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- Dec 7, 2019
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I don't recall hearing back, so maybe you'll have better luck.I was just going to submit him but checked here first. Great minds think alike.
I don't recall hearing back, so maybe you'll have better luck.I was just going to submit him but checked here first. Great minds think alike.
Nothing beyond the generic 'We'll forward this to LE' message.Did you guys ever hear back?
I don't think it's the same Gil, he was just listed as missing from 1969. The obit reads Gil died in 2004. WOndering what he was doing for 2 years the case reads: Circumstances of DisappearanceGil Leite was reported missing by his wife on 12-15-1968. He was last seen in Hartford, CT on 12-11-1968 or 12-12-1968 (at a bar called "Barn") but it's possible he returned to Bloomfield after that. Leite has had no contact with family or any activity since the date he went missing.
I think it should be reported as a match.
The more that I think about this, the more I think the watch was a gift. The man had sewn undies, a paste ring, and other signs of "modest means." Who wears something very expensive with otherwise meager clothing? People who got it as a gift. From someone who vacations in or lives in Portugal.
I believe it’s all in here, but I can’t access again because paywall. It listed a few things like that. His underwear had been mended with a needle and thread. Amongst other things. I think his shoes were fake leather or something, I cannot recall. A Case So Cold the Dead Man Wore Pajamas Under His Suit (Published 2016)I missed where it says he "had sewn undies".
What are "the other signs of modest means"?
MOO JMOO
My impressions of this individual is that he is definitely Portuguese, recently arrived in the US. He could be from Portugal or Brazil, Canada or the Azores. I favour either Brazil or the Azores. An interesting bit of trivia is that the word 'galoshes' is an Azorean Portuguese word for shoe.
I believe it’s all in here, but I can’t access again because paywall. It listed a few things like that. His underwear had been mended with a needle and thread. Amongst other things. I think his shoes were fake leather or something, I cannot recall. A Case So Cold the Dead Man Wore Pajamas Under His Suit (Published 2016)
SBM & BBM
It's not an Azorean Portuguese word. It's a Portuguese word derived from the french "Galoche". We actually spell it "Galochas" and we use the word in continental Portugal too!
I don't see him wearing galoshes though... or "galochas" (rubber boots). I wonder if he was wearing spats instead and LE misnamed them galoshes?
MOO JMOO
Galoshes is a perfectly good US English word. It means those rubber rain shoes or boots that pull on over your regular shoe, or sometimes just worn directly over the foot.
Thanks @carbuff ! Was my english that broken???
I know what galoshes are. I just don't see them in the photo. Our UP seems to be wearing only shoes. My question is, could he be wearing spats instead and LE misnamed them?
MOO JMOO
What photo are you looking at?
Namus says he was wearing "Black leather shoes (size 8.5), gray socks, black rubber overshoes (Medium) with label "Wings" made in Canada."
For that matter where did anybody say he was wearing galoshes?
What photo are you looking at?
Namus says he was wearing "Black leather shoes (size 8.5), gray socks, black rubber overshoes (Medium) with label "Wings" made in Canada."
For that matter where did anybody say he was wearing galoshes?
If he was actually a drug courier, as one of the articles suggested, he could have been anywhereIf this is him, which I think it's very possible, then what in the world was he doing for 2 years?? Did he travel to Portugal or Brazil and got that watch??
This photo: https://static01.nyt.com/images/201.../04CRIMESCENE3-jumbo.jpg?quality=90&auto=webp
The galoshes are mentioned here :A Case So Cold the Dead Man Wore Pajamas Under His Suit (Published 2016)
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