TX - *LOCATED* Barefoot woman seen on surveillance video, Montgomery County, 24 Aug 2018

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  • #401
Can I second this idea? I can't see anyone else in the clip, but I may be just overlooking it.

Thanks in advance to anyone who posts screenies!

I REALLY want to help everyone with the screenies but especially YOU because you said SCREENIES and well it rhymes with WEENIES....RIP to my wiener dawg Gracie!!!!!

Sadly I can't do SCREENIES but oh man do I want too be able too lol in the meantime if you make the video FULL SCREEN and pause every fraction of a second, before the video hits the 2 second mark you should see another person UNLESS MY eyes fail me, please forgive me I AM OLD. (they step out into view beside her before she steps around the pillar, reaching for the bell...hope this helps.)
 
  • #402
  • #403
I REALLY want to help everyone with the screenies but especially YOU because you said SCREENIES and well it rhymes with WEENIES....RIP to my wiener dawg Gracie!!!!!

Sadly I can't do SCREENIES but oh man do I want too be able too lol in the meantime if you make the video FULL SCREEN and pause every fraction of a second, before the video hits the 2 second mark you should see another person UNLESS MY eyes fail me, please forgive me I AM OLD.

OT: Hugs to you for Gracie. I am sorry for your loss. Wiener dogs are the best!

I am old too! ;) I will fullscreen and check where you say. Thank you!
 
  • #404
I hate to say it. And I am sure I will sound like a terrible person. But I think I’d be so terrified at someone ringing my bell frantically 20 times in a row at 3am that I probably wouldn’t answer the door. I don’t live in a development and my house is somewhat private, so it’d really freak me out. I’d call 911 while cowering in my room.
I have a gun and I have 3 huge Great Pyrenees German Shepard trained guard dogs that would have been waiting and ready to attack if needed, but I wouldn't have opened the door either. I would have yelled to her through the door to stay there in front of the camera while I called 911. If someone came up and grabbed or attacked her outside of my door, then I would let my dogs out and use my gun. I would be scared to death, but if I was actually witnessing her getting attacked, I couldn't live with the guilt if I didn't do something. Plus, the noise of female screams (mine and hers) gunshots and my dogs barking and attacking the perpetrator would hopefully bring other neighbors out to help. I'd still be scared out of my wits, but adrenaline would probably take over.
 
  • #405
Not true. ER treatment rooms are rarely empty in any city, so ambulance patients with non-lethal conditions don't always get taken back to treatment rooms. The waiting time for Emergency Room non-emergent patients to leave the waiting room or triage and go back to a treatment room to see a doctor is 2-4 hours in my area. In NYC, the waiting time to leave the waiting area or triage to see the doctor can be 12 hours unless you have a life-threatening condition.
Wow, we’re like 8-12min where I am and ambulance patients are direct to triage in a room.
 
  • #406
Since I cannot seem to edit

This would absolutely be tracked. All reports are typed and entered with key words. This is not the dark ages this way. I will go ahead and get verified - I can’t stand the rampant speculation. :( that was not directed towards you in particular. Liability insurance requires that this stuff is tracked and searchable.

Please do get verified! It will be helpful for other cases as well I’m sure, but it can also put to bed that a woman wrangled her way out of hospital restraints and none of the hospital staff cared to document and report it.
 
  • #407
delete
 
  • #408
Wow, we’re like 8-12min where I am and ambulance patients are direct to triage in a room.

And it’s this way in NYC area hospitals as well from my experience, despite the previous posters claims. Jme
 
  • #409
  • #410
Wow! I didn't follow that case, but if you have to handcuff your husband at night to keep him faithful, you might need a divorce attorney and/or mental health treatment.
Or Lorena Bobbitt
 
  • #411
  • #412
I have a gun and I have 3 huge Great Pyrenees German Shepard trained guard dogs that would have been waiting and ready to attack if needed, but I wouldn't have opened the door either. I would have yelled to her through the door to stay there in front of the camera while I called 911. If someone came up and grabbed or attacked her outside of my door, then I would let my dogs out and use my gun. I would be scared to death, but if I was actually witnessing her getting attacked, I couldn't live with the guilt if I didn't do something. Plus, the noise of female screams (mine and hers) gunshots and my dogs barking and attacking the perpetrator would hopefully bring other neighbors out to help. I'd still be scared out of my wits, but adrenaline would probably take over.

I have two akitas, and I don’t think anybody who rings my doorbell will WANT to come in after they hear them barking on the other side of the door.
 
  • #413
Two faces together at the top yellow light.
Screen Shot 2018-08-28 at 10.33.03 PM.png

And it's not a hospital restraint on her right wrist. This photo show something that looks like a lanyard with a metal ring.
Screen Shot 2018-08-28 at 10.29.26 PM.png
 
  • #414
Two faces together at the top yellow light.
View attachment 144283

And it's not a hospital restraint on her right wrist. This photo show something that looks like a lanyard with a metal ring.
View attachment 144284

Thank you! I still am not seeing the first image clearly, but I've been squinting at the video all morning. Must take a break, maybe clear my eyes, so to speak.

Thanks again!
 
  • #415
:confused:Hello All,

This case intrigued me, so I watched the video several times and also did some digging. Some things I *think* I noticed:

1) The woman does not look around in paranoia, nor is she in a hurry.
2) Due to her walk, she seems steady and does not appear to be out of it on drugs in my opinion. She seems alert
3) After several views, I do not believe there is a man behind her. I think it is a lighting trick due to camera resolution at night.
4) This may be strange, but I did some digging, and I went to a bondage site (haha seriously, I did), as well as a medical restraint sight, and it is my belief after pausing the video, that she does indeed have restraints on. However, they appear to be type used for bondage, and have a clip that looks almost the same as a dog leash.


There should be finger prints on the door bell as well as the wall near the door so that should get Law enforcement in the right direction. Her face may seem scared, but her gate is too nonchalant in my opinion, which is confusing
 
  • #416
Two faces together at the top yellow light.
View attachment 144283

And it's not a hospital restraint on her right wrist. This photo show something that looks like a lanyard with a metal ring.
View attachment 144284

Your first pic is literally just blur. Maybe you can mark up and circle where you see these two faces in order to help others see as well. And why would she have a lanyard with a metal chain on each hand? A quick google search (but heads up NSFW so clutch your pearls) will show you numerous bondage restraints that have chains like that.
 
  • #417
Watch the youtube videos on .25x speed She is swinging some type of lanyard with what looks like an ID tag. It's definitely not a hospital restraint. There is a square object that looks like an identification tag at the bottom of the lanyard.
Screen Shot 2018-08-28 at 10.40.40 PM.png
 
  • #418
Your first pic is literally just blur. Maybe you can mark up and circle where you see these two faces in order to help others see as well. And why would she have a lanyard with a metal chain on each hand? A quick google search (but heads up NSFW so clutch your pearls) will show you numerous bondage restraints that have chains like that.
LOL...I clutched my pearls this morning. So I can verify this as truth.
 
  • #419
Watch the youtube videos on .25x speed She is swinging some type of lanyard with what looks like an ID tag. It's definitely not a hospital restraint. There is a square object that looks like an identification tag at the bottom of the lanyard.
View attachment 144286

I’d hate to break it to you but hospital restraints aren’t the only type of restraints. Again, I think your eyes are seeing what you want them to see, and I mean that with all due respect.
 
  • #420
IMO it looks like the three pronged restraints where two go to wrists and another goes to feet or stomach.
 
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