mom3dd said:
I have to weigh in on this one. I do not know who did this. I feel so troubled by this case. My heartfelt sympathies and prayers go to Michelles family.The husband is innocent until proven guilty.
He is not guilty because he retained an attorney.
Lie detector test are notorisly in accurate, and are not allowed in court.
So why do that one.
Then we only get the very limited news reports they like to sensationlize these things.
I would like to know if the husband did call Michelle and couldn't reach her and for business purposes needed to know if the fax had arrived. I know that my husband would call one of our daughters if he needed something and I wasn't reachable without a second thought. He works out of town and sometimes needs things that are at home.
Another tidbit I would like to know about is one article said someone was visiting Michelle & husband at the time the husband left to go out of town.
In this society the second thing I would do if something were to happen to a loved one is contact my attorney. Sorry folks but no one in the police or child protective services have your intrest in mind.
I feel for you, really I do. I was right there with you when Laci disappeared. I couldn't believe Scott could do it. I believed so many of the things he said, and wasn't really even suspicious of the fishing story at first (I know, I know).
No one here has the authority to pronounce the husband guilty, but we are going to speculate and sleuth like crazy. If you read back on the Laci archive, no one is safe from scrutiny (yes, some even suggested Laci somehow drowned accidentally or completed suicide!). We are going to pick apart the timeline and analyze every press conference, map, and blog posting. It's what we do.
As for the fax, I agree that my parents, in-laws, and brother would think nothing of asking me to run over to their house to pick something up or do an errand (and vice versa). The fax could go either way for me.
To me, more telling is the lack of forced entry, nothing being taken, the baby being untouched, the shaky alibi, and the possible problems in the marriage. And, the opinion of Michelle's family is not to be taken lightly.
You're right that polygraphs aren't admissable in court, but they are a standard tool to rule out a suspect. Why wouldn't you beg for one if you were innocent? It can't hurt you in court!
Hiring an attorney before you even see that your baby daughter is okay? Please. I would be able to think of NOTHING until she was in my arms. I would want to fly to her to console her and reassure her with the 2nd most familiar person in her life, not pass her off to relatives after the most traumatic event imaginable for a child. You would have to pry her out of my arms.