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What would make this case a federal case? Is it just because she was not supposed to be in the state?
What would make this case a federal case? Is it just because she was not supposed to be in the state?
If Brittanee were my child and I knew beyond any and all doubt who did these things to her, there would be no trial for them. The trial would be for me. And the only question would be .. will they convict.
Seems to me that with a case this size that the "witness" would have been taken for a country ride to ID the "stash house" and a search warrant subsequently issued would lead to a crime scene discovery. Alligator pit sounds like a bad Tarzan movie IMO.
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Munoz told the court that investigators have searched several alligator ponds to no avail. He said investigators have been told that the area is peppered with as many as 40 of these ponds. Investigators also have searched the stash house, the agent testified.
What would make this case a federal case? Is it just because she was not supposed to be in the state?
Federal prosecutors obtained indictments in June charging DaShaun Taylor, 25, with interference of interstate commerce by threat or violence for his involvement in a 2011 robbery of a Mount Pleasant McDonalds restaurant. Taylor was the getaway driver while two others held up the restaurant, one wounding the store manager with two non-life threatening gunshots.
Taylor confessed, cooperated with authorities and was sentenced to probation, which he has successfully completed. The gunman got a 25-year sentence and the other robber got six years, suspended after serving 10 months.
Under federal law, prosecutors have the authority to bring parallel charges when federal laws are violated along with state laws. They often did so during the civil rights movement, bringing rights violation charges against people freed from or not charged with state law violations.
What makes this case unusual is that the federal charges against Taylor involve virtually the same evidence as in the McDonalds robbery for which he confessed and that he has long since completed his state sentence.
The federal charges, which include use of a deadly weapon, carry a potential life sentence.
I think that the answer to this question is contained somewhere within the quote:
It's kind of confusing the way they word it. It sounds like Dashaun was charged with something unrelated to Brittanee's case, but the reason they sought him out was directly related to Britt.
The inmate,Taquan Brown, also implicated a father and son from McClellanville, SC, near where Brittanee’s last cell phone ping was traced.
The articles I've read were quite ambiguous about her departure from Myrtle Beach too. One would think words like "abducted" and "taken against her will" would be used...but they were not.
I don't know if the FBI is unsure of the circumstances for that aspect of it, but the wording of it almost makes it seem like she voluntarily took a ride. I can't imagine she did, but I'd be interested in hearing more how that reportedly went down.
The more i think about this iam seriously disgusted when is the last time you heard something like this .This might sound wiered but for me part of me is more pissed off in them holding her hostage rather then what they did to get rid of her remains .I can picture her cowering in a corner while these SOB drink get high laugh all the while someone when they feel like it could do anything they wanted to her .Even the people that did nothing but simply seen her tied up and god only knows what they were doing but I strongly believe the people that came and seen her but didn't participate there just as bad maybe even woarse for not saying something to police .H ow the hell would one of those guys that seen britt and did nothing how they could sleep at night is unreal if u ask me.....
In the transcript, Munoz testifies that the inmate, Taquan Brown of Walterboro, told investigators he went to a stash house in the McClellanville area in the days after Drexel was abducted. As he entered the house with a couple of other men, he saw Timothy DaShaun Taylor, then 16, sexually abusing Brittanee Drexel, the agent said.
The FBI agent gave the following account of what the inmate said happened next:
He spotted others also in the room with the girl and DaShaun Taylor, and he kept walking through the house to the backyard to give some money to DaShaun Taylors father, Shaun Taylor.
As the two talked, Drexel ran from the house. She was pistol-whipped and taken back inside.
Two shots rang out and the inmate assumed Shaun Taylor shot the girl. Then the girls body was wrapped up and taken away.
Asked what happened to the girls body, the FBI agent testified that it has not been found but that several witnesses have told us Miss Drexels body was placed in a pit, or gator pit, to have her body disposed of. Eaten by the gators.
I've always wondered about this, and I can't imagine she'd willingly enter a vehicle driven by the elder Taylor, but driven by a 16 year old? Perhaps.Yes, I would like to know more about that too.
I am very surprised to learn that a 16 year old kid may have taken her. I don't see her going with them willingly but I can see her trying to just be cool, hoping they let her go at some point. I'm sure she really just had no idea what to do