Unanswered questions: Police say they need to keep lid on information
OREGON A body may have been found, but dozens of questions remain.
Some could be answered today. Others may take longer.
As they've been throughout the weeks since UW-Whitewater student Kelly Nolan has been missing, police on Monday were stinting in what details they would release about the case.
"We are always, in missing persons investigations, very, very careful about what information we release," said Madison Police Chief Noble Wray. "There's speculation we could engage in here, but its really important, given the gravity of the situation, that we don't speculate and conclude on some things."
Nolan was reported missing June 23 after a night of partying in Downtown Madison. She lived in a sublet apartment on Mifflin Street but it's not known how she came to rest about a mile from Deer Park Buddhist Center, one of the most peaceful spots in the county.
"We have a lot of physical evidence," Wray said. "We have . . . an area that we need to make sure that we're collecting as much forensic evidence as possible."
More at link...
http://www.madison.com/wsj/mad/top/index.php?ntid=200677
OREGON A body may have been found, but dozens of questions remain.
Some could be answered today. Others may take longer.
As they've been throughout the weeks since UW-Whitewater student Kelly Nolan has been missing, police on Monday were stinting in what details they would release about the case.
"We are always, in missing persons investigations, very, very careful about what information we release," said Madison Police Chief Noble Wray. "There's speculation we could engage in here, but its really important, given the gravity of the situation, that we don't speculate and conclude on some things."
Nolan was reported missing June 23 after a night of partying in Downtown Madison. She lived in a sublet apartment on Mifflin Street but it's not known how she came to rest about a mile from Deer Park Buddhist Center, one of the most peaceful spots in the county.
"We have a lot of physical evidence," Wray said. "We have . . . an area that we need to make sure that we're collecting as much forensic evidence as possible."
More at link...
http://www.madison.com/wsj/mad/top/index.php?ntid=200677