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Hope4More - I have also been thinking that all the evidence of texting and sexting on the day Cooper died is strong circumstantial evidence that he really did forget Cooper was in the car. Of course he wouldn't be engaging in that behavior if he planned Cooper's death, knowing police would find this on his phone and use it against him. He was clueless!
I agree. Not so much about the sexting to adult women, but yes about sexting with a minor on that day, more so if it's true he researched the law and knew the consequences (that the State says he did is meaningless at this point, imo).
Putting some pieces together, I'm sorry, but I increasingly find the State's theory of his intent absurd, start to finish.
What's wrong with this picture? On the day RH intends to murder his son, he takes his son to breakfast, inside, ensuring that he's even later for work, making his deviation in schedule all the more obvious.
He then drives Cooper into his workplace parking lot, and chooses a spot that is not out of the way at all. Video of the lot makes that point better than any words could.
For that matter, if RH wanted to kill Cooper and make it took like a hot car death, could he have chosen a more unbelievable scenario than he did? It's the very fact he says he forgot Cooper between CFA and the intersection, in a matter of seconds, that many find most incomprehensible and unbelievable.
Why, if planning ahead did he choose that most unlikely of all scenarios? And why choose to kill Cooper on a workday at all, since besides the too quickly forgetting thing, a workday killing meant he would be on surveillance cameras or observed for virtually every minute of the day, other than his driving time?
And, if Cooper's car seat was so small that his head was clearly visible over the top, and if RH was well aware of the seat regs (per LE, per RH's acknowledging this), and if he planned on killing Cooper, isn't putting Cooper in that car seat about the very LAST thing he would do? Since, no matter what else, LE is absolutely going to notice that car seat, even if they don't start off thinking murder? But might be more inclined to wonder , or think negligence, if the carseat was so terribly, egregiously suspiciously too small?
Imo, their narrative becomes more Alice in Wonderland upsidedown the more I think about it, and that's without even considering the mounting pile of LE irregularities.