MO MO - Ricky McCormick, 41, St Louis, 30 June 1999

  • #901
First time trying out this kind of investigation, i made some notes based on context clues. This is probably the most facinating case i have ever seen

(mnDnvwEAesE-w[or n]-s-TA-v-w[or n]-v w[or n] A R E) (ACSm)
TFR N[or w] E N i t N[or w] S E N[or w] P &[or R] S E R c B R n[or w] S E p[u, or v] P R S E I N[or w] C
PRSE N m RSE BPREHLD wLDN[w] CBE(TFXLC[E] TCXLw cBE)
AL-PRPPIT XYPPIYwcBEmGKSEWcDRcBRwSGPRSEWLDRCBRwSEwT56NE10TXSE-CRSLE-CLTRSEWLDwCBE
ALWcPwCBETSmELRSERLSEvRGLSw-EASNW-DNcBE
(NoPFSENLSRENCBE) NTEGDDmNSENCURERCBRwE
(TEwE TFRNE NCBRTSENCBE ING)
(FLRSE PQSEONDE71 NCBE)
(CDwSEPQsEDNS0E 74 NCBE)
(PRtSEPRSEONREDE 75 NCBE)
(TF NGcmSPsoLEmRDELUSE TOTE WLD NCBE)
(194 WLD's NCBE) (TRFXL)

ALPNTE GLSE-SE ERTE VLSE m7's E-CTSE-WSE-FRTSE
PURTRSEONPRSEWLD NCBE
NWLDXLRcmsP NE WLD STS me XL
DULmT 6 TuNSE NCBEXC

(muNSA 1 STENmu NARSE)
KLSE-LKSTE-TR SE-TRSE-mKSEp-mRSE
(SAE 6 NSE SE NmRSE)
pmN RCBRNSE PTE 2pTEwsREBKe 3 E
26 mLSE 74 SPRKSE 29KENOSOLE 173R 7 RSE
35 GLE CLGSE ouwuTXEBKRSE PSESHLE
651 mTCSEHTLSEN CUTCTRS NmRE 99.84.5 2uNEPLSEUCRSEAOLTSEwSKSENBSE
NSREONSE PUTSEWLDNCBE (3XaRL)
BNmSE NTSE INR NTRLERCBRNSE NTSRCRbNELSPNSENG-SPSE mLSERBESGweBEAVXL'R
HmCRENmREpCBE 1/2 muwPPLSE
D-w-m/4 HPL XDRLX

notes:
NCBE seems to be used as an object or something simmilar that can be counted

"WRLD's" is probably also a object that can be counted and probably bought

strangely "m7's " is also plural based on what i can tell from the actual writing. Its quite hard to tell though as the writing is quite messy

I could be wrong and probably are but hopefully one day someone cracks this
 
  • #902
First time trying out this kind of investigation, i made some notes based on context clues. This is probably the most facinating case i have ever seen

(mnDnvwEAesE-w[or n]-s-TA-v-w[or n]-v w[or n] A R E) (ACSm)
TFR N[or w] E N i t N[or w] S E N[or w] P &[or R] S E R c B R n[or w] S E p[u, or v] P R S E I N[or w] C
PRSE N m RSE BPREHLD wLDN[w] CBE(TFXLC[E] TCXLw cBE)
AL-PRPPIT XYPPIYwcBEmGKSEWcDRcBRwSGPRSEWLDRCBRwSEwT56NE10TXSE-CRSLE-CLTRSEWLDwCBE
ALWcPwCBETSmELRSERLSEvRGLSw-EASNW-DNcBE
(NoPFSENLSRENCBE) NTEGDDmNSENCURERCBRwE
(TEwE TFRNE NCBRTSENCBE ING)
(FLRSE PQSEONDE71 NCBE)
(CDwSEPQsEDNS0E 74 NCBE)
(PRtSEPRSEONREDE 75 NCBE)
(TF NGcmSPsoLEmRDELUSE TOTE WLD NCBE)
(194 WLD's NCBE) (TRFXL)

ALPNTE GLSE-SE ERTE VLSE m7's E-CTSE-WSE-FRTSE
PURTRSEONPRSEWLD NCBE
NWLDXLRcmsP NE WLD STS me XL
DULmT 6 TuNSE NCBEXC

(muNSA 1 STENmu NARSE)
KLSE-LKSTE-TR SE-TRSE-mKSEp-mRSE
(SAE 6 NSE SE NmRSE)
pmN RCBRNSE PTE 2pTEwsREBKe 3 E
26 mLSE 74 SPRKSE 29KENOSOLE 173R 7 RSE
35 GLE CLGSE ouwuTXEBKRSE PSESHLE
651 mTCSEHTLSEN CUTCTRS NmRE 99.84.5 2uNEPLSEUCRSEAOLTSEwSKSENBSE
NSREONSE PUTSEWLDNCBE (3XaRL)
BNmSE NTSE INR NTRLERCBRNSE NTSRCRbNELSPNSENG-SPSE mLSERBESGweBEAVXL'R
HmCRENmREpCBE 1/2 muwPPLSE
D-w-m/4 HPL XDRLX

notes:
NCBE seems to be used as an object or something simmilar that can be counted

"WRLD's" is probably also a object that can be counted and probably bought

strangely "m7's " is also plural based on what i can tell from the actual writing. Its quite hard to tell though as the writing is quite messy

I could be wrong and probably are but hopefully one day someone cracks this
I think “WLD” is the key here. It is used repeatedly as WLD with NCBE almost always after it. It only once appears as a possessive with “194 WLD’S NCBE” at the end of the notes
 
  • #903
I'm studying speech pathology and not much of a investigator, sleuth, whatever you want to call it... but I figured I should put my thoughts down just in case someone else can make anything of it, even if I can't. I'm sorry if this ends up being a whole lot of nothing or a whole lot of repeated information.

I suspect if the note is written by Ricky, it is written in a form of AAVE native to St. Louis. The biggest pointer is the comment cited in news articles by his mother: "The only thing he could write was his name. He didn't write in no code." It is also possible that he was dyslexic, which could complicate things a lot further.

I find the use of dashes and brackets extremely interesting. They seem to be the only grammatical clues available outside of the potential of E being used as a word/sentence break.

The incidence of "SPRKS" on the Notes page might be a red herring, but I noticed Ricky's mother's maiden name is Sparks.

I'll also add to a few previous comments here in that WLD and NCBE are extremely interesting, but the occurrence of X - and generally XL together - has my interest especially piqued, given X's relatively uncommon nature generally. It might be an important contextual clue.

Good luck with this one y'all, I really hope some sort of resolution is reached eventually, even if it's something as simple as directions or a shopping list.
 
  • #904
I'm studying speech pathology and not much of a investigator, sleuth, whatever you want to call it... but I figured I should put my thoughts down just in case someone else can make anything of it, even if I can't. I'm sorry if this ends up being a whole lot of nothing or a whole lot of repeated information.

I suspect if the note is written by Ricky, it is written in a form of AAVE native to St. Louis. The biggest pointer is the comment cited in news articles by his mother: "The only thing he could write was his name. He didn't write in no code." It is also possible that he was dyslexic, which could complicate things a lot further.

I find the use of dashes and brackets extremely interesting. They seem to be the only grammatical clues available outside of the potential of E being used as a word/sentence break.

The incidence of "SPRKS" on the Notes page might be a red herring, but I noticed Ricky's mother's maiden name is Sparks.

I'll also add to a few previous comments here in that WLD and NCBE are extremely interesting, but the occurrence of X - and generally XL together - has my interest especially piqued, given X's relatively uncommon nature generally. It might be an important contextual clue.

Good luck with this one y'all, I really hope some sort of resolution is reached eventually, even if it's something as simple as directions or a shopping list.
Welcome to Ws @LuteAndLyre, thank you for the very interesting interpretation of the note!
 

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
91
Guests online
2,306
Total visitors
2,397

Forum statistics

Threads
632,718
Messages
18,630,891
Members
243,273
Latest member
M_Hart
Back
Top