Chris_Texas
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- Joined
- Apr 22, 2011
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Chris: hope this link works better! :innocent:
http://www.nhregister.com/articles/2011/08/27/news/doc4e5906f273ec0673281342.txt
BBM! #1. Saturday 8/27/2011 was the date the body was discovered, the date of death is undetermined as of this posting.
#2. OH yeah!
IBM/U Here's the point of this issue IMHO: it is the obligation of members of any profession to give the public the FACTS as they can be established vs hypothetical thoughts. :innocent: Given any death scene, there are general lessons or information points that can be shared with the general public as in "please keep aware of your surroundings at all times, travel with your vehicle's doors locked, park your vehicle in a secure/lit area.....etc" without providing specifics of a particular investigative case. :innocent:The other "danger" in death scenes is "jumping to conclusions" as folks who commented on the local area TV station report did! http://www.wtnh.com/dpp/news/new_haven_cty/suspicous-death-in-new-haven :maddening: BTW: I'm not willing to give the copywriter a break with the "headline" on the WTNH link, Hurricane Irene or NOT, that statement is/was baffling!
Let me see if I understand this...
In your opinion, in GENERAL (and setting aside the exceptions) if the facts of the case lead a professional to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the case was a homocide, it would be unprofessional or unusual to conceal this potential danger from the public?
Note: again, no one is accusing the professionals involved in this case of violating this. I am, in fact, arguing that they would NOT violate this. I believe that if they had evidence of homocide that they would inform the public, and that it would be really odd (at least) for them to conceal something like this from the public unless they had some damn good reason for doing so.