier for people to pick up the phone and call but they may not have the staff to work a tip line right now.
That's scary! My husband sleeps through those types of things as well. He slept through me *screaming* at him to wake up because my dog had eaten a raisin (he was fine -- but dogs aren't supposed to eat raisins. Poor thing had to be given vomit-inducing medication because I am a worrier). I had to physically shake him to wake him up.I see that posters have been debating whether people could sleep through a terrible crime. I used to believe there was no way people would sleep through murders in their own home, until November, 2009 when an incident occurred at my house (thankfully NOT a crime). Here's my story, which completely changed my thinking about sleeping through loud and terrible events.
My husband and I bought a dining room table and sideboard in September, 2009. The sideboard had a fairly large tempered glass top, with metal circles embedded in it that screwed into 2 supporting metal legs. Husband is a big and strong dude who always overtightens screws. So when he overtightened the screws, he unknowingly caused major tension in the glass.
Flash forward to November, 2009, 2 months later, 11 p.m. at night. Husband fell asleep in my 3-yr-old's room upstairs while reading to him. He's snoring; son is sleeping hard. I'm lying in the master bedroom upstairs across the hall from my son's room reading a book, with a large 100-lb lab sleeping next to me. I hear a really, really loud sound of glass cracking and crashing, followed rapidly by a massive boom that SHOOK THE ENTIRE HOUSE. It was coming from the dining room, directly under where Husband and son are sleeping. The ENTIRE HOUSE SHOOK! The noise was unbelievably loud. After the crash/boom, I heard a crunching noise and what sounded like trickling water. Apparently this is what tempered glass sounds like as the pieces crack and then split. I walked into the hallway, listening to the noises, expecting my husband to come running, while trying to figure out what happened. I totally forgot about the glass sideboard, and the only other glass in that room is the dining room window. Combine that with what sounded like someone or something walking on the glass and crunching it, and then the water trinkling sound, and I concluded that a deer jumped through the dining room window, walking around in the dining room while bleeding out. (I know, I know, sounds crazy, but it was the only way I could explain the water sounds along with all the rest, and we were surrounded by a wooded city park, so not too crazy).
My husband continued to sleep and snore through this entire episode. I had to physically shake him to wake him up, panicking slightly and telling him he had to get the dying deer out of our house before it destroyed anything else. He was completely confused, stumbled into the hallway, rubbed his eyes, heard the crunching and trickling sounds, and then said, "I don't want to go down there." Every feminist bone in my body disappeared as a yelled "You're the man of the house, get that deer out!" He tiptoed down the stairs, peeked around the wall into the dining room, and said, "It's not a deer." I then followed, and we spent over an hour trying to clean up the glass. My dog never left the bed.
So after this longwinded story, I can now attest that, depending on where you are in your sleep cycle and how tired you are, you can sleep through anything; my husband and son did. I've found that alcohol adds another level of sleep/unconsciousness that can also result in not hearing anything (personal experience there, not that I'm proud of it).
If the two roommates were on another level, and/or in a deep sleep phase, I can understand why the murders didn't wake them up. I feel terrible for them. I hope the police were able to remove them from a part of the house without their deceased friends. All my opinion and personal experience, and sorry for the long post.
It's easier for people to pick up the phone and call but they may not have the staff to work a tip line right now.
The two roommates who escaped death while their four friends were knifed at their off-campus house are DM and BF both 21Unfortunately, the names had been making the rounds before. Poor women. This is awful in countless ways.
I wish they could do a text tip line but if they posted a phone number people would call it. If they only have one person available to work the phones then people may not stay on hold if they were to get a busy signal. An email tip plan is okay but some people may prefer anonymity.I suspect college age kids would feel more comfortable sending a tip by e-mail than phone call, hence the e-mail tip line.
This is rough, I had no idea that there could even be the potential of increased traffic to the area. I know the theory is floating around that the murderer was a stalker / SM follower, but this really seems to me like a random violent attack (IMO) and this at least makes this more possible than it might be normally (this, meaning, increased out of town traffic to the area).Wow booked back in March, I saw WSU close by on the map and from mention herein and with a home game also in Moscow vs. UC Davis on 11/12, all hotels (and there is not many) both locations had to be full capacity. With a potential timeline of 4-6AM perp leaving the crime scene, I was thinking along the lines of possible sighting on camera of of anything unusual in appearance of persons returning to a hotel at this hour, many possibilities of course, but this is one I thought of and at that TOD probably not too many returning to their room.
I had a similar incident several years ago. I had a bookcase in front of a water main turn off in my basement. I put wheels underneath the bookcase in order to make it easy to move back-and-forth. I then proceeded to load up the bookcase with books and knickknacks, including two large jars of shells from various trips to the beach.I see that posters have been debating whether people could sleep through a terrible crime. I used to believe there was no way people would sleep through murders in their own home, until November, 2009 when an incident occurred at my house (thankfully NOT a crime). Here's my story, which completely changed my thinking about sleeping through loud and terrible events.
My husband and I bought a dining room table and sideboard in September, 2009. The sideboard had a fairly large tempered glass top, with metal circles embedded in it that screwed into 2 supporting metal legs. Husband is a big and strong dude who always overtightens screws. So when he overtightened the screws, he unknowingly caused major tension in the glass.
Flash forward to November, 2009, 2 months later, 11 p.m. at night. Husband fell asleep in my 3-yr-old's room upstairs while reading to him. He's snoring; son is sleeping hard. I'm lying in the master bedroom upstairs across the hall from my son's room reading a book, with a large 100-lb lab sleeping next to me. I hear a really, really loud sound of glass cracking and crashing, followed rapidly by a massive boom that SHOOK THE ENTIRE HOUSE. It was coming from the dining room, directly under where Husband and son are sleeping. The ENTIRE HOUSE SHOOK! The noise was unbelievably loud. After the crash/boom, I heard a crunching noise and what sounded like trickling water. Apparently this is what tempered glass sounds like as the pieces crack and then split. I walked into the hallway, listening to the noises, expecting my husband to come running, while trying to figure out what happened. I totally forgot about the glass sideboard, and the only other glass in that room is the dining room window. Combine that with what sounded like someone or something walking on the glass and crunching it, and then the water trinkling sound, and I concluded that a deer jumped through the dining room window, walking around in the dining room while bleeding out. (I know, I know, sounds crazy, but it was the only way I could explain the water sounds along with all the rest, and we were surrounded by a wooded city park, so not too crazy).
My husband continued to sleep and snore through this entire episode. I had to physically shake him to wake him up, panicking slightly and telling him he had to get the dying deer out of our house before it destroyed anything else. He was completely confused, stumbled into the hallway, rubbed his eyes, heard the crunching and trickling sounds, and then said, "I don't want to go down there." Every feminist bone in my body disappeared as a yelled "You're the man of the house, get that deer out!" He tiptoed down the stairs, peeked around the wall into the dining room, and said, "It's not a deer." I then followed, and we spent over an hour trying to clean up the glass. My dog never left the bed.
So after this longwinded story, I can now attest that, depending on where you are in your sleep cycle and how tired you are, you can sleep through anything; my husband and son did. I've found that alcohol adds another level of sleep/unconsciousness that can also result in not hearing anything (personal experience there, not that I'm proud of it).
If the two roommates were on another level, and/or in a deep sleep phase, I can understand why the murders didn't wake them up. I feel terrible for them. I hope the police were able to remove them from a part of the house without their deceased friends. All my opinion and personal experience, and sorry for the long post.
It's easier for people to pick up the phone and call but they may not have the staff to work a tip line right now.
This is a small town and I believeif IIRC, in the coroners intereview posted in the last thread, she indicated she had been involved in a multiple homicides before, but not in one where all the bodies were in one place. I imagine they don't see the horror that say City LE might witness or the crimes of larger towns.That statement is crazy important. Coroners see death every day, and law enforcement sees horrible things on a frequent basis, too. There is something about this crime that is so heinous that the first thought that comes to mind is these people are going to be irreparably harmed mentally.