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Reply to "Savannah Guthrie’s mom is missing, suspect kidnapping"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]A few interesting points from a video I just watched: The blood was aspirated and from 8-24 inches off ground. The nest camera would have kept recoding after being removed. So if he put it in a pocket or backpack, there could be very valuable audio during the time it was still connected to her wifi. So maybe they don’t have that recording yet, or they already do and it just isn’t known to the public. This guy thinks he parked down the street, removed the doorbell, walked away for about 20 min to see of there was a response, came in through the side door (captured on camera, flood lights were broken), then held her at gunpoint, and walked her back to his car. Still makes you wonder how his car was not detected by any footage in the area, how he got in the side door and knew he could get in it, and what the motive was. Occam’s razor would probably say it was supposed to be a ransom situation, but she died before that could happen. Maybe he somehow knew where she kept a spare key hidden or he stole it from someone else who had a spare. Off topic because I don’t think this happened, but it reminded me of a story I heard years ago. Someone bought one of those fake rocks you hide your key in. The cashier got their address from their check, retrieved the key from the rock, and broke into their house. [/quote] A lot of th side doors in Tucson are the sliding patio doors which are super easy to break into (it’s just a snap lock and then the doors slide open). My dad always installed a metal cross bar to prevent this. Also that neighborhood is super super dark so it does not surprise me that no neighbor captured anything usable on camera. Would be more likely that they would catch something at th cameras at one of the major intersections near there. But those are also pretty dark. I hate driving there at night because I find the utter blackness terrifying. Tucson historically had light restrictions due to the observatory at Kitt Peak I think. [/quote] I was just going to comment something similar about how dark those suburban desert communities are if there isn’t a full moon, and how windy the streets can be. And the houses often back to a canyon or hills or something. [/quote] There was a full moon on February 1, 2026, so the night of her disappearance would have been as light as it ever gets. However, I think it would still be pretty dark and require someone that knows the area well, to find their way to wherever they went to dispose of her body. Or a small chance to stow her away alive. Regardless of how light or dark it was, most of the homes near her are on 1+ acres and are set back, with lots of vegetation in the front yard. So house cameras are not going to pick up cars driving by. I heard a local say the easiest place to dispose of a body would be to roll it off a cliff on Mount Lemmon, about an hour away. [img]https://www.thejoshuatreehouse.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/QD5A3610-4-e1666977932275.jpg[/img] [/quote] I lived at the base of mount Lemmon. If I was gojng to dispose of a body from nG’s neighborhood I would not go up mount lemmon—you’d have to drive all the way across river, Sabino canyon, then Tanque verde — all major roads with traffic lights and police presence. They often do DUI stops on caraljna highway up to mount Lemmon because so many drunk people used to go off the side of that road. Much easier to drive west or north and dump body in desert there. [/quote] She’s probably buried somewhere and never to be found.[/quote] The soil is made of caliche, which is like concrete. So it's hard (impossible) to dig with a shovel. Unless they drove her miles and days away.[/quote]
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