Fire in upper NW?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't tell my own kids if I had that much money coming to my front door much less the housekeeper.


This. I find that piece of this newest info to be the most non credible.


I used to be the personal assistant of a wealthy DC lawyer. I stopped finding anything he asked for or told me unusual when he told me that he needed me to drive his Porsche to a place in the far-flung suburbs where he had forgotten his Blackberry. He told me to drive HIS car because I took the Metro to work and the Metro didn't go there.

I was sent on errands to his accountant at tax season, to his divorce lawyer, to pick up his kids from the doctor's office. One time he sent me to his house, with instructions about where the secret emergency key was, to go pick up his kid's textbooks that she forgot when they left on vacation.

I thought this kind of relationship only existed on TV myself, until I was in it.


Yes, but did your employer tell you to handle tens of thousands of dollars or transfer them/receive them? Running errands a la "Devil Wears Prada" is unique in this area, but not unheard of.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:so the niece says it was unscheduled. NG says it was scheduled. is that what we're getting at?


The niece's story makes most sense to me. SS was instructed as she said to call AIW,INC and request 40K. If the niece knew he was instructed then it sounds like SS told his contact at AIW this situation and to not call the police..leave the money at the front door. Everyone thinks that if the intruder gets what they came for then everyone stays alive.


I bet the police told niece's parents what they knew at the time, parents told niece, niece started posting about it. I don't know how old niece is, but she seems young to be posting about this stuff so early in the investigation.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't tell my own kids if I had that much money coming to my front door much less the housekeeper.


This. I find that piece of this newest info to be the most non credible.


I used to be the personal assistant of a wealthy DC lawyer. I stopped finding anything he asked for or told me unusual when he told me that he needed me to drive his Porsche to a place in the far-flung suburbs where he had forgotten his Blackberry. He told me to drive HIS car because I took the Metro to work and the Metro didn't go there.

I was sent on errands to his accountant at tax season, to his divorce lawyer, to pick up his kids from the doctor's office. One time he sent me to his house, with instructions about where the secret emergency key was, to go pick up his kid's textbooks that she forgot when they left on vacation.

I thought this kind of relationship only existed on TV myself, until I was in it.


Yes, but did your employer tell you to handle tens of thousands of dollars or transfer them/receive them? Running errands a la "Devil Wears Prada" is unique in this area, but not unheard of.


I did hold about $5,000 in cash for him and a bunch of checks for someone to come pick them up (I was not told in advance who it would be, just that someone would call from the lobby), but never that kind of money. He also was nowhere near the top of the feeding chain, even at our firm, and there were others who had bigger time hobbies and charity work than he did. The $5k was related to a charity involving boats and an event they were having. I don't know specifically what the money was for.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't tell my own kids if I had that much money coming to my front door much less the housekeeper.


This. I find that piece of this newest info to be the most non credible.


I used to be the personal assistant of a wealthy DC lawyer. I stopped finding anything he asked for or told me unusual when he told me that he needed me to drive his Porsche to a place in the far-flung suburbs where he had forgotten his Blackberry. He told me to drive HIS car because I took the Metro to work and the Metro didn't go there.

I was sent on errands to his accountant at tax season, to his divorce lawyer, to pick up his kids from the doctor's office. One time he sent me to his house, with instructions about where the secret emergency key was, to go pick up his kid's textbooks that she forgot when they left on vacation.

I thought this kind of relationship only existed on TV myself, until I was in it.


I'm not uber wealthy and don't have assistant, but I really don't find any of those tasks listed odd. What else would a personal assistant do other than these errands that the employer didn't want to do.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Did someone post that Nelly said "cash deliveries to the home were common."

Please, can someone confirm this and post a link, if possible.


maybe they meant scheduled? I found this.

A large amount of money was scheduled to be delivered to the D.C. home where four people were found brutally murdered, FOX 5's Paul Wagner reports.

According to Nelitza Gutierrez, a housekeeper working for the Savopoulos family, $40,000 in cash was to be delivered to the house on Woodland Drive last Thursday morning, the day the bodies were found after a fire.

In an off-camera interview, Gutierrez says an assistant was scheduled to drop off the cash to be used for the opening of a martial arts center in Chantilly, Virginia. The housekeeper says she spoke with the person who was supposed to make the delivery and he confirmed he dropped it off at the house Thursday morning.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Did someone post that Nelly said "cash deliveries to the home were common."

Please, can someone confirm this and post a link, if possible.


https://twitter.com/search?f=realtime&q=%40fox5wagner&src=typd&lang=en


So Nelly knows cash deliveries were common. I wonder how many other people knew? Could AIW staff and Savapoulos household staff maybe "let information slip" that this was common practice for father to receive large cash sums?


Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't tell my own kids if I had that much money coming to my front door much less the housekeeper.


This. I find that piece of this newest info to be the most non credible.


I used to be the personal assistant of a wealthy DC lawyer. I stopped finding anything he asked for or told me unusual when he told me that he needed me to drive his Porsche to a place in the far-flung suburbs where he had forgotten his Blackberry. He told me to drive HIS car because I took the Metro to work and the Metro didn't go there.

I was sent on errands to his accountant at tax season, to his divorce lawyer, to pick up his kids from the doctor's office. One time he sent me to his house, with instructions about where the secret emergency key was, to go pick up his kid's textbooks that she forgot when they left on vacation.

I thought this kind of relationship only existed on TV myself, until I was in it.


I'm not uber wealthy and don't have assistant, but I really don't find any of those tasks listed odd. What else would a personal assistant do other than these errands that the employer didn't want to do.


You mean like help set up a martial arts studio? Because way up thread, people thought that was a suspicious and inappropriate task.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:If I had the prestige these people had, I could call my bank President and have him bring me money. I wouldn't need an assistant to bring it to my house.

Or leave it outside. Who leaves their boss's cash OUTSIDE where any Joe Blow could just take it ?


The employee with the boss being held hostage.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:so the niece says it was unscheduled. NG says it was scheduled. is that what we're getting at?


The niece's story makes most sense to me. SS was instructed as she said to call AIW,INC and request 40K. If the niece knew he was instructed then it sounds like SS told his contact at AIW this situation and to not call the police..leave the money at the front door. Everyone thinks that if the intruder gets what they came for then everyone stays alive.


I bet the police told niece's parents what they knew at the time, parents told niece, niece started posting about it. I don't know how old niece is, but she seems young to be posting about this stuff so early in the investigation.


Not sure police would just give out info like that...everyone is a suspect. His sister (niece's mother) did call and talk to him on the day of the murder.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Where did you hear the voicemail? Seems like someone is saying that the little boy could be heard in the background???



They removed that portion of the audio.


I listened several times and it didn't sound out of the ordinary to me.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If I had the prestige these people had, I could call my bank President and have him bring me money. I wouldn't need an assistant to bring it to my house.

Or leave it outside. Who leaves their boss's cash OUTSIDE where any Joe Blow could just take it ?


The employee with the boss being held hostage.


This!!
You're gonna do what your told when it comes to life or death. If SS instructed the assistant to drop off money, not call the police, go and don't look back..well I'm sure he did. What else can you do in that situation? I'm sure there is always the I shoulda, coulda, woulda aftermath but during a crisis you just do what your told because you don't want anyone to get hurt. Money is replaceable..life is not.
Anonymous
Paul Wagner ?@Fox5Wagner 8m8 minutes ago
@patrickgmfox5dc talked after crime.
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Paul Wagner ?@Fox5Wagner 9m9 minutes ago
@patrickgmfox5dc she says assistant told her. She has worked for family for 20 years. They talks after crime.
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Anonymous
The reporter's twitter says that NG talked to assistant who dropped off the cash AFTER the crime.

Sounds like she is just passing info along and adding that cash deliveries are common.

If the assistant didn't tell her that, it would be very easy to verify.

So if this is the assistant's story, then it contradicts the person on the internet claiming to be a neice. She has 900 followers. Would someone lie about something like that? I don't know.
Anonymous
were the S family's next door neighbors at home during any of this? have any neighbors made any statements about having heard or seen anything out of the ordinary?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The reporter's twitter says that NG talked to assistant who dropped off the cash AFTER the crime.

Sounds like she is just passing info along and adding that cash deliveries are common.

If the assistant didn't tell her that, it would be very easy to verify.

So if this is the assistant's story, then it contradicts the person on the internet claiming to be a neice. She has 900 followers. Would someone lie about something like that? I don't know.


Thar niece is a fraud.
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