CandyKiss
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Dec 29, 2019
- Messages
- 61
- Reaction score
- 403
Similar to the Idaho truckdriver David Schultz; not a wreck but he left a loaded trailer full of baby piglets on a highway and disappeared. Poof! His jacket was left outside the vehicle, if I remember correctly across the highway. Keys, wallet etc. left in the truck. Trained dogs indicated the scent just disappeared at the edge of the road. During several weeks of searching, they did find a missing person who drove out to a farmer’s field prior to Schultz missing. BAM! I believe it was late spring a farmer found him out in the fields. Autopsy results: meth user; area was known for drugs, but no one wanted to discuss it. Police weren't that interested in searching until his wife began posting everywhere and the Texas Equine Team arrived.Agreed. The good samaritan probably volunteered to take the polygraph hoping the family will move on from him. Unless I'm misreading, a non-profit released this information, not LE. I believe the Laundry family believes foul play was involved. imo
I'm still of the opinion this poor young man was impaired, wrecked his car, walked off on foot, and succumbed to the elements. imo
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Someone several posts back made a detailed timeline the unaccounted 67 minutes; stopping at a park – signing out of his GPS and jumping on snapchat (no digital footprint). Meeting people at 11:30 at night and continuing (without GPS) down the road makes sense for a drug deal. Someone jumps in, and whoever came with him followed in their vehicle. If I were following you and drove up alongside your car, and hit the driver’s front side in front of the tire, wouldn’t that pitch your car sideways and back off to the right of the road? The back-end damage of the car makes sense; it landed in a tree, but they said the driver’s side landed / hit a fence and post. If that is correct how could his dad enter the driver’s side after the wreck?
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