That's right Rocky.
As far as I know, they only searched the pond about 1/2 mile north of the crime scene at 12 brook Station Road.Oh, I thought they had searched the pond across the street.
Earlier on people were speculating whether the killer may have seen her at the restaurant the night before, in Worcester. Is that near his residence?
Earlier on people were speculating whether the killer may have seen her at the restaurant the night before, in Worcester. Is that near his residence?
I based my theory on that he had been stalking her for a while, therefore put some planning into this.I tried my best to convince you guys otherwise!The simplest answer is usually the best answer and most people are not brilliant.
As far as I know, they only searched the pond about 1/2 mile north of the crime scene at 12 brook Station Road.
You can see the pond from the road.If this pond is not near or visible from the road way this would shock me if anything at all was found in there because I would not expect a FedEx driver from Worcester to even know there was a body of water out there if it was simply in the middle of the woods.
Early on in the investigation when police believed it might have been someone very close to the scene who was very familiar with the layout of the land it might have made more sense to search those kinds of places. But now knowing the circumstances of the crime and the person who committed it it seems very unlikely to me that anything would have been turned up too far away from BSR
So, he could have seen her running earlier on during his FedEx routes.
Knowing that employees of UPS have to be bondable, I am assuming that Fed-x is the same. They don't hire people with criminal records. The Insurance companies dictate that.When I was trying to sort out in my head what a Hispanic guy would be doing for work in Princeton I really could not come up with anything that I felt was correct. I felt like if he was a member of a work crew like a landscaping crew or a roofing crew, that someone would have been aware of that group of people working on their neighbors house or seeing the trucks. None of that made any sense to me.
But now when I go back and analyze what the DA said it becomes eerily obvious -
dAs exact words were that this was someone who "was familiar with the broad geographic area". Who fits the profile better than a delivery driver ????!
It was right under my nose
Knowing that employees of UPS have to be bondable, I am assuming that Fed-x is the same. They don't hire people with criminal records. The Insurance companies dictate that.
Although now we know that he has no criminal background. we didn't then, and I was thinking although his DNA wasn't in the system, he still had run-ins with the law.
I would have never guessed a delivery driver from Fed Ex, due to these reasons.
If he had seen her running before, while working, possibly knew where she lived, and planned to go there to do this, it shocks me he would park in plain sight where he did for so long. That part is still difficult for me to get my head around.
But, I suppose FM could have been right earlier on when I think you said he may have tried to abduct her and she ran. Then I brought up her unexpected level of fight earlier on as well. So he may have not planned to be there that long at all , then circumstances led it to be that way.
He moved from PR to the US in May.yes absolutely in fact I would venture to say it is likely that he knew of Vanessa. She regularly ran there during the hours when he was driving. I know a few articles recently have said that she went for runs specifically on Sundays but from the old review of her running apps it is clear that she did not have a particular day that she ran. Runs on the app were completed on Saturdays Sundays Fridays Thursdays, She took long weekends in Princeton the previous September and ran just about every day that she was there. If it is known that he was working there for a period of months before this crime occurred I think it's a fair bet that he was aware of Vanessa. proximity to her home adds serious weight to this theory in my mind. I do get the feeling that he knew where she might be coming from. We know that he did not drive past her and then park there and act disabled because she was not out running yet when the witness first saw his car at the path. I don't think he was there just waiting for any random passerby.
I think that he punched her in the face, breaking her nose, and that stunned her enough for him to drag her down the path.Good points and yes, I would think this was initially a failed abduction. Could be wrong. But still lean that way.