|
Post by ritoast on Oct 30, 2020 23:07:55 GMT
Okay maybe I’m confused but what about the cop car the neighbor saw speeding down the street while he was doing drywall? Was he speeding away from the house? Why were his lights or sirens not on? Why was he a lone cop and there way before any other police officers? I feel like if I’m understanding this right it could be a huge lead and also the reason the cops aren’t doing shit. Is Angels family connected to the police in any way? I mean the suspicion is that this was a planned murder. Obviously Angel didn’t do it but she very well could have orchestrated it for whatever reason and it went a little awry when she was either grazed or hit by a ricochet bullet. It could have been a police officer. Or the police car could have been the get away car. No one is going to be suspicious of a cop car parked in a neighborhood. Is there any other information on this police car? Or did I misunderstand what was said?
|
|
|
Post by 2ndbest on Oct 31, 2020 13:21:48 GMT
Interesting viewpoint. I had not thought of that before. Does anyone have a timeline of these events put together?
|
|
|
Post by freddie on Oct 31, 2020 17:56:10 GMT
ritoast I can't say I've ever considered the idea that the police car that the Northland Ave Neighbor saw being the get away car. That's definitely an interesting thought. I guess I'd be curious to know what the protocol is for lights and sirens given the context of the situation, location, time of night, etc. My understanding was that the Northland Neighbor saw the police car speeding west down Northland Ave, towards Shepherd Hill Dr (i.e. the Stewart house). Really though, there'd be no reason that anyone going directly to or directly from Matt's house would need to travel down Northland Ave. It would only make sense for a car to be going down at Northland Ave if police were making a perimeter, or sweeping the neighborhood to ensure the person didn't drive away without passing police. Of course, if they were doing that, it wouldn't make sense that they'd be going that fast. It could also be that the police car accidentally passed by Shephard Hill when they first turned in, and then took Northland to loop back around.
|
|
|
Post by ritoast on Nov 2, 2020 13:19:03 GMT
freddie I dont think it would be uncommon for police officers to pull up to a residence with a potential home invasion, hostage situation silently. The only thing that gets me is that he said he saw this police car around 11:30pm/12am. Phone call to 911 wasnt until 12:45 and according to the reports, the first police officers arrived on scene at 12:49am. The neighbor states after he saw that police car he kept his eye out for others to see what was going on, except he didnt see any until he woke up the next morning. Which indicates he probably went to bed before the first two officers on scene arrived at 12:49am and all the other emergency vehicles arrived. Definitely seems a bit suspish to me.
|
|