Anonymous wrote:I gave her the benefit of the doubt earlier in the thread and didn’t want to jump to any blaming or conclusions. I will say though she sounds remarkably calm and collected during that call. I have had to call 911 before for a true emergency and it is such a disorienting and panicky feeling I felt like I could barely collect my thoughts and respond cogently to all the questions. Imagining my own 5 year old missing and the ensuing call I would be making to 911, I think I would be practically screaming at them to hurry and send someone and hardly able to formulate responses. She doesn’t sound panicked or stressed in the least.
Anonymous wrote:I gave her the benefit of the doubt earlier in the thread and didn’t want to jump to any blaming or conclusions. I will say though she sounds remarkably calm and collected during that call. I have had to call 911 before for a true emergency and it is such a disorienting and panicky feeling I felt like I could barely collect my thoughts and respond cogently to all the questions. Imagining my own 5 year old missing and the ensuing call I would be making to 911, I think I would be practically screaming at them to hurry and send someone and hardly able to formulate responses. She doesn’t sound panicked or stressed in the least.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who are "they" - I mean the people who were telling the mom that somebody must have taken Dulce?
I’m guessing other people at the park? But now the story is that Dulce ran off?
Anonymous wrote:Who are "they" - I mean the people who were telling the mom that somebody must have taken Dulce?
Anonymous wrote:Mom admitted she was in her car scratching a lottery ticket. Not helping an niece with homework.she admitted she could not see the park where her daughter went. So a lottery ticket was more important than keeping an eye on her children. Lovely. I doubt the kid. Is hiding. It's been nearly three weeks. Someone took her. Yes abduction is rare but it happens
Anonymous wrote:Mom admitted she was in her car scratching a lottery ticket. Not helping an niece with homework.she admitted she could not see the park where her daughter went. So a lottery ticket was more important than keeping an eye on her children. Lovely. I doubt the kid. Is hiding. It's been nearly three weeks. Someone took her. Yes abduction is rare but it happens
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have the authorities talked to the little brother? Not that a 3 year old can always be a reliable "witness..."
How convenient that the child who would have been a more reliable witness (the 9 year old sibling) was in the car instead of playing with the other kids.
The mom is only 19. She didn't have a kid at 10. The 9 year old is her sibling's kid.
And they have detained the mom's boyfriend, an illegal immigrant from Mexico. But he's being held by ICE, not local police, so he apparently didn't do it and is just being deported.
No, the 9 year old is the MOM'S SIBLING. Her parent's daughter.
I think the girl is 8.
I think this is significant (that pp said 9 and you say 8)
There is so much conflicting info in this case. No one seems to be giving/getting accurate info.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have the authorities talked to the little brother? Not that a 3 year old can always be a reliable "witness..."
How convenient that the child who would have been a more reliable witness (the 9 year old sibling) was in the car instead of playing with the other kids.
The mom is only 19. She didn't have a kid at 10. The 9 year old is her sibling's kid.
And they have detained the mom's boyfriend, an illegal immigrant from Mexico. But he's being held by ICE, not local police, so he apparently didn't do it and is just being deported.
No, the 9 year old is the MOM'S SIBLING. Her parent's daughter.
I think the girl is 8.