SapphireSteel
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 13, 2012
- Messages
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I don't think lawyering up is a sign of anything, at all.
I do find the timing of the lawyering up to be significant, however.
A grieving parent will do absolutely anything for their child, including answering questions until the cows come home. They will stop people on street corners, engage strangers, knock on doors and search everywhere and talk to everyone they can possibly think of. And then they do it again.
We know of some poor parents who virtually stalk LE for the rest of their lives, trying to force them to reinvestigate their case, take it off the cold case list, folks getting in trouble running their own investigations, etc.
This sort of desperation for help is typical of grieving parents.
Calling the lawyers, in fact calling anyone at all not immediately affected by the death, within hours of finding your daughter deceased on your basement floor, is not typical behaviour, nor consistent with grief being the primary emotion.
I am always suspicious when "grieving" parties call attention to themselves, rather than their child.
In Jonbenet's case, LE had not even managed to interview the Ramseys to make them feel uncomfortable or victimised. They attempted to the next evening but their lawyer stopped them.
The only reason any lawyer would advise innocent clients to not cooperate from the get-go with the only agency looking for the murderer of their child would be....??????
:sick:
I do find the timing of the lawyering up to be significant, however.
A grieving parent will do absolutely anything for their child, including answering questions until the cows come home. They will stop people on street corners, engage strangers, knock on doors and search everywhere and talk to everyone they can possibly think of. And then they do it again.
We know of some poor parents who virtually stalk LE for the rest of their lives, trying to force them to reinvestigate their case, take it off the cold case list, folks getting in trouble running their own investigations, etc.
This sort of desperation for help is typical of grieving parents.
Calling the lawyers, in fact calling anyone at all not immediately affected by the death, within hours of finding your daughter deceased on your basement floor, is not typical behaviour, nor consistent with grief being the primary emotion.
I am always suspicious when "grieving" parties call attention to themselves, rather than their child.
In Jonbenet's case, LE had not even managed to interview the Ramseys to make them feel uncomfortable or victimised. They attempted to the next evening but their lawyer stopped them.
The only reason any lawyer would advise innocent clients to not cooperate from the get-go with the only agency looking for the murderer of their child would be....??????
:sick: