That's what the evidence shows.
The latter part of that is a horrible assumption to make.
While my mind was elsewhere, Greg casually asked Officer Al if he'd participated in the search efforts for the missing children. The answer we received certainly managed to gain my interest. Al and a partner had indeed searched Robin Hood Hill woods sometime after dark the evening of May 5th, and according to him had been within a few feet of where the bodies were later found, right along the ditch bank. After not finding anything, he gave up and returned to his regular patrol route. Not expecting any big revelation, I asked if the bank had been slicked off or washed down, which was what Det. Mike Allen testified to at the Echols/Baldwin trial, leading to the state's contention that this revealed an effort to clean a crime scene of blood, shoe prints and other forensic evidence. Al proceeded to drop a bombshell. He hadn't observed anything like that at all, and could not have been more emphatic. "If I did, we would have found the children that night!" he insisted. The fact that he was contradicting Mike Allen's testimony and undermining the state's entire theory of the crime didn't faze him a bit.
Perreti's evidence was already challenged on TOD by Dr Duke Jennings, who gave evidence at the Echols/Baldwin trial. IMO, Jennings' challenge was flawed, and Peretti's evidence was sound. So I would agree that the TOD was within the range of 1 am to 7 am, unless anyone has evidence to the contrary.
But, of course, I'm not a doctor, so this is just the opinion of a lay person reading what forensic pathologists say.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.