So they commit extortion? I mean anything is possible I guess but imo it seems less likely and if it is actually a real tip, this person is not that astute either jmoIn criminal cases offering rewards, what is the typical time it takes for the person offering the tip to receive the reward? Maybe this tipster is impatient and doesn’t want to wait for a government payout.?
Amazon has been known to deliver at some strange times.
You’re treating the video as proof of a complete timeline. It’s proof of activity at the house at a certain time. That’s not the same thing. If her last confirmed drop off isn’t verified, that’s a gap. And in any investigation, timeline gaps matter.How would this "never made it home" scenario work given the video evidence of a person intending harm later in the night at the house?
Maybe the snitch doesn’t want to be interviewed by police, go to a court case, etc, because the snitch is a criminal, too!How odd, since there is already a reward out there...
She made it home, though. Phone, watch, pacemaker are all connected and LE tells us she was at home. This isn't questionable. If you choose not to believe LE, then go with whatever pie in the sky suits you.Yes, it matters. If she didn’t actually make it home, then her last verified location was her daughter’s house. That would significantly impact the timeline and could suggest the events started there, not at her home. Confirming that detail isn’t backward-looking, it’s critical to understanding the case.
Harvey Levin on Foxnews right now saying they got a note from a person claiming to have info on NG and asking for bitcoin to reveal it.
Why not take the $50 and be done.
Well how would a random person even know how to contact the family? Very interesting detail in that post.
The snitch is definitely a criminal now if they weren't before. IMOMaybe the snitch doesn’t want to be interviewed by police, go to a court case, etc, because the snitch is a criminal, too!
JMO
I had a subscription to nest for 60 day cloud storage for over 3 years. Cancelled my subscription to nest for over 6 months. A neighbor had their house broken into. So I renewed my subscription. As soon as I re-subscribed 60 days of past feed showed back up automatically. My next door neighbor at the time was a police officer. They used the feed to apprehend the suspect. Caught his truck on my camera. I didn’t know at the time the past 60 days would be restored like that. And that was about 4 years ago. Not saying they still do this. My camera played out about 2 years ago and opted to install a better security camera system. I thought I read above it was a Ring camera and not Nest. Either way I’m sure if google has the ability to do that with nest. Amazon with Ring should have the same capability (IMO). What I’m not sure of is. I originally had the 60 day subscription. And that’s why it loaded the past 60 days. If I had had like a 30 day or less if it would have gone back to that instead of the 60 days. If that makes any sense at all. On the other hand I was great full I could help my neighbor although that wasn’t the reason for re-subscribing. Didn’t know at the time that would happen. Just a surprising added bonus. But was honestly weirded out by the fact it was still recording to the cloud after subscription was cancelled.Ezviz cameras have local SD storage. Nest cameras do not.
Thrift stores like Goodwill are jam packed with clothing donatedJust wondering what everyone is thinking about that jacket. Has anyone ever seen one like that before? It doesn't appear to be a current fashion from what I can see on Google. In fact, I haven't been able to track down on similar. However, I do recall seeing my Polish friend's husband wear something like this.
Maybe if we can help LE identify the jacket--and the jacket is on the rare side--but it will lead to identification when it was purchased?