BigJimsWornOutTires
Kraken
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As four people are being shot to death, not to mention the screaming, I imagine there would be lots of screaming especially knowing the husband and wife were arguing sometime Sunday night, or early Monday morning; the 10-year-old allegedly slept through it. Also, the father, the alleged shooter, shot himself to death.
The "supposed" reason the child didn't hear over five loud gunshots, including screams and agonizing cries for help, was because his door was closed and the box fan was running. I imagine the detectives would do what I would do and replay the scene. Set up the sound recording equipment on the child's bed, run the fan, close the door, and then have another member shoot blanks in the rooms where the crimes took place. But would that be enough to convince the prosecutor to charge the child, knowing the shitstorm that would follow?
He had enough time to clean the evidence off his hands, i.e. gunpowder residue. He had enough time to plant evidence to make it appear Pappy went wacky-jacky by rubbing his fingerprints off the gun with a cloth and then pressing Pappy's fingers against the trigger. The next morning he called 911. So he had anywhere between four and ten hours to get busy and get some sleep.
Before any of you accuse me of callousness, or your usual skitzo virtual signal retardation, ugh, consider the facts. Some of you readers are young parasites and know more about things today than your ignorant parents did at your age. Knowing that this kid probably spent most of his time on video-sharing apps and CSI video games, he's not that far off. And he wouldn't be the first kid to do something like this.
The detectives have no choice but to play along. If the kid doesn't talk, they have nothing. If the Internet history of every device in the house doesn't show any criminal intent, such as, "how to clean up a crime scene," the DA won't touch it.
Ah, yes, I see a future novel. Twenty years later, that child, now a grown man released his first book titled, (IF) I Murdered My Family, How I Did It.
Cops describe 'massacre' at Oklahoma home
The terrifying crime left neighbors in a quiet Oklahoma City suburb shocked as some described the perpetrator, Jonathon Candy, 42, as 'goofy' while investigators still search for answers.
www.dailymail.co.uk
The "supposed" reason the child didn't hear over five loud gunshots, including screams and agonizing cries for help, was because his door was closed and the box fan was running. I imagine the detectives would do what I would do and replay the scene. Set up the sound recording equipment on the child's bed, run the fan, close the door, and then have another member shoot blanks in the rooms where the crimes took place. But would that be enough to convince the prosecutor to charge the child, knowing the shitstorm that would follow?
He had enough time to clean the evidence off his hands, i.e. gunpowder residue. He had enough time to plant evidence to make it appear Pappy went wacky-jacky by rubbing his fingerprints off the gun with a cloth and then pressing Pappy's fingers against the trigger. The next morning he called 911. So he had anywhere between four and ten hours to get busy and get some sleep.
Before any of you accuse me of callousness, or your usual skitzo virtual signal retardation, ugh, consider the facts. Some of you readers are young parasites and know more about things today than your ignorant parents did at your age. Knowing that this kid probably spent most of his time on video-sharing apps and CSI video games, he's not that far off. And he wouldn't be the first kid to do something like this.
Alabama teen sentenced to life for killing 5 family members, including 3 younger siblings, when he was 14
The judge wrote that the crime was "ghastly, disturbing, and draped in unmitigated evil" and warranted the harshest punishment allowed by law.
www.cbsnews.com
Teen Who Massacred His Family with Rifle Just Before New Year's Ball Dropped Gets 150 Years
Scott Kologi was 16 when he shot four members of his family with an assault rifle. Prosecutors called him cold-blooded, but defense lawyers said severe mental illness drove him to kill his family
people.com
The detectives have no choice but to play along. If the kid doesn't talk, they have nothing. If the Internet history of every device in the house doesn't show any criminal intent, such as, "how to clean up a crime scene," the DA won't touch it.
Ah, yes, I see a future novel. Twenty years later, that child, now a grown man released his first book titled, (IF) I Murdered My Family, How I Did It.
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