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- Apr 19, 2005
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So the coroner ruled it a suicide, could it be that it was not? No police? That seems odd for the setting and circumstances, people usually called the police first, not the coroner...I think it probably was suicide, but could it be that someone was afraid he might talk, and had a friendly 'drink' with him? Now that they knew Brody was gone?
I know they are weird questions, but I want a direction that Anna might have taken in all of this...the bottom line, find Anna![]()
The way that Waters died matched exactly his earlier interest in the method of suicide by George Rommel. The hotel manager indicated to Joe Ford that Waters had been extremely distraught prior to his death. And Brody had been drilling into Waters for years the notion that he needed Brody's guidance for even the most mundane daily tasks. I believe that all of this points toward a suicide.
Your hypothesis is very plausible. The question of whether Waters was an active participant, a manipulated patsy or completely unaware bystander is open for debate. If Waters was not "in" on the abduction, that would explain the comment "I am glad the tot is dead." Brody may have told him that Anna must have drowned in the creek (to cover his own complicity) and Waters merely parroted what he had been told earlier. This would also explain Brody's uncharacteristic dumbfound silence at the statement - he may have been thinking that it was best to leave Waters thinking that Anna had died.
I am interested in seeing your numerology findings once they are completed.