IMO a number of people following the case feel the same. For me personally, putting together all the little bits of information the family has released paints a picture of defiance, deflection and deception.
December 28, 2019 - the family writes that the swelling they observed in Evanna intensified during the latter part of that week, enough so that they "resolved" to take her to Boston to see the family doctor.
* Note they refer to the latter part of that week. December 3, 2019 was a Tuesday so were they talking about the prior week?
In that same post they wrote that "on the morning" of their planned trip to Boston Evanna woke up with her abdomen severely swollen. They decided to take her to the hospital instead. While making arrangements for a car Evanna collapsed and stopped breathing so Steve "instructed" someone to call 911. Also note that he told an adult sister who was "knowledgeable" in performing CPR to get instructions from the EMTs on the phone. Why? One knows CPR or they don't.
January 14, 2020 - a month and a half later. The family now reveals that what they referred to as "the morning" of the day Evanna collapsed was actually the afternoon. The adults liked to stay up all night and go to bed around 6 or 7 am. Evanna stayed up with them.
Why did they change the timeframe? IMO they tried to present it as a little bit of family eccentricity but I've never heard anyone else call afternoon morning under these circumstances and I'm a night owl myself.
The 911 call was logged at about 5:30 pm on December 3. If in fact events intensified on the morning of that day then what transpired until 5:30 pm?
12-year-old child's death under investigation in Columbia County
I understand that this is all speculation based on what the family has written; hopefully LE has the full picture. I also understand that facts sometimes do change as a case goes on - but that's when we're reading news stories written by reporters, not the actual family. All MOO.
*According to the family their doctor is a homeopath, a midwife, and the author of several "important" books, including one on vaccines.