Ag_07 said:
So who's gonna start the new thread because this one is about to go the way of the old one.
Pretty sure a reporter or someone acting shady nuked the old thread
Ag_07 said:
So who's gonna start the new thread because this one is about to go the way of the old one.
Was recently asked to assist in a MP search. Not exactly a culvert but similar, the body was found in a roadway drainage structure not more than a 3 minute walk from the person's car. Dogs completely missed it (though to be fair I'd imagine rain, snow and time complicated the situation).ursusguy said:
One of the basic tenets when you have multiple dog teams is making sure the handlers work independent of each other. Otherwise, the handlers may unconsciously bias themselves. In Johnson County we had the "super baby" case. Toddler went missing from effectively a drug house. 3 dog teams were brought in. Note this was in the middle of August about 12 years ago. Two came in pretty close to each other time wise. Dog one hit a scent, crossed the road and went straight to a pond about across the road and about 50 yards out in a pasture. There was one toddler foot print at the edge of the pond. This brought all search efforts to a halt (bad idea, but that was on the Sheriff's department). Later I would be shown the track and it was not from that day. Dog #2 followed the exact same path. Hasty grid of the pond, nothing. Dog #3 was a lab know to be a really good trailer. Right as they got ready to start, a deputy mentioned what the other 2 dogs did. The dog initially started the same way, but turned at the end of the trailer house headed to the back fence. As we watched, for whatever reason, the handler pulled off the dog, and it veered back and took the exact same route as the other 2 dogs....48 hours, the baby was found sitting next to a stock tank about 2 miles due north of the trailer. Wearing a clean diaper......yeah. Never heard how the investigation worked out.
Burleson roughly 2004. Cocaine stung out diabetic with no shoes crashed his car along I-35. Best guess was he freaked out and ran. Canine got him to an apartment parking lot across the highway, and then lost. Area was "throughly" searched by various leo agencies. He was eventually found about 76 yards away in a bridge culvert entombed in mud.
..you know, the first place you should probably look.
*Bloodhound was an odd deal. This was down around Rusk in the middle of the summer around 2006 (don't hold me to the year). 75 year old, supposedly with Alzihmers disappeared (but no one other than a daughter seemed to know anything about the Alzihmers, the husband never mentioned it in his interview). She was annoyed with the husband about something, and did her usual walk it off. She was in good shape for her age, and was known to be content walking a good distance (Alzihmers patients in good physical shape are a royal pain to hunt for). Poof nothing. I don't remember how or why, but a Texas Ranger was involved and suddenly we had a TDCJ bloodhound on scene. Dog took the expected route, but before hitting a small highway, veered off across a pasture. Hit a fence and nada. The fenceline was fairly overgrown and no signs of vehicular traffic. Very little doubt she went that way, but might as well be an alien abduction. Last time I checked, she never was found.
What movie is this from?PrestigeWorldwideAg12 said:
Another theory based off the dad's actions and calmness.
IT was all set up and his dad was in on it AND the police are in on it just to keep the kid safe. Maybe he did get involved into something bad and made a deal to rat our the bad guys. Maybe he is in protected hiding now until the bad dudes are busted. Maybe he made a sweet deal to not get in trouble.
Not likely but hell what is normalcy anymore
Are you friends with Grapesoda?PrestigeWorldwideAg12 said:
Another theory based off the dad's actions and calmness.
IT was all set up and his dad was in on it AND the police are in on it just to keep the kid safe. Maybe he did get involved into something bad and made a deal to rat our the bad guys. Maybe he is in protected hiding now until the bad dudes are busted. Maybe he made a sweet deal to not get in trouble.
Not likely but hell what is normalcy anymore
shiftyandquick said:
I don't buy the "son and dad are guilty" theory. I think that's ridiculous. So dad doesn't want son to be found, purposefully holding back information that could allow his son to be found, because of some big bad secret.
The competing theory here is that the police in Luling are incompetent.
I'll take #2.
Didn't happen in Luling. SO case and Rangers.91AggieLawyer said:shiftyandquick said:
I don't buy the "son and dad are guilty" theory. I think that's ridiculous. So dad doesn't want son to be found, purposefully holding back information that could allow his son to be found, because of some big bad secret.
The competing theory here is that the police in Luling are incompetent.
I'll take #2.
Used to live next door to old school retired Dallas police officer. As in, he knew JD Tippitt pretty well. Not best buddies or anything but from that era. Anyway, I got loads of stories, some of which centered on multi-jurisdictional issues. Often times, the FBI would come in and gunk things up at one time or another. As my neighbor would say, "the FBI were masterful at things like bank robberies and kidnappings (remember, we're talking way back when), but they couldn't solve a murder if you had the guy with a body, a knife dripping blood AND a confession."
Point: I'm sure Lulig police do what they normally do mostly fine. This is the obscure missing persons case that most police departments probably wouldn't handle well in any case. Not sure I'd go all the way to incompetent.
Luling doesn't generally run these types of cases and call in the Rangers for assistance. I think Ranger Benoist still covers the Luling area.91AggieLawyer said:shiftyandquick said:
I don't buy the "son and dad are guilty" theory. I think that's ridiculous. So dad doesn't want son to be found, purposefully holding back information that could allow his son to be found, because of some big bad secret.
The competing theory here is that the police in Luling are incompetent.
I'll take #2.
Used to live next door to old school retired Dallas police officer. As in, he knew JD Tippitt pretty well. Not best buddies or anything but from that era. Anyway, I got loads of stories, some of which centered on multi-jurisdictional issues. Often times, the FBI would come in and gunk things up at one time or another. As my neighbor would say, "the FBI were masterful at things like bank robberies and kidnappings (remember, we're talking way back when), but they couldn't solve a murder if you had the guy with a body, a knife dripping blood AND a confession."
Point: I'm sure Lulig police do what they normally do mostly fine. This is the obscure missing persons case that most police departments probably wouldn't handle well in any case. Not sure I'd go all the way to incompetent.
Quote:
Friday's 100 volunteers will include search and rescue K9's trained in human remains detection.
ATX_AG_08 said:
Starting a new 3 day search this Friday.
https://www.statesman.com/story/news/2021/02/25/jason-landry-investigation-texas-search-and-rescue-commencing-3-day-search/6814780002/?utm_source=SND&utm_medium=Facebook&utm_campaign=statesman&fbclid=IwAR2ge0TPkUAPCvILq7hkIU2BJZb_1L_gO10x5AD3yRWGyrXbKza8b7aVI6Y
Quote:
The search teams covered miles of terrain on horseback, motorized vehicles and foot. Thankfully, everyone was safe and sound at the end of the weekend. We continue to analyze and follow up on search results and data collected
Where did you see this info?John Cocktolstoy said:
"1. Friends of his talking about the Rapture and him acting weird"