Kyron Horman Discussion Thread 2020 - 2022 - #2

  • #761
  • #762
  • #763
Happy 23rd birthday Kyron 🙏
 
  • #764
Posted: May 22, 2025


1757441015779.webp
 
  • #765
and Terri is still out walking around...living her life.
 
  • #766
I’ve experienced narcissistic and sociopathic family members literally lie for zero reason knowing the facts were clear. They don’t even care and keep putting forth the lies regardless…even with the proper can truth in their face. So it does happen in my experience and IMO TH could be doing this in f she is a narcissist and sociopath for no actual reason.
Terri is a narcissistic sociopath.
Desiree is a heartbroken mother who wants to find her child, and she knows Terri is guilty of disappearing Kyron.

<modsnip>
 
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  • #767
I'd describe her as sneaky and self-centered, with the tendency to use confusion and misdirection as cover to do whatever she wants and also a tendency to project blame upon others for her own poor choices and failures.

Examples: The miscommunication about the doctor's appointment was because the teacher is inexperienced and can't hear well out of one ear. TMH failed the polygraph because she can't hear well out of one ear (so took too long to process answers to questions). She sexted with a man - including sending explicit photos of herself - within 26 days of Kyron's disappearance because "Kaine did it first" (sexting someone) and LE was setting her up.

She has no shame and believes retaliation is justified when she believes she has been wronged.
Like Leticia Stauch.
 
  • #768
It is an absolute necessity that Oregon District Attorney’s prosecute Kyron’s case. Please have the Sheriff’s and Prosecutors, ask ( and perhaps they should have previously ) for outside training and help, if they cannot work these cases timely. This should never have gone cold.
It is not Doctor Phil’s, DateLine, 48 Hours and certainly not his beloved mother, friend's, the press, or help-groups to find justice in Kyron’s case.
Only the Oregon Prosecutors have the power to bring this case to court.

Justice is demanded and pleaded for. Please.

Jmo. Moo. Omo.
 
  • #769
The 15-year anniversary of Kyron Horman's disappearance recently brought this case to my attention, and it's just heart-breaking. I truly hope that one day Kyron can be brought home and his family can finally have some peace.

It's stunning to think that after 15 years, law enforcement hasn't officially named a single suspect. From a logical standpoint, it seems to boil down to a few key possibilities for why the case is stalled:

1. The "No Crime" Theory: Kyron simply wandered off and was lost to the elements. This feels unlikely. The search for Kyron was one of the largest in Oregon's history, yet they found nothing; no clothes, no trace.
2. The "Weak Case" Theory: They have a suspect, but the case is too weak to move forward. There isn't even enough evidence for an arrest ("probable cause"), let alone enough to convince a jury "beyond a reasonable doubt."
3. The "Long Game" Theory: Investigators are actively building a case against someone but are strategically waiting for a new piece of evidence, or for the suspect to make a mistake.
4. The "Unknown Suspect" Theory: This covers a stranger abduction or someone else who was never on the radar. Here, the problem isn't a weak case against a known person; it's that the trail went cold before they could even identify a suspect.

There's a mountain of circumstantial evidence against Terri Horman, but a good lawyer can create reasonable doubt for much of it. In my opinion, the whole case against her seems to hinge on one critical moment: the last time Kyron was seen. Did he leave the school with Terri, as some witnesses have reportedly claimed? Or did he stay at school, as her lawyer insists? This is a major contradiction, and both stories can't be true.

On top of that central conflict, there's a broader and deeply concerning pattern of behavior from Terri. The public record suggests a possible motive with her alleged anger towards Kyron, and the timeline she provided for that day has major inconsistencies and gaps. Further, her behavior after he vanished raises even more red flags: an oddly detached emotional state, failed polygraphs, using burner phones, etc. When you put it all together, the weight of this circumstantial evidence is hard to ignore. But the biggest problem persists: without any direct physical proof, the case is incredibly difficult for prosecutors to win.

After all this time, the case is stuck. Without a confession, new physical evidence, or a key witness finally coming forward, bringing Kyron home and getting justice feels like an agonizingly distant possibility. I really hope that's not how this story ends. Perhaps fresh eyes and new technology can uncover details that have been missed.
 
  • #770
Welcome to WS, Wiggins! the evidence is there...they have to start over..Terri is not a criminal mastermind...they need to go back to the very beginning.
..someone really smart can find the missing link in this case..it can be the smallest detail that just got missed or misconstrued. I hope to see her convicted...I wish Joe Kenna would take a long look at it and sign up to help solve it. mOO
 
  • #771
The 15-year anniversary of Kyron Horman's disappearance recently brought this case to my attention, and it's just heart-breaking. I truly hope that one day Kyron can be brought home and his family can finally have some peace.

It's stunning to think that after 15 years, law enforcement hasn't officially named a single suspect. From a logical standpoint, it seems to boil down to a few key possibilities for why the case is stalled:

1. The "No Crime" Theory: Kyron simply wandered off and was lost to the elements. This feels unlikely. The search for Kyron was one of the largest in Oregon's history, yet they found nothing; no clothes, no trace.
2. The "Weak Case" Theory: They have a suspect, but the case is too weak to move forward. There isn't even enough evidence for an arrest ("probable cause"), let alone enough to convince a jury "beyond a reasonable doubt."
3. The "Long Game" Theory: Investigators are actively building a case against someone but are strategically waiting for a new piece of evidence, or for the suspect to make a mistake.
4. The "Unknown Suspect" Theory: This covers a stranger abduction or someone else who was never on the radar. Here, the problem isn't a weak case against a known person; it's that the trail went cold before they could even identify a suspect.

There's a mountain of circumstantial evidence against Terri Horman, but a good lawyer can create reasonable doubt for much of it. In my opinion, the whole case against her seems to hinge on one critical moment: the last time Kyron was seen. Did he leave the school with Terri, as some witnesses have reportedly claimed? Or did he stay at school, as her lawyer insists? This is a major contradiction, and both stories can't be true.

On top of that central conflict, there's a broader and deeply concerning pattern of behavior from Terri. The public record suggests a possible motive with her alleged anger towards Kyron, and the timeline she provided for that day has major inconsistencies and gaps. Further, her behavior after he vanished raises even more red flags: an oddly detached emotional state, failed polygraphs, using burner phones, etc. When you put it all together, the weight of this circumstantial evidence is hard to ignore. But the biggest problem persists: without any direct physical proof, the case is incredibly difficult for prosecutors to win.

After all this time, the case is stuck. Without a confession, new physical evidence, or a key witness finally coming forward, bringing Kyron home and getting justice feels like an agonizingly distant possibility. I really hope that's not how this story ends. Perhaps fresh eyes and new technology can uncover details that have been missed.
I believe number 4 is the correct one. Too much attention has been paid to Terri which allowed the perpetuator to get away.
 

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