Anonymous wrote:Now they're saying someone called 911 to the home for a domestic incident prior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People are killed all the time. Is there some reason why this murder of this couple in — OHIO — is worthy of discussion here? It’s so weird.
What topics are worthy of discussion here?
They usually don’t involve murders of random people hundreds of miles away. They tend to be DC-related or topical per threads.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of families don't even report their own family members missing that fast. He worked over an hour ocmmute from home. They assume something came up, they check with friends and others, there could be an accident, held up in traffic, phone died, they call around etc. And for the police to go immediately to an 'employee didn't show up for work on time' call is also unusual.
I think calling 911 and sending police to the house within an hour and the police going immediately is unusual and suspicious. I think it means that his work knew something we don't know. His office opened at 8:00 and the first 911 call was made at 8:58. The coworkers were already on route to his house by then (google maps says 1 hour and 15 minute drive) and made the second call from the house at 10:03 after seeing his body.
It isn’t unusual at all. Also with first patient scheduled at 8, he more likely would’ve been due at the office anywhere from 7:15-7:45 or so. A lot of offices have a brief morning meeting before the schedule begins (the dentist would not typically stroll in at 7:55 for an 8:00 patient- especially without calling to give the staff a quick heads up). They were likely already calling him by 8:00, and probably started calling his spouse pretty shortly thereafter after getting no response. It really isn’t the type of job where someone is just randomly late. Or ever late at all. If he is late and not answering his phone, & his spouse isn’t answering hers either, something bad has very likely happened.
By the time they called the police and started the drive to his home, he’d been missing for about an hour. Long enough for them to call around, and long enough that he or his wife should’ve responded by then.
That said, they were probably more worried about an auto or household accident- not a murder.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of families don't even report their own family members missing that fast. He worked over an hour ocmmute from home. They assume something came up, they check with friends and others, there could be an accident, held up in traffic, phone died, they call around etc. And for the police to go immediately to an 'employee didn't show up for work on time' call is also unusual.
I think calling 911 and sending police to the house within an hour and the police going immediately is unusual and suspicious. I think it means that his work knew something we don't know. His office opened at 8:00 and the first 911 call was made at 8:58. The coworkers were already on route to his house by then (google maps says 1 hour and 15 minute drive) and made the second call from the house at 10:03 after seeing his body.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is so very sad. Hopefully there will be an arrest soon.
https://people.com/frantic-911-calls-children-crying-inside-dentist-wife-bodies-found-11878500
Probably related to drugs.
Anonymous wrote:This is so very sad. Hopefully there will be an arrest soon.
https://people.com/frantic-911-calls-children-crying-inside-dentist-wife-bodies-found-11878500
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know why this is national news. But I suspect the guy who first called 911. Would YOU call 911 when a colleague didn't show up for work? How bizarre to assume they needed a welfare check.
What? I wait on tables. My co-workers know that if I don't show up or call, I'm held hostage, super sick, locked up, or dead.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know why this is national news. But I suspect the guy who first called 911. Would YOU call 911 when a colleague didn't show up for work? How bizarre to assume they needed a welfare check.
What? I wait on tables. My co-workers know that if I don't show up or call, I'm held hostage, super sick, locked up, or dead.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read about this earlier today ... something sounds so fishy. I feel so terrible for the kids.
Apparently some people are commenting that her ex is a prime suspect
Her ex is a vascular surgeon and the divorce went through in a matter of months, so does not sound too contentious.
The neighborhood they live in is not great and there have been several residential burglaries in the immediate area recently, I think maybe a robbery gone wrong?
Anonymous wrote:I don't know why this is national news. But I suspect the guy who first called 911. Would YOU call 911 when a colleague didn't show up for work? How bizarre to assume they needed a welfare check.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My thought was the owner of the practice might be involved but really, who knows?
I agree.. at the very least someone familiar with the house and area. No forced entry it's not an area you'd leave doors unlocked. No reports of dog barking. No reports of any theft from the home. The attack seemed to be primarily focused on the dentist.
The quick call.
Why call the police first versus just running over to the house?
Then when no answer ask for a wellness check?
Only to come back and check because they knew the kids were unsupervised and could be hurt.