- Joined
- Feb 24, 2013
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- 75
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- 475
Sounds like they are getting warmer!Yeah, sounds like his phone number was scooped up in a tower dump or geofence warrant and he checked several boxes that made him a worthy line of inquiry.
Sounds like they are getting warmer!Yeah, sounds like his phone number was scooped up in a tower dump or geofence warrant and he checked several boxes that made him a worthy line of inquiry.
Understandable and respectful. iMO a lot of this going into circles over male or female or seeing things or not seeing things…fills time but IMO I’m not sure if it’s worth itI'm feeling that remorse today too Inthedetails.
Its a really uncomfortable feeling. The click and refresh, click and refresh. I think regardless what comes in the next few days, I'm going to step away regularly and just let the investigation unfold and not be so caught up in each step. And remember the real families living this, not reading about it or watching videos about it.
It made me think of an Elaine quote from Seinfeld, I think she said it to a tv exec - "Russell, you're part of the problem". I feel like that today![]()
I've been thinking about something similar, that perhaps they meant to take her to an ATM, but something happened and she passed away, then they dumped her and only learned the next day that she was the mother of someone rich and famous, hence the delayed ransom note which would only have been an afterthought. But this theory doesn't explain all the LE activity on the streets near AG's home, so maybe some piece is missing still.My leading theory
my leading theory is still that they wanted her to withdraw or transfer a large amount of money and were ignorant of her medication needs and she died while in their possession.
What are her medication needs? Other than blood thinners?My leading theory
my leading theory is still that they wanted her to withdraw or transfer a large amount of money and were ignorant of her medication needs and she died while in their possession.
I want to have faith in the talented women and men of the FBI but lord it seems like Kash is bungling this.
The kind of tip they're probably hoping for would be something like "A guy I work with has a backpack like the guy in the video and he hasn't come in to work for a week."Yeah there’s just not enough information for the general public to make an ID.
If it’s a successful tip it’s going to have to come from someone that knows the person intimately.
And maybe that tipster that called in did have a close relationship with the person detained. Could just show how hard it’s going to be to ID this guy
Amen sista! Not too long ago I saw the same conclusion drawn about tips received in another high profile case. Some felt the police should arrest the person based on the tip. That's not how "proof beyond a reasonable doubt" works.Calling in a tip doesn't mean the FBI should run out and arrest someone. It's called INVESTIGATE.
Honestly, the case got to me the minute I heard about it. It is tragic that they still haven't found NancyiMO some people are stating to let this case get to them
I'm not a fan of Patel, but I've seen no evidence that he is bungling this particular case. I liked the communication from the sheriff, but he has really crapped the bed with the CSI. Missed cameras, prematurely releasing the scene, etc.I want to have faith in the talented women and men of the FBI but lord it seems like Kash is bungling this.
The official statement said it was local LE detained him (I’ll try to find it). But they wouldn’t do it without FBI knowing would they?I am wondering the same thing....
I am trying to read as many "breaking news" reports as I can.... TRYING to find the WHY of this detention.
Was this done, specifically, by FBI?
It said ‘lost connection’ at 2.28am so that implies they have data that shows connectivity up to this point, which is probably based on the Bluetooth connectivity history on the phone.I don't think we should assume she was home at 2:28am. It is common for pacemakers to transmit data only once per day and usually in the middle of the night according to this pacemaker monitoring company: Remote Monitoring: Frequently Asked Questions - PaceMate®
So the pacemaker monitor reported that it was not able to connect at 2:28 am because that's the standard time each night that the monitor tries to connect with the pacemaker. She could have been gone much earlier.
They're checking every tip and on the day they releas images one is on the move south, not difficult to think they're gonna want to check it out in a bit of a panik.He lives in that area. 'Uh oh, that guy someone said had too pretty of eyes for a delivery driver just turned south!"
That's right. Detained and released was the correct protocol. Released doesnt' mean "cleared".Calling in a tip doesn't mean the FBI should run out and arrest someone. It's called INVESTIGATE.
Thank you!
LAVANDERA: And Jake, we spent some time this afternoon speaking with the sheriff. He told us that Uber driver had been interviewed. It was a female driver, that they had seen video from inside the car that everything appears to be fine. It does not appear that driver is going to be a suspect in any way.
Right. I just want to be clear about one thing here, though. There are two possible conclusions people could take from "you'd have to be a real expert to pull off a successful crypto ransom."Yes. A true crypto “expert” would not have a BTC ransom sent to an address where it sits for more than milliseconds. News reports indicated a small deposit was made into the wallet and had not been moved. That’s a rookie move. Tells me this person doesn’t understand that art and speed of remixing crypto. A true expert would have already written a program to instantly move any deposit made into wallet A into a crypto remixer (such as Monero) where decoy transactions are used to confuse the trail. Or… so I’m told![]()
To be clear, while it was happening there were major news outlets saying police believed there was a major break in the case and that they don’t want to say more to jeopardize the investigation. NBC broke into the Olympics to report on it. It seems like LE indicated to media off the record they thought they had something big. It’s not necessarily our fault for believing something big was occurring.Such a wild pendulum swing here from “the dude police say isn’t a suspect is totally the guy that did it!” to “They only went off of his eyes???”
We have no idea what police have or don’t have, and breathless speculation is not fact.
JMO
Probable cause is the standard for an arrest, not BARD.Amen sista! Not too long ago I saw the same conclusion drawn about tips received in another high profile case. Some felt the police should arrest the person based on the tip. That's not how "proof beyond a reasonable doubt" works.
This is exactly my thought.Interesting. That would explain why it took so long to send any ransom demand (if it was the same people, ie not the hoaxer one) - it was Plan B.