For sure i would of called 911 but in the moment..not sure.. she was moving fast. She was high. I would lay bets on that. I have been high too..so no judgement...do not think I listened well in the moment. Moo
I have not heard she tried to go inside the home but I could have missed that report, it's not on the video, she's in the yard, relatively far away from the home or any people. She yells across the yard asking for the woman to call her mother for her while the unknown men are saying she's crazy.The location where this incident occurred is in a rural area of Floyd County.
Folks living in rural areas of Eastern Kentucky are leery of strangers approaching their homes.
They are leery of strangers on account of the drug problem in that region. There have been incidents where drug influenced individuals have invaded or attempted to invade homes thought to be unoccupied when in fact the homes were occupied.
Now consider the fact that in this incident one evening an unknown person approaches the homeowner asking to use their telephone. And at the same time the homeowner also happens to see unknown persons nearby in a vehicle as well.
Now wouldn't you be suspicious if an unknown person comes to your home asking to use the telephone and you also see unknown persons nearby in a vehicle?
How is the homeowner supposed to know that the unknown persons aren't going to rob or invade their home?
I say that the homeowner did the right thing by making a telephone call for an unknown person rather than letting an unknown person inside their home. I can't blame the homeowner of being leery of strangers.
In my opinion, I believe that Kandi was trying to get away from someone and that she was in a frightened state when she approached the homeowner. I don't believe that she was a drug influenced or a mental person at all.
Right, if I'm reacting to my fear that this is possibly a home invasion, coherance isn't going to make me trust three unknown men with a truck.The young men were coherent
..she was not
Need to clarify, the woman on the video was not the homeowner. My understanding is she was at the home doing something that day and the homeowners were not there.Did the homeowner know the boys in the truck?
Who or what terrified her? Enough to run without her shoes or even her phone?If I'm honest, I don't think she's alive. But, I hope they find her remains in the forest she ran into. At least that way, hopefully she'll have died of natural causes and not be tormented anymore.
However, I hope I'm wrong, as it'd be reasonably easy to find your way to a road, listening for distant cars, wouldn't it? I'm unsure how big that forest is, and SAR didn't find her in there, despite finding a scent.
So, there is hope.
Where were these “boys”? Riding down the street or at another house?
Are they teenagers or adults?
I’d heard different stories so it’s hard to discern.
Did Kandi run up to them asking for help?
Was she running from someone? Or did she perceive danger (real to her) and just take off?
Everything you say is correct as far as I know.Need to clarify, the woman on the video was not the homeowner. My understanding is she was at the home doing something that day and the homeowners were not there.
The boys had an encounter with Kandi at another house where they were working and followed her. Someone please correct me if I'm wrong.
I've seen the long version and I don't think it is any better, the lady may have said the words "I'm trying to help you", but the tone says otherwise, same with the "boys", the tone in the way he says "hey there's snakes down there" after saying she's crazy sounds like taunting to me, not someone showing concern.Are we allowed to discuss the extended video that's on YouTube? Because the guy on there says that the three boys were on a moped not in a truck. And the lady on the phone clearly tells her that she's trying to help her but she needs her to tell her what's wrong, and then she runs off towards the creek and a guy says "hey there's snakes down there."