You can click on the Case# of any listed charge. Then look in the section "Case/Defendant Information" for the DOB. The year is suppressed but there is enough date info to differentiate between defendants.Where is it? I did not see anywhere.
You can click on the Case# of any listed charge. Then look in the section "Case/Defendant Information" for the DOB. The year is suppressed but there is enough date info to differentiate between defendants.Where is it? I did not see anywhere.
Yep, I tried to edit it some are dob 5/30 and the he is the mid December DOB. Looks like 5/30 DOB got the tickets on Thursday...can we say they were outwardly looking for Junior?Some of those don't say Jr., so it's possible those are not all the same person. Maybe his dad has a drinking problem since all of the charges related to that type of offense seem to belong to the person without the "jr."!
Police were looking for information about Hannah. Why didn't Jesse Mathew come forward right away and let police know that he was with her on the night she disappeared? A good person would do that.
This is a bit of a devil's advocate move, but if I was a black man that had driven around a young white girl who later disappeared, but I couldn't prove that I was not the one that did it, I might be hesitant as well. Yes, good people come forward, but an innocent person might be TERRIFIED in that situation especially if they are a convenient, easily convicted target. I actually joke about it with my boyfriend. Like, if he left my house one night and then someone came in right afterward and killed me NO ONE would believe it wasn't him. NO ONE. He said he would just accept his jail sentence and then still look for my real killer while in jail![]()
Now, obviously, my boyfriend would have to come forward because he would be suspect #1 immediately. However, I can understand having an "oh **** this is going to be pinned on me" moment or being scared to come forward even as an innocent person.
However, I think it most likely was him, all things considered.
Good catch!!!!!!
Please someone send his links FB and other SM
Remember, 9/18 was the hearing date. The offense dates were in May and June of this year. And FWIW the "fail to display plates" charge was dismissed with a noelle prosequi.Yep, I tried to edit it some are dob 5/30 and the he is the mid December DOB. Looks like 5/30 DOB got the tickets on Thursday...can we say they were outwardly looking for Junior?
I still don't like CWG. It looks like she speeds up when she sees him scoping her at Sal's. Doesn't mean anything, I just don't like him.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
In my opinion, Dred's family members just screwed him. By grandma going public with Dred's claim that he and Hannah parted ways after leaving the bar, the police only have to establish Hannah was in his car to know that he is lying.
Fast forward to murder trial, the prosecutor puts both Mom and Grandma on the stand with this claim, now debunked by physical evidence, and the jury sees a liar (Dreds) sitting in front of them.
Wow! A local cab driver? He's had plenty of opportunities to abduct drunk college girls! That alone makes me reconsider his guilt.
It is two different ...I tried fixing it above.People, when looking at the court records, note that there is a "sr.", a "jr." and some with no suffix. I think this is a father/son, both with court cases. Don't assume they are all the POI's
IMO
I disagree. If they find ANYTHING belonging to Hannah in his car, he is screwed. He claims that Hannah was never in his car.maybe . . . .maybe not. It all depends what evidence they find in his car and/or apartment. If they only find hair in his car, there's not much to worry about. But, if they find evidence of her in his apartment, after he said she was not, it begins to look shady. . . . and if they find blood anywhere (especially of a quantity larger than a scrape or small cut), things look really bad!
He could have only had a plate in the back, and not the front (I don't know the laws there) or had a license plate holder that covered a little too much.
They can get a court order for his DNA.
This is a bit of a devil's advocate move, but if I was a black man that had driven around a young white girl who later disappeared, but I couldn't prove that I was not the one that did it, I might be hesitant as well. Yes, good people come forward, but an innocent person might be TERRIFIED in that situation especially if they are a convenient, easily convicted target. I actually joke about it with my boyfriend. Like, if he left my house one night and then someone came in right afterward and killed me NO ONE would believe it wasn't him. NO ONE. He said he would just accept his jail sentence and then still look for my real killer while in jail![]()
Now, obviously, my boyfriend would have to come forward because he would be suspect #1 immediately. However, I can understand having an "oh **** this is going to be pinned on me" moment or being scared to come forward even as an innocent person.
However, I think it most likely was him, all things considered.