Anonymous wrote:This guy is really brazen. Looking right at the camera in the cab. Leaving the monopoly money. I suspect that leaving the starbucks stuff behind was intentional. Maybe he's not a professional, but he is really good and he is trolling them big-time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At first I thought this guy must be acting on his own, especially given that he left his phone and cup. But now I think he's an assassin. Everything he left, he left on purpose. He looked directly at the camera in the cab on purpose. The only mistake he made was to flirt with that woman at the hostel. And he is clearly much smarter than the cops.
That could be plausible, except for the problems with the gun. Because he was clearly expecting the gun to function again after firing the first shot. Except it didn’t. He tried to fire, realized it hadn’t cycled the action, and then had to cycle it manually to get it to fire again. Then he had to repeat that process several more times. That means he hasn’t previously tested this gun and suppressor combination before. That’s something that a professional would never do - go into a job with untested gear.
Other than that, your theory is plausible.
I thought they weren’t actual jams but that this particular gun model had to be manually cycled between shots. But either way, he clearly knew what he was doing in handling it with ease. It didn’t seem to throw him off.
+1. I don't know much about guns, but whatever happened he didn't miss a beat.
Also the way he walked off completely calm. A regular person would have panicked and ran, especially since there was a witness right next to him. He knew not to attract attention.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just don't think anyone is going to turn this guy in.
They need to up the reward to 1 million.
Who would put up that kind of money?
UHC? Yeah, that'll look great for them.
NYPD? Also an awful look, compared to other rewards for other unsolved crimes.
No one wins by catching this guy or offering up a hefty reward.
BT’s family? It sounds like they have that kind of money.
PPs said he and his wife were separated. If that’s true, the wife has a lot on her plate, emotionally, logistically, and financially. Putting up a big reward may not be at the top of the list.
I would feel unsafe on a personal level if my spouses killer was on the loose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just don't think anyone is going to turn this guy in.
They need to up the reward to 1 million.
Who would put up that kind of money?
UHC? Yeah, that'll look great for them.
NYPD? Also an awful look, compared to other rewards for other unsolved crimes.
No one wins by catching this guy or offering up a hefty reward.
The guys salary was 10 million last year. Ten percent is easily doable, but only if his family cares. They obviously don’t. 10,000 is what a family making 100K could scrounge up as a reward. This is just embarrassing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are making crazy profits. How about just a reasonable profit?
is that how America works though? in any sector or industry?
if so, please name which one.
Also please define a reasonable profit? How much money should one be able to make? I’m
Guessing there are people in this country who think you are grossly overpaid for whatever you do OP. I’m sure you have much more than any one person truly “needs”. It’s easy to say “a billion is too much” but very hard to say what the lower limit should be.
I think after salaries and overhead are paid, there should be no profit in healthcare.
so all healthcare is non-profit? assume this applies to doc and hospital systems?
In my Utopia, yes. Everyone is paid a very healthy salary commiserate with their training and experience. Money is set aside for research, and maintenance on buildings and equipment, etc. But any money leftover is not used to pad corporate pockets. Any monies left beyond that mean that premiums were too high and should be lowered accordingly.
You realize insurance company profits are a tiny fraction of health care costs, right?
No, they still dont understand industry margins or scale. That’s why they have a blogger gig.
Who cares what the margin is, when the bottom line is $16-23 BILLION in profit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are making crazy profits. How about just a reasonable profit?
is that how America works though? in any sector or industry?
if so, please name which one.
Also please define a reasonable profit? How much money should one be able to make? I’m
Guessing there are people in this country who think you are grossly overpaid for whatever you do OP. I’m sure you have much more than any one person truly “needs”. It’s easy to say “a billion is too much” but very hard to say what the lower limit should be.
I think after salaries and overhead are paid, there should be no profit in healthcare.
so all healthcare is non-profit? assume this applies to doc and hospital systems?
In my Utopia, yes. Everyone is paid a very healthy salary commiserate with their training and experience. Money is set aside for research, and maintenance on buildings and equipment, etc. But any money leftover is not used to pad corporate pockets. Any monies left beyond that mean that premiums were too high and should be lowered accordingly.
You realize insurance company profits are a tiny fraction of health care costs, right?
No, they still dont understand industry margins or scale. That’s why they have a blogger gig.
Who cares what the margin is, when the bottom line is $16-23 BILLION in profit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Speaking of money. . . the backpack had Monopoly money in it.
I thought the guy was sloppy because of the water bottle and stuff. Seems not.
The engraved bullets, the staring straight into a camera in a cab, the monopoly money, evading capture as long as he has... Guy may not be a pro (I don't think he is and never have) but he's clearly pretty smart and playing games. Combined with public sentiment, I think he is on the run for awhile and people won't be eager to to turn him in. FBI and police are people too, who are probably aware pics of him in handcuffs won't exactly make them look like heroes so who knows how committed they remain, especially if it turns out he jumped on an international flight same day and things goes on for awhile.
Im curious how much money this guy has to play around with. His backpack was apparently expensive and they think he was in NY for about a month which makes me think he doesn’t have a job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are making crazy profits. How about just a reasonable profit?
is that how America works though? in any sector or industry?
if so, please name which one.
Also please define a reasonable profit? How much money should one be able to make? I’m
Guessing there are people in this country who think you are grossly overpaid for whatever you do OP. I’m sure you have much more than any one person truly “needs”. It’s easy to say “a billion is too much” but very hard to say what the lower limit should be.
I think after salaries and overhead are paid, there should be no profit in healthcare.
so all healthcare is non-profit? assume this applies to doc and hospital systems?
In my Utopia, yes. Everyone is paid a very healthy salary commiserate with their training and experience. Money is set aside for research, and maintenance on buildings and equipment, etc. But any money leftover is not used to pad corporate pockets. Any monies left beyond that mean that premiums were too high and should be lowered accordingly.
You realize insurance company profits are a tiny fraction of health care costs, right?
No, they still dont understand industry margins or scale. That’s why they have a blogger gig.