Seems there was a 3 am alcohol related police call near the frat house around the time of the murders.
I consider that unlikely as it is largely student housing in the area, being right off campus and so close to Greek Row.YZ250 said:
Or a neighbor being tired of loud parties or some other annoyance.
Maybe the early reports of Kaylee having a stalker influenced their thinking too much?Waltonloads08 said:
its sounds like they are just walking back the "definitely targeted" statements (which were of course referring to victims originally) and trying to save face with nonsense about the house. Typical local cop bs'ing about what they meant. Not bashing them, they were going by what seemed to be likely at the time, and just spoke too soon.
Know what else is weird here? That the locals are still doing the PR.Valtrex_11 said:
They are messing this up big time as predicted.
I remember them saying there was no threat to the public, what about a day after the murders? Have they walked that back? I can't believe they would declare that so soon.gotsand said:
So, they pretty much walked back most of their prior statements. Interesting choice.
Are they still saying the skinned pets found nearby have nothing at all to do with the case?
What does she expect? She should know better. She covers stories like this all the time.Valtrex_11 said:
(8) Elizabeth Vargas: Idaho stabbings on track to become cold case | Morning in America - YouTube
Seems that way to me, or someone closer to the vicitims than just "been to a party." And definitely seems like one or two people were the intended victims, based on the supposed number of stab wounds.BadMoonRisin said:
Wasn't it a known party house? and the layout was kind of haphazard? Wondering if the killer was someone who had been in the house for a party and was familiar with the layout.
This group of roommates moved in last June or at least the rental history suggests that is when the latest lease began from reports. My assumption is there is a rental property management company that handles the leasing.BadMoonRisin said:
Wasn't it a known party house? and the layout was kind of haphazard? Wondering if the killer was someone who had been in the house for a party and was familiar with the layout.
They walked that part back very quickly. From the link shared before:texsn95 said:I remember them saying there was no threat to the public, what about a day after the murders? Have they walked that back? I can't believe they would declare that so soon.gotsand said:
So, they pretty much walked back most of their prior statements. Interesting choice.
Are they still saying the skinned pets found nearby have nothing at all to do with the case?
When the FBI shows up with 2 serial killer profilers in tow, tends to change perspective of the local law enforcement, maybe?Quote:
.On November 15, Moscow police said they preliminarily "believe this was an isolated, targeted attack and there is no imminent threat to the community at large," and that "evidence indicates that this was a targeted attack."
Yet the following day, police backtracked some of that, saying they couldn't actually say whether there was a threat to the public."
When a cop who sees a murder a decade finds 4 butchered college kids, he should have kept his mouth shut until hearing from said experts, maybe?aggiehawg said:When the FBI shows up with 2 serial killer profilers in tow, tends to change perspective of the local law enforcement, maybe?Quote:
.On November 15, Moscow police said they preliminarily "believe this was an isolated, targeted attack and there is no imminent threat to the community at large," and that "evidence indicates that this was a targeted attack."
Yet the following day, police backtracked some of that, saying they couldn't actually say whether there was a threat to the public."
Gun with a silencer would be more efficient to send that message.suburban cowboy said:
I'm not ruling out an organized crime hit as retaliation on X's parents or M's dad and their hard drug usage and distribution (recent) past.
Not saying it's it's most likely here, but I think it's possible.
The mother of one of the victims is currently being held on drug-related charges w/ a $50k bond. I have not seen details or confirmation of 'distribution'.Old Sarge said:
So is is speculation or known with the ties of drug distribution here?
And then there is the question of age.BQ78 said:
I think the "evidence" was the number of stab wounds, usually that is the result of a very emotional motive filled with hate. But when it is not, it's a sicko serial killer.
More toward the number necessary to get the job done, so bare minimum. Many wounds normally indicates anger or passion, almost always with people closely connected to a victim.gotsand said:
redacted: inappropriate in the current context
looks like all the coeds who were not coming back to campusBQ78 said:
Well there is no doubt the police public affairs is screwing the pooch on this one. Initially the community was told don't worry this is not a Jack the Ripper on the loose, no need to fear. Now they are walking that all back. Unfortunately poor performance by this division casts a shadow of doubt on the entire Moscow police force.
At age 15 Co-ed Killer Ed Kemper shot grandma in the head, then two more shots for good measure, waited on grandpa to get home and plugged him too then called his mom who told him to call police and he turned himself in. At age 21 he was released and by age 22 he convinced all the psychiatrists he was fully rehabilitated and all his juvenile records expunged.HtownAg92 said:
Question for the DAs / FBI / LEO -- can you dig into the histories of suspects to see if there is some sort of earlier psychotic episode or behavior that would otherwise be sealed -- like mental health treatment or juvi record? Seems like something this horrific would not be committed by someone on their first rodeo. There would be some troubling incident in the past.
I know, privacy and HIPAA and all that -- but can FBI investigators access it?
I guess related to this -- would that sort of thing show up on a FBI background check for a firearm purchase?
LINKQuote:
Under Idaho law, most convictions, charges, or arrests from when you were under age 18 can qualify for expungement. However, certain more serious crimes cannot be expunged, such as: murder, voluntary manslaughter, rape, arson, aggravated battery, drug trafficking, or injury to a child.
fka ftc said:At age 15 Co-ed Killer Ed Kemper shot grandma in the head, then two more shots for good measure, waited on grandpa to get home and plugged him too then called his mom who told him to call police and he turned himself in. At age 21 he was released and by age 22 he convinced all the psychiatrists he was fully rehabilitated and all his juvenile records expunged.HtownAg92 said:
Question for the DAs / FBI / LEO -- can you dig into the histories of suspects to see if there is some sort of earlier psychotic episode or behavior that would otherwise be sealed -- like mental health treatment or juvi record? Seems like something this horrific would not be committed by someone on their first rodeo. There would be some troubling incident in the past.
I know, privacy and HIPAA and all that -- but can FBI investigators access it?
I guess related to this -- would that sort of thing show up on a FBI background check for a firearm purchase?
So sealed vs expunged, I too would be curious as to how this practically works. Who holds the key to open sealed records, even "unofficially"?