Mr.Wilson and a neighbor stayed the whole night from 8:30 on with a watch on the car.It is said that Rachel's husband and sister showed up but I don't know if that is true.Police where called when the mall closed and one parent made a report in person that was there and the other two were phoned in.I will share what articles I have found here I kind of was hesitant to post here again because of strict rules but if I break them I'm sure they will let me know.After this thread shut down we had a great group with people from Arnold's and Trlica's very small and we made a lot of progress.Of course it all fell apart but afterwards I got a lot of mr.wilson's views and a phone call from Julie's aunt who didn't facebook but liked what I was doing but I've all but gave up because imo this case has been sabotaged since day one.Thank you johnbelt, I owe you brother. So according to the report, the family found the car by 8:30 PM for sure and the report was taken at 1:30 AM. Now it depends on where the report was taken. Did the family stay at the shopping center and have the officer make the scene for the report or did he go to the home? If it was at the scene then the security guard story doesn't match, because they would have been on the scene at the time. Or did the family return home to make the report and someone go back to sit on the vehicle.
May I ask how you got those? Would it have had to been originally sourced from a FOI request?I can assure you no one was at the mall at 6 PM and that Mr.Arnold did not spend the night watching the car and that is straight from the man who watched the car that night.I can't find Julie's missing person's report right now but I have the other two handy.
No i didn't request them at all.I did some sleuthing like I said with others and started questioning all the inconsistencies in all the articles.I got enough info to make people think and joined that FB group for a few hours until I was booted out but I ended up with 33 new friends including family members I've talked to a lot of people about the case.I don't think FWPD is real cooperative with people asking for info on the case.May I ask how you got those? Would it have had to been originally sourced from a FOI request?
In my honest opinion and I'm not one to automatically consider trafficking even today.I think these girls were sold by members of one of the girls families or they seen something they shouldn't have seen that day.There is people who could answer this question today I feel.@johnbelt what do you think happened to the girls?
Are those people Fran and her sister-in-law? Cotton supposedly had a brother who was a very bad guy.In my honest opinion and I'm not one to automatically consider trafficking even today.I think these girls were sold by members of one of the girls families or they seen something they shouldn't have seen that day.There is people who could answer this question today I feel.
I see, thank you very much for taking the time to explain! I have wondered for while how co-operative PDs generally should be with sleuthers on cold cases and I honestly think that it wouldn't hurt at all, but for whatever reason they all seem to have reservations on the idea. I wouldn't be surprised if, in the future, cold cases were "crowdsourced" in order to bring more awareness to them and increase the chances of them getting solved.No i didn't request them at all.I did some sleuthing like I said with others and started questioning all the inconsistencies in all the articles.I got enough info to make people think and joined that FB group for a few hours until I was booted out but I ended up with 33 new friends including family members I've talked to a lot of people about the case.I don't think FWPD is real cooperative with people asking for info on the case.
Crowdsourcing criminal cases would lead to vigilantism, so LE won't go for it.I see, thank you very much for taking the time to explain! I have wondered for while how co-operative PDs generally should be with sleuthers on cold cases and I honestly think that it wouldn't hurt at all, but for whatever reason they all seem to have reservations on the idea. I wouldn't be surprised if, in the future, cold cases were "crowdsourced" in order to bring more awareness to them and increase the chances of them getting solved.
I will say one thing and I have many newspaper articles to back it up that Fran has told so many versions of the day in question that you have to suspect something.Famous sightings the man who seen them pushed into the van who came to their house a few days latter never went to police.The flyer thrown by three girls out of a car at a gas station that flyer was never seen by police gas station attendant called Fran who got the flyer and read the address to police and when FWPD interviewed the attendant Fran had given them more details than him.Are those people Fran and her sister-in-law? Cotton supposedly had a brother who was a very bad guy.
I was given the detective's name and phone number by a member of Julie's family who wanted me to share some info with her and it was like jumping through hoops to get a call back.For one thing they had given a family member a number that essentially they give to people who they want to have to leave messages and not have direct line to them.I see, thank you very much for taking the time to explain! I have wondered for while how co-operative PDs generally should be with sleuthers on cold cases and I honestly think that it wouldn't hurt at all, but for whatever reason they all seem to have reservations on the idea. I wouldn't be surprised if, in the future, cold cases were "crowdsourced" in order to bring more awareness to them and increase the chances of them getting solved.
Crowdsourcing criminal cases would lead to vigilantism, so LE won't go for it.
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A while back, someone was spreading a rumor that TT had a car that vanished at the same time that the girls disappeared. There were people willing to lynch TT based on that rumor—I'm not exaggerating; I believe his life was in jeopardy—yet it turned out to be an unfounded rumor.
To get support once a case goes cold is a very long-winded process, unfortunately. On a side note, I contacted NamUs around 5 months ago about a potential lead and am still waiting for a reply. Even a negative result would be welcome just to allow me to complete that interaction and move on with the case. And this is a case I have no personal connection to - I cannot imagine what it would be like for the family of a missing person.I was given the detective's name and phone number by a member of Julie's family who wanted me to share some info with her and it was like jumping through hoops to get a call back.For one thing they had given a family member a number that essentially they give to people who they want to have to leave messages and not have direct line to them.
To add to my previous comment, though I don't support vigilantism, I would be careful about saying it doesn't have a case in society. Don'tCrowdsourcing criminal cases would lead to vigilantism, so LE won't go for it.
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A while back, someone was spreading a rumor that TT had a car that vanished at the same time that the girls disappeared. There were people willing to lynch TT based on that rumor—I'm not exaggerating; I believe his life was in jeopardy—yet it turned out to be an unfounded rumor.
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