bessie
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Who attempted to pick her up?Right, I'm assuming when he attempted to pick her up, and when he opened it up. I don't think he would notice neck, eyelids etc.
Who attempted to pick her up?Right, I'm assuming when he attempted to pick her up, and when he opened it up. I don't think he would notice neck, eyelids etc.
Yes. To my knowledge, but unconfirmed.
And right now I am not putting stock in it!
Jmo
BBM
The second most common type of staging in a homicide is changing the scene/body to make it appear that the homicide was the result of a sexual attack.
Who attempted to pick her up?
How so?See? The timeline we have been dealing with is off!
Howdy to you, too!:seeya:
How so?
Okay, but why would a panicked drunk driver, who accidentally hit her pick her up, take her to his home, put a bag over her head, tape it up, bind her hands and feet, take off all her clothes, put her in a black plastic bag, wrap a tarp around that, wrap her in a belt, and then put her back out in the street in another location?
If no one saw him hit her, why not just drive away, and go home and wash the grill of your car?
Okay, but why would a panicked drunk driver, who accidentally hit her pick her up, take her to his home, put a bag over her head, tape it up, bind her hands and feet, take off all her clothes, put her in a black plastic bag, wrap a tarp around that, wrap her in a belt, and then put her back out in the street in another location?
If no one saw him hit her, why not just drive away, and go home and wash the grill of your car?
Okay, but why would a panicked drunk driver, who accidentally hit her pick her up, take her to his home, put a bag over her head, tape it up, bind her hands and feet, take off all her clothes, put her in a black plastic bag, wrap a tarp around that, wrap her in a belt, and then put her back out in the street in another location?
If no one saw him hit her, why not just drive away, and go home and wash the grill of your car?
The boys picked up little Alanna's body in the tarp? Where was that reported?The boys did
http://m.nbcdfw.com/nbcdfw/db_/contentdetail.htm?contentguid=QxqoT4Gn&full=true#displayAt first, I just thought it was some rubber stuff at first, and then I got a closer look and all I saw was a bag and I saw some hair sticking out and so, I was like, Oh my God! Its a girl! And thats when I dropped to my knees and just started crying, said 18-year-old John Smith.
Every time I walk out that front door, Im going to look over here and know I found a little girl. Someones little girl, thats just sitting here miserable in the middle of the street dead, and her familys out there wondering where shes at, Smith said.
How so?
We have a verified insider who saw Alanna as late as 2:30, an hour from her home.Tarp seen at noon...all the way to 7pm
Parents door to door search according to neighbors began much later than claimed.
Time last seen and by whom is sketchy at best.
If she was killed after 5 and discovered at 7... She would have been limp, not rubber like.
All IMO
I know ambient temperature can effect it. But iirc temp was pretty average. I don't think age matters much as it a chemical reaction. In my very unprofessional opinion.
The boys picked up little Alanna's body in the tarp? Where was that reported?
http://m.nbcdfw.com/nbcdfw/db_/contentdetail.htm?contentguid=QxqoT4Gn&full=true#display
That doesn't change the timeline, as one has never been firmly established. In no report is an odor mentioned. All this talk of decomposition and rigor mortis is pure conjecture.See post 547
If her mother got home about 4:00 and didn't see her, she must have either gone into someone else's house or been abducted already (or both.) If she was actually seen later that afternoon, why hasn't anyone come forward to say she was there for a while (from 4-5 or whatever)? The only explanations I've come up with that make any sense so far are that either she wasn't seen later or she was seen later and then went back to wherever she was at 4:00. Either way, it seems like something most likely happened wherever she was at 4:00 or shortly after (when her mother got home.) I'm sure not everybody will agree with me, but that's how I see it. MOO & all that stuff.
That doesn't change the timeline, as one has never been firmly established. Nowhere is an odor mentioned. All this talk of decomposition and rigor mortis is pure conjecture.
We have a verified insider who saw Alanna as late as 2:30, an hour from her home.
The times people have given for seeing the tarp range from noon right up until the time the boys reported it. Nothing official on that point.
A freshly dead body (1-3 hours) can be said to feel like cold rubber. I can attest to that myself.
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