I said it mattered whether it took 5 minutes or 50 minutes (which are numbers that I just made up to represent something that would be a short and something that would be long) for the silver car to arrive and you responded back that you had no time frame, so that's why I responded back using the example I had previously given to show that it mattered. The longer it takes the silver car to arrive after EN calls, the less probable a one-trip scenario is. I'm not saying whether the silver car arrived quickly, moderately or took a long time, just that we don't know when and it matters in balancing out what most likely happened.
I agree with this.
That's definitely a possibility. If the Buick spotted EN around the time he was getting in the car, that would mean EN had left the park and went by the school and across the street, which isn't to say it didn't happen, just that would be a pre-requisite step to EN being at the location where BM saw him.
Well.... as you pointed out earlier, we have to be careful not to take all of the statements in the warrant as being 100% true and accurate. BM's statement says that after the roundabout trip involving Cimmaron, Westcliff & Buffalo, they spotted the silver car on Ducharme at Sam Jonas. I'm not sure I buy that roundabout trip, and that would mean the location of the silver car at Ducharme & Sam Jonas is also suspect. I think the cars first interacted with each other somewhere in the vicinity of the park & school, but I'm not convinced that it happened in any specific location -- just that it happened somewhere around there.
It's entirely possible that if Brandon (and any other Meyerses in the car with him) set out to "get" EN that night, he told the story of the roundabout trip as a diversion -- if they were driving around over on Cimarron & Westcliff, doesn't that make it look less like they were out to "get" EN? Thereby making them look less guilty of instigating the incident?
I think the stories were made up on the spur of the moment as needed, and fleshed out later as needed. That would mean they're not always going to make perfect sense, and they're going to be a mix of truth and falsehood.
I'm about 100% certain EN is the shooter, but I actually believe
his story of the chase and shooting more than Brandon's. EN was telling his friends about it, and in a context that indicates he wasn't trying to lie or hide what he did. BM was talking to cops, not friends, and he was trying to minimize his responsibility for what happened that night.
I agree he called someone nearby geographically, but that doesn't mean the person immediately went there. We don't actually know what EN said to get the ride, which for all we know EN didn't want to lose his potential ride by tipping off they'd be going into a potentially hazardous situation if they got him, so the driver could have dawdled taking his time to leave instead of going into emergency mode. I think it took no more than 20 minutes for the silver car to arrive, but I haven't closed off the idea of later times.
Agree, this makes sense. Or, depending on how worried EN was and how big of a hurry he was to get out of there, he might have called several friends until he found one who could there fast.
On the basis of no evidence whatsoever, I tend to think the whole thing, from when the Buick set out that night to the shooting in the cul de sac, was over in a fairly short period of time. That's just my feeling -- MOO and all that -- and I'm not claiming that any detailed timeline supports it.
