Ok, the drive being pre-planned changes things a bit in my mind. I was under the impression that didn't come up until after they announced they were looking for the car. At the time of the murder, it was registered in PA. Though, shortly after the murder I believe he re-registered it in WA, which he probably regrets. Though, my understanding is that they connected him through the university records. He seemed to know he was screwed once they announced the car, but he was also obviously still looking for some way to mitigate the damage. I would be surprised if he had a garage where he was living in WA, but I don't know. |
I mean, with the benefit of hindsight, they obviously didn't know with certainty the year. Why were you so sure they were sure? Whether they're giving descriptions of people or cars, the descriptions provided often don't perfectly match what they're ultimately trying to find. That's certainly not unique to this case, and I would think would be common knowledge. |
Ever see the movie "Murder by Numbers"? |
They put that information out based on the video of the vehicle in the area. Obviously whoever the police consulted on that video believed they could identify that car as being a 2011-2013 model, it wasn’t some rando that made that conclusion. If the police say they are looking for a 2011-2013 vehicle, it is perfectly reasonable that someone would not connect that with their son’s vehicle from a different year. |
To be clear, I'm not trying to convince anyone of anything. I haven't followed this case as closely as some of you. I've been saying that I'm confused why they didn't suspect him. Some things, like finding out the road trip was preplanned, helps to explain that. But I'm still surprised the car didn't at least make them more worried that the police would suspect him. It doesn't seem like that really crossed their minds, either. |
The narrowed the car down right away. A bored university security guard did a search on Elantras registered with the university and found his car, with no front plate, just like in the security cameras, b/c no front plate is required in PA where his car was registered. Took awhile to get a sample of DNA to compare against the evidence at the crime scene. But they knew exactly what kind of car he drove and were watching him for weeks. |
OK. I mean, I guess that's understandable. Seems weird to me, but understandable. To me that sounds akin to hearing that, say, the police are looking for a 6 ft white male with a rough sketch, seeing someone that matches the sketch, but dismissing it because you happen to know they're actually 5'10". I wouldn't expect the years or heights or weights or colors to be precise or confident. In practice these are regularly off. But maybe that isn't common knowledge. |
Because that is the description the police put out? They didn’t need to narrow it down by year, but yet they gave a range, which did not include 2015. People are acting like the parents should have known because of the car, but their son’s car wasn’t in the range of years provided! Obviously we all know he did it, but this whole argument has been about whether the parents should have known or suspected their son, and you just can’t use the car to support that conclusion when the year of the car didn’t match what the police said they were looking for. |
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I think what's surprising me about this discussion, and the NYT article, is that no one is talking about his long history of harassing and stalking women on campus.
Numerous women, including his own professors, tried to intervene but there was never quite enough evidence to act. To me, that's a lot more interesting and worth exploring than the family's insistence he was autistic. |
He was known to be a creepy weirdo and the women were scared of him. But we’re to believe his family had no clue at all what he was like. |
+1 |
This isn’t a lay person eyewitness conclusion, which obviously can be faulty due to a variety of factors. Some car person was consulted and said this is a 2011-2013 Elantra. They didn’t need to give a specific range of years but they did, and that was the information put out there. Again, the idea that the parents should have been like well they said specifically it’s a 2011-2013 Elantra and Bryan has a 2015 so he should be a suspect in these murders is ridiculous. |
Well, he lived in the area. Drives same car. Incel. Was acting weird. And known for being aggressive and threatening to women he worked with. Seems like a few red flags, no? |
What does it matter when the family became suspicious? The murders were already committed at that point. It's not like they could have saved anyone. |
| Wow-many of you guys are genuinely bad at this! Just, shockingly bad instincts and assertions. |