yosande
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- Aug 9, 2008
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Well, the core body temperature drops during sleep, and
Cold water removes heat from the body 25 times faster than cold air. About 50% of that heat loss occurs through the head. Physical activity such as swimming, or other struggling in the water increases heat loss. Survival time can be reduced to minutes. Strong swimmers have died before swimming 100 yards in cold water. In water under 40 degrees F, victims have died before swimming 100 feet.http://www.enter.net/~skimmer/coldwater.html I think it can be safely said, along with what Mealy said about the "ferocious current", that they could have gotten into trouble very quickly, especially if the tide rose and caught them unaware, in their sleep.
It just doesn't make sense that the keys were found on the dashboard, the doors were opened with the idea that they just fell asleep.
Since the ground was unlevel, and they were on a beach and she grew up in the area, it doesn't make sense that she wouldn't have known that she was too far out on the beach. Going down that path and then further down on the beach, without getting out of the van and walking up to the house, suggests something sinister.
If she had an overnight bag, due to the cold weather, they would have had several layers of clothes on in order to stay warm, even as they walked away from the van, if they did. However, Az was found in a t-shirt, not multiple t-shirts, and his coat? Where is his coat? It would have floated yes? Wouldn't her "overnight bag" also have floated?
Ok, so where is she? 10 days it has been said for a body to surface, but not true in the Puget Sound as Az was found 3 or 4 days later, and LE has not told us how long he had been there.
Where is SS? Where is her overnight bag, and where is her purse? Where is Az's coat? Is anything else missing?
ETA; They were both wearing glasses. Have either of their glasses been found? tia