taffodills
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I understand that many are taking different approaches to this case; some are looking at the parents, the children and some are looking at non-familial individuals. As you can see by my postings, I am looking at a flight scenario which originates in Georgia and arrives in Colorado. We are all looking at many scenarios and hopefully we can find a new piece of evidence that will move this case out of neutral into drive. Whatever information I find, I post it. And it is up to you of how you want to use it.
What is the rush to midnight? On December 25 1996, two individuals have a flight the next morning at 8:30 A.M. local time. Generally, someone would wake up roughly 2-4 hours before that flight. Remember this is before 9/11, the check-in counter was the most time consuming, not security. Security involved a walk-thru metal detector for the person and a large plastic bin(which went on a conveyor belt and into a housing that x-rayed your personal items). This large plastic bin had your bags and any items containing metal, like your keys. You walked thru the metal detector and there coming out the manned x-ray machine for personal items was the plastic bin with your personal items and off you went.
According to s-john-andrew-ramsey.htm Melinda finished her shift at 7:00 A.M., December 25, 1996 at a local hospital. That means she worked a grave yard shift that was at least 8 hours to 10 hrs. So she had possibly started her shift from 9:00 P.M. to 11:00 P.M. on December 24 1996. After she got home from work, Melinda went to Lucinda's home around afternoon where other friends were present. If Melinda got any sleep in between 7:00 A.M. and that afternoon, it would have been around 3hrs. After Lucinda's home, Melinda went across the street to a neighbor to have dinner. Melinda then left the dinner at 7:00 P.M. to go home and pack for the next day flight. So this individual who has been up since 9 to 11 P.M. last night and it is 7:00 P.M. the next day which is a total of 20 to 22 hrs. And this person may have possible only gotten 3 hrs of sleep during that time.
So you think Melinda is home now and she is done for the day? That did not happen. It was someone's idea to keep going. At 9:00 P.M. they went to visit more friends and family until Midnight. So if you add on the 5hrs that started from 7:00 P.M. of Melinda arriving home to pack and to 12:00 A.M when she returned home, we have a total time of 25 to 27 hours from when her shift started to when she finally went to bed. This includes a possible 3 hour nap after Melinda came home from work and a possible 1 hr nap after Melinda arrived home from dinner to pack. So you get off a graveyard shift and you go 17 hours straight with a possible 3-4 hrs of sleep slipped in if that ever happened.
Now for John Andrew Ramsey who had another marathon run to midnight; not quite like Melinda's feat. John was at Lucinda's home around afternoon, the same time Melinda was there. Then that evening, he attended Peachtree-Presbyterian Church and then left 8:30 P.M. to Brad Millard's home to play video games(that is the quickest stay to play games; 10-15mins?) where he stayed until they went to QuickTrip at 9:00 P.M. And then on to the movies at 10:30 P.M. and then back to Brad Millard's home to pick up his car and drive back to his mom's house in Roswell which had him arriving at 1:00 A.M. Of course he had a morning flight to wake up to in 3 to 4 hours.
There were two paintbrushes that had each of their ends broken off. And one of the paintbrushes had a missing end( when the missing ends of the 2 paintbrushes were sought, only 3 out of 4 ends that had broken off were located).
Two broken paintbrushes may indicate a second person was present at the crime scene. In the execution of their plan and under duress, each person, unbeknownst to each other, grabbed a paint brush and broke it, only to realize at some point they had two.
Another option is if two people were involved, the missing piece may have been secretly concealed to maybe frame the other accomplice.
If a single person was responsible for the two broken paintbrushes, it may have been a reflection of a perfectionist who didn't like the way the first paintbrush broke or maybe its size. You could also look at how remarkably different each of the paintbrushes are. The paintbrush that was used in the garrote had more of a natural wood look with dark spots, which appears to be mold or bacteria; the basement was dark and moldy.
A Lust murderer becomes highly aroused in the humiliation of their victim. Sexual torture becomes a tool to degrade, humiliate, and subjugate the victim I'm thinking in the heat of their frenzy, the person opted for more humiliation by dropping the first nicer looking, broken paint brush and opting for the second moldy paintbrush which was then used not only as a part of the garrote but as a penetrating device in the victim which is common among lust murderers.
Lust murder sometimes includes activities such as removing clothing from the body, posing and propping of the body in different positions (generally sexual ones), insertion of objects into bodily orifices, cannibalism and necrophilia.
Another idea of regarding the two paintbrushes, is the perpetrator for a moment became disorganized in which was an organized crime scene. Disorganized meaning in the frenzy and euphoria, the perpetrator's short term memory was affected by forgetting that the first paint brush was broken. And so a second paintbrush was selected.
The missing end of paintbrush that was used in the garrote may have been kept as trophy or souvenir. In the context of a murder, a "trophy" is an item that the killer takes from the victim as a "souvenir" of the crime. The FBI differentiates in their definition of these two words, classifying a souvenir as something that fuels the killer's fantasy, while a trophy is proof of their skill. Regardless, the result is the same: the murderer uses these objects to relive the thrill of the crime and feel powerful again.
What is the rush to midnight? On December 25 1996, two individuals have a flight the next morning at 8:30 A.M. local time. Generally, someone would wake up roughly 2-4 hours before that flight. Remember this is before 9/11, the check-in counter was the most time consuming, not security. Security involved a walk-thru metal detector for the person and a large plastic bin(which went on a conveyor belt and into a housing that x-rayed your personal items). This large plastic bin had your bags and any items containing metal, like your keys. You walked thru the metal detector and there coming out the manned x-ray machine for personal items was the plastic bin with your personal items and off you went.
According to s-john-andrew-ramsey.htm Melinda finished her shift at 7:00 A.M., December 25, 1996 at a local hospital. That means she worked a grave yard shift that was at least 8 hours to 10 hrs. So she had possibly started her shift from 9:00 P.M. to 11:00 P.M. on December 24 1996. After she got home from work, Melinda went to Lucinda's home around afternoon where other friends were present. If Melinda got any sleep in between 7:00 A.M. and that afternoon, it would have been around 3hrs. After Lucinda's home, Melinda went across the street to a neighbor to have dinner. Melinda then left the dinner at 7:00 P.M. to go home and pack for the next day flight. So this individual who has been up since 9 to 11 P.M. last night and it is 7:00 P.M. the next day which is a total of 20 to 22 hrs. And this person may have possible only gotten 3 hrs of sleep during that time.
So you think Melinda is home now and she is done for the day? That did not happen. It was someone's idea to keep going. At 9:00 P.M. they went to visit more friends and family until Midnight. So if you add on the 5hrs that started from 7:00 P.M. of Melinda arriving home to pack and to 12:00 A.M when she returned home, we have a total time of 25 to 27 hours from when her shift started to when she finally went to bed. This includes a possible 3 hour nap after Melinda came home from work and a possible 1 hr nap after Melinda arrived home from dinner to pack. So you get off a graveyard shift and you go 17 hours straight with a possible 3-4 hrs of sleep slipped in if that ever happened.
Now for John Andrew Ramsey who had another marathon run to midnight; not quite like Melinda's feat. John was at Lucinda's home around afternoon, the same time Melinda was there. Then that evening, he attended Peachtree-Presbyterian Church and then left 8:30 P.M. to Brad Millard's home to play video games(that is the quickest stay to play games; 10-15mins?) where he stayed until they went to QuickTrip at 9:00 P.M. And then on to the movies at 10:30 P.M. and then back to Brad Millard's home to pick up his car and drive back to his mom's house in Roswell which had him arriving at 1:00 A.M. Of course he had a morning flight to wake up to in 3 to 4 hours.
There were two paintbrushes that had each of their ends broken off. And one of the paintbrushes had a missing end( when the missing ends of the 2 paintbrushes were sought, only 3 out of 4 ends that had broken off were located).
Two broken paintbrushes may indicate a second person was present at the crime scene. In the execution of their plan and under duress, each person, unbeknownst to each other, grabbed a paint brush and broke it, only to realize at some point they had two.
Another option is if two people were involved, the missing piece may have been secretly concealed to maybe frame the other accomplice.
If a single person was responsible for the two broken paintbrushes, it may have been a reflection of a perfectionist who didn't like the way the first paintbrush broke or maybe its size. You could also look at how remarkably different each of the paintbrushes are. The paintbrush that was used in the garrote had more of a natural wood look with dark spots, which appears to be mold or bacteria; the basement was dark and moldy.
A Lust murderer becomes highly aroused in the humiliation of their victim. Sexual torture becomes a tool to degrade, humiliate, and subjugate the victim I'm thinking in the heat of their frenzy, the person opted for more humiliation by dropping the first nicer looking, broken paint brush and opting for the second moldy paintbrush which was then used not only as a part of the garrote but as a penetrating device in the victim which is common among lust murderers.
Lust murder sometimes includes activities such as removing clothing from the body, posing and propping of the body in different positions (generally sexual ones), insertion of objects into bodily orifices, cannibalism and necrophilia.
Another idea of regarding the two paintbrushes, is the perpetrator for a moment became disorganized in which was an organized crime scene. Disorganized meaning in the frenzy and euphoria, the perpetrator's short term memory was affected by forgetting that the first paint brush was broken. And so a second paintbrush was selected.
The missing end of paintbrush that was used in the garrote may have been kept as trophy or souvenir. In the context of a murder, a "trophy" is an item that the killer takes from the victim as a "souvenir" of the crime. The FBI differentiates in their definition of these two words, classifying a souvenir as something that fuels the killer's fantasy, while a trophy is proof of their skill. Regardless, the result is the same: the murderer uses these objects to relive the thrill of the crime and feel powerful again.
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