margarita25
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Yes it was/is an absolutely heartbreaking case, margarita25. A statement made by retired FBI BSU/BAU pioneer; Roger L. Depue, always comes to mind in abduction cases with such a tragic ending as Kathylnn Shepard's; My work has given me a profound respect for what humans suffer at the hands of evil, and a particular sensitivity for what its victims endure. During every investigation that I participate in, there is always an invisible observer at my shoulder, whose presence I never forget. Regardless of the circumstances of a case, I am always giving voice to its silent victim.
What must this young girl’s final minutes have been like? Did she cry out while he was repeatedly stabbing her, or keep silent, breathing like a wounded animal, watching for the next glint of a blade? Did her thoughts turn to her parents in those final seconds, when she was overwhelmed by the deepest loneliness she had ever known? Did she experience a dissociative response, the sense of drifting upward and watching her own death as if from above? Or did she sink mercifully into unconsciousness, and feel nothing as her life ebbed away?
<respectfully snipped for clarity>
BBM
Foxfire, in Jessica Ridgeway's case, I think about how it later came out (like so many awful things did) that one of her last questions to ARS was is if she would ever see her mother again.