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Reply to "Dr Sneha Philip mystery - did she die in 9/11 attacks?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Three pairs of shoes, bed linens, and lingerie would be clunky, heavy bags. Maybe she took a cab home; as she was arriving home at 8:43am (if that time was correct), she realized she left her bags in the cab, easy to do after a night of partying. She turned around and left the building to try to stop the taxi from driving away. [/quote] Or maybe she was afraid to go home. After her troubles and the fight at the courthouse. Maybe it was the last straw. Nobody really ever knows what goes on behind closed doors. Maybe someone was helping her start over. Maybe they advised her to NOT return to the apartment for her things. Maybe they suggested she purchase her own shoes and undergarments, and they'd supply clothing at a shelter. Maybe the bed linens were for some sort of shelter hopping she would be doing. Maybe it wasn't her seen in the security video.[/quote] Oh for Pete's sake--her purchases telegraph that she was having sex with someone other than her husband not at all that she was abused. Battered women's shelters don't have a dress code and don't make you bring your own sheets. It's not camp. [b]There's also no way shelter employees would keep silent this long a family think some had died in 9/11 even if it were a breach of protocol.[/b][/quote] They absolutely will. My senior year of college, I was placed with the battered women's shelter in the college town as my internship for my senior thesis. To this day, I still do NOT know where the shelter is located in that town or if it's even in the town proper. I, and the other student placed there, met our handlers at random locations throughout the town. We then drove to another location in town, switched vehicles, and were blindfolded for the drive to the shelter. Same procedure leaving the shelter. Pick up and drop off locations were never the same. The cars used varied. The only constant for us were our handlers. I legit felt like some kind of CIA spy. All of the helpers and handlers working there took their work very seriously. Not only that, there were lawyers, therapists, doctors, makeup artists, hair dressers, and teachers who all volunteered and were blindfolded to get to the location as well. This was back in 2005, so I can only imagine how sophisticated their operation is now. I saw the transformations the women went through before being moved out of that location to their new lives. It's much more sophisticated than simply tossing on a wig and making a run for it. [/quote] I worked at a domestic violence shelter in the Bronx. I was not blindfolded to travel to it! The women were free to come and go during the daytime, but were not allowed to use cell phones or give out the number. This was in 2000. [/quote]
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