my_tee_mouse
Done. Put a Fork in Me.
- Joined
- Dec 23, 2008
- Messages
- 3,580
- Reaction score
- 38
Thank you!
I was taught that being deliberately evasive is the same as lying. And yet, she doesn't "really lie." She probably thought she was helping out her son by keeping the public from honing in on him. And yet, now it seems to have done just the opposite. Sigh. This is why it's best to tell the truth in the first place or just hush.
So...she didn't hear anything because she wasn't there to hear. She was probably told there was no party, but she doesn't state that she's relating what she was told...not what she knows first-hand. And she wasn't the last one to go to bed because she wasn't there to go to bed? Not "lying," just being "deliberately evasive," or so it would seem.http://www.cnn.com/2012/01/08/us/maine-missing-toddler/
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"During her interview with CNN, DiPietro said Friday that she "didn't hear anything" when asked if she heard any noise the night Ayla disappeared. She added that there was not a party at the house, noted she wasn't the last one to go to bed and said she wasn't sure whether the doors to the house were locked.
On Sunday, DiPietro said she wanted to make clear that she wasn't home the night Ayla disappeared and that her information about what happened that night came from others."
I was taught that being deliberately evasive is the same as lying. And yet, she doesn't "really lie." She probably thought she was helping out her son by keeping the public from honing in on him. And yet, now it seems to have done just the opposite. Sigh. This is why it's best to tell the truth in the first place or just hush.