Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Playing devil's advocate - considering that he had flown to FL just a few weeks ago, why would he drive back without her knowing it would lead to a MILLION questions if he did kill her?
I'm not saying he didn't - and I'm CERTAINLY not saying she wasn't a victim of something, I mean that video says it all - but it's not like he thought he could just go back in their van and people would be like, "oh no Gabby? Cool."
I think they got into a fight and something happened that led to her death and that whatever it was was probably a grey area of fault. Maybe they got rough next to an edge of a cliff, maybe she ran crying and fell, maybe he drove off to cool down and came back and she was gone and he found her body somewhere near by. I think he did not MURDER her but something happened where he wasn't sure if he had criminal liability. He freaked out, got scared, and started driving home. Takes her phone, stupidly posts and texts a few times. Realizes that this is a bad idea, ditches the phone, keeps driving. Gets home, spills everything to mom and dad and they lawyer up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i'm coming to this thread very late and not terribly knowledgeable, so I'm sure this has been covered but if the van was hers and he was found in possession of it, shouldn't/couldn't he have been arrested for auto theft and held that way?
Someone will come along and tell you that the van was not reported stolen, so it’s not a crime. That in the police video, he was the driver and she was okay with that, so it makes sense that he would have her car.
To the rest of us using common sense, it’s a major red flag for him to be in possession of her vehicle back in Florida, with her having gone missing.
Glad we have a rational, impartial legal system in place, instead of relying on emotions and misguided “common sense” of people like you.
It was once “common sense” to burn women as witches, based on perceived “red flags.”
Oh, I’m thrilled that this young man will be going through the legal system. I look forward to the legal system picking apart arguments like “she probably loaned him the car” and “he pretended to be her in a text to her mom because he was scared” and “he was the abuse victim and the missing woman was the abuser”.
If he faked her texts, there is likely video from the phone or cell service provider showing him writing the texts.
The only evidence he faked her texts is her own mom’s unsubstantiated hunches.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Playing devil's advocate - considering that he had flown to FL just a few weeks ago, why would he drive back without her knowing it would lead to a MILLION questions if he did kill her?
I'm not saying he didn't - and I'm CERTAINLY not saying she wasn't a victim of something, I mean that video says it all - but it's not like he thought he could just go back in their van and people would be like, "oh no Gabby? Cool."
More devil’s advocate here: what if they were hiking, she said “I can’t take this anymore.” and jumped off a cliff all on her own? (it’s possible).
- would you blame him trying to avoid spending the rest of his life in jail for something he did not do?
Fact is: we do not know what happened. So finding him guilty now is a little premature, donchathink?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i'm coming to this thread very late and not terribly knowledgeable, so I'm sure this has been covered but if the van was hers and he was found in possession of it, shouldn't/couldn't he have been arrested for auto theft and held that way?
Someone will come along and tell you that the van was not reported stolen, so it’s not a crime. That in the police video, he was the driver and she was okay with that, so it makes sense that he would have her car.
To the rest of us using common sense, it’s a major red flag for him to be in possession of her vehicle back in Florida, with her having gone missing.
Glad we have a rational, impartial legal system in place, instead of relying on emotions and misguided “common sense” of people like you.
It was once “common sense” to burn women as witches, based on perceived “red flags.”
Oh, I’m thrilled that this young man will be going through the legal system. I look forward to the legal system picking apart arguments like “she probably loaned him the car” and “he pretended to be her in a text to her mom because he was scared” and “he was the abuse victim and the missing woman was the abuser”.
Anonymous wrote:Playing devil's advocate - considering that he had flown to FL just a few weeks ago, why would he drive back without her knowing it would lead to a MILLION questions if he did kill her?
I'm not saying he didn't - and I'm CERTAINLY not saying she wasn't a victim of something, I mean that video says it all - but it's not like he thought he could just go back in their van and people would be like, "oh no Gabby? Cool."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i'm coming to this thread very late and not terribly knowledgeable, so I'm sure this has been covered but if the van was hers and he was found in possession of it, shouldn't/couldn't he have been arrested for auto theft and held that way?
Someone will come along and tell you that the van was not reported stolen, so it’s not a crime. That in the police video, he was the driver and she was okay with that, so it makes sense that he would have her car.
To the rest of us using common sense, it’s a major red flag for him to be in possession of her vehicle back in Florida, with her having gone missing.
Glad we have a rational, impartial legal system in place, instead of relying on emotions and misguided “common sense” of people like you.
It was once “common sense” to burn women as witches, based on perceived “red flags.”
Oh, I’m thrilled that this young man will be going through the legal system. I look forward to the legal system picking apart arguments like “she probably loaned him the car” and “he pretended to be her in a text to her mom because he was scared” and “he was the abuse victim and the missing woman was the abuser”.
Anonymous wrote:Playing devil's advocate - considering that he had flown to FL just a few weeks ago, why would he drive back without her knowing it would lead to a MILLION questions if he did kill her?
I'm not saying he didn't - and I'm CERTAINLY not saying she wasn't a victim of something, I mean that video says it all - but it's not like he thought he could just go back in their van and people would be like, "oh no Gabby? Cool."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i'm coming to this thread very late and not terribly knowledgeable, so I'm sure this has been covered but if the van was hers and he was found in possession of it, shouldn't/couldn't he have been arrested for auto theft and held that way?
Someone will come along and tell you that the van was not reported stolen, so it’s not a crime. That in the police video, he was the driver and she was okay with that, so it makes sense that he would have her car.
To the rest of us using common sense, it’s a major red flag for him to be in possession of her vehicle back in Florida, with her having gone missing.
Glad we have a rational, impartial legal system in place, instead of relying on emotions and misguided “common sense” of people like you.
It was once “common sense” to burn women as witches, based on perceived “red flags.”
Anonymous wrote:
DP. Victim blaming?
How do you even know she’s a victim??
For all you know, she left on her own and is living it up someplace.
You don’t know. Anything.
But that didn’t stop you from going off emotionally on a stranger and calling them “vile.”