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- Nov 18, 2023
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One question: Is TT still alive today? It seems someone was very keen on erasing documents with his handwriting on the internet. I found some of them years ago, but now they simply vanished.
I believe he is still alive and still living in Texas, though not in Fort Worth. Last I heard he was living down south on the coast somewhereOne question: Is TT still alive today? It seems someone was very keen on erasing documents with his handwriting on the internet. I found some of them years ago, but now they simply vanished.
Nope. When a big deal is made over how under-staffed FWPD Cold Case Unit currently is, it's easy to forget the detectives who have been assigned "exclusively" to this case through the years...50 years coming up and I guess Fort Worth investigators don't even feign interest anymore. I haven't heard anything in the media either, or family members for that matter. It seems kind of hopeless at this point. It doesn't look like there will be any justice for these girls, Julie Ann Moseley, Renee Wilson and Rachel Trlica.
P.S. Thanks to those who sent them to me. Just my opinion, ok? Not registered as a specialist here (yet), but the documents are quite revealing (to me). A pity I cannot discuss more due to the rules.One question: Is TT still alive today? It seems someone was very keen on erasing documents with his handwriting on the internet. I found some of them years ago, but now they simply vanished.
My feeling is still that it was a stranger abduction, carried out by possibly more than one perpetrator. Rachel wrote the letter under duress, and used those oddities as a tipoff that something wasn't right. I initially thought the speed of the letter's delivery was suspicious, but apparently mail really did travel that fast back in the 1970s! I honestly would not be surprised if it was a security guard or someone acting in a role of authority.
One question: Is TT still alive today? It seems someone was very keen on erasing documents with his handwriting on the internet. I found some of them years ago, but now they simply vanished.
P.S. Thanks to those who sent them to me. Just my opinion, ok? Not registered as a specialist here (yet), but the documents are quite revealing (to me). A pity I cannot discuss more due to the rules.
RSBM3. According to a V.I who posts/posted here, the writing is not Rachel's, but is very similar to someone close to her. it is back on an earlier thread (probably from around 2020 or 2021)
Just an information: A person closer to the family (I have talked about this in another thread) has given me more than samples. By the way, I am not an amateur/curious person but have been a professional investigator for many years who have not registered here yet for a private reason.RSBM
It's interesting that the FBI, with their training and expertise, was unable to conclusively determine whether Rachel wrote the letter, when it seems so obvious to folks around her that she didn't. Must've been a decent forgery. It's also interesting (and unfortunate) that we amateurs are only given samples of her husband's writing for comparison. jmo
Maybe just a mediaI haven't decided whether he was actually involved, or merely covering for someone else in LE.
Maybe, but I'm inclined to think he knew Rachel's family, felt comfortable around them.Maybe just a media *advertiser censored*, it wouldn't be the first time LE or LE adjacent wanted to be in the spotlight. And nothing says "look how involved and Detective-y I am" like a photo with parents during a search for the victim/s. That's about as good as it gets, barring film of a live action rescue.
What is your opinion on the way the police acted? ONE (of two) of the relatives I talked to (a nice guy by the way), said the police didn't make a good effort because they were "common folk" not important people.Normally, I would be in complete agreement with you, but in this situation, I bump the security guard (whether rogue or not) theory down the list for the following reasons :-
1. No one can state with 100% certainty that they were even at the Mall that day.
2. The Runaway Letter. If mall security are involved I don't see them writing a letter stating that the missing girl's car is at his place of employment. Or even if it someone impersonating a security guard is responsible, I don't think they are going to bother with a letter stating were the car is, a potential crime scene, when they have already got away with the crime.
3. According to a V.I who posts/posted here, the writing is not Rachel's, but is very similar to someone close to her. it is back on an earlier thread (probably from around 2020 or 2021)
What is your opinion on the way the police acted? ONE (of two) of the relatives I talked to (a nice guy by the way), said the police didn't make a good effort because they were "common folk" not important people.
What is your opinion on the way the police acted? ONE (of two) of the relatives I talked to (a nice guy by the way), said the police didn't make a good effort because they were "common folk" not important people.
I would agree with all this regarding the initial LE response. Per procedure at the time, one officer (who would've had a shotgun in the patrol car) responded to the mall lot. Only one missing person report was actually made in person (Julie's)-- the other two were phoned in. I've never heard a really good explanation for that btw, but anyway. It's how FWPD detectives (namely Wilbanks) handle the case in the days and weeks immediately following the introduction of the letter that I question. Would he have treated this case the same if he'd never seen that letter? I may be off, but I really think there was something about the letter of significance to Wilbanks himself. Something that would prompt him to be rather suggestible/collaborative with Rachel's parents (the newspaper articles suggest that possibility imo), then be a real jack@$$ to Renee's parents, as they persist in hounding FWPD to find their daughter. He didn't just ignore them, he flat-out lied and toyed with them (per Renee's father).Yes, I think there would have been an element of that in their thinking. Then adding the 'arrival' of the Runaway Letter to this thinking, they probably thought they ran away due to 'some family stuff' and decided to take a step back from the situation. They probably thought they would be back in a couple of days. I'm not sure exactly when they started to take the case 100% seriously, but I don't think they did in those crucial first days, unfortunately.
I don't want to put down the FWPD, but it was also Christmastime. In some cases LE probably just wanted to get off their shift and get home, without any hassle. I appreciate that I am being a bit flippant here, but I remember as a kid back in 1970s, TV with family at Christmastime was a bit thing. If you want to see the Colombo Christmas Special then you better be back at home on your couch. No VCR in 1974.
He could be both.Maybe, but I'm inclined to think he knew Rachel's family, felt comfortable around them.
One might wonder if the information from the A family to the police might be part of the reason the police were not as active on the case as expected. There seems to be misdirection from the family now, and I wonder if it was around back then to keep police away from the family and the business.
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